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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-10-08 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17 .. , , IJP'I TetwMi. L T •. G\llDO BATTAGLIA INSPECTS· MARIN COURT DAMAGE In S..n Rafael, More .Violeftc1 .at-th1 County Courthouse DAILY PILOT .. * * * 10' * * * --.---....,. __ _..~ _,...._ -.. ,:..,,_~ ... ..,..,..:..,...,.. - . IHURSDA Y Al'TERNOON, OCJ'._O!EF{ a;.:t 970 i ' . ' " • VD!,.. A NO\ Ml, 4 l l CTIONl,.O PA•ll ~ -' __,:____.,._ 1 ' '. . PresideIU.:s ''' ' ' .. - Plot Sus~ctea i ' • ' I. -' . .. • ' . . Coolaie Snilling Canine . . . :nty .. H•pe .. ,Ba.id .St~:.._ __ ' ' I ~ : , • CJi J '~ ...: -~ . : ! ; ' • ' Bomhsllit·· ' , I ' . ' . ' ' • • • . . :.,' ' .. : ~s··.l : I • t ~ • .. ,, . • ._ -n -. . • • 1 ' • j ' . I' ,._ .... ~-· Targeis ·:--: . . On -Coost ':: Foes ·-K~· . " . -··~··----~-···--····-··•··· ····--·----···· PlanNiXed ' ~.i.smOOrpN (jp)' -. The-Senate FinaDC9 Cominitlee voted Thursday to reject ·PreskWnt Ninp 'J . welfare . reform J>~l'! bpt agrf!ed to s1,1>[>0rl a limited t.6st of the coritroversial proposal. . The• committee's pos.itlon ·emerged in a l'leriea of test votes ,w}\lch resulted in a &etback to the PresJdent. who has· called the Familf Assistance Plan (FAP) his No. l domeltic proposal Qf this Congress. However, "the admiiniatration forces still will have· a chance to win on the Issue on lht Sen·ate floor when Congress re\Urns in Nov.ember after .an electloq recess.· . In Uuit debate, F AP Is ,ezpected to b< OUered as an amendment to a Social Seciirity. bill which the FJnance Com· mittee may approve next week. Administration officials have predicted they will have 60 votes for F AP on the Door, a comfortable margin. In Thursday's tem, the committee firat rejected 1....,1 a motion to approve lhe F AP bill passod by the Bod!e" laJI April. This wu ·not 1 conclusive· test of the p~'s ,' strtngth in the •OJmmittee, bOwever,,lio«-some member:s fayored a •..,' rnore liberal proposal' Uian ' thi House venio'it! ' Then the panel voted D-3 to addM the Social Security bill some form of'test o[ PAP, p0oslbly In three localities. !Jha!TllWI fRusaell 'B. Long (0-La.), laid the· actual form or the test wohld be Wtrked ou~ by the committee's stafl and '(See wµFARE, Pop I) Them That Has Gets Some More EW YORK (UPI) -A couple who reside in West HamptOn,' one of Long Island's~fasblonable sum- mer placu. today won the · 11 Ull'IT...._.. Sharp, Jtlan, Sharp Paul Grasham;· 30, a Sacramento hip-clothing store operator, flashes his star spangled dentures. He ~ays he chose the red,. white and blue color ~heme to make t>eople happy. But Grasbam admits they make- some people unhappy 1 including the San Francisco dentist who made them. The dentist reportedly has vowed never to do it again. Dog Sniffs Out ·Narcotics • • I million top prite in lbe New .'XOfk ~I-..... · By-JACK 'BROBACK Of rllt 0.llY ....... 11.-f Officers aaid. Ginger detected the allegedly dopel .. ded cookies in a suitcase. Officials said the illicit ln· gredientJ n the coolcy dough was believed ..... 6UJl"'lol<ery. The winners, George 1 n d Genevieve Ashton, have 1 sixteen-t year-old aon, Glenn. ASbton is an execuUve l\vith the J. C. P e n n e y .. Company. 'The _top prize will pa)" Ashton and hlujle ffjl,ll!IOA_Y!¥ f9r.the next 12C> years. A•m11rijuana-snlfUng•German shepherd , dog l was the star of ' a countywlde --n1rt"Oticrra1d·urly-today. Ginger. a mtmbet of the Tustin police force, sniffed out a bat.Ch of cooklca In a San C1emente resMlence Jeading to the ar· rest-Or.Jobn P. Grll!am. 19, o 104$ Paudena-court. • • to be marijuana. This morning 's raid in whi.ch 26 Persons were arrested was the second countywide dra gnet in a week. Mote 1han 40 police offiCer< from 12guna • ~adt, -san (See RAID, P11e II ~-------------- , • , . ' I . '. ' ' • . • : D~r .Ope~· . ,..,. Win Servfceo A sa:ies of tiomb blutl coming one day after 'lhe ultra·radlcal Weathermen ler· roriBta declared an autumn offensive a8:ainst American socltty shattered three public buildings on the West c.oast this"' morning. Aulhoritles fear it ii only the beginning. No one was Injured in the explosions in a Santa Barbara milltf;ry armory, the Marin County Civi~ <;enter In San Rafael and a sha red RO'I'C building at the · University· of 'Washington in Sea tile. Telephone Ups were given in two case11, leading· police to· bW1Ue a janitor · out of the university's Clark Hall within minutes of the blast. r • The Sall Rafael blast occurred near the · courtroom from which a Sqperior Court judge. was kidnaped Aug. 7 by three black revolutionaries who died with him in a barrage o( gunfire. ' Blasts came in succeuion, 1t 1:27, 2:44 .and 4:15 1.m .• at SeatUe, San R41ael and Sant.a Barbara. NO WARNING No warning was &iven.belore the e.i-, plosion Jn Santa Bar~a, which the Weathermen warned . WedneSday would be one 'of their targets acrou the naUon. · "Part of a wall was blown back, but there was no cave-in," said Police Lt. Fred Baker, who Identified the cause as de'finitely a sabotage device. The armory ls s~d by an artillery unit of the California National Guard and 1hared by .an Army Reserve unit. 'l'EACE' IN THIS CENTURY' ·HlxOn T•l~I to Nation Papei: Changes M41d, Endor~s lU.Ies· for. Post• · No fence protects it· on the 'nort aide where the bomb exploded and police 1ald S.6,~NTO (A~) -Tt]e ,5'-n Jose &f\.Y ~y on the 1.treet outside would · M~rcury, which. endorsed lb~ re-elpction · have access to the building. r campaign.of state schools chief Mai Raf· A door was blown ,off ita hinges and ferty daring the. June primary, did an numerous windows were shattered, while Jnterk>r plaster was damaged and 1 amall , about face .today and u~ied voters ' to fire that wu quickly utingulAbed broke. elect his. gepe.ral . 11ecµon op~nt, out. Wilson . Rile.. The' San-ft.afael bomb wu planted in • The Mercury, In a lengthy· editoriaI in women'•' restroom• apparwUy · during today's ediUon, aaid, "'Ibts decls!On ii business houri Wednetday ond reported ~_. · · ' 'th (Iv. _,_ .. ,_ ···lier. prom.-largely, but nol·~ntlrely, by e . UW™~ -·=id ... ~-01 the Riff•~• r...ie~'Oll ''An ei:clted young woman called an 15Ur-u "'"'" ...... :r "'w operatQr aeonymously and said there was ~mpatgp, an · effott character~y a big bomb in tbe ~ ln San 1 amear and JM.uendo." Rafael and It would aooo go off,'' Aid The ntomlng ,ne'.wspape.r, published by Sherllr's Inspector Bowen Brldgea. J , B Rldd ported Se AJ • Dynamite f\lmeS could be smelled im· • · er• · sup n. an mediately·followlng the blut, which slop-ciwton, who deleal<!d Rafferty In the ped -.u·~1oca 'Ind ruptured l>IUinblng, 1161 Seiiile.race. It aupported RaUerty'a . (!ff. llOMBS, P1,. I) re-<lectlon in l!le6 10 the ochool pot~ . 1 . ' . PARIS (UP~) -:; North Vl~m . llnd the Viet Cong today condemned ~t Nixon's peoce pion u gunboat dJplmueJ aimed at perpetuating U.S. "aggreulan'' tq Vietnam, ~t the)'. agreed to dilCllll tt in future negotlaUom, Both Xuan Tlluy, the North Vietnameae minister of state, and Mme. Nguyen Thi Binh, ·the "foreign minister" •Jn the Viet Cong government, called the .offer political trickery aimed 1at winning votea fOr ·the Republlcans in the November election~.. , 1 Madame Binh and Thuy appeared tired• a:pparent!Y fronl a nlghUong·ttudy ot the .presidential· addl'eu whichJ wu received hett :it 2 a.m., and fr.om ,com- munications with Hanoi. Madame Blnh, swathed in 1 w-arm winter coat despite the mild autumn·weather, was ·grim fac- ed when she arrived for today'1 talks. Their lanauage wu harlh but there was !'oo • outright ;rejec;tion in their 11tatement.s made before and during today,'s session, the 87th. • They. rud nqt mention Nixon'• offer, to (See NIXON, P11e IJ Orufe . · Weatlaer Thlnis ai-e Wan/ting up iJOn1 U.: Orapge ~. with ·Friday'• JU1b rea1Ung1 tabbed "•t' •75 •nd Jaland mercury 92. Bl1me thole uaty Santa Ana winds for that. INSmE TODAY ,Capt. E4dir, Rickta~cktf'·-· ontti"ll'U ro:cfng driver,. World W'ar I fJ'j/)ng act ar\ct 114~ of 23 days on· a raft m the Pad- fic -ha'.! reached hil !Ot.IJ birthday. POge 4. ' . C:•llftf* ' -a..wr~,. a.a-. U11 1 C:l...ifllll ,... ·-" c: ........... .__ u """~ 11 •fltll"WI ,_ ' .. iltwtllt'r 14. li. It ••""'° ' •n MlfftcM It AIM .......... 11 ........ ~. ~U--11 ._...... . ..,.....,.....-..... .............. u °""fl c-tt It .. ,.,.,.. ....... . ..... .... Dt ....... """' 11 '*" ."... »t1 T~ • -. -. ............ ,,.,. --.. f • • ! DAIL V PILOT s Tliursd<ty, Oct-, 8, 1~70 ' l\'bon flailed Mlll'JlhY Ties Both Democrats,. 'Peareniks' . I GOP Laud Plan To Tunney WASHINGTON (AP) -Conlretaional --l'MCtiln -~-PreAldent Nlxon'1-Vietnam speech '111 virtually unanimous today wilb Republicans, DemocraU!. hawks and doves using such adjectives as "bold •.• forthright ... fair ..• comprehensive." .. · Most members or the House and Senate reached for comment, even those who ha ve been most eul!pokrn in their criticism of Nixon's Jndochina polleles, s1id the next move toward peace is up to Hanoi. .._, applaud lM -Presidenl's message and warmly endorse his plea for the im· mediate release of all prisonn ef war," declared Sen. Frank Olurch 10.Jdaho). Church. a member ef the highly critical Senate Foreign Relations Committee. was cosponsor of legislation that would have cut off all funds for righting in Cam· bodia. Church said Nixon's prop o s a 1 s ••censtltute the most premising formula ' yet for-achieving a ne&otlat.ed ietllement ef the war in Jndochlna.-1 hope-thet Hanoi will not reject them out of hand." Sen. John Sherman Cooper (R·Ky.)1 who v.·ilh Chur ch sponsored legislation that embroiled the Senate for nearly twe months, called Nixon's proposals "com· prehensive and fair. "lbe immediate stopping of all warfare and killing and the e1change 41f priseners of war are humane and difficult te be refuse<!Defore the world," sai.d Cooper. Ooe voiCf: temporarily absent in the hymn of praise for Nixon was tha t of Sen. J .' W. Fulbright (D-Atk.), chairm8.n ef the Foreign Relations Comm ittee, wh11 could not be reached for comment. Sena te Majority Leader M i k e Jlilansfield, another persistent critic of Nixon '& war policies said the President's speech was excellent. "I will do my very best to support it," aaid Mansfield. OAIL Y l"ILOT l"llttt " L• l"IYftf ,. _ SeJ!. Georje h!urphy -fl! e d n 1 1 d ~ y demanded 'his , opponent Jotin Tunney prove hti has made no polltical dtals with two "ultra liberal peacenik" groups lhal donated $60,000 to the Tunney campaign. Spea,king at the convention of the souther,. d J vision of the California Federation ol Republican Women , Murphy said he'd ';like to know if there were any agreements or political un- derstandings arrived at before these very large donatio1111 were made." --The ~t-Seliiitor did not narm the two groups in hi! speech at the luncheon meeting, characteriz ing the groups only u "peace at any price peaceniks." He later told newsmen they were the National Committee for an Effective Congress and a fund -raising organization headed by Sen. George McGovern (D- S.D.). "President Nixon has written a new chapter in the diplomatic history of the United States with his bold move lo end this unpopular war,'' said Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott of ' Pennsylvania. SENATOR MURPHY CHARMS THE LADIES DURING GOP CONFAB IN ANAHEIM Californi• School Ch ief Max Rafferty Joins in the Fun With Trici• •nd N1ncy -lnformed of Murphy'• statement, Ttm- nty acknowledged the contrlbullol)I and noted that the committee has been active for )!Cars on beh11lf of liber.11! candidates. He also pointed out th11t McGovern ls a possible candidate for the 1 I 7 2 Democratic presidential nomination. "lf these suggest.ions are turned down at Paris," said Scott, "the burden of the continuing war clearly. unmistakably and inexcusably must be borne by the other side." Sen. Edmund S. Muskie. lhe Maine Democrat who is a potential Ni xon op- ponent in the 1972 presidential race, was &amewbat more restrained in his cnm· ments. but said the proposals were ••serious and Americans will recognize that. "They are overdue from the While House, but nonetheless welcome," Muskie 5aid in a statement. From Pagel --· .--~ NIXON. •• Real Estate .Talk Series Set for GWC . For the si:rth consecutive year, I.he DAlLY PILOT loday announced plan!! to present a series of lectures on·real esta t.e investment on a c1rsponsorship basis with lhe Orange Coast Col,lege District. The big change in the program In thi!l 1973 edition, however, is-that it~is to be moved from the Harbor Area to the Golden West College campus in Hun· tinglon Beach. exchange prisoners. The Huntington Be.ach·Fountain Valley The Nixon call for a cease-fire Board of Realtors also has joined the throughout Jndochina and n ff er in g lineu p as a co-sponsor of the four-part 10 Buildi1igs $5 Millio11 Retail Office Set for .Newport Center. A $5 million ret;iil-affice-plata will-be----include--home-furni!hinJl-ele!'e!;-· blue built in Newport Center adjacen t to the printers, art.isl!, commercial photogra. planned Newport Beach municipal cam· phers and similar outlets. plex, the Irvine Company annflunced tl'I· Keyzers called the Cl'lncept ef the plaia day. uniqu e, saying, ''As far .as w know,. Called a "design plaz a" by Irvine of. there is .no o!her ~evelop~ent like ii." ficials , the project will be built fin 11 He said the buildings will be arranged acres south e{ Fashion Island and will be so all will f>pen to landscaped malls, geared to professions allied wilh the cen· courtyards and patios. struction industry only, Parking areas will be reml!ved but con· Designed by architect A. Quincy Jones venient to each building. he said. and Associates. the ''design plaza." as it He said the p;irking lots "will be heavi· "Hill !ltatement just show!! what a shallow uOOerst.anding of these organiza· tions Sen. Murphy has," Tunney said. While Murphy delivered the keynote address of the convention, it was obvious the 1,650 feminine audience members: were most taken with his tablemates - Tricia NiJ:on, Nancy Rea1an and Ivy Baker Priest. The president's eldest daughter ls tchedu1ed to return to Washington tod.ly after a three-day stay to Southern Ca1ifornia where she campaigned for Murphy. During a brief meeting with the.prea ·before ~Murphy's 11peech Wedneaday, the petite blonde 11aid she .wu honored to be campaigning for her former boas.' ~be worked aa a secretary for Murphy in 1967. ''I enjoy campaigning for something I believe in. California. as the most populous state in the nation, leads the way for the whole country," she !laid. guidelines for R political settlement were &cries. starting ne:rt Tuesday, Oct. 13. -presented formaJly at loday·s session by The Huntington .Beach-Founlain Valley Ambassador David K. E. Bruce . But both realtors· group replaces the Newport i:oi called by~Jrvine afficials, will include a ly planted with trees, sh r u b s, group of 10 buildings !lnked by a series e( groundcover and olher landscaping." All three women spoke briefly to the convention, urging the partisan audience to work for Republican candidates during lhe remaining 26 days of the campaign. While Mrs. Priest, the slate treasurer, assured the women that their efforts would bring .1 Republican victory in November, the state·s First Lady warned of the dangers of overconfidence. --. .....__ OUT OF ANAHEIM PARADE Rojoctod M1rohol Allon Steve Allen Out ·' Of Anaheiin F ete After Pressure . Entertainer steve Allen v.•ill not appear ;s'""~&nd marshal in Anaheim's 47th Halloween festival parade. The nati'onally knewn televisien and st.age star withdrew Wednesday under pressure from the Anaheim Repoblican Assembly tARA ). , The conservative group passed a resolution Monday demand ing that the Halloween committee and the chamber of commerce drop Dem~rat Allen frem the parade. The ARA contended that Allen did not fit into the free enterprise and patriotic stance that has characterized the parade ever the years. Allen had lhe last word Wednesday. He said be would not appear in the parade "because 11f the danger tha t a few ex· tremist.s might cau.~ a disturhllnce that could prevent children from enjoying a merry evening." Allen, has long been identiUed with liberal causes. At ene time he ran for Cengress en the Democratic ticket. DAILY PILOT • ..,.,, le~ Hml"l'tMI .... ....... .u h .. ,..,..., CMte Mfttl S..ct...- OltAHGE COA$1" POll.1$HING COM,AN't 11.o\ltrt N. W11d ""6IHlll t r.41 PvlllltW Jae\: R. Cu•l1v V1tl ,.._!dent t r.41 C..notrll MW,.. Thom41 K.,.,u EdUor 'nioMtl A. M11•phci11e M911ttlnt t:dllor t.lch•r4 P. Nill '°""' ~ COll"1Y Editor ""'-CC.1• ~: 3>0 W•l in' llT'tlt ....,.,,., e.c:tu "" Wal ••l!l't •our_,.. ~ llMcll: ttl l<a.t"I Awrt1,19 ....,,""'* ... di: 1t11S a.a. •ou1 ... "9 1.a1i ~ af IWtll li cam1n0 lt .. I I Thuy and Madame Binh were thoroughly Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtot!l, fam iliar with them when they arrived. which has betft. a part of the program Meanwhile, much of the world reacted sirft its inception five years ago. with pr&i:Se to Nixon's call for an im· Or: Loren Moll, direct.or of the Evening mediJ.te__cease.fire--tn the search for College Division, Golden West College, peace in Indochina, but so me said movement of the lectures to his governments and statesmen e:icpressd campus was viewed as an appropri11te doubt .of its success. st.ep. ~uth Vietniln said lt was in agree-The .. 1973 census figures indicated Hun· ment "'1th the proposals. Th~ Saigon tington Besch -· with tenfold growth government said its statement followed since the last official census in 1960 -is after discussions with the America n one of the fas~ growing urban areas in £Overnment. the world . The Sou~ Vietnamese reaction favor-Real estate aclivil.y in West Orange Ing the Nixon plan followed by !levers! County can be expected to continue to in- hours a~ unfavorable. ~e~RQn~ by crthec. ... t'rellse:· .. -.. ---~--~ -··---~· ·~ So.~th Vietnamese off1c1a\s. . . The lecture series, open to the public The proposal .~f a cease-fire is un-Jree o[ charge. will consist of four pro.- favorable :to us, .s~ret.ar.y of State grams, each lasting approximately tv.·o Nguyen. T1e_n Hy said 10 Saigon !!ho~tly hours. They will begin at 7:30 p.m. on after Ntxon .s. addres~. Other South v.1et-four consecutive Tue.'jdays. All programs n?mese of.fic1als .said the Commun11Jts will be presented in the College Center. v.ere certain to reject the proposals. . First program, "Tailoring Your In vest· But a statement from Saigon radio said . t ., .. 11 be presented by Randall later it •·reaffirmed" illl _earlier call for ~~ · dl"1 DAILY PILOT real estate "free elections to determine the future of ar 1'· · 1 esident of the Re al South Vietnam " page co umn1s , pr . "We have s~ggested An internation&l £slaters firm and longtime Orange Coa.st body to assure and supervise the e\ec-area reaHor. lions." the Saigon government said. "We P11t McVay of ~cVay Real Estate, would still like to discuss with the other Fountain V11!1ey. will be moderator for side about these procedures.'' the four lectures. f'rom Page l Earlier, Ho Van Minh, assistant speaker of the South Vietnamese Chamber of Deputies, said a cease-fire "is unacceptable beeause we are involved in an unconventional war.'' BOMBS ... small courts. Jon es described his plan:i; (or the plaza Buildings will range frnm ene to fl'lllr in detail stor ies and will provide floor space rang· "At the second fioor level ef the ing from 4.000 to 34,000 11quare feet. building!!, a IQ.foot everhang will be in· Sile preparatien is scheduled to beg in stalled to shade pedestrians. Trellises in November and actual construction is will then connect the everhangs from &ne planned for a start in early 1971. building lo another. Claltde S. Keyzers, manager of com· "Our concept," he said, "envisions a merclpl leasing for the Irvine Company, building scale that is related le the said the plaza offices will serve human scale at the mall level. This will architects, decorators, e pg in e er s , prOOuce an intimate experience for the designers. landscape architects, develop. pedestrian ." ers, builders and artisans. The building's archilecture will include In addllien, be said. space will be pro-the use flf complementary m11terlals and vided for related retail steres that weuld textures such as wood, stucct, cencrete, _ -----· ______ _brjc.k~and.itone,.Jones.u.id ... --··· From Pnge 1 WELFARE ... Keyzers said that building sites will be ground leased only and all building!! will be Cflnslructed by individual developers. "All improvements ether than buildings will be installed by the Irvine Cempany," he said. "Overconfidence is the wa y you lose elections. So it's important to keep right on working up to election day ," she said. Lt. Gov. »I Reinecke al'° made an ap- pearance at the podium to booat the Republican cause. "I have great con- fidence that the voter!! of this 1Jt11te will rise to their responsibility and give Gov. fu'!agan the team he need!! ill Sacramento and President Nixon the team be needs in Washington," he said. From Page I RAID ... considered 11t a meeting next Tuesday. Keyzers said than in an efft1rt lfl create Clemente. Orange .1nd Tu st In The Finance Committee'ii rejection of a harmt1nlnus preject , the Jrvine Com· participated in 1he roundup. FAP was expected. The panel has been pan y will control de!lign er each flf the The 26 arrested had been n 1 med In rnnsidering the plan for si:ic months and buildings. "but in so doing will encourage secret Grand Jury indictment.8 as the most of llol members ha ve indicated tiriginallty and creativity en the part of result of three month!! of inve!Jtigation by strong opposition to it. all ceoperating architect.oi." the police officeni and Illa.le narcotics of. The opposition has centered on the ficers and district a t t o r n e y ' s tn- estimaled $4J bill ion cost of the plan and vestigators . on its provision to give benefi~ for the Jordan Toll Lowered Officers1Jaidintheraidtodaytheycon- first time to the working poor, thus fiscated quantitie!l of heroin, LSD, boosting the welfare rolls to a potential 24 WASHTNGTON (UPI ) -The State dangerou!l drugs, marijuan1 and hashish. mill ion. About 20 million now get the Department !la~ there were 400 to 500 Nabbed in Laguna Beach wall Gilbert assistance paymenls. persons killed in the recent Jordanian M. Brad y, 19, a transient jalled on The plan would provid e a basic annual civil wRr-not the 2fl,OOO casualties the charge!! of !Jelling heroin. He predicted North Vietnam and the Viet Cong would reject all Ni:icon·g pr1r ~tis when lhey 9."ere presented at Paris. federal payment of $1,600 for ,11 family of guerrilla!! cl11imed dur ing the conflict. While officers were looking for anolllll..... !'ending torrenls of ~ater lhrflugb the fnu r. But. under it, total benefits "'ould The department said the new figures unidentified Laguna re!lident., they picked- bu\lding. reach a level of about $6,000 for such a came from the U.S. Embassy Jn Am-up a man arw:f woman on mariju11:na f.r f.r f.r House Approves Anti-Crime BUl Overwlielmingl y \\'ASHlNGTON (t:PI) -The House pa s ~ e d overwhf>lmingly Wednesday President Ni:ron·s bill lo crack down on organiied crime and te rrorist bombing!! despite objertions it would not ~·ork and would endanger Constilutional rights of all riti1.ens. Passage or the bill wa~ the 11ccnnd major victory for I.he President. ill two weeks in getting Hou~ action on crime bills he complains have been delay@d unduly. Earlier 1he llr:.1se passrd a rompre· hen~ive bill to fight the drug pmblern, which 11lso aroused dispu~ on constttu- tlona! ground:oi, 11nd the Senate wa~ mov- ing \Vednesday night toward passage o{ that measure. The organized {'rimt bill . v.•ttich pa~l!td the Senate in January In tougher form. is the mAjor propo..~al In rfixon's ll-t>Olnt anticrime package. It would make or~anized gamblin~ 11 fedrnl crimt, bar invt!ltmcnt of crlm1. n.11 gains in legjtim.:ite bu!iness And allow exttnded !lcntrllCt's for habltu•l or pro- fe~$iQ(IRI criminRls. The antibombing section wnold rt:gu. late ~ale nf explosives, provide the death pcJ1alfY. for bombings that cause aftali tles And let F'BI agtnts intervene in campus bombing-c11se11 even 1r loc.11 authorities oppose such intervention. Night cust.odia n George Pant.Axv: ":'as family in some states. man. posse!JSion charges . only 10 feet away and said it sounded hke li";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m. a load of scrap metal fall ing. Sheriff Louil! Montanos emphasized lhere was no direct evidence linking the courthouse bombing to the attacks in Santa Barbara end Seattle. The damaged courtroom ls normally used by vacatiooing Judge Joseph Wilson. who recently conducted hearing.~ behind wa~ of San Quentin in the cases of I.he sn-called Soledad Brothers. Ironically, a metal-detecting device '"'a!i installed Wednesday to protect agai nst just such incidents 11nd was scheduled to go Into operation today . "I don 't believe it was 11ingled out tt1 any particular judge or court,'' Sheriff ~1ontanos added today, "But we 11re going to increase our !lecurity around the clock and put on added personnel.'' JUDGE ABDUCTED The explosion was directly acrns~ the hall from the one whert .Judge Hsirold Haley was abducted in the fatal flight by lwo convictS and an accomplice. Odis by a man and woman lo lhe Uoiversity (Jf Wa!!hington. the fire departmcnl and lht.: Seattle Times 25 minute~ befnr~ the Clark Hall blast warn- ed them 11f ii. The bomb was planted in tht b<11semtnt nf lhe structure. which houses Navy and Air Force RO'l'C units. "It was quite a bl11st," said university ."pokesman Irv Blumenfeld. who thetiriz· ed the bomb WAS planted befOl'f: Wed· nei;dAy's 5 p.m. closing lime. Heavy damage resulted and a shnwer or gla~!J new 50 feet around Ult butldlng. A \Vellthermfln tape recordll'lg was played Wednesday at 3 New York ne~·s <'onfcrenrt. And the voice ldtntified As lhat of Miss Bem11dettt Dohrn 's by htr ,:1ster, Jennifer. a spokesman for the Youth International Party -Y1pplt:s. RIP VAN WINKLE mattress Haruicrafted by • •Ide ewftl"@fry ,,,. JM4.. • Hand·stiched bkwaUa that will Mft!' -c _. ....... ..,.,.. • 12~ mo~-bie .. ef slffping 1urf11ee- • Upholstered wit.Ji ~ lay!rg of flnfiJ ~ by Da Pont. •Holland M1 id ~ 111>rinr for great.f!r...., hi!ity and comfort. •&-way )larid-tifNI ),n: aprinr -the e"?J .t the ind"stry. • Fun 20-,_,. i-:r.-. .. -aot,..ntecL , ........ "* ........... $199 .so HI llT -.................. $279 .50 "' llT \". .,., ..................... $369.50 m '" You faooritl interiqr df!rfgner win bt MPPU to 41.ri.Tt uou ••• H.J.GARRE1T fURNllURE · PROFESSIONA[ INTERIOR DESIGNERS -TRY OUR HVOLYIN• CHAR!ill- Opt1t Mon,. Thurs. l Fri. lw& 22 15 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MESA,.CALIF. b~b.021' 11 1 I I -...... I I I \'" . . . • I ' 'Uuniing~on-Beaeh VO~, 63, NO; 241, 4 SECTIOt•iS, 52 PAG~S ' ' -:-.~- e .s Bombs Hit 3 'Targets On Coast - ""'' ...... LT. GUIDO BATTAGLIA INSPECTS MARIN COURT DAMAGE In San R1f1tl, Mort Vloltnc• at the County CourthouM ' . ' ED l•J I 0 N THU.RSDAY, OCTOGER ·s, "1970 emn . ixon's . -~ -. Jurist In My~ Lai Trial Relnted·tnBeach ·W oman PT. HOOi>, Tau_·-A•panel of !Ive ~ve juron-all V-War vet- eram-llal been ci-n here. for the trlol GI the finl among 17 Gls char1od in the~ notoriOUs My Lal massacre. Testimony begins next week Jollowing Jury telectlon Wednesday, to &fve the defclidants' aftonieys time to examine ' dOcuments by the Army"s CID and CIA agent& concerning the atroc_itJ. . Staff-Sgt-David-Mitchell, , GI Sl Francisville, La., is charged wilh u- sault wtth intent to commit murder' agaiMt 30 My Lai civiUans. One of-the officers abosen to hear the case is 1st Lt. Jerry T.,1. Curry, 26, of Levelland, Tex.,, ""' of ..Mr•:. qurord L. Jonea, of. 111361 BrooklNrot oL, Hunt- l1111ton B<ac~. T···•, whi~ "' He wu raised in ~ i.:: ma ' ~1 ' Jnolber JllSI moved lo·the Orange Coail. Praoecutlon and def-att«nqs que~Uontd 10. prospective jurora Wfld.. neail&Y , and tentatively aP°f'od oo ~ the minimum nUmber required .for Mit--cbell'~ ,general Court mar11a1: jW)'. , Bui nellber aide bu· uooi! Ha per;,,.p- loey challence ,and u any . avcb .chau ... ges art made more officen . wiJJ. havt to· be_qu..Uootd \oJlrlo&Jllt'~baCI: up to nve. Defonae Attorney Ossie Brown oald he will not deolde il be would·UH bll challenge unUI allel' mllltiif' COiiliCll Capt. Thomas Parachinl r.turn.s from , lns~llng the My. Lal lnv..UCaUon re-P.Qrti !n ;,Yuh!ngton. Parachlnl Is due ·back at Ft. llOod tometlm• thil weekend. . ' But Viet Foesl{eep Door .Open The path bu been partly cleared for court. action to proceed OD the City of Huntington Beach's auit to ensun public access to the two-and.ihree..quarter-mlle Huntington Pacific beach. ,Supuior . Court Juda;e Harmon G. Scoville Wednesday ovemded the demur- rer ftltd·by four compinies to the city's .Wt to 1cquire till• to public euementa over the property. The court 1uatained the demurrer 11ai.ut another section of the compla!nt -the ejectment action-In whlcb the city aougbt the removal of certain structures trom1be property and damages pald. Tbe deftndants, the Huntington Beach Company, ~tandard Oil Company of Caillornta, Hun\lngton Pacific Corpora· lion and. Fluor-Hunttncton, argued that the atruc:tures were not named or deta'Jbed In the conipla!nt. . Judie ~Ille gave the city :IQ days to amend lbe compl,alnl In the ejectm~I ac· Uon. . ' .wlsWll . City Atlon)ey Jooepb llil said toilay Iha\ 'the city woqld amend the 'COO'lp)llnL .'~e."1ll n1n the .1tt'11Ctuia .... _... .,r.mng to," be uld. ' ' U.I would nol lndlcall toclay; bowev.r, . what the struc:tures are. They ~d lie the 13 million Huntiqtoa J>acmc 1partmentt, oil weU-. tanb1 or fencing._ Uol'oaid GI lbe Judge:• rejection In the other aectlons ol the c;omplaln~ "in effe(I the Judie oald ''" complaint ~ 1ood aad Ute com~lts must answer it." -'nle companies had Crftlclit<I lbe dfy In· the demurrer for omlltlng apecllle dates relaUng to beacblronl land Utlu ...U.U'1)1 to JdeoUff_,o_,. ol oborollljo property wb0'1Re1tdiY sr1Dled eaMment rlgbla to 11\e IJllbUc. -, • Today'sFlaal 1 rEN CENTS 'PEACE' IN THIS' CENTURY' Nixon T•lk1 to Nation School District OKs Railroad Car Cuusroom Israel Slaps Pilot TEL AVIV !UPI) -The pilot <ii the El Al Israel jet seized momentarily by Arab guerrillas Sept. S has been de- moted to copilot statul!I for violating retu· lations, airline officials said Wednesday. .Cean Weatlper · Thlngs ·are warming up along the Orapge Coast, ,wi\h F'ridiy'a high ,reading tabbed at 7S and inland ~-cury 92. Bl"me those 111:sty Santa Ana winds for that. INSIDE TODAY Capt ·Eddie R!clunba,ck" - .onetim1. racing . dtjvcr, .world War 1 ftvfnp ace and 1urvivor I o/ 23 da111 on ~ rtifC m the Paci-: fie -· Ms reached hi> 30th birthdou. Page f . • -1 • -· . MllfHI ,... • Nlt!Mll ...... OrtllM CMlttY T1 ., ..... ,.,,.. . ,_, .... DI": Sltlllc,...11 II Sttcll Mlt""'9 •t1 T•wltliMI a -. WMIMt I w__.,, .._ 11-1• .., .......... ' i .. I • Z DAIL V ~ILOT M , '""'*'· -1, 1"1 . . -. New RQUte Possi_f)le State St~dying F-Feeway Change· Gcw.erncr Reagan's admlnlstrat.ion ls draltiJli.L-blll-u..t cculd-produce a-new route for the Pacific Coast Freeway aatbfactory to Newport Beach and 0th.er aurrounding citieS, including Costa Mesa. The measure. which almost was in- troduced Into the last session of the JeglslabJre, would allow the State HiihWly Commission to consider chang- ing specific Unks of any adopted freeway route. Robert B. Carleson, chief deputy' direc- tor-of the-State Public -Works Depart~ ment, disclosed this and a second poten· tial ll>luUon to the freeway controveray in ail a.elusive interview with the DAU.. Y PILOT W"'""""ay. CarlelOll U]ilained that under pr...,,t law WtieD a freeway route ls opeDed for rcconalder1tion between two point!, all put agreements are rMCinded and technically the freeway cotlld be moved In direction. 1be ·ata~~No. 2 public work.! oUlclal 15aJd the legislation, if adopted, would open the door for a solution to 1 number of •imilar controversies on freeway routes throughout the sta~ He said it would allow Newport Beach and Costa Mesa officials to meet, agree on a new local route for the coastal freeway, then ask the Highway Com- rnigsjon to reconsider this section of the adopted route, which now closely parallels the Pacific Coast Highway through Newport Beach. He 11id the commission would be under no obligation to reopen conslder~tlons. However, chances they would agree to do so, with both cities behind the request, would be <try iood, be added. 1be adopted route for the future superhighway calls for it to be built wtlbin 200 yards or the Coost lllgh_way In Newport Beaeti. The route, -. portion or which has formal concurrence from the Newport Beach City Council, has been bitterly fought by a number of Newport residents. Cos~-~ olficia!s,_ howeyer, ha~e been reluctant to support reopening of the route queaUon, because: of the rear the route would wind up through the city llmlt:r of·therr·town-. - Without the proposed legislation, there IStill may be ano_lh~.L w..1y jor Newp<!rt Beach and Cosl.i: '_Metia to conviiiee the Highway Commission to COl'l!ider .a specllic alternate local routing. "Vuy frankly,'' Carteson said, "there ls one possible way to 'cuarantee' the commlsaion con.aider..& specific..oe_w route under existing law." He said if the city councils of both com- munities passed resolutions agrtting to a reopening along~ specific route, and in· cluded in those resolutions a proviso that they wou1d Mt sign a freeway agreement along anY other route than the one pro- posed, the c:opimission likely would listen to them. In other words. if both cities agree on a precise alignment pf the Pacific Coast Highway through this area,-it would stand a good chance or being adopted. Carleson placed more emphasis on the legislative solution, hOwever, disclosing that a bill was act\lally prepared prior to the end of the last session of the legislature, but just too late for in- troduction. He denied that the department con- sidered the bill "an ace in the bole" waiting to be played when the Urning was right. He indicated the department has been working to.ward a solution to this kind of problem for a period of time. Carleson stressed the concern of the state in the relationship between the two cities an d said Governor Reagan's ad- ministration "does not want something like a freeway to come between the two communities." There have been various alternate routes proposed for the Coast Freeway route and both Newport Beach and Costa Mesa officials seemed to agree on one that close)y parall!ls 15th Street in Newport Beach. · lt turned out, however, the freeway would have to cut through a corner of Costa Mesa and this did not meet the ap- proval of officials there, who subse- quently dropped slipport of the plan. It is generally felt lhat if a }nOte inland route could be designed ·within the city limits-of Ne¥£PQrt Beach it could gain the approval or both Costa Mesa and most of the present Newport freeway opponents. Opposition lo the present rouU-is 10 -ferVefit. 'hoWever, ·that -one group·in Newport Beach has launched a petilion drive that would force a referendum on a demand lhat the eliating ir~way agree- ment be rescinded. A companion petition calls for a referendum on a charter change that would require future city-wide votes before any freeway agreement could ever be signed. Citize~ *Grou~:-.W ~gt • 1 • , I I I e • .-' ,.,. ,~-• I ' • 'l ... Proposed Silp~rhighway Full of Beans Ray Thorp, 8 (in pot), and Billy Pellerin, 8, of the Huntington Beach Boys Club, clown a bit while pre- paring for club barbecue from 11 a.m . to 4 p.m. Sunday at bake Park. Menu includes 1,000 pounds of beef, plus beans, potato salad, coffee, milk and ice cream. Price for fund~raising feed is $2 for adults and $1 for children. Everyone is invited. School Chief Questioned Over Valley Boundaries From PfJflf? 1 BOMBS •.• ped all clocks and ruptured plumbing, sending torrent.a of water through the building. Night custodian George Pantaxes wu By TERRY COVILLE isolated area," be said. only 70 feet away· and sald lt IOUDded.llke Of ,... Dtl!Y "'"' 11.n The Garden Grove administrator would a load of scraP metal falling. "Any change of achool boundaries in not say if he natty opposed a boundary Sheriff Louis Montanos emphasized Fountain Valley ·would have to be looked change in Fountain Valley, but expressed there w.u no direct evidence linking the at carefully." skepticism at the lde2. courthouse bombing to the attacb in or:~oa111<t H. Paynter, superintendent·---Homeowners--t.here-claim ·they-h • v e '-s8nta B8.rbara and 5e8tii!. -· of the Garden Grove Unified School been ignored by the Garden Grove District, gave · tliat reply thLa morning district and too many of their children The. damaged courtroom Is norma11y when uked his positloo on the move by have been bused out of the are.a. used by vacationing Judge Joseph Wilson, some residents in the · city to transfer James Bennett. a leader in the an-wbo recenUy conducted hearings behind from his district to the Fountain Valley _ nexation drive, said he Qopes _all the peti-walls of San Quentin in the cases of the School Districl -tions will be complete by Oct. 15-. At that so-called Soledad Brothers. "l haven'__t seen any petitions yet. l've time, if complete, the petitions will be only hU!d_ rumors of such a move," he -lalCen to the "Oriiige County Superin-Ironically, a metal-detecting device added. · tendent of Schools. was installed Wednesday lo protect Residents of the area surrounding Los The basic decision on the bound~ry against just such incidents and was Arnl&ot:Hl&h ·~ool:diim four petitions 1chaqse wQuld_be in the bands of the coun-schedul~d to go into operation today. are ctrCulating, ·aumg f9f' aMexatlon to · ·ty BOal'd or Education. ·· "I don't believe it was singled eut ta the Fountain Valley School District. any particular· judge er court," Sheriff ~ FoijPtain V.111ley's City Council _gave its · Montanos added today. ''But we are aupport to thl-annexaUon move Tuesday S : ,... ' S t night. --. . erv.,.,eman en going to increase 'our security around the "A school district can't foUow the ger-' ' clock and put on added personnel." rymandered boundaries of a city," Or. Bac-k W H 'tal JUDGE ABDUCTED Paynter said. "We have to be more ospi The explosion was directly across the dable. City boundaries are more like to hall .from the one where Judge Harold change." J S bb' C ,A new itate c:oncept In freew3y plan-The . o~hers are HunUngtan . }3ucli, ''Making a change simply on the basil n ta lltg ase Haley was abducted in the fatal flight by mng was launched ln Newport Beach last Fountain Va11ey, Cosla Mesa, Santa Ana, or city boundaries is not fair to the two convicts and an accomplict. 3 FactbF8 \: : I o :?1 : On Noise ~'' R~vealed -· Three c:enslderationa i;nmt ~·~ , the solu\ien to the crowtna 11alse ~P6Uutton probl&m, an -orange COUntf 'Uque •f Women Voters conference' was' lold this mornin1. R. Dale Beland, a planner with.Uie coa· suiting 11r;n ol Wilsey and ljllll; .the company 'hired by Newport Beat;h to study noise at O~ange Ceunty Airpoct. ouUilled lbose three factors as the COD• ference ln the city of Orange opened. Beland said.Jbe_most importanUactor Is the noise recipient and he urged tmt 1his be.considered the only filed entity.In any proposed solution. "Man can adapt to growing noise PQllu· lion but only 1t a price," Beland a.aid. "We must make the system serve UI, net us serve the system," he said. Beland pointed out that the major source of. noise in the eutdoora ta: not from aircraft. "It is from its ground transportatinn system and that system 'a rolling st.eek - cars. lruck.s and buses. ''We cannot blame it all on the aircraft industry," he said. Beland said the other tw& C'.lCID· siderations are the noise source and the transmission path. He said bouf are variables. "The noise source t1ffers the mo..'it f)p-~ lions for modifications," he said poinUhg out that there are several tecbnl<fues for intervention in· this element. · Beland cited the new retrc·fitting pro- gram under study by several major com- panies in the aviation industry. The retr.fitting process ii seeking ways w basically tone "down the nerse ernitt~d by jet engines. "The transmission path element ls more difficult to work with," Beland sajd, pointing out it! "greatest value is before the fact." He explained that this can be -controfl'ed beSt bY''acquirifig enoughJS.nd to separate it as far as possible from in· habited areas." The noise recipient hov.oever, Beland stressed is the only element that should not be tinkered with. He said r;everal methods have been devised to meisure ~l pollution levels including noise pollu- tion. Beland said there are some 30 dilferent noise measuring acales. night as: the city's Route 57 (Orange Garden Grove and Orange, all ol. whktl children. Our boundaries are basically A Westminster sc;rviceman who stab-Calls by a man and woman to the ,-----·--···-mew1y) ·aUJ:mm-nillsory-confifilttee · ·-wn1-ttieft ]Olntty·everythrtt months-and;------·:rnli·-· ·· -t-.· · · · · -· ·-···· •• ·· ·--· · -· · · · ·-· · bed-iris ·pregmm~·wife-WhHe ·on-weekelid' · · li ., · · · · · · . . . aounu, econ mued. . . ·n1versity · ·ar ·-wasrungt&i;-·tht:' --nre met for lhe first time with a paid con-Jn addition, exchange minutes of their "That area is totally planned f 0 r leave from p,Ychiatrlc treatment at a department and the Seattle Times 25 Sllltant to study lhe need and proposed meetings regularly. OOool! We have bo ht se eral sites veterans hospital ha! been sent b~k to routes . for ~ new n o r t h • 1 o u t h The ~tate . has budgeted . 1150,000 f~r a ~here a~d Los Amigos ~gh Sc~ool covers Atascadero State .H~it~I as not having minutes before the Clark Hall blast warn- 1uperh1ghway m Orange County. consulhng f1~ to meet w1~ the var~ous more than just the Fountain Valley fully recove~ed his sanity. ed them of it. Robert B. Carleson, chief deputy dire:-panels, s~~1ng .as both an mtermediary area." ThOmas Clifton Teeters, 28, of 13872 La The bomb was planted in the basement oor or the State Public Works Department and a gu1d1ng hght. Pat Place, was ·returned from the of the structure, which houses Navy and wason hand for the meeting, calling it · KiSuh Park, a plaMCr with the ~n-Dr. Paynter pointed out that his district hospital last month as capable of stan-Air Force ROTC units. ''an historic occasion." sultant, Victor Gruen Associates, cutlined agreed· to a small boundary change last ding trial but Superior Court Ju d g e ''Jt was qui\e a blast," slid university He told the committee Its P"""'st in his firm's role in the study pr~ss. . year which gave a small section of Foun-James. F. Judge ruled that he was in-spokesman Irv Blumenfeld, who theoriz--~ · h \.: lain Valley to the Fountain Valley School We is to identify· the best route possible He explained that ne1the~ e nor 1~s DistricL nocen.t. by reason. of iJu;anify, of two ed the bomb was planted before Wed· for the freeway, determining in the pro-company, oor any of the ciuzen .comm1t-felomous assault charge,s. nesday's 5 p.rri: closing tiMe. cess if the freeway is needed. tee should go into the planni.ng pro-"That was a fair change. It was an The judge called for additional reports Heavy damage resulted and a shower Carleson told the committee members cedures Hwith any preconaJved notions." _,._ ..A. J._ from psychiatrists on his present mental of glass flew 50 feet around the building. their efforts will hopefully "avoid con-Park said the ''fundamental role" of W W )..( condition and those reports received this A Weatherman tape record.inc was , DAIL'I' ,ILOT Si.H ...... Net" Planner troversies similar to thoee surrounding the committees is to "balance the en-School AnnexerS week led to his being sent back to the played Wednesday at a New York news Route 1 lthe proposed Picific Coast vironmental deficiencies of 8: route "'.ith state hospital. conference and the voice identified as Freeway)." the regi?nal good." . -, Teeters ':"'as arrested Jan. 11 , 1969 and that of Miss Bemadette Dohm's by her Frank Higgins, 43. an archi· Newport Beach is only one of seven He said the comm1tt~es must consider Need. tO Follow charged v.:1th ~ttempted murder after he sister, Jennifer, a spokesman for the tect for the Huntington Beach communities along the proposed ex-carefully not that they want the freeway stabbed his wife, Melony Yvonne, 23, at Youth International Party -Yippies. Company, has been seated on teruiion of the freeway south from the in somebody else's back yard. but why the couple's home. Mrs. Teeters was "Now we are everywhere and ne1t the Huntington Beach Planning Garden Grove Freeway to the coast that they want it in somebody else's back Ri , d p hospitalized and ga.ve birth to her child ·week families and tribes will attack the Commi.ssion. Higgins, 6872 Sea· hive been asked to appoint advisory yard." g1 altem by caesarean section shortly after the enemy around the country," the tlpe way Circle, replaces Richard panels to discuss the proposed lG-mile et· He said all concern~ cannot "~xpec:;~ stabbing. said. Tom, who resigned. tension of the super highway. too much from the ad visory committees A well defined pattern must be followed 1;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;a' but said they can only determine . "how whe'n anyTesidents attempt to change the DAILY PILOT OIAMOI. C0oUT PU•l.1$HING CIJMPAlf't ReNrt N, WM .... lllfnl .,.. PllllOWI' J•ck R. Cuilt'( Viet Pmkl.,I t rA G«l\l'r1I MIMttr The'"•• Ktt'ril Elfllar Tflt1l'lll A.. MUTpl!l~• loltnlllni 1:117~ Alan Dirk i• Wfd oni,._ c.unty hlt...- Albeft W. l1t 11 "-I"-l"•ller Hatf91tN IHlil Office 17175 leecti le•lev•rd Melli .. Adcl1•u1 P.O. In 190, 92641 ...... - ·-- best to minimize the impact of ~ boundaries of a school district. treeway.'' Several parents in the northern section . P.ark agreed that In the eild the panels of Fountain Valley have taken the first could 'recommend that no freeway be step of that p1ttern by circulating peti- bullt, if that l!l the only conclusion. .tions to withdraw fi"om the Garden Grove "II-the need !or the freeway does J!Ot Unified School District and join the Foun- outweigh tbe environmental impacts, taln Valley School District. then.we could recommend no freeway be Here's· what must be done before any 'bullt," Park said. achoo! boundary sw~p is possible : He said the planning should not begin -Residents. of the area must gain the by putting alternative route.s down on a .signatures of 2.i percent of the registered map. voter!! in the disputed section who are in ''There must be 1 C1)Tltinual recording favor of a boundary change, In the Foun- of community concerns." he &aid. "as lain Valley case the estimated number of soon as we \earn these we will be able to signatures needed is SSS. come up with an alignment." --COmpleted petitions must then be He Sa'.d, "the more vie know, the better riled with th! Orange County Superinten-dent of Schools and with the board of we will be able to present alternative~." trustees of the school dlslricl residents Park said much of the op-po!ilion tO want to join (Fountain Valley ). freeways in general comes from I~ -Trustees of the desired school district dividuals and organizations s i m PI Y then deci.de If they want to accept or re- because of a lack of knowledge -a ject the new area. general rear of freeways. 1 -lf the district accepts the petlti('ned "We hope we will be able to dispel this area, the matter is returned to the c:oun· fear," Park said, indicating that the ·ty !iChools 1uperintendtnt Coi tludy ·by I presence of the consulting experts in lht apecial county committee .on scllool or- plaMing picture may be for that reason aaniiation. as much as any other. • -The committee has 20 days to study Park else Hid he will be able to spot the proposal at the end or which 1 rec:om- any proble.mir that the lay c:ommittee mendalion is handed to the county board members might not be able to recognize. of education. At this point. the parent The committee also discussed It! rela· school district (Garden Grove) makes il3 tionshlp with the varioos levels of govern· po!llllon tlear either favoring or opposing th! move ment concerned with the fretway. -Then the decision Is In the hands of Carle!On told them that most of their the county Board or Education. which input sbotlld be put to UJe by their may hold hearing9 on the mailer. lf there respective city councils, who have the Is 1 dispute and it cannot be rt!Olved ulilma[a local authority ii'I route a<foptlOn ·~ tbe county level, the proposal can then an'd rou~ agreements. • be handed over to the state Board of Ed- He said the stale ,,_,,ill bene!lt. too, but ucation. stressed tilt Hlghw11y Divis ion wUJ do all -State bolrd members may then order It can not to Interfere with the workings the transfer or boundaries or call for an of the panels. el~cllon to dtclde the issue. • ......... • x.r.-,,.-.· • Band-stiched Ad~ that will Mlrv ...... bn,U: dOW'L • 12% more 'O .. bie u. Gl 1leepinr IUJ'face. 1 . I ttJ UphGJ1tertd with d~ layen ol lluftJ Dacroa br I>. Pont. • Roll•nd Maid l•JI"'°' ~rinr for lft•ttt It.a-bility •nd eom!ort. ........ ,. h•11d-tt.d .,_ •prinr-th• •T7 .t tli.• lndaetry. • .... to. .. ~-=.·~-­--Jiit a&ld.. , , --. fl99.SO ... -.. ·---··-··$279.50 ...... ··--··-····$369.50 .... ..... y .. faooriU -""""'"' toCll k "°PPr lo -,.. ••• H.J.GARRETT fURNll1JRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS I I HIS HARIOR lt'tO. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646-0l'I' _, - I I I .--...--~··------------------- DAILY .. IP,.OT .. lt91t' ~ LN .. ffM • Thund1Y, OctoOtt 8. 1970 H DAILY "1DT 3 Welfare Reform Nix ea ,-Senate Committee Rejects Nixon Plan WASHINGTON fAP) The Senate Finance Committee vvted Thursday to reject Praident Nixon's-we.lfatL.Ieform plan but agreed to aupporl a limited test or the conll'Ollerslal proposal. The committee'• poaltlon emerged in a scriea ol test votes which. r.esult~Jn a scll><.cik toJl!U'rnldenl~h•!..<~ the Family Assistance Plan (FAP ) his No. 1 dQmesUc proposal of this Coriifess. However, the administration forces still will have a chance to win on the issue on the Senate noor when Congress returns in November after an election ~ss. In that debate, F AP is expected to be olfered as an amendment to a Social Security bill which the Finance Com· mittee may approve next week. Adminlslj':alion_offl£ial!_ have _pr:edicted they will have 60 votes for F AP on the floor, a comfortable margin, In Thursday's tests, the committee first rejected 14-1 a motion to approve the F AP bill passed by the House last April. This was not a cenclusive test or the plan's strength in the committee. however. since aome members favored a more liberal propoul than the House Version. - TU -IUoo baa ctJ11<red on the .. umal<d 44. t bUlloo cost ol th6 plan and on its proviJkln t.o give. beneflll for the first time to the working poor, thus ~ting the welfare rolls lo a potential 24 mllllon. About 20 million now get the uaiJtance paymenta. The ptan would provide a bule annual federal payment of t11eoo fer a family of four . But,. under U, total bf:neflll would reacl\ ·a tevd of about $8,000 for .,such "' family in some states. * *~* * * 1!._ Nixon Crime C.r-ackdown Bill Approved in House WASHINGTON (UPI) -The House p a s_s...e Lovecw.helmio&ly '(~y President Nixon's bill to crack down on organiz,ed crime and terrorist bombings despite objections it would not work and would endanger Constitutional rights of all citizens. Passage of the blll was the second major victory for the President in two \veeks in getting House aclion on crime bills he complains have been delayed unduly. extended sentences for habitual or pro· resslonat_crunma111. The antibombing section W1)1.l)d regu- late sale of explosives, provide the death penalty for bombings that caUSe aftalltie.s and let FBI agents intervene in campus bombing cases even if local authorities oppose auch intervention . Joseph Kennedy Suh8 For His Uncle · Ted SENATOR MURPHY CHARMS THE LADIES DURING GOP CONFAll IN ANAHEIM Californi1 School Chief Max Rafferty Joins in the Fun With Tricia and Nancy Then the panel voted 9-3 to add lo the Social Secur ity bill some form of test of FAP, possibl y in three localities. Chairman Russell 8. Long ("0-La . ), said the actual form of the test would be worked out by the committee's staff and considered at a meeting next Tuesday. Eirlier the House J>assed a compre- hensive bill to light the drug problem, which al so aroused dispute on constitu- tional grounds , and Ille Senate was mov- ing \llednesday nighl toward passage of that measure. AfEDFORO. Mass. IAP) -Young Joseph Kennedy had to borrow a neckUe first but the 18·year-old aon of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy filled in ac - ceptably for his uncle Edward al a City Murphy , Insists Tunn,ey E~plain 'Peacenik Deal' Sen. George Murphy W e d n e s d a y demanded his opponent John Tunney prOvi· he has made no Political deals wit h ·iwo 7'llltrl libEiril PeaCenUt" groups thal · dOnated $60,000 to the Tunney campaign. . sP.eaking at the convention of the 10uthern d i v i s i o n of the California Federation or Republican W o m e n , Aturphy said he'd "like to knOw· if there \Vere any agreements or political un- ders~andings arrived at before these very large .donations were made." ·The incumbent se·nator did not name tt-e two ·grou~ in his speech al the luncheon meeting. cha racterizing the groUps only as ··peace at any pr-ice peaceniks. ·• He later told nev.•smen they "''ere the National Committee for an Effective Congress and a fund -raising organization \llt&ded by Sen. Georit McGovern (D· SOD.). Informed of M~hy's state~~t. Tun· he}'. ackno\\1Jedged the contributions and ooted ·that the committee has been active for· years on behalf of liberal candidates. He also pointed out that ri.tcGovern is a ~ible candidate for the 1 9 7 2 Democratic presidential nominalion. ".Hi& statement just shows what a shallow ul'll:erstandlng of these organiza- tions Sen. Murphy has," Tunney said. While Murphy delivered the keynote address of the convent.ion, it was obvious - Paper Changes -Mind, Endorses ·Riles for Post SACRA~1ENTO (AP ) -The San Jose 1'-1ercury, which endorsed the re-election campaign of s1ate schools chief fi.1ax Ra f. ferty during the June primary. did an "bout face today and urged voters lo elect his general election opponent, \Vilson Riles. The Mercury, in a lengthy editorial in today's edition. said , "This decision is prompted largely, but not entirely, by the aordld nature o( the Rarferty re-election campaign, an effort characterized by 1mear and innuendo." J The morning newspaper. published by J. 8 . Ridder, supported Sen. Alan CraMton, who defeated Rafferty in the 1161 Senate race. It supported Ra[ferty's re-election in 1966 to the school post. .,.,·ere most takel\ with his table1nates - Tricia Nixoo, Nancy Reagan and Ivy Baker Priest. The president~s -eldest-daughter Is scheduled to return to Washington today after a three-day stay in Southern California where she campaigned for Murphy. During a brief meeting \vith the press ~bifure Muri)hy'S spt?eCh WeOneSday, h~ petite blonde said she was honored to be campaigning for her former boss. S~e \\'Orked as a secretary for Murphy 1n 1967. •·t enjoy campaigning for something I believe in. California. as ihe most populous state in the nation, leads the way for the whole country," she said. All three women spoke brieOy to the convention. urging the partisan audience to work for Republican candidates during the remaining 26 days of the campaign. While 1'1rs. Priest. the state treasurer . assured the women that their effort! \\"ould bring a Republican victory in November, the slate's First Lady warned of the dangers of overconfidence. •·overconfidence is the way you lose elections. So it 's important to keep right on working up to election day," she said. Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke also made an ap- pearance at the podium to boost the Republican cause. "1 have great con- fidence that the voters of this state will iise to theit responsibility and give Gov. Reagan the team he needs in Sacramento and President Nixon the team he needs in Washlngton," he said. County Jobless Rate Hits 7.1% Unemployment hit a nine.year high in Orange County in September \\'ilh 7.1 percent of the work force affected . The state Department of Human Resources said there were 33,000 unemployed in the county in September. Of that number, :'1.800 "'·ere aerospace and electronics workers. Last month the U.S. Department of Labor declared the county to be in the "substantially unemployed'' category which gives county aerospace firms first priority on federal defense and space contracts. Orange County ranked second highest in Southern California during September in unemployment. Only Ventura County was higher with a jobless rate of 1.2 per· cenl Daily Pilot Will Present Lectures on Real Estate For the sixth consecutive year, the DAILY PILOT today announced plans to 1-'\resent a aeries of lectures on rtal estate iOveatment on a co-spoMOrshlp basis with ~ Orange COasl College District • Tht big change in the program in this tpo edition, however, is that it is to be moved from the Harbor Area to the Golden West College campus in Hun- Ungton Beech. .. Tbt Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley Board of Realtors also has joined the Uneup as a co.sponsor of the four-part 11tries, starting next Tue~ay, Oct. 13. The Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley rtalton' group replaces the N~wport tt·arbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors . Which has been a part of ,the program ilnce Its inception five years ago. : U'r. t.ortn Pttoll. dirt:ctor of the Evtning tollege Oivl!I~. Goldtn \\'est College, 8ald move.ment of tht lectu~s to his campus was view@d a~ an appropriate ~p. The 1970 census figures indicated Hun. tington Beach -with tenfold growth since the last official census tn 1960 -Is one of the fastest growing urban areas in the world . Real estate acUvity in West Orana;t County can be expected to continue to in· crease. The lecture series, open to the public free of charge, wUI consi.$t of four pro- grams, each lasting approximately two hours. They will begin at 7:30 p.m. on fou r conseeutive Tucadays. All programs will be presented in the College Center. First program, ''Tailoring Your Invest. ment." will be pre.stnled by Randall McCard1t. DAILY PILOT real estate page l'Olumnist, president of the Real Eot.tt<rs firm Jn<! longtime Oran(t coa.1 area realtcr. • Pat i\tcVay of McVay Real Estate, Fountain V11l\ey1 will ht modcr1tor for the four lectures. • Jordan Toll Lowered The organiud crime bill, which passed the Senate in January in tougher form . is the major proposaJ in Nison's 13-Poinl anticrime package. Hall r~ption. ~ WASHINGTON tUPl) -The State Department says there were 400 to MIO persons killed in the recent Jordanian civil war-not the 20,000 casualties the guerrillas claimed dur ing the con!lict. The Finance Committee's rejection or F AP was expected. The panel has been considering the plan for six months and most of its members have indicated strong opposition to it. ll would make organized gambling a federal crime , bar investment of crimi- nal gains tn legitimate business and lillow The uncle. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy ID-Mass.), was lo have been the gueat of honor but cooldn't make it and Joeeph appeared Wednesday · as a laat-minute replacement. -........ - • • IS11 Bulbs now ••• daffodils later. Hyaclnlh bulb& for fragrant flowers later. Pink, blue, red, white, yellow. 69¢f'!c.ol5 ,,.._ Hummingbird Feeder. lifelike plastic Gfoxinia blossom with ":-=C::.. directions. 79¢··· Kellogg's Nltro~umus Top Dr-Ing. Excellent seed cover for lawns, flower beds. Won 't bu rn lawns, Is wee1Hree, odor· free. 3 cu. ft. baQ, 2.19 99~ King Alfred Dllloclll1 (#2 size) in mixed colors to.add delicate color to )'OUI' garden. Pk. of 9 YellowKing.-Dallodllt 166 '" golden 8Urlbural shades. 3 lb. bag, Glori• Va1e, Mexican hand painted in assorted exciting colon. 649 . large 329 sm&ll Bedding pl1n1t. 3 kinds. Choose any or all 31 Pan- sies, snapdragons, ·stock. Assorted colors. 44¢ttay l\nne111 save$1 Venus Fly T11111 . ..actwilly traps and digesls llies. Useful and edueatlonaL 69¢Pl<.of2 Evergreens, 5 gal container .------·-i.1 I Evergreens, 1 gal. container .... ---·-· 77~ Air Fem needs noth- ing but air to live along, IUl<uriant lff~. small Pot 39¢ Scoll'I Super Twf Build- ., Sale.Greens and thick· ens grass or dichondra lawns. 6000 IQ. ft. bag. Reg. 9.95, NOW 8.95 Charge It at ti-Penney stores: CARLSBAD DOWNEY MONTClAJR NEWPORT BEACH Shop Sundays, too, 12 to 5 p.m. • DAft.V PltDT JULIAN. Cjllif. I AP) -The an- nual twl>-week weed show. with about 125 varieties of weeds irown locally, °"""' Saturday in Julian, Calif. with visitors expected from throughout the United States. As a feature, Mairai• Cowan will demon- __ _,.1trate ways to ar.range weeds for the dining room table. • During bis lifetime, retired po- liceman R11ul C11rg11l11rio donated 'more than 159 quarts of blood. At his death ·at 66, the entire village of Castelo Branco in Mozambique turned out for his funeral to show their gratitude. -.• . An item in the Pretoria, S. Africa government's bul1etin for tenders reminds suppliers of hangmen's ropes that the closing date fot bids is Sept. 28. South Africa has one of the world's highest rates of le- gal executions. • The official New China News Agency reported that the Peking Brewery is busy producing hydr0o gen medicines, insecticides, poly· crydalline silicon and potassium· sodium tart.rate. No mention was made of beer. • John Thompson of Bay City, Mich. enjoys-caMed beer so much that be has 728 cans in his base· ment. The only unusual thing about John's interest in beer is that all 728 cans are empty on shelves and make up a collection that dates !rOiil 1934.' • • Ronald Soute, 28, and Bea Be,.. him 22 have set sail from Hono- lulu in hopes of becoming the first persons tO sail a Tulibe.r raft from Hawaii to San Francisco. They hope to make the voyage in two or three months. Their airline emer· gency raft is named "Shark Bait.'' • A corn cob bas ended the life of Skipper the performing dolphil). Skipper's handlers found the mam-- rnal dead on the bottom of his tank Thursday al the Tri-Staie fair in Amarillo, Tex. An autopsy per· formed by a veterinarian !hows Skipper, owned by a Freeport. N.Y., firm, d ied from Swallowmg a com cob that fair officials said apparently had been thrown into the outdoor tank. The mammal'.s _handler-a-Hid ·Skipper was worth • Color names have gone political as exhibitors prepare for the'"Paris ready·t~wear fashion showin~s scheduled for Oct. 17-22. There will be Mao red, Anarchist black and Tear Gas gray. There will also be a CRS blu"e, named after French riot police who io by those initials and wear blue uniforms. • For years, it has been the house· wife's prerogative to squeeze to- matoes in the produce department to test for freshness. But the Agri· culture Department at West Vir· ginia University has developed a' machine to do the same job, with more genUeness and accurately than the housewife's fingers. A por· tab1e and inexpensive, "pressure load" meter will be used to test tomatoes and other fruit in sear· ches for the better tomato. 'Conspiracy' Told Kettering, Ohio Police Chief John R. Shyrock addresses the Inter· national Association of Chiefs of Police in AUantic City, N.J. follow· ing his election and swearing in as the group'~ new president. He said after the closing banquet.i that he believes police are targets of a national death conspiracy./ Militar~ teftists Quash Rightist Bid in_Q91itla LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) -Military leftists appear to be in control of Bolivia again after squelching a conservative -attempt -to take p<iwer. Gen. Juan Jose Torres declared him· self president Wednesday after routing Gen. Rogelio Miranda and indicated his .government would move farther to the 1eft. Miranda, the conservative army chief of staff, a day earlier had forced the resignation or President Alfredo Sadat Seen Big Winner in Egypt Vote on Oct. 15 Anwar Sadat emerged as Egypt's in· terim president today and with a pledge to follow the policies of Gamal Abdel Nasser appeared likely to win the Oct. 15 national pl ebescite by wn overwhelming majority and to rule Egypt for the nexl six years. Unanimously nominatlli to th • presidency by 353 National Assembly members meeting in extraordinary session Wednesday night, the fonner two- time vice president spelled out a sit-point program in a 20-minute acceptance speech closely tuned to Nasser's foreign and domestic policies. Sadat pledged to press Egypt's "'conflid of destiny" with Israel. vowed to recover all the territory seized by Jsrael during the 1967 June war and to assist the Palestinian Liberation move- ment in following the goals of his prederessor. with whom he was closely associated since 1936. Tn Jordan, Amman radio said the Arab officials who engineered a cease-fire bet"·een the Palestinian guerrillas and troops loyal to King Hussein during the Jordanian civil war worked out a new agreement today to govern relationa between the belligerents. Ovando Cania, ~ho had headed a left. isl military regime aince a coup a year ago. 'l'orru, _relieved ~of. bis ~.posilion....as - commander in chief of the armed forces several months ago because of pressure from Miranda, declared his was "the revolution of the people, who manife st thi;ir unwavering_ wil!_ to take the route of national liberation." Only o~ report indicated his control of the country might not be complete. A radio report from the mining town of Oruro, 12d miles southeast of La Paz, said Ollicers -loyal to Miranda had killed IO leftist demonstrators who appeared about to assault a divisional headquar- ters. It was the only bloodshed reported in the four~y power struggle within the military clique that has ruled Boli· via for the past six years. Torres appeared -to ha~e s~-~ port from students, farmers, workers and powerful segments of the armed forces. After Miranda capitulated, he rode from his headquarters out.side La Paz to the presidential palace through cheering crowds massed along the streets. There he took the oath of office and then told a cheering crowd in a rpeech from the palace balcony: "So that the people never again will be betrayed in their hopes, we have sponsored an unbreakable alliance of the workers and the armed forces. They will be, together with the people, the force of this revolution." He said the government would create new jobs with "fair salaries for workers" and would defend Bolivia's natural re- sources. This indicated there would be no retreat from the nationalization of the U.S. Gulf Oil C.O.'s local holdings, an action by the Ovando regime which apparently helped to trigger the at· tempted conservative coup. "When this president. who comes from a humble origin, fails, ask for his resignation," Torres said. Anned civilians freed several leftists prisoners from jail. Freeze Grips West States Foot of Snow i1i Rockies ; Nea r Zero in Wyo ming California LOS AHGl!:LIES AMD \llCINITV - S.Unn"<' •I'd wermtt FrlH¥. L«t t 11,_ tlld'f" nortf\N1I Wllldl tie!-CHI• }'OllS ,Hl9~ Frldl'f" n. Low tonl•M .sa. "OINT CONCE~TION TO ME>CICA N I OllD£1t -SMell crtft '"''"lnt1• •ti.olt~td .... llrt trff tor loc•I norlhMtt Wlftds lfl l'O JCI kMI• 11 l lm" flMr Clll)'IMll. O"--be lltl'll y1r/1bl1 .,.ll!Ch. lllolll 11111 "'°"'11111 houri --IM MSNll'h' 1 to 15 kMlt 111 lfllf"l\OOfl FrlCNY· SllllllY "'' Ind clffr 11lolltl. W1r1111r. ' COOL '1PIWEATMI• ,OTOt•Sf® SVM• fod41 '1', 1..ltllf .,,,lt,lt Wirlft ,...,., 111d momlnt '*"" 11tcomlnt l!Ortl'lwH "11Y" It l'O 20 luloh 111 1llt•• 1tOOM todl• elld l'tkl.l'I'. Hltft todt• 1J. CMt•el -1111••• •lftlfl frOl?I .S. THU._SOAY A w111'"' \ION!\ 111411 dutt>Pld 111 hi I loot Of I,_ In Ille COior.-llloetit. r1"fM 11110 K111111 •nfl 0-.ltlloml 19- •UY afld """'' •-1tvru Mt• n,. 111 "'' of W'forlllftl. Cold<WIYI w..-11ll'lt' """' ""''" It l•f -!JI 11 ~ Ntw M .. lco 1f!d llOllloM of Afli -. T ... Hrthtrn ~II I I mvel'I II fO fttfH I t lont 11141 l!onn'• "''"'· .,..,,, .... " .... .,.1 .. , tM ttocitmtll '""'•IM'll 111 ellect I-or Cola•IOG 11111 Temperature• Atbe11'1' Al~u-1 ... lltnlt 11im1•ct ""' 8otlOll 8uffllo Cl'ltrlo!!t ClllCttO (lr>elnMll ci ....... 1111 ...,_ ...... _ ....... F-''119111rt l'ort Worlll ··-HoMlulv llldltMllOllt Jtdti.oowlllt ,_ kllflMl1 Cltv LOIA-'" 1..ou11vmt M-• M .... MllwtutK ML-.POti•St, Ptul N-OrlH nl NIW Yartr Oklt~ City ....... Pl'llttdelPhlt p,.,.,,;. Plltsbu,.l'I "flrtl111(1, Me1N 1"ort11n11, er.tOll lt1Jtlf Cit• Hllfl l.ew l"r.~. .,, .. " " " " " n n " " • " • .. • • .. " .. .. " " n " .. " " " " " " • " • " " • " " .. " ,. " " " .. .. " l ? ,11 " " "' " .~ n " " " " " ... " " IJ .It ,, .l1 n AO ., .Ot «I T.11 ., " ., " " " " .. " " .. ·" • Reds Continue Daylong Raids ' PHNOM PENH (UPI) -'Communist-< Phnom Penh lllelf WU in the mlcht of. forces tAiiay carried out tfiifr thirdco~--finaJ PfeP&f&Uonl--for a cala...celebraUon-. . . Friday marking ·the declaration of a secutive nudnJgbt-to-dawn ittack against republican form of government fot Cam· 1 government offensive stalled near the bodia, ending the long reign of Prince town of Prakham, '8 miles north of Norodom Sihanouk aml hls anceston. Phnom Penh, but the Cambodians First reports of toda~"•f battle were weathered lhe attack with only small bsued in Phnom Penh. losses. " The Cambodian command in Phnom Penh called it the largest Comnnmttt thrult"of the war, but-UPI ~t Kale Webb reported from the !root that officers there esUmated that no more than 400 CommWts were involved in the attack. Field olllcera at Prakham told Mis9 Webb !hat the Cambodians suffered "aboot 20 wounded"· in the attack and that 12 North Vietnamese bodies were recovered. There were several other discrepancies 1n the high command reports in Phnom Penh and reports from officers in the Cambodian drive northward toward Kompong Chom. The high command said between 7,000 and 10,000 Communist soldiers were involved in I.he attack but field reports said only about J,500 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong were in the area. Military officers in Phnom Penh said 11.bout 1,000 Cambodian soldien returning by boat up the Mekong iver from training in South Vietnam Were harassed by Com~ munist mortars but that the troops suf. Canadian Terrorists Postpone Execution MONTREAL (UPI) -The Canadian government and the terrorists who kid· naped a British diplomat inched closer Wednesday -Ui~ kidn~pers poJitp~nling execution of the diplomat and the govern· ment asking them lo begin negotiations for his release. In Montreal, a communique from the Front De Liberation Du Quebec (FLQ), a clandestine French-Canadian separatist group, announced it would postpone for 2 hours -Wltll noon (EDT) today -any action against James R. Cross, the senior Britlsb trade commissioner. fered no casualties. The attack occurred at Moat Kra.sas Kvao, 11iJ miles east of the capital. * * * U.S. War Deaths Drop Sharply, 38 Last Week SAIGON (AP} -The total of American Cleaths in Indochina dropped to 38 last week~ tSe )o}Vest weekly toll in nearly i\2 years, the U.S. Command announced. But the toll for the South Vietnamese in- Creased 40 percent over the week before, and enemy casualties went up slightly. The total number of Americans killed was 25 less than the week before and the lowest since April 18-24, 1966, when 35 were killed. The U.S. Command said 666 Americans were wounded last week, compared to 344 the week belore. A command spokesman said I.be wounded figure jumped because it contained a two-week accumulation of minor wounds that servicemen did not want reported to their families. 'Ibe summary reported a total of 43,775 Americans killed, 289,800 wounded and 1,424 missing or captured in the war since Jan. 1, 1961. The Saigon government sai d 345 of its troops were killed 1ast week and 720 were wounded, an increase from the previous w«.k's 246 Jslll~ an~ .fi~_wounde4. The two allied commands reported 1,468 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese killed last week, 11 more than the claim the week before. · In the war today, South Vietnamese forees were regrouping at a northern base after withdrawing from Firebase O'Reilly, near the Laotian border. Of- ficials said the government troops pulled out because of the approaching monsoon rains, but the North Vietnamese had been pounding lhe base &teadily for twe months. Eddie Turns 80 Living Legend Sifts Memoirs NEW YORK (AP) -Capt. Eddie V. Rickenbacher -one time racing driver, World War I flying ace and survivor of 23 days on a life raft in the Pacific -is 80 years old today, thanks to a "little luck on the side." "I've cheated the old Grim Reaper seven times that I know of," says Rickenbacker, who recalls that his brushes with death have at times been ''painful." "But," he adds, "l have no regrets.'' 1-lis devil-may~are approach toward figh ting the war and living made him the object of wild acclaim when he came home from World War I. He had shot down 2i enemy planes and rise n from sergeant to captain. receiving the Cross of the Legion of Honor, the Croix de Guerre wlth four JaJms, the Distinguished Service Cross with nine oak leaves and 12 years later, he was award· ed the Medal of Honor. As an adviser to the government in World War II, he, along with si.x com- panions. survived 23 days on three tiny rafts after their plane crashed in the Pacific in October 1942. Then, as head of Eastern Air Llneii, he turned a small, losing operation into a large, profitable one. Now, offtcial!Y retired for seven years, he 's been sifting through boxes or mementos and years of memories. The memories went into an autobiography published three years ago. and he's dividing the memenlOs among several museums for '-'when I bwnp off." u,,,..._...r NOBEL PRIZE WINNER Author Solzhenlt1yn Russian Wins Literature Nohel Prize STOCKHOLM (UPI ) -The 1970 Nobel Prize for literature was awarded today to Alexander-1. Solzhenitsyn, the con· troversial Russian author whose work.! are banned at home but read and admired abroad. The prize this year is worth f/8,400. The 52-year-old author of "One Day In the Life of Jvan Denisovich," "Cancer Ward" and "'The First Gircle" said through fri ends in Moscow he was grateful for the prize and would like to go to Sweden to accept it. "I am grateful for the decision," he said. "I accept the prize, I intend to go and receive it personally on the tradi· tional day insofar as it depends on me. I am well and my journey won't hurt my health.'' Despite the calm lone of the statement T iterar~ sl:furces in Moscow sa1d the prize will spell political trouble for the maverick novelist. They ' cited the pressure put on poet Boris Patemak who won the prize in 1958 and then rejected it under pressure. As in the case or Pa sternak's best-sell· Ing novel "Doctor Z h i v ago,'' Solzhenitsyn's mass ive novels about the Stalin Era prison camps were not published in Moscow. However they were circulated in typescript in underground conditions. A few years ago when Solz.henif3yn refused a suggestion from the Soviet Writers Uoion that he disassociate himself from "the slanderous anti-Soviet campaign" abroad connected with hil name, he was told he was free to go abroad to join his like-minded admirers. He was labeled a renegade and compared to Svetlana Alliluyeva, Stalin's defector daughter. He did not lake this offer. Nor did he write to the Communist Party as Pasternak did to say that exile abroad away from his beloved Russia, was tan· tamount to a death sentence. Solzhenitsyn "'as expelled from the writers union this year. Moscow dispatches said the Soviet press probably will mount a campaign against Solzhenitsyn on two grounds -he has written to endear himself to foreign enemies of the Soviet Union. and the Nobel committee awarded the prize as an anti-Soviet gesture. ~1any literary experts In Stockholm had believed that the Swedish Academy or Letters would choose to I g 11 o r e Solzhenitsyn because of the political Im· plications attached to his name. \lll!Ttl......_ Who Cares? N• •fl.tr 111-iP•P•r 111 flit world c•rtl •~owf v•11t co,.,,.,11. ....tty lik• v•111r co1111t1u11ifv d11lv 11tW1p1per 4e11. lf1 tilt DAILY 'llOT. Sl(end hJili . , I.SI'·"'· S..:Of'ld low 11 :d •·"'· 'IUOAY ...,., of Nltw1t111 tlllf n rt t~NMed lo s I nor111Wur.111 IC•"··· IM ""' Olcltl'IOl'f\I o.i "'""'""'•· "'°"~''''" ••kl ••"9f't9. •u\!f ,.,,,,,, "'°""' CIUll lllowl .... '""' d1 !n ln1 al 1now. l"ltll llltll •. . .• 1•00 •"'· •1 .,., .... SI. l,.oult 5111 Ltlo t C!IY ~4" Olt'IO " " " ~ ll " " " " . " l1icog1aito Beatie Visits Flo! 1e.. . ..... ll::M •.m, J& •KOii<! hl9h ....... , •. f.t• 1.m. S' SKOl!d low , tt;3' ~-"'· -ti I J.ull lllHt 4 5' • "'· Seti 1:H ~ m. IN#l lllttl 2.,J 11.m. Wtt 11: ... 1.m. l"lvt IO ""'" ll!Chtl ol '"OW Wll COl?lmOll In Wr111111111 11111 WUlt •ll Ht- bf't\kl t/14 111 K l llt rH t r .. 1 of (OIO< ••ao V11 10 two tllCllt\ w11 f11C11(11M fol llO!'ll\ .. 11ttf~ Okt111em1. ~I" Frt"dKO .s ... 1111 ,. ...... . W11lll11tl01'1 Wl1111I .... ___;.r !) •• h " .. -» ' .II • lla ul tl-'1cGa rtner, member or the no\v di sbanded 1'Bc3lles-nana onCi'tliCSul51ecf of a mfstery death rumor, appeared very much alive in New York • '\Vednesday. lie wa s making his first visi t wi th hi ! wife, the former Linda Eastman o! New York and their daughters Alice, 1, and Heather, 7. I . . I , ' • ' • f 01i _ii tai.1i Va)J.ey· -, · .. ' • -EDITIC) • " , ' ' • '· ' ' • '' , . ' •' Bombs.Uft 3.Target,s ' ' OnComt ... -LT. GUIDO BATTAGLIA INSPECTS MARIN COURT DAMAGE In San RtfHI, Moro Viol-. el tho C°""ly CourthovM --. ' " • Jurist l .n My ,_ Lai Trial RelatedtoBeach .W.oman • ' . . ' ' • ' .Today'• F l!.'!' r . . . . . r ' TEN c::ENTS , n' ' • . .a .. . i . Foes.·l{eep" · I)<>or ~OJ>en 'nit. pa~, has b:e~n ,P•rt'Y cl~ for court action lo prOceed ·on tfle; city .of Hhn'ttniton ·Bf:aeh'1 Sult to ensun .Publtc ·~·to. the tWo..an;d:three~uarter·JD!I• Huntln~n Pad.De' .beach. ~ Sm>erior Coort Judge Harmoo G: 5eov!Ue·Wednesday ovemilfd the'demur- rer filed by. f ot.U"-coi;npanlei ·u; .t6e .. cltj'l auit to aCquire tiOe to public eUemenu o\'er' the property. · ·Tbe cotUt sustained the demurrer qabist another sectiOn Of the ' complaint -the·ejectment acUon-lh which the city 10Ught the removal or certain structures fmm thl,proputy aDd dlmages,pald. The a.!endanll, tile HuntJniti>n Beoch cOmpony, Sland>nl-Oil Compony of · Momla, -HuntingtOn Pacific Corpora- tion iafld Fluor-Huntington, argued that th! stnictures were not named or cleteribed tn the complalhl Jufl«t SCovtlle gave the city 30 days to atnend. the cOniplaint in the ejectnlent ac- t. ' ' .... · AilliJtant· City Attorney Joseph Lisi ~aid t<idoy that the clty<woold ameild· tl\e complaint. "We will n~ the. ltnlc:turtl We are riiferrfnl 'to," he aaid. 1 Usl wou1d not indle1tertoday,1_bowqer; wllat the 111/uctur•s aie. "rtiey ·could be tJlel . a · million · Huntlntton Pacific apirt~ll, oil W.llo, Wllll,_or lenclllc. · !Jal Aid of the judge's. ,.jectlan Jn the oib6 iocllons of tile compUlnt, "In effect tile ,.. Aid •our complalnt WU pd Md the c!ompanies rmat · nwer il t• • " Tllo aimpanles had erlllclud . tbe city In tbo ·demumr for ,oml~lnc..JllOClflc ..... 1'elit111J to -llndi Ulleo end fdioe-lo ideatilr _., It lborellllt ·.,...,tr-•ho a11...,i11.,..ted euemenl rtabU i. Ille pt1bllc:. ·' 'PEACE' IN THIS CEN'l'IJRY' Nixon· Talk~to N•tio.ft School Distr.ict Israel Slaps Pilot TE;L· A'JfY !UPI) -The pilot of the El Al Israel· jet 'Seized momentarily by -Arllb• guerrillas . Sept. 6 has been de- moted tO copilot. status for violating regir litJdnl, -...JrllnC<ifii'clalsr said. W~dnesday, Oruge Weather Things .are warm ing op along !lie Orange Coast, with Friday's hlJh readb1g tabbed at 75 and inland mercury 92. Blame thMC nasty Santi' Ana win:ds ror that. · INSIDE T ODAY Cbpt. Eddie Rickenbacker-' · ,,.. Oflttiffle racing driver,', 'pr~ 4 'Wo.r 1 flying o.c'e and survivor of ZJ days on a raft m th.e Podf.. fie -L.. has' reat;htd hb BOth ' birthdtiy,. Po.gt 4. • ~ ' I I l 1 r I OAIL y PILOT H New Route Possl•le • ' State St udying ~reeway :.LC_han.ge ·· GavttlKlr Rea1an'1 administration Is drlf'tlng a bill that could prnduce a new 1---route for the--E'acific-Coast Freeway 11lilfactory to Newpo11t Beach and other 1urround.ing cities, including Cost& Mesa.· The ineuu.re. wh ich almost was in- troduced lnto the last session of the legtal1ture. would allow the State RiChway Commission to consider chafli-inl specific Unb of any adopted freew11y ""'"" Robert B. Carleson, chier deput y direc- tor of the State Public Works Depart· ment, cilsclosed this and a second poten· 1----'U"'a"l·aolu.tion..lA.tbelteeway_controversy in_ an ·a~ve interview with th@ DAILY · ! · PILOT Wednesday. Clrleaon explained that under present law when a freeway route is opened for reconsideration between two poinl.5, all put qreements are-rMCinded and technically the freeway could be moved in direction. The state No. 2 public worlai official aald the legislation. U adopted. would open the door for .a &0lution to a number of aJmilar controversies on freeway routes. throughout the state. He said Jt would allow Newport Beach and c.o.ta Mesa officials to meet agree on a .new local route for the coastal freeway, then ask the Highway C.Om· tnission to reconsider this section of the adopted .route1 whi~ now closely par~IS the Pacific Coast High~ay through Newport Beach. . . _ . He said tbe·commission would be .under no obligation to reopen coMiderations. However, chances they would agree to do so, with both cities behind the request, would be very good, he added . The adopted route for the future superhighway calls for it to be built within 200 yard& of the Coast Highway in Newport Beach. The route , a portion of which has formal concurrence from the Newport Beach -city Council, has been bitterly fought by a number of Newport resident.,,. C.Osta Mesa officials, -however; <have been reluctan.t to support reopening of the route question, because of the fear -·t11< roul€would-.,;nlhlp1hroup"1he dty lim.it!..of their town. Without the proposed legislation. there still may be another way for Newpo rt Beach and Cos~-Mesa to convinCe the Highwa:t 9>~ajlliQ!t t.o consider a 1pecific alternate local routing. "Very frankly,'' Carleson said, "there ls one 'J)O&slble way to 'guarantee' 1he commission consider a l!ipecific new route under existing law ." He said If the ci ty councllsO tooOi com· munlfles passed resolutions agreeing fo a reopening along a specific route. and in· eluded in lbose resolutions a provi&o that they would not sign a freewa y agretment along any other route than the one-pro- posed, the commission likely would listl!fl; to them. In other words. if both cities agree on a precise alignment of the Pacific Coast Highway through this area, it would stand a good chance of being adopted. Carlesnn placed more_e1111ffiasis QllJ.he legislative solution . however, disclosing that a bill was actually prepared prior to the end of the last session of the legislature, but ju.st too late for in· troduclion. He denied that the department con- sidered the biU "an ace in the hole" wa iting to be played when the liming was right. He indicated the department has been working .t.Owar:d a solution to this kind of problem for a period of time . Carle.son stressed the concern of the sta te in the relationship between the two cities and sa id Governor Reagan's ad- ministration "does not want something like a freewa y to come between the two conimunlties." Thfre have been various alternate ro~tes proposed for the Cn;ist Freeway route and hoth Newport Beach and Costa Mesa officials seemed to agree on one that ·closely parallels 15th Street in Newport Beach. It turned oul, however. the freeway would ha·ve to cut through a corner of Costa Mesa and this did not meet the ap- proval of offi cia ls th ere, who subse· quently dropped support of the plan. It is generally felt that if ;i more inland route could. be designed within the ci ty limits or Newport Beach it could gain the approval of both Costa Mesa and most of the prescn·t Ne~'port freewa y opponents. Opposition to the .presenl route is so fervent. however, I.hat one group in Newport Beach has launched a petitio·n drive-that-would force a referendum on~a demand that the existing freeway agree- men t be rescinded. A companion petition calls -for a referendum on a charter change that wo_!!ld requ!re future city.wide Votes before .9ny freeway agreemtnt s:ould ever be signed. · * * * * * * L Citizens Group Weighs . . . P~oposed. :Superhighway A new state concept tn fret!~!y plan- nin& was launched in Newport Beach last night as the· city's Route 57 (Or11nge Freeway) Citiztm' Advisory Committee met for the first 1ime with a paid oon- .aultln~to ·1tudy~the-need ·and JJto):>oS~ route11 for the new nor t h ·1o u th r;uperhighway in Orange Count y. Robert B. Carle.son, ch ief deputy direc· tor of the. State Public Work s Department wason hand for the meeting, calling it "an historic occasion." . He told the commitlee lt11 purpose. in life is to Identify the best route. possible for the freeway, determining in the pro- cess if the. freeway ls needed. -Carle.son told the cilmmittee members their efforts wlll hopefully "avo1d con· troversies similar to those 11urrounding Routt I 1 tht proposed Pacific Coalit Fretway)." NeWJXirt Beach i!I only nne or seven communities along the proposed ex· tension of the freewa y south from the Garden Grove Frteway to the coa!lt that have been asked to appoint advisory panels to di11cus:s the proposed 1G-mlle ex- tension of the super highway. DAILY PILOT OIANGE COAST PUBLISHING COM,AMY Roh•rt N. w.,4 'rnkh"I t r.d PuMllhtr J1tk R. Cu1!1y Vlc.e l"mkltnl tM Gttloifll Mtri.gtr Thom•• K11 .. a E~i!Or 'TlloMll A. Murphint Mtnlgln<J Edl:et Al111 Dirk i11 W•I Orll9t C:-.ly f dlt.r Al•trt W. 1111, "-"• l!lfltw Hntl .. tn .._. Ofrlce 17175 lttch l oul1vtr4 ~.1u., AdcfrtHi P.O. ltll' 7tO. t 2•41 °'"'"""" U ..... hatll1 tt2 F-1 AVWIUll Col"' M111: no w.t ••r 11...at """'°" t11c11: n11 Wflt •••• _.,....,. a.11 Clll'IW!lt: a5 NNfll ~ Cd\IM lt"I OAl\.'I" '!LOT, wllll w:i;o, W C*'Ml!lcil Ille H_,.,_,. It ~Mltl'M .. n., •we• •- ._, 111 ,_.11tt UHllOM tor ~ lff(ll. ~-" l 11cfl, "'"' M"'' l'NMlflt!M a-fl ..... '-""' 'llllty, ..... wllll ,.,., ,.,1on1t '41111111, Ortflft C:.!11 l'\lllH•llt.ot ~'l't' JWlrlflllf oltitt. a.t II ttll Well att .. t 81W., NtwpOrl l .. cil, Mii Ull W11I ,.r ,,....,, c.11 """'· ,...,.. .. 17141 f4J""4JJ1 ,,._ W_,.hmtr C .. Ml·llH Cl•lfld A4'NffW .. 64J·lt11 (flll't'l'lf'tt. '"" ~... CMll l"t,itollllllflt '--· ,.. -· ........ """""''-· .. JMrlt( ,,..,..,. ... ... .. .,..~ "'" .. -1 IN ~fd wtt1W1 .,._"' Pf'• "'~IM'I "' ..,,."~' _,., ._.,.., tl .. J --Nit I t N...,.,. .. di *"" et.11 M_., (lllltr111t. l llhu•i.t h' U•~ SJ.IS -lltfyl 1W IN!! WJ 1!1111111'1l 1'111111,Y ftt.tlritOtM, UJ1 _.-il!I!'(. ' The others are Huntington ·;Beach, Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa, Santa Ana, Garden Grove and Orange, all of whicll will meet jointly every three months and, in iddition, exc~anse. minutes of the ir mee lings regularly. · The state has budgeted· $150,l!OO fo,.. a consulting firm to meet with the various panels, serving as both an !ntermediary and a -guidin g ligh t. KiSuh Park, a planner with_ the co n· sultan!, Victor Gruen Associates. outlined his firm '-s role in the stud y process. He e~plained that neither he nor his comparty, nor an>' of I.he citizen commit· tee should go 1nt.o the planning pro- cedures "~·ith any preconceived notions.'' ~Park said t~ "fundamental role" or the committees is to "balance the en· vironmental deJir1encies of a rou te with the regional good.'' He said the cnmmitlees must consider carefull y nol that they "want !he freeway in somebody else's back yard. but why thev ~·ant it in .somebody else·s back vafd." · He s;iid all ronccrned ca nnot "expect too much from the advisory committees'' but said they can only determine "how best to minimize the lmpacl of the freeway." Park agreed lhal in I.he end the panels could recommend that no freeway be built. if that Is the only conclusiop. "If the need for the freeway does not outweigh the environmen ta l impacts, then ·we could reco mmend no freeway be built ."--Peri" said. He said the plann ing should not begin by putting alternative routes dov"n on a map. "There must be a continual. recording of community concerm."--he said. "as soon as ~·e learn the.<;! we ~·ill be ab le to com e up with an Alignment." tit said, "the more we know. the better ~·e "''iii be able to present al terna tives.'' Park ~aid much of the opposition to freewa ys in 11:r.neral comes from In# di\'idua ls l'lnd org11.niuilinns Ii Im p 1 y btt'ause of a lack of knowledge -a general fear of free~·ay!l. "We hope we ~·ill be abl' lo dis pel lhi~ fear," Park ~Rid , indicAlinli: th11t the preSfnce ()f I.he consul! ing 'xperL, in the planning picture may be for th11t reason as much as any other. P11rk also AAid he. wlll be Able lo spot any prob lem" that the lay commi~tee members migh t nt>l be ablt to recognize. The <'ommiltee also rllscussed iL, rel a· tionshi p with Ole v1r lous levelii of govern... ment concern'd ~Ith th' free.w11.y. Carlcson told them thl'lt most flf their lnpot should be put to UMJ by the ir respectf\'e city councU!, who havt the uJtimate k>cal 11ulhon1y in NIOlt adopUon-·and route 11grttmtnt.s . He s11id !hf' stat~ "''111 ~efit. tM. but 'tressed the HiAhw11y Divismn u•1U do alt it can not to interfere with the 'o\'Ork1ng1 or Ult panels. f'ull of ·Beans--------·- 3·Factors - On Noise Revealed _, . . . . ' • .. ., .-.. 'nlrft' censideraUons must &flYem the 11olutimi .. to the growing noise pellutieiii problem, an Orange County Le&J!le ef Women Voters conference wart.old this mornmg:--- -· ; R. Dale Be1and, a planner with the co& . ' suiting firm of -W Usey and ·Ham, --th, company h!red by Newport Beach tt. 11tudy noise at Orange Cminty Airport_ outlined those three factors u the coo- lerence in the city of Orange opened. ..., Beland said the most irnpnrtant factor Is the noise reCipient and he urged th~ ..,... this be considered the only ti1ed entity_ln: any proposed solut ion. "Man can adapt to growing noise pou\i. lion but only at ' price," Beland said. "We. must make the system servt us, not us serve the sy11tem, '' he said. Beland pointed nut that the major source of noise. in the outdo&rs Is not from aircraft. Ray Thorp, 8 (in pot), and Billy Pellerin, 8, of lhe Huntington Beach Boys Club, clown a bit while pre- paring for club barbecue from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday at Lake Park. Menu includes 1,000 pounds of beer, plus beans, potato salad, coffee. milk and ice cream. Price for fund·raising feed is S2 for adults and $1 for children. Everyone is invited, . ''It is from its ground transpt')rtaticn syst.em and that system 's rolling st.eek - cars. trucks and buses. "'We cannot blame il all en the aircraft industry," he said. Beland sa id lhe &ther two toil· siderations are the noise scurct and the transmission pa th. He said both are variables. From Page 1 School Chief Questioned BOMBS ... "The noise source offers the most op- tions for modifications." he said pointing out that thert are-several techniques fdr intervention in this element. Over Valley · Boundaries ped all clocks and . ruptured plumbing, sending torrents cf water throulh the building. Night custodian George Pantues 'was t1nly 70 feet away and said it 50llnded Uk• a load ef scrap metal falling. By TERRY COVILLE Of ti" 0.llY l'll1t Sti ff "Any change · of school boundaries in Fountain Valley wouJd have to be looked at carefully.'' . Dr. David H. Paynter, superintendent of the Garden Grove Unified School District, gave lhat-1'eply-·thia -mor-ning when asked h1s position on the move by som·e residents in the· city to transfer from his district to the Fountain Valley School District. "I h~en't ~n any ~t!tioos yet. I've only. heard rumors of .such a. move," he added . · Residents of the" area surrounding Los Amigos High ScbMI claim four petitions are circulating, asking for annexation t.o the Fountain Valley School District. Fountain Valley's City Council gave its support to the annexation move Tuesday night. "A school distri ct can 't follow the ger· rymandered boundaries of a city," Dr. Paynter said. "We ha\'e to be more stable. City ix>undaries are more like t.O change.~' "Making a change simply on the. basis of ci.ty boundaries is not f11.ir to the children. Our boundaries a.re basically soun~ntinued . ''That ·area is lotally planned for schools. We have bought several .sites the.re and Los Amigos High School covers more than just the Fountain Valley area." Dr. Paynter pointed out that his district agreed to A· small boundary change lsst year which gave a small section of Foun- tain Valley lo the Fountain Valley School District. "Tha t was a fair change. It was an Isolated area," he said. The Garden Grove administrator would not say if he flatl y opposed a bOundary CChange in Fountain Valley. but expressed skepticism at the idea. Homeowners there claim they h 'a v e been ignored by the Garden Grove . .district and too many or their .• children have -been bused aut of the area. James Bennett, a leader in the an· nexat~ drive , SJi4.ht: tJopet all,..the peti· -lions will be complete by Oct. l:i. At that time, if complete .. the petitions will be takeif tO t.nel>range County Superin· tendent ()f Schools. The basic decisio n on the boundary change would be in the hands of the coun· ty &ard of Education. Serviceman Sent Back to Hospital In Stabbing Case -Sherif( Louis Mont8nu emphasiil!d thert was no direct evidenct linking the courthouse bombing to the attacks in Santa Barbara and Seattle. . ~h~..!11!.f!laged cou_~o_o~ Is normally used by vacationing Judge Joseph Wilson, who recenUy conducted hearings behind walls of San Quentin in the cases of the so.called Soledad Brothers. ironically, a metaktetecling device Was installed Wednesday to protect against just such incidents and was scheduled to go into operation today, "l don't believe it was singled eut ln any particular judge or court," Sheri fr Montanos added toda y. "But wt are going to increase our security artM.1nd the clock and put &n added personnel" JUDGE ABDUCTED The explosion wa s directiy acrnss the hall from the ene where Judge Harold Haley was abducted in the fatal flight by two convicts and an accomplice. A Westminster serviceman who 1;talr Calls by a man and woman to the bed his pregnant wife. while on weekend University ()f Washington , the fire leave from psychiatric treatment at a department and the Seattle Times 25 veterans hospital has been sent back to Atascadero State Hospital as not having minutes before the Clark Hall blast warn· fully recovered his sanity. ed them cf it. Thomas Clifton Teeters. 211, of 13872 La The bomb was planted in the basement Pat Pla ce, was returned from the of the structure. which houses Navy and hospital last month as capabl! of stan· Air Force ROTC unit.'>. ding trial but Superior Court J u d g e "It was quite a blast." !laid university James F. Judge ruled. that he was in-spoke sman Irv Blumenfeld, who theorii· nocent, by re;i59n of insanity, of two ed the bomb was planted before Wed· felonious assault charges. nesday's 5 p.m. closing time. The judge called for additional report., He11vy damage resulted and 1 shower Beland cited the new retro.fitting pro- gram under study by several major com· paliies in the av iation industry. The retro.fitting process is 5eekinf ways tn basically tone down the neige; emitled by jet engines. "The transmission path element 1$- mort difficull to work with." Beland said, pointing out its "greatest value is before the fact." He explained thRl this can be' controlled best by ''Requiring enoug h land' tc separate it as far as possible from in~ habited areas." · . The noise. recipient however. Belandi stressed is the only element that should• not be-tinkered with. He said severai' methods havt been devised to measure all pollution levels including noise pollu· lion. · Beland said there are soine 30 differenf noise. measuring scales. '1:! -tr·-_ ..A. from psychiatrists on his prl!llen t men tal of glass new 50 feet around the building. J.-f condition and those reporL-.; received this A Weathtnnan tap! recording was OAILY l'ILOT ''-" Jtllelot Sc hool Annexers 'w,•.•,.k hled 00 pt,.•,,,h,is be ing sen t back to the played Wednesday at a New York news ~'e10 Pla11ne r _ __ conference and the voice identified as Teeters was arrested Jan. 11, 1969 and tha t of Miss Bernadette Dohm's by her f'~rank Higgins, 43. a n archj. N d F II charged with attempted murdtr s.fter he sister. Jennifer, a spokesman for the tect for the Huntington Beach ee . {0 0 OW stabbed his wife , Melony Yvonne, 11, at You th International Party -Yippies. Company, has ~en seated on the couple's home. Mr11. Teeters was "Now we are everywhert and next the Huntington Beach Planning Ri , d p hospitalized and gave birth to her child \\'eek families and tribes will attack the Commi.ssion. Higgins, 68~2 Sea~ gl 8 lfCf ll by Caesarean section shorily after the. enemy around tbe country," the tape way Circle. replaces Richard stabbing. said. Tom. who resi gned. A well defined pattern must be followed I ~;;;;;;;;~:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;,;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;_..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;- when any resident« attempt to change the boundaries of a school district. Several parents in the northern section of Fou ntain Valley ha ve taken the first step of that pattern by circulating peti· tions to withdraw from the Garden Grove Unified School Di:itrict and join the Fou"" lain Valley School District. Here's what must be done before any school bounriary swap is possib!': -Residents of the area must gain the si,l{natures of 25 percent of the registered voters in lhe disputed section who are In favor ()f a boundary change. In !he Fnu n- tain Valley calie the estima ted nu mber of signatures needed" is 555. -Completed petiti()nS must then be riled with the Orange County Superi'nten· dent of Schools and with the boerrl of trustees of the !!Choo! dist ric t resi dents want to join <f ountain Valley). -Trust ees of the deslted school district lhP.n decide If they want to accept or re- ject !he new area. -If the district accepts tht. pt\illnnerl area. the matter is returned to the coun- 1.Y schools superintendent for 1tudy by a spe;cial t'ounty committee on school or· ganiiation. .... Th~ comm ltlM' has 21\ d~y~ In sturly !ht proposal .,t the tnd of which " rteom- mendatlon is handed to the county bn11nt nf educa tion. At this point, the parent school dlstri ct I G1rden Grove) mikes ita posltinn clear either favoring or opposing lhe move. -Thf'n the decii:inn ls ln the hands of lhe i:nun ty Brn1rd nf Educatinn, which ma y hold hearings on the m111er. tf there. Is ·~ dlsP.ite· and it Cinno• bf' rHftf\'t'd at tht county ltvel, the pmpos111 c•n thr.n ~ hrtndfd O\'er IO t.ht slate Board Of Ed· ucatlon. -Statt board mtmber1 may then ordtr the transfer of boundarlts or call for an elecllon to decide the lssue. RIP VAN WINKLE mattress Handcrafted by ~. ~ • Jlld• -"',,, _ • Bud-•tichM 8idt•alla that .-ill -.er as _. bf'U\:: rioW'JI, • 12ir.. metre Jt:flellbJe ana ot' •leepinr r;11.rf•C9. / .• Uphol•Yrtd with ~ ltJ f!T'I of n ut.f7 Dacroili by Du Pont. • B olla111f M •id i•~ SJ)rinr !M rru~r -... hilit"y a11d romt'ort. •A-way >iaYid·tied M: aprinjf -the en..,-.t. the inda1try. • Fan 20.ye.r awu•e -~ pro..niod. -.. .... ___ $199.50 ... • -.. ·-·----.. $2 79.5 0 ... .. • \ ..., ., ·----····$369.SO I'll .. YOI jmioriu lnt"'lor ~toll! h 11opi>r to -,.. ••• H.J.GARl\ElT fURNllURE PROFfSSION"L INTERIOR DESIGNERS -m 0111 l lVOLY!NS CHAR•l- Opoo ...... 1'llwL • ""· ..... HIS H"RllOtl 11.vtl. COST" MES", C"LIF . 6-46-027' 7 ' II 7 I I · Ne VOL. 63, NO. 241, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ,. , ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA!' . • t ,~ • -. THURSDAY, OCTOBER a: 1970 TEN CENTS ' . State Eyes-Programfor J'.1reeway Compromise Governor Reagan's administration is drafting a bill that could produce a new route for the Pacific Coast .Freeway _utW.a.ctor)Lto...Newport-Beach..and-other aw-rounding cities, including Costa Mesa. The measure, which almost was in- . troduced into the last session of the legislature, would allow the State Highway Commission to consider chang· ing specific links of any adopted freeway route. Robert B. Caileson, chief deputy direc- -k * * Citizen Unit Hears Views On Freeway-, A new state aincept in freeway plan- ning was launched in Newport Beach last night as the city's Route 57 (Orange Freeway) Citizens' Advisory Committee met for the first time with a paid cort- sultant-to· study the need and proposed routes for the , new north-south superhighway in Orange County. Robert B. Carleson, chief deputy direc- ~or of the State Public Works Department tor' of the-si.i. Public< wQ;µ Depart,. ment, dlaclo9ed this ~and a aeamd poten- tial ao.Jutton·to the freeway controversy in an .qduaive,.Jnter:view ... with-the-DAIL. PtlDT Wktnesday, . Carlesoa ·explained that undec . preoent law. ben a:freeway route is opened for reconsideration l>Eltweerf. two points,. .an past agreements are rescinded: Ud technicaUy the ' freeway could ' be moVeil in direction. " The ""'"'· No. I public lier ks· officio) --·- said the. legialatlon, U .adopted, would open the ~ for a,sotuUon to a nwnber of similar ~troven.ies on ·freeway ...... ~lllie...~~~~ He said it would allow Newport Beach and CQlta Mesa offtciall to meet, agree en a new local route for the coastal freeway, tbtn ut' the. Highway Com- mission to r<cqnS!der this oectlon of the adopted route·, wbicb now closely parallels the Pacific Coast Highway through Newport Beach. . .. He iai4 the COl!lll)issio!>, WO\lld be w(a.r resident.. no obliptlon to reopen eonslderatj()ns. Costa Mesa officials, however, have However. chanct.s tbey would agree to do been reluctant to support reopening of ao,-wi~botbreili•bebind-Ahe-request-, -the-route--queetion1 beeause-of-tbe-fear would be very 1ood. be added.. the route would wind up through the city The .ailopted .route fOr the fllture limits of their town . supei:tllgtrway ~calla foi' it to be ,'.built w'ilho~t' the proi>l?se4 legl!.latio~. there within too yaids of \he. Co{at Highway in still may be another way for Newport Newport• Beach. The routt', a ~ of Beach and Costa Mesa to convin~ the which :iw formal concurrence from the High~ay Commission to consider a Newport Beach City Council, hU been spe~ific alternate local routing. bitte~. fought by a number of .ljewport "Very frankly," Carleson said, "there Reds Blast Nixon • Is one possible way to 'guarantee' Ute comm.Juion consider a apeclfic new route under existing law." , He said U the city counells of both com· muniUes passed resolutions agreeing to a reopening along .a specific route, and in- cluded in lhose resolutions a provllo_that . th~y would not .s.lgn a freeway agreement along any other route than the one pro- posed, the commission likely would listen !See FREEWAY, P11e l) Plan North Viet~m L(J,bels Proposal 'Trickery' PARIS (UPI) -. Nor.th ·Vietnam and cf the presidential address which was presented formally at .today's session by the Viet Cong today condemned Pteaident received here aL 2"a.m., and from c;om.-Ambassador David K. E. Bruce. But both Nixon~s peace plan u gunboat diplomacy municaUons with Hanoi. Madame Binh, 'n!uy and ·Madame Binh were thoroughly aimed at perpetuating U.S. "aggression'' swathed in a warm win_ter ·co{l.t despite familiar with them when they arrived. The south Vi~tnamese reaction favor· lng the Nb.on plan followed by several hours an unfavorable response by other South Vietnamese officials. in Vietnam, but they ·agreed to discuss it the mild autumn weather.., was grim fao-. Meanwhile, much ·of the world reacted iii future negotiaUons. . . ed when stie arrived for. ~y's tf.lks. , · with praise to Nixon's call for an im-"The proposal' of a cease-fire is un. Both Xuan Thuy, lhe North Vietnamese Tbefr ,.language -was harsh but "Uiere mediate cease-ore--in the search~ for ---favorable-to us," Secretary of State minister of slate, and Mme. Nguyen Thi was rio 'outright · rejection i·n their peace in Indochina . but some Nguyen Tien Hy said in Saigon shorUy Binh, the "foreign. minister" in the Viet statements . made befOre and during governments and statesme n expressd af~ Nil:on'a address. Other South Viet- Cong government. called the offer today 's session, the, 87th. · doubt of its success. namese officials said the Communistl .political .trickery aimed at winning votes -They did not~mention· Nixon's offer to South Vietnam said it was In agret-were certain to reject-the proposals. ~~~?~I ~~~d !o!_ t~e-!?eetin~, c~lH~ it __ _ an u swr1c occasion_ for the Republicans in the November exchange prisoners-ment : with the proposals. The Saigon But a statement from Saigon-radio said ---'eJ.ecliOns:-... -.--~ ... -----nie "N"tiOOCilf '"'JOi'-~8. ceaSe::fif! g ovf rniTlent.S ild'-fti 'SUitCifili'ff"foUOWtd-1.ater· it "reaffirmed'"lts-earller CBll "fOi' __ _ , Madame._;Binh ·and ·Thuy appe:&ted throughout Indocbina.:.aru:f :offering after discus.siona with the American "free elecUons to determine the future of He told the committee its purpose in life is to identify the best route possible for the freeway, detenniriing irl"the pro- cess i{ the freeway is needed. Carleson told the committee members their efforts will hopefully "avoid con- troversies similar to th<>ee surrounding Route 1 (the proposed Pacific Coast Freeway):'' NeWport...Beachlis....onlJ.:,.one.:oLsev.en communities .Along the proposed tl· tension Of ttie fieeway: south from the Girilen GrOve· Freeway -to ·U>t. coast tlilt have been asked to ipPolnt idvisory panel!-to discuss the propbsed 1G-tnile ex- tension of. the super highway. The others are Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, C.o!la Mesa, Santa Ana, Garden Grove and Orange, all of which will meet jointly every three months and, in 8.ddition, exchange minutes of their meetings regularly . The state has budgeted $150,000 for a __ consulting firni to. l'(l~_et witQ the various panels, serving as both an intermediary and a guiding light. KiSuh Park, a planner with the con- sultant, Victor Gruen Associates, outlined his [inn's rore in ilie Sludf process. He explained that neither he nor his company, nor any of the citizen.commit- tee should go into _ the planning pro- cedures "with.any preconceived notions." Park said the "fundament31 role" of the committees is to "balance the en- vironmental defi ciencies of a route with the regional good." He said the comlnittees must consider carefully not that they "want the freeway in somebody else's back yard, but why they want it in somebody else's back yard." He said all concerned cannot "expect (See CITIZENS, Pa1e !) . ' Mll!IT......_ ~.PEACE IN, THIS CENTURY' · ... NIX,0n ·Talks to Na,llOft . " . Cyclist Injured In Balh~a, Crash: A !Jalboa lsfand man is listed 'in good condition today at Hoag Memorial HoSpi- tal after suffering a fractured wrist' and ankle. in the crash of his motorcycle· Wed- nesday night. · Police said Robert Husby,.24, or 110 Apolel'ia Ave .. was traveling westbound Ofl Balboa Island;s Park AVenue when he collided with a car driven by Robert S. Henry, 22, of 2853 Vista del .Oro; Eastbluff. Henry was not injured; accordi ng to police reports. Israel Slaps Pilot TEL AVIV (!JP!) -The pilot ~f the El Al Israel jet seir.ed momentarily by Arab guerrillas ~t. 6 has. b~n de· moted to copilot'slatus for violating regu- lations, airline officials said Wednesday. ' Dog Sniffs Dope Lawmen Net 26 in ·Drug Dragn,et: By JACK BROBACK 01 11'11 0.llY 1'1101 Sti ff A marijuana-sniffing German shepherd dog was the star o( a countywide narcotics raid early today. Ginger, a member of the Tusti~ police force, sniffed out a batch of.cookies in a San Clemente residence leadmg to the ar· rest of John P. Grabam, 19, or -4045 Pasadena Court Officers said Gtnger detected the allegedly dopeloaded cookies in A auitcase. Officials said the iil icit in- gredient ~.the cooky dough was believed to be. mar11uana. Thia morning's raid in which 26 persons were arrested was the second countywide dragnet in a week. More than 40 police officers from Laguna Beach, San Clemente, Orange and T us t in participated in the roundup. The -2& •arrested had bttn n a m e d in gecret Grand Jury indk:tments aa tlle result cf three months of inve1tlgation by the police officers and state narootlcs of- ficers an~ district a t t o r n e y ' s in- vestigators. · Officers said in the raid today they con- fiscated quantities of herotn; ' LSD, dangerous drugs, marijuana and hashish. Nabbed in Laguna Beach was Gilbert M. Brady, lfl, a transient jailed on charges of selling heroin. \Vhile ofricers weui lookJog for another unidentified ~guna resident, they picked up a man and woman on marijuana possession charges. Jailed and released on their own recosn1tance were 'l'bomu L. Ornw.U. 21. and Kim c.mille Curtis, 22, bo\b of Ill! Victory Walk. Last .lburoday • "'""'tywide raid resill!ed in the arrest of U persons and the discovery of a potential bomb factory and drug laboratory In Modjeska Canyon. The District. Attomey1a Office today announced grand.jury ln4ictment. of J I I . .;,~.J' I people who had been._preVlWS.ly arreitetl1 Jncluded att'Samue.I R. Gtbson, S4, and' Alfred C. Linde, 28, of 1214 ·ralrywood Walk, and Roger B. Decker, 2$, ol $2$ Catalina St .. all of Laguna Beach and Ill charged with the sale of LSD. Also Indicted today was Linda K. Blll'!I!, 18, ol 796 'W. 'Wilson St., Coita Mesa. She was also charied with the ult of heroin. tired, appareoUy ·from a nigbUon& study guidelines for-a politje.l 1etUement were g'overtUJlent.' South Vietnam." .-~~~' ....... ~_:;-~~~~_:;·;.....~~~~~-1 -. Women . Vo1~s ' J I Heat· ft1c;{or '__; !_ -• . J!!f .:f!'1~:;:._~f!~B.•~·. lrcVine CityT Id ~ '.:. -~~ToN ;;;>-=~; .,~ ~ ~v~ ~~ ..... ~~~ -.oncer.ns o ~ · Nll!ft'iMit,_......,.litrJMc<:Mna; ' :-"!l!'r,··;'._· ·::: -. " -. -·ro Endt No~ " 1,-"I· ~ th&t -olf"arineil' rm. ~t. Jndocblhi ceue -fli!nl . n..._._ mg~.': M;;..et "their. weajlql\l:WI relnalll •to .lhi ,poatt1cJ111·~ 'iiO,. h~...'.--· · ' .1,.1~· c 2.-0 { propiOM .ttl Indochina peace~conf~ ! •• an international con- Three ·conslcleratliml muil' a9vern the . ference Ii Miiled to dell with.the conlllct in all three siates ol. lndochlna." A inieting .. thls morning at the Al/porter ·soh.itl.On to the ;rowing noiSe pOlluUon · 3.-~'We. ·ire. nady to :ne~~ an ·agreed timetf,ble for complete With-Inn prdduced ' a list ol. five "concerns" ,problem,' an Or3n1t' County Leagu.e Of drawala U-·Wirt of. in over'all aeUJement.-Wt are prepar,ed to wilbdraw all O:Ut _that 1i1:·orange Coast cities have with the Women Voter! conf~ce wai told tbli forces ; •. '.'' I ' • , r • ' I pro_posed CilY. of Irvine. ·morning. -4.-"I ,ilsk the other ,side to join in• .1e'1'Ch for a political iettleinent that Re'presentatives of Newport Beach, , . . · ,. Coata Mesa, Laguna Beach, Orange, Tus-. R. Dale Beland, a 'planner .with the co~ · truly meetl, thi!: ·aspirations of all South Vietnamese. .tin and Santa Ana met with repre~nta- auliing . firm of Wilsey aqd · Han;i,.· the 5.-"l propose the) immediate 'and unCohdl:t!OnaJ 1'tlea.se· of all priloners tlves of the Council of the Communities .company-hi.red by Newport Beach tp ol"war held 1by bath aidU." · of Irvine (CCI) and the Irvine Company. study..:_nq_ise ~$ Qt:,~'!l~.9Ynty ~!1•--·'---------:--------.,,,:::::::::::;:-::=====:;:::.'.',' __ .. ,,,_.Spokaman.for..lhe-rneeting; MaydrUSr. -• ~· ootlined those lliiie-facttts as the con-"'"·---.. ·--.. ,~·-· In Griset of Santa Ana, said he felt the : ference 4n tlle city o! 'Qr~e apened. -W meeting was very productive. ''This i1 Beland·sli.id 'the most important factor Th D -b v_p sw· ns the fourth such meeting we've had , and is the noise r<elpient IM he urged that . ·ree"-nu·m . -n.,\/, -c. -we wi!J-rneet again Oct;-!9c' he-said. this be considered 1he only fixed entity in The complaints aired by Griset are: any'pioposed soluticin. ~ • ' -The loss of seUo-determinalion for ex- .. "Man can adapt to gtOwing noise' pollu-,~ .: w lsting cities and industry through the bu nJ " " Belah" aid H 0'.i B ld I • . est controlling impact which a few people !!W. m~~ ,;a).~t i:. ~~ .. ,., ':..~ noi 1Ji. Ul . ings in . wm have upon these adjoining land• wben !l)'B they make decisions for the entire 50,000. us serve the system," he said. -The problem of ·the pioposed pl'an re- Beland pointed :out that the major la tin'g ta housi'ng, transportation traffic source of noise in the outdOors. ii' not From Wire Senlces ploaion ln Santa Barbara, which the circulation and open space. ' from aircraft. A series of bomb blasts coming one day Weathermen warned Wednesday would -The problem of illogical boundaries . -·~It is from its ground transportation after tbe ultra-radical Weathermen ter~ be one of their targets across the nation. related to the topography and its bearing system and that system's,rolling stock -roriall declared · an autumn offf:nsive "Part of a wall was blown back, but on delivery of city services. cars, trucks and buses. agalnst Aniericari Society lb8.ttered three there waa no cave-in," said Police Lt. -The problem of inconsistency in the "We cannot blame it all on tbe ·aln:(aft publiC buildings on the West Coast this Fred Baker, who identified the cause as proposed city boundaries with long term industry,'' be said. momtng. definitely a sabotage device: existing agreements -with the Irvine Co., Beland 1aid the other two con· Authorities fear it is onlf'the begiMlng. The armory Is shared by an artillery adjacent cities, the University of Cali- siderations are the noise liOUJ'Ce and tne No one wa.s injured in the explosions in unit of the catilomia National Guard and fomia and I.he general plans of existing transmission path. He said both are ·a Santa. Barbara mill••..., armory, the h d b Arm u....... unit. cities. variables, .... , 1 are Yan Y ,~rve • -The question of the ultimate economic Marin County Civic Center ln San Rafael N f rotec•· It on the nort side b th "The noise source offers the most op-· o ence P ~ via ility of e proposed city which Jn-tions for modifications," he said pointing and a shared ROTC buildirig at the where the bomb exploded and police said elude Its development and its ability to out ttiat there are sevefll techniques for . university of Waahlngton in ~@tt1'. any passerby on the street outalde would raise operating funds through taxes. intervention in this element. T~lephone tips were given ln two ~. have access to the building. . • ,BeJand ~~ the new retro-fitting pro-1eiding police to bustle a jlnitor ·out of -A door was blown off lb binges and gr,am under atud.Y by several majof com-the university's Clark Hall with.in numerous windows were shattered, while . panies in. the.•aviation in'dustry.. minutes of the blast. Interior plaster was damaged.and a small The retro.fitting process is Sttking The sin Rafael blast occurred near lht fire that was quick!)' utinguiahed broke ways to basically tone down the nelse courtroom from which a Superior Court out. emitted by jet engir>es. judge Wu kidnaped Aug. 1 by three black The San Rafael bomb waa planted in a ~"The transmission path element Is revolutioharles who died with him in a .women's restroom, apparenUy during more difficult to work with," Beland said, barra~.of gunfire. business hours Wednesday and reported pointing oUt its 0 greatest value Is before Blasts came in succession, at 1:2'7. 2:« five minutes earlier. the fact." He explained that this can be And 4:15 •.m., at SeatUe, San Rafael and "An excited young woman called an controlled best by "acquirina enou&h land Santa Barbara. operator anonymously and said there was (Set NOISE, Pap t) -No wai'nina: wu given before the ex-(Set 80~, Pap I) Bearing Re•et Tidela.nd Meet .Delaye4 Newport llllllor pioperty .....,. "'1111 plera and docks IOI 1 repr1eve w.,_ day, but It Ir only 1-11'1· lo. P"blic hearing on a propoted lched- ule of fees for use of the tidtlanda wu continued to Dec. II and U.. Boord of Supervisors agreed not to levy • 1111· gested interim ttnlil of M a foot a ytar lor doca and moorlnp anc1:,uo a· Y'" for· Jide-tiea. But the 1upervi90rs decided that ftes will be chart1ed beginnini J111. I, 117L The amount per foot will plo6'bly· be sct at the Dec. 16 hearlna- 11 the fees are not set al ~ time, when. they ·are set they wilt bl ·Tetro- active lo Jan. t, board mtmbtfa.dedded. The cleciaioo lo ch&r .. -~ ,,..... -... .n opinion by c0unty co... · set Adrian Kuyper that prlvato u.en ol · eo.inty.beJd tklellftds must. pay •· fair ltl'ltal· value--for the property. Unut now. such ·Ule9 btve been aJ .. lowei -wttbout• charge to waterfront p~ ptrtf owntts. · s~ey Krause, c:Ouiity 11eli Proper- ·ty ·$ir'vleeo D~l!C!or, had rtCO!ll-laat July Iha! Interim rental r... be chersed µntil a pd'lna.Dtnt fei ached· ule ;eould' be .,l>bli.!hed. Wednndoy be drtiPped that w<>pos&I . and ·SlJllHIOd that detailed study of the Newport Hor- bor be made first. ' .. 1JM 1tud1 will sitart at cmce, Kr1U11 ·1114, and I will. lnvoln his depa.-1, the<!lilY Of Ne1l]>Ol'I 'Beach, .~ 14'1!" port Harbor Chamber ol Commerce, the county Harbor District 111d other lntor· ested groupa . , The 1upervison added another task for department head&. They ul<ed Plan- nJng Director Forest Dickuon and Har· bot Direc,tor , Kenneth $a~peon to eug· ·gest methods for tt;awfng up a muter USC plan fOr the tidelands ll't81 Of the lower Newport Bay, one which would Include both· city and counly,.wntd tlde- lllnds. Tbe city chaiges Udelandi . usen a minimuro lnspeclion and maintenance t .. but does not levy I rtnlo! cbar(e. Krause oaid both the city and chaJn. bet· of commeroe hove agreed to work Clot PIER FUll1 Fop I) No Survivors Found TAIPEI (UPI) -All 13 American miltary personnel aboard a U.S. Air Force transport plane which crashed In ·northern Taiwan ~last-F-riday-apparentt.ly-- were killed. Nationalist Chinese air force sources 11id today. Oruge Coast 'Weather Thmg1 are warming up along the Orange Coul, with Friday'• blgh reading lobbed · at 75 and inland mercury 92. Blame those nasty Santa Ana wfudi for that. INSIDE TODAY Capt, Eddit Rick1nbacktr - onetbnt racing driver, World War I /tying ace and survivor of 2J da~• on • rafl tn tht Paclo fie -has ,rsa.ched hi$ 8Qtll birthda~. PaPt-4,, •C.Mliftl1 1 Ml'lln • C""r Cll"lltt 1t M"*I I'.... 2' Cfllclllllt Ut 1 NMltlMI ....., W c1-..r1iw M... or"'" C1111tf't 1t C-ln rl l'Nll lt"'1lt tf C,...._.. -» '""' IW1 tle:!"l..-Mtllcn 1t or. llllllt,...ft 11 ·-· ,.... ' 1'9dl Mllrbft ...-11 '"~*" '" ti, D T ...... 1911 n l'llllMCI •JI ~ n ...,...,.,. II • W .. IMI' t AM LI....,. 17 W~I ...... IJ·lf .... . ..... ..... .. r,...,,.... lie-11 2 DAil Y PILOT From P .. e-f FREEWAY ••• to them. In other worda, ii both clUea qr .. on a precllO l!lpm,.t ol the Paclflc Coast HIP""1 Unoc11 tb1a .,..., 1t would -I pd -ol heJna ldopled. 1 bill by A!Umblym1n ll<>berl E. Sidhom (R·N•"J"lrl Beach) Jn Ille tut •tnion of the lta:lslature that would have kll1ed the freewl)' 111 the·W&y from Routo JS 0(Belch !oul•vard) Jn HunlJnlloa Belch to Ille flt end ol Newport Beach, 11 the.~ bowldary ol ~ Ml Carl.,e Wet. ''there are commitmeml." Mar. Clrleeon placed more-emphuis on the le1lalaUve lel_hltion, however, disclosing that a bU1 ,was adually prepared prior to the end ()f \the last session of the "When there is an adopted route," • ... •.. Fro~ P .. e) , • ·-BOMBS •• > 'f :· : • a big bomb ~ the courtbou$<' U,· liin Rafael and Jt ,would aoon 10 o(r.'' ..Jd She.rill's lm~tor Bowtn Bridges. :~ Dynamite f1f"" could ... lmdltd llb- ftlldlllely lollowlng tM blut, w~ ...... ~ all clock! and ruptured plu.,...., sending torrents of water through tie ~ildillt. lectaJatw'e, ""tiut jost "b>o late for in· He J!Qinted out that the 111.fte bu r---.,,,..,ctl __ ..,~ much of th-e ril!_t-<>f-~ alone on. he a<IOptedlocal rOu!e. ~- · -Nilb' ·custddian George Paetax .. -..l. only·'lo f~t a'way and iaid-it ~ uke • I' • • -~ a load of scrap met.al falling. · ·~ • Hl!l deni~ that the department con-"Jn addition," he ~d. 1'there are many sldered the bW "an ace in the bole'' individuals and buSinesses that have · wa1Una to be pl•yed wb411 the tilnin, was localed in a certain area under the rlght. _ presumption that a freeway is going lo be He indicated the department has been there to service them." Working toward a &elution to this kind of Carleson explained that to get the problem for a period of time._ Public \Yorks Department to relent ln its CarlfS0\1 stressed the concern of the opposition to the de let ion of any part of at.ate in' the refationship between the two the system. it would have to be shown Sheriff Louis Montan~ emp~-~ ~re was "f direct evidence 1link:tna_ tbe courthouse fbomblng to the ";ttacU in Sant.a Barb&ra aod Seattle. ; cities and said Governor Reagan's ad-that the segment in question "ls not ---~mlfilslfatiOil"Ooes not wants omethlni "ltecess-ary-to-the systern:'- 1be i:lary,aged courtroom is' normally used by vacationing Judge Joseph Wilson , 'j'ho recen,Uy conducted hearings behind walls 9f.. San Quentin in the cases Of the to-called !)oledad Brothers. Iro,Pcally, a metal-detecting device was installed W~dnesday to protect aga1.nst just such incidents and 'IP'as 1cheduJed to go into operation today. 11 • llke a freeway to come between the two C~leson said the need for freeways in ---unities." "v....... the state is still growing. • ~ have ~ various alternate "Unless californians change their life routes proposed for the Coast Freeway &tyle,'' he said, "we are aoing to need route and both Newport Beach and Costa more and more freeways _ it's a fact of MW officials seemed to agree on one life.'' that c1ose11 parallels 15th Street in Newport Beach. He said that the freeway system is still It l\UT!fd out,. however, the freeway a very efficient means of moving traffic. would have-to-cut through a corner of "Freeways move a lot of traffic Oil Costa Mesa and this did not meet the ap-comparatively little land," he said. proval of officials there, who subse· quentJ:Y dropped support of the plan. .From Page 1 Joining Exclusiv e Club "t don't believe It was singled eut ;to any particular judge or court," Sheriff Montanos a4ded today. "But we are going to increase our security around lhe clock and put on added personnel." The 1'explosion was direcUy across the hall ffom the one where Judge K~old Haley' was abducted In the fatal flight by two convicts and an accomplice. It is generally felt that if a more inland route could be designed within the city limita of Newport Beach it cou1d gain the approval of both Costa Mesa and most of the prestnt Newport freeway opponents. CITIZ ENS ••. Opp:>sltion to the prese.nt route is so too much from the advisory committees" fervent, howe ver, that one group in but said they can only determine "how Newport Beach has launched a petition best to minimiZe the impact of the James McCulloch, 18 {right), c hecks out scouting achievements of hi s brother Mark, 19. James be- comes an Eagle Scout in ceremonies tonight, join· ing Mark and another brother, Hugh, 25, in the rarifie~ atmosphere of Scouting's highest level of achievement. All three McCulloch brothers, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence McCulloch. 450 Catalina Drive, Newport Beach, have been members af Ex· plorer Post 182. Hugh curr~ntly is in the Air Force. James and Mark attend Or::c. Call s by a \ man and y,·oman to the University of Washington, the fire department and the Seattle Times 25 minutes befo re the Clark Hall blast w~­ ed them of it.; drive that would forre a referendum on a freeway." demand that the existing freeway agree-ment be rescinded. , Park agreed that in the end the panels A companion petition calls for a coul~ recommend that no freeway be referendum on a charter change that built, if that is the only conclusion. would require future city-wide votes "lf the need for the freeway does not From Page 1 NOISE •.• $5 Million Retail Office The bomb was planted in lbe basement of the structure, which houses Navy and Air Force ROTC units. "lt was quite a blast,'' said university spokesman Irv Blamenfetd; \!ho the&rlz· ed the bomb was planted before Wed· nesday's 5 p.m. closing time. before any freeway agreement could ever outweigh the environ mental impa~. be signed. then we could recommend no freeway be Highway Division officials have built," Park said. to separate it as far u possible from in· threatened to sue the: city il the route He said the plaMing should not begin habited areas." • agreement, easterly from Bayside Dr ive by putting alternative routes down on a The noise recipient bctwever, Beland to the Corona del Mar city limits, is map. Set for Newport Center Heavy damage r~ulted and a &bewar of glass flew 50 feet around the building. A Weatherman tape recording was rescinded. • "There must be a continual-recording stressed is the.only element that should Carle.son did not comment on the possi· of community concerns," he said, "as not be tinkered with. He said several A $5 m.illion retail office plaza will be hie litigation. indicating he hoped the pro-soon as we learn these we will be able to methods have been devised to measure built in Newport Center adjacent to the po5ed legislation· enabling aolld-inter..city corne-up-with..an..allgrunenl~ 811 .pollution~vels-iocludiD& naiae .po.Uu,_ lanned New rt Beach mun icipal com· cooperation, could provide: a !IO!utlon. ·He said, "the rriore we know, the better ti on. p ex, t e: rvtne COmpany announce -t.O=" The state official was adamant that the we will be able to present alternallves.'' day. Pacific Coast Freeway will be built. Park said much or the opposition to Beland said there are same 3G different Called a "design plaza" by Irvine of4 He indicated the Public Works Depart· freeways in. general comes from in-noise measuring scales. ficials, the project will be built on 11 ment. sometime in the future, might not dividuals and organizations s imp I y "But we are going to measure the acres south of Fashion Island and will be oppose deleting a portion of the route because of a lack of knowledge - a creature to death while it eats us alive,, geared to professions allied with the con· thrt1';1g~ N:~wpor_t f:leaeh, but some of it Is general fear of freeways . Beland said. He recommended as his slrtx:!ion.industry only. . C!Ons1dered "an mteg:ral part" of the state "We hope we will be able 'to dispel this . , . ' -OeS1gned by architect A. Qu incy Jones freeway systei;n. . . fe ar," Park sai~, ind~a!_ing_Jl:lat the ~ firms report for the city fl( Newport ~nd •ssociates,_ the "~~sign p_la~a," as it Carleson ~'fM department op~\ ~pre~n~ ol :fh.e·~ttng,e~ij in the r ~~--p~.-¥·~ns~ of the ~ _1s ~a~~ by lrv1~e off1~1als,·wlll-1nc\~de a ---'-----:-' ~ -·· ~ T".!planning picture ma'f be for tlUit-reason--·dU'lUf, At _1\lpped~~· so-h.itions art group O!.lll..butld~tn~ed by a M.rill_of as much as any other, found. . · ~ • smal~ cO\irlS: ~ Froftl ~age 1 Park also said he will be able to spot Bej@Pd said certain· noise aCceptability B~1ldtngs "".ill ran~e from one to four F ~ any pj'oblems that the lay committee 11 .ti·.. t be: lideP•~ A al lhi . ~tor1es and will provJde floor space rang· PIED li'l<'S 1 " members.migt!t·not bt abij to r~izt. m ?~~ · . 'r!j J n s 15 .a mg f[pm 4,0Qllo 3'4,noo sq~e feet. • ,,. ~ • • f \I The CommJftee also' discussed jls ffia• 1.Hfllit'I e( ;ille. recoiniafndatlom in thi s~ preparltJol. JS Sche:auJed tO begin • · lion.ship with the various ievels of govern· Newport Beach. study.' in t'overJ!ber 'and ~t:tual construction is with county departments in the itudy ment concerned with the freeway. Beland enumerated "the two major pla~ fer a start Jn early 1971. even though the ~hamber ' ls on record Carleson told them that most of their cost! the public is payili"· as tt adapts to Cla~de ,s, . Keyzers, man~ger of com· as oppo1in1 any rental ree for UH of Input should be put to use by their th . 11 t• •bl merc1al leasing for the Irvine Company, tidelands. . . . e growing po u ion pro em. said th I fl . ·11 I th f n~ respective city councils, who have the ., . . . .· . e · P aza o ices "".I serve Vigorous Y opposing e ees was n.uy ultimate local authoritv in route adOption First there 1s black dirt 1n your lung! arc~1tects, decorators, en g 1 nee rs, B. Woolsey, commodore of the A~ J d d th · hJlt · b dem l d h' d ciation of Newport Harbor Yacht Clubs. and route agreements. · an secon ere IS a 1 , tn }'Our ear· &ne!s. an scape . arc ltects, evelop. He said the state will benefit, tpo, but Jng threshold. .. ers, buil~~rs.and ar_tJsans. . ·He presented 1 petition bearing 1•525 stressed the Highway Division will do 111 "We must say we wlll nol accept that. _Jn additiol\, he ~1d'. sr>ace "'111 be pro-ai~:O~:eesy: said the petition signers on. ·it can not to interfere with the workings We must say we want a life style as full .Y1dr1 for related ret:a 1l,1stores that would r-of the panels. as possible " he said. lD~ u,de ho~. furnLs!llngs . stores, blue posed tldelandl -le.es for a wide variety ' printers, art s, oommerc1.Jl photogra. of re:asons. · pbers and si ar Outlets. Includ·ed -were-the fact that .. pier • ' Keyzers Callid ~ concept of the plaza and float owners and ultimately boat unique, !a yin~ "AJ far as · \\'e know users make a substantial contribution ·there is ne elhirt development like it.'' ' to the benefit of the public and · bear aubstantial financial burdens in doing IO." He listed : t. Property tues which are usertedly four to six times the amount of nearby land not on the wa- ter: 2. Owners of piers and floats fre- quently dredge and thus protect channels used by the public. 3. The y bay has few areas that will support a shellfish and other marine life which usually attach to rocks. The pilings are prolific bases for the pre> duction of life on which other fish feed, resultlng int better fishing for the pub- lic. Woolsey also pointed out that t h e city has charged for permits and 1ddi· Uonal charges "Should not be imposed. Police, Checking J ewelry Theft Newport Beach detectives today are in- vestigating the theft of two rings and a collection of dimes valued at $1,SOO from a Corona del Mar home. Muriel Pinover, 65, of 303 Poppy Ave: reported the loss Wednesday nisht. Officers speculate the thief gained en· try to the woma'n's hol.i.oie by cutting out the screen of an open window. He said the buildings will be arranged played Wednesday at a New York newi so all will open to landscaped malls, conference and the voice . Jdentifiid u courtyards and patios. _ lb.at o.f Miss..._BernadeUe Dohrli.'s by bee arkl ng areas will 6e removed but con· sister~ Jenn.if er, a apokesman for tbl: venient to each building, be said. He said the parking lots "will be heavi· -Youth International Party -Yippies. ly planted with trees, shrub s , "Now we are everywhere and next groundcover and olher landscaping." week families and tribes will attack the Jones described his plans for Ole plaza enemy around the country," t!Je !a~ in detail . • • · said. '''At the second fioor level of the buildings, a IO-foot overhang will be in· Jerry Rubin, a Yippie leader and one ·qi tall d t h d d · the defendants in the Chicago seven tri:Ji ·s e o 5 a e pe estrians-:--Tretllses· said the recording was received by m .. will then connect_lh_e_ov_erbangs from one ·--:bUil(fing to another. • Jn New York Tuesday, postmarked' frorit # "Our ccncept," he &aid, •:envi!ions a Chicago on Monday and bearing the building scale that is related to the return address of the old national bead- bwnan seal; at the mall level. This will quarters of • the Students for 8 product an iritimate experienci! for the Democratic Soclety.· The Weatbermin began as a splinter fac lion of SOS. pedestrian." The building's architecture will include The recording said the first bombint the use of complementary materials and of the offe nsive had already exploded h 11-1onday in Chicago's Hay mart et textures sue as wood, stucco, concrete, Square, blowing up 8 police statue,. brick and stone, Jones said. Keyzers said that building sites will be The tape recording. which generally at-tacked present American society. gave no ground leased only and all buildings will indication of speciric Wealhermian plans. be constructed by individual developers. Miss Dohrn and 1 I other members or the "All improvements other than buildings WealherrTien were indicted in ··April, will be installed by the Irvine Company," charged with conspiracy to cross state he said. lines to incite rioting. Keyzers said than in an effort to create Miss Dohrn, a former n 1 t~ e n·ll: I a harmonious project, the Irvine Com· secretary of the sos. dropped out of sight pany will control design of each of lhe before March 16 when -she failed to ap- buildings , "but in so doing will encqurage pear in court on charges of attacking criginality and creativity on the part of three policemen during a Weatberm,. all cooperating architect!." disturbance in Chicago in October 1969. Russians Rep ort Sex Affected by Smoking f\.10SCOW (UPI)·-Heavy smoking can make middle aged men lose interest in sex, a Sovie t newspaper said today. The newspaper Soviet Russia said there was scientific evidence smoking lessens sexual activities of men 40 years old and older or even as young as 30. "One reason for th is is changes in the blood which pro<luce ch1J1ges . in sex hormones," the newspaper said. Later in April police found what they said was a bomb fpctory ei:i piicaga's North Side. Police said they bad reports that she had been seen in the area ef the apartment . The tape recording Tuesday ran · fLr several minutes. "If Nixon Invades Cu ba. bombs North \1ietnam, intervenes in the Middle East we. must all move fast," the tape said: "Figure out strategic weak points of the enemy, look to the Arabs. "Wi th the underground and m1m1 movement responding together, we could shut down every international airport in America within 24 hours." ,...--. DAILY PILOT RIP VAN WINKLE mattress Otu.MOll COAST PUIUIHINO c:QMIWrt l •hrt N. WeH PntlNn!WhMllW Jt1lc l. Curl.y Yfot l"rel:derll ..... ~· MlllWw ltio1"•1 KteTil f.411ot 11'-•• A. M11rplltne M_,!nl EOl!or l. Pt ftr krtig N~ ktdt City !dl!w __ Of ... 2211 W11t lal\e1 1011!1.,.,HI M•lll119 ~:P.O. In 1171. !tl•l I --c:.fll .... ~ ...... ..,, '"" L ...... '-di: m,,....., ......... ......... ...,., llWJe.edl ........... S..~•twtalUc...N ... UN ITED FUND'S HIEL D ILEFTI ACC EPTS $10,000 PLEDG E Philco-Ford's Heilig loots a Long One In Drive Kick Off Philco-Ford Makes riedge Of $10,090 Toward Fund P~Ford Aeronutronlc Wednesday , night pledged a $101000 corporate 1Jft to help kick-off the Harbor Area UJ\.lted Fund campaJ&n ror 1976-71. Louis F. Helllg, Phllc.o..Ford vice pre1- idtnt and Atronutrorilc dh1ision genera l riianager pre!ented I he· pl~ge to Robert Hleld, Harbor Art& United Fund iener,\I e:11npilgn l::haltman during 1 gathtrlng of corporate executives and agency offici1ls. Htlllg ••Id. "Our peoplt •t Phll~For<I benefit In many w1ys from the wvices ' ' provided by United Fund member agen- cies. Ind they bave continued to support lhe United Fund in thei r home cltie:s. "As employers. parents and citizens. wt have an obligation to this cause. Dul beyond that, as a corporation, "'"~have a 1t1Ji:e Jn the wdfar1 bf' our confmunitY. t can think or -no better-way to ·kfck:-(lff lhis ye1r's campaign than to present our corporate al.ft -a Ford Motor Company F'und pledge of $10,000 for the Harbor Area U1dted Fund." Handcrafted by ~ ~. ~ • If"'' """"' ,.,. ,,_ • 1Band·1tlcht!d 1idt'-"l.lla that 11111 ne•er ..,.. or brHk down. · • 12~ mort U1"eable area flf 1\ttping 1ur!aM. .• Uphol1teN!d with d4lfll layers or f luU7 Daatia by Du. Pont. • Jlolland Mald in~ •~ring for greater a.- b1Jity and romf~ : , _. B·w-11 fta"d·tied 1'olt 1 1prinr-the •TJ et i ·~' the h1da1b'J'. !I Fan 2(),.7ear pm• tK _.,._ -......... __ $199.SO ... Ill', .,._ .................... $279 .so m .., . .... ... ................. $369.50 ... "' You faoorit< fnt<rlor dulgnl!' tDill be ham to asrilt ~°" .. . .. H.J.GAl\l\Eff fU RN ITURE PROFESSfON>..L INTERfOR DE~IGNERS -'11Y OUl IEVOLVING tHA14H.-. Opee Moo., Tllun. l Fri ...... 2215 HARBOR IL VD. COSTA MESA: CAUF. 646.027' l t • . I I ..-- ' I • • -' . • Costa Mesa • .. T.May'• Fl•P1 N.Y. Stoekll ED IT.I 0 N YOl. 63, NO. 241, 4 SECTIONS,' 60. PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C UPO~NIA THURSoA Y, OCTOBER I, '197.0 \ TEN CFN'fS Governor Reagan's adminiJtration ii draftln& a bill that could produce a new route for the Pacific Coast Freeway satisfactory to Newport J)each and other IUn'OUJlding cities, lnclulill!g Costa Mesa. The measure , which almost was in- troduced into the last session of the Jegislature, wouJd allow tbe St.ate Highway Commission to consider chang- in'g 1peclfic links of any adopted freeway root.. Robert B. Carleson, chief deputy direc- -k * * Citizen . Unit Hears Views On Freeway A new state concept in freeway plan- ning was launched in Newport Beach Jut night as the city's Route 57 (Orange Freeway) Citizens' Advisory Committee met for the first time with a paid con- 1Wtant to study the need and proposed routes for the new north-1outb superhiihway in Orange County. _ ,Robert B. Carleson, chief deputy direc- tor of the State Public Works Department wasdn hand for the meeting, calling .it ·~ historic occasib1:1. •• - ,.He told the committee its purpose in Ufe ls to identify the best route possible for the freeway, determining in the pro- cess if the freeway is needed. C•rle~n tatd the corn_mittee mern_bers their effort.! will hopefuUy "avoid con. troversies similar to those aurrounding Routt· 1 (the proposed Pacific Coast Freeway)." N~rt Beach · ii only· one of •v'n CO!DDIUnilifo along 'Ill< .. .ii-U• tension of· the ·freeway south from the Garden Grove Freeway to the coast that have· been a:sDd to appoint .advllory panel! to disCU11 the proposed Il).mile ex- tension of the super highway. The others ·are Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa, Santa Ana, Garden Grove and Orange, all of whk:h Will meet jointly every three months and, in addition, exchange minutes of their JJ'l~etings regularly. The state ha! budgeted $150,000 for a et>nsulting firm to meet with the various panels, serving as both an intermediary and a guiding light. ·KiSuh Park, a planner with the con- sultant, Victor Gruen Associates, outlined hi.! finn's role in the study process. Hi eXplained thaf neither he nor his company, nor any of the citizen commit- tee should go into the planning pro- cedures."with any preconceived notions." Park said the "fundamental role" of the committees Is to "balance the en- vironmental deficiencies of a route with the regional good ." He said the committees must consider c:arefully not that they "want the freeway in somebody else's back yard, but why lhey want it in somebody else's back yard." He said all concerned cannot "e1pect (See CITIZENS, Pa1e Z) tor of the State Public Works Depart. ment, discloOed thte and a second poten- tial solution to the freeway controversy in an ei:clusive in'terview' with the DAILY PILOT.Wednesday. Carleson e:rplained that under ,present law when a freeway route Js opened for · reconsideratibo ibetween tri points, all put ·.agrttment! are . rescinded and technically the freeway could be 'moved in· direction. · • The state No. 2 public . Wor~ oCfitjal said the IegWaUoo, il adopt..!, would open the door fer a solution to a number of similar controversies on freeway roUtes throughout the state. · He said it would allow Newport Beach and Costa Mesa officials to meet, agree on a new local route for~ the c:oJSlal freeway, then ask tl!e Highway Com- mission to reconsider this aecUon af the adopted route, which now closely parallels the Pacific Coast Highway thiough Newport lleaCh. · · . ' " He said the co1111nluton would be under no obligation to reapen consideraUon.s. However, chances they would agree to do "°' with both ciUes· behind the request, would be very good, he added. The adopted route for the future superhighway · calls for It to be built withln 200 yards 9f the Coast Highway in Newport Beach. The route, a portU>n of wbiCli has formal concurrence from the Newport Beach City Council, has been bftterl~· fougfit 'by a'itumber'O[ NelYport . . . . . rtsidents. C.OSta Mesa officials, however, have been reluctant to aupPort reopenintl of th~ route guest.ion, ~uae of. the !tat the route would wind up through the city limits of their lown. Without the propoaed l~laUcin, !here stll:l may be another way f~r Newport Beach and Costa Mesa to .c;opvlnce the Highway CommisSion to cOnsidU a specific alternate local rotlting. ''-Yery franklj," Cirles0n' said, "thl!l't is one poulble way -to 'euarant.eet tbe commission consider a ijieclfic neW route under existing law." He aafd lfthe city COW!Cite of liOUI - lllllllllJes passed ,..alutlOns agreefni to • reoJienlng along a -le rwta, and Jn. duded.ill tboae r<soluµons a prvTtao'tllal they would not· sign a freeway agreemmt along any other route than the one, jlro- poaed, Ibo comm!Jlion tttc.Iy would llltm (Seo FllbWAY, Pap· I) ' Reds Blast Ni .xon Plan North Vietnam Labels Proposal 'Trickery' • Mesa's Firemen PARIS (UPI) .:.. North Vielnam and tllf: Viet. Cong tod1.y condemned President ff11on '1 peace pbln u eunboat diplomacy aimed at perpetuating U.S. "aggression" iJl Vietnam, but they agteed to discws it in future negotiations. Both Xuan Thuy, tl'i~ North Vietnamese minister of state, and .Mme. Nguyen Thi Binh, the "foreign minister" in the Viet Cong government, called the . offer political trickery aimed at winning vOtes for ·the Republicans in the ·November ecUons:----• _ Madame Binh al)d Thuy appeared t~ld. apparenUy from a nigbUon1 study .-· Mrs.· Slocum --·ehavw&- ·~ Des'cril;ed . ' By JACK '1\()MCit Of ~ .,_Uy Pll•t ll•ff Bitarre behavior ot · Mrs. · Marian Slocum when her C.Osta Mesa bolile wu being repossessed was described ~Y in tesilmony by a real estate man m a ' of the presidential address which was presented formilly at today's aesalon 1'7 'nle South Vletname• reac:tion favor· received here i.t 2,a.pt., and from com-Ambassador David K. E. Bfuce. But both . ing the Nixon plan followed by ttveral municatlons with Hanoi. Madanie Binh, Thtiy and M1dame· Binh were thorougb1y . houn an unfavorable responlt by other swathed in a warm winter .coat· despite !ami\lar with them when they arrived: . th v· ff'clals the mild autumn weaQler, was grim fac-Meanwhile, much of the world i.eided ~ tetnameae. 0 1 • ed when·ahe arrived for today's tall(.s.. . wiV\ praise to. 'Nlxol'l's, call ' for an • im-The proposal of a ceue-flre ii un- Their language was harsh but ther_!!: melllate cease-fire· in the searcla for · favorablt' to us," Seer_, of State was no .outright -.rejection . in their peace ln Indochina, ·but some N(llJID 1'1111 Hy aaid in Salem lhortly statements made before and during govemmentS and · statesmen e1presad after Nix.cl!.'I' addrtaa. Otber' Saatla Viet,. today;s Session, the 87th.. · doubt of l'ts· success. · · · · narotse officl&IJ uid tbe Ollgmlnl1ta .They did not mentiop Nixon 's offer to South Vietnam Said It was In agr• were c:ertajn_to r~jept Ute pr'ClpOllll. eiichange·priSoners. . · ' . men.t ·with · the· propasal~. The Saigon But a statement from Salem radio uld The .Nb.an µll for .-a cease-Jiu.__~ga_v.ernment_s.ild: it,!-att_teimi:tl-f2._~wed Jater-lt-l'reaffirtned!.'-ill~~lilf.. Clll...c..lor ~- throughout Jndochinil and 0 f f e r l n g arter dis'cusslons with . the. 'American "free elections to detemillie the future Of guid'ellnes for a political lettleme'n.t were govern'ment. · · South Vietnam." ~ .. '. Women Voters -' Hear=faetv-~ : T1> Erid Noise ~ con.olderatlOM iruJ,t ...... Ille aoluUO!l to lbe growing noise polluUOn problem, an Orange County Ltague af Women Voters C1:1nference wu ~Id th1J morning. Will S , d T ll defense ettort to discredit the woman u ' tan a· a witness against her husband. "~-· •.. -· .. _ ·-· . P~rrell.~~Yb.um pf. G~atde,....., n Grov~~as -l;,):irt'.f" COsta MeSans are invited to review the the fifth 1n a long list o ¥11tneues • ....::lng · ·-·r- R. Dale Beland, a pJaMer with the con- sulting firm of Wilsey and Ham, the c:ompany hired by Newport Beach to 1ttidy noise ar orange COW'itYAJij)Ort-, -- ouUined those three factors u the con- ference in the city of Oran1e opened. troops and equipment Saturday when tbe called . by def~nse attorney Michael men and ,machinery of the Costa Mesa Gerbos1 ~the trial of Dr. W~sley Slocum Fire _Department stand inspection at four on charges he murdered blS ~IA-month branch stations:. old daughter. _ The open house programs are staged In Rayburn told of the diffjculty he had flf conjunction with National Fire Prevent-geWng Mrs. Slocum out of the boust ion Week, which ends tben arter five days when it was repossessed last March. of exhibits and displays in the mall at "She was crying most of the time and South Coast Plaza. when I removed her from the home she Literature on fire prevention anti crawled back in through a broken win- emergency procidures will be' available dow," the real estate man testified. "N• to visitors-who drop in during the day. matter how many times I IOC;k~ her eut, Locations are Station One, 11 1 she found a way to get back 1n. and Station Four. 2300 Placentia Ave., ac-Rayburn testified th• woman appeared ROchester St., Station Two, 800 Baker to be intoxicated or under the influence of St., station Three, 2803 Royal PaJm ,Drive drugs. and Statioo Four, 2300 Placentia Ave., ac-In cross-examination ?f ~he defense cordin& ·to Chief John Marshall. witness. Chief Deputy D1str1ct Attorney James Enright bad Rayburn describe the condition of the Slocum home. Btland said the most important fad.or Is the noise recipient and he urged that this be considered the only fixed entity in any proposed solution. "Man can adapt to growing noise pollu- tion but only at a prict," Beland aald. "We Must make the system serve tU, not us serve the system," he said. Belind pointed out that. ttie major source of noise in the outdoors is oot from aircraft. "It is from it! ground transportiUm system and that system's rolling stock - cars, trucks and buses. "We cannot blame It all on the aircraft industry,'" he said. Dog Sniffs Dope He told of finding an "indescribable mess" and detailed .location of pellet gun holes and where be found arrows 1lickin& in walls. Beland said the ather two c:m-- 11iderations are the noise Source and the transmissiOn pat.Ii. He said both are variables. "The · noise source offers the most op- tions for modifications,"·he said pointlne out that there are several techniques for intervention in this element. Lawmen Net 26 in Drug Dragnet . . •' .-By J ACK BROBACK Of ,.,. Dlollf ..... , 11.tf A marijuana-sniffing German shepherd dog was the star of a countywide qarcotics raid early today. . . • Ginger. a member of the TtUbn police · force. sniffed out a batch of cookies in a San Clemente residence leading to the ar- rest of John P. Graham, 19, of 4045 l!'asadena Court. ,. Offii:ers said Ginger detected the iuegedly dopeloaded cookies in a 11.1itcase. Officials said the Illicit in- gredient in the cooky dough was believed to be marijuana. '' This morrung·, raid in which 2S persorui ·were arrested was the seamd countywlde -dragnet in a week. More than 40 police officers from Laguna Beach, San Clemente, Orange and T u 1 t I n ~ctpat.d In the roundup. The 26 arrested bad betn n a m e d Jn lfC:ret Grand Jury indictments u the result of lhrtt months of·lnvesUgaUon by the police officers and state narcotics of. ficer1 and district a ti o r n t y ' s in- vestigators. · Officers said bt the raid today \bey COl)o flscalefi quantl)lea col heroin. LSP, dangeroiJs llrup. marijuana and hashish. ' Nabbed in Laguna Beach was Gilbert M. Brady, 19. a translent jailed on charges or selling heroin. While officers were looking for another unidcntUled Laguna reSidenl, they picked _ up a man and woman on marijuana possession charges. Jailed and released orr their own • ' • • ' recogni,.,,.,. _.._ Tbomaa L. COrnWall, 24, and Kim camille CUrtll, 22. both of 1198 Victory Walk. Last· Thursday a countywlde raid resulted ln the · arrest of S4 perlOOS and the discovery o( a potential bomb factory and drag laboratory in Modjeska Canyon. Tht Dlstiict Attorney's ()(fief: today IUl110llllC<d. iraiid' jury Indfctments ol 11 ~eiwbo had betn previoosly arrested. lnclllted are Samuel R. Gib!Kln, 34, and Alfred C. Linde, 28, of 1214 Fatrywocid Walk, and ·Roger B. Decker, 25, of 525 Catalina St., all of Laguna Beach and all chatged wl!Jl lhe sale of LSD. Al• indicted today wu Linda K. Bums, 11, of 796 W. Wlbon St., Costa Mesa . She was also charged with the sale of htroin. ' Earlier, Dr. Alan Adrews testified that he delivered Cynthia Slocum, the baby for wbose death Dr. Slocum Is being tried. The Newport Beach abstc'ridan said the baby was healthy and tl average weight when born .. Under questioning by Gerbos:l, Dr. Andttws related intimate female pro- blems and ailments Mr. Slocum had following the birth of Cynthia. He said she had a form of blood poisoning, "Cou1d this lead to the death of the fetus?" Gerbosi asked. The doctor replied that It was a "relatively common syndrome with pregnancy" and that it coold lead to the death of Ute fetus and the mother. Dr. Andrews told the jury af eight men (See SLOCUM, Pare I) Them That.Has Gets Some More NEW YORK (UPI) -A couple who reside in West Hampton, one of Lo08 l1l1od'1 fashionable 1Um- mer; places, today won the Sl nilllion top prize in the New York state superlotlery. The winners, George a n d Genevieve Ashtoa. havt a sii:teen· year-old son. Glenn. Ashton 11 an executive with the J. C, P n n e y company. The top prize will pay Aahton and hls wife $50,000 a yur .for &he nUi 20 years. .r UPIT- LT, GUIDO BATTAGLIA INSPECTS ·MARIN COURT D~GI! In S•n R•f•tl, Mor• Vlolenc:t •t tht County Courthovtt ' Three Bomb Explosions ' Hit Buildings in W ~t From Wire Services A ae'r:iea of bomb blast! comin& one day after the ullra-ridtcal Weathermen ter-. rbrilta ·declared an autwnn offensJve against American society shattered three public bujldinp on the-Weal Cout this morning. •• · Autbaritles fear it is on1y the beglnnlng. No one was lrijured in the exf>loe:ioaa In • • Santa Barbu a 'military armory, the Marin CoUnty' Civic ,Cerrter 1n San Rilfael · and ,a al!ared l\IYI'C : buil!ling at the University o[ Washington In S.aWL . Tel~pbaue tips were given in two cum,· leadiflg police to bustle a janitor out or the unlversity's. Clat~ ~· Within minutes or the bla!\· The San Rafael bl'81 occurred htar the c:ourtroom from wblch a Super'l9£. Court judge was kldnaped Aug. 7 by thnt bllCI< rlvolutionaries who died. with hlm in .a barrage of gunfire. ' .• Blula cam• in aucceulon, at 1:27, 2:44 • anc1' 1:a a.m., a\ SeatUe, San l\alael and • • ~nta Barbara. Np warning was 11Vtn hefore the e1- plosiQn in 'Santa Bwhta, • wblcb the Weathermen warned 'Wtdnetclay ·would be One at their targeti"ttran the nation. •:Part of a wall wU blown bat'k, but there waa no cave-tn." said' Police LL t<red Baker, who tdeo\Uled the cause u definitely a aabotage device. The annc.y· II ~ by an artillery tmlt of'the <;aiUomla Najlonal Gllll'<I and shared by an Army :Re:ter-ve Jlftlt.. · • ·No · r .... ~µ:tho wt llde wl!ert thebomb • . and poUCe llld any puoerbr oo thi'.v.et cMllde wiuld ha,;e acceu ID the liaitdin(. • · · • A door was blown o11l·111 hC.-.00 and ' numerous windows. were ~ttered, while Interior plutor •• dani•ied Pl a' small fire that 'I'"' Jllll!Mr e1tiiTfufoMd btoko. wl ' : !l'be S•n JWaef•bon\b WIS pllflted ln a ""'""P'•, 'real(_,, IJ!ParenUy , duth>e ' (Seo~l'af'I),, Beland cited the new retro-nttlni pro- gram under study by several major com- panies 'in the aviation industry. The retro-(itting: process is aee.klllt ft JI to basically tone do"'1t "the Mlle (See ~OISE, Pase I ) ,1 Weather . Tbinp a" wanning up alon1 the Or'ange Coaat, with Friday'•' llJch· reading tabbed al n and Inland mtfc:W'Y n.:: Blame thole nuty Sant. Ana winds. for that INSmE-TODA'Y Capt. Eddi< R!clmlbacker - cmetirni racing driwr, World War· I flying · act aM· 1urvivo,.. of 23 c1ov1 •• a rGJI ,m th< Poe!-. ·f~c -Ila<-..... ~.a• ~Ir 'IOUI biTllul<q/. ~, •.•.• ' • -. Mm.I .. .,.. • lllM .......... w .,., ... ~ 1t IY!'WM ,_,., .. '-'t Ml Dr; ......... ,. ....... ,_ ... a.11 '"""""' JI -. -. Wtnttfl'• Htwt ,, .... ..... ,..... .. • I I llAJ). y '1LOT c Th'""", ·CktaW I, 1970 Speed Change Stalled The Five · Points FroM Pqr J 'i FREEWAY ... to thetn. _, In other word!, lf both cities I.fr• &n a precise alignment of the Pacific C6ut Hilltway tbroolb tbll llU, H would , Mesa l:l-ears Arguments , Tab'les Action miWUil WU i~pfiVMJllBluab C9UD- cllman Pinkley voted .qalllll It. ..,.. g"lln& ll obould alJO be aavid for the N'ov. 1Jl study meeting. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Here are the five polntc composlna President Nilon'a new ptice proposals for lndoc:bina: 1.-"I propc11< that Ill anned r ..... throtJibout lndochlna ...... IJrtni their WNponl Bild remain In the posilloM they now hold." ltwl I l"'\d dwlct fl! ljtill& idopW. Carleson .placed more1empft11ls on ,tflt A propooal to nlae the ai-1 limit oo a · busy Celta Meal street and thua reduce the number· of vtolat.or1 lnstud of han· din& out' wholtHle cltaUons has been ilo.!'td to a dtad' slAndstUI. TM city council U~ to argumenll ln favor ()f hiking th'e p<:15tl:d limit on East ltth Street between Newport Boulevard ind 1rv1ne Ave.nue from 30 to ~ miles per hour Ind finlll~ la.bled IL A ~ lludy ..,.lo!i of )he type In· 1uguratlld by Mayor Robtrt M. Wilson Is l.Che:®led Nov. 20, at which time city traffic problems and procedures wlll be reviewtd, th.1t one 1imong them. Several letters Were read into the record Monday from cltluns opposed to raisin« the limit -as recommended by the Colla Mesa. TrafflC Commisllon - due.to heavy UJe by school chiddren. "la this • problem of enforcement or what?" questioned Vice M.1yor Will Jordan, noting . speed limits have been railed in .1everal recent instances. Traffic Engineer Jim Eldridge e.r- plained the atate prohlbita setting arbitrary speed limit.!, requiring them to lie"' ·esUblished-inst.e.1d on pri.mA-facie bailll, • 1"Ut to aafely aoceptabli, lie Mid ·the 3\1'mJle.per.J>Our limit m1bl IO 1l"C'lll Ill the motorist. uslll1 East 19th Strett traffic ,violators and the system f<XJnd best ls to raise Ult Umlt by five miles.· Eldridge uplained this makes 85 per- cent of the motorists law-abiding -sllll ~·ithin 1 safe speed range-whlle giving police l~way to crackdown on the. 15 per· oent ltmaUe fringe as he called It. Pollet ge.nerally make a five mile allowance gver the posted limit. "lf you make ii 35 miles, then It will be 40 nest," predicte:d Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley, saying the number of f0ur-w.1y stops on the street make an incre.1s1 unrealistic. Eldridge reminded councilmen that the trend hasn't bl':en to raise the speed limtt in every case bu t just the opposite tn some, such as on busy F.tlrview Road. OrigPlally posted foi-SS mlles-per~hour, poUce radar surveys showed motorists were almost all driving slower. ao It was dropped by IO miles with satisfactory results. ·A_ second tra!.ti.c .... commisslon....~com- Councilmen voted 4 to 1 to rtmove two parking spaces OD the north aide of Bay Street at Harbor Boulevard to speed the Clow of traffic. -which must turn right and lett Easthluff Location 2.=-.. 1 propoee an Indochina petce conference •• , an inter.national con· .leren.ce la needed to dt:aJ with the conflict In all three atates (){ Indochina." . 3.-"We are rtAdY.·to neg~ale an agreed timetable for ~mplet, with· drawal1 11 part of an1fverall settlement. We are prepared to withdraw all our (<>reel I • .'' 4.-"I ask the other aide to join in a gearch for ~ political setUemenl that truly meets the aspiratio111 of all South Vietnamese," \ I 5.-"l propoae the Immediate and unconditional release. cl. all prisoners ol war held by both aldts. 11 • ' F rom Pagel tegis.lative solution, Mwever, discloeiq that a bill was actu1llyrprepared prier io the· end of ,the lasti 11et1sion or the legislature, but just tcio lite foi li- troduction. '· _He denied that the department eon- isld'ered the bill •·an ace in tht (!Of6" waiting to l)e played When the timJn1 ·w11 right. He indicated the department hiis ~ working toward a solution lo this kind of problem for a period-of time. Carleson strl':ssed thl': concern of th!': 6late in the relationship bl':twetn the two too much from the advisory committees" cities and said Governor Reagan'• ad· but said they can only dl':termine "bow ministration "does ·not want somethll)& Recreation Commission CITIZENS ... best to minimize thl': Impact of the like a freeway tO come between the two freeway." communities.'' Park agreed that in'Oe end the panel• There have been various altemalt could recomme!!4 ttlft no freeway be built, U that la .. only conclUJlon. routes propostd for the Coast Fr~,)' Backs Boys Club Site "I! thl': neef: w~· e freeway does not route and both Newport Beach and €olta The two year gearch for a third ait.e for previously considered one on lhe und at al the Harbor Area Boys Club moved a 11tep Balboa Pier. outweigh the .. ironmental impact!, Mesa officl s seemed to agree oft· one nearet-complet.ion Tuesday riight at ttie He cited the cost ()f construction, thfl: ll}en we could recommend no freeway be that closely parallels 15th Street in meeting of the Newport Beach Park, pressures fu kfl:ep bfl:aches clear Of built," Park said. Ne.wport_Beach. Ir • c Beaches and Recreation Commission. buildings and the need for immediate ac-He said the planning should not beg1.n It lurned out. however, the fretWay Vine l•ty The commission recommended city tion in !electing a !Ile. by putting alt.ematlve route! down on a would have to cut through A corner of cou~ilmen lea!e the club a parcel of "The Irvine Foundation donated $80,000 map. r-M d h' d. th I d . E tbl ff p k I th -•--t b d I "There must be a cont1'nual record1·ng ..,._,sta esa an t .is id not meet e •P-an 1n as u ar or e organu.a· o our uil ing uod, but the money will Concerns Told lion's third clubhouse. The lease will bt have to go back to them If we don't have of community concerns," he said, "as proval or officials there, who subse- for SI a year. a site selected by Oct. 12. soon as we learn these we will be able to quently dropped support of the plan. \Villard Jordan. Costa Mesa city <;oun-"If we were to push for the beach site come up with an alignment.'' It is generally felt that lf a more inland cilman who is director of the organi?A· at the Balboa Pier, it would require an He said, "the more we know, the better route could be designed wit hin the city Durm• g Meet tion , asked the commission to reco.in· election. and with the time element, we we will bl': able to present alternatives." limits of.Newport Beach it could gaLn the mend the EastbluU site rather than {he can't afford to wait that long," he said. Park said Jl\UCh of the opposition to approval of both'Costa Mesa aod mMt of , The Eastbluff site, which is adjacent to freeways in general comes from in· the present Newport freeway opponents. th. e,1·51· g hool ·11 'd dividuals and organiU1tions s im p t y Opposition to the present route is so A meeti ng this morning al the A1'rporter in nursery sc , w1 prov1 e I t h th . ,_ F .. om P nn• l th r 10 ooo f 1 b ·1d· because of a tack of i--wledge _ a erven , owever, at one group u1 IAn .....-... ed . 8 list" of five "concerns'' -v~ e !pace or a , square oo . u1 1ng "'IV 1 hed .1. "'~-f bo · ht •-18 general fear of freeways. Newport Beach has aunc a pet1 ion tnat s.iI Orange Coast cities have wtth the or ys ages eig "' . proposed city of Irvine. BOMBS Much of the public hearing on the issue "We hope we will be able to dispel this drive that would force a referendum on A •-t · f • • • w take b pe · I 'd t te 1· rear," Park 11ald, 1'nd1'cati'ng that the demand that the existing freeway-1gree-.n.o::presen atives o Newport Beach, as n Y n1nsu a re!1 en s s I· Cos. ta Mesa, Laguna Beac.h, Orange, Tus-fying against location of the club on the presence of the consulting experta in the ment be rescinded. U 1 tin and Santa Ana met with representa· business hours Wednesday and report.td beach. planning picture may be for that reason A companion petition ca 11 or a tives of. the Council of the Communities five minutes earlier. William Grundy, a Lido Isle resident, as much as any other. r_eferendum on a charter change Uiat of Irvine (CCI) and the Irvine Company. "An excited young woman talled an gtressed the need for coritinuing recrea-PArlc-also said he will be able to 11\)ot would require fu ture city-wide votes Spokesman for the meeting, Mayor Lor-oper.1tor Anonymously and said there was tional development in the older parts of any problems that the 11.y committee before any freeway agreement could ever in Gri~t 'of ·Santa Ana. said he felt the a big bomb in the courthouse in San the city. members might not be .1ble to recognize. be ~igned. . . . . _ . ' meeting was very productive. "This is Rafael and it would soon go off," said He reminded the tommissioners that The committee also discussed its rela-Highway Division o~fici~ls h 1 v e the fourth sucO meeting we've had, and Sheriff's Inspector Bowen Bridges. there were only three parks in the tionshlp with the various levels of govern-threatened to sue the city If ~e ro~te· ,. I I _ ~eet=acain ~19,1.'-hf! said.--Dynamite f~s_C(luld_ .. J~: smelled Im.: __ Peninsula _area an<t asked that the ment concerned with the freeway. agreement, easterly from ~ays1~e Drive The Complaints aired by Grisel are: me<fiml~ltlJWl:ng-the-bmt;-wh~-'.15oflr66d·not-be-forg0ttenitt-d~;=::::c:ai~ld:thlm::.thal:mosr~o-tbLCorona <!el ~ar Cl_ty hmlts, ii -The loss of self-determin.1Uon for ex-ped .all clocks And ruptured plumbing, ment plans. , input should be put t b ••-tr esctnde · --- ! . .. gh . . 0 use Y uie Carleson did not comment on the possl· s_t1ng cities and industry through the se~d1_ng torrents of water throu the The only dissenling note was sounded respective city coun~ils, who have ~he ble litigation, indicating he hoped the pr~ "' . .. .. • 3 ,_ OUT OF ANAHllM PARADE Ro joctod 'Monhol All".' •{~,. ,,> I• Steve: ~eii Out: . r Of Anaheim Fete After Pressure E ntertaint.r Steve Allen will not appear as crand 'marshal 1n Anaheim's 47th Halloween festival parade. The nAtlonally known television and atqe star withdrew Wednesday under pressure from the Allahe.im Republic.In .usembly (ARA). 'lbe conservative group p.1ssed a resolution Monday demand.irlg that the Hallowee.n committee. and the chamber or: commerct drop Oemecrat Allen from the parade. - 'lbe ARA cont.endtd that Allen did not fit into the free ent.erprt11e and patriotic atance that has characterized the parade ever the years. Allen had the I.1st word Wednesday. He said he would not appear in the parade ''because of the danger that a few e~· tremists might cause a disturbance that cou.ld prevent children from enjoying a merry everiing." Alltn, has long bee.n identified with liberaJ causes. At ene .time he ran for Congreaa on the DemOcrat.ic lie.Ir.et. DAILY PILOT oaAlfll COAST ll'Uk.ISMUIO ~AN't l•"-" N. W ... Pr•ldllltW'"'*"'W J.,\: .. c.,..., Vke ""'*'" ... ~ ...... Tlloflltt K11'ti1 E•nor 1\0111•• A.. M11rphi11• MtMtN ldttar c.... ........ IJO WMt l tT SfrrMt MeUi111 M4,-n1 ,,0. S.11i0, t l,16 ---..,._,.!Jltll, .. , ...... _ ~ L..-. ... , ....... _ •• , ... ~: ,,.. ... "' loul_,., -~ ' .... f:IC..... ... controlling impact which a Jew .people bu1\d1ng. . by commissioner A. C. Cameron . "It ultimate local authority in route adoption posed Jelri!J.ation enabling solid inter.Qty will have upon:these A:<Jjoining lands when Night cus.tod1an GeGr~e !antaxes ~as seem! to me that Boys Clubs are !;Up-and route agreements. cooperat'i~n, could provide a !Olution. they make decisions far the enUre 50,000. only 70 feet away and said. it sounded like po--• to be for needy boys, and there'i·ust He 1ald the state w!U b flt loo b I Th bl I th d I ~ . . ene •. • u The state off1'c1'al was ad•mant that••- . ~-e pro em o e propose pan re-a load of scrap metal falling. , · N rt B h B t ·r-tr ed U! H h D 1·1 = lati.ng to housing, transportation, traffic Sheriff Louis Monf.alios emphasized aren t arlf.. \P ewpo eac • u I _you ~ e~ e ig w.1y !Via on will do all PacifiC Coast Frefl:way will be built. circul.1tion and open space th . d' t 'de J•-~-th were to go up to SMta Ana. you would it can not to interfere with the working• He Indicated the 'Public Works IJepart..-, -'Oi_ ........ t -oi-i · J-bou · _ ere was no irec evi nee UllWll e find all kinds of kids whose lives might be of the pane~s. ment, sometime in the future, might not _ ....,.!!11 . _lloilCfl -ndanes COOflh<ilile l!ornl1!!!g-t&:::Jhll -attacks Jn ha d b faclli'trl'k· th! " h ·d re\Attd to _the toi>ograjihy an"! i.ts bearfr\i Santa -JWbara IDd SuW c nge Y a v l ~ s, e sai • oppose deleting a portionti-()f the roul.4 ciJ deli_~'!\l'Jel'ld<H"., . . l'lte-~ -cew1i..:;. ;s_oennlliy • C1meroo abstained from approving the thmugh Newport Beach, but 50me of It lo -'11!f. . . .d JMonsistene)' In the used~-VaCl.UU!ng Jlldte-J'oti)li'Wlhen, . 'lite. Thi rommtsston~I nco~endA~n From Page l considered. "an integralp.1rl." of the ~te pr~:i:ltt_~I with long term who recenUy.eenducW betrlrip .beblnd will go to Monday's· city council meeting SLOCUM freeway system. . ff.1.stioC-agreemenla_ with ~ lrvlnt Co:• wani-of ~ ~ in the-cues of the (or apprnval of the lease agreement. Carle!On said the department C[ltlOIM!d , a11.Ja.~~ dtia. iht=Unlv..._.!ty of Cl;li4 , -AUf4 Siiltdad· Bro&henr _ . • • • a bil1 by Assemblyman Robert E~ ftimiaJllld U.:.i!!!!!IL-Plal!1 ol emtint ·<:;.:::!'. ._, ,11_ ,,,.-,y '"'"-d . • • 1 •' d d 1 Badham (R·Newport Beach) in the Jut ~ dtier;•,·. , ;.;:-:.:;:: 11v111.ca11yf , .,mela"Oftee"",... evtce $JO OO Pled d an our women that be delivered . I th 1 1 1 1 th 1 Id h v -Ttie ~on·of·the ultimate economic was installtil We~_~Y to protect ,O . ge Cynthia on the even ing of Dec. 3, 1963, at session o e eg ! a urfl: a wou a e viabillty d ·th"e propo8ed city which in· agaln!t just ";'Ch iriC1denf.I and wu Hoag Mem"rlal Hospital In Newport killfd the freewa y all the way from ftout.E cludA its m•i..-ent and 1•-ability to scheduled to go into epe.ratlon today. Beach. 39 (Beach Boulevard) in Huntington JI CSUJ"" .. ''I d 't be!' tt · led t t T u • d F d Beach to the far end of NeWJ)Ort Bet:ch, raise ...-atidl fUnds throUth ta1e1. on 1eve was sing eu a O n•f.11. Un Cynthia was the third girl born to the. at thfl: southerly boundary of C,orona dei -· any partlculAr judge or court," Sheriff .,~ Slocums and Gerbosl a!ked if the doctor : MontanOJ added today;-!!But .we are could tell of Mrs. Slocum's reaction upon ~rleson said, "there are commitments~" Frotn P••e J -golng to increase our security around the By Phi'lco•Ford learning lhat she had ~nother girl. ar. · -. clock and put ()n added personnel ." -"If I remember correctly, she was "When there il'i an tidopled roote,tt -~rn15·E -Ttle-·explosion-was·lfirect.Jy across the disappointed.Jhat~sbe bad a third girl," He pointed out th.1t ·the it.Ale has l -, \I • • • ball from the one where Judge Harold Philco-Ford Aeronutronic Wednesday Dr. Andrews fsaid. ch.1sed much of·the rlght-<if·way along ,. emittff by jet engines. "Tbal ansmisslo11 path ~eleme.nt ts more . 'cult te work wttb," Beland 11Ml. poin ()Ut its "~Atest vAlue is be.fore the f ' He explained that ou, c:an be controll~ best by "acquirin1 eriough lind to separate it as far u possible rrem In· habited areas." The n~se recipient however, Beland stressed 15 the only element that should not be tinkered with. He said 11everal methods ba.ve been devised tn measure all pollution levels lncludlna noise pol!_u- ti on. Beland said there are some 30 dlfferent noise measuring scAlfl:s, "But we are going lo me.1sure lhe creature to death wbI\e it e·ats us alive,'' Beland said. He rtcoinmended, as bis firn1'1 repok for the city •f Newport Beach propa15el, that e..rpanslon of the creature bf atopped while solutions are found, ·. Bellllld said certain noise icceptablllly limits must bf: t1dopted. Again this is a repeat of tht, recommendations in the Newport Beach. study. Beland· enull'\erated the two m a j o r costs the-publiC: is paying as it adapts i. the growina pollution problem. "First there is black dirt in your lungs and second there is a shift in your hear· ing threshold. "We must say we will not accept that. We musl say we want a life style AS full as possible," he said. Grisel said city staffs are working on developing specific areas of complaint. "At the moment, rapresentat.ivef' of these cities do object to this particular plan of incorporation btcause of its t1dverse impact on the future ol the ad· jacent cilies," he said. He named the proposed park plAn As one of th e specific areas af concern. "As the plan stands now, the city will have only one acre of park per thousand projected population. Jn Santa Ana we have two l:Cl'es, and wt don't ton1ider It 1n be enougll~· he "Id. Grisel u.id the apprehension over the ecooomic aspect. of the city la the re.suit of what be termed the financl1I failure ()f two other plaMed cities -Re.aton and Oolum.bla, both located near W.11hington o.c. They meetings are an outrrowth of the tn ine C;ompany'1 vow 10 listen £o lnput {folJl ~e,tghborlna cities. Ray W.1taon, stnior vice prc1ident of the 11.nd firm, hAs repeatedly u ld thty wtiuld listen to any 11ug1estlons their pr o a p e c l I v e nei1hbor1 would make. Haley was abducted in lhe fatal flight by night pledged A Sl0.000 corporate gift to On cross examination. Enright a!ked if the adopted local route. two convicta and an accomplice. help kick-off the Harbor Area United Dr. Andrews ever saw Dr. Slocum at the ''In addition," he said. hthere are many Cills by a man and woman to the Fund campaign for 1970-7 1. hospita l when hls wife wu bavlna individuals and businesses that h.1ve University ()f Washington, the fire Looi! F. Hailig, Philco-Ford vice pres-Cynthia. located in a certain area under the department and the Seattle Tim.ts 25 ident and Aeronutronic division general "! think t saw him once but 1 don't presumption that A freeway Is going to be mln.Utes ~fore tbe Clark Hall blast warri-manager presented the pledgfl: to Robert recall, u the pbysici.1n s.1id. there to sfl:rvict them." ed tbern of lt, Hield, Harbor Area Uni ted Fund general Carleson explained that to get the The bomb was planted in the basement campaign chairman during a gathering of Public Works Department to relent in its of the structure, which houses Navy and corporate executives and agency offic ials. R • R S opposition to the deletion of any p.1rt ()f Air Force ROTC units. Heilig said, "Our people at Philc~Ford USSISDS eport ex the system, tt would have to be shown "It was quite a bl.1st." iald university benefit in many ways from the services Aff d b S that the segment in question "ls not spokesman lrv Blumenfeld, .Who theoriz· provided by United Fund member agen· ecte Y moking necessary to the system." ed the bomb was plArited before Wed· cies, and they have continued to support Carleson said the need for freeway• In nesday's 5 p.m. closing time. the United Fund in their home cities. MOSCOW (UPl) -Heavy smoking can the state is still growing . H d ulted d "A em lo r re Is d cit1' ns make middle aged men lose interest in eavy amage res An • shower s P ye s. pa n an ie • "Unless Californians change their life of glau flew lO feel aroun· d the build' we have 11n obligation to this cause. But sex, a Soviet newspaper 11aid today. ing. The newspaper Soviet Russia said style," he said, "we Are going to need A Weatherman tape recording was bC'yond that, as a corporation, we have a h 1 ·r d k' more and more freeways -it's a fact of played Wednesday at a New York news sµike in the welfare or our community . l ere was sc ent1 Jc evi ence smo 1ng life." conference and the voi ce identified AS I can think of no better way to .kick-off lessens sexual activities or men 40 years He sa1·d Iha! the lree··ay •ystem ,·, otlll th l f M' B d Doh · b this year's campaign than to present our old and older or even as young AS 30. . .. a o 1ss erna ette rn s Y her 1 ·11 F d M I c "One re:ison for this is changes 1'n the a very efficient means of moving tralf1'c, sister, Jennifer, a spokesman for the corpora e g1 -a. or o or ompa ny Youth International Party _ Ylppies, .•. Fund pledge of $10,000 for the Harbor blood which produce changes in sex "Freeways mOve a lot of traffic on "Now we are everywhere and next Arta· Un1ted Fund.'* hormones." the newspaper said. comparatively litlle land ," he ~Ald, week families and tribes will attack the enemy aroUnd Pie ceuntry,11 the lApe old. Jerry Rubin, a Yippie leader and one of the defendants in the Chicago severi trial. satd the retordlng was received by mail in New Y()rk Tuesday, postmarked from Chicago on Monday and bearing the 'return address of the old national head· qua,ters of the Students for a Democratic S«iely. The Weathermen began as A splinter faction of SOS. The recording said the first bombing of the offensive had already exploded Monday in Chicago's HA y ma r k et Square, blowing up a police slatue. The tape recording. which generally at- tacked present American society, gave ne Indication of specific Weatherman plans. Miss Dohrn arid 11 other members of the \Veathermen were indicted in Aprll, charged with conspiracy lo crtN state lines lo Incite rioting. Miss Dohm. a former na ti enal secretary of the SOS, dropped out of 1l1ht before Marcl'I 1S~en she failed to 1p- pe.1r in court o char£es ef .attacldn1 three policemen urln& a Weatherman disturbance in Chi o in Ck:tober 196tl. Later ln April pol found what they said was 1 bomb factory t1n Chicago'& North Side, Pollet said they had reports that she bad been stt.n in the area ef the apartment. The tape recordilli Tuesday ran for several minutes. "If Nixon invades Cuba, bombs North \'letn am, i.nlervenes in the Middle. East. we must All move fast." the tape said. "Figure out stralegic "Weak pelnts of' the tnemy. look tf the Arabs .. "With the underground and m11ss movf!ment responding together. we could strut down every international alrpert tn America within 24 boura." RIP VAN,.WJNKLE mattress Handcrafted by ~". ~ • Jrtd• """"' ,.. _ • Hand·ttiched aide•alla th•t will Mft:t ., .•. bftalc doWI\. • 12% rnort ctellble ll1-of 1l~pini:: 1urlece. ,• Uphol1~red ..,jth dee, layer! of f1u!f1 Duroa by Du font.. • t •Holland Maid fa11.,.. · •pring fnr ,-reatn st.. bility and eomfort. • 8-war hand-tied liox: •prinr-the D TJ fJll th• indutrJ. • Fall 20-0-~-=~c--· "1 -•1to a t!i4. ,_ • M llllt •••••••-••$I 99.50 -... _ ............ $279.SO ... • ........................ $369.50 .. .. H.J .GARRETT fURNITtJRE PllORSSIONAL IN11iRIOR DESIGNEU I ' -ntT OUl llVOLVINl5 CHAltaJ- 0,00 Miii.. n.n, l "'1 ...... " 2215 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. M .. 021r . I ' ' . ·I! I I 11 i . t ' .. 1 Satldlehaik . . . Today's~ , N.Y. Steeb . \ voe. 63, NO. 241, 4 SECTIONS,-52;!'A&ES . • 1 _ ~ couNtt, CALIEOINIA ' ', ~ TH\!~SDAY, OCT0~8, _1_!70 ' ' • .. TEN CENTS I . ' --I -· Dog Sniffs Out' Doped Cookie~; Youth N3hbed By JACK BROBACK ot ... Deity ,.... ttlff A marijuana-sniffing German shepherd dog was tbe star of a countywide narcotics raid early today. Ginger, a member 9f the Tustin police force, sniffed out a batch of cookies in a San Clemente residence leading to the ar- rest of John P. Graham, 19, of 4<K.l Pasadena Court. Ofllcon aid Ginger detected the allfcedly dopeloaded cook!" in a suitcase. Officials aaid. the illicit in- gredient in the cooky dough wu believed to be marijuana. --rhit morning's raid in whlch 21 persons were ~ was the second countywlde drlgnet in"a·-k. Mott thin 40 police -- e s . . ' offictrl from Llguna Belch, San C1ementt, Clrange -and TUI t In participated in the l'OWll!up. The Z& 'arrested bad been n 1 me d in secret Grand Jury indictmenta 11 the result of thret nlouths of investig1tkm by t,tle police officers and state narcotics of- ficers and district a t t or n e y 1·1 in· vestigaton. Officers aaJd.ln the raid today·they·coe> . -quantlU. al heroin. Wl, ~ drup, marijuana.and buhlsh. Nabbed in J.aaim -wu Gilbert M. Br1dy, .11, a tramient. jailed on charl• of selling heroin. • While offietn·were looking for another unidentified i..runa resident. they picked up a , man and 'f{OmlD · on marijuana poueuloncbarg... ~ Jailed and reloued on. their own remgnizance were 'I1lomu L. Cornwall, 24, and· Kim Camille Curtb, 22, boili of 11911 Victory Walk. Last Thursday a countywlde raid resulted in the arrest of 34 penons and the discovery of a potenUal bomb faclory and drul laboratory in Modjesb C,Oyon. The District Attorney'• . Office today announced irand jury indic:tment.s of 11 emn . --' ·. ., IXO·Il S San Orwlre Hearing.~ people who bad ~ pftvlously °"""'!'•. Incltxled ore Samuel JI. Gibooo, :14, ·111111- Allred C. Linde, 28, of 1214 Falrywooll Walk, and Rocer B. Decker, 25, al 521 ea1a11na st., all of Laguna Beach and all charged with the sale of LSD. Also indicted today WQ lJnda Jt 11ums: ti; of 796 W. Wit..in St., Costa Mesa. She wu at.o charged,wlth the aale of heroin. an But Viet Foes, Keep Door Open \ Art Colony Buildings' ~ate EY-~ed~-=-= -l'~l!P~-floi'th4'1<Wm,~m"'1<1.i--'--.::1 ' f I Two pleas for preservation of Laguna's "art colony" atmosphere were heard by city councilmen Wednesday night. They considered a report from the Planning Commission suggesting razing of five old br.iildings on El Paseo and possible installation of a parking Jot. Tb;ey also took.up aJeUer_from landscape archilect Richard Bigler offering to help develop the area with something, more. artistic than a parking lot. The buildings, part ,of the city's .Main Beach purchase, were not paYinc their way in rent revenue, planners reported. A possible solution would be to remove them and expanding the ez:iating parking lot between El Paseo and the Boardwalk. Bigler, who has a studio in one of the old houses, had written the council of- fering lo provide, free Of charge, a design for development of the property in a "'park like theme." Since he was unable to attend the coon-, -. t Testimony, and a;oss examlnation - p1rtlaJlarty on· fllcal matters dealing with IUCieAr plant npuslon -ccritlnued ~-thll moriliistJrbWinp·befono·a- -PubliC 'lJtQitiel~QwnnMiocr uaminer in &lft ·clemeateo I • ·Tha --·llU llle·balf.tiµlioo~ Pl~ Wiearl'll'rafur...pu.\on 11-, Sin 'OnO!te . .,.; ciJaitiiuln . amid iti'iq . liidtciiliiii 1Uiai't0ril r:,. tlle-)!i\i.. . ' .. . .. ' . l.,. '"'""'' -·' . , ' . ... ... ...,..~.....,: ... ~ ! . ~';.:U1'.~ Pi'$#&li • : ... ~J.'UC-'~;lfllii, ... nO( 7'I OfllctODJ . . ; the . u.. al tbo-:"tllhl ·-~~ ha in~ lot ._... ...... adfOoS . "next week1 '' · · · rffis akles" Hlvf· 'alie . ~ the resumption. · . • ' ·In tht 1mta~,· petlliOffi tieitinl'i" __,__ eltimated JOO tllftatures alJ'eadY' !lave been filed by opponent. lo the piepoeed · the Viet Cong,today condemned Ptestdent Nixon's peaCe plan u IUJlbolt diplomacy allned at perpetuatirig U.S. "aggresslon" to(vi•E'".m, but they ..!l!'eed lo dlscuu fl Jn f1:1ture oegot.iatiom. J!oth Xun Thuy, the North VletrouneH minister of state, and Mme. i;-guyen Thi ..: Blnhr tbe.:"tOrei-mw&ter" m thi V"itt l . ' ••• ., 'Oin1-gavernm:en~ called the off"' po1iUcil tric!Jery a1lned lit -innini Yatts f°df ·the·· Republicans: ·In ·the. 'November II elections... • Madame Binh and Thuy appeared . llnd. appmnUy from 1 nlghilong atudy al .. the prakfential 1ddreaa which wu received here at 2 a.m., and from corft. munteatJons with ·ffaniol. Madame Binh, swathed in a warm winter Coat despite the mild' autuinh weatber1-w1s grim fac- , ed whe11•1he arrived f.or today.'s talks. · · -· cil ·meeting because 'Of family J.I~ .. -.. :. I Bigler requested a two-week delay. 1he tWin ·reat:tofs. -' • · : · ·~ · · · ·Late W-y the Capilitt,;,..Beach ., Chambier: « Comm'erce job\ed tffe 'ranks ' Their languag& wu harsh but there r wal 'DO' 'outright rejection in their ·· · · _,,, ·" ' · ; ""' ·' · statements made before and durin& council agreed that the planners shooJd l(" have a chance to examine his proposal. ,.~ of local oppo1itlO. tio tbe re&Cbr 'locatiOn. 'PE~CE' IN THIS. C!NTU'~y;., . today's SHSion, the 17th. Nixon Tille.a to Nitlon c 11ley did not mention .NiJ:on 's offer ~ · ~ · · exchange prlsooen . Artist Paul Blaine Henrie, who oc- cupies a neighboring building and patio, ii .F .... -led · primarily by .GUARD (Groups United .A1abllt a·a'(f l·a t Ion Dani~J bave complalned all weelt th&t they have not had enouch time _lo coordinate opposition to tbe plut becaUlt Fashion Mode~~ '!be Nixon caU for a ceue--ftre throughout Indochina and offer i D'I guidelines for a political letUement were pri!sented fonnally at ,today's llt9Sion by Ambassador David K. Ei Bruce. But both 'Ibuy and Madame Binh were tborou&blY familiar with them when they arrlvecf... .· where paintings are ei:hibited in a rustic · setting, made a personal plea to · the council. Bigler said he had acquired the pro- perty long before the city purchase and spent thousand!! or dollars developing it as an artistic center that attracts visitors from all over the country. . "Razing the buildings would serve no useful purpose," Bigler said. "The ei:· isting parking lot is virtually empty dur· ing the winter months. Ir you can't develop the entire Main Beach property until 1973, why pick on these five pro- perties now? Why not pick on Dante's or other properties further north? Or just abstain from the whole thing?" 'Henrie said he would be glad to move to other quarters if it would benefit the entire city but ad~, "what you do with the Main Beach wlil reflect on the whole city for years ... you have a tremendous decision to make. I think the planning commi5.'ion should meet with Bigler to sea what he suggest.! and I'd like to· be there." The councilmen, asked by lt1ayor Goldberg for an Informal opinion, since the matter wts scheduled Iser on the aginda, all indicated they wou1d favor waiting.· 'Theodore Freistat. Beverly H i t 1 s bultrlessman who 11.id he Is a frequent visitor to Laguna and is thinking of mov· Jng here told the council, "I'm getting the imp~ssion that this is becoming the 'city of Laguna' rather than the Art Colony. If you tak~ the art out of Laguna· it wiU be just like any other city. Why take the most beautiful part of your bef!chfront ,and put It in 1 parking lot. It (See BEACH, Pase ZI Them 'fhatHas Gets Some More NEW YORK (UPI) -A couple who reside In West Hampton, one of Long Island's fashionable ~ mer places, today won the ·st million top prize in the New. \'.ert slate superlottery. 'I1le winners, George • n d Genevie•e Ashton, have • silt.eta. year-old son. Glenn. Ashton. ii an executive with the J. c, Peno e y Company. The top prize will pay Ashton and his wife $50,000 1 year for lhe nert 20 years. 1 Ul'IT ....... LT. GUIDO BATTAGLIA INSPECTS MARIN COURT DAMAGE In S.n Rlif•el, M'or1 Vlol1nc1 ·i1t the County CourthC!UM, .! •. Three Bomb Explosiom Hit B~~ltlings in Wes~ From Wirt Services A series of bomb bJasb coming one day after the-ultra-radical Weathermen ter- rorista ·declared an -autumn offensive against American society shattered three public bW!dings -on tile West Coast thi.< morniai. 'Authcrities fear it is on1y the beginning. No one f asd.njured in the erplosiona in· ' ' a Santa' Barbara military armory, the interior plaster was damaged and a 1m1ll fire that wu quicXly ertlnguia~ broke out. !fhe San Rafael bomb' waa planted in a 1vomen'1 resboom~ appenn.Uy during businw hours Wednesi:lay and r'eported (lee BOMBS, P ... I) • few San Oementeans i:new :tbe dates· el the hearing> tu!lk:ientJy ID ldvanc<. 1be primary objectlOll!, G U A R D spokesmen and ~tionen have told Main, iJ the alte for 'the propooed electcic planta. OpJl;Ollents want the . PIM!~ moved downcou~ inlll!'i and undergn11111d to help eliminate the asserted d.angtrs of radiation ·and bot water dlscliarged from reactor cooUn1 pipes into the coutal waters. . They have promised at least eight witne11e1 . nut week, ID)ODI them speakers q,ualifyln1 for "expert" atituJ for PUC 1wom tettimOny. Betides ·the peUtioM Wedne.day, Ex- . •miner Main beard ~ deiaill on the emissions: froht the eJistint · nuclear generator at San Onofre. Two witneases-one.a prime technical spol<etman •for the Ecliloft Company; the other-a ,..te bealth olllcial<Gflerl in ef- (llet llllARINOI, Pqel ·II ' . Clothes Stolen A· Laguna Beach 'fashion rDOde.I haa Meanwhile. much ol the world reacted .. ,.pt• of her w•rd:robe. remove:t! TueSday with praise to Nixon's call for .an fm .. __.~ mediate cease-fire in the, search· for afternoon from the powder ~ of the peace ln Indochina. but 1 0 me VlctOr 'Hugo Inn. , .. , d --• According .to Laguna Beacl)i~lice, the . govemmenta . an 1latesmen upr~ -'--doµbt of its success. woman was taking part ln ·a ·JJ.shion .-.w South Vietnam iaid It was ln agree- and had·le.ft her clothln1 in tbe restroom ment with the proposals. The Salaon while modeling in the show. . government said its statement followed She· returned to the reatroc;,r. lo make 1 after diJcussiorui with the American cha.rife of clothing and foun'cf that some-· _,._ f lothin' · government. . one else had found her C.i,;i~ o c . C The South Vietnamese reacU9n favor· and jewelry valued at $90. Police are Ing the Nixon plan followed by several investigating. hours an unfavorable response by other Israel ·Slaps Pilot . TEL AVIV tUP1l -The pilot of 0the El Al llrael jet' selr.ed'momentatily b,Y Arab ~errillas Sept a his been 'de.- motecrto copilot ltlitul"Jor vlolatin'a ~ laUons,.airllne Officiafa said W~y. South Vietnamese officials. · "The proposal of a ceut·fire Is Un- favorable lo us," Secr<tary of State Nguyen Tien Hy said ID SU,oa 1hortly . after Nixon's address. Other South Viet· namese oUiclall said the Communist. were certain to reject the ~II. · But J statement froin Saigon radjo ll1d tater it ''reaffirmed" its eai'lier clll for · "free eJectiom to determine the future of South Vietnam." , Orofe M8rln &ltmty Civic Center 1in San Rafael and a shared .Rorc building at the · university·ofwashing1oni•s.•t0•. Lam•na Councilman Aue3tions_-·.Motive for Req·uest' Telephone tips were given in two cases. et'-Y leading police to hustle a janitor out of • · · . , , , . the university's CJark Hall within By BUBARA K.REIBICH "How did you evU dream it.up?.lf.1 tiny Merring to J>:lpers, Lorr said, •;tn 1911 minutes of the blasl ' or 111e DillY "" ...., b' · · hlld ••· UN bo ed 110 Uli fr The San Rafael blast occurred near the A ro tine T~ueat for a charJtlblt it did 10 lo some poor COmmunilt c 1 Ul'lll : "'°"' m 00 om courtroom from which a Superior Court aoliclla~on ~hit a,flliJm~,.aaq _ how coul~~~ ~ibly bur~!~' UNI~EF ~~lhls mon9·.!~~ judge wu lddnaped Aag. 7 by three black· at the Lagiina . Beim\Sty -C o u n C'i I Mn. lpetn, who said sbt hU been aelJ.. in 'a wir aCalnal 'Batanga. l hate ,no; Faith revolutionaries who died with blln in a meeling Wedneaday night •wben coun-inc <ln1stmu cardl f!l< UNlc;EF in in the dJtecfo[1blp of UNICEF which in- b rr.ge of -· .. 'ire cilman Edward Lorr Wk:ed -.-L.1-•u 1 --· Beach for ·aeven years witmut I .. ,.! Co •~ u " a 6 ... u • -JllU"" -. ... -, b c uuq mm1.Dh•~ na ons. L-- 'l'hfnp are warming up alOlll tho '--0rlnp Coosl,-with•Friday'.-h!P , rudr,ig tabbed 1t. 75 llJd flll...r tnU'CUl')' a. Blame thtMll nasty Sanla.Ana...wlndl for thlL ·. Bluta came in succmion., at 1:27,.2:44 to itl real motive. __.. ln¥Jbie, II.id the' 'yoonpWI w 0 Th~ ~om~ said It· "soundl like' and 4: t5.a.m., al SeaWe, Son Ralad and Lorr uked that Mn. Adele 1-'• re-partlci~ ill U.,. trick or treat dm:e.,co\. .--.. •• ~ t~ J hri Bir h &c: ty ., ' Santa Barbara. . ques~ In behalf-of the Coa.W....Chal!'« Jediftc eouis In UNICEF' CGlltamm"" ..... _._~WU e 0 c •. INSIDE TODAY No warning was Riven before the e1· of United Nations, for &utbarbation of the lttiiCl Gr accePunl,CIDdy, lfst )'eat~ 'tlt 'Jiu nothing to do with ~ J'Ollt plosion 'in Sania Barbar•, which the Halloween "trick ot treat l«•!OOC.U" 1100. . Birch Society,': "id Lorr. "Thi& bu-· Weathermen warned Wedne>dly would drive;be pulled from the ceo....t eaten-"Yllil llliowd' 1eetl\e ha{llll' f~.I" . ~ .. \elfby ofllcia!J of the .\mer~ be one of their targett....,. the nation. · dar for spedal dilculllon. thOoe chlidn!il 'who tinow' they ara. dolllC . i.ei.1oo; 'lldJthe DAR." _, "Part of a wall wu blown back, but "I am in accord 1rith the !:God ht-IC'.mfithN for"othe(s;" ibe told Lorr. · · ' . there lWIS no cave-in," uld Polite Lt. ten lions of people in tlill town who want 1 ••11n•t' 'that better than · • tu 1f f J'n c Wljlfll: Arnold Hano stepped forward ~. Capi. Eddi< l!fclunbacktr .,. onatimt rating driver, World \Vq I /lJlfng act and '""1iuor of 23 doya on • roft In Ille Paci- fic -1aal rtaeMd hi&' SOL.la biri/Jda;o. Pdge 4. l Fred Baker who.Identified the cauae as to r•ise money f0< •tarving children," themOelvel 'wltli a lot of coridy, ••t it . "'":~:.Thia la an •Ill hat ro-l\Olh of cleflnlt>ly a ',.boiage devlc.. · u id ·Lorr. "-.Ver, s1nco part al, the . ~r ~~· our ~11("1, Ill \".'11 lo bt,IP '.an . . rlghtw)n1 propq-llM. ' 1be a.-y la ·atw<d by an ·artllj•ry ·di.-rtblp·of•UNICEF (United NaUons •others? . that liali~ dlr.eCted igallllt the ,UN . unit al tile California N1~0011i Guard and. ·Children'• Emergoncy rFund ) is in the Lorr uld 'It '!<JU)d 11.! better" If t'i!l'.111 ~'belore ttei! It his all' lie<n ' allared by an Army· Reeerve'llfttt.-:-binds of COmifluiiW'llaUons and we hive ~ethlni' ..... for -uary---~~en .,Iii thli , , , and ln;!Wered Yeti'! ago .. ~ Nd fmoe protecta it on·the nort ·aitte • no usuran<o -filllda do oot !Ind their c®'Jlt)\ •j!Ut.t'""'~ '1ll, o~, 'llO(ld wlioj&; Iii la ltx11c;:oo•· The ·~ Is where the boinblexploded ind, police said way into the hands of the* nationl, thls help tllia (Und," ald·Mro. . , wnUatft. Ume... , any pu1trb1 Ofl the street out.Ade woukl could heJp release their own funds for ''How clit you' dO ttmt" a wo!n-an in ~an ·Roy Holm moved to. arant1 have acce11 to the building. oiher purpooes, like making 'war on'us:" tho audlence .. ul!'\ tort., "I don't Ill· thef;t for UNICEF trick or tmll!'I A -wu blown off It. hinau and "That ii the mott!fiota!lil: tale I t)ltf doiritand).Wl' mlaalng. 'ThlJ i•:i..tplng • on een. 1be moUon w11 1pproved numerous wlndowt were ~tttr-ed1 while hear ln my life!" txclaimed 'Mt1. Jpien. lltUt chlldi-en .•. " ' • 4-1, 'Lorr dl.Jsentlng. ' ,, ' c.11..... ,. 1...w • ~.,..,,.~ 11• ...... ,_ • I.It 1 .. .,,.... ... •• a..Mll ... ...... a.tr ti '-"' » = .,_ . o..-f A ,-L-.,,,,_..IWt ~ ....... tt °'· ••• ..... ti ....... ..... ' .,.,. .. ,.... ..... a ......... , .. , ... ,.......,. • ,..... •n 1"-"" • ""'--11 ......... .• ... .......,, ,, .._., ..... ,,,.,, ..... . ...... .. ........ l,. ..... 11 l 1 .. . . • • 2 DAILY PllOT SC • Riot !fepert Secret Laguna . . - Heari-ngs Hit behind closed doors r V.'&S questioned Wednesday night bf artist Andy Wing, I Real Estate Talk Series Set for GWC DAILY PILOT "--.... ,.. .. .., ... -OllANGE COAST f'UllmtllfG """1AMY ll.eb.rt N. W11d Pretllllflt 1r.f P,,llllt'*" J1clc R. Curl1v Vkt ,.,..1e11n1 ar.d ~r1l 1'\ef111tr l ho,,.•• K11vll E~lllir Th""''' A. Mllf'P\;"' Mtntefnl 191(0!' l lchtt4 P. H1I '611111 Or1,... County .,.. Of- • I From Pqe l BEACH ... shOu!d be built up t s 1 be1utilul little Ct!nter or .iu·t! end crafls, With artl!tt: x- tuitlly workiniz." Freislat said, "the pt0ple who come here fur art are lhe oneJI "'ho SPf-nd money, not the o~ wl'wl come lt1 park and ~ lo 1he beach. You should do everythlng to presenie your arl colony lm11ge.·• Goldb<rg not..! thal th• parking lot Idea was sugpested only as 1 temporary 11olution lo a _fma.ocJa1 problem. Md said .the creation af an art..!l And cr3fl.s specialty area on Ule beachfront already had been' proposed u p1rt of future develapment. tl was agreed to defer 1ctit1n pending Bider's meeting with the pl1Mlng com· miu ion . .MurphyJ'ies 'Peaceniks"' -To Tunney 12 Bomb Suspects Plead Innocent • 1lf "'' """"' ,,,. _ • Ha11d-1tiched aide•alhl tht t will Jteftl' Ml' .. bf'eak down. • 125' ""°"' u!!Hble ..._ f)( s\eepinr aurfaet. ,. UphollMred ~th d9ep Jayf'~ "' fluff7 Daam by Du PO?lt. •Holland Maid~ aprinr fM ~eater ~ bility and ~f~ • 8·••1 hand-tied Noa aprinr -th• UTJ' .t. t he indo1try. •Full 20-7eu awwwa:M _ ... _ ....,.,,....., ..... --.$19'1.SO ..... -.................. $279.50 ..... ...... ·--······--.. $369.50 .... y .. '"""""' -~ eQl be ""1>l'f lo ouflC ,.. ••• H.J.GARRtfT fURNl11JRE 12 15 HARIOR I LVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646-027' PROFESSI ONAL INTERIOR DESI GNERS -TIY OUI HVOLYlNIS CHAlt;l- Opto w... .,,,... .. Jlrl. ..... I I ! I I' I Ii ;. -,.,: .. • • . • Lag••••a Be.-.f1h --'-. ED.ITION. • . -*i-~ .. - VO~. 63, NO. 241, ~ SECTIONS; 52 P'A6ES ' . • 1 • • -' . ~GE-COUNTY, (:Al.IFORllM -· . Today'• Fl••I N.Y. Steeb JEN CENTS ~ . .. -I ----. ---,;i.\.. -" ~· ... ----- Dog SniffS Out Dop ed Co~ies; Youth Nabbed .. --·---' -- By JACK BROBACK 01 ftlt Dtll'I ,,. '''" A marljuana..nifflng _German sh13>hgd dog was the star_ of a countywide narcotics ratd early today. G •• a member of the Tustin police force, llliffed out a batch of cookies in a , San Clemeftte residence leading to the ar· real of John P. Graham, 19, of 40l.I P•uden.1 out. ()ffij)en uJd ·Ginger cleted<d .the ane@!lir ~ _ ~ coollles · In a -· Ofllcla]J uid the ·lllidt ln-gredleiit '1n·11>e cOoq•dOup was believed to lie ... ij..... " Thls·--1ng'1 raid lnwhic!i ·-~ arreltid was the aecond countywide drqnet.til a week. More !ban IO police e s Art Colony Buildings' Fate Eyed Two pleas f0r preservation of Laguna's ''art colony" atmosphere were heard.. by city councilmen Wednesday' night. olficm !roiD Lacuna . Beach~. San Clemente, Orange , and T u 1 t I n :._:paledln the~-~ ' The 21 arrested bad·been n 1 m-e d in secreLGrllll!I JJ!IY ~ p the resultof three moalbs of lnvesllptm oy the police officers and 111aio·narcotlcs of. ficera and district a t tot n e y • • , in· veatigators. · .... -• Officers said In 1bt raid today Ibey .... . .. llacaled .quatit!U. of b«oln; LSD, .W.,emn dnlp, llllr!Juana ·and buhish. · Nabbl4 ln.~ch WU Gilbert . llii<ly!D;4';lf0iilliol Jilled on <bar&• of tell\l'I boroln. ' . While olfioeri·"'° Jooklng for soother unidentified Laguna mident, Ibey Ricked up a man m:l WOIDID on marijuana -loo chirgea. . * Jailed jnd rtieued · on' their own . ' recognttance were-niomaa L. Cornwall, 24, and' Kim Camille CUrtis, 22, both of li98 VlctOcy Walk. . ~t • 'fh~y a cOufttywidt' r~ld resulted in the· arrut of 34 persons and the discovery of a po(enUal bomb factory and drug laboratory In Modjelka Canyon. · The Dliitt1ct. Attorney's Office, ·today aimoW>Ced IJ'llld jury tildlc:tinenti of 'U ' . .emn -· . . . ' . 1xon s ' SanOiwfre Hes ring Continues . ~ 'Testimony and cross examir:i.i.tien -, particularly on fileal "lnfl:ters dealing with nuclear plant expansion .-·continued tbrougli ll>is mornlili lil ~ before a Public .. UUlltfes_ C.Ornmlulon~e11mlner jn_. sin.ctenieole. . . . . ''l'bt • ' .. 'uiui u,. b~~llar •• j people who had beeo previously rrrraaled. Included are Samuel R. Gibson, M, and Allred c. Linde, 28, of 121' F~ Walk, and Roger B. Decker, 25;-otlil cataltna St.,·all of Laguna Beach' and all charged with the sale of LSD. · Also · indicted today1 was Linda' K. Bums, IS, of 796 W. Wilson St., Colla Mesa. She wa, aJao charged with the u1e of beroln.. . -an But Viet · Foes;· l{eep -noor Open PARIS (UPI) -North Vietnam and Nixon's peace plan aa gunboat dJplomae)r aime~ at perpetuating U.S. "aggress.ion" in Vietnam, but they agreed to diacuu it ., tn futurt negotiations. They considered a report from the Planning C.0Jllmi!l~-sugge_~g _r!lZing of five old buildings on El Paseo and possible imt.allation of a parking lot. They also took up a letter from landscape arcbilect Richard Bigler offering to J\elp develop the area with ao~-more artlsUcihiln~g l<il. · ........... ~ .......... ' . . ... ~ ,~·:~ ~~·+-~. r ;Both Xuan Thuy, tlie Nortli Vietnamese , n\iniater of state, and Mme. Nguyeft ·Tbl ' Blnb, tbe "f"'J&n mlnilier" il)'lh-Viet f, _ eonp..,venmient · cauOd~Cilfer _ 'The buildiiigs, part of the. city's Main Beach -purchase, were not paying their ,: . . . . \. " , . f .. -o!,.lbe:.,Jl!.!i--. .,.;-'".1~~ -~·"!"I>;·•· J 'f .·,..~~:~. .Wblfa:t.l,~ ~~ ... net .,. rrifiailunctrUbi nlump. UOll of tile~ Desi W~, be bas lndlealed lor the reconl ..... 'actions politiealctrickery ·aJmed..at wlnn;na .'(........ , f'4' tbe-Republlcans"m'lhli !lciYOiiiliilr;J.-. etections. way in rent revenue, Jl:}anners reporie(i. ,,_ Madame Blnb and Thliy ippeaud A possible solution woUtd be to remo'irt them alld npondlbg the ealsling parking lot between El Paseo and the Boardwalk. Bigler, who has a studio in one of the old houses, had writ(en the council of ... fering to provide, free of charge, a design for development of the property in a "park like the~~ · ~ "next week." . ·lf>1 'lidea · tiave also predlcled the ......... too. Jn the. ll!<>!lllimt, petitions :bearing •• estimated 500 •!&natures alreacfy have . been-filed'by OflPOlllnll to 1Jltcpropooec! twin reactors. . ' • tired, ·1ppareo11y·1rom a niibUorig study of tbe'.Jresldenlial address which WU recetv here at J a.m., and from com- munications with Hanbi. Madame Binh. swathed in a -.rm winter coat despite the mild autumn weather, was grim fae- ed when ahe alrJvecffor today's talks. • Since he was unlble to attend the coun- cil meeting because· of family lllnes!, Bigler-requested-a.-two-week: .<!elay. The council agreed that the planneiS~ shoaht·-·-•· ~ have a chance to examine his proposal. -··-· ···>Lale ·Wednesday· the 'ClpiSttiM'.Btaeh Chamber of Commuce joined the Tanks "f l~al. oppositiotl lo -the reactor ~tioa. . 'PI ACE IN THIS CENTUR'(' NIX... Talks ~ Nation Artist Paul Blaine Henrie, who oc-. cupies a neighboring building and patio, where paintings are exhibited in a· rustic setting, made a pelsonal plea to the CQuncil. Bigler said he had acquirea the prir perty long before the city purchase .and spent thousands of dollars developing it as an arti.!itic center that attracts visitors from all over the country. "Razing the buildings would serve no useful purpose," Bigler said. "The ex· isting parking lot is virtually empty dur· Jog the winter months. If you can't develop the entire Main Beach property until 1973, why pick on these five prir perties now? Why not pick on Dante's or other properties further north? Or just abstain from the whole thing?" Henrie said he would be glad to move to other quarters if it :would benefit the entire city but added, "what you do With the Main Beach will reflect on the whole city for years ... you have a tremendous decision to make. l think the planning commission should meet with Bigler to see what he suggest! and I'd like to be there." The councilmen, asked by Mayor Goldberg for an informal opinion, since the -matter was scheduled l~er on the ag~da, all indicated they would favor waiting. Theodore Freistat, Beverly H i 11 s bUslnessman who said he is a frequent visitor to Laguna and is thinking of mov- ing here, told the council, "I'm getting the Impression that this is becoming the 'city of Laguna' rather than the Art Colony. If you take the art out of Laguna it' will be just like any other· city. Why take the most beautiful part of your beachfroiit and' .Put it in a par~& lot. It · (See'!IEACH, Page I) Them ThatHas Gets Some Mor e . . LT.· GUIDO .BA1'.TAGLIA INSPECTS MARIN COURT DAMA<;E; In S.n R•fael, More Vloleiic1 11t the County Cou~ou1e .Three Bomb Expwsions Hi~ Buildings in West From Wire Services A series of_bom~ blast! coming one day after the . ult;ra-radical Weathermen ter- rorists declared an autumn offensive against-American 10Ciety shattered three public buildinp on the West Cout this morning. . ' Interior plaster' was damaged and a small fire that wu quickly ellingulabed broke out. . The San Rafael.bomb w~ pJanted in a women's restroem, · appareJitly · dll(ing busiJiess hours Wednetday· and reported (See BOMll!I, Pap I) Foes -led primarHy by · GUARD (Groupa United ' Against Ra d iation 08.nfers) liivi cOmptained all ~ ib8t they have not hid enough time lb coordinate oppbsition to the plant becauae few San qt~ knew'.ll\< dates if. the bearlnp auUlcienlly In advilr>Ce. Tbe · primary objections, G.lf A R·D spokesmen and ' peUtionen bave told Main, ii the site for the propl)Sf!d electric plants. Opponents want the plants moved downcoast. inland and uftcfeiground to llelp ellmlnate the asserted dan~rs of radiation and bot water discharged from reactor cooUne pipes into the coutal waters. Tbey have promised at Ieut eight witnesses next week, .amon, them speakers qualifying for "expert. ' status for PUC sworn testimony. · , .Beside> the peUiionS Wednesday, Ex· aminer Main beard specific detaiJJ on the emisslotJS from the 1 exlstlng , nuclear genet11tor at San Oriofr~. . . two witl\eSl&I --one a prime-ticbrpcal •l"'lraman for the EdllOn Com~y; .the · o(ber a ilUe helllti ·official expert In ef. . (Bee l!EAIUNGi,.Papt·I) Fashion Model's Cl0tlies· Stolen · . ' A Laguna. Blllach, fashion. mod.el had part of her wardrobe removed Tuesd1tY afternoon from ·the pow<ler ro:om of the · Victor Hugo 'Inn. According to Laguna Beach police, the woman was taking part in a fashion show and hid left her clothing 'in the re.!ltroom while modeling in the show. She returned to the restroom to make a change of clothing and fO!Jnd 'that some- one else. had 'found her cache of clothing and jewelry v'alued at $96. Police are investigating. Israel. Slaps Pilot. TEL AVIV (UPI) -The Pilot of tho El Al Jsfatl· jt!t seized mome'ntarlly b)' Arab · guemllis Sept. s has been ·de- mGted to copilot status for violating regu· ~ ta·uOns, airlli1e offielaJa ~id Wedneiday: Charity Plea"· Stalled AutboriUes fear·it is only the beginning. No one wu injured in the explosions in a Santa Barbara military armory, the Marin County Civic Center in San Rafael and a shared ROTC building at the u~:r:;~.:\i:.':':~~:~ is:::;·~..... Laguna CounciCman Questwns . M~tive ·tor Request leading police to husUe a janiter out of . . ' " · · · the univers.ity's Clark Hall . within By BARBAR.A KJ\EIBICB "How did you ever dreim ti up?iu a tiny· Referring to papers, Lorr' said, "In 1961 minutes of the blast. °' *-DIMt' 1"t1tt 1tett bit did go to some, poor Communlat child, the ' 'UN ' borrowed •10 million from The San Rafael blast occurred near the A routine request for a charitlble UNl~F '--•· an!i •• 11 money wu, ... :. · courtroom from which a Superior Court tolicitation· permit hit a momentlty 11111 bow could that.poalbly hurt you?" '-'&i lWJUIJ w1 UM:'ll judge wea kidnaped Aug. 7 by three black at the Laguoa Beach City Co u n c 11 Mn. lpoen, who 11id she hu -oell-lil a war qalnsl Batanga. I have no faith • revolutlonariea who died ·wttb blm In a meeting Wedneoday nlgbt-wh<n COWi· Ing .Cl>rlslmu card& for 'llN!CEr In; in the dlt.ctdnbip of uNiCEF-whlch in-· barrage of gunfire. cilman Edward Lorr voiced IUlpicloo u Laguna Beach fol"'aeven yen whbaut cludes:cOnuDun1st natiorui." ·Blob came In 9Uccesslon, at 1:17, 2:14 to Its.real motive. trouble, laid the )'OllllJ!~ . ir.b •. -Id .. '" •-Uk • · tba Mn ..... I ' _.,.1,.1 · te• in~..:.: tri:..L -~trelt drive, ., cOI· · ·1.ue women . u ... . sounw. t ~~t!'.l:;~~~t Selttte, San Rafael and q~ ;1'~ ~the·;~.,:. ~tu ~~ uNiCE'r C<lalllnerr li;. oomethi!>I from the John.Birch Sbciely." No wamtnrwas given before the ex· ofUnlledNations,loraulhorlaatlonofthe lleldol·a~~"'!dy1 fisl)_earf~ • ''It has nothin'· to do with the.Jorut plooion In Santa Barbara, which the Halloween "lrlc:k or treat for UNICEF" •too. • • · . B~h Society," .. td Lorr."'Thltliaa be.n NEW YORK (UPI) _ A couple Weatbennen ""'1led Wednesday would drive.-be pulled from the COllMll ·eal.,.. 1 • J"You ohaold ,.. 'tlii! 'hapW " ficts ·of d6c:umen°t<d ·l)y officials of ihe Amtflcaw ' be one of their targets across the nation. dar for special dltcuuion. J t11t11·•cbtldle6 ,wfrlo kftmr!tltey f}';.~I " ".:. .. km ' d u\e DAR"' " ' ·~ · ' who,. reside in West Hampton. one "P.ari·of a wall was blown back. but .ii am 1n accord with tbe good Jn.'~ ..m.ctifna'~for ·Othei't.:~'lbt ' tMd 'Lori'.' -ti an , t ' 1 • of Long Island's fashlonab1e sum-there wU no...·cave:-in," "id P,oli~ Lt. , tentions o( p;pf>le hi this town who wet "~t· )Lilt . better .'.~·: 1't iJ f'.~ 1·!l c ' ·Wrl~ ~ld Hano stiepped forw~ to mer places, today won ~. $l Fred ,.-Baker • .., identilfed the cause as · to 'Tallie money for starving children," tlitinitelves·wtth a lot of c•dy, Isn't It comment. 1 '1'1Us ta· arr old hat-re.ti• or 1 million top prize in the New .York ddinitely-a sabotage device. u.Jd Lorr. ~·However. since part of the Mder fOi' our ·clilldttli (o lellt 'to lietp an extreme .rlghtwing propaganda line state superlott.ery. The armory Is shared by an arttUery directorship of UNICEF (United Natioos othen1'"" · ... , ~ thlt bu been 'directed ·agalnlt. the UN , The winners, George . 1 n d urut of the Calilornla National Guard and Children's Emergency Fund) is in the Lorr iald It Would be better if they did ainceilong tiefore 1961. lt has 'Ill been Their · ...,,.... ,JW~har&b but there was no outright rejection in their statements made before and durlna:· today's 11esalon, the 17th. They dJd not mention Nixon's iiffer to exchange prisoneni. The Nlzon call for a cease-fire throughout Indochina and o I f e r I n g guidelines for a pOlitJcal aettlement were prestnted formally at today's sessiop by Ambassador David.K. E. Bruce. But both Thuy and Madame Binh were thorougb1y: fcimiliar with them when they arrived. Meanwhile, much of the world reacted with praiw lo Nixon's call for an im· mediate cease-fire in the search for peace in Indochina, but s o m e governments · and statesmen expressd doubt ot its auccess. ' South Vietnam said It was In agree- ment with the proposals. The Saigon government said Its statem~t followed after discussions with the American government. · The South Vietnamese readion favor.. big the Nixon plan followed by several hours an' unfavorable· response by other South Vietnamese officials. · "Tbe proposal of a ce.ue-flre ls un- ravorable to us," Secretary of State Nguyen Tien Hy said in Saigon sborlly afler Nil<on's .addreu. 'Otht< South Viet- namese offlclil1 said the O>mmunis$1 were certain to reject the1proposal1. But· a statement from Saigon radio said later tft "reaffirmed" its earlier call for "free eJecUona to determine the future· of South Vietnam." Oruge Weadter 1'hlnp are warmin( up stone the · OrlNfe Coal, with· Frld1y'1 blgh n!ading tabbed 'al '15 'ind lnlaild mercury 92. Blime thOse nall!Y- Santa Ana wlnd1 for that. INSIDE TODA 'Y Cop!. Eddi•' Rlcktnl>acker '.:... • ofietime racing driver, World W'•• I fll!ina ""' ond sunri..,. of 23 dayJ. on a roft i'n tlit' Pa'tl· fia -. 11(U , rtathtd hil 80ih birth<14li. PQJJe 4. • ' ~nevi eve Ash~n. have -:.' .. sateen-_ _ shared by_an~Army Reserve unit. _ hands of Communist nations and we have_ IOD'le~_fOr t.~Y: cfiildml ~ in__Jbls doCbitientea,ana answerfid years tgo. The · year .. !d son, G!Cnn. Ki~'611 Isa• ~ l'lLJ•nce ,P[Otecls It on the nort side liOUsurpce lundl ·do notJind tlitir._ Cllunii'f."'B~t.btom..,all over the world woole 1hlng 11 IU<il~ ~0-~xecutlve wiUt'\be J:-C;-P e n n e Y where Uie bomb explOOied an po ce u.id way' into' the hinds o( 1*'utions, ·um. btlp thia fllnd," said Mn. Jpsen. ~ + wa 1-iG ~ ·' ;--Co.!!'.~an1 Y· lze wlll pay A!bton and any,passerby on the· street outside would could help release t~~-· /or "How can you do thli?" • woman '·In Councilman Roy Holm moved to IJ'lnl "~ op pr · have access to the building. other purposea, Uke m IM!ll~lji1 11'1f th< audtenee elted l.or'r: ••1 doil't un-• the permit for UNICEF trlc~ or treatlna his: wife $50,000 • ye.v for the next A door wu blown off its hinges and "That ts the most fan~-~' denllnd your rruon1n1: TtiiJ ii b~J>Jnl ()ff U.Uoween. ~ nioUon ·wu·1ppteveit 20 years. numeroua windows were 1hattered, wblle hear In my lUe!" uclaflbielttrlt _ ·lltut chlldrtn .•• " · · ~J. with Lon dlNenliqc. 1. • ... \ r • ·r ,J • \ ' ., ' 2 -DAILY P"OT· -$C Riot -Report Secret Laguna Hearings --Hit .'J'be Lacuna Beach City Council's right to~dllcuu ltl_ Woodland Drive riot report. behind closed dpora was questioned Wednioday nlghl by arti&l Andy Wing, Real Estate · Talk Series Set for GWC County : Jobless Rate Hits 7.1% Unemploym~nt hit 1 nine-year· high in -·erqe-eounty-ln··SeptembeP'-wllh. 7.1. percent ofthe work force affected. The ala.te Department-of Homan Resources u.id there were 33.000 unemployed in ~ county in September. Of that number, 5,800 were aerospace and electronics workers. Last month the U.S. Department of Labor declared the county to be in the "substantially unemployed" category which gives county aerospace flrms first priority on federll defense and space contracts. Tbe September unemployment rate was . the blghest since May, 19Sl when 7.2 per· cent.of the workers were idle. Orange County ranked second highest in Southern California during September in unempl oyment. Only Ventura County was higher witb a jobless rate of 8.2 per- cent. Los Angeles. San Bernardino and Riverside counties had a 6.4 percent unemployment rate and San Die10 Coun· ty 6.3 percent. The, statewide average was 7 percent. DAILY PILOT N ..... -H.ol--""9M ... di ........ Y6!r - c.r. M,.. S. Clo ••• · OAAHliE COAST PUILISH IMO COMMMY Robtrt N. w,,. Prnlllrnl t rAI Plllll~ Jee\: R. Cur ley VI" p,.1e11nt t r.Cl Gtner1l "'"""'r lhomt• K1t"fl1 Edtl1r lho"'11 A. Mtrtphi111 MIM9ifll i'.d1ttr fli,ti•r" '· Helf loVlll Or1111t t.tl.lnl)' ldtlOt" Of- CO.tt Mttl: l30 Wnf Sl'f Sfl'ffl N..,..,1 tw.J\• 2111 W•t .... , 1.oultVIN • utuM "'¢11; m Ptrttt ..... """ '4111'.'lflllfltll-.... clu ,,.,J_l .,cll lo\lltwt"' .. Ii Cll!Mlltt: at Jtlttll IJ Carri-~•I From Pagel BOMBS ... five minutes earlier. "M excited young woman ctlled an operator anonymously and ukl th':fe was a. big bomb in the rourthouse 1n San Rafael and it would soon ge> off," said Sheriff's Iri!pector Bowen Bridges. Dynamite fumes could be smelled Im· mediately following the blast. which ste>p- ped all clocks and ruptured plumbing, sending torrents of water throu1h the building. Night custodian George Pantaxes was only 70 feet away and said it sounded like a load of scrap metal falling . Sheriff Louis Montanos emphasized there was no direct evidence lioking the courthouse bombing to the attack.s in Santa Barbara and Seattle. The damaged courtroom is normally · used by vacationing Judge Jo5epb WilMln. who reeenily conducted hearinas behind wall& ol San Quentin in the cues of tbe O<><:Blled Soledad Brothers. .IrtrUcally. a melal-detectin& device . was installed Wednesday to protect against just such incidents and was scheduled to go into (lperation today. "I don 't believe it was singled out to any particular judge or court," Sheriff Montanos added today. "But we are going to increase our security around the clock and put on added personnel." JUDGE ABDUCTED · The explosion was directly across the hall from the one where Judge Harold Haley was abducted ln the fatal fil&ht by t'\'(I convicts and an aceompllce. Calls by a man and woman to the University of WashlngU>n, the fire department and the Seattle Times U minutes before .I.Pe Clark Hall blast warn· ed them f:lf it. The bomb was planted in the bssement of the structure, which bouseS Navy and A!r F(lrct ROTC unill. "It was quite a blast.'' said university gpokesman Irv Blumenfeld .. who theorlz· ed the bomb was planted before Wed· nesday's 5 p.m. closing time. Heavy damage resulted and a shower of glas1 flew 50 fttt around the bulletin&. A Weatherman tape recording was: played Wednesday at a New York news conftrenct and the voice tdenUfled u 1--11 .. 1t..-ot a4i11 Bemadette:-Dohrn'a· tiY htt &ister, Jennifer, 1 spokesman for lbt '\'"outh lnternatlonal Party -Ylpples. I ''Now we a.re e\"erywhere 1Dd cen wtek families and tribes will 1U.1ck the enemy around the country." the tape sai d. House Approves Anti-Crime Bill Overwhelmingly W ASH!NGTON (UP!) -The House p a s s e d · overwhelmingly Wednesday President Nixon's bl!) to crack down on organized crime and terroris t bomblng.'11 despite objections it would not work and would endanger Constitutional right! ~f all citizens. Passage of the bill was the second major victory for the President Jn two Wetks hi 1ett\ng House action on crime bills he· complains have been delayed unduly. , Earlier the House passed a ct1mpre- htnsive btll to· fight the drug problem, which also aroused dispute on COMtltu- tional grounds, and the Senate was mov- ing Wednesday night toward passage or that measurt. The organized crime bill, which passed the Senate in January in tougher form , Is the major pro~a1 In NiJ1:on·s 13-polnt, anticrime package. It would make organized gamblinl! ll fedtfal crime. bar investment or crlmi- nel !!•ins In leg\limate bus iness 11nd allnw extended sentences for habitual or pro- fessional crimlnals. f'r0m Page I BEACH •.. ' 11bould be built up as a be1uUful UtUe ctnter of arta and c:rafts, with artists 10- l11>lly worklna." P'rnlstat said. "the people Who ~me here for art art the ones who spend money, not the onts who come: to park l'lnd ~ to the beach. You should do evtrything to prese rve your art colony imare.·• Goldber1 nolod that the parking lot ideA Wit sugR"e!ited only •~ a temporary solution to a financial problem. and 1ald lhr"creetton-ot-an art.~ and crafta sptclalty area on the betchfront elready h1d bee n prop)ted as parl of future development. ' It w11 agreed to defer action pending Bigler'• mettint with the pl&Ming com· mission. • ' . . MilrphyTjes 'Peaceniks' To Tunney , II I ! I .1 --'- .1\~ 12 .Bomb Suspects Plead Innocent Twelve of the 1mpecl! arrested last Friday when office.rs raided a Modjeska Canyon "bomb factory castle" have entered innoa!nt pleas at arraignments at Central Municipa1 Court In Santa Ana. Preliminary hearings for the suspect5 were set for Oct. 20 but attorneya 1aid grand jury indictment.s ma y bring th~ proceed ings before Superior Court before that time. Individuals face as many as 18 felony.., charges involvinj:. drugs, posseS!ion (If a machine gun and explnsives. Judge Eugene Langhauser set ball for· the suspects for eig ht at $50,000 each and at $25,000 for 11 others. · ··~·-"""'-• Ha11d·t liched aidewalla that will rtnu ... , _. break down. • 12% mor1 uaable u. of 1!Hpill1 l\lrlaoa. te Uphol1teftd wi th d_, layrn of flld!J Dacroa by Du Po11t. •Holland Mald' lftl'llf'o •P!i~c.Jor gru\tt-...., «"J """"1ITTitj"'&na comf~-~ · • l·••J. hand-t.led Mx a}lrinr-the •YJ ti. t he lnd11irt?T. • hn 20-:rar a= 11 --pro-.r&Wld. ..... "" ......... -•. $199 .so ... "' -a. ............... $279.50 ..... ....... ·····-····-····$369.50 .... ' Y 01I t•••ril•-lnttrlor cl<rigMr 111111 bt ham lo llU'8t '°" · .. ---__ H.J. GA.RRflt -FllR~qtJRE _ -- 2215 HARBOR It VO. COSTA MESA. CALIF. 646°027' PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS -TIT OUR" llVOLY!Na CHARGll- o,.o· ..... ,,,.... ' 1\1 ...... ' I I I I .- -· • Tilursday, October a. 1970 s Nuclear ·Plant ileats-Sea Currents Would Take Outfiill Do·wn Coast to Park IC Southern California Ediscm wins a long list of needed approvals for a half~ biU~llu.....nQ.IJllioo jlf OJ.t_C l--e a r geperation at San Onotre, a new state park downcoast will have a few 'Unique aapect.1 ...... including warmer~ water for l>l.thers. Spokesmen for the utility aMOunced -zthis week-the sea water woUJd De wanner · year-'round. · , .. ~ -• _J At an estimated t.6.mWion galloos per min~te. aea water. heat~\ 10' f!Pgr~s warmer than normal wll! be pouring from an outfa11 &·'half-mile out to tsea from the San Onofre.'pllnt,sites. , -Oc~ curren~. :lhe ~pokes~en said,. art sure to -transport. the warmer water -doWncout to the propo!Jed 3.5-mile 1tate • PIU -lill.rec«JliY e)t.,.__an .w ... _ ment with state recreailon officials and the Matlne Corps. Bul. experta: for Edison told' a Public Utiltfiea Commission examiner, the tempenture rise would be no more than about four degr&S1ly'lhtf t1me-uie warm brine mixes with cool sea water. One ' other co~ept Whicti arose in W~n~·s testimony by Edison Mechanical Engineering Manager David Fogarty. is that the firm would work out a suitable agreement with state recrea· lion ofricials rOr a beach access road to * * * * * * Onofre Generator Plant Decision Will Take Time ' . . A decision by the State Public p-tilitie.s. _ Commission,on.utility propqsaJs.tot.".aaUyJ expand nuclear generatofs at san Onofre. will not conie soc>n After adjournment .or the lengthy hearings in San C::lerriinte. · PUC press aide C~ol Kretzer said this week that it will take weeks before PUC Examiner Arch Main-who is presiding over the hearings-will draft his recom· mendation. San Clemente ~onday and which could stretch well •into next week,-are·the-first in an intricate network of official actions in· nuclear plant permits, 11>e -new-11ate part--the-road traveling through the nuclear aite property. ~ '"!'ii• comPcllli~(E~ and_San Diego Gas and Electric) have agreed with the Califotia _ftesourceJ ~Agency t b a t multipurpose use with the public e_f the Sin Onofre plant and adjacent properties will be made wherever ffaslbl~ ~ approved Withl theAtomff Ener COl'fl: mission where\ necesaary securit 1 and safety of the -plant would not he im· paired," he testified. • . He added that his firm would not OJ>- pcse granting a right-of·war for beach access if plant security and pbblic safety were accommodated. Safety reasons, however, would mean the barring of the public from a strip of beach fronting the two proposed new reactors and the existing one at lhe coastal location. The proposed new state park-the pro. duce of a year of sometimes tough negotiations between California State recreation officia ls and the Marine Corps-will involve bluffs and beach im4 mediately south of the 83-acre site where the nuclear improvements have been planned. A strip of the old "Slaughter Alley" Coast Highway strip is used -now for ac· cess to the first reactor site at San Onofre, and by next summer will be put into use as access to the new state park, officials have said. Beach paths will have to be cut through bluf fs at the upcoast end of the· proposed park. Hypnutized Coed Sent To H~spital • CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -:-Sbtoen- year-ola c,iithla II: Perklni Of !mi was in lnglealde-llolpllal 'in Cleveland today after being hypnotized ~a clus at Berel Hig!I School. The girl waa·one-of--tO~volunleen: Tiles-- day when another IS.year-old 1irl offered to .hypnotite aome class memben during a session on human behavior, achool of· ficials said. The ypung hypnotist told the volunteers they were freezing and 111 ~a!Wcing. The girl then told the 10 •1.wa:e pt,. ting warmer and soon, wo\ilit wike up. Only Cynthia did not ~ out of ~ thrashine abOut and cried: "I'm friilli\g. ]'m freezing." . The girl's parents: rt1r. and Mrs. Sandy Perkiris Jt., of Berea, safd ,their dau&irter apparently recognized them. ·"But she wouldn't let us touch her," her mother said. -: "She ~ept screaming, :You're ao cold. You 'rei so cold. You're putting nie in a freezer." Classmates sald the girl who did the lzypnotizin& had hypnotized several pupils at different times and that no problems had arisen. ~·. Lla11ui Love It is love at first sight for 16-month-old Brian Bullock of San Pablo, Oalif., and the ki ssing llama at the Oakland Baby Zoo. L!amas ar.e nativ es of South America, where they are used as pack anlmals, pr1~ marily in the Andean Mountain countries of Bolivia and Peru. Usual· ly, they are not so friendly. From there, the opinion will go the 'fUll commission for an official action. The next hurdle for the utilities would be to win approval of the half-billion· dollar expansion project by. Ute Atomic Energy Commission, which will hear the case early iii 1971. Besit:leS the official state and federa l approvals, actions are prescribed for the State Resources Agency , the State Department or Public Health, regional water quality control boards and a host of other agencies. Because of the emphasis on surfing at the proposed recreation area, Fogarty explaiped, the warm water could add lo the beach's attraction by creating a year round surfing area where the winter chill in the water e-0uld be cut by the warm exhaust water, The incident took place in an 11th-grade sci~nce cla.ss or Joseph R. Schnelzer, a new teacher at the school. Schnelzer'11 wife said he was out of town today 111d could riot be 'reached for comment. Reaga11 Sees Vegetation elrangeior-Brnshy-Hills SACRA'MtN'fOTAPJ'='""cov.-Re"'ag'°a"n --n;·r~;iffi said, COUlit'nrutn: ... "Clmtro1ted, g_aid Wednesday a change in vegetation or planned burnoff, reseeding and types may be needed in the chaparral· landscaping that would preserve the "There is oo way of telling when a. forma l decision would be announced," she said. The arduous· hearings, which began· in Bulbs now ••• daffodils later. covered Southern california hills that beauty of those hills." recently erupted into the most disastrous Reagan met with reporters after brush fires in state history. -unveiling an "Environmentalisfs for "I believe that we should take a second Reagan" committee headed by Melvin B. look at what \Ve could do to preserve the Lane, the chairman of the San Francisco beauty of those hills-and I don 't believe Bay ~Q_nservati@ an_Q Dev.elop".'en.t _fom· that's dependent on that chaparral growth . mission.Lane is an executive with SWlset 1-think that hills that have brush and Magazine in Menlo Park. trees and grassy meado\vs can be just a:i; The governor said he and his advisers beautiful," Reagan told a news con· were considering a series of dams to con· ference. . · trol the sometimes-rampaging Eel River in Northern California. But Reagan in· 'Sam the Seal' Goes to School ______ !~· .. ~~yistrano '·Sa mmy the Seal" will be entering the first grade this year. That's the name of a new workbook developed by a committee of reading specialists for children in the Capistrano Unified School District. The commi't.tee. led by Charle~ Bossard. principal of Richard Henry Dana Elen1entary in Dana Point, developed six workbooks with "Sammy the Seal" being the first. Using the new state reading tests for first graders as a guideline. Bossard ex· plained that his committee found many of the words used in the test were not in any of the texts. "We thought our wealth of reading material \vou\d cover areas children need to be exposed to for the tests." said Bossard. He said that in the new supplemental \VQrkbooks, vocabulary is the most im- portant factor but writing, spelling, and oral language areas also are examined . "The group has gone beyond a test analysis," explained Jeff 0 I s en , C~strano Unified's Projects Director. ,.What has been developed is a unique , t_·onstructive word development pra. grim," he added. The books are to be available to first Jeride teachers who Will be encouraged fo use one or more of them either as sup. plemental or primary working ma.~erial;~· "They will be one more tool, said B..,.rd. Fl exible Sc liool P,lan Expan ded A self-determined scheduling program, wtiich allows speci!led students Jec._wayjn t:l¥S attendance, has been extended at San CleMle High School. Trustees of the capistrano Unified S~I District votl'd to extend the pro- arlm to sophomores. Juniors and seniors ha•e successfully been involved in lhe program this past year. Voting no on the expansion was Trustee S!Jn Kelley who questioned the students' !!OCial responsibility and capabiUty or berlefitting _from the program. sisted that the dams, if built, would not result in flooding of scenic Round Valley. Reagan was applauded by C-On· servationists earlier when he vetoed a rlam for the Calirornia Water Project that would have flooded the valley. ·• 1 still do not believe that either for the flood control or the water project that we can justify flooding that very unique valley up there," Reagan said. President Gets Bills Creating 2 N eiv Pr eserves WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate ha s approved legislation to create the King Range National Conservation area in Northern California and the Fort Point National Historic Site in San Francisco. Both bills. passed earlier by the house, were sent to the White House, The King Range area, covering some S 1.000 acres, includes both F'ederal and privately owned lands. The legislation calls for preservation of its scenic values. ""ith other uses continued where they do not destroy recreational values. Mu ch of the private land within the rugged area along California's north 'coast is to be acquired through exchange for other government lantls. However, the bill authorizes $1.5 million for the purchase of some private lands. The legislation also authorized ~.S million ror access roads. t r a i 1 s , campgrounds and other ilnprovements. The Fort Point bill calls for preserva· tion and restoration of the 19th century fortification located in the shadow or the Golden Gate Bridge . . The. fort. begun in 1853, is already in federal ownership so authorized _.ex~-·· peildltuf'es will go for restoratiOn, development and possible reconstruction "' of an old seawall. A total of $$1250,000 .. '!l'OUld be aut'1orized under the bill. · • ~ We bster's Book Sto len at OCC Burglary has been re-defined by .J Webster's Unabridged Oidionary to include the entry of any building, day or night, with the intention of ct1mmitting crime. You could check that out in the copy on a stand in the 'hallway or Hyacinth bulbl for .fragrant flowers later. Pink, blue, re d, white, yellow. 69.;Pk.ofS Hummingbird· Feeder. l if&like plast ic Gloxinia blossom with directions. 79¢··· Kellogg ·1-'lii llrohumi!S Top D_.lng. Excellent ,,.1i~!llil seed co ver for lawns, 1u1.!.i'"' flower beas. Won1t bum lawns, ii weed-free, oclor- f ree. 3 cu. fl. big, 2.19 King AHred DelfodUa (#2 size) in mixed colors to add delicate color lo yOUr garden. Yellow King AHred Deffodlls 1 66 in golden sunburst shades. 3 lb. bag. , Gloria Va se, Mexican hand painted in assorted exciting colors. 649 large 3 29 sman Psychologists say that hysteril. is net_ rare in' hypnotiam when induced by amateur.s. • Venus Fly Tr111 ... actually traps and digests flies. Useful and educatlpnaL 69~Pk.ol2 Evergroena,Spl. conhllner •••••• c-3.lt Evergreent, 1 pL conhllner •••• __:_ •• TH Air Fern nOeclanolh- ing but air lo live along, luxuriant me. small pOI 39.; . . ' • Darrel Taylor,.principal. told Ole board that he felt student& Involved in the pro- s.rem were carefully screened and must ltliVe parental 11nd teacher approval. Jf --~Q>fi~~\l_tc LOk<n otr the program. the Orange Coast College Home Econosics Building, e X' c e p t -romebod)"'--has--81olen~o --o --relerencCvOlumc. --:---. I I -----~------~~=-~-l He also said that the majorily of ~lUdents on tilt program last year ra ised !heir grad<! point average and round lbe µrouram beneficial. Mrs. ·norothy Lau, of the 0CC staff, reported the burglary to Costa t.fesa police Tuesday. • . ' • -. -Cha rge it at tliesel'enneVS ores:C;&;RL~S-AU-OOW'ucv------------­ MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH Shop Sundays, too, 12 to 5 pm. ·- .. • • ! \ (e.-lllcl 1W 'r o.1tr PHii •1tt1) • -~ JULIAN. Calif. (AP) -The an- : .. nual tw°"week weed show. with ·: aboUt 125 varieties of weeds grown ! locally, opens Saturday in Julian. • calif. with visitors expected from throughout the United States. M a • f'8ture, Margi• Cowan will demon- ! strale w·ays to arrange weeds for the dining room table. • During bis lifetime, retired po- liceman R•ul Ca rsaferio donated l more· than 159 quarts of blood. At • hi s death at 66 the entire village of Castelo Bra~co in Mozambique turned out for his funeral to show their gratitude. • An item in the Pretoria, S. Africa government's bulletin for tenders reminds suppliers of hangmen's ropes that the closing date for bids is Sept. 28. South Africa has one of the world's highest rates of le. gal executions. ' . The official New China News Agency reported that the Peking Brewery is busy producing bydr°"' gen medicines, insecticides, poly- cryStalline silicon and potassium .. sodium tartrate. No mention was made of beer. • John Thompson of Bay City, '"Conspiracy' Told Kettering, Ohio Police Chief John R. Shyrock addresses the Inter· national Association of Chiefs of Police in Atlantic City. N.J. follow· ing bis election and swearing in as the group's new president. He said after the closing banquet that he believes police are targets of a national death conspiracy. Reds Continue ·nf ylong Ra~4s PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Communiat PJ;m Penh tts<U was In the midst of forces today carried out their third con-1inaJ preJiara.t.lona for a gala et.lebratlon r ·drught-~wn attack against Friday marking the declaration of a secu 1ve mi . republican form or govttrunent for Cam· a government oUeD.SJVe s~lled near the bodia, ending the Jong reign of Prince town of Prakham, 48 miles north of Norodom Sihanouk am his ancators. Phnom Penh, but -the Cambodians .First reports Q.f k>day's batUe were weathered the attack with only small issued in Phnom Penh. 1 ...... The Cambodian command in Phnom Penh called it the largest CommUrilit thrust of the war, but UPI Correspondent Kate Webb reported from the front that cfficers there estimated that no mere than 400 Communists were involved in the attack. Field officers al Prakham told Miss Webb that the Cambodians suffered ••about 20 wcunded" in the attack and that 12 North Vietnamese bodies were * * * U.S. War Deaths Dt _op Sharply, 38 Last W ee k UPIT ....... ' NOBE L PRIZE WINNE R Author Sobhonlt1yn Ru~sian Wi1JS recovered. There were several other discrepancies tn the high command reports in Phnom Penh and reports from officers in the SAIGON (AP) -The total cf American deaths 1n-1ndocbina dropped to 38 last week, lbe lowest weekly toll in nearly 411.. years, the U.S. Command announced. But Literature the toll for the South Vietnamese in·""' creased 40 percent over the week before, • cambodian drive northward toward and enemy , ... a11ies went up •lightly. Nobel Prize The total number of Americans killed Kompong Chom. The high command said between 7 ,000 and 10,000 Communist soldiers were involved in the attack but \\'as 25 less than the week before and the STOCKHOLM (UPJ) -The 1970 Nobel field reports said only about 1,500 Nortlt. lowest since April 18-24, 1966, when 35 Prize for literature was awarded today to Vietnamese and Vi et Cong were in the were killed. Alexander I. Solzhenitsyn, the con· area. The U.S. Command said 666 Americans troversial Russian aulhor whose works Military officers in Phnoin Penh said are banned at home but read and admired were wounded last week, compared to 344 b d Th · th· · th about 1.000 Cambodian soldiers returning a roa . e prize 1s year 1s wor Mill• L f • Q h by boat up the Mekong iver from training the week before. A command spokesman $78,400. tarv e t1sts uas in South Vietnam were harassed by Com· said the wounded figure jumped because The 52-year-old author of "One Day In J J l munist mortars but that the troops suf· it contained a two-week accumulation of the Life of lvan Denisovich," "Cancer minor wounds that servicemen did not i~~~h ~~en·~~hein F~~:cl~~ =~ B d B Ii C d • T . want reported to their families. grateful for the prize and would like to 10 filghtl• st· 1" m" 0 VI• a 3 ll3 13ll errOl"JSl S The summary reported a total of 43,775 to Sweden to accept it. _ _ _ _ Americans kill ed, 289,800 wounded 3"d .. I am go-ateful loc lhe decision," he ---~-----..l'Oslpone-Execu.tio·n.--J,424--rni1&ing cr-captuGFd in-lhe-.... ·ar said. "I accept the prize, I intend to go · J 1 1961 and receive if perSonally on the tradi4 since an. , . MONTREAL (UPI) -The Canadian The Saigon government said 345 oI its t lonal day insofar .as it depends on me. I ' r I Mich. enjoys caMed beer so much l"---7t<"a:Tiielias ns-canrtn-his-base-- ment. The only unusual thing about John's interest in beer is t hat all j---+28...can&-are...empty_on shelves and make up a collection that dates from 1934. LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) -Military leftisbi appear to ht in contr..91 of Bolivia again after squelching a conservative attempt to take powtr. Ovando Cania. who had lleaded a lefJ.· ist military regime since a cQup a year ., .. government and the terrorists who kid· troops were killed last week and 720 were an1 well and my Journey won't hurl my nilped-rBrl.tfslrdiplomaHnthed-closer-wounded;-an-tncrease-from"ih~revi:ous--health.'~'--------------- Wednesday -the kidnapers postponing week's 246 killed and 690 wounded. The Despite the calm tone of th.e statement • ROMld Sou11, 28, and Sta Ben-- ham, 22 have set sail from Hano. lulu in hopes o( becoming the first persons to sail a rubbe.r raft from Hawaii to San Franctsco. They hope to make the voyage in two or three months. Their airline emer· gency raft is named 0 Shark Bait.'' . ' A corn cob has ended the life of Ski pper the performing dolphin. Skipper's handlers found the JI'L8lll"I mat dead on the bottom of his tank Thursday at the Tri.State fair in Amarillo, Tex. An autopsy per~ formed by a veterinarian shows Skipper, owned by a Freeport, N.Y., firm, died from swallowing a corn cob that fair officials said apparently had been thrown into the outdoor tank. The mammal's handlers said Skipper was worth • Color names have gone l)Olitical a s exhibitors prepare for the Paris ready·t~wear fashion showin~s scheduled for Oct. 17-22. There will be Mao red, Anarchist black and Tear Gas gra)'oo-There will also be a CRS blue, named after French riot police who S?O by those initials and wear blue uniforms. • For years, it has been the house· wife's prerogative to squeeze to- matoes in the produce department . to test for freshness. But the Agri .. culture Department at West vir .. ginia University has developed a' machine to do the same job, \Vilh . more gentleness and accurately ·than the housewife's fingers. A par· : table and inexpensive, "pressure ~load" meter will be used to test tomatoes and other fruit in sear· cbes for the better tomato. Gen. Juan Jose Torres. declared him· self president Wednesday aft.er routing Gen. Rogelio Miranda and indicated bis government would move farther to the left. Miranda, the conservative army chief of st.ail. a day earlier had forced the resignatioo o! President Allredo Sadat Seen Big Winner in Egypt Vo te on Oct. 15 Anwar Sadat emerged as Egypt's in· terim president today and with a pledge to follow the policies cf Gamal Abdel Nasser appeared likely to win the Oct. 15 national plebescite by -.n cverwhelming majority and to rule Egypt for the next six years. ·unanimously nominated to th e presidency by 353 NaUonal Assembly members meeting in extraordinary session Wednesday night, the former two- time vice president spelled out a six-point program in a 20-minule acceptance speech closely tuned to Nasser's foreign and domestic policies. Sadat pledged to press Egypf s ••conflict of destiny" with Israel, vowed to recover all the territory seized by Israel during the 1967 June war and to assist the Palestinian Liberation move- ment in following the goals of his predecessor, with whom he was clcsely associated since 1936. ln Jordan, Amman radio said the Arab cfficials who engineered a cease-fire between the Palestinian guerrillas and troops loyal to King Hussein during the Jordanian civil war worked out a new agreement today to govero relations between lht belligerents. Torres, relieved cf his · position as comrhandU in chief of the armed forces several months ago because of pressure from Miranda. declared his was "the revolution of the people, who manifest tlfeir unwavering will to take the route of national liberation_." Only cne nport indicated his control of the country might mt be complete. A radio re~rt from the mining town or Oruro, 120 miles southeast of La Paz, said officers loyal to Miranda had killed 10 leftist demonstrators who appeared about to assault a divisional headquar4 ters. Il was the ~y bloodshed reported in the four-day power struggle within the military clique that bas ruled Boli· via for the past six years. Torres appeared to have strong sup. pert from students, ranners, workers and powerful segments of the armed forces. After Miranda capitulated, he rode from his headquarters cutside La Paz to the presidential palace through cheering crowds massed along the streets. There he took the oath or office and then told a cheering crowd in a speech from the palace balcony: "So that the pecple never again will be betrayed in their hopes, we have sponsored an unbreakable allianct of the workers and the anned forces. They will be, together with the people, the force of this revoluticn." He said the government would create new jobs with "fair salaries for workers" and would defend Bolivia's natural re- sources. This indicated there would be no retreat from the nationalization of the U.S. Gulf Oil Co.'s local holdings. an action by the Ovando regime which apparenUy helped to trigger the at· tempted conservative coup . "When this president. who comes from a humble origin, fails, ask for his resignation," Torres said. Armed civilians freed several le!LW.s prisoners from jail. Freeze G.rips West States Foo t of Snow in Rockies; Near Zero in W yom ing LOS Jt,NGILEI ANO VICINITY - &vnt1¥ •nd w..-nwr l"rlct•'I· Le<•I 11"""' •11t1Y iwrt1Wm1t wlMI btlow t i"· i"=:;,--ft!'\ lll!l.!!i?i .... ~ t~!~.51· f'OINT COHCll'TIOH TO MllllCAN IOltDElt -Sfnllll <r•ff 1qm!1111t cll1Dll¥tcl ""'1r• l tN for loc.•I _,,_,, wkllll 11 tt ia knm tt um .. ,,.., UfWOlll, °""""1M ti.tit 'll fillll• wlndl l'llalll ...i ...-11lf'IO '*"'-tiKom· .... wuterll' S to IS kMI\ !ft 1n.n- l'rhJaw. ~ .,..,, 111111 (!Mt 11l0Mt. W1rmer. " " " .. " " 71 I J " " ,. n .1• 11 jl ·'' ~ " ~ n .. " " " .. " " " .. " " " " n n ~ 111 A' ,IJ is 11 .sr •• ,, .et 71 '1 D) 5' "° 1 11 ll ,, " " '' •l 61 l• . " ,, -,, n " " ,, .. " ~ " .. "' execution of the diplomat and the govern4 two allied commands reported 1,468 Viet li~erary sources in Moscow said the prize menl asking them to begin negotiations Cong and North Vietnamese killed last will spell pclitical trouble for the tor his release. week. 11 more than the claim the week maverick novelist. They cited the In Montreal, a communique from lhe before. pressure put on poet Boris Paternak who Front De Liberation Du Quebec (FLQ), a In the war tod ay, South Vietnamese won the prize in 1958 and then rejected il clandestine Fren~-Canadian separatist forces were regrouping at a northern under_ pressure. . group, announced 1t would postpone for 2 base after withdrawing from Firebase As in the case of Pasternak s best-sell· houri -unW noon (ED'l'.) today -any O'Reilly, near the Laotian border. Of· ing novel "Doctor Z h iv a Io,'' ac~?'l against Jame~ lf:· Cross, the senior ficials said I.be government troops pulled Solz~enitsyn's ~assive novels about the Brtlish trade co!'8nuss1oner. out because ()f the appr()aching monsoon Slah~ Er_a prison camps were riot fered no casualties. The attack occurred rains, but the North Vietnamese had been published m Moscow. However they were at Moat Kra.sa.s Kvao, sil miles east of pounding the base 5teadily for twQ circulated in typescript in underground the capita.I. months. conditions. A few years ago when Solzhenitsy" Eddie Turns 80 Living Legend Sift,s . Memoirs · NEW YORK (AP) -capt. Eddie v. Rickenbacher -one time racing driver, World War I flying ace and survivor of 23 days on a life raft in the Pacific -is 80 years old today, thanks to a "little luck on the side." "I've cheated the old Grim Reaper seven times that I know of." says Rickenbacker, who recalls that his brushes with death have at times been •·painful." "But,'' he adds, "I have no regrets."' His devil-may-care approach toward lighting the war and living made him the object of wild acclaim when he came home from World War 1. He had shot down 26 enemy planes and risen from sergeant lo captain, receiving the Cross of the Legion of Honor, the Croix de _Guerre with four palms, the Distinguished Service Cross with nine oak leaves and 12 years later, he was award· ed the Medal of Honor. As an adviser to the goverrunent in World War ll, he, along with six com· panions. survived 23 days on three tiny rafts after their plane crashed in the Pacific in October 1942. Then, as head of Eastern Air Lines. he turned a small, kising operation into a large, profitable one. Now, officially retired for seven years . he"s been sifting through boxes of mementos and years of memories. The memories went into an autobiography published three years ago, and he's dividing the mementos among several museums for "when l bump off." refused a suggestion from the Soviet Writers Union that he disassociate himself from "the slanderous anti~iet campaign" abroad connected with bi~ name, he was told he was free to go abroad to join his like-minded admirer:r:t He was labeled a renegade and compared to Svetlana Alliluyeva, Stalin's defictor daughter. He did not take this offer. Nor did he write to the Communist Party ·a5 Pasternak did to say that exile abroad away from his beloved Russia, was tan· tamount to a death sentence. Solzhenitsyn was expelled from the writers union this year. Moscow dispatches said the Soviet press probably will mount a campaign against Solzhenitsyn on two grounds -he tias written to endear himself to foreign enemies of the Soviet Union, and the Nebel committee awarded the prize as an anti-Soviet gesture. Many literary experts in Stockholm had believed that the Swedish Academy of Letters would choose to i g l'I o r e Solzhenitsyn because or the political im· plications attached to his name. Who Cores? I'll• etll.r ,. ... ,,.,., i111 the ••rid to•r1• 1b1111t y1ur co11111nu• t11ity Ii~• y1ur ''"'"'u11lty J11lf 111w11J•1J•t '"'· 11'1 tlle DAILY P'IL.()T. n a~ 11 M " " " " " " ·" l11 co911ito Beatie Visits .. 31 ,, 'I ·~ • 14 .J• " " ~ " ' Paul r.:tcCartney. member of the now d isbanded "Beatles" and once the subj ect of a mystery death rumor, appeared very much alive in New York ~ -. \Vednesday. He \Valli making his first visit wilh hl1 .., 'vire. the fonner .Linda Eastman of Ne\v York and their daughters Alice. I, and Heather, .7. ' I ii ·- ' . . . . San t;Jenien te ( t;1;1pistrano . - voe. 63, NO. HI, 4 SEGTIONS, 52 PAGES . -\ . ED·ITIO.N ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA , • . . - .. Totlay's Final TEN CENTS -~-----'IF"'"' t.. ,. • . . . Doped-Cookt~s; Youth Nabbed By JAcK BltOBACK' PUldena Court. officers from Laguna Beach, Sin fiacated quanuu• of ·heroin, tsD, Officers 1aid Ginger detected the Clemente. Orange and Tu 1'.t J n dangerous drugl, marijuana arKl hashish. reoognlzan!!e were Thornes L. Cornwall, 24, and1 Kim Camille CUrtiJ, 22~ both of 1198 Victory Walk. Of l~t 0.llY l'llff Sltff A marijuana-sniffing German shepherd dog was tbe_ star of _A_ county~Q~ narcoUcs ra:id ~arl.y .today. aIJegedlY. • dopeloaded cookies in a participated in the roundup. Nibbed in Lqupa Beach was Gilbert sult.caae. Officials said the-illicit _.The 26 arrested had been n a m·e·d in M. Brady, It, a transient jailed on ""-..!!l:-,..ret-Gr&nd'Jury-lifdl<:tiiienli as -cbel'g~ of .eDlill1iif6ill.-gredie~ dough was believed result of tNrtt months of investigation by While oUicera were looking for another Last.!..'J'hursday -a countywidi ra~d rtS;Ulted in µt~ arrest of 34. persona and the discovery of a potential bomb factory and drug laboratory in Modje&ka Canyon. Ginier .' a ~mber of the Tustin police fore~. sniffed out a batch .of rookies in a San Clemente residence leading to the ar- rest of John P. Graham, 19, of 400 to be marijuana. the police officers and state narcotics of. unidentified Laguna reaident, ,they picked This morning's raid in which 26 persons ficers and disbict at tor n e y1• 1 in-up a man . and woman on marijuana were arreated wu the second countywlde vestigators. ~ poUesaton charges. · • dragnet ln a week. M~re than to police Offlcen said in the raid today U)ey·con-,Jailed and rdeued Qn' ·their own The OlstrJet Attorney'' Office today &Mounted grand jury indictmenta or ·11 s Art Colony Buildings' i-Fate Eyed- C9 ony ' atmosp ere were tieard by city councilmen Wednesday night. They considered a report from the Plahning Commission suggesting razing of five old buildings on El Paseo and po.uible -installation -of-a parking lot. They also took up a letter from landscape architect Richard Bigler offering to help develop the area with aomething more artistic than a pafking lo1. The buildings, part of the city's· Main Beach purchase., were not paying their way· in rent revenue. planners reportep. A pOssibfe solution would-be to .remdve them and ~nd_ing ~ existing parking Jot betweeti~!f11'aseo and the ~dwalk. Bigler, who has a studio in one of the old houses, had wr.itl.ei:t the oouncil of· fering to provide, free of charge, a design for development or the properly in a · ••J>ark like theme." Since·he was unable to attend the coun- cil meeting be<=;ause of family illness, Bigler requested a two-week delay. The council agreed that the planners· should have a chance-to examine his-proposal. Artist Paul Blaine Henrie, who oc- cupies a neighboring building and patio, where paintings are exhibited in a rustic setting, made a personal plea to the council. ........ on .. • emn ix tin's: San Ooofre Hearing Continues · ., --~·T~ea~umony and cross examination pat:licularly. oo filcal .m41lers clealin& wilb nuclear J>1a!lt·.......ion·-contl!lued _ tll<oUgh UtlJ mornJng In bearlnp belore a - P.itblle u1111u .. Coinmlul\111 e~r bi . san Clemente.· . · · . - -·The·~ lbO"iiii·liilliOOodOuir piypQRIJ ppctear:senu;_-..~ ~at san _Qn1ilre ·~.~.;alnid . .-. . -· . Uult . local loe4 . of Utec ~ -w~· -":""wiii-••·' ·~.r.ivt· .:.-.-1'11eei<'10--M. -,.--~r;,,~lr_..., ~ -;--------_-1 · ·'•· SiEP.i~ '.lf...!H·' ' ' 1 ' . '' ,, 'f;µ'-~ ~ • -• . ._,_ ~-. •. ' ' litlit:-Rf: .... 'tt n "'cs .a,wl•&ea<t&-y,.~ ·-.... hirijii&ated. for 'the record some actions "!f w~"' ~ ' ~' ! >' '•~'I ' " aid\11· -ii•• ~-the ~on:· ... . ~'Iii :t1te·mianuine. pellU•i\o'·liWuig an • tsllillat«i lflO ·11gna1ures alfeidy. u v• ~n. filed by OJ>pop~nt.s to the p~ · twin r,eactors. . .. ·1.ar.. Wednesday lht Caplittano Beach chamber of Commaree Joined the ranl<a 'PEACE' fN THIS CENTURY' -•l'JO<B1·opp0.tt1oti-ieft!'< r'8ctor·1 ... 11tiif.--.., "lllfx.K ;Tilkifto Ni lli!f Foea · '--· led primarily . by GUARD (Group1 .Ulited ·A'g1lnst Rad iltion Oangen) have complaJned ·.U·weet ttiat they have not had enough time tn coordinate opposition ta the plant because few San Oementeans:· knew ·the dates ef the.hearfftp aumdentiy In lclYance. Fashion M.odel1s . . ClOthes Stolen -~ Bigler said he . had acquired the pro- perty long before the city. purchase and spent thousands of dollars developing It as an artistic center that attracts visitors from all over the country. -LT. GUIDO ·BAtTAGLIA INSPECTS MARIN COUR-T.DAMAGE · In Sin R1fHI, Mort Violence at tht County Courthou11 The primary ·objecUooa, GU ARP. spoke.men and petitionen ·.hive told Main, is the 1Jte for the proposed electric plants .. A Laguna Beach ' fashion model 'had part of her ward robe removed Tuesday afternoon from tlle powder room of the Vidor Hugo IM. "'Razing the buildings would serve no useful purpose,"· Bigler said. "The ex- isting parking lot is virtually empty dur- ing the winter months. If you can't develop the entire Main Beach property Ul)til 1973, why pick on these five pro- perties now? Why not pick on Dante's or other properties further north? Or just abstain from the whole thing?" Three Bomb Explosiom Opponenta want. lb< plants· ;moved downcoul, . Inland and underground lo help eliminate the asserted dan«ers of ridiaUon and bot water di schar&ed from reactor cooling pipes jnto tbe coutaJ ·~~ng· to Lagitna Beach P9llc,t; the woman' was taking part in a· flishlon mow and 'hiid left hei-clothink in the reitroo,m whlle modeling in the show. W8i.ers. • Henrie said he would be glad to move to other quarters if it would benefit the entire city but added, "what you do with Hit BuiUlings in · West 'Ibey have prorrilsed at Jeist eight witnesses next week, among them speak~rs qualifying for "expert'' status for PUC sworn testJmony. . . She returned to' the restroom to make a cMnge Of clOthing and fOund that scime- one ·el!e had ·found her cache of clolhing arid· jewelry• valued at $96. PoliJ:e ar~ investigating. the Main Beach will reflect on the whole From Wire Services city for years. · .you have a tremendous A series of bomb blasts coming one day decision to make. 1 think the planning commission should meet with Bigler .to after the ultra-radical Weathermen ter- see what he suggests and l'd like to be roriats declai-ed an autumn offensive there.'' again.st Am.erican society shattered three The councilmen, asked by Mayor public buildings on th.e Weit Coast this Goldberg for an informal opinion, since morning. the matter was scheduled Ia.er on the agenda, all indic~ted they would favor Authorities fear it is only the begtnning. I · No one was injured in the explosions in -~a ling. Theodore Freistat. Beverly Hi 11 s ·a Santa Barbara military annory, the businessman who said he is a frequent Marin County Civic Center •in San Rafael visitor to Laguna and is thinking of mov-and a shared ROTC buiktlng at , tht ing here, told the cou.nc~I, "I'm .getting University of Washington in SeatUe. the impression that this 1s becoming the Telephone tips were given in two cases, interior plaster was damaged and a·small fire that was quickly e:dinguiahed broke out. The San Rafael bomb was planted In a women's restroom, . apparenUy during business hours Wednesday and reported (See BOMBS, Pap Z) Besides the petitions Wed!!<sdlly, Ex- aminer Main heard speeUic detaJ.l.!l en the emission' from the elirtlng nuclear generator at San Onofre. ' Two wit.Msse!l -one 1 prime technical 1pokesman ' for the Edison Compuiy; the ether a state health ·cfficial expert.in ef- (SO. llEAJtlNGS, Papi II I srael . Slaps Pilot .. TEL AVIV (UPI) -The pilot ol the El ·AI Israel jet seized momentarily by Arab gilerriUas Sej)t. f has been de- mbted to copilot status for violating regu- laUons,.airline officials said Wednesday. Charity Plea Stalled Laguna Councilman Questions Motive for Request 'city of Laguna' rather than the Art leading police to hustle a janitor out or OJ:ln~Y· If ~ou ~ke the art out 0~ Laguna the university's Clark Hall within By BARBARA KREIBJCH "How did you ever dream it up?;U a tiny Referring to papers, ~rr said, "In 1961 It will be Just like any other city. Why minutes of the blast. -Of t11t 0.1,., ,.11e1 "'" • • hUd the UN boJT ed 110 Ill' fr people who had beerf'J)nviously a~. Included are Samuel R. Gibson, 34.. and Allred C. Liode, 28, of 1214 Falrywood Walk, and Roger B. Decker, 25, of 52.S Calalini"St., ill of ta.guna· Beach a00-1u charged with the sale of LSD. Also indicted today was Linda · K. Burns, 18, of 796 W. Wilson St., Costa Mesa. She was also charged with the sa1e of heroin. an But Viet F0es l{eep Door Open PARIS (UPI) -·Nfirllf Vl>lnam and Uie Viet ~ today condemned President · 's peari plan as.gunboal diplamaeyr ___ I aimed at perpetuating U.S. "aggre~sion" in Vietnam, but I.hey agr:eed to discuJs It in future negotiations. ·Both Xuan Thuy, the North Vietnamese tTiinister·of state, and Mme. Nguyeft 'nlf Binh, the "forei~ minbter" in ·I.be Viet r ~ng gover~ment. called the ""ofter ---. political iric~ry aiffied~at w~i;..vQtell 1 for-· the · RepublicaM~ in · the November Af.flactiOos. , • · . Madame Binh and Thuy ' apj>eared Url!if; apparently from a nigbttong study of the presidential address which was received 'here at"2 1.m., and l.roin com- municatiom with ·Randi. Mada111e :Binh. swathed in a. warm w~ter roat despite the mild autumn 'weatlier, was grim fa~ ed whelfsbe ah-rved >for today's ta1kl. '.Their .. language was. harsh but there was no outright rejection in their 11taterftents made befOre · and during t()j:lay's session, the ~. They did not ·mention--Nlxon's offer to elchange prisoner!l. . The Nixon call fOr a cease-fire throughout lndochina and o f f e r i n g guidelines .for a political. settlement were pre'sented formally at today's aeaion by Ambassa.Cior1David K. E. Bruce. But both Thuy and Madame Binh were thoroughly fam111ir with them wnen they iliived. - Meanwhile, much of the workt reected with pJ'.aise to Ni,xon•s .. call for · an lm- niedlate cease-flre in the search for peace in Indochina, but a o m e gQvei:nments and statesmen expressd doubt of its !IUccess. South Vietnam said It was ln agree- ment With the proposals. The Saigon government said its .statement followed after discussions with the American government. ' The South Vietnamese reaction favor- ing the Nixon plan followed by several houn an unfavorable. responu by other South Vietnamese officials .. "The proposal of a ce~fire la un~ favorable to us," Secretary of State Nguyen Tien Hy said in Silgon sborily after Nixon's address. Other South Viet- namese officials said the Communists were certain to-reject the .proposals. But· a statement from Saigon radio aa1d later ll "reaffirmed" !ta earlier caU ,for "free elections to determine the future· of South Vietnam ... Oraage l\'eatller take the most bea_utiful part. ~f your Tb• San Ra. fael blast occu. rred near the . A routine. requ~t for a charitable bit _did CO to SOrl)t~ ~~ ~un1,11, c • ow m ton om .,_1,... al ••· d l l I '"·lot II •··'·could ••·t-1bl• llr;Jl UNIC~·••""• and"'· mone·v wa:S wied · .'J'hlnp are w ........... a u.P· oni, ·-· ·-beachfronl an pu ~ n a par'!'ll-a :...___ cou!jroorn.Jrom l1<hiSJ! a Suetr~C:.:.·~~~llcita.1!911_~-JllQJ!!el'l~snag 11""'·· ~. waa. "='-~ ~,. ==-·"""'¥" ™ .~ ~ ~ ,__.~ -""'4-----~-~rttdna~ ·.)-., ' ' Fffli!'~at...,.y"\,~·-""lilli~.a' .,..,,........ .£i a ii . ·~! Baliiiga. l'll•>e n0 11 ·~ -reading tab "It 75 and~Mlf"'' -"-·- Them That!-f as Gets Some More NEW YORK (UPI) -A couple who reside in West Hampton, one of Long island's fashionable sum-. mer places, today won the $1 million top prize in the New'Yotk at.ate superlottery. · 1be winners, George a n41 Genevieve Ashton, have a slJteeo- year-old son, Glenn. Ashton ill an ---.uecuLive with the J. C. Pen n ey --€ompeny. _....,... The top prize wUI pay A'&hlon and his wife $50,000 1 year for the next 20 years, .. i . - 1'evolutionaries who died With him ln a meeting Wednesday night when cOun· Ing Christmas cards for UNICEF · in in the d1rectorsh1p of· UNICEF whlch 10-mercury 9'l. Blame those nasty barrage~of. gunfire. cilman Edward Lorr voiced •PicioD as La~_ Buch for~ley'en years without clum:s Com.rt:i:uniat-n1Uon1." Santa Ana winds for that. Blasta came in succession, at 1:27, 2:44 to its real motive. trouble, aaid the younasten W·h o · The women said it "soun6s . like 11 nd 4:15 a.m., at Seattle, San Rafael and.. Lorr asked that Mrs. Adefe-Jpe111'1 re-participate in the.trick or.treat'dri•e;CO\o---. 10meth~g fr.om' I.he Johrr.Blrch Socle .... " , Santa Barbara. • quest, in behalf of the Coastline Chapter Jtct.ing coin.a in,. UNICEF ccmtainen· ht-•1 No 'warning was given before the ex· of United Nations, for autborlzatl9'1 of the steed of accepUng candy, list year raised '••lt. Ii.as nothlng t;o do with the John plosion in Santi Barbara, which the Halloween "trick or trtat for UNICEF"' $100. , · . Birth Soeiety," lliid Lol'J'.i"This·hu been Weathermen ·warned Wednesday wou1d drive, be pulled from the consent calen-·"You ahould Jet the .happy ·.faces·Of · dOfW11enled by.offic ial& of the American be one of their targets aCI'OS.'I the nation. dar for special discussion. these clilldren who know they Ire dolng Legion ind the ·DAR.,, "Pa,rt.of a wall was blown back, but "1 am in accord with the good in-.tometbing ,for ·oth.ers," she tohl ~· there was no cave-in," said Police Lt. tentions of people In this town who want •f~sn't , ~ . better:-lhan 1 tu f f In c .Writer Arlold Mino ltepf)ecr rorward1 fo INSIDE TODAY Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker - onetime racing driver, World \Var l fl11ing act tind turvivor of Z3 days on a raft' ha· the Pncl· fie -Ml , rettchect hi: 80th birthd<ly. Page 4. · Fred' Balter, who-identified the cause as to raise' money for starving children," themselves wllh a lot of candy, tsn't It ~menL, "this Is &n· old hat re-huh or 1 definitely a sa""'i .... e device. said Lorr. "However, since part of the better~ for. our -children to-leam to help an extreme ri1htwin1 propqanda /line <,~~ 1: =:.': ,._. : .The •r:morY ~ared by an artillery d!rectoNhlp of UNICEF (United NaUon.s ~••""""..,;·-~,_,~,..,.,,.,.=;;:· ,_· -"!"'l-"llu!"'~-~·,,.<lir~~~;•~inll"""'!ll'~~-fl£l~~'::J'~-~ unit 1of the california National Gusnhod---chintrors '"Emergency ) is UI, ~ .~.-Jd .it1would be~~fJ~_.they ·cU • llR<fe iJorc'<tJ;efore · 1961 .. It: has 1tll been · <•kt _ n ~ ,.,.., • shared.bf an Army Reserve unit. ·, hands or Comrnnnist nations and we" . ~etNn& ... for-•r;_eedy · cbUann 'ln··this • dodlnented'ud answered years ago, :rbe: , ~~"':,1e.... fa ~ .... ~·~., No fence protects it on the nort srde no assurance these funds do not fin~ lbtit J. ~IJ:y•· "But twon1 -all over,,Ufle world w~ :tl)tria' 111 IUdictP\ll. :I'bt councjl •ll ••:=::;... • ~-: ~ »-n • , ;._.;.::: ,.we.Ute"bomb..~llct..JJill_ w~U..-~ot-lhewn'*1>1,'~~'1•11!1il!t.11"1. f!lracI~~ -::::---w~'ljl·tlmt.-.. , • · • -....:;.....~ ':0:.-· ~=-·:-~· aiJi~yon:the~atreeto.utsidt.:wOokl~ht!J>-rel~ their own . .luad(#it _.._''How can you do this?',. a f(omarJ In. 1 ~man";Jfoyflotm:.mov-ett lo grant ;"'::-•~:~~ ~i :=.:-.._ 1,.,: bave a~ to the bwldlng. --other purposes, like making war onr1!!4'1#) the audtence· asked tmr. "I don't ~ t¥.pennlt. for UNJCEPI trick or treatlng • ,,,,.""" , WWlll•"""" .. A door was blown on its hinges and '''lb1t la the most fMtasttc tale J;'."8"' d"'°stan4 yOur rulOQ~C· This 11 ·belpine ~Jttlloweeh~ '.l1te moijon wu apprqved · M•rrl• 1.1e""" 11 numerous wlndo1¥1 were shattered, while ~ar in my life!'; e~aimtd t-ft•-· ~ li~ chldre$ •• 0 . .. +t, wttb U:irr dluenlinl. . . ..__. ------·---------' " .~. ~ • . ·-·, ' . 1 . . 1 t " ---· ' . 2 DAiLV PILOT SC Riot Report Secret L~na • . • Hearings Hit \. Tbt Laguna Beach City Council's righl. to discuu lt• Woodland Drive riot report behind closed-doon was questioned W~~ night by artist Andy Wing, Real Estate Talk Series Set for GWC For the si:rth consecutive year, lhe DAILY PILOT todey announced plans to present a series of lectures on real utate investment on a co-sponsorship basis with the Orange Coast College District. The big change In the program in this 1970 edition, however, is that Jt is to be moved frotn the Harbor Area to the Gold~n West College campus in Hun- tington Beach. The Huntll'\if.on Beach-Fountai n Valley Board of Realtors also has joined the lineup as a co-sponsor of the four-part &eries, starting ne:rt Tuesday, Oct. 13. The Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley realtors' group replaces the Newport Harbor..COsta Me sa Board of Realtors, which has been a part of the program &i.oce its Inception five years ago. Dr. Loren Moll, director of the Evening College Division, Golden West College, said movement of the lecturei; to hi.! campus was viewed as an appropriate step. The 1970 census figures indicated Hun- tington Beach -with ten~old grow~h since the la st official census 1n 1960 -1s one of the fastest growing urban areas in the world. Real estate actiyily in West orange - County can be expected to continue to in· crease. 1----"he-lec:ture aerie!, Qpen 1P the public free ol charge, will coniiist or four prcr grams, each lasting approximately twG }\ours. They will begin at 7:30 p.m. on ibur consecutive. Tuesdays. All programs \\'ill be presented in lhe College c.enter. First prOgtam, '1'ailoring Your Invest.. ment," will be prestnted by Randall· McCardle, DAlLY PILOT real estate page Cillumnist, president of the Real Eslaters firm and longtime Orange Coast area realtor. Pal McVay or McVay Re.al Estate, Fountain Valley, will be moderator far the four lecture.s. County Jobless }{ate Jiits 7.l'!b Unemployme nt hit _a nine-year high in Orange County 1n September with 7.1 percent of the work'forc:e affected. The state r Department of Human Resources said there were 03.000 unemployed in the county in September. Of that number, 5.800 were aerNpace and electronics workers. Last month the U.S. Department o( Labor declared the county to be in the "substantially unemployed" category which gives county aerospace firms first priority on federal defense and space contracts. The September unemployment rate was the highest since May, 1961 when 7.2 per- cenl of the workers were idle. Orange County ranked second highest ln Southern California during September in unemployment. Only Ventura County was higher with a jobless rate ef 8.2 per- cent. Los Angeles. San Bernardino and Riverside counties had a 6.4 percent unemployment rate and San Diego Coun- ty 6.3 percenL The statewide ave.rage was 7 percent. DAILY PILOT .. ....,.,, ... . H1llltleftM .... ........ ..., s. Cl111111 .. Let ...... ;, c.. .. ,.. ... OltANGE COAIT PUBLISHING COM,AMY Robtrl N. w,,, ,rhoftfll •rAI Pllbllllllf Jae\. JI. Cvrftv Vitt Pr•.dtnt lr.d GIM1•1 M-ttt Thol'I'~• K1evil £dllor 7hdl'I'•• A. Mvrphi"' M-llltt lldlle!' lith~r' r. ,. •• $0ulh Oflfl!IO COVIii~ ld!!Or --ll====iF1iii."""'~~"·;t"'~llUl:..JJll.Wnll•V Slrttt ~ 1n1-•w•1n 1111e1 l!lll!W•" • i..1uu 1Ho;111 m Forw-"'"'""' Ml.lfltl"'*' lff(.llr UVS IMC!! lllVlllYtl'll .... C1tmt111!: .I05 Nwlh I.I c;&rnlrlll I.Ml I ' , • I unofficial spok&man for the Woodland community_, ' J!...Your discussion of the three Jndivldual reporL' that were condensed into a single general report should have been con- ducted in public.'' said Wing. "Your report did nol contain anything 1boul personnel and state law says City Council meetings must be carried out in public. It is important for people to know how you are arriving at decisions." Prior to releasing a joint statement on the Woodland Drive melee , the council had spent an hour and a half in executive jclosed) session to decide which parts of the three individual reports submitted by Mayor Richard Goldberg, cou·ncilman Charlton Boyd and former city manager James Wheaton should be included. Lat.er the lndividua·1 reports .also were released. "I would like this point cleared up ,'' said GoldQerg, turning to city attorney Jack Rimel. "Did we do anything im· proper?" Rtinel replied, ''Charge_s of polic~ brutality were made so il did concern personnel of the police department. Since the three separate reports were arrived at in private, I think it was a proper mat- ter for an erecutive session." Councilman Roy Holm noled that the i;eparate reports did contain names of ci- ty personnel, which were blanked out before the reports were released. Wing insisted, "The report you came up with contained no names and was completely general. I still think Y°';lr discussion of il should have been held 111 public." The artist continued, 1'A1 far as the report it!e.lf goes, I commend you Oft your work, except for the suggestion t~at any such matter in future should be m- vestigated by the district attorney. I hope we will neVer have to go that far .•. never get serious eno9gh to need an official body~to-mak'e 1-ce~rt. lf such .a com~ mittee is needed agam perhaps It could be set up by a noted citizen rathe_r t~ao the city manager, to have an obJect1ve bOd • Holm said the concern of the council wu the committee's inability to sub- ~a witnesses and take s w o r n tesiimony to obtain complete and reliable information. ' "Both city employes and others." said Holm ·"were making statements far , .. which they would never have to answer. Wing said be would advocate "some sort of community watchdo1 sy1rem, an organiiation or review ~d. that ,':"'ould be "responSiv~jo people 1n plights. "The confidence or the people in the police depart.ment should be main· tairied ," u_iQ the artist, "But t~e police department is not perfect and 1t should not be impervious.· The pledge ta~en by the.police is almost sacred, but pohce of· ficers still should be subject to careful scrutiny when there Is possi bil ity of er· ror. However, this should be handled in the council chamber .• .It should not have to go to the courts." Frotn Page l BOMBS ... five minutes earlit.r. "An ·excited young woman called an operator anonymously and said th~e was a big bomb in the etiurthouse I~ S~ Rafael and it would soon go off , said Sheriff's Inspector Bowen Bridges. Dynamite fumes could be smelled im- mediately following the blast, which s~p­ ped all clocks and ruptured plumbing, sending torrents of water through the building. Night custodian George Pantaxes "'.'as ,,nly 70 fee.t away and said it sounded like a load of scrap metal falling. Sheriff Loui!I Montanos emphasized there was no direct evidence linking the courthouse bombing to the attacks in Santa Barbara and SeatUe. The damaged courtroom Is normally used by vacationing Judge Joseph Wilson, who reei!ntly conducted hearings behlnd walls of San Quent in in the cases of the so<alled Soledad Brothers. Ironically. a metal-detecting device was installed Wednesday to protect ;iga inst just such incidents and was i;cheduled to go into ~n today. "I don't believe it was singled out to any particular judge or court,'' Sheriff ~1ontanos added today. "But we are going to increaie our sea.irily around the clnck and put o.n added personnel." JUDGE ABOUCTEO The explrt1ion was directl y across the hall from the one where Judge Harold Haley was abducted in the fatal flight b~ · two convicts and an llCCOtTIPI~"~." Calls by a man and woman lo the University of Washington. the· fire department and the Seattle Times 2.S minutes before the Clark Hall blast warn· ed them of it. The bomb was planted in the base ment of the structure. which houses Navy and Air Force ROTC units. "It v.•11s qult.e a blast," seld university spokesman Irv Blumenfeld , who thecrit· ed the bomb was planted before Wed· nesday·s 5 p.m. cklsing Ume. Heavy dam1ge resulted and 11 ~hower of gla!15 flew SO feet Around the bulldlng. A Weatherman tape recording s pl«yed Wtdnesday a(_a..New"York news conference and -fhe voict !dtntlfied as that t1f Miss B11:madette Dohm'• by her $i5ter, JtnQJ!er...__a spokts!JlU;<tJ :tbi ,Ynuth Tnternatlonal Party -Ylpples .. "Now we a.re everywher~ 111~ nf!it week families and tribes will att.lck the t:nerny around th• country.'' the t.tpc 11ld. DAILY "!LOT P'IM!t ltf L• '""'• SENATOR MURPHY CHARMS THE LADIES DURING GOP CONFAB IN ANAHEIM CaUfornl• School Ch ief Max Rafferty Joins in· the Fun With Tric ia and Nancy San Clemente Officials Balk at Hospital 'Gift' San Clemente city counc ilmen balked Wednesda y at an offer from a Van Nu ys developer to "give" a hospita.I free to the city when the facility turned 30 years old. "'ould be run by a nonprofit corporation with profits going toward repayment of the bond debt. If the venture r a i 1 e d, bondholders would absorb losses. After the 30 years, the hospital -lock, stock and barrel =-would be ha:nde·d~over to the city. Front Page l HEAl{INGS ... tects cf radiation lo health -detailed the specific materials discharged into the en· vironment by the reactor. In the testimony or Senior State Health Physicist Amasa Comish. came' the statemenls that a radinactive isotope known as tritium created a mild surprise by appearing at a greater quantity Ulan expected !Ltjie _existjrig_rea~tor .... __ . Murphy Ties 'Peaceniks' To Tunney ~ Sen. George Murphy W e d n t 1 d a ,Y demanded his opponent John Tunn.ey prove he has made no political dells. wttti two "ultra liberal peacenik'' groups that donated $60,000 to the Tunney campaign. Speaking at the convention or ~e southern d iv Is io n of the California Federation of Republican Women . Murphy said he'd "like to know if there were any agreement.a or political un· derstandings arrived at before these very large donations were made." The incumbent Senator did not name Uie two groups in his speech at the luncheon meeting. characterizing the groups only as ''peace at any price peaceniks." He later told newsmen they were the National Committee for IJl Effective Congres! and a fund-raising organiiaUon headed by Sen . George McGovern (D- S.D.J. Informed of Murphy 's statement, Tun- ney acknowledged the contrlbutJons and nt1ted that the committee has been active for years on behalt of liberal cand idates. He aJ50 pointed out that McGovern is 11: possible candidate for the 1 9 7 2 Democratic presidential nomination. "His statement just shows what a ~hallow un:ierstanding of these organiza· lions Sen. r-.1urphy has," Tu.nney said. While Murphy delivered the keynote address of the convention, it was obvious the 1,650 feminine audience members were most taken with his table.mates - Tricia Nixon, Nancy Reagan and Ivy Baker Priest. The president's eldest daughter l.s scheduled to return to Washin&ton ~ay after a three-day sJ.ay in Southern Galifornia where she campaigned for Murphy. During a brief meeting with the press before Murphy's speech Wednesday, the petite blonde said she was honor~ to .be campaigning for her former boss. She worked as a secretary for Murphy in 1967. ' After a sometimes ·bitter exchange between councilme n and t h w a r t e d developer C. T. De Cinces. the council voted--3-1-to-delay-any-aelioo-in-l~nir obligation" leaseback gift until DeCinces' bid for oilicial endorsement by a hospital planning agency is settled Tuesday. Councilmen, obviously dubious about t.he-sudden-propos;;i l ;;il'ao, took some jobs at De Clnces and the years of delays Oc· curring before and after the developer's involve ment in the ill-fated hospital development. But, Cornish stressed. the tiny ameunts of the nuclear material were not in· Jurious to health and have not been noted 1n an y concentration lnfUe"'. orms aroun the plant site. He forecast no health problems from tritium if the two new plants were lo be built. "l--enjoy-campa1gning-for-someth1il· lf-ll.--- believe in. California. as the most ~pulou., state in .the nation, leads the Way f or the whole country," she said. The proposal by the developer and his lawyer Wednesday indicated grave pro- blems in the status of the long-delayed hospital project. De Cinces.has until Monday to submit a detailed report of financial capability and solid plans for 5an Clemente Medical Center. Hearings held on Tuesday by the Orange County Comprehensive Health Planning board will determlne if the board's endorsement should be renewed for the Van Nuys builder. Jf the board decides against De Cinces, il will leave the door open to Chapman General Hruipital of Orange, which hopes to build its own private hmlpital in the ci· ty. but needs the endorsement for critical licensing. On Wednesday. De Cinces beseeched the council to sign an agreement laun- Chlng a plan to sell tax:exempt bonds twithout a public vote ) which would be paid back through proceeds of San Clemente Medical Center. For a period of 30 years the hospital House Approves Anti-Crime Bill Overwhelmingly WASHINGTON IUPI) -The House p a s s e d t1verwhelmingly Wednesday President Nixon's bi\\ to crack down on organized crime and terrorist bombings despite objections it would not work. and would endanger Constitutional righls or all citizens. Passage of the biU was the second major victo ry for the President in two w~ks in getting House action on crime bill!t he complains llave been delayed unduly. Earlier the House passed a compre- hensive bill to fight the drug problem. \\'hich also aroused dispute on con.stitu. tional grounds. and t.he Senate wAs mo v- ing Wednesday night toward pa.uage of that measurt. The organized crime bill. which passed the Senate in January in tougher rorm. i~ U\e major proposal in Nixon's 13-point anticrime package . It would make organized gamblinir ~ federal crime, bar investment of crim!. nal jltains in legitimate business and allow r.xtended ~enl.f'nccs for habitual or pro- fessional criminals. Qutspoken DeCinces critic ~fayor Walter Evans. and Councilman Stan NorUirUp launched the fusillade against the builders. "My voLirJg.for a plan like...this -to put it more bluntly than I should -would mean an endorsement for you and your hospltal .•• I would never do that," the mayor said. ''I remember distinctly." Northrup a'd- ded later, "when the city granted permits six years ago and aftet, that got nothing but. delays , promises of construction 'next wee k' and a couple of sewer pipes on the site across the street from city hall. ··well, rm getting tired of the next weeks and would be in favor of denying this thirig here and now," Northrup said. DeCi nces shot back bitterly, "I have been involved in this project for only the 1asr1s nlCinUis; how Jn the hell do Yl?U ex- pect me to be responsible for things wh ich happened fi ve years ago?" He said under the tax exempt plan the cily would assume no financial liability for the success or failure of the hospital operation until the 30-year repa yment per iod ended. The city·s credit rating and runds "·ould not be in jeopardy either. he said. But councilme nagreed that the pro- posal was too sudden for an immediate decision. Northru p cast the no vote because he preferred nat denial. An ;iction might he taken Oct. 21 - more than a week after the hearings in San Clemente by the health planning boi:1rrl. OeCinccs I.hen predicted optimistically tha t he would win another 90-day df'lay period in the board 's decision, "to make sure all the aspects of our operation are In fine shape." Edison Mechanical Engineering expert David Fogarty explained the specific emission levels of· nuclear waste at the plant -em issions mea sured in "Curies." ~From January, 1968. through Augusf of this year, the existing plant emitted 11.56 Curies of liquid gross beta-gamma nuclear materials and 9,045 Curies of thP tritium substance. He stressed that the gross beta-gam· ma readings amounted to only 7 per- cent of the all owable quantity set by government agencies. The tritium reading. he said, amounl· ed to onl.Y 0.2 percent of the allowable amount. The first eight months of this year, Fogarty added, constituted a "peak peri· od " or activity at the reactor. 'Ole dlsc~arges in that period. he said amounted to 4.25 percent of the allow· able for the liqu id waste and .23 per- cent of the tritium element. Cornish augmented the figure!\ by stressing that the readings were so small that they barely rose above "back· ground " which ls the reading of nu- clear material in the envi ronment oc- curring naturally. Cornish said no substanti11l increase in emission level11 would result from the L~·o new reactors -each of \\'hich will produce lwice as much power generation as the old reacltlr 11t San Onofre. One aspect of the technical issue <lf radiation em issions, Cornish admitted. i~ lhe point of controversy-whether or no1 nuclear wastes can accummulate in organisms. "There are experl' and eminent scien- ti~ls y,·ho would differ greatly on this point ," he said. All three women spoke brieny to the convei\tion, urging the partisan audience to work. for Republican candidates during the remaining 26 days of the campaign. While Mrs. Priest. the stale treasurer, assured the women that their effortJ would bring a Republican viclory in November, the state's First Lady warned of the dangers of overconfidence. "Overconfidence is the way you lou elections. So it's important to keep right on-working up to election day," she said. Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke also made an ap- pearance at the podium to boost the Republican caUJle. •·1 have great con- fidence that the voters of this slate wU\ ri5e tt1 their responsibility and give Gov. Reagan the team he needs In Sacrament.0 and Pre~dent Nixon the team he needs in Washington," he said. 12 Bomb Suspects Plead Innocent Twelve ot the suspeet! arrested las t Friday when officers raided a Modjeska Canyon "bomb factory castle" have entered innocent pleas .at arraignments at Central Municipal Court in Santa Ana.. Preliminary hearings for the suspects ""ere set for Oct 20 but attorneys said grand jury indictments may bring the proceedings before Superior Court before that time. Individuals face as many as 18 felony charges involving drug~. possession of a machine gun and explosives. .Judge Eugene Langhauser set ball for the suspects for eight at '50.000 each and at $~.000 for 11 others. RIP VAN WINKLE mattress Handcrafted by 7 .~~@1~ ~t'·\1 ~J • Vtde ~,,,.lrt"""- • liand-1tiched si.dewalla that will M'ftl' aar w bl'f!Ak dOW1l. • 12.,:. MMt •~Ne al'ea of 1leepin.r 1t1rlaee.. ,a Uphol.W.fflt with d.,a layel't nf fl't1ff1 n.uo. by Du Pont. • Baollanlf .M11id huM1"- •1nrinr for gJ't!lll.itr n..- ~ ... 2'==· -.ie:... From Pagel ;;:;;;-::;;::;::;:::;:;Z::;;;;;;;;;:::;;!'.:~~-.. Iii .... .,~ .. lblWI -~ fpri.nr-tne 9lrTJ' el. he 1ndo1try. BEACH • • • shnuld be built up as a be8uUlul litUe ~nter of •rt& and crafts, with artls~ ac- tually working." f'reistat said. "the people who comr here for art are the nne!ll who 11pend money. not the 006 who crnne In p11rk .and flO lo the beach. You !thould dn everything to preserve-your Art colony image." • hit 20-yea.r rtttma~aa--• -JIOl p~n.&ed. -............ -$199.50 ..... -................. $279.50 ... "' --.... ""'·'··---·--··$369.50 .. .. y.. t""""" mt.nor d""1Mr toil! be "°Pl>r 1o am.rt llO" • • , __Goldberg._ nnted tllAt.-.tM--.p.Arking~~t-...-- Idea was sugJ!e~ted only 11~ 11 tempor11.ry so1ution to a fin111ncial problem. and t11il! !he creation of an art.• and cr11rt.• specialty area C)n lhe htiCfitronl-&iready h11d bun pmposed as-part of fllturt. develnp'rT!enl.. -=_JQJiAR~IIT f u RN)TU_ RE 2215 HARIOR llVll. COSTA MESA, CALIF. It WAS 1greed to defer action pendinlt Bl1ter'1 meeting with the planning com· mission. I ' PROFHSIONAl INTERIOR DESIGNERS ... -TllY OUI llYOLVIN!i CHAl!if.- • . . .. -· • . Barbara . Ficker Sha res Hu sband's Joy GU.I UATI COl!ITIDn D'1 ... DD's Lifelong Dream Comes True .... co .... IOl'!PI• • y-Co.IN" Sandy'1 Fluff 'n Stuff .• HO e. 17!Jt St ... C1111 Mnt-Mlooren S••• •• -""J.Oll -•• ''On I.he beach" a n d perfectly coot.nted to be there is Barbara Flek.er, "1!e of the first West Coast skipper in history selected to defe™f lhe America's Cup. "Empha.ticailY NO-I don't like to sail,'' claims the at- tractive bloode. ''I guess I just don't like the coniinement of a boat." Barbara did board a boat owned by lnlrepld's syndicate to watch each race sailed by husband Bill, Newport Beach architect, during the grueling tria1s and competition in the 1 l~year~Jd yachting classic which began last June. Although the weather was rniseraLle -heat, cold, fog, wind. rain -sbe found lhe people on the East Coast friend.Jy and hospilable. The alleged antagonism towa rd West Coast yachtsmen is all in people's minds here, she claims. ;'They were absolu t ely delighllul to us," she says. Accompanying. the Fickers for their four-month stay in the East was their daughter, Deon, 11 , who also shares her mc~her·s antipathy toward sailing. ON THE BEACH -Daughter Deon, 11, (left) and Barbara Ficker, wife of ln- trepid's champion skipper Bill Ficker.of NewµOrt Beach, don't share hi s en· thusiasm for sailillf;l'. but enjoy the fringe benefits of yacht racing. Barbara does enjoy the "fringe benefits" of her husl:iand's avocation -travel- ing and meeting people, and renown yachtsman likes it that way. Even though she loves the exciting atmosphere but doesn't aJways understand the racing jargon, she main- tains U • ..:1 Bill doesn't even want her to learn. Celebrity Book Review Ry . JO 01..SO/\ Of t1t9 O.Uy Piii! Stilt An era of early canfomia not often publicized is the set- ting for a new novel by Miss Gwen Bristow, en tit I c d "Calico Palace," which was described by the author during the opening session of the an· nual Celebrjty Book Re view Series sponsored by Pi Beta Phi. Miss Bristow, a "alive nf South Carolina, was born into a Bible-reading family which she smilingly credits as the reason for putting "not a single four-letter word" in the book. She and her husband Sn.ice ManniJlg, were fierce rivals in their jobs as reporters for the New Orleans Times-Picayune a11d Item but v.·rote a novel together which launched her career as a writer. The novel came about as a protest to the loud radio tha t blasted from their neighbor's aparbnent for 15 hours a day, seven days a week. To vent their anger, they jokingly thought of many different Pen Line Art Colors Fall Talk \vays he might be killed and fi11ally selected the best for in- corporation into a mystery novel. BEFORE 4.9ERS ''Calico Trail" is the story Qf the California11s \vho were ·in the state before the gold rush started and before the 49ers came upon the scene. These· "·ere the 4.8ers -people who had come to San Francisco for \•arious reasons when it was Others were "The Ex- nothing mort: than a frontier ecutives,'' a novel by Alex· shantytown. ander Fullerton aboUt the men \Vhen gold was discovered in :1 and wome1 who light for pro- 1848 it took a year for the t fit and power in international news to travel eastward to the );.,", , ' executive suites; "Desceat," a cities along the Atlantic. What " ' .. , novel by J ames Whitfield happened in San Francisco " , Ellison about the impact 0( during that year is the subject divorce: "The Ravishers," by of Miss Bristow's novel. C•rVlll '"'"' f.1erle Lynn Brown. a novel Her main characters are about £our rich, handsome and Kendra . Ted Hiram, Pockcr. CHRONICLER talented young melt who have Capt. Pollock and Marny, the Gwen Bristow been "swingers since they left latter setting up the gambling the playground,'' and "Conflicl tel'lt called the Calico Palace. or lsiterest." by Larston Far· Now a resident of Encino, the best-seller list and has rar, an insider's novel of Miss Bristow has written been chosen by the Doub leday Washington, D.C. other his'torkal f!ovel s in-Book Club as a11 offering for The next book review wi!l eluding "Jubilee Trail," the 1971. It has been translated in· take place Friday, Nov. 6, at story of Los Angeles' early to German, will be a serial in 10:30 a.m. Mrs. H 0 ward citizens. ''Deep Summer." a British magazine and soon f\.feans may be called for in- "Tomorrow Ts Forever" and will be translated in lo fonnation at 548--6108. The "Celia Garth." Swedish. series benefits the philan- She writes on R strict other books on the program, thropies of the South Coast ~hedule, feeling that "if you reviewed by PtfiiS Carlotta Alumnae Club or Pi Beta Phl. don"! keep a schedule you 'll------''------- never get it done." Her day begins at 9 a.m. af!d includes a • 1unch hour about 1 p.m. and 20 lengths in the swimmh1g pool. SOUTHERN DRAWL f.Uss Bristow, v.•ho still re- lains a soft. South Carolina Artist Mrs. Afaryella \Var· drawl, is president 0£ the Los ren will d':?monstrale her Angeles Center of PE N unusual combination of acrylic International, .8 worldwide color and pen line for association of professional members of the Affiliates of writers which had as its first Laguna Beach Art Gallery on president Joh1t Galsworthy. -..~ Oct 19 t J JO ''Calico Palace" has reached '"~Nay, . , a : p.m.,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,I ' in the gallery. 11 Mrs. Elsa Geischen, pro- gram chairman, will Introduce the artist. who graduated from UCLA and has exhibited in maj<r galleries and o n television. An exhibitor in the Laguna Beach Festival of Arts, Mrs. Warren also designs products ror commercial enterprises. Following, the lecture and a :~:Cc""' •ktt>rt. business mect.i~h con--.---.. ·~ ...?·=---~5i bjY U". rruv , president, refrcshrnent.'I will be served by hospitality chairman Mrs. Georl!e Dave~ port. DIAMONDS GEMSTONES ESTATE JEWELRY--11--" l tillol •t s.11 Coit• M••• Di•go Fwy, s_.O-t066 • " • CUSTOM-MADE DR·APERIES 0 0 USI OUI CONYINllNT SHOP AT HOMI Sll YICI Hltltf .... ,...., I tt2.Ufl • ...... " 5474141 0 --.. -0 1~ . . ' -0 "We doo'l have to talk about It. We just go and do ii, and tbat'.s it." During their stay I n Newport, R.I., the Fickers shared a home with members of the Intrepid's crew and various representatives of the 12 meter's syndicare beaded by Bill Strawbridge and co- manage4 by Briggs Dalzell. "At times theni were as many as 23 in lhe house , bl"l it "'as completely staffed in-. eluding a house manager," she said. Barbara and Deon found plenty of time for sight-seeing, roller skaUng (skating, both roller and Ice, and !Wimmlng are Bf_rbara'1 hobbles) J.od beaching. Although Ultre wete many social events connected with the elite Ot racing competiUon sponsored by the New York Yacht Club, s y n d i c a·t-e members usually "covered" for the Fickers. "We didn't attend too many parties," she admitted. "You can't sail all day and go out nights, and our people were too busy racing.·• Barbara attended Pomona High School and Mount San Morning Club to Hear . 'Everybody's Secret' M1Joday ~1orning Club n1em- bers of Laguna Beach have scheduled a busy m o n t h starting with a luncheon meeting on Monday, Oct. 12. The noon gathering in Ben Brown's restaurant will be highlighted by a o n e · a c t drama, "Everybody's Secret" directed by Mrs. Jeannette Kevan, chairman oi t h e Wednesday Club or Costa Mesa. Starring in the play will be the Mmes. David Farge, Ken- neth Reynolds, Fred Johnson, William Hill, Billy Gibbs, Gene Gribben, Robert G r e e n e , Stewart Warnak and Robert Clark. Also on the agenda is in- ronna\ modeling by Fashions by Robin as arranged by the program chairman M r s • Richard Orchard. Those in- terested in reservations may call Mn. Ruth Hatfield, 494- 465tl. On Thursday. Oct. IS, an armchair cru ise to Acapulco via colored slides. presented by a representative of American President Lines, will entertain members in Irvine Coast Country Club at 8 p.m. ·A bus trip to San Diego for shopping and lunch in the Hotel Coronado is planned for/ Wednesday, Oct. 28. Following lunch members will participate in a two-hour nar- rated cruise of San Diego Bay. Alumnae Gathering Husbands Welcome Husbands will join members of the Newport llarbor Alpha Chi Omega Alumnae, Gamma Tau Gamma group for an evening of dining and socialibility. The affair will take place at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Ocl. 10. in the Linda Isle clubhouse. Mrs. Jack Bibb is chairman of the annual affair honori n g husbands. Assisting her are Mrs. Lawrence Milne and Mrs. Paul A. dePfyffer. Mrs. Dale F. Winters has assumed presidenliaJ duties of the group. Other officers are A1iss Laurel Arnold. vice president; P.1rs. John A . Cooper and Mrs. l\iark Rodar· nal, secretaries. and Mrs. Kenneth G. Cooling. treasurer. Serving as committee chairmen are the Mmes. Richard Parker. Lyre editor: Arthur Olson, chaplain: Val Ely, historian: John Billings, rush: Sydner Gaynor. Panhellenic; Ronald Gagliano, parliamentarian. and Loren W. J~ealher, presS, and Miss Charlotte Clark, membership. nu-trend kitchens NU·TJ1JilD ICITCHtNS' modtrnlztfion lttviu' h1fp YoU plin your ki!Uitn rtmodelil'l9 from 111rt lo finish. You c1n deptnd on N\l·T•tHD KITCHENS' ticpert covnse!or to he ir, rou pl1n your project from Inception to complt· tlon ncluding sources of fintriclng. for • disliiictive, nn' kllthen ti 1n unbe111bl1 prlct, ctl1 NU-tll~D IUTOllHS 1od1y. (Also 1sk t bout our .compl111. qu1hry 81throom rtmOdtling servict.) NU-TREND KITCHENS ~20 El Camino Real, Tustin 17141 838-2654 Antonio Junior College prior to her marrJ.a&e to Bill, her col· Jea:e sweetheart, in 195.3. She naturally was overjoyed with lnlrepid's win tlecause Bill, who has been sailing since he was I, was so ex· tremely happy. "For him, ft was the fullfill- ment of a lifelong dream." she :said. Holidays Previewed Gctti.ni; a head st.art on the holidays are members of the Costa f.1esa-Bay Citic s Branch, Califoraia National Fuchsia Society. 100°1. KANEKALON W IGS Tho !NSTANT HAIR -DO ! THE TRAVELER Str1ld1 c•p, c11rl.y or s•"'i•flirl top wlih l•perecl flfck. R19. 24,fS. 14.95 THE VOYAGER With o• without ,.,t. fo, th• longer loo~. 119, 2f,9S. 19.95 THE DUTCH BOY Lol'I' •h•9tY neck. R•t · 14.t S. 22.95 THE "GAR BO" H•ndrned• for tht 1•le1I f•1h· :011 1tvl11. Rig. Jt .95. A Preholiday Fun Night and dinner will take place at 6:30 29.95 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 12, with I\ ·-c::-cc-:=-::-:-::-:=--:-::=,,..-· 1 Mr. and Mrs. Merle Qui'<Y "MONIQUE" hosting the affair in the Amer· ican Legion llall. Costa Mesa. WIGS Fruit cake and Christmas cards will be offered for sale and are available by calling hirs. Lem Downs. c a k e chairman, at 64&-2500 or Mrs. John Trainor, card chairman, al 642-4228. ·PaµI Brecht of Brecht Orchid C'lmpany will discuss Gardea Chatter and show shade plants. 0 t h e r en- tertainment will be provided by John Aeberhard, chairman. Harbor Center 1/i & lAIGI SIZES 2300 Harbor Cost• Mes• . ... S6t .t5 NOW '29" Pl I-STY LID ••••••• , $J4.fl CUT I: STYLID •••••• $Jt.fl OTHER HUMAN HAIR WIGS $19.95 ALL SHAOES ID •••••••• SJ4.fS maffiej WIG & BEAUTY SALON 250 E. t7th STREET Daily Til 5:30 Thurs . & Fri. Till 8:00 COSTA MESA 548-3446 5x7 NATURAL ' COLOR PORTRAIT R.,YI• ,._,~ vo r.,. f ,.., w\ii.-ct. 1 '4" f.,..Wly Jai. ........,:,, 1" A!Ultl-•l ""J•ct•, $1.00 •tch T Wl•I • THURSDAY Thru SUNDAY October 8th thru 11th HOURS: D•ilf 10 a.m. to I p.m. Sunday 10 •.m. to S p.m. -2200 HARIOR ILVD • •t Wilt0n -Coat• Mei• r Out•tanding Couapact 6VER THE CO.UNTER Completr-New York Sto,ck List NEW YOllt: IA"l• TilurMIV't C1f'llfl9ft ... .. .. , NfW Yori: Stock l11U.1111• ••le .. wlltl , ..... , Mllll ltW c .... c1111. 111<-"11 vohll!>t: .... Mt! Ill•• dHW • •!.~ IN 1114 • 14 ms 'I~·· (llcll.)MlellltWC'*Ca.. ~[~"'.li': u ~; r11 ~--~ '""rf'· I~°!/: f 1tt !Silo I~-" I 11 JI _....., __ _,._1 I t ~-" ~11•.12 •, J. i;: b = = -~r .. ........ ~ 1'11W M l,tt ti -+.. M '4 UW. U\li '™-1" u I N ....... Ill 1 141 ...... ai. ~:..;1 1 14"-ltl\ : "4~ ::: 1~I ?:: lib f.~ m: = +~ ""1 ~~ a..,._111.-..._... ... WO!atllfll M •-""'''"' t a.111. Mllll •AtO. ., .......... 1'11 ............ ~ .. -i--. NASO Llttl"IJ• for Wodne1d1y, OCtober 7, lf7D ..... -· .... J· ......... , ... a.. ~-· -· ACll'lf_lo\kl 211 lt 1ffi 4Po\ -.0 ....... 1'1 lN\11 M1 -+ lot ~II f~·. f<llW Yotl( l.Al"l 1Mf11 lt.t lM W. l"lnl\ P'tc 1• '-!H<•""I 4\la S AMIE.I! I~ 11 l3V. '4 l~V.-lllG r4.11 lll U +.! ... ,,., I !'IC~ -'r"'-lodo .. r ... &Id M ii I , ... ~ ~Wt '11-) i.1111111 llN l!OY.I Ml MU!11 M 1 14 h w + \i ""' Ml I. " II\\ [ JJl'I .,. : .. ..,. 11ktd -'•• lllWIJI t ffi II <rt 44 /Id _..,..,1111 Jll,;; AOdrft4 I.~ 1., Jl>Ao :Ith »fl -'S ~ITFlll 1.M 116 •Ill • + ~ ~ Clo ', ""_."~ -_··1;~ 'f.i.1. llHIOllto b~ Oii '°'! "I " w I' ''"•Pd 20!,\I/ l~"' Allfftl••I ~ -~ t i4 ..,,,. -IT FplJ,IOI ! I" ' '! to '1ir. . lot ti .... ' ....... -"w" 0 ' I ' • :t=' .. "" .. s"· ~" " ,,. '"MLll ... I! l ''" ~ -IT '"""" • ' ' ... ""' '"°" et Sewflllft 1"•19 TK r: 'flt °"' '°"' 11\oll lr•W I i " ·~'"' Co tv. -14 !lluSvc: 120 "' *l'I +"' K '·'° aJ .... '4 DMI~. fflC,, tr1 Ft C:.t<o ~ P ftkllll Jtlll •?\11 bK v \It jl'I A ltf" I~ llli \II + ~ llS p1•«1ickl t 1; 111 IUIWi +1"' n Flf/!r "' 1!" _ ... .. ·"~( lrftlUC• Fib Ttk -Mi'""'" HIC 11 '' •1 F f.r. Ar Ptt<I l't ••·· 111$ Df':I.,,. lt 1--13111 +1.. n '"' 160 ... l bl.II 1r1 rep-=~!~.· 2 )14 Pro Goll l'-1 t>i r:•bo Fd IV. 1111 Ar RM 2.1 I -1 \lo 1tli -llY l.W )0 l lW. 17.... "' lfl Otl :!ID Im \to jll4 -""' =·~•I( .. , :~ ...... ff.~ J"'= 1.~ ~~= ~ -i.., ~ :::f, 1~~·11~ ~·*11 ,1 ~ ~ i~ = t1 ~·r :! ,., ""' ,11'1 3I .. ~~ ~ ... ~.Jmt i' Ji ~ ~,,. 1$1 "'T :: INl"Nlm•i.!Y t ,,, 6011 ...... !'1111$ NM 11 ... 11 T1r10r w ~ u,,., All Oat 1. I 14 1.th +"" .. ,.;: i.A" Jl »" 3f:: Jr~ -11' ra~lit1 Jofl 75 ' j ,.~ "'• ~!i p,m. 41 wto kft thnl l'llG Rr. j\lt 7h P11ti S J,IC IOU 11111 T11H11I em A111111 Jnl:ir I • li · .,, i.r1t Oil M 11 If" 2 "'-2'"--+'Ml :Elii'· 1'2 U t '" " MClll'ltlet CWkl F11 WF n 14 m Publ1/lr 61-o 114 f1.M1nl I ~ lt\lt Albll<'loC t \.\ -.. :::i'!ll > -', .,' " I MOI d >I i ""+ .. "'"'' bftn Pll•· l'lk:lull 1E 1 'WI PvrtN 1'4 ~ TwldVll 16\lt u Ait:lwtMll 141 ..-I l.t ,.... \to .-' --H-ol 7 l "' it + 1141 c ... Md (~Ml OI' FllOd l'P ~-Ji ll-1 2314 2' ffJCll Al 1 1111 Alc:IMlu j;J! 211 'WI ~ M -• 1· .. • 11,,.t.1• ~ !~ Wili1_ ·.~ + 4-If:' . 7 IS'M -V. .O~ (bfci). tllfr· Fon! 011 1 'IO ljl't Pyrlty S l' 1' Thim! A 211\ I ko$1tl\CI ' !i I 11 .. + It; OX ~,.. ,.,. '"" · •• PU'bUI I to 15' 20 -\i IMtllr 'f'l•t.i1 '°"""It Ill l't POU. CO J '"' r111iw Ct t\~ lo Alunellri r '1'4 tJMo -\'-c~""•" ·'° tt'1 ,,.._ Dlill + V. , lllir.(I 21 '"' -"' c"'"'' tl>routfl. Fosr Grnl JAii ~ t 1jli IO'ol TltlnY n ''' nt A!lttl Ct :i09 ' ~ tu. 9"" -t ,...n Ill I UU. I~ lN +111o !lo l.H I ff Jl~ ~ -'111 out lht CleY. l'rkn Fotom 2'4 J IA ~J CM I loo U!'i f•tc CP!I 1• !~ A[IRLud 2... lt JO\lt l!::' I0\6 -CNA Flnf .IO lS. 11'1111 11 11'11 -... Gin 11 M ' I H '4 ftl4i ~ . Tb h"gh de not ifl(:!UO• Frt1kl 'I • I" IYtl ~ JOll. '\'<_ft.! G ''"', ... A ~ud II, ' ll\6 Ml -CHA 111 Al.11 ., ,,. ft" m. + ""'CkftSllh•ll • ,, ,.. l:l'A ~ -"' e 1 -performance Ply mouth Dus ter 340 is at the top of Plymouth's popu· r11111 ... ,,,,.,., FrM1n 101' 1 w. 11." o~ '"" 13 .... rr_IMQ• H .., 'h 1 Pw 1.» u ~ im-" ca.,, 11 G•• 121 44"' .a\4 .u\'li-n. ! •~E1 1.)1 ,,, ,.. jE 111' -.,. 1-' ... , •• _n .,. c:-. FvlVt"I' '"" ,,., Rlhtll l>h ''"' Trko Id :Ill 31 I 1.7' 15' 1$ -l4i 1ISG1 """ 0 •1 ~ ",ril· " T"tl I pff 511 "" )Ml -.... 14Jr comr,ac t Valiant line for 1971. A new grille and-strong identification are """"1ot1 ,'"'""' 7M ~ )'WI R., .. , • 201o1111"1Tr:r.Ji1' s1 $'111 .-,1 #.111 ... ' "" --. ococ11 •M ] n~ '™ 11 .. t• t11.1i ''° ~ .. ,.,..+~ t Jin MA En• IV. l\lo .... IOW ~ 514 11.IYCh • r.i .. Tt ... Jlh,. AJldMl .7Sb ' t'l'I ._ 1''11.-"" oc1llll1 1.n uliii "' "' + fio Tt 1ta1.l0 1 Y g eatures. Introduced las t year, Ouster paced Valiant to its most suc· M l cor• '\(, ""'G1t1 ''"' J111 ,.,. 111rm • u lJ\lt u ·~ ,.,.. s .-,1111<1 Pci ... 11 ,_.. """ 1111t ...• o11 P11 1.• !!"" 1211i nv. +"" ''I" 1~ ""' 1~ ... ful · b' A rl".APS U\4 JN! ltrlnkl 11~ 1214 lllCO. o 2114 !hi Un lllllln 27''• 21'41 Allltd5!f \·• ll 1,W. tll\i U'lli -VI oHlnf Alk l 29\lt :lfllo -lilo Gin Tire lb ~ 9'-Ao ' 1~ 19 + Ioli . cess year in 1story. There are four Valiant n1odels for 1971 . A10 •nc: aVio '"' •• sw: 1l,.. ' Rt1 cr.o ti\'J :1o1v. un me GU w. ~"' AuldSuit » 7"' 1"'° "' -y; 0111"'11: • .21)p " 1"" 1~ ,, -'"" Gl.-co 1 11 s1 ''"' n'" 21\i -...., -~---~-------'------------'------'---'---'-----------A.ITS Inc JV. J.\11 Aird! ! 21ii ll lddt Pu 1)\4 16\'I u1 1·~1 t1'o n. Iii• Ch1lm 1n IS. 1514 15"" -V. ololMit I.~ 1J JI-. :Mh il"9 -\'J ~1•r .10ll l 1to ,.. fro ..... AS9 11111 ,.,. 3\'t l(J111tlc Ml ~ ll lltt Sto 22 U U nv• """ 2l\'t Al!H'4PC «le 'H 1514 11-. JMI + ._ olo 1'ou pt • I'° <&:! "'"'" 4S .... nf"I .15 :n-111 lJli fm .. : AS~ pt .... 7 L1l1ur Jv. 3\'t Rold Ell 1.u JJV. u1 \u,t•r ,..,., ,1 Al:f 1 M ~25 S1\lt 5'V. JSJ\ +1 on Ind l ,, I~ IWi 1 .... -Ht I f'IC .IOb 1' ~ ~ -" :~r••crn :"''mG!:t1f11 l~ f~:=7o..,,_ ~~2J""tlp Pen, ti rit~:lrJii• st W: Htt fft::.=-~ 01'1'-J?~'.'JJ ul m: tt'.4 "'!i"'+1.,. :r,~-\~ liJ WA• ~ i1 =~· Your Money's Wortla Ac"'' El 1\'t 1v. G!tttn N 114 CO\I \!'' '"' ,,., u11h SLll J1'1. '""..,,,,.,.Et i.20 n 10 ".._ 1H1 9f 1 H ll"" JO "'+."' "'" pti.20 ~ !j' 1'\lt' """' ... • tA151• I'll t llo Gltotl1tl 25 111'1 1>'111 OV 21"11 U\40 Ull/ IMI 2•\'J 26 Am~ .flr US 40 JN ll'lli ~ OluGit 1641 ! -" J2 JIV. ..•.. 11nlPt ,.. 0 !!: II ia· + • Air 11\0ul ll• ,w, Gle•i.n W 11Uo lt S1Clll•r 3 Poli Y• LO I t\11 A~H 111.50 '41 M 9' M -1'111 ColuPIU .'51' 1 UW, 12111 12\11 -1111 llrelt I' n ti 20V. -U Altbrn F ll'lt llh Glob llub 2 J Sc1"tn E 3'11 3h V.....:1 " lJl'J 16 M !tFltft .10 11• .u ... J$11a $5111 -"'Co!SoOri 1.7• II 2~ ~ 2$._ -\lo r:!L"" ·'°" .\,lo tV. -l't AlbM H J Jllo GOl4 C~c 13 14 lli't In •Iii 4io Y11lr011 ,.., '"Am Alrlln .IO J61 2114 20'i 21 -,,_ 1ombEn 1.10 J3 •t .411V. "14 -1111 nf!ll l.«1 1 ""14 ~ im-~ . Albll<'t1 ~ I U. LS 71Mi !"' C1>tr I'' 1 Wl<JI ll lt l•h 10tl A.miff• .Ole :w; ""' u Hi.lo + ... bE ptl.JO I .U ~ .U -"6 l'l'IOel •r I M l) )1 \lo -'" Akol•c .. ,.. J'lo c • '"' "' I Incl :i.-. ' WlllJW p " ,.--A8••ftlh 110 '" ,,"' •v. ,._ .. OISolv ... 11 ""' 12111 ,, .... -" lno1 tnc: 1'' JOV. JN "" -"' Aiko Llld 1,.., 15 ••Pl! c.. t\'t 10 ~Sons ,, 22\lo W•lrl 8d n ,, .... A.macu;1 .• .Y '"" 711A :M"' -1 1a.!Sol "" l'lll '' 16 left Ald,n ., N j~ l'Vt -" IA.It l•v 1-. JI• '"''' Sc JJl'I '' r PH "t 11'~ 1'14 W 11.t..S. "" 41Ai Am C111 1'20 n 13". 4 .u -omwEd i.lO Ill V. jllt n"" +·~ ltl'IAI 111'3.IJ xl .Y\'I ~ .... 7" Alllld E• J'. J\I IA Mt1 U\11 :II ~ f'O A ,U)C ~ w......... '"" $111 ...,,. c~ ~ ' •'4 .... I ..... 'it. ...,e ll'tf.44 ' ION I 7:16 lilt'lli + "' leMld ,,, l •• " Iii w.r. _,,.. A1pn G.o '"" ~ rfffl Ml 1'111 11 r •11111' 17,,. U'-i W11t1 NG 1' l'h A Clltfn iM • ~ ,..,., a.v. -!mwE pll.tt 11 f'-!'• !'"' ~ IMIA.I ""I' J Xtl't ~ -414 A"'lldc Wt 3\lt r?IH Jtl 11 11'4d ll Cm. l:\lo t Vo W1lll Ill 9"' t'i Amey_,. l.2$ 9' ~ ,, ... JO _: ~ -OU . .O 101 71'» 7 1 -\II lobll Mtt n lfllo ll\lo """ -"' Am lu1n 12 11'4 revo ~f •14 '"' lltn Ill '°" W1I Tr t '\It Am Oltttll 1 I llh ""' ll~ -Ill _, lei '5.l lJlii 12 ltl• -V, lobe Un .«t 5 tl&'J 11"9 11 ...... Why Do Buinesses Fail? B y SYLVIA PORTE!\ In the space of one city :block near our Manhattan apartment, I've watched close to a half.dozen stores go under in the past several months. During the same period, other ,stores on the b lock have seem- ··ed to be doing fine. Why did Restaurant 0A" fail while Restaurant "B" -in the 1ame block, same price 1,000•1 OP. Oil PAINTINGS WHOLIJALI WAllHOUSI OPIN TO THI PUILIC $5. -· ., 161t I:. llOIHOEll, SANTA ANA PHONE lU ..... OEALEll.S WANTED EVERY FAMILY -:·SHOULD HAVE ·THEIR- .PERSONAL PHARMACY range, appealing lo the same nearby residenlS -is thriv· ing? Why did Lingerie Shop "C" go bankrupt w h i I e Lingerie Shop "D" is pulling us in to buy everything from pantyhose 10 pajamas? It's by no means a casual question iD late September 1970. For business failures have surged well into the 900- Newport Man Elected To Head Post A f.I Ltb .v. ~ h in 7 7111 ....: Cir• • '"' Wtbto II• t\lt 1014 AglllTll .lOe 12 2,w. tt'lll 2,.., ... _, ts 42h 12 12 -" rid! 17'1 '100 2' jl M -1'11 Am E~1>r 1tt.. n~ 111rd Ch ,,,. ~ ~ffl U• " .. Wtldrr" • U4 A u ' tH a... 6 ,,_ ,,. ,,. -"" -.Miii• 1 1 IWI 17\IJ 171i'I ••• ,u 5'7 :Ill~ * ""' ... Am F11r11 •"' '"" G11tt '"' 7"1 11'1 ndol'I " M Welln1 M ll"i \' 1.m'~...... .. ..... OllllM•t "' 10 n-. ~ ft!.\ ... IYA -'~ ' I~ '~ '" .. 1,000 range per monlh, a A G•MI sa:w.stUtG~•ocln •v. • ~1!011 s 2i-. i~w"dt P 10-. 1 ei ...... 1·"' '"2s 2'-" 24'11i-\tc-c0 '60 14 l•l'I MW'"'''\., Jrw.140 29' ll" »14 ~-"' starthng 33 percent -(lne :,,. M'f'~t.: 1:¥:, J:~ ~:e:• 1~ 1f~ 21* ~11 '~\ 11= ~~\\ ~::: ~~ :~ ':! :r:.r~ ~.i'' !~ n: :~: f1tt =J c:: Fci!1 ~': 1': Jr" ft"° J~ ::1 \'I ~:~;;o i,1J' J15 J!?Z r.f; n._. + l? third! -over the total at this z:~i 1~ 1r,z ':\Ii ~=~~1:., 1~ ,1:z J .... :: 11l!~1 u1.!~'fi ~.i~~rp'f.~ :~ 1: :8~1 f"f Ji i'V. 2i~ ,m t~ ~::J'1:,tJ 1;.J *f't r,\'I tt: :!:,:; G~:::ii,~ $~ J: r~ lJ: ·l~ =1:1 time In 1969. Business failures :~~!., ·~ ~~ ~ ~r.;~ ~~I m r,: ..,m~ 1.60 -. ~ ~o:: l'S =: c::F:» •• lJ: 'J r,14 ~'=-''* + ~ rr··~~v1t'1so1 u ~ ~,'it k~ = ~ 1nvolving habililies between :~:•n,..:t ~" fi,M =~ll~vnE P ,;"' ,;:w. *E -SWIM i F !n.~11.2! 1117 UJZ Y~ ~ ... .,?~~="~'Ml 1 n 2!~ 24" 27"' t ._.. G~:yo; tu 1f6 ~l~ i!'WI. g"" = ~ $100,000 and $1,000,000 have :"l': H J'~ 1:v. ~:o~: ,:: J~ ~!i;cr:• l.: ,~ l:~ ~~ !~li =1~ COllNl~~·rt. •5' ,.,. 2t~ 2tli = ~ &1=~.~ r.i,: I i23"' lv: 1) .... = ~ swelled to an all-time record A~c•eo1 21'* 2Ai ~:)~d A<;'1 1~ 1):! !~1~!M2'10 -C ,~ ,{v. ,?t1o -Iii f:S,..... ci;tJ ~ ffn ~ U,,. :-+ ~ lilN~l.~..,_1f ': t f~ lttt = ~ and more than twice as many =~:~d ~. ~ ~ H-m '" ,.""' lt\~ MUTUAL :m. "~·'° .12 " 111'1! 10\lt 10\'t....:. -~::~,,·'t'6D u~ !,1* ~l~ !l't+ ~ G1H1>Neli 1.60 60 461'11 dVt di-\-~ l lkff I ~ ll'A HU<k Ml ~ 1"1 ....... 131 Ill JO ~ .... " -l~ Con c h. GIWnUl'lfl .to 107 n:w; 23 n +"" rounder ing concerns ha ve 11 Pilnt J•, Y4 11vc1 PP tt 29 ~ su,,','"' • 1 ""' 11t1o 1"" -l'O c:::: c°: 2 ~ "~ ~t; ,:,. ··· ... l";.1 wnt "1"1 u 21 JO ~ -~ 111 p ''" J•i H11• G•t 1214 IJ\, """ I .It l.J 214 21'4 21 .... + ""'! C Al.50 ~ -... GWUll 1111.U 4 ltvt lf!Ai 1tw -"' l1ab1httes or fl,!)00,000 or more :11~ )lYI 1'1'1 Hu"' P '"" 10 ""'sv,s 1r .10 ;111 "'-' -0.,.. ""' +"' :in,~1~ n ii 1,,. ~ll: fll'.: -~ GIW••h•11 .JO 1 •11. t'1o t11o + "' th Whll h l•Yl lH 11 """' HYlll CP '"' ll\11 A"' Aft 11'1.7' 1 • " 40 I 011 i'JG sn 2' ,,.., , -GrttnGnl .. 22 21 !l""' 21\lt -\lo an a year ago. e t e 11_,"'" 25,,., 26y; H~•n 1n1 '"' ti. FUNDS Am S•d 1 •J lll'o ''" 1'" : .: !:tin '". 2 , ,,., " ~"' + ~ Gr"ns~ 1:20 1 vv. fl._ m. -~ giant Penn ,central disaster 1:1~ \~ 1; 1t~ ~~~:1 "'~~ :~ j~ !;;::5J~./i''·~ 'l ~ ~ ;:::: ~1 YI ::t t"i 1'° 11 ~ I"" II~ J'"' -"'g~~ 1 1~ ~ J: ~::t' = 4 hl'IS been In the head)lnes hun-ltrk H1 00 'l Inell G•l 21,,., 21~• A Sug1r l 60 5.1 JI 30:i,r, ~ -~ Ofllrol' 0.!I .U2 1t ... ~ u~ :....1,\;, GrvmmntD I I~ 1'9'1 1~ ll't't -~ • 8il1. t.ib 43>,1; """' Ind Nucl 2 ~ 11 '1 AS119 PfA2.6.J 3 41\'t 11\li 4'\\ + ""' nDet llf'.30 IIJO """' """' Iii GllL!Hld 40t 32 :IO'lli :zt.,.. JO -dreds of Jtttie firms h 8 V e 1111uo1 W ~·,;, '""' lntr•rd J'4 l... Am5wnt ... 1 1-. '" l'lli onWODd l 90 I ~ J.l \lt 3'\'t -""' GllMOh 2 &Ill 10 """' 6J.,., 6SV. + ;: lro SOii 32 .M ln! Cont !"' l~o AT&T WI llS "" 1'4 IW.' '' tooll!Jnll JO U 2'\lt ,..,.,;:"'G1111011 l.50 IU6 30~• 2N » -quietly been failing every e1r1chr 3 1•,1,111trm In ~ '~ Am T&T 1411 61t <&:!'WI.~ 1n.....:.1"coo1Mrlni:'° 1, -Ali 3,v. 3-lv.-VtGull Jleotce1 '' 1rw. 111"'1 11Jt ...... · lll•Ck Ht ,., ... """' In! IWI~ ~ /"' AmWWkci .u 11 10 ~ 'r.+ * COGpoer Tit I ,, 1m u l:W. + * G11ltll:h DI'° ll2 Im 15'11 IS-Ill -"" week rn ever y field and in l°"w El ,,n 11'1 Int M11tt11 21 l >.:. Aw Pl"•' 1.2s 111» 14fli ''"' ,,,~ + :w; C01>1l•no 1 Kl us w. !.Mi ~ -''" Gttlln 1111 » xl' lt\\ ll 11 -+ ~ . oil ltr I" ~In! SY• 21 29\'I Oc~INr f ISi Inc 11n1v•ll AW .l.1 H l.'3 111 ''"' n i,;,, 111'11 CPPPRge, JOii jf 31 lHll 3' , .... g"'llSl1UI ·" ' 21"' 20\\ lll,\ every region of the U.S., and lloolht t ,, ,,,,.,int Sy pt UV.1 7 NIW YORI( IAt)!mp C10 'l' t.U Am Zflli: 2 ' ••... ~oowlSll \211 u IJ'WI '"' 1.S =v. 11!ISU '"'«> 11!16 ""' S6"i ""' .• * . 11001 AH 17.,., 111.4 ln1td ,. lfV. -Tn• lol-IF'tl q~O-.... , Glh • 1 6.1S Amtf,:\11 60 1l 21 ~ 20\'t + v. lnth8 ne Ill »1" !fl 2''" \ii u11\Ylnd ,Sii "'°° 11'-" 1,.. II - ' It now appears certain thal by aoa CIP ,,,., • :on1uu111 ~14 ~"" t1llon1, IUf>t'lltd '~IN; Fdl 1.21 111 A~t~ -~ .. ll:w; 13 13 -'II,. «GW 2~ .. 163~ l I' lJI~ =J.lij, ~u,'1' ·,~11 J ~~ gt' ~v. =a th ti. 1970 e d th f ·1 Br.otn I~ t'4 I lhti N1!lon11 AUocl· nd...... S.41 111 AM" IM .90 1tS 11\11 :U"' 'Uh \lo or-1111 12 JI 21\lt 21\1; _ °" ..,u O A e me n s e al ure 1r1n11.1 1n 3' :wv. J1cP1>1 " •14 •~ ltlon Of s.c-ur1Ut1 IM11trv uri1v111 Amt•c 90 l 3' 3l'llll 39 -;_,, Cowleo com ,. ,i., '"' ~\ -H·l- total will be approaching l tkt k• 19!'o ~ 1:~1"w~1 !~ ::: °"""' Inc.., 1rt INTGl'o.4. ,,.OJ t ''I.MP IM .st 117 """' ......... +\;to• alks1 "f St lfV. If'.~ lf!.~ +1 \Ai M•lltt1 l 6111 I ~ 2~ ~· -+ .... 000 :;:~ ~ lJ lh.-. Jlmtl 'F U .... 1'16 :::.rlctl ~-r:~ t~~ Guld 1·:, l I.gt :rn:,~ err: 'r ~ 1tV. H~ -t. l~.C Inv I "! ~ 2"li 2914 • .. • H11Ubvrl I 05 160I 414 '2 12\~ -~ l ,, . l lKkn" '"' 61, Jam\bY 10'4 1114 COlllCI "-"'• bffn Inv 1ndi< I 15 1.U ~" .:n .! l~~ Ji\(o ""' -v. !rtd"ritt ti: I • ff:wi r~ H.\11 .:.: "" H•mW•I .U! • ..... ' .J.~ . ' .... The recession ol I96!}.70 is llunn Cp ,..., ' 1::Z,, "P: 2J~ 2~ ao1c1 (llkll or-~m I"~" loa J'·u 12 n A111t0nd i.t0 lif 24 2~ 2~= = "tt rornPKn .to '/ 16\lt O!o ""'• _ v. ~:i;::~,:•P1~ ~ rll?' ~«i f111o =.,. llU...,111 S U .... ~ Kt lwr St U O t11Ktd \ Wtdftldy, nvet1or1 roup . Anc:ft Hod: 1 ~ UV. 3 V. -ll.li l"Ot/SeHln41 1 1 72111 21'4 21\/o -1\li Ha•><ll"'n II 4I MUo Jlli 3H4i _,.,.,. Kennelh E V f an obvious explanation of c1c L••t ~ lfi K 1151 1 11 11 a111 AP 10s ne111 • OI 1.n Ancor-pNSv 1 ' 11\• ll \o 1614 _ v. roweon 011 iu J:ivt 1:v., lJ'.~ -l't Hil\CI H8• n 71 20,,, "'" 19~ _ h · 3'f1Ce 0 • ~fl W Sv ~ 71'.ii 1 P, , Alwrd" I N ~.O' Mui t 02 t II Ana Cit y I 20 I 1'"' Jot', _,.,,.. row11 Cork 110 ITV. 11 11 -\'i t Sii I' 1•\<1 Ul 1~ I N course In today's sluggish ~•-M 11 10 ~:l~'Grn 'l14 3i>.1 Admtr•llY F111101: s,iock 110111 sJ Aooid•tto,25 11 11 1•' ''f~+·,._c.-2,11 160 126 Jlh Jl'lt J11.+,,.~;~,,_P130 1 " .a~~ 11 + .... _ ~wport • Bejlch_ h~s . been_ • c1nl\M a 41 10 K 1 Ill G•WI~ e °' 1 •? elKt 1 13 •JI AocoOll 1 :11 113 JI 111 30~, 3 1, + "I C•11 2 Pt1,10 11to .o~. J'I 601'> , H 1 1· 30 41"' ~ ~ -+ ,_, ·-business climate it's much C1MIMI-7U. 111. l("•Y•ro,. ..... 111 lnc:om Jll .... oo 1 V•• Pv 6~ 1.03 APL _Co•t> 11 19""' ""' It CTS corp j.(I Jl 111• 11\to 111 ~;,., H=~~~11'1n1 _1 -st~)>;< ~w. -'l'4-"" elected execullve vice presl C•• Mtg• i~ uto ••r 1n1u• 1.1• 1.tt n~ At•h 'u ~»APL p1c1oa 2 .. ~. 14;i,, ".._ .... Cl.Ml•hY .•111 31 1Ji. 'l 1J -~ , 1 • '''L 11 • .-+ • -tcugher ror most f1rms to Cao Sow 1'4 1-\.l~t!l:::Ot ,1~,•.t AOvltt1 18" S,llll!el 1111 11.ff"-,RAS vc 106 IOjlO'l"l06\lo 1061/:o-2~iudhy Oii.iS I 11~ 1'1\ 11 ... +'Ji ~1.~noM;,1';0 1117 "72 ... _1,1,' dent of Co L . f C•1' lnlA J ... Jl.ro • A.tint ~d ISi 931 APOiio 1.16 91),\ r(•l•N 10. J 2l'h 21 21 +Mi ulhfln ·" I '~ J.\llo lS'!.i -.\t ' n . -+I ngress I e make a pro flt. much easler for C1nr(h 1v. J~ ic,w,,," ;,, . ,',1'! 11•,\~ .-,111111td • n 1" Cui Bl 11 " 11.95 "'•"'•''.It Pl 1 1 Jl.,. ll"' 33"'1 . ... 11mrn1n .IOb 1 J;~ :nv. nv. . .. !:!•,~,, ',', •, •,•, '•' ,' •• ,.!l •":t" + ~ I C 1rr 0.11 10 1ov. ,. A!utre 6 II e 11 tu1 81 1111 !9.1' r< ..... n 1 ll """ ~~I " _\'Ii C11"nDt1JQ 4 JI 11 101/t 10.\t -•ti " '"' ''' '-::' ~--11-::n:e'ei"c'"'::n::c::e=•=m~p;;•;:n,y"•;:f:,::Aor:i'=°"::::•=---;mr,o;•~nf,y;..;t;•c,;';;h;:•;l,k;.•:P<...:d:•:n•goe:ro:•:''ll::···· 81 2~ 114k•Y~lll 14 ''""All Am F 61 ,7l UI B• ''° l61Arl1PSvc l.OI n !IV. 1n.o. 1114-1/:ii !UrlJSIWr Mt 21 11.\t 11-. 11'" Ha•t• Alb I M ""' 17'• 1 + .... ,-rlr--Go l~.2114 I<''£ 1"" tit • IJ.\O.l US 1(1-;tl!c.l.'! Arl1111 OS 20 "/,' 9!11 l '>li I ' vrt . Wr_.A_hlitll"-'f-'-L=.'11 H•1elllnt Jl IO~r '"" 10 --"•,,__ ___ _ wit responsibility for opera· oas o re n •K NG 11 11.._k1ntt n '1.i""'" ..,..,.1 Fd t""10M u1-11: • 1 '·' Arm(tiSf•'.iD-n~r""b -jlio -'\i ulrtt""H--1~ ~-, .. -=-1i He"-'""--:-t •~.s-•-. Ci•ll t•P ~ 2h Klntt uel JI~ d \ Am<•1' 5.•I 5 •1 CUI Sl 1'. 11" Armco Pl:! 10 2 ,,,,.., j f\'o Iii •• YCl<lol I 90 11 \0 ! 2J -1 HtclaM" .11r 13 16"!' 1•'i. 261'i -+ ... tions a n d administration. Tight money· JS another ob-. t 1n11x ""' ,... ~r·~•lr, 2~L1l:Z Arn ov1n '·" lo.s. Pola• l.11 l .... ~::V~1 11j, '! •fin. ""' ""' -1111 CvDrulM 1.60 11 1' s " ~ + 1,,;, ~Hei"' HJc !.. " ~,,,. u,~ l~ -~ ~ TlllY •U.NT, l .F'lt Thert a re imporlttnt rca· Aons why th.e American Mf'dlcal A!!\ocialion SUJ,"::fi!:eSt!\ that you bAve one personal pharmacy from 'vhich ynu obtain all the m~icines and health aids nttded by your family. When onl! phannacy fills all your pi=escriplions. Hie f.cord f!lt contains all the lnformallon needed fnr tht' pharmacist to help protf'ct fOU. Some people are aller· ate to cert1ln drugs. Othtrs may be getting pTt'scrlplion~ from more than one Doctor and the m~iclnes rould con· fllct wilh f'ach ·olher. \Ve hope that you "''ill choose ljl to ~ the personal pharmacy for your family. . . . C.,., VP~ 17'11 11'\'o ' "' .. Am•• Ellft'fll" k.rlld<b 6.61 7.?J · .,., SJ\) SJ\11 -V. -0-I ~e U" JI ,.. _,.., ,.,, - Pr'.or to J·01·ru·ng Congress, v1ous explanation. Jn a period Cent L•b 1•4 Ai tMc 01t 1tt t~ c1,11 1.•i • Le• Grth 1.10 1.u :'"''•'" 1.t0 1n :n~ :zt\'o -" e111r 1n1 . .o JI ~ 1t-'ll 20~ -. . (ftirnll ~ 2-'ii •Mt In 2"" 21Vi 1 t I 61 f 42 Le• Atc:h 1' 02 UM rm Ub .60 -, i'o lj )I -"' D.lnlthrr :Uo I• ,.... l'Ji It~ -\!, Htlme Pd! 1 11 1'14 UV, 1611 .. >A'hen credit IS exceedmgly 1"-" o w,; '"' L•llCI 11.e• ':wi. sv. .~~1 1:20 1:" Llbel'IY s::n J:n :~:·nt°I".." .. ·l° ,•, •,1 1 "' 11 -~ 0.1111 CP 1.1s n 2 :.,, 11 21'" -+ "' He1mr11P .20 l' 21a:; JO't. 20~ -"' Vance was president of hm L" '"' 1v. Lin. ......,,. 6 ~ ! 1 1.n .. LU• s1k '·" s.33 ' "" ''~ 2, 11i' -\Ii °'" 1>111 .JOb in 1'h ~ 3''--11o Hm11,.~ C•~ 1 • l"' 3"--\' . scarce and expensive, any t1n ind ,.., s>~ L••ion 1~ '"" r,::k '·°' i.b ute 1""' '·~ 1.10 ~·h~ 'iii: 1.:io 111 ""' 2~ .. :u -.,., °"'' tM 01 2 s2 411 .it11o J9'Ai -.,., Hel'C •nc: .1s. ,,, • J1\ll l1v. -~· Empire Insurance Company, firm whia;-;•-shOi't or-working CMI UHi ,,.,., Ul'I r·~ ~ l~:t I~ Am E"Y '-•I •.11 Linc Ntl •.u '·" ...:= oo---r~ 1~l .J:! :Jrt; ,•• -,v.. 0..11 PtOC.Hl ,., " If~ IS -I',., H,e•ll!Fd 1.10 1 1~ Uh 2.S1i1 7 19-... Clll l tl.I 56 JI e AmGrlh 5-Sl 'Ml!no J.&JJ.t7AalClc-1.... ~-V.0.v('O(p l .U l517~16'*1i..-~ tubteln.IO 1111 '1 40 -.,.1 also a Sllnta A a b ed ·t I · · d Chrl$1 s 11M 101 l.11'1 to•I i~ ?"'A 1 .., s u s·11 Loom!1 StYl•i· """" .... J Jll\li :JO lDloo + v. 01Yco 1'11.25 110 'IV. ",,., '6\11 -t Hew Pack .20 1711 71't 16"' 11 -1 , n 85 com-c.11p1 a IS In a angerous con· Chrlll DI 91 102 Lelsur G ,,._. 16" A::: A111 ··°' a:11 C•Flld 3' ... , .1-1.•1 :oc1Tr1n .Ojp '}I '""' ... ,,,. + \II OtvlnHUO 50 'II 76\'t 1A Hh -'" Hl~h Voll••• Jl l!Ut 10>1 llW1 -\o Pany. dition -and 1970 has seen the C!l1dtl l'lo "" t~1·M,F 1}~ 'l14 AmN Gth 7.10 2.ts C•1>ll 10.0210.0J ..,;~~,·~ll l~ ~~ \~~ 11 . -... OIYlnPL 1.~0 '\ 271\ 21:W. 2H4 -·~ HllklnHGltl I 1 m. ·~I Jll -.... Clll! M!1 11"-11'"' l n 1 Anc:l'!O< Grwp· Mu! un1v1il•Atl Rlcti11ti :i ... ... 1'to -''° OPl. plA l.IS r7Sll 111.~ •l'lli "8',~-+ \'o HObllrl 1.20 I Jll 31\i 31"" -•,;, Bero'. hi·, a••oci·ati·on wllh m ost brutal money squeeze or c:.1111 u "-21'1111 2•·~ L:f,''"'Cd\" ;~ i c1p11 1.:it 1.Df Lu1h a•o ii.01 n .10 At1Ret1 p13 7J 1160 ~,.. .,,.. ~ -~, OPL 1>1e J.1J 1100 'e 4 " -+PM 11oe-rnwa1 .llO JJ jl'" 2• 2•1~ +i.. ,,.., -. -Cl!!I u It 21 ... u .... L Et 1011 11"'!. G,w1n t .90 10.u M••n• In •.10 l.H All Rlc:h ~· 3 '' 1G3 I + ,,. Offrl Co 1 20I ll''A 33 ll -1 Hoff Eltclrn ·~ " ,.,,. Th -+ "" modern limes. tl!¥ln Ml 1.W. """' L·~ch en 11Vt 191,: Inc"" 7.41 1.13 Mlnh!n, '·" 4.,'1 Al!Rch pl:! to 104 ... n'4 l~ki +I,,_ OelmarP 1.12 41 U\< 164l U'\lo -+ ~t,',,",'"', .22 lt7 31t"I ll'lli 31~~ -•f, ' Empire. Vance was one of the Cl••k Ml 10,,.. 21 M.o GEi 1 ... 1 • Fd in~ 1.00 1.11 M•u d '·" 10. 'AU Ch · 1 ,, -•• 0.1 Mn1e 1.10 1., 1s11. 21\• 21.,. .-.o .7llb 1 31 s1 51 -?'' Buttheseobviousre asonsdo CliYlon !'Ii l ~M•I R!ty s~ :,,. Vint Jl.51~1.11M•••G•n1,o.tt12.01Au:!c!~ 110 1;1.1. 2~~ 11"+!~Dell•Afr.JO 111 """ 3\1~ 31•JJ ::.·HDU~Suq 1.10 6 16V. l .... llft+Vo Original Or g 8 n i Z er S Of (I nl Mfr t '"" M1Uk I 1t1 6t\'J APGl!o F4 1 11 1.60 M•11 ,.r 3.75 JS.OJ All1Cr. I USk 411 11\lo ... + vo Oelt.c lnl JI 11" 1\'o 1\io -~ Homtll~t ·~ J? 2'\lo 1)-to 13'l -\• not explain why "A" wentc1n1on o 5'ftl •V.Morni'Ai "~ 1 A.1111:11 i'.>1.21M11M 1.01 ,.01.-,Tonc:"ot. i,. !l!'I. 1i'llt 1Jn ···;.4 0tnnMl1 .4lt 4J '°"" itv. 19..,_1v;H-ywf I.JO n 1 ••v. Ull 15"'--l'~ Founders Life Insurance Com· d h.I "B" I ·ii th Ctow CP 11 lt M&nln M JV. ll'I ""'on ,.11 •.41 M&!hfri 10.o 10.0 Auror• Proct ,., , Ni -OnnMft p1 1 i 11" 1•\• 11\/0 -\1 Horw 11 1.10 ' """ l•V. 1,v, +i;, Un er w I e s st1 ere C01Ur o t ;ii 1v. Manor c 1.,. , Alo:• Houoh•on: Merill Fd 11.u n .•• ""''""''" '"" ,, 51 5111 st.: + '' oennylls1 °' 7050 1ov. 10•<1 10\<ii _ '" Host 11111 .J• ,, "'-1,v. 3''~ -\·, Pany of Orange, California. -not when they're bolh in the 1c~ cl ~" ~ .... M•r M11 Ht. 1!'• ~""° .. '• :·:f i·fi =v ~~ ,1 ~il~1/ AvcoCp ''°' st 1'~ 12,,.. 11\.'J :~ Onh1>ty ln1 '1 lJ 1~ 2s 2s -~ ::::= ~'m ·: ~~ ~~ l'r.! \f,? ·· ·• 0 ,,.,., ... Gr ·~ t\\ II . . .. ~' 11·,, n '11AVCG lfl.20 21 loo-\o ll'-:w.. OtnAGr 110 • II ln'I lN .j. I\ ... __ ... , . . '. H'·s d"l1'es ,·ncl"ded bem· g s eb s·-ss same location omn•'" 12,..13v.M ari1wr 29Vi:inu, s1occk s •1 J.ti---11 ·-. ""'"'Pd 20 "l1:w. ,.,,, J14t+·,·0treco "'' ''7"' q-., •2~-+Ut""" • ..., i.?G uo •o ..,~ ~ ...• am U lon.o , '(&Ion Sir '' 2S M&ul LP 11\i 17t~ Sci t11 ,,II l ,SJMIF Fd l.n l.SI AvMt In iOD 102 I~ I I 1~ C>tSo!olnc: ,0 lD ~ 10'4 l0\11-V. HOllJF ltf,,00 1 llt !Ir 111 ... same general price range CDmC1• 1111 '"' M•yer o 1111o 11"' &•b•o n •.w i.s. MtF Gth '·" 5.2' ..,~,.., ~i.so I 'II 'II '° :4 "° OttEdl1 '.ie 12 1114 11'4 ,,"' H0111F tH2.J1 ,. eo """ 5'01• -+H• lrl!asurer and administrative •Com cir ,,.,, '6V. Megvy •1v. 21 11vrc~ ,_.,, 1.51 M11us Gv 10.u 10.J1 ..,.....,.Pd 1 10 _,., 7114 , •• _ n• + °''Ed tHiso 1 1114 n '*" :.+-iu. Hou•1L • 1.20 JS ""• '°"" '°"" -~ etc etc '""' G11 11:\11121\i Meal< H ·...,,, l'M BflCOll UF\l~all Mu OmG '·"' J.21 A "'-Off ·, .... ~ . • Hous•NG1 .llO 41 5111-. 50 51) -.... ff H ] ft F n.ln • •• • c;om "ft! 21 21'6 Mid Mii 2l 2l'll Ifft K~I 1.IO 7.IO Mii Omln t .J1 10.11 l • JI 67 Ullo 1J'Ai 1' -lo. Del 1 Slttl 11 1 1~ U\ 1•141 • .. HouGi Pll..50 21 $11!'1 SllV. 50lol _ \'o O icer. e e ou,""'rs in The answer underlying the fiom Hl!h '"' tw.Mecurn "'"''° l••k G!h 5.17 6.11Mu1 Sht1 13.IOU.IO -8--g:i~,r -'',0 1J l~"' /f"" J~111 -14 HowJl'lll" .1, 11 1 ~ 11-" i~· •• 19611 to become executive vice f ~om Pt¥ io lov; M .... 111 1n isv. 1'''-a1.1 .. Fd •.n 6.fl M111 T•11 11n1v111 ,,bdi; w JO 2s1 ll'.' '°'~ :t0\4 i1.1i o1' ~·1~ ''° 13 l6l' lS'lo ~ +1 · Howmet .711 '"s '~ 1'V. "" +""' ailure in an o1verw~lming !':;;pc~ 1~11• 1~!! ~lg!:. t1 '~ ;~ =~~k51 ~-~ ~::: ~!," 1~u1 ::~ ::N ::~:oJ'l i'l2 lJ; 11•A1 2Y. .. 2n t = ,,. 01!~ s"r. ..... · , so 11\i ,,,,.. 11111 _ \~ ~~~: \:1; 1~7 'g'~ 2;'1~ ~i°t-:J: :Z president al Empire and >A'aS nine cases oul· o ten Js: the ""' tn1t •'lo st-. Mldw GT "'" ""' aot1 Fdn 10:12 11.01 N•• 1nv11 '·" 1.s. 111G 11111·JO ,,0 21'" 26'9 2~ -""011s~ '"t i 2 """ 11""' 21Vi -v. Hutn H•• .Ml 11 11.'h 111"11 11,,, + •.i. . . mo "TIC 7 1v; MPh G11 301,;, JI llotlon 1.71 •• ,3 Bllln '·" 10.1' I . 11 '®} .,,,. -1"' O!aS pl 01.7' 11 11" u~. lj ... -t~ H11~!thm .12 • 11 .... 11 .... 11\11 Promoted to lhe presidency in manager's incompetence, Jn· omr•• l'" 3'!11 Min v1G 1s u•" 1ro111 5t 12.JI u .1J aor111 '·" J.U 8•n•~n.• ·,1» 1' 114 • ..., ""' -·· 01c111>11011 ·" '' ut~ 11111 11i,:. -'4 111anoPw 1.ao it 7-11 !' ,._., :i: :ij, . . ] d t on Rock 'I 31 Mo llt<~ 2'9 3 Bullock Ctlvln: Olvld 3.71 l.ll •n1 l 1'1/t ltV, lt\'J -'II O\tbo!d llb 6 6-W. 4? 61 -lt. ldtal lla1 .60 " 121,1 12~ 11"" _ 14 December. !969. experience, l n e pt I U e. con1r10 ~ 1>.1 Mod sci s•11 J•1 llull<• u.1~ i,.H Grwtn 1.11 '·°' 011k of Cll J.l-1 11 ?JI-\ ?JVt 21.,. -•to OIG!01"1l!t ·'° 11 llli 13"'1 ll.,., -,,.. 111 te"t l." to 21 16h 26~ -+ "" Be r th · Contr1" 1\1:1 l:W. Mot1w• fl 1•\.J 111-. C1Mln 11.M20.6.S Pl SllC ,,lD 6.lt l nllt>f N• 1 41 4'1f.I 43_., '3"" +Vo Olll!nghm .«! S<t l'V. 1' U'lo -"'II ll!(en Prl.511 6 '6~'o 16\lj ~_to Mr. Vance 1.5 marri·ed and cause o e upsurge in C-9• L 11"' ''"" M°"'' co1 ,~, 1~ 01 ... 1.t J.3' 1.t1 inc:om '-6• 5.u ''""' Tr 2.a. 12 1~ u v. ,,.,., -1:w; 0111.,. "'A 1 1 .:JOI-I lO\\i JO\' -v, 111 Power 1.20 11 JI 36 l4 _114 b . f·1 D &Corps S•MJV.MOM'IPkll l!l> Nl!WS ,,,I10,l5 Stock 7.'61.IJ a•rbOJl1 . .Sll ?lll'llll6\tl1 -·~g111,,,,CQ .U ;1111J~OlJ'141Jl'o-1-'M '"'PCPAm 11111'11111 11 -\4 USlneSS al UreS, Un Coam Yr t i;. 10 ~e p I'> ,.... NY Vnt \l.21 U.4' Ntl Gr1h l.ll t .01 l1ro CR .:U 60 '1111 •1 .it;+ V. l'"ey .JOb Ul 117'4 111"' 11W. -J INA Co 1,411 311 3.,!i. J7 p -1 the father of three children. Bradstreet studied the recent Crwtrd 11 '~ Moo•t s 1nv. 11·~ llr H1w11 3 Mt 1.t:J Neuw c11 •·" s.21 a.1ic lflC .to • '"'-ui-. utit -,,.. 01 ...... 1tnd .w J7 1n1 ioo. 1~ -14 lrw.°"" C•Plt u 1av. ,..,, '~'_•Ai . . Crt• Mt! 11 . 11~ Ml .. TrA 11U, 11h aU\M Fd ,,~I 1.09 Nevw FO 11.ll 11.6.S 81tt1 Mlt 21 111'1 17'1'1 '"'" -... OfvM11 1.S. 22 ,,,. n '17 -.\o lnCCU'm ·'°" 4 '"' ... 9 .... He is active in the Santa Ana bankruptcies to i;ee in the '"'' Mh '"' "" Ml•rr ,.,, Ju .,.. CG Fd 1.u 1.11 Ntw wk! 11.41 12.n a11t1 M1 pf 1 10 11,,.. ''"' 1.-. _'!Ii DrPtpPtr .:io ,, " 11,,. 11¥. _ \'o r1ndl•n Hd .ta 1 11y; li 21 _""' ' Crou Co 3''-'i liV. MO!dt M I s•• , ....... , 7.:U 7.94 Ntw!Ofl U.4 H.1' llalh lnO ll Ult. "" lift + •to OomtMln '° 11 '"""' "'' n v. -14 ndol1PL 1.511 71 2:P. .. 'Pio .. Rotary Club, Orange County words af Rowena Wyant crv1c1> " m 6\lo Mo1 ttub i2'-" 11 c1011 1n11 '·" 1.11 N1c:n sir• 10.n io.23 ••thin on.si 1 ,." .itv. "'' + •.ii DomFl\CI ;1, 1 tv. t\!o •·~ 1nc1it1 Nit .to n UlAi 1 11 -.,, • CYD•t• c l\':t '" Mtltlit'r I t (1Pll Sh• J_,, ,,,. Nor•••I u.21 ''·11 1111Kl'tU• IO JO ,, ... 41U ~2\' ""Oonnt11tY ' "' ,.. '""' 16ft ,~ ..... !nft•lt•nd J n '°" ~ <IO)ji-+"' Chapter Of the Nall 0 n 8 1 whether there has been "any &•"r L•" ,•,~ ,{ Mu•A• E"' 2·~ '"' ''"' 51\r 10,11 11.111 0c0 """"' 1.11 •.11 aa~lrLAb .10 lo ulr. ,..._ 1,t; =Vt Dote co n •J it\lt 11 ,"" -·~ :~R .. • ""• .u, 12 3'11 ll>Ji 31111 -+ vt h . h I '""' ""1'' LE ,,~,?Ht Ch1llft!ftl F11Mlt: meta 4.0l 6.U 81yuktll JO 2 10\lo t0'.4 10' + 1 Dorr 011 f ,. 10\li 10 l!M n I 11 1~ ll"t 2! lY~ -\\\ ' c ange 1n t e causes o cor-0111 °'' ~ 11~ N c 1nc1 ••~ J 11111n 10.,2 11.41 11111 l"d U.'5 u.u 11e1 Fo1 ,· 10 JlV. 3, 31~ ;: Dover co" '7o 1 Jt .it " + ..,. !"'"°"'' .:ltll 1t1 •Vt ' • -.. Association of Accauntants d h" Ott• G.n SJ JI N1rr1• c IJ " Com St 1.I) 1.6' IOI l"d l.'5 ,_,5 Becltt11.1n .5(t IOI 2t-\o 11~ 271'1 -,lo .. _ ..... ...,,. i " 1 Ii-ti ~ """ I.I. """""' ..... $(! JIO Sl\.'J SIV. J,o•}j -+n~. porate eal . 01t•tn ' 2'i 2,.. N~IC•r II. ''4 lG Grwlh ,,,J 5.(11 On1 Wms 11.Sl 11.5 IKI Diet :JO '5 Jt\'9 19 39\/o -+~ o;; ... 0c. ,-:, 1i ~\. ~ ~ .... -\Ii •,iuuc,•,.1'111 <&:! Ulli lJ\.\ lW -.... and Commerce Associates or Th I . M " Davis Fd '1-1 s ~tmp CP l }~ •nc-6 .. 1"' O'N11l 11.6.S 11 6S 8ir«ILAt 7Sb 21 17'4 11\4 111.1. ~ . -IUP, OCI JI ' •51~ 41\~ ,1~ + ... e COnCUSIOn, Says LSS DIY Mir 1•'1f<1J1f1 N•t Eovt 11V.1t Spttl 1:11 1)•~ 1.12 l)IBelcoPel .. 50 11'1 2l~ 19\fo '°"--... ~fl1tl!llonl;: 15f ~-"~14 ~~-1 ,._ nlerco 1.10 13 ln\i 37Yo 31'1.. the Un'·versi·ty of •···thern w t · "N J e pe ·1ence D«or 1" '"" m N•• G&o 1~• inti cn15• Gr 11.,,-DPP AIM •.et 10 59 e1rd1n 1 60 4 1,v. 2,v. 1 .. _~ -"""" · -., 1~1.11t1"c 1.10 • 1!\~ 2••u 2,..,. _ * d · l • th 0.lhl In f 11f t\lo ~Ill Mld 21'4 1SW FuMI I '1 t 1' Pict Fl'ld 7 ll 1 1' 11 ti':! "-'"° ' ·· fvJ P "Ii llJio 211" -\It lft! (h Nuclr 13 ,314 421'< 47•4 J !~ ~ yan , JS 0, n X r Oell!b Aj llV.l' Nat l lb 71 H'!O C1oll un.v1ll OTt ~ 9.3110:1t9e111 H.60b t 16,L ,.,.., 1•' ..... 5"' 1"1 l i. JOll>-1 18M '·'° l6t:JOS Jtl 2'114-W. Calirorni11. an 1ncompe ence remain e o.111w t h ~3'1, Sl•4 Ni1 Pe• jl'I 3,,. Frni 71 ·1J "·,, Pau1 Rev ii1 1·11 a:11 1 ~: ·60 1 ~~ ~ 3'.,. l.'I -~ k•Pw 1,,1n ii., 21 21~ :1 + 1.1i t~!F!1Fr -'Ob s1 Woli 6l"" 63, ... ,.. ~1.- basic reasons in 90 percent of 011 C1nT" it~ u~ N11 ~«A 1u s11r~d ~:i. 10:6' Penn Sq 1:11 1:31 Bemisnc~''V' 60 11 ,,., ~ ~ .... =1111 ov~r.•n•d J;20 J,J ;~.,.. 11"" 1i'~ -:;1t?; 'i"i'•"~,~ 1i.AD 167 15"' 1 ~ :u + t .. O.t !!Ir '20 201'1 Nit Shaw l'lt 1~ Spec! 1." In P1 Mui '·'' '-11 lendhr I Mt u '1"4 ''* ,...., o.i dllt 1 i.u 141 lll l1j,>.(j 11 14 l•Ai n ° .Ott l 13"' 13\lt 131\ the failures.'' D0ev Am, l Poll uv. N11 su..,, 1'11 •l'o ~hem.cl l•.1111:15 P~111 IJ.11 u.~ !llndl• iii l • ,,..., ,, ,1v. +-. euP=:t ,i, t, , "'·' A•IJio "to :\' "'1",, .~~v•,•, _ ',~, n"' 11 11 .:.: ~" . YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a delivery. We will dt· liver promptly without ex-tra. charR'.e. A great m11ny people rely on us for their h ealth needs. We welcome 11;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"'itl requests for delivery service ll and charge accounts. • PAii LIDO PHARMACY If .,. • .,. ..... 1 ....... ,,"' hnke. Ye1 •re ••I 1lttl., all af Y••r c.tl•-,,, ""' ......... tllll'HONI ANSWlllNG IUllAU NewpM INcJi 642· t 110 ' _ ... _ 835-7777 12.5°/o YIELD f.IRST MORTGAGES WHEN PAID TO ?-IATURITY l'k 5 YEARS. DISCOUNTED MINIMUM $3000 10% INVESTORS PROPERTY MANAGEMENT J700 NfWPOll ILVD., NIWPOIT llACH CAllfOlNIA t2660 PHON I 714:671·1lOJ BROKERS tWfV 4'.!o J NEn GE 101 1$\oo olonl1I• Plltt!m l.•1 t.'°leftl'llCP 16& 61 ,1111 ":wi .. -.. 1 d p 1J'50 1 !l!Ai 51\.1. ~V. !Ao "" P "" 21 .Ml.I. U\lt I Oh the apparent causes 011m cr ''"'"'4NJ N11G 1s ... 1~11 E<iu•y· 3.J'l J.t7P111t ~• 10.4010.ooee11t11iHs.5G 1 111 "> u3 +1 ~cr:r .. · 1091, '°'" b ="'J"lM'i"1"" ''' 1~ l:Mt 111!11-=*· .. may 'appear entirely different: 0g1~. 1CC, M l,~ :\to ~11~r11".-,.. ll~ ~ ~~h 1~:~ 'tU ~:: ~:'.:t i~:n ,t:ll R::::: ~::~ 16' i:v. ~ i!'" ~':Z g: ··.~~?ls 1,S:OO '!A'; 'i''"" '1o1,,., + VI .~: = r~ ~ll ~;tt ;~~ ~~~:: ~ ~ I . ] h OCCUit 1V. H t l1 II 3614 l1 inc.om t.U 9" Pl•n Inv t.6.S 10.j,5 !l•nel Jo12.l0 110 :ztv, '"~ 1tl'I _ \':t Oo 31iCll1.•t 1.,o ~Ii< •lili '''-' _ ,,. n c .-~ ....., 'J\<ii MV. .,~ -"" • a sump 1n .sa es or eavy Dr>kl•n L '""' •~NA lie~ J'~ l'• v...,, ,_i1 ,.11 Prlc• F11nd1: a-ut• 1" ''" ,,,. 6.., _"' S::2:10o1:1.11 iXICt 11 1' 11 -+..., :1111°,ftP 1.JO 230 ~""' 3Jlt!; :u"' -v. • • Dow JOll 36"' JI NCtr NG t'llll 10\ol ol Gtrll 11.611.'5 Grwlh '17.11227.011-ut! In 16 '"' ~ "" FflO tnd .tfl UV. ,141 '\"+I.lo nt ec!lf ll t~ "" "'9 + v. operating expenses or a poor Oo'tt• oe :n mii NEur on 1 1:i.. oms Id •.Jl '·tO N E•• t.n •.1111m1v ""° ns ,u, ..,. lit_·;,;, •Am .10P JJ 7\lt 7\lt "4 -~ 1111 T&T 1 05 13!• u i.;, 1s '514 _1.,. 1 l. · · Ortw I'll. 31.i • NPA G11 1-\!t """' wllh AB 1 n 1 l5 N Hor 2J >t n BermK tor-o ti '"' 1\lo 2\i E F IMTl.1' Pl(' r.!I 115 15' 1.56 1 oca ion er a rise in com· Ounkln o isv. 1s111o NW N••G 1 •"• wtth c J'.4 1:" Pra Fund t:u ':"I'"' s11 '·'° sr.1 ,~ 72 nv. ::.i-. -• -1n111.r •IO• ,, u1•11 ist\11 lj ?Vi =' petition Cir eXctSSiVe\ fixed 011tlr011 161(. 17 NW P11Sv 11'9 10\t ~-.U t.12 t.61 Pro Port! ur11v1U fl! ThrH . .0 _. ~ ..... m:--\to ~IPltPch .IO 2' 2:¥'1 ,•,1:-! 11'4 +I~ lntT&T llE 4 11 U61'11 UIJ\'t1'1\Vt -l\IJ !l P1lt1! 1,.,.lWNucl Aac IV. 1 omHI 6'lt 6MProll'llnl •23 4'381tct Olt; Ill 71 ~ Sll\.I. ~lteo CP Of 17 1t .... .,, lt\oo -'•1"171.T ... Fl 11llYl1l111t1J1,,..+S asse ts etc But why did sales E111c WI F4 •'•01110 Art 1:w. •Yi omP ad t."lt ,:01Pruc1 SY• t:431o:Jo 1111rJohn :a ,1 1'l• ,..,.. ::::: "'' -'1• (1n ,., 11 uv. 16~-""'t"iT&T .,.H• 2 ti ,1 91 +T • . . Ettl $~ 6-\o 1Vo Ohio W1t 11 2]\~ om11 Fd 1.76 t.S1 P11rl11n '·'' 10.10 gun L•ug I ) 20-. ~ 20l>li -... ~.,, GI" .121 ,, 1?"" 3' 31\\ ' .. 1n I'll ,.50 J I, ... llV. ...... slump or why were aperat1ng Econ L•b 72"1 23 001 Sein ttV. n com11~ J.t6 ,_13 Pu•n•m l"und1' lock HA .:11 JI ,,,_ 59"' ~"' -Jl.'I ~1it u111 1.10 ' H"" .U~.· 11'1 -i~ 1n1T&T !HJ 4 11 IJ M IS · 'A EOIK 5.,,, JV. l"° Ormonl 4~• 7\\ Conc:or-d 11 66 11 66 Eau II 1 GI 7 7l ah,lf 8t!l 1 20 16 .. ,,.. '4 .,,.,, Easl(ocl1k !1 J1~ -,. 6•'1ti -~ lnlr& T pll(I 71 15 l2\'J IJ - expenses SO OUt o( balance Or 1:b:·1~~ ii~ ll~ 8!'"' t~ 11~,V ~ Con~I In 10:00 10:15 G.,.r1 11:n '':1? g111Bt1 pfl)J I 12' l2t 1j9 :.:....2· ~:1:y~lllil(I! 21 lO''o ~\i ~h -, lnTTtHN 1.25 IMS 511\.'J Jf1h S71'o +flll • why was the urm in a poor ldt:11 '• ~ ~ ~~~C·: , \~~ :1~ ~:::11 ti~ t~ t:~ ?~~... ~--~ ;:;~a::'~: c~~!o ~ II~ l~!: 1.::Z :!: ~~ "c~11,,.,1j11 .Mt, H ll:;:: iii... 1~"" ~ .. · i~: 8::1 ~-«! ti N'tt I!~ ~~ = ;: location? Because of the boss' ~k1N~ 1~~ I~ ~abst..,_ ~. •f A ,}~ )~! <(_~ it~ 1~:~ t:l:r;t ~·.1, ~:n l~'f,,a~~, 20; tf>4 sm 5i,,.. :_ ;; !~1~1r?j 1 ,,,; ff~ ilv. n:~ £;~ /~/~/~c:'j·32 171 1~ 2j'"' 2p~ --\Ii Incompetence or inexperience. El'r: 5 51'1 ,.:~ '"~~ ,;.111 ,t"" ~~~y w'Jr.. 1~-11 ·1·~~ 11~:~· t:~ ,&·;: t~!':.'h1.~1• 1&i l!~ ~,.. ~; ... + ~ "',',~'1,c' .Oft J5 ..... 4\, s~ -~ :n1 !lr!ll(I .to It ,5,,, 15 IJ~ -.... II h th I · E C Svs 7'AI Ht P•r-• Or 11Wi Jl'o c wo 1 t• '" Alnlr•t lJ Mt 13'1s aor;W1r 115 15' '°'" l"-' :M\t "" ~· uoc 116 6 S•~ . -""'"'"w 1.'' 16 '""~ 1•"11 l•V. •1 A t e o er exp anat1ons I 011• uv. u ••vene '""" 1 .,.. .JCoh ,: 60:11 60;11 Rosen1~ fit 4:31 l orl'lltM .lo 10 1~~ 1""' 12,., = 111 F1 Mem M1•1 Ji. 1•1" ,,"" J;~ = ~ 1"1""'~'' AO '" 11i. i~ 1~ = .i, f b . f ·1 be MOdUI l'li ''" Pee•lfl T 7t ,, .. O.l•w•r• G•OllP' s..1 .... Fd UFllV•ll I°' Edl1 2.2, 'i l-IUt l• SI -"' EIMMIO 0 1J li~ I~~ •I .. IO'WI leol "' ,. 2•v. J<l\ -1 or us1ness a1 ures can m•S 011 11 1-Mt P1 En•I~ 2.., l" d•V•h M 60.1• ,;o.11 Schut1r is.15 15.05 w•n• ll'IC 11 11.,. u:i,r, -+ .., ~:p~nN11G t~d 11.,.. 1,:;: ... 1ow1F.ll 1.JO , """ 11 ,1 _ 1.11 bunched into that minor 10 Ene•t Y c '"" ,..,., P• Gl.w ""1 >t 0ti1w••• G•-: $ctHJd« i<un01: 11••nf1Alr .so '' '" 11.. .,,., -"' ~ltr•j 1.20 1~ ;~ 1•'i 141'o -+ "'1ow•111G '·"' 11 ""-• 211·~ "''" -·~ 0«•1 JOIO 11 llO Int Inv lJ." ll.'1 lr111f$1 1.<IOI 17 II~• 41'" '!\'J -+ l'I E,,.,... \l'C l llJ ~1 W~ ~-+ ~ lowftPLI 1.~ t ~ 12\li 11.,. -''I percent· including .,.glect o.1wr 11'11 n ·1111 SKI :iono ».oo •ft• My '·'° 111 51!\ ,,.., 51Vt -""ie....,,., , t0 • "'" !1"'1 <:\~ -ll \ow•PSv 1.3<1 1 '°"" '° "°"" -1-1~ ·, ' 0.111 t.s 111 1111 ll.9111.•S g•lt Pt! . .r.11 l SO 11'4 "1 ll ..... Emhi rl 1.lo ,4 3'"6: l~ i,YI + \\ Kii HDJD 'II 1' 21'4 ,, ''l-ii _ t• fraud d isaster. Drt.••I n :6212:,, c-s1 t.02 t .02 8•Ptl ,'.."·~ ,." '•oi.; 10 l!I ..• i!1111111M1n "° .in"'"' nv, 1:1 -.. It!: tmp .to "'J>11 2s1Ci 7i\.'J -'ll ' th CdM B nk O•ttl Fd 10.u 11.H SK11r1tv Fu<IO•: wv '"" •u , J0'4 30\~ -'Ai ermlt. a111 n "!~ 1,... IW. 1 141 -.., ltoi< cor11 1'l l~ 3'1\Ci :UV. _ 1 One new development at a er 0..rtf lv 13.Dt ll.22 E<111lv 2.tO J.11 B,~WVH'-1, ~.! j l'.~ "•'•"", ll]'~ + .... '""!Gfl 1.2'1 ' :H 31'11 J! ... -"'ITT 5v ~•.JO ' 1ll'O\fo lt:IV. 103\'J + ~ M. ho h ,_ E1t011&How1rd· ln~JI 1.37 1.00 W'I" ..... "" .., • ,, .. + V. ESI IM. 1 JO •1 """ 1'"-" -·~ -..J K 1ssWyantnotes.t ug ,U>l l•l•n •si10 3' unr• •.u 1.11 Rk1y"u1:1,n 1; 1J.,, ,,.., l'lVt ... !ioulrt .36 xii,, '"'\ 1.1,..-1,,. • - .harp r'·se 1·n fai·l"res among Grwtt> ii".u 12:19 Selec Am •·~' t.>4 a~O-:S';,1,00 20 • ,,'~ 10'" ,,•:,~ . eue•tnl 1.'° A6 ,.~ 111>4 29 ... , Jlldt•nA11 .2• 11 1i, , . .., ,..., _ ''o 1ncom J.S8 6,10 Sel Sllf'CS 11n1v1n • '°1h!rll,.. .lOI 1J 12 t~•• H_.. - ' J1c1tA11 ~.• ' i111 ,.,,. ..,. + 1 tbll hdfl Th T k P $1>111( 1111.seSentlG•n 7611 l!llwt15.tlo.1.SO 'l'"l"'ll1.<o+'ll FhYICDM 1111~7" .. 11\li-l-'J•-70 1 IU, ... P9 ,· more e s a S e rmS. e a es ost Stock 12,'59 IJ.7S Shim "d t."19 t'.11 =run•wk .10 21' t~ 1'1'11 ' -14 lt~Y1 Jlf'l.(o I l• )>111 3• • .. J111lrtn .tob 15 lf~ 11:>\ 14'11! +.: odd I t th U g lbt•ll 11 ,, u GI Sht•r AP tf.MIOll.Jt UCYE• '·'° ,,, ,. 'o ll... 11'4. + ,,~ urot!>d ,lill 3 111Vt 'I"" i•111 ' J•1>11~F11 Ml 19 !~I'll I,.._ 111\4t s aga ns . e y 0 n Ori! 11°62 1,:6.l Sh De1n 11.11 15.11 Rudd ~o .10 ,, IO':i IOloo 10\'t -~ -"~n~P ·'°" • j!\4 1!:1' lTtlt -* J•Dld '~ "o•· t 1,,,. '"'~ tn•' ~ ~ business are still enormous: 51 m•• sc s:11 s.u lid• ., ·!J t.J1 8~ F0 0f:'J 1'~ sz 5! !ll ····· ~~110 'JP ,n f~ ~ ~~ = l: .1ff1~P1i.,1 · .•n •• 2.,4 1,.~ ,.,~ .• r ·1 · h. h II t El I f R. h d J M•IY 11.JO 11.so 1~'',. Uf'll'.I,. lhJlt<>t '" '*" 21 1•• I'll ,._, '.It • l"ft •'°" 10 2'~ -"'• Ii.. y, Jtr<>~~1A SO x1•1 H•i 11.., ,,.,_ + ''• percent 11 wit In le rs eclan o 1c ar . ~n1Pri1 s.llO , ... u, 1~·~f 1,·~euNFDr9 i_10 , l~h 11111 15,1 -1,;~~;, si& ?•V. ,,,. •11i =iMi ,..,CPL ..i, ,,. ,... 5~ SOl.6 -·~ rive years. But another 23 per-Flamson, lit, of Coron• del (:U'YGth ::I? ::~i ,n.:;:,~~ •:,. •:Dt ~~~v·~ ... ·:O 10; f~;z 7i;,; ~~ =.•.,., ~:1~1 ·!"' )l l~!:t j~ 1f"" -" Jr1:"\.S;111~;g ~ ~~ ;; ~lli -+ ._. cent of all casualties are 10 Mar, as executive vice. presi· ;:~~.Pro 13;:'/l 3:~'. i~lh1n~ l:i1 l:~ R~~1•r,..,pf:·: ,J ~l .. ::y,.. ~~ -1.,.. ~:1""'ft' iri 1 ~ 'Vv. 'm 1m +·" 1/r';.~.1~"r.i~, ':~ r,v. r,~ ~~ ~ ~ years and older, the highest denl and member of Security F:r..:; 1" '~:~ ";:~ = ,~! ,t,; 1~:~ ,11wr[=°' 1~J!: 1,11 w~ v 31,,. =,,., ::!:.111: '"',. tn 1.1-. \, 11v. = ~ 1onnM1n 1.10 " J.'1'4. ~ :m\ -,,. · l p Ill N 1· I B k • 1<1r"' lu • tM tM 5Ptc!•I 6 1' 11J "' OI' .N S llli ••\ II'> -\i F11111ttl trc: l' llllli 1 111/t -\li]----------'--'.;..;_.c; rate 1n a quarter cen ury. ac c a Kina 1 n s '"" Gm 12:15 1J:21 !'F•m Gt ,,56 ,:s. Ru~ ·: n 11.., 1~ in. -"'Fir wnt i<ln 11 l~"" ir• 1•"11 -" Why? Again, the undtrlying Managing Commitlet-was an-~I: ~:!.t 10·~!i'I': ::~~ ... s~n i~:~-00 a:~t.Jny ··"' ~ 1i'i: \';,: 1,i:: ~ ~~..,~:1 ~ 11t ~;:, ,~ ~ = :: cause w ill be lncompetenct, nounced today by trederlck ~~.,!~;:' J:.JO. 23_,, ~i:uc'....s l: :·~ -bot -C--:-:=-~ 1~ '1 j;~ l!~ ~;~ + ~ ltlnrleet although an apparent cause G. Larkin Jr., chairman of the Oynm •'"·· •,·:t s111:1 11: ... 1ff:',;s. l :1 Fl~:n1"70 n 1t: ,~ ,~ = ~ ::=.1·:: ll)r, ,t~ I!~.\ i: =,~ may be lht poor health of the board Ind chief executive of-:~~ s:21 s:n ~·p 01 ,1:11 1: .. ::!i':~L ~~ ~ li .. ll~ n~ +·~ ;ec1:~~ ;;11-:. ~ H" !u 1:~ = = '--1-See -""y' T'>nt""'"'~..fl.-1'14l>tl;,__ll8CI. .l'ot-1.Jt.e=...liu.r of SerJ.ll:ilJL_P.:acil Vtnt ',[i '·4 !~~' !:~ ·:.-21 am s:. '·~ x,'l 'r:! 2:;z ''"' + "' l'fdl'~ald '1 l l• 1• ,. 1 U W1 ho Jd ha e be n com~ tional Bank "'11" 011 7.oir · S• •.or •: Cdn P•c 3.20 • 6:ru. •2111 •2v. -Iii "eas11ns '° t s•-~ e.., i~·, -+ 1.-owners s u v e . . Ftl lnG1h t.t) 1.6 Mnc.r Gt 1.01 1.1 Can•IRd 1.10 l 16\0 16\:o 1'\i -"' "ed~••h •i>c lO 4:t.to ' t .• pettnt enough to groom I F lamson will become &d-~!l ~~/,~ •,·l: f·R ,!h"" ': tt 1~·a: c i, t !ldct1 2l "'"' 7t'• ,,~ -\• ""'0'""'11' ' ,_.,1 31 ,,.i. l 1'o + tt Sfi1nbob Want Ad s e G\\'f' D11d 1!1. hrf'Ak'. Hl!l.''f' the y11rd cleanf'lf up It liU~ h11.uHr111 by ll dl'pt'ndl!l.hlP m&n In 11\f! bulliM11s. e Jn 11~1 (lf f'llll"l nffiC'I! fumitw-e:' S« our l1t1t of i;:-uue salea. e BARGAIN Ii UNT ER~: Hert'• • GE 16 cu. rtfrifl:· l!'l'alor in A·1 condition tor Ml)' $1 00.! e 01!'an OUl )--OOr a111c hr-- fol'!!' tblt hollda)'ll. lhtn ad. vertillfl in !ht ~ll)' Pl.lot kif a quick tR.11!' A ea.sy •monty. " • • ' Tl('!'l1>e1 1'1 '09 C1rbr11n 1.JO 11 ., ''~' d \lo -""' l<ld O•v Cn '~ t I" • younger person to Uike over. mln1str111tor Of Security Pacific::: s~::_ ,f:Jl ,rn Tte~• , 11' f'.>i c ... 11.i. ·'° 1 111t 111 .. ""' -·~ ,~ .. o c11 .10 ~l m;: ~,i"! ~"' +"' ""~-1,,. ,, , •n te --" .,. .. Whether you're going Into Bank's Corpor8le Ba n kl n I! :::: ~ lt: .: .. l::': ~~ 'ftt 1l·ff ~:-:,.t~s 111/0 n'/,,,u {tlt .. s.;j,.-_v. ~1?~;1 1~... o' f, !µ6 ii"' -\' "' "" 1toc1r m11k1tt ~ your own business via a Group comprised or the Fl• ti"' 5.'10 5:411r•n t•P •:u 1:0 ~"p::t' 1.:g i~ ~,,. Hi: '•sv. -1 ~l:""~.Je~th li Ul: :..., 1~ : ~ s.1., 11t11'1!1 '" 1111C1tt1c11L h •-n]c; ',.._._ • . Fnd Gth •,27 4.66 ''"' I• ..... '·" Irr • · Flrt"tftl I '6 n -1!1' IS '5 1-.AlM t!ftr 111tJ ~ I franchise deal or t e old· Ull I \.Nl"porate Banking ltld Fovnon 7.6l I.loo ~"' o'd 11,.," 12.lf CcM •• ~.~ -'!?!. JJ,, ".~ u1,• ',~ + ..... .,!, Chr1 ?.1't •J ll>t 'l.. ., .. --to • " ft. IWIVI ..if f • b f ] t ] ] B kl FOllf'H f.-1' 11,fl •" I · • l.21 -.~ ,....., ' • •• ~ • .-. -I'll Mi.t 1 !Ill n ''"' ""' l"I'~ -t.e tlw •Iott lflyldtnd. _l..,.fd.11111 div!< 11sh1on~ wav. t e un--n trn11t ona an ngi<r•~1in Cit(IUll: t-c lf'IC 3•1 1.•C•fff"l•1.• ''' :11u. lu11 l6...,+.,.,1<ttffCJh' lM ':! ••• 41 61,,. d I • f 1 d rt It f I ONTt 1.60 1.13 IJn[I Mvl I 'J t.U CCI Cort n S.. JI~ ,,,. -\\" 1 HllSt ·,, ~-fig Jilt .._ Ii IH<'llll. d-Otc:l1rtc1 tr ••Ill In Im •hit amcnta s are a s power u •s ep11 m e nlS. e o r me r y Grw111 J .u 1 . .111 un 111 • , • ~ cece cor1 .t0 , 11w. 1•"' 11~ + (' ~ '.1111 JO t' atoO: lllvllllffllll. ~·"' 11 • 1 """· ""' .y'r . ~rveda!!adminislrat-ofthe 11111 s.n 6.'7 Uft C•oln 1.3' '' c111,..ieC"J ""51 w.. ss -1\.li 111i,iu-P'd .U• 2s 14 ~ 1o1 .. ~, .. _., ·---·-,~ _.._ ....... • • • • v o IMom I 9' 1.16 Ut11llCI l"und• C111" ,...,_,, 7 J1'14. ~?'Ml Jf.. Flthlrkl 1• 1~ !114 ~1,; If.., ·• ....,,.,. .,., _,.....,,..., Knew thoroughly the 11·ne bank·s lntemaUonal Banking FrHll"' 731 1 u Ac<m '16 1•111 CfftCCI '"• .JO J1 :W'' ,.,. l•~ -1'11 l'"l<l!rllf"" Jo 12 ~ ""' te -I• ctJft ·••kit .,, u411'141n1111 .,. U<dl"'1~ Fd !•Mui t 1J 9)J lfltom 11.ft 1J.6f CHll 'Fcty l ·~ l \'f ...... '\ "l!l'llll:Olt ' " -"n Mn -···~ ".,, dtlts. ..____ .......... -•••• -,,, You·re joing into a nd don't kid Department Fvnd 111¢ Gr•: Scl1n 6,,. '·" c ... Hiid l.n ~ l" 1i1tt 11.i... -4 .., """'" ,..,_. 110 " .---...... ... "' -· Cmrc l.'1 t.n V1"' 7.77 *·" ''" 11n.1 1.~' 1 lll;, 1'11 !1111 -"I 1:11 E co~~• 12 r,111 2""' -,_, tfllt ,,., ~l•l'tCI OI' Id .. ,,.. yOUr!iel about your awn know· A native of l..o!I AnDelcs lmHe •. ,, 1,)1 UFd Ctn '" '·" C•n1 u"s ,,. m ~" !' +,,fl• Gtl .• Ml • 1 11~ ''" "" .. . Pl ..... . . • •' lnd T•d 11 .l'O 12,jl V•lu. ~lftl Fd~ Wft l 1 E" l ' No I'.!. -" Fi, Pow IAO P. it\\ it'\ ttllo + 1t ltd dl•ldlftll f/lt •Ill lltl. 11-Dectl .... ho>A'' with a 811chtlor of Arts degree P1io1 •. ,. •· ' v~1 t 11 1.0. •.n tnMPw l·i. t " •u. '"' .... .,l''..,_1 J I~ •"'::! j'•t' -+ "'• .. to 11111 .,..r, 111 '"""'1111,""' 10,_ • . I Full!! An1 ,.01 •.11 111com 1.11 '·' tnl sw .'9 ,,, •n\ 1• "'" "• $!tt ~ !.,, ,....,. -"'° ·· Be sure you have round'd In cconom Cl and business ad· Glltwl' ·" 1.U SDI $11 S,(11 s '"' iiw• ,II) ·~ 12~ l" ru· -·1 '"'!11 '' I l ·i 11· I\' -.. wllh lllYltlflndt In ...... 111. 11-Ntw ,.,.,.., • l ·I U f Gin~ t .6' 9MVl'ICtS lPI l" 1.M enTflU .tOll S4 1.tt. l ljj \'o-• Fty , t 1.u 4.,. l't 1'1-1\'t-l'llf fhll n1r. lllvldtll'I o...ll!f'CI. ~ experience -In 1 t 11 n g , min stra on rom Clartmont G\br&ttr 6" f15 v1nd•b• .t111 •.w '"'re 1.60b '' ~ ,. • -1,11 FM co \5 ;,u, '"" l" 4. 1.,.n!ll or ""' Kflcln '•~.ii •· 1Ht 111Y111•11t purchasing. prod u e I n R, Men's College. f'lamson began v'l.:. 7 : 110 1 ,, v:~ndP :·U !:ff'' ~':r ~ "J01"'MU .... lt?!~lt1,f~ 1. :~D''l'1· ,,.. fl ,11 1.1o l11:, -Vi~=~"'"""""· r-Dtici.r .. • ""' • 1"" '"" h tt t the t h" b k" i J95S ••I ,_4 l.U 1.n VI-Int J Jl 1· "I Stl .-! "" t I~ -,._ ,....., .M f l''o l"I ;:: . <-•'OCI! 41~ 1-1'1<0 111 JIOdl ~'"' W 11 \'Cr -Or ge 0 rs 0 IS an IO{t: caretr n , Com M II ti 13.02 W•!111 I" t "' I . hadbr/ IM 'ij °' f'• ""' -'• !"" " .I 1u~! r;·• m' ,. -+ s tt1t. n 11m•lt'lll ulll Yllul ., .,_.., ........ _ •• fill In V"''r g•p!I· whtn he 1·oi-d sec u r t t y Grttt~ .., •.1J 1..>t w1,ft Mu 11n1 :.J1 .... o J l'lt 11 ' ,, Jl'Yt -\It oOt• ,·'!. ~.. ... ••.....-. • "" • • '"'" t".rlh Ind 11.Jf II.JG w1n1,,.111 c.._: ~·~N, .1 f~\ •l ·~ -" n f?l l.,. ?:? ~? = • tw:4lltl1bvll., 1111?& x-sei.. In full, Provide yoi1rself with ample Pacihc National Bank tn 1958 •Y""" 1l t l u"' •it!• it.oi '°·n "'" 11 1 '1 4 io ~·\ 1 \ • ""~~~·"·" l "" I'-,,,,. + ... cN ..c11ie.1. P -1•"'"'""""· _1...,.,. • · 111rdt1 2111 U,11 lw"' 1l •I U. Ch11MT• ·')r 6' 1'°"1 ft~• ~ 't Sl:;f')" ' f1"4o .--, 1'1 cash and access to credit to Flamson w11s promQ.tejl to 14fti.'I""; , _. •"lt tt:~ \-\1.lO, ~f' .~' --i ~i,'? ·~~ 'fl! -u ,,~ 1.,·'? -i~ ,51, jf.' ,~~ t11• .,.. .. ro.. 111 tull. •-'4l-r.•w carry yaur business through 1s,,isl3nt vice president, hl HG•~ fti ,:; l«11: /·~ 10 : ::=rJ~"":k i1 ~~ 1~'· :C:-·~ ~r1n1tJl~ 1~ lllt .~ Utt + i,-, """°"' "1"-E• "'"'· cw-wtlhllul •• ,. • the first, most vulnerable 1962 he was elected 1 vice ~::::1'1 10:1111~· , w~,r "112 '!: • [IW'' ~ ·ffl 11t J;: 3.,, J" = ~ ,~0 1:7ij ,,'•,' 1~~ 1~, ~;I ~ ~~:bll,:r=W.:":.. ~ YearJ president and in 1963 the 116-l.:ir.C ~ 1; n ~~ 't·n 1 ·~ "" Ohio ' 25 51"' ioJ. J1 +"' ll\lovt 1~ )iii -"G"---lJw. l~1i -.. .,., •ttvt>rY. Yl-111 ~., rocet.oo • ' • .,, l ·, t;t' I"' .. ~ !'" 1~br01111 1 II flit 4t '"-\ 4-•t From todJ.y's b u s I n e JI• minlsttator af S e c u r I t y "")r,• t:m 1:9 wM1e11 ~ 11: 1 :liO 111i!r'"~ ~1 : r• 1•• 111~ -•• 9..,1 $? 1 51 '"' 1~.., 1,.. n ri. tt """'' °" 11111"' -. ... 1* lll'lllOr 11w !allures, learn how to prevent P1cirlc'1 (nltrnatlon1I Bank-~11bl.:i~l't 1,;:r; 11:*-' :~l'1 d ; I~ ::,,_,: s~· rl ~. H :nt '~~ ~ ~ n~ ~oi,.:. u! ff·~ l1, "·~ 7 ' kil'llllW•n ~~ .. -"1• "" 11X.-'" your own !1Jlure tomorrow. ln1 Deplrtmtnl. 1'f1M6i~"' • -:,. ... ~ lt('"1t• f·l; f !1 :ti';~~ L,. 'r 1r,t.. 'l~i IJ~ . ~! ... ;~!"·• ; ;7~ ~· 3'-.=. i: =':'v111ra"!.,.:'._ .._ 1Ut1l11t1 " • Jhursd•Y October 8 l IJ70 SC DAILY PILOT 'JI I Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List . • M.c:AnF 'lllD M1t Don d JO MKkt(O 1-+0 ~etYllH I Mt<'r al • 's ~=FA h~',' M1t11tChf 60 ::::r~OJll ~20 Manhlnd Solb ::~.-;;' 27. MAPCO IO M•l hn I I.Cl Ml tor IO Me cor Df ..,, 11\a emn ' 1 MIM d 1 10 f\1rlon.lb 31 Marl.., l Oh Ml QllTf Cem ~=J,,D~d ria Ma nM I D ~~~C~Ufp ,,~ M i i«' e 11 M1• .. 'r F MI HtYF In 1 Ma"• 10 M1vDS r I.Cl Meys JW SQ ~~~8?ncl l~ McCord 1 lllb McC oy 120 McCro au 50 Mee 0 VIDf ' MCO. m b MCDoMld CD McOon"D 40 MCG Ed I <O McGH I 6°" McG 11'V Oo" McKtt 1 SO Mel-en ,10~ Mcloulh olOo ~:!1to1g 1 Mtld D Ai ~ M~d plB llO Mf'dU1a C l 'lO MEI Co p M• vShl>e 7J Mel'r Sh Ill • Mtm«•~ Cr> M• cans 1 40 Me c~ 11 M tt'lld lh I JI) M• .. P• 0 Mel I a12 20 ,...,..,,, Df2 20 Nwts1bfT' SJ~ Mesll Mch 1 MCM ~tlromd '50 Ml Ed all 90 MGIC Inv 'lO M chG11Ut I \\!ch Tubt M crtldOI lOe MklCnTtl II MklSoUI I 'N M .dld It I «I M dll:al.t. • 15 M dwtl 01 l Ml eLlb 'lO M!tl!lad 60 II\ nrtMM 1 JS 11 l"nPLI 1 70 II f\1n(p 1 JS M stR Y 3Dr Mo Pee A S r;P Ctm ilO MoP11bS 90b Moll 0 1 ,.o Mohl K D l 0 Mohwl< Data Mo VOd I 96 Mt Vb Pf1 50 MoMCh 1 71) M-m '"" Monon ll:A 11\0lll'OE~ 60 Mons1n I 10 IAonll pl? IS 1.o.on out 11 Mon Pw16' MonvM 1 n~ Moor McCo Mor;anJ 2 40 MorteSl'lo 10 1-of No ICI M4 orol• Mt ,, Fuel$ I IO MIS!ITT I :16 MSL nd «I Mun1!r19wr 1 M11 ohY I 10 M"'""". ll'ld Mu pl\OI I.Cl I 11r..O DH 20 M11r .,on Mt • , ' "' "' ' t: ~. "'' " " . ~ ~­" ' nn .1 , ~ ~s>~ ~~ ' ,, 4' tG l L o 2 tl~ 101 101 •JO S8., S8 t l051 S4 l ll ~67 5 0 •l ! 13 11 1ss:io -.10. 3S U •1 " • " ' ' , , ' . ll ' ~' •1 • ., JI• ~. " "' ~ .. = 15 ~ ,, 11 11 ? JO~, JO • 15 .u •J • 9 • 9 " 11S JS'o 34~ ,, •• •J'IO !43 9>..:.. , .. 93"6 s ~ 1611 IO no 19 l 0 SI tJO SS o l7' '''• 7'l I • >4 • .. "' • "' ' ". " 1'•7 " m '" ' m " " "" , .. • • " • " m •• '" "' • ' " " ' ' " n " ' " " .. ' .. " • ' ,, • , "l • • , ,,. 'l • ,? ... " ,, l' • ,,l " . , '" • " " ,. . " " . ., " "' " "" ,.. "' " "" ,,~ , .. ' "' ' '" . , ••• " . ' ~" , "• "' " " .,, "'• , .. " " • " . ••• " , ' ~ti ' " . ,, .. ,., " "" " ~· ,,, " " " " " " ,,. " ' " •• '" ·~ 1n. "' " ,. . '"' " . d h •• " . JI,, , ,, " " . ,,, "" 'I~ ,,. " 3t"" . ,· " '"" "" •• •• • " •• • ~" '" ii~ '" ... " . " ", ,. " 1\1.Y. Win1aers and Losers • ' . • ,., " .. Ma1~kets Decline In Brisk T11ading NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks declined In bnsk trading today as a result of a combmation of fac~ tors 1nclud1ng Communist reJecl1on of P_res1dent N 1~on s Vietnam peace proposal profit taking after recent strong gains and a Wall Street Journal art1cle-po1nt1ng up the advers&-0( the General Mot ot s strike on the steel industry One analyst noted that seLllJ1g also was fueled by a report North Korean volunteers were tigbt1ng 1n Cambodia along side the Communists Shortly before the final bell the Do\Y Jones l n dustr1al A\erage \Va s off 6 64 at 777 04 Of the 1601 issues tr"Dded, 941 declined and 418 gamed Turnover amounted to around 13 3/4 million shares, compared with 15 610 000 shares Wednesday Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List • "'" !~11 Kl•V < comP t • ~ oc~ El(J>.lf9e prict o.; • • " " • ' " ' " ' " • " ' ' " • .. " • • ' " •• "" " ' ' ' , ' ' ' • ' • " • • " " ' • ... ' • • • ' " ' , ' .. ' ' • " • • " ' ' " ' 20l • ' .. " .. " ,, ' " , • ' " " " I • " • ,, ' ' .. ,. .. •• " . " " ' . • • " .. ' . ,, "" ' . " . ", '" • '" .. '" • • ' '" •• "' "' "• " " " ,., •• , " " ' . ' '. .. ,., " . Ill• • J .. "" •• , . ' •• 11~. • " ' . .. , • • ' " ' • • w· ' •• ' 11l• ' •• .~ .. ' "" .. ll "' , . '" , ' . ~ •• n . "• "' " ' . ' , • " . ' , , . " '" " "' ' . J• ti Nt l llMlt I Hit' Law Cltst Chf h11•·•>-••J..•-1 u !-..IS .. -9! , ' !\ • ' JI JI JI .. .. • ft4 1 • 2• ,,. " ' ' " , ' ' " , ' " " " j .. • ' '"• ,. " , " • ~ " " ,' • ' 1Jl 6 • • ~t ,~ ' " . ' .. • • . ' . , ~ : .1 ~ ·~ I 1 s ,., tlCI IJ o }! 10, Hs 10 J l1 • ••• ; ,t ' .. 61 11 • .. . 1•5 •• . ,. " ' .~ l~ • •1 ,,,,. lJ J\o 111 \J •• ~ J 0 11 1~n ,j • ' ,1 .. ~ ll~ . " 1 II • 0 •• •JI w. 11 ••• n " '~ ID t ' . 1• " • . ' . . . .. i 1tl~ 1l 1!l ' " U I o '' I • ' . II 10". • < " ' ' n • .H IS,,,_ ' .. 10 IQ l . ' 'i ,: ~ ;, ~: ' : , lJI • , ' • '" • '" I' ' " .. • • ' . ' . .. .. • " "'• ' " 1611 " "' ' ' . ,., ' . . ' •• , . ' . ' •• I : '" U \o "' r. 1~ " .. , .. ' . " • ' "' n • ~. r ,1 ' . ·~ '" ' • •• " ! . , .. •• , J• • ' 1t! ... ... ", " '" " I .. ... ., ' '"" .! '" ... • " 't ' . " "" .. " lli.t .... 111111 1 H1911 L•• ci.w c11,. " • ' ,.. .. • ' " "" " ' " ,. • , • • ' ' ' ". , . '" • ... r· '" ". ... • ", ' '. " •• • ' ... • " ' • " • • • • "' ' IO t llL• ' ' . ' . . , . ,. • • ' ' " .. ' ' " ... • ' , .. • , • • ... ' ' ., 70 " lJ J • ' . • ' ,. ' ' • • l 11 • , -"'I l!>' 11 1 • ... 71 J • .!• o. . "" l 2111 1•7 1 7 11 o l J•o 10 .. 10 .. "" )]lo " " .. " ... •• •• .. .. .. , '" " ... ". " . ' l l>o • '" '. ' • "" • '" ... •• ' • • ' , .. ' • '" "' • .. ' , . ,,, • • ,, 11~. , • • .. ,. .. ' . 21~. ' ' • • , l \t l h ' . ' ' ' Sl o 5 ,,.,. ., ' .. " ' ' .. ' " " • ' " • " ' " • ' • " ' ' ' • 'l l , ' " . " n u •i1 • 0 " ' " ' 10'.o 10io ' ' . 111. ,,,,~ .. ' " n 0 • ID 1 ' ' .. '" .. ... " "' " , . " ... '" " "'' "" OtO "' I"' , . ' " •• • ". , " "' J'~· .. • ", '" ll.: " Uh " . J7 JI " ' . • .. ' • l " • • ' ' .. ' " ,. " • , f. " " ~ " " " • ' " " ,., •• ' . ... " '!.. • llh .. •• ' .,, "'' .. ... .. • ·~ ' " • .. • '" 1'1• "" " • .. " ' . ' . ,, .. ,,_ •• 1.: • 12'• • " . • " • ~1 .. " . • ' . It• N"' (Ht I ltltll L-Cltit Cll1 hltl N•t CIWll ' Mltlt L•• CIMt ca1 J'o -'9 " I~-. ""_, JV. -• l~ ;.1,. ~l'I +• 1,i. + .. 6'°1; -• -~ ::j • J~ lo ' J.C. Penney Co . l Di vid end s Told j NEW YORK -The board or directors of J C Penney Co ) fnc department atore cNtn f declared We d nesda y the ~ regular quarterly divldwd of ~ 25 cenb per share on the com i p:iny s out.standing COlTlmon \ stock payllble. Nov I to j stockholders or record 1.t 1fie. close of business on Oct 10 • I 21 DAll Y PILOT Finance Briefs ST, LOUIS{UPI) -Mcllon- nill-Dwclas Corp. hu obtlJn. c!d an order for eiaht tw~jtt De.I traneport pl..,., from FiMair, Finland's iriternaUOn· al airline. , Thursdly, Octobtr I, 1970 Mesan Elected LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTIC& LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL !\'OTICE LEGAL NOTICE •. ,..,. "'*" I~ ...... F. ••lllf, llw. .... Int P'le(• H11r11 -auldenct. M •11tlClfKT1 t:).!ilwl PlltlCiltC'T1 ».ft4·1 CllTllflUT• °" •us·"~·· ClllTt•tC"•T• Ofl •t.1•1 .. 1.st. """".t. 11t~ .... 1t. ... W•Wll 'I. .. .i1~ l'i.e., ''™' ltt110t11«, JIOI. Vi n l"l:llnnt Pittt, HlrNr Oblrict Miff ll'ICTITIOUS Not.Ml ,IC1'1Tl0f4 HAMI Cltrtu I, l , lt!Nd. OtM. 111-tvt, P, 0 .. l1c1, a.-htt<I Awt. 11111 .. ltOI 11,tlN Or, TM Wld1nftl'ltd tit c:-111,., ttiey 1r1 TM \ll'ICltrMol!IOll 111H Ut!lfor tie 11 CM-Cltl'tl:, W M Oii'-0.m. JUOM. $ IC. How, It.-, I--· J. 0. Cwfd, llt•, 1-'0f, N. N. CVMI""'"""' It-. n.•~ M"''""'" ..,,th_ Clllldllell'* 1 bull'*' 11 »01 lllvv Ave.. ll!X'llnt a tlulln1u 11 5»1 II.Iv• A••~ '~ICINCT1 iwu.• (19r11, J, a, Kll•rb. II• Juot1, v. "· lllflllltr. ltttt. JllClff. M. l . lllte.tw, 1111. IW~ll """"-~· ~ ''"" ,..._, hKfl, C .. Jlorl'll•, ll!ldtr .... fie-Ntweorl l ..cfl, Ctl!fon11L Ullftl' '"' fk:· Pol~ ... PIK•· ••"""9 M•lt. ... ,. ci ..... v ... llktlltr, o.m. Clwk, •• E. Ntl.oti. fltii.. Clvlo,, ~ w. ••llUe. ·"· Marine Supply l5)1 Su....,.lor tllkM ,,...., ...,,,,. of NOltTHWl!JT IN· 1!11Dut 11...., MIM .; Qw"•l'llOl'1141 1rw1.tl· cJubtlouH, 1•»1 ••ootlM.lral 11 ,•tctNCTi u.,1•1 c1,n., c. fl""' 0em. Cltl'll, l o. Htmn\Ol!d, .... • ...... Vl.TMl!NT o•ou .. •1111 IN!! llolld fll'fl'I .. "*'' G•M ..... "'-t U 1111 n ....... b awn. ltltMctor. I. D. l(ll"Choff, It" '"II"' PS.ct. C1ll'9fflle ~I. n» PltlClll6C'T1 II ttt-1 •1t•CINCT1 ~' Avenue. Costa Meia, was :'1: :11 ":.,."•'=e.."~'::iu '"1:: ::". ~ '~ .~11= o~::;nc:'::! ~r::; ~· :er'::?'· it':.:~ i.!:.'!~~ '\"'W1rktr. ""' P~1~1r:~!• ~.w .... 111.s~tM .. Jl»I 't\I: :"'~· H•l'f• •""'™'-~ v 11 eltcled Stcretar" Treuurer cf • follow11 •• 1o11ow1: c1tr11, o. £. tt ... 111... Ju<111. I!. E G• .. 1.c11. "''· 11111>t<tor, J • """''11, 1tt1. 1"1oH(!Or, L T """'""· 11"' ,. I. Mr. Ntl!IV '--111, Mrt, Jlnt I. llt'I' L. J.iyll'1. !07lf Drtneit Pttk P•ICllKTt U;JQ.I Clt1li. I J. "l'l0"''°11• Otl'rl. Jl/Cl9L M B, Gorl\fm, ltfll, JuCIM, H L Wllto<I, lttp, the N a t I 0 n I I Marine ••rmt\11. 11"4 Ctttflntlt Av-. LM fl0111tu.r111. OrAM•· C:ttl19'"'' "'41, P'oUl"'f Plt« Set ··~'~ lrtlltr ... rk Cltrk, I( '· S•flOtr .. Dtm. Clttk, ' 8.Cktl ....... lll•P Cltr1t, H1 s. Wllll. ••• AMt1tt. C.11 ..... lllCS l. Ml. ""4 Rel111f I(, 01Wt, l'ml l#tltt' Drive, Ckl&lhou...,.;. litll Avt 'IJICINCTi l24'11-I ci.k. It, M. 0..tfl. 0-. Cltrt;, P'. Lollllelll1tt. ltl11. Distributors AalOcl.aUon, a na· :rr!:..t~:J::!'.:14~: c~'m':~i."'#~'t"':': ~~"'~,c=1111.!. ":r;,,1::11~~~ tnJttC,.., 1 s s1me11111, A-.. P111111e "*'· Herr~• 111tldtll(1, m. ,111c 1MC1'1 Do1J11.1 ••1c1NCT1 .....,.,., ti I I ho! 1 O.vllll G T'*-Ofl-atl ~tst UQ llH(ll Clllfof'll .. .,.... TJlttdotri Ill Judtt, It M. Mclttl&. l>lf., OrftOl'I Avt, ""11119 .. ltu, Trtll« TO'IM Clllttllfl.oM, PelllM Pl.ct, EMU CIYtl CMifMM.i ... l lS ona group o w esa e °'1_.. "11 Oltff. ceu'tornl• Hiit .._Mr Mall•ffty, >OJ ·I!! F~tll(I• '""'' Cl•rt. H, M. 1t1n1ty, Dllfll, 111wmor, v. IE, Ht"k•, """' '" w wn-w, t11bo• lllMI d'·trlbuton ...... ma~--JU!'I. '"' ""• Vtrll E. Cltvt. 1>01 H•lt c~. c1111 .. n11, f1110, CCloll lllduetlM c,',"",' " .. ", Dltlt,,, Otm. JllfJ1t. c I •••It, lttp l"lJl(tor, G •• '•lll>tum. "'" l"ll>t(IOI', It fltmlt~. 11111. lll UIC 1u.n: ,,-Av-. Stt<t llDol, E ICllllll•t Httllflt Ct .. IM,. "'2I ltd SltlltOll Cl t •JQ-1 Cl1.-.:, G !'-01lvtf, 01111 Jlldtt. M, F, All~tt. II,,, Jll(fff, C I Ftrwt!I, Otm, Ply lndUll..., C.Llf.,1111 t2Q2I S Ml tlllll Mn. J-A....,_, ,,,,_ ........ , Ct llfotnlt, to27t. Polllllti "Itel, F"''' lte.tlclf.n(t, Hll Vltw Clefll. a. J , '°""""'• It,,, Cl..-k. H. M Prkt , It"' Clerk. H, W, N~lltrt, 111111 • To Marine Post .. ,. a. OUntlfr, IO)tl Trtb¥fo Sff .. I, IU<llttlll 1 IMIHI Sr )OUO ClllntY Cir lltBCINCT: H.,,>1 Cltfll, M, I Ltltll.r, 0tm. Clffk. H M. J-. Dlln WASHlNGTON_· (UPl) •eu1..-. c.111orrilt "'°' • Mr n Awiwt. O..WlltY. CtMfror,... tt:1•t, lttuKtw, c c, fr:ttt. 1111 POllll\t 1111«, v1c1..-1e klltol. IOU v ,c. ,.11.•c1NC1". U-11>1 P'1tl!CINCT1 1,.,..1 Columbia G.. Y'(•-lw , •r•L NOTICE _,,..,, WU"-Wttd(jt(~,'251 llit 1t tori, J•fll H Gollll. NllMn Hilt Drive, JI/Ott, M, D. 8l•1loc:t, Otm lorl1 U Polllnt ,.ltct, Mtll'll Ktlltr kllool. tl:JO Pill!M Pita. htlt• ltHklenta. m f . wu ll.4ll...,. NOl'lll l• Jtl<ll, C1Ufot11l1 1 Mr 1nlll S!tntol"f, (lllllll(fkUt, ott02, J_..,. J, Ctlr. J J , Workmt11, O.m l11~tw. 8, H F-1. llttp. $1.nlt Ant Avt. llltllloa l lvll. asked the Federal Powerl--------------M.-.. Etlw•rd l(Ufln1. 1'01 ..... ,, Ft P'l'r'Tlllnt. "" Orc:htl'lll Ho HJ, Cltrk,...M. I". ICl11U,. Dem..._ ...llldlt. •• E.. Fi.ti.ti:. ~tP, Lnt.Hclol"~_J,\_ T, Conde. 01111. lllJHcior. $ L Moor• ••••• P .M144 Aw-. H...,,111'111;.,. Pt~ Ctlllorttlt I lth•t,.ldt, C1llfor"l1 fHOI, Gtr! G•-PllECINCTi Ji JM.I Cltrk, D. M. MIJllCNle,., 0.... Ji.19t. E, M. Jloua, A.till. .l\IC!tt, M P Slvltr, lllH. Commiukm for permission to Cl•Tl,ICATI 0, SUSINISI Mr. l'totmtll Wlllu. ,,, ~rltold, lf(IOI .... d llc Cotlf Hlt/1Wt1. Pl(lflc PolU"' llLKt. ~·1111rd •••ldtnc:t. 1'2'1 c1e.-.:. IE, v. Ellltfton, Dim. Cltrll, c E 1(11. .... Cltfk. IC s l r1n11, 11 .... raiae rat.es of seven Of 1·1, PICTITIOUI )IAMI c~ t tl Mir. Ctlllornl1 '· ,,,,,, "'° P11l..a.1. C1Hlof11l1, lr.11'4! ltrltt, All91tr ~II PllCIHCT• IHI ... , Cltrli., ff. I, Wtllt, Ill•. ci.ni.. I!, WOl!d, 1111, Tht unatnlt....i -.S "rtlf'r ht It Uft> Mtl Wlltltl'rl ICllll~. 1'01 $elllt Ft M,0., :IMS Alli/Ill~ LGllll ltKll, l'lllN<"-c' G Mwflr ..... P'olllne Pltct. Ctll~Oll Sd\l:lel, JllO Ct nn1n PltlCINCT: U·IH·I "le:CtNCT• H...,.1 aubsidlarles by 51 total of dllCtlM • Ml"'" 11 161H cr11t LI!.. Avenue. Hu"n11111111 P1r•, C1HtG11111 10 c111fcml• Judot R ,._ Wtl!M•fotd ••t11 ,.•,!:.,,,, , J ,,_,,,,, Do-. ,.01111111 Pl•ce. $onor• ltllo!ll, 966 sonor• 1to1,•01~~.',,'~o,' Fowlllh 1teslde11tt. :.:1 -JI' mJ"'•· f H11Mlt1t-ltlCh, CtHfomlt, ""'"' tlll M•, Alt• Sltvtfll, llW C1nton, Sf\ltlol 01'-<1 S.11t•tnbtt 4 1t1t Cltrk 'L A Mt...:!ttien. Otn'I "..-. ••¥ "' It.II .... -... wuu or ID l it. per -fkfllklul "...., -., CONTININTAL CllY. Ctlllor"lt· Albert w ...,,.,_ Ci.rt:' L. z' 111-. ••• Jucftt •• L $1'1t .... 0.... M I II l"NllC:lor, s p Nl(lloh, DIM, CAltP'ET ANO V•~nlll'I' CLEAN· D1IN S.pten>Dtr 4 1'1t Gt>i.rtl Pt •h"llr ' ' ' Cltrk. (, "°'kl"" Del'rl IMlllCIClt. M, A, H ..,, "'· Jlldor, C M Evl"l. It"' cent return on overall in-ING,.,.'"'-' Mill""" 11 com"°'"°'"" Alben w An01'"1t11 Jl•t• o1 c 1111orn11, 111tac1MCT: u -iu-1 c1 ... k, L J wu.,., Hci ,.,,,1 J..W., P It Vt•1"11• °"" c1tr11, w. c H1111n11, 111 ... Vestment. f(lltOWl119 Mnon, wllol• MIM I" full tl'lll GtMttl P1tlMf O••lltt (OlllllY ' .. ollll"HI lllt<t, llttel ltftldellC•, 112'1 llllCINCf• JHlj,.I Cltfk, I Alllltldto ~ titt!V Clefk, E. M, Oollfr, 1t111. 1!tct ol re1ldtt1ct ii 11 followfl St1!1 of Ctlltilrt1l1, Or1119f Co11t1!v O~ Stlll1tnlHlr 4, 1,10. btt«I mt. t M1t•ll1n L" Pelllnt Pl•<•· ll'ltnlllfl Mobllt P1'11 Cltrk. N. f , Otlltrd "°' Oem, .. ll!"CINCT1 U.1 ... 1 L1rrv Ltt tl'llll Mtri. C H11lrlM, 1Ut2 On Stpte1t1ber '-1m, btfOl'e mt, 1 NoltrY P\lbllc 1" '"° tor Stllll 1111t, ln1Deetor, O. M. G1llrl11, Itta. ,.~~~bllou•••·",·."',,,.•,·,','m,!!, •,,',',,~NC0T,,•,,», •,1~-~-•• ,,,,-.,, ,~1 Po!,1..,'"',,!l•,',',·. HO<"llllnt ltt,ldena, 41C l SAN FRANCISCO (U PI) Cr1l1 L11 .. H....,llrlt!Ofl b1C11. C1lllomlt, Noll'"' Pllllllc In 1...:I ter 1tld Stefl, ll"llOfllll, t11M1r111 Albert w AllOl•oon, Judtt, M, M. H119hes. O.m • ._.. ..., .... '""'" ....... ~· ,. ·~ Otr.4 Sttlten'lbef" 11 1'10 1trtoNll"I tPMlftd Alblrl W Alllllt"'" k-te mt 1i1i 'M ll'lt Hf-wfKIH Clri, M W StrotHO. Dtm Jlldt1, O v. PlnUttff, Rf'P, C0<1lc1 Pl, lnsl>lcipr, T. M loloflllltte. Otm. Standard 011 Co. Of C•bfOtnia L1rrv L. H111tll1 k,_,., II '"' ft 1>t !ht Plr50tl wllDt.f ntlM fl •l>l>Krlbllll ft Jiit wlllllft I,.. Cltn.. M H Sl'rlll~. It# Cit.-:, E. 8 $.Or"'""' ltto ln1Ptdot, E C ,...,.,,,,, R... Jud1t, L. L. LllCtre. Dtm I Mttlt C, Ht•ltllt ,..,... I• 1uttcnbtlll lo 11\t Wlllll" lrto 1tr111"f"T tllll tdulowleclSICt 1'19 tll.KUltd llltlCINCTt ll ZM-1 [lllfk, J W, W1lltc1. Rep, J\;lltt, & J Fo•~1ce, Otm, Ct.fl!;, H 5 Allldts. lltP U d It hlS negotiated 8 new Sltlt of Ctllfornl1, Ortn•t County tlrume"f tnd 1dlnt1Wll49Mt ~• •.cK11ltCI 11\t ttmt Po!llrit Plttt, Dl1trl(I Olll<t Lounr1 "lllCIN(t: a.tt• l (lffk, A 0 I tal!, o.m Cleft, Jc: M Addi., •111, Prod Cf It I "th ("-a 0.. 14111, It, lf7t, lltftrt ,,.., e Nolery lllt ..,,., tOFF1CtAL SEALl Scnoel, 7'12 W1r11tr Av1, PoOln1 Pitct , .. lt'l'POrl MQbllt Ptrk Ci.tk, M 0 H!ck1. RI!> PlllCtHCTt S)..lf2 I U 100 COTI IC W1 ll'C "...tlllc 111 11'1111 IOI" ttld s .. tt. ftrlOllllllY (OFlllCIAL SEAL) C,...l!er F•rrfU St lllbul"I' II tnu•t~fOr. E M Vtt1 1,,rtn, ••11 Cll.oDllOlloe, f'Ol W. 111~ St PtlCIHCT, U ll•I Polilnf Plt tf; Coot. 1t11k:llnc1. 411 covernmenl of Ubya pr~ tPHll"M u......, Ltt HUltrtt 111111 Mlrlt C Cl'ltttw Ftrrtll 5.llilllu,., Noltrv Public -C1lllorlll1 J..O.e E L Nitti. 1tt11, IH>KIOI", L H Mttt<O"• ND P'lrl'I' Polllllt Pltct, Flrt1l1flot1, llOl lttYll Stvlllt A¥f, 'd' 5 ( HUltllt k-NI mt lo bot the Ptf"SOf\I NOii'"' .. \lblk -C11U0<nlt .. rlMIN I Offkt In Cleft:, £. M. ,u.111, lltl Judtt, C. A Joltnton.. Otm P1lm Or ln1Hclor, 0 , H D..tll1, lttl, VI lni a ntW percefl SUrtal WhOlt fltmtJ trt Wblcrli1H NI tile Wltfl lll PrlnclHI OfflCt In 0•1"9t C""n"' Cllfk. M E. 511llllrkl11, O.m. Clffk, A. M. $rtrbll(l(, llt• lnlMCIOt', ~ Vtn 0.ff", 11..,., J,,OOt, C. D. JOY"'-f, llttp, and will raise the posted price ln1lr11111tt1I 1fl0 ICknowlHtlO lilt'/' tll• Or1J1tt County M~ CM'll'rllUlon Exp!re1 PltECINCT• tt•Ul-1 Cltrlr., J C fvtltl1ft, No P1rty Jut!ot, J It, \/en Hoaltfl, Rtl Citrt;, K H Coot, llet> I tcuted !ht llmt, Mv Commission Extlft1 • Ochlbtr 3, lfll Pellillt P'ltct. Slro11e ltts~entt, 1110l .. tlCINCT: tWl .. I Cltrk C. E l urlllt1, Rtp Cll!•k, I(. l Morte Oe1t1, 0 its Libyan crude to $2.53 a ($EAL) Oc'fobtt '· 1t11 Pllllllstoe.:I Ort "M '°'" 0111'1' Piiot. (.11Mlol Cl• Polll"' PS.ct. Oriti•• H•ll Cl~bl!o\IH, c,~ •• ·,,,•,,' •"'"•·••'",R"' lllll(INCT "', ... , barrel. .. .. rl E Mlle!. .... blltlled Or111tt COit! OtllY PJlgl, Set>temlltr 11, 14 •1111 Oclober I, •• '"lpt(!M, $ A 111....,, ltH. 114' ,,.,,,I" Av• • ,oll!nt PIKr, J-11.ffMIMCI, 3C1 The HOltrY "110llc -Ctllf01t1l1 S11tlt!Ttblr 17, l._ •11111 0CJ00u I I, 1t1' 111f..}0 JlllJ&t, s, A s""°"' It,,, ln1Ptc:IOI', R M Btrr11ff, llltlt, llolUt11 Pita, At!tm• kl!ool, :U) Gtl"d Ct"'I NEW YORK IUPIJ -C.m· p.iter Apphcabons Jnc., which filed a petition to reorganize under chap~r IO ot Uie bankruptcy act said Thursd1y It!! total assets of $12 9 mtlhon e1ceed its current liabilities of $7 4 million But Computer Apphcat1ons ~d it currently 1s 1M0lvent because cf the Bank of New York seiled its cash reserves of $470,000 to apply .against a delinquent loan of $2 2 m1Jhon. The compaey says 1t hopes the federal court wtll compel the bank to return the seized cash Prlnclttl Office In lt1& 111 .. 1' Clt•k. A J WltklM. llllP Juodoe, D M Chtrler, Dem. Clubl\ol/11 lllf 1111Nctor. P w, J_., 11111. Or1riot Countv LEGAL N011CE Clerk c M, Sl•O<JP, Dtm Cltrk, L J N1l1on, R., lntPtClor, B, W yyn, llltlt, J116", J A Crerltr, lllP. Mv Comml11lon E•.tlre1 LEGAL NOTICE ,.lllCINCT 12•Hf-I Clflt., 1. Rotlenion, 01111, J ut!11, 0 H. LH. RtP C~rl< c E. P1l111, 1l11t Mtrch 1 ltn ,._,, p UI Pl • Jflft 11 1t! 16HI .. llECINCT· tHU-1 Cltl'll. M. L. GIJ)d,,n9. Otrn Cltrk, V, C flrtndl, Rtl P11atli11ta Ori"" C1111 Otltt Pllol, ClllTllllCATI OP IUllNESS o.;:,0 L:~ nun tt enci, Pallll>lt ,ltct, Ort"9t Cotti COlll!lt Citm Cltrk, E M P1rk1. lltO .. lll(lNCT· IS.I ... ! kol 2o1, Oct I, I, U, 1t7t 114llll NOTICE 01' TlllUITll'I SALi l"ICTITIOUS Not.Ml llllH<lor, 11 C flltnd1r, It,,, khool, %101 f t lrvltw ltd PltlCINCT. lt-111·1 'Olllnt Plac:t, Wt lMn lttsllltnc-, J)t.J .Ht. 17n lllr unftrtllntd clot• urtlf'lo llr k con-Ju.tot. V, L. Glllt, llt1t t"'P1Cl0<, M L lttkl, lteP, PoUlnt Ptct, Sttlloll No. Flrultllttt, Stti.hOl't Or Dn Oclo»lr 10, lflO. t i II 00 AM • duclll\I t IKllllllll ti no W. Vlctor!t SI , Cl1tk, J A Joll111on, 11.. JuodH, E. C. llolllm1", Dtm IOO Stl<tr SI ln•HCIOI', E, J , McC11!11ott, lttl. llENE.l=ICIAL 5EltY1CE CO, t C1nttimlt C011t Mtw, Ctlllornli, vnlltr tht fie· Cluk, C. W Joht1son, Olm. Clerk, I, C Lont, Dtm Inspector, R J FINI, 1111 Ju<tgt, l A W11Son, llf'I T.....W ~1tlon I t lll11lv 1PIOlnltlll T ...... ltt lltlollJ tl•m ntm. el Solltll Coul GrtPhlci PlllECINCTi n 2f)..I Clerk, J Y, ~rollll, ltte Jllt!9t. I M A•onton, lttP Clttt:, H M HulcM111011, II" SUPltlOll COUltT 0 1" THI WICllH' tnd 111rw1nl to DHd DI Trv1t tl'ld thll 1114 urm It comPOllO of 11'19 Polllno .. l1ct, Mum~ 1tt1ld1t11(t, 60Sl At Plll(INCT. 11•2f.1 Cltrk, C flt,., Otm Clttk M E Tipping, Otm STAT• OI" CALlllOll .. IA llOll 111rt11 J1nuery :10. lt1' tltCu'-0 11'1' V!L-lo!l-l"o _.._, wt>ol• ,.1/M lll~U r-ow!Mlll or ' Pelllnv Plt<t fo"1vlrlt ltttllltnte. XII Cieri<, M Mlldltll, Otm .. llECINCl : U.ltf 1 "' COUNTY Of o1t•N•• Jl(O MUJl.IC tllll ELLY M. MUltlC, hu.-,--'o<•" on•-o lo ,, '""""' ln•otclor I s, Asl'ltOl"d, 111, Wntbrwk Pt. PltlCINCl : boll! Z Potllnt Plitt , Jonn. lltnlllfu1ct. lOl .. 011Pt • ,.,. ,. •••• ,.. ·-·"' Jo-·••• ... ,,.. "' "' .... "" •·•-•-. , , ,,,,_,,,,, R-Pollln1 Plitt s1111on No ? l"lrnt1tt011, ''' Ht "'""'nu • "" r~ ·~ • ., O 1toe1r H0111n. J)O w. Vktorlt , JU<l!le, L F. R11t1I o..... ",...."" •· ·~ NOTICI 01" lotEAltlNGI 0" PaTITIOM lf10, 11 ln1lr. No Ul11, I" i.o._ '202, Cotll Mtll Cltrk, L, M Hornor Otm Judoe, J GOfl'll'Y, Otm 11)(1 liker $I ll\$P«IOr, M A Altll"Mll R,.., 11011 PllOaATI DI" WILi. ANll PO• ••• G I, of otlkltl ltto0r111 In lht ofllct Dtled ~Pltl'rlbtr u, lt1G C1tr11, J, M V1n~1lktnllll•th, Oem Cltrt, G, J. Coal1y, lt1p 1111pector, J J WIUl1ms. R111t. Jude•, J. M Herd•<••· 111 ... Lin••• TllSTAM•NTAllY "' lhe ("""'" Jlecotdtr ol O•llltl CO\llltv, 0 lt1191r 1'ioetn llltKINCT tt-nt l Cltfk, II A. WJktley, .... JI/doe, H M C•rton. Rl'll. C1trll, 0 M lh•ll•<••· ••p, Etttll ol FllANJ: C EWIG Otclletet! C1Ufor11l1, WILl 5ELL Al PUllLIC AUC 51tlt of Colllor"lt , Pollll"HI ,ltct, Hlv•n View S<J'lool, lj.11&1 llltl!!CINCT U~·I ~::.t:: ~I c::u.:~r~'lll' c,•,•,,,2,,' <,:'.",Reg, NOTICE 15 HEllEI V Gl\ll"N Tntt TION TO HIGHEST fllOOElt fOlll CASH Or1nt1e COllntv Wtlklkl Ln Pelllne lll1c;e, Cotlttt '''k $clloo!, 2* .. ltlCINCT· U·ln 1 ,. ' ,. I NE llORT TOH L fl.AHi(. lontt (Pt Vtblt ti !!mt Of ttlt I" Ltwlul ll'IOntV On Seo! 16, lf1t), btlcte ..... .fl Nollf'I' l"lll«tor, L Mited Dim Nol .. Dl"'t lilt! Polllrit F'ltct , Sn'll!ll ltHodtP"«, llV lllut• W NA 1 A A NII of 1!'11 Unllet! St1tt1I II !ht SOlllll Front P'ulll1c I" Ind to• ukl Sltll, PlflOnt ll, Jut!91, R. I Plckoru, RIP ln1P1Cl9r, P B fl11rv.tfn, Rtp, lloll!"9 Plact. Htrbor llPhll Churo;h, lonl#\tll L" 8111klng AUod lllon tit • 11111111 1>11rtl" t t nlr•llCI to !ht old Ortl"Hlt C011n1Y _. D ' C k ' ' '"'''a L, l't11bll, ll:H IUD lllker Ave l"SPl(!Or, M .,, Macln"es, llw, petlllon for Probllf of will 11'1111 tor <-·rt•---·, ,,_ '' >·"o A•o. ,,,~ ... tPPH•KU ottr t-109on knowtl lo mt 10 ler M Mi ng nell , Dtm. lnlPldcr G N ICottl Rep l ~ """~ •• .,n •• '" '" bt ll'HI ""'"°" ho n I bt lbtll Ct k J M 1 U O Cletk, S D N1,,m1" Ottn ' ' 'o Jut!ge, L II" Wiiton, Rtp. ltwtnc:t or elle,. ltllltntllltf'I' to lllt Ctllfornt1 tit rltllt, llllt '"" Jnl1r1ll u1r.. ' 'w •t •mt s tu tr e• • '"0 net ' em. Cieri<, M 1' Gtn1!1r, llltP Jl/C!Pt. M A fllers(n, t o Clt•k It 1111, Rto pe!ltl-• refererlCt to whldl l.t m.clt tor "''" • ,-_ •• ,, _ '' ""''' ,.,, to 11\t w lllln n1l•umen1 t nlll ttkllOWledo-P'RECIN(l ii )11111 Clttk H p ltt11••m Orm C ' • ' ' '"' ·-~ "" '" -"•· o•-•'" .... ··-· .. ''' 0 , y ' ,,.,, PltECINCf. IMt•t ' IPl"lc, 0 W. $.mill!, lttp, l11rlllet" Dll"I CU ft, tllll lhll ht I mt Ind' 0..lll of T...,11 In Ille proo••IV sllUtlet! In "" ·~ "" _,,_ ..-o 1111 tct, Oull, e11oeno:r, ~ llolll1>11 Pltct, EplsCOJ>tl C~urch, ;o4l C!trl<, R F FonltGrlt"' O•m lll!(INCT J>-JU-l plect of llNrlrio ff>t Sime hll Ileen tet llkl Countv tllll Sltle t!e1<rlbed It (OFFICIAL $~ALI RU'J",.._ Lint Ore-1 A.r NIWllOllT llACM Pollln1 Pl1c1, JtnllHI lttlklttlCt, !om tor OctOOlr If 1'10, II f :Ill t m • In Ille t..01 I of Tr1C1 Nt W), In lht CllY of Mt•Y " Het1rv lnSf>fo(:!Of, M C MCShtl\I ll"et> tns~i'Or, Y, M FellChtll, Olm, ,lllCINCT JHUI Ccmmodort co1,.1r-. of OtHrlrntnl No J of ttllll Cost• M•lt• •• thown on 1 m•• lhtrtol ~o:•;r •ug::~ Ctlltornle JUOClt, S G Htrwoat!, Or!m. J1tt!gi, L. 0 Ptlllton, Rf'P llolllllt Pl.c.. lhlfll Retftv Bu• Olflct, lnsl>l"clcr, J A l(lr19iler. llell, LEGAL NOTIQ: c"""· ti JOD C1¥1( Cet1ltr Drive Wt1I, 111 recorded 1" bock 111, l>llff 1J ttlCJ '° 0' n ''c1 !,1 1" Cltrlt, K J Dor1te1n, Rf'P <•-. A , ''""' "' _,,u 141~ Visit Del Oro Judge, It.. M MtlJnolf, Dtm lilt Cl,., of S1nt1 Ant, Cttllornlt M•K ••o·•-· "'OO ••-"> " '''' •tnte Olln., Cltrk, E '°' GVode, RtP '" ~· ' I Mlfelor E L Lln!Dtl Rep SYRACUSE ( U P I) Oiled Set>lembtr "· 11/'0 I ·~~ ..,.. ' ...... u ... .\\v CM'lmlHlool E•Plffs ,lll((JNCt-n Jll 1 Cit•~. R o. Hwth Rtp II • • Clttk, c W1H Rto W E SLJOH/(, °''"'t Cout1,.,, Nev, ll. 1tn Pelllllll Pll(t , 11 Frtncl1 Schoel, 10o100 PIECINCT. Jt .. 211 JUlllt, II R, Ltlltl"-Rtfl CIPtt: M A Ftrblr, Dtm, General Electric Co has COllntv Cttl"lc -Still Ml.t wUI M /l'llllOl, llul Wl.l!)olll .... bH\lttd Or'"'' Co11t D•llr Polo!, Mt1no1i. Pom..., Pllu, C11 Jno Re1\dell(f, f06 Cler-. o. J Ewtll, llfP PIECINCT: U.l.,_l d ded ( k LllOOY & L"IOO'I' (0Utn1~1 or w1rrtntv, e~ortu er Jm111/ed, S.1ltno1Jer U, l• Ind Octobtr 1, 8, l~tOIClor p Mtrrlon 0.m FtlfWl'I' Pl Cle•~. J I( Toalt..-, ocm Polllnl Plitt, Wklnl1n llHltenct. IUS ec1 0 stop ma in g reo1rdl11t title, pCIUtHlon. or ell-""' lni-10 • ' I I w L E I t ft ,ltlCINCT ll-Kt-t Artllt St noch ,,, • Gltlllll't''• Clln'lbrlllCts. to Pl'I' Ill• rem•l"llll prt... Jlllltlr. E Cronklllle, ll:ep, "1"' "'' • IS,,.... .,,, P'olll"O Pleet, Bluff• Rttl!'I' 8111 O!Uce. ,_lor, M, c Sltll\hilUI, O.m. mo rome picture tubes for u111111 ltt(~, ce11..,1111 .,u, clHt '""' o1 "" 11111, iecurlllll i.... 11111 c11rk, ll F SlmcN, R.. ~'{!~~·JM M': T~:~':"R::.""· 1•u v1111 Dtl Oro J\lllH, v ~. Alllltnon. ltoo its black and white television T•t• Intl •H•I•• OIW cf Tr111t, to-wit n1..-oo, wnh lrto LEGAL NO'MCE Clrrk, f J Cinnon, °"" Cltrl<. L R C••lno, Dim. •111PK1or, c. A Fell, Rt~. c11Mc. J s KrltMr. otrn A"lfMVI Hit Pttl*-i.tr"t 1,,,... Ftbnll f'I' 1$ 1'70 tt I" ttld ltltlCtNCT• 12-Jel 2 PRECINCT JJ.nt-I Jut!fl, M L life, RtP C ler~, R S Fi•tl, Otm, receiver hne and will buy Pullllthl!d Ort"M COIJI Dtll'I" P!111I, note provld.,,, tlllv1iw;1t.'lf t nY, 1H111« fllt Pelll119 Ill.ice, SI Frt Mll $<1'10o1, 20ol00 Po•••-'''''' ''''' -.,, l -•lo• Cit.-:, E O W1rl!GO, Rf'P> lllll!CINCT· SJ.JI._! th I t d I Od 1. 7, t, !'10 lllOl-10 Ooo-o '' .. ,, •-•" '''''' ''''' -,-,, C"lllTlflCAT• 0, aUllNaJS M11nollt ··• ....., ~ '' ' J y < o • ''' em rem D\J SI e Supp I.rs "' _ .....,., .,, ..,, . • ,,,,,,,0 ,_ "AM• , ... ,,. •• .,_,, __ '' er • tv•"· "' ..-o "' Pltct, Coron1 Oo' Moo "•o• ' 0-oooon•-1 of lht Tru1lte tflO of 1t1t ,.. " lnJO«IOr, 8 Dtll~I Oem '"' '" " "' "'" P•ICIN(T: IJ-OU.I S<~' >•• e ,,.,, D " " mamly Clint-> Electrorucs LEGAL NOTICE ,;;."ere.I.,, b¥" will o.eq of Tr111t T~t "1111er11une<1 does ct•l!tv""' It cDfto Jl/C!Pt, M, L c.111ac1, Rio rn1peclo•, A G Chrl1t1nto1"1. ll.11 Pot Hng Pl1c1, 1tuc•eY Re1l.ten<e, 1301 vr1 I "'';" ' ' ~ r -TM ~-..,·•-ulldtr llkl ~ ol 11111(11119 t Mlnfl\ ti 2172 OuP'onl, 51.ollt Cle•-· J. G fl•rntt, Otm, Ju<tot, £ 1.-Jetr\111, 011t1, Ml Int "1PIC or, • n1"'1tl"'· Ill••· Corp ot. Rockford, J:U. Up. to Tniat b;'';';;;;'.;, 1 bruCll ., d;Jl•1tll In 271, N....,..,,. Stldl. Ct lltornle, ""°'r Clertl. fl L McCltln, RtP Clrrlr., G. Hlrtokl, ll"l!fl lllt1>t~to•. J M 51\i(kf"I", Dem. ~yll:t_e, ~· ~ ~lret-. ~· 225 I be I d fl .. .ias2 !hi '00t11r1llOM' IKU•"" I h. r. b r. "" lldltlout: fl"" ....,..,.... ot <ENT RA-... ECINCt. _:JZ.JIH I -Cler-. I s . L•t!wl1. •••• Jlldo1. M M. ltrCOVJll. Otm. c1' • ' nolt, ..,., emp oyes may ll 0 111-'-'0l"I uec11ltt! tlld C1llu1r1d to"'' LIZED OFFICE SERVICES t l'lll lhll .. otll .... Pttct, M1l11 Club Hou•• PltlCIHCT SJ.tn·I Clerk J • ll1rton Rell tl"lc. A I Corb'f, lttp. by the move but G E. said 1t c~~J~i:~:J: ~:JUJJ.:~SI 11,,d;~';'1gnlid 1 wrlN1n 1>«11r111on of 111d 11nn It coml'Offd o1 1111 1o11owtn1 tm VIII• Paclfl( O• Poll!ng PS.ee, Louldcn lt11!d•nct, lll c11r11'. H A S!\x:k.i~. e>.m PRECINCT: JJ·Jll I ho t '" I --e t THE UNDERSIGNED ~ 111..-."' Dt11ull 1llll Oemlllll tor S.le, ll'MI w•llltn ,.,..,,., wtloft nttne In lull t llll Pit« Gf 1,...,,.c1or, F M Cr1b!rff, Dtm t Mon!1 \111!1 Avt PlllCIHCT. 5M6t I P~ll~gl Pleet, 8 trrY Ruldenet, 2tl1 pes D .. ans er ,,.,,., 0 ,,-,,, -·· ··---. ·-· , .... -.... l'IO!kt al IHeteh '"" ot eltcllon .. CIU'Jt fftldlnct ••• II ..... Jll(tgf, H I( JtdcMIO'I, ltte AIHdor, \I, Loiullon, ll•O Po1H11g Pl1Ct. lltYJlt!1 T••llfr '•rll I ..... D '------o!J•" " "' ,....,,., '~ -·~,. Cltr1t A M H l>tt R JllfJgt, F. A, $.mllh, 0.... Cll<bha!r~e. JOO E Cots! Hwy "lol>eCICr, M Bltf'I' lhp r r-opet m9tlllnln1r·&-mnuftc1\Hh11 k1lntN....t In....~ tDJtll....M}jl~ffl to ~d~ml!I< 1131.t l!r~ ""'"'.--J E Ml<uir ;.,,,;,•Incl Cllrk, F .! Roellwi=lt, 0 !!!.'.._ 11119~-· .. ,_E" Je'.!ltt!f, lt"'"'"'-----IJuOCI•. N K. H1lllt11brt l\d, Rt1, 2~ S•Ltmlll(I Or .. City o1 MIHlon VJ~ llllllY ukl obllt1tl0nt, lflt! lllt ru r on No 11, Fou"11r" Vttl .... , C1111. -f'I'~ • C , M ~Rell, J,,llli;'!L." M!!Cftili. ll'U--· .c.tuk....M....~WU.Jl.ef-------- lo, c .... n!Y cf Or1n111. Siil• ot Ctlllprt1Jf, JUM ts. 1J10, 11\t ullller1l111..i ctUled U lt! D•ll!J Oct '· 1'10 ;111 c1H,Cf n JIJ.I ,,._,. ,.ICINCTi 12 .. n .1 c•-··· •••••••••••••• ··-Cle•k R F l(lollrv, Olm ' Avco Savings N3Ples Chief """'' 11\t tldll!O<ll firm tllfl\t ti nollc• ... bAtai-•1111 of llKllln '~"' J1net L Ftltlll'rllll om.,. l•ct, John a flu1ht rd "~ POU!l'IP Pt1c1, M~N•ll1 1111~ 1<hocl, Itel Cl;;k J W11tbroc11. Rt• ,.. llltECIN(T: J)..ttJ.I MISSION MACHINE lftll MANUl"AC· rteordlllll Ill book i'llJ, Pitt 211• of ltld STATE DF CALIFORNIA I ltfff Et!ucttlon L" NtwPG" llllYll • ._,_~,....-_ _ '''''"CT·'"'' 1 Polllr.u Pl1c1, Ebblld1 Tr1111r Ptlk TUlllNG COM .. AN'I' Allll 11111 ••1111 firm l1 Officl•I llti:orcb ORANGE COUNTY ' A~PKlor, 1• T M•••· °"'" 1n1P1clClf, M. A~kltl. ""'· ,,,,,_ • •• , ..... -,,,, ,.__,_~~···, CIUllllOlltt. 1.16(1 Pl4ice11ll1 Ave. -----.. -"--l•o ..,"" -Otlt SHltm~ 1 •• 117' J!Jdge, C 0 T,'1'1of Otrn ··• ,. .. ....., .uun--1----.. M l D"• D ._.,........, "' """''"" _,., BENEFICIAL SEllYl[E CO On Octoblr I. lt10. ~Ort mt, I Noltt'I' c t ... k. A L St9t!e, Dim J"°"t' A. S. Soulr1, Dtm POO 1111'1 SI .,.......,_,..,, -·· Mo fltl'l'lt 11'111 ldllrtt1 la • followt, to-wit ti 11111 Trv&tff, Pullllc In tnd IOI' 111111 Stilt, Mt.tc"tllV Cltrk, M a Rlllltlloh, lltei> Clt•k. M, Flllltr, llH l!!l~or, H f.I flo.lf<f, """ Jlldtt, A V, Newkirk Dem IUcflll"t! P, Erk. l'502 StltlTllMt Df , av > L "TUltNER Viet Pftlldtlil .OHtrH Jin.IL Ftlfllmtn t"ovm la '"I'll .. ltECINCT Ji Jll-I Cltr~. O L 8111, No P1r1Y Jut!et, J I Str>dl, Oem Clerk, G W N11te1, No Ptrf't MlHIOrl Vltlo. C•lll ' ' • , .. s 2twi to.,."'' Plr"IO" Wl\Dte ntmt II t11b1cr!IJ. Poll!no Pl1ct. HOl>I Vltw School 11'7f ,lll!C tHCT-: SWJ)..1 Ct.rk. M L, 5cnun111, RIP . ~""'.,',·,',,,A Lb! Dem, WITNESS "'' hind' lh I 1'1h t!l'I' ti Pullllt"t<:J Ortlltt Ct1$I Otl!v !I lle! ed ID fllt within lnJINmel>l 11111 Flln~!-Ln Polling Place, Llnlllbtflll 'C!>ocJ, ?HI E C!tr-, L C FllH Dtm • JJ '26'1 '°'""",~.:..~•,.n, ''' •-•·--· '' , ........... ,., 1, 0 ,;i:• •,.,",~,,·.',~",,,w llllCuttd ll'HI um• lnsoecror, M T Crtnt!tll Rto 23rt! St llll•CINCT 1J.t111 P0 0"0ln1t Pleet, H, EniJgn Sd!oo!. 2000 Clllf ..,.,,. ·~ .. ,,_ '"' ..... ..., l1"1W>tel0<, ... E Kvle, ltn ,,,,,., .,,,·,, •·•w°" '''' '''-''' 'T"TE DO <AL•oDo"•A 11 0 M K .__, Jud!le, &. II" SoH•no. R@ll " r ..,._ ,.,_,_ • J ..... ' .. " ••r nfllf'I' Cllrk J "' l(fU<'ll A.IP JU<kl•. M. E 1(11lop, Dem ~100 16th SI .. ~~ ~ • .,_ "· A South •• ,, Ca!1lorn1'a area COUNTY OF Oii.ANGE Nel1rv Putltk • Ct llta•nll ,,,-· ' ' __ ,, ... , • ,,, Cit.-: E L Wilker It.lo I ' ' JVllt-1', c fl Gulkl, Otm ~ DN TH••••-0 " .. , " _., 0 '" •·~ , ,. • • • • "'1ttclo•, M Fowle•, eo Cll rk L E Ma•ctllao, '''• d I t ...,.,, l'I' v• ""P em r ' LEGAL NOTICE Prlnt!Ptl Otll« I" lllt!CINCT J:l lW I Cltrll, E 5~1w, Dem Jl>dg1, G M Cou•tne~. Dom l'lav1ngs an oan ve eran, 1•~ bttor• m• G•"* lltNOn • Not•rv O••"'' Co1m1v S6&2 ,.llllC!NCT· 51">1" c1er11, a. J McAt•e, Dem Cit•~. E J Cam••••· lltep Ch"..les. C. DarnaJI, bas been Pubtk 111 tncl tor ttkl Coull!¥ t llll Sl1l1. MY Camm!stlon E_,•l•H Polll"9 Pltce, Mt•lr>t Vltw ~choal POJlll'IP Pltct, 8 1g/tY Rts>dtn(t, l llt COtl• Cl1tk, L I Whteltr, Rf'P, llltECINCT· IS.nJ I '¥' rt'lklln• 11\tf"tln .,.,.., cornl'rlllJlorltd tnlll NOTICl OP INT•HTION 10 •l'IG•G• ND¥ 24. 1tn Tllbur• Dr. tl"en!•I A•t PltlCINCT· l).t"IJ I PoUI"" Pltce, lell1rlll ltttldell(t, '4-07 named vice president and 1wor,., 11r10ntllY -•rllll ltkMnl ' IN TNI SALi o.-AL.COHOLIC P11bt11Mt! 0r,...,. '°''' 0111r Polo!, ~':!iHd~,;:; ~ T~~,i''"',· R.,, lnsoector, A s Coflmen, A.t.t, ,..mnt Pltci. Cltr Hill, 3300 NewllOl'I Camt!tn or. El"lc kftow!< IO IM to"'"""""°" whole ••V••AGll °"' I u 27 :it 1J70 llSl 10 u• -m "' ••• J"'6111. T. Fr1kt1. Olm, 81vd ln!flt(!Of, M c ltlltrll, Rt• manger 0£ AVCO Savings and 11em't It wblcrlbtd II Int wllllln In Oclobtr ,, !tl'O ' ' ' ' -(l.,.k, I J Bair. 11:.. Cler•. J M, Annon, Dtm. llls.eectcr, F M Cr!umfn D_.,, JU<:loe, ! S A.oH, RHI Loan A ssociation's Costa Me.sa 1trvmtn1, •nd 1dc110WIH1gec110 .... thtt 1>11 Te i't.llfro ,U M1r..conce111 LEG AL NOTICE ~~Ekci:c~ •.,•~;~·Rep Cl•rl•. J G Pt1111r. o1m Ju.tot. v Shtnnon oem Cll!rli, o l , IC-. Otm e...ecllled !he ttl'>t I,_, Wl"Ut&M >o 1-1 to llWlllC• ol 1111 llCtllM el ' •• oo•<••CT n ">>• ' R Clerk S J 8•1nkmfn, Otm lfi -PoUl"'!I Plt CI l(fmNrk lltl•llltn<t. 7047 "' Cltr!I, R W Ml•~t mer, eo P'o•<,•<To O' -•• , 0 ice. WHEltEOF. I htVI hlftlltlto te'I rn'I' htnol 1lltt! ,.., notlC• 11 l'lrrllW .iv .... 11111 lilt • Polllnp Pllct, Mllllrl!ll~ lttthkllC .. 112 E. Cltrk, A 8 florder, Dem, .. ,., D II de t I Int! tltl•tCI l'rlY ollldtl 1111 tllt dlW tllll "'~""' PfOOttll lo tlll 1IWIOlk •D>•<• '' ••••Y Gl"•N I l'Ofd Or 21•1 SI .. ltlCINCT· ... la.I Polllnt Plitt, ll:Ytn llnfcletl(t, IJ,tt ama , a Te&I n 0 ., .. , '" 11111 cHtllk•I• nt11 1bo'tl wrltt1t11 -" _ _,., ,_,,,.,. ,, " • hi! •t I-'"'· "'· IOmbtrk, """· Oolollfn Ttr N rt Be h I rm I 'D'''c''l .'' 'I rtM• "'' pr.,,. • •~ 11\!1 Gentrtl Eltc!IOll to be htld NOVtmbtr JUlltlt, L, [, Hedt!t", llltl l"'PKIO<, E I G•l"I, Olm Polllllt Pltct , Commu"!tv C"llurch, tll I ewnn aC W8S 0 er Y • •••··· > oo-' _, ''' .. ' o~-Jllt!lt, C C, M1"l~ly, lteP. Ht!latr~ AYI nlPfCI«, J, H Cromo, lltlt. "r-' Gtl"HI 8ensc11 ...... : o "' " N , .C .. ·-,· ,h• ""'1 w -"~.•om '"'• Ci.rt, A. M Yount. ltH Ctttk, D, K S~•I•;;• D11t1 lnsPl(lor".8. a Wilton. Otm JuCkle, L A, Moro1n, RH associated With Lincoln SaV• Nollf'I' PiJbllC lSJ bot COi i 9 Wfy, IWli'Or """r o 00 o'clock Im. lo 1,,. ~Our O Cltrk, H I( G1bhfrt, 0.m Cltrlt, H I( B1nntll, •-, J~llirt, L G LIPPlll, Otm Cltrll, 0 J Cornell, "-"'· ' • •••••• ,,,,, •• ,, Buch • 00 o'clock p,m . 11'111 !Ml 111ur1 .... ltioot P'ltlCINCT J:l·•I ... CIPrll J M • • • mgs and Loan Association In ···-···· -,,, .. ,_ P\lnllttll to IU(~ t..t1t11l9". lht ...... """"the PCl!llnti oltcei ror !ht rtSP«llv• f>ltct. IC1!z R11fOem:e, .... ...... ... PlllECIHCT: IJ.tf1 I Clttt:, L L Oollld. Rto, 8 tr IP. '"" "'' ., ft I tilt 0 I I I 11 bt !ht l hi ! fl« .,. Polllrio Pl1ct. Dir Rtlldtoce, 2111 C1boll Clen., M Ptrlt1, Dem, lllllEC"tNCT· J).UO.! Los Angeles Durrng his SIX 0•1119t Cou11tv dtnl•nlCL l l'PIY"' ,., .... , ...... Pl"K llCll Shi II KH ff flt llltHCtor. J a Ktfr, 0-• Avt .... CINCT· Sl.t11-I llotllne Pl1c1, Htrbo<" Dty Sd lOO!, Sth Incl • • • M, Commlnlon E:J;elre~ of Altahllllc l•Y•••lll" COtlfrol for IH!t' cllllgrwllt! •11111 t~tl ll!f P9r1011• Jlldtt. L 5 ~""9· Dtm Mtroue !t Ve·-woth the assoc1at1on he r •·-" ,,-,-, 11'1' Trtnl•• of ,,.. •!Col'loflc btvtr· h..-e1 .. 1111r "'""" .,. 10POl"ted otlk••• c11r11, s c ICountt, R-111,pector, c G CtfPt11ltr, Otm Pallino Pl•ce, lo""'' ll15ldet1te, f lt \lit , " ...... w.. ... ,. ... I I I .,.. Jut!et, E 0 DIV, llllP Dllo" "IPKla•, H !I KMntY. RIP ;crved m '"· Santa Ana office Pullhtlttt! O••n11t CN •I OtllY ~net, '" llnnM tor llMtntesl tor lhtM pram of !ht •action !or l~tlr rtsllt(:t vt vol no Clerk • .t. L Morel•""· R10 Clerk, c A Mo;ill•llP Rt•, l"tPKto•, J F !lomH:r, RtP Juo;r, o o su,.,,erJ~nct ll:tP. un: • °"' 1 ••• IS. n. 1f10 1106·70 IN• •• hlllCIWI Pl"Klt1C11, •ncl llH!r slllU llOlt! ••Ill l!tt!lon .. ltl!CINCT n ·lOf·l Cltrll;, J c Ra1m1t1, Oem Jucklt, y J Me111v, llt• Clt•k, R. E Clt•kt, Flop, as an appraisor, and late 1n ON SALE GENEllAL, BONA FIDE •1111 mike rt turn llllreof In "" mtnntr Poltlt11 Pltce. Cooll. School, 14401 Wiiiow llltlCINCT· H.tn I Cieri!;, E c MacGllllY•IY, Ile• Clerk, M H, smr111. Rte • "'''' ,,.,,0 ''''' orovld.,, tw ltw Th• lollowlllt 11 I Ptrtltl L" '''''"'' .. ••o' T b h anag.' LEGAL NOTICE " ' ~ Polllno '"''' W"'"" S<"-'• -• W Cltrk, F. S Pre.fa", Rtfl, ' _.Q orrance as ranc m A",_ <lttlrl1'1 la 11rolt•I .,.,. 11!-UfMI llU or "" ••rlou1 pr1Cl11CIJ ol Ille 111111 ll'llPKIO!'. J M TIC~··· RtP Wll1on St. -· ,._ .... PlllC1NCT SJ.t1j,.1 Polll119 .. li ce. Coro111 llltl Mir Sdlatl, •to Prior lo his a ft1hation with o1 111c11 llc1"1thl m1, flit_ •+Y.ttUlffl. lu.f':•!YL~1G~V'~iJfoN -a"iAcir-· ~ ·JIKIH~ Y. 1:, e11n, Aeo. • tnSf>eclor, a J sankfll, Otm. Poll!ne Pl1ce, NtwPCrl Eltmentirv c1rn1tkln A~• L ( D II . ,._,.... -nl 11 111' offlct-lll'''fflf Oti>e"menl of PltlCINCT ri 1..._1 Clerk, 0 L Ro11, Oem Judpe. B F S!tvtn•Oll, Otm, Sellool, l~!h SI /Bllboe l"•P«IDt, A L. Trvt, lttp 1nco n , arna was In pro-c•1tTll"ICATE Of BUSINllJ o.rtohollt 11.ver111 con1•ol ot llv m111 to , • < •• ..,_ Cle•k, F M 11u11e1. Dtm Clerk, It M ThOmPto"· Rep '"'eKtor, M. J Cr•wfOrt! II•• J\ldge, M Reylt, Aeo rt t 'th T • lllt OfNrtme"t ot AlcthOllc 1tvetrg1 Pllllll"HI ltct, Mc Otirl ltt1 ... t nce, u .., Pltl!CtNCt lt-J121 <•-•, D < lo••• No ,,-, Moo. G R , ewrtn<e. Rto Cl1r~. fl A l(lrkwooc!, Oem, pe Y managemen Wt own Th nc1 '"11C~•= N"::',!' 1'19 1 _ C011trel nu o SffHI, s1cr1m11110 C11>l1tr1no L" Polll"9 Pltc•. N«tc" 1t11kltnct . t101 ,;·EciNCT-lt••i " Clerk. L L [{.b,..,, 01m Cl1Mc J R!clltrt!t0n, 1111,. & Country Realty 1 u 111 o ct• ' c C1Ulornl1 UIU. tl1llr111 tl"Clllnt!t tor dtft111 l1111>1ctor, C, J McCOllrl, Dtm Btrmut!1 Or 0,,,,., '''''' '' Joo<"I-C•oo<" Ho,I, Clftk, y N Runt U, Rtp llllECINCT SJ ll2 I ""<tint• bu1lnt11 ti P 0 80l! 13'2 CD1t1 .. •-•••-'' ,,. ''" 0 __ ,_ ''' -J11t!e1, C A, Ftrmtr. Orm, lnoo-•oo. ' J "•-· Do-" ""' ,. n Pol!I~ ''''' H bo V' $ M < 111 ..... jh• II 1111 !! -•¥ ...,.. ..... ~ ·---'" ""' "' , ... D•o-• .,, .. lt!CINCT• IJ.t17-I ""' • 1r r tW tllool, too eu, 1 • u • ......,r ,,.. c O<JI rm Lk:tlltet! tor tht ltlt of •lcol\oll( Cltrk, C II ~llYfr, O•m Jut!;t, e fl Wfllon, Ree . .., " t I Goktenrccl Avt LEGAL NOTICE "'""of COAST DIS1ftlAUTOll5 1fl0 11\tl btvtrlill Tht form of vtdflcillon mt'I' Cltrk, M J Prcu•t, Dem Cltrk, B. 0 Wright. At11, Jnspec!Of", T T Schocltv, Rell, Pol Int Plitt, Holme' flut, 011 ce. 213 lnir>rclor, J H McDonntll, Jl:ltll, U ld ilrm 11 conlPOled ol Ille tollowl,., Oo ,.,,, ... ,,_ 0,0 '''''' • ,~-tiltlCtNCT J:l lti-1 ,,,-0 l Wo•• D•-JuCgt, P S Johnoon, Dtm, 61st St J•'"" N C $ """-I I II 1111 I of ,,.,., """ " "" '" ... Clt rk ' J ,.,, •• _,,, R-ln1~tor, D C Jcl'rn111", Rt11. .....tt. llnlOtl, Rt11 .. )M17 perton, MIM • U 1 I let Otpirtm"'t Polll"' Pleet, Alv1ret Rt.,,lnce, 111•1 ,lllCINCT• )2·lU 1 , •n•~ , ·~ Ju09f, S W G•llto, R!O Cttrl<, M I( Gttrlct , lltp CEllTll"l(ATI 01" IUSINUS. , .. ~MCI b llF~llowt IC.twtl HUNGlllY TIGElt, IN( CtPltlrino Ln '0!111111 Pt1ce, Et!lson Hl1h kllool, I I.QI Cieri<, E C McT1p111, Rtp Cletk, J L JM"'°" No Ptrlw Clerk, W A, MVtf1, lttp, f1CTITIOUS l'IAMI ~ w ~· ltJS Pli er. Publllket! °''"" Cout OtllY ~llot, lrupecfOr, J L. Al¥1r1r. Dtm Mag""ll• Avt .. ltlECINCT S1"41·1 Cltrl<, p L Erlct1on. Otrn Plli!CIN(T· U-JSJ.I TIH! uncltrtluntll dou ctttltv ht IS co.,. ~:K ~~70C•t Oct 1 \tJO ll..IJ.10 Judet M M Sml!h. llt11, lnspectcr. D Lt~ln, Olm Pollln• Pl1ce. P1ul1rfno s,tioa~ Joto W lllllCINCT S).H0-1 ,aut1111 Pltct, Elllllt Rtilotnce 1t3' ,.0rl nuctl119 t butlnt111 ti II 0 lo~ llW s.... Clerk, M Si>t"Cer, RH Jut!gf, M E Rlck1t!1, Drm P1ul1rlno Avt ,olllno PllCf, Mirin1t1 Sdllol, l!~ Albtl"ll Pt ' It ot.111, C1ll+otnl1, ul'ICll• 11>11 llctlllout JMn W Fllt!et Ctel"lc , 8 N Ctt'I' lttO, Cltrk, 5 5 Helle"bel"' It.IP ln101Ctor, I M. H1Jtk lt.tll Mt•l"I" Or lnsP«tor, H M Ethtll II.fir, 11,,., "'mt" al S ~ R Trucklll9, Ind' 11111 51111 °" Cilltort1ll OrlJ!tl COllnl• LEGAL NOTICE Plll!CINCT· n 1t1·1 Clerk, s' 5 Gotllltb, It,,, Jud!Jt, Y H 8rown. lltP 1"1~. T R MtnlltnhJll Oem Judte, F. J Sl1Ph1n, lllH ttkl lorl'rl 11 ~5"' of llwl "'llowll'll On Sfltl )0, 1'11(1, btlOft mt, 1 Nott'"' Polllno lllect C1..,nltrt lJ"oon &ut 01• PllllCINCT· J:Ji,11•1 Cltfk, J l omllt1, Dtm Judit. M L l rli lil, Dern Clerk. D C $!1p1W111 Rtp, ...,111n, wllcit nt,,.,. In 11111 1t1CJ PllCt of :::.:~cNI:~" J= ~Of' 1'~~!1 S~~"~;~":I~ NOT1CI TD c1t•OIT01tl 01" flct, tXI! .t.!11n1t Avt Polllrit Pr1c1 E1ll1• Sdlool. Htl l1nn!nt Cltr!I, M A Brown, Otm Cler•. J I( J•ckson, Rep C~tt:. 5 Y l hlvtr, Atp, rttkltnct 1111 iollow1 bt lilt Pl•MHI wt.cs~"'"'' Is iull!crlbtd BULK TllA,.,$1t•1t ANO 1;~::0;;, !t, "i:rlon~"?i':'m l"s11edor, M R l1lch ltte, PltlCIHCT. SJ"'42·1 Clerk, J y MtAltet, P:eo, PltECINCT• U•U)..J S1m11tl J. J-s ,.0, S•~·· Ant. to,~, wlllllll 1 .. 11rum111t 111111 tCkllOWlftlt NDTtCI 01" Jud1t, F c a11ktsl1v. RtD Po!llM PIK,, l(!llybrookt Stllool, llU .. ltllCINCT. SM&l I Polling Plitt, t-tuu lltttlllfnct Tfn Port Col11 Meu Old hi extcutt<:J lllt llolmt-HITENOED TltANSl"I• 01" Ctel"lc, H M Ptl!oll!il, Rep Cl~rk. F L Moa•hou•t, Olm l(lllvbrookt L" Pol!111t Platt Newriorl Shortt CtubhOlllt, Albans Pl ' Otltd 51111, 21. JtJll !OFFICIAL IEAL) llQUOlt LICENSI OI: L1c•1u•s ~:::c.1~c~'""J:'1~1.~"'" c,',",'c '"''' fl~'."',,', RIP t .. spector, J R N•umever, Dtl'I 511 Clnll SI l"•H~. c J Hun, ll;op, Stmutl J JC>lltt Mtrv I( Hen,., kOTlCE u 11EllE&Y Gl\ll!!N lo .... p m PL c ' u "'" Bui Of-I t ~·.. Jl/Clff, J D E11tlllh. O.m l1U1ttclcr. I MIMr. Rfp J1n101, c. T, C11~, llH l 11te of Ctl!torn•t Ort"Ot C"'"'' Notirv Pub!lc Cthlcrnit C•Mltots el JOHH GOlllSl(I 1nd !SABEL :let"' 1,,,"':11,:,:e;~-:• " Polll119 Plt tt . Wllll•m D Li mb Sdtool, Citric, 0. L Ge'""'' 11:10 J""9f, I J Heo<lrlc~•""· RH Ctttk, F L G1r111111, Rtll On $ePI 23, Ul'O, btlort mt, I Nc!1rv Prln<IPtl Oltlct In GORSKI, 5oc:lt l Securltv No, 1tf.1o-.f)I, ' 10251 Ygr~town Clerk, C p Mtrtor., 11"10 Clerk, H R M<Nllr, Orm C!rrk, 1 M Jud'°"' RH P ul>tlC I" tllll tor Mllll Stilt, ptr1o<1n11lv Otlf>ltl Count, frlnilrt0< Int! L!ct"lff, wll<IM WJlf\l!U l"SPICIDr, fl • Albllllgfr, RtP !"10Klar, N L l(oli.on, Clem, PllECINCT n+i>I (!('rt.. M Skilling, 11111 PAULA.IND e0111red StmUtl J J0'1ff k-lo mt It M• Commllslon E•Plru '"""" Jt 29(;1 W, (Dils! Hlt hWIV, In the Judge, 8 A MOHi", Dini, JUllOt W Wlll!1ms, R•p Poll!nt Pltct. Kt!l1 Rt1ldtn« 3141 P'ltlCINCT· JJ·Olt I PlllCIN(t 54"'1•1 be 1111 Pfl"IOll wl>olt "'"'' 11 111bscrlbtcl Nov 2, 1,n Cltv of Ntw0orl INth COll"tv ol Ortnee CleMc, l F, Bltl!Y, Dtl'rl Clerk, R J Bltckburn, Dtm Ye11owllo.,.. Orl¥e POll!np P!Kf, Swt ln lteillltnct. 312 Potllnp Pttct, Unlvt t1l!y Mllllodlll lo 1119 .... !Ill" lntMu""tll tncl t <kncwledt-llubhlhed O;lntl C°'JI OeUT Pilot, S!eft of C1Ui..."l1 t2'60, tt>tt t bulk ~~-~l~C~· s,;~~~·1 Dtm. Clttk, K L CtmOIPM, 0tm l"IPICIOf", H R ICIM, It.,,, Aoalen1 AW C~u•c~, !ICU Culver Dr H ht t•ecultcl llH! um• oc1 1 • u n 1'70 1•10 1rintft• I! 1bou1 to bf m•df 10 P1t•CtNCT· n m1 Jud•r, J J K111,, llt• lt1sHclar, L IA (h1mbet1, Otm hitffCIOf". M.. E wuson, 11.11 !OFFICIAL SEAL) ' ' ' MA.TINS COLLINS, tNC , 1 Ct!ltorn1t Pol!111t Pltct, Lucl1M llHldt nct , 100.2 ,olllne F'l1c1, Ar1v1lo1 School, 1Htt Ltl• Cltrk. M, M, D1t1nll, llff Jl/OOt, F. w sio.o.r, 11111> JUlltlt, H E Muir, Rto Mirr I( Htnrv, COfllOl"ltlOll SOCltl SeoJdlY No 'SlJ"°'I, Btv••lv Or lno!on Ln Clerk !I J WMl\1111, Rf'P. Cll!rk, C A Ho;i1ton, Rep Cltrk, K. e N11uur, Dtlll Nolt ... Publlc-Ctlltoftl•I LEGAL NOTICE Tr1n1ltr1t 11111 l11lendet! Tr'"'~'" l"•PKlor. s M L11cl1n!, Clem, ln1P1Ctll•, l F Stont Dim llllECINCT n-·I Clerk M " 5wtl", R•o CltrW, c A WllJo" RIP Prlndot l Oltlcr lt1 wl'lost butl""'I ..sct••H 11 11101 Mtrlne,t t::::·::; J oy, Ille:, Jud!lt , V I 5mlt~, Otm Polllnp P!1c1, Pornofl<I 1choa1, 10'1 .. lllCINCT. U..._,,.1 llltECINCT• Joi-Oil I Ort ntt Coun!Y p illll Otlvl I" Ille (llY of NtWIH!tl !ltt(ft < ' S F fl :J"1'• N ••, Clftk R A DtY•I Rf'P Pomont A~e Pelllnt Pltct, l lbol r1 llHldenct , 11a. Potllrt11 Pltct , U"lv1,11ty Mtihod!al MY C""""ls110n E~plrfl c .... ni:, of Ortntt Sti tt ot C1Utom1t ,:':ciflic; ' .,."· o ••IY Clerk. N l . Fl1~•1•n. RH l1>10Ktor, '°' 0 fltrsc:n, Dtm, Otvon Ln Churcn, 1101 (ulvtr a.-Nov JC, Ifft (l"lltTIPlCATI o,-aUSINllS tJ660 ' ' lf·I 1 PlllCllKT· 11·"1 I JuOClt , 0 M Htwtll, Otm ln•Plcfor, N A Fullen, R.tP l"IDl!CfOf, M W !llli, Riii 1'1>bU1lled 0•tll9t C11<11I D1llr Polo! "ICTITIOUS NAMI Tiit IFl!PlrfY It t!eKrlbed I" oenerll 11 Pollit.e F'lttt . P1rk \/lfW School, 1 .... 6 .. Oll!f\O Pllce, Lt81rll kl'IOOI, :O•Jt Clt rk, H B Cr11n<lt!an, II""' Jlld11, J IC. Tibf!!P11, lloo, Ju<tge, R M Ferrar, lltp S11! 1.1, Oct I, L IS, 1'10 HU 1G Tht 11ndertl1necl !Iott ttrll!Y l>t It COii-All itoc:k I" lrt ell t!.wturtl, Mlll°"'l"I lflO Tu~lllll L" C•almtr Ln Cltrk, N 8 l1ck, Dim Cltrk J /I, Diemer, Rte Clttk, D Fry, Dern ----..,..,,-,-7 -,,:-:-=-::::----·1t!uctl1111 t buJltllU •I 2'0t Clllt Dt , tOOCI wtll cl 1 ctr1lln rtllll IJClllOf lnll>Klor, MG Futto" R!I llllDKIOr, P, A, Dlu•htnbtutft ltt l Pltl!(,LNCT UtOI Clt tk J 8 Rtlbltlton, llteP Cltrk, KP. 1Ct1ser, Rto LEGAL NOTICE NfWPOfl fltKll. Clllfoml1. ul'lller tht rte-M lllfll know" fl l'+tWl>Of1 Lie! ...... •1'111 JUdtt, p J, Honrit!I. Dem, Jl/091, 0 E Feeney, Rerr PoUl!!I Plt(to Mt!hlMllll C1!11rc~. 1101 .. lllCINCT : U-ltl-1 PlllCINCT Mu 1 1111..... !!rm "'"'' Pl MILtTAll'I' loctllll •• 2''4 w Cctll HlghWtv. In "" Clerk, s G flulllt•, 11•° Cl•••· I M Ol1•e, Ill•• ltkff SI POHi"• .. l•ct. ICllOtl Rn!t!tlll:t, 210 lrl1 .. 0111.,. Plt(t, Ctm11btU llt1llll•-· ,,,, ---c.c,:,:,:,:,c:,:,c:,:,:,:.:,:,:,:,:,:----1M.t.RtcETING 1ElllUICE Ind 11\tl Mkf Cltv ol NIWllOl'I llltl'I. COOi""' cl Ort""' Cieri<, M J Rubio Rtt Clt rl<. R. ICthn, Orm hllOK!Or, \I 1 M!ll1t. llttp. IMIPfC!pr, 8 J Gtfllll. Ret> PtgtlU'J '""' flrm 11 cam-ed ol "'"'loliaWI"• P••ton. ' Pll"ICINCT n .-.1 ..... Vl•W ,..,, • ••••••• ••• ""-• J ,, •• , •• ' su .. •1110• COUllT o• THI: w•·-· ....... ,In 1\111 end ltltct ol r•tlt!fMI Sttlt DI C1llloml1, •nd ltl lll er Ill• .. olllno Pllcf, w T Ntw!1~ll I CllOcl 1111 ,,,,,,, ...... , ' ..... ............ OR ' D "IPK"lor, M " C•m•btll, ••• STATI OP CALIPOlllNIA '0• ·-llo fellowln11 11c-llt bev~•tat LlctnH lor DolP1il" '' Clt rl<, S, M Woro1n, 0trn Cltrk, D M Don1lt!1GI\, Rte, Judge, C E O:i mpbtll, ~IP. ' 1• 1' Fo Wt 0. ll(tf\Mtl• oft ttll 11.,...11 Numbl• n· 1 ·-· 0 I 0 , '' Polll11t Pl1c1, Cr111t ll ult!tMf, Ull Cl,,k, fl J McKlm, Otm. Clerk, W L BollH•tni; Dem Clttll, F. s o·~n._, Dem, THI COUNT'!' 0" OltANOI JOh" ,., Wtllfr, 2tce Cliff , le 1• loc ttd I "~ ' 119Wt • Otm lttt!ltllllll Or P•IEClltCT• JJ .... •1 PlllCl,.,CT JJ,.&U.1 Clttk, A N Wlmtr AtP NI, A .. lJll Nt-rt Ill(~. C1lll01nlt, ~~W~ 1~1gtiW:~""N=-.•s..:i. JU<l!lf, W. J NiYIO!', 11.. lnllleC!ot. M, j Crer1t Dom. PoUlnt P ll(t, Ptlllt lltnldtlOCt, 21:W Polll,., Pl1C1, SdirUrT1Pl ll.t11dt11C&, st llltlCIHCT: JC•lHI • Elttlt of CECIL f SHOOK DtCtlHt! OtlH Septtmbtf" JO, lt7t 4 °"1 Cltn. J K ae,.Mn, Otm JWft, F ti Shlll!tv, Olm Mlplt SI fltlbol Covtt PelUne .. lact , ''' v~-,,-,, ,,., N011CIE I~ HE II EBY GIVEN IO 11'19 Jort" F Wtlltr lor !tit ertm!Ht ICICflt<:J 11 l'U W Clerk A R Ntlll"ll• Oem Ctrrk D , J Sht11I R" tntHClor. M. e Wlllltm1, Oem l"1Plcfor, ... M Sdlrumpf ltt1 Dl'<•ood Do "" •--tredllof"t o1 11'19 tbovt ntmtCI dec11Cl1t11! Sllll of C1t!lornlt, Or1n1e C01111lv Cot1t Hl.,_w1v, lt1 tht CltY ot N-•I .. ltlCINCT ft..lft I Cltrl( T Towle, Otm ' JUll D E p t II o J "9 E c Rl'lll R fl'lll tit ,.,_ ~ ... 1 ... cltlml •••IMl lh• 011 SHI JO, 10'0 bt!Dft mt •• Nl)ftfY INCi\, c ....... 111 et Or•n.. ~, ... ol , ... 1'11111119 Pl~, Sprint View •cllool, , ... , llfll(IN(Tt Sl-t$fl.I Cl•~~· A K1fl0:1:.: .::::· ,r, .. ~· a .' p Sdw~":' Aep~· ~".::o':.'0.:' !: g.~~1.1 .. ~"'.· ltkl lllteltllltfll ltt rt"'ulred lo fllr ll'ltm. .. ub!k In •nd tor Hkf 51tlt, 111'11'11\IW llonilt Ttutlv Ln f'olllng Pltce, Un!vt rtltv F1ftstt1iorl, Cltrll;, l Gtudt"ll, lttt Clel"lc, IE M, lewis, 1110 (ltfk, C z Tui, RI!>...,,.., wllfl 11'11 ntt;ttll'"' VOUClll'1, I~ Ille ollkl PHtrM Jol!fl F WeUtr lr.flOWn It mt lo Thi! IM t ntOlllll of IUttl\111 l rkt or l"N«ler, I J S1u..C.r' Ne "•rlY 190(0 lH 51 PltlCINCT• S2.tll I P'll•CIN(T• .,_...., CIUk, F Crtnt, De1t1, .i !hi (ltrll of lltt •bow• entlllttl C-'• or bt Ille Plrton wl'H>le n1me 11 sutltcrlbet! CONldlr1llon '" tanl'ltcliOn wllft tll4 Jiit!"' M I( Mur.-1ml D-tnu>Ktor, E N (tnlilf, ll~P Polllnt ''""'· Mtlt V1tt!t Scl'lteJ, nto N. ,.,in,.. Phlct. Sllllotr No. s FlrtUfllort, ltltlCINCTi JC·2tl·I ID pr111t1! !hen\, wll~ IM ntcfllt f'I' lo 1111 wllnl" l"llfllmf<ll tl'lt! ICt.ntWltdt• lftntlt• O! H id lktnlt 4or llClf'IU~l •rid Clrrk, J L SwtnllJfl, 1111 Jllt!lt , L A, Wtt1~. R" Mest VtrcM Dr ftll .. 10 Mtrltolt! AW! P'ot!I Pl VIVCl\t,., to ltlt Undt•tltnttl II 4JCI ltnlll et! ht t>tcUllllll lilt 11mt ltl~ bulllllH l"C!Ullln1 "" ttllmtll'lll 1"· Cit••, A I lt!ll1"111, ll11 C!tfll;, C. O Altbt! lttP l"IJ>KIM, C 8 SllYtrll, Itel' l"tPIClor, 11 A. H!llmt" ·~~ "IF '°"' Allmtn ll!l~I"" t1t.H St,...!, N,...._, l!.t•tft, Ct lltor,.11 t26't, l$EAL) vo"torv 11 IM '11m of 186.SOOOO, whlc.h ,1taCtNCT1 JtJl)..I Clt •k E M flr1ckrll, Dtm J\l<lg.e_, N J Glbbt, ltep JUllOt. H, 9 Sc1tw1rtr, R"' Quee"1 Wrttllt WY • -ldl 11 ltv ~llr;t of butlftttl ol llH' ll•bt H C1nttll, i;on1hl1 ol !tit lol-l11t. llolfl"g Phw:t . CIHlf Scllool, tll1 "lllCJNCT 11-Ml-1 Cl•''• J. M Wv•"· Olm Cltrll, H G Kusttr, Rtp tnapector, II, N Allmt"' It••· vllllt'1lt>Nll 1" ell m1lt..-1 ""'lnltlf II "'"'"' Po••· C.i lltorn\1 C•ll• o1 1s,q ,to, s.u.oceoo nott 11 bt L••dlwoolll or '"'"" .,,,,, • .,.,.,. ,,•-•. -1• <•-k , , ' Jlldgt , v. V, llobtnvtt, Olm. _1 ..-'""' "' Cit•-· 1 A Ntttel, ll11. ,~, L 11t, ••· Cltrl<, P. 11 N«Mt. O•o tilt ""''" of lilld 111tcm 111, ..,, .. " foll• P'rlncl1ttl Offkt '" rtplKllll wjllt Cttlt orltr " CIOW Of ft" lrtU•teler, E. "· Oollll1n. °"" T111!111 Av• ... IClllCT· n•s)..I ... ECIHCT· ,,. .. ,,, c-' mot1Hls t lttr ll'lt 11•11 1111blk t!lon el 11111 Ort"'• COllfltv cf-. lt1Clllclln1 In"'""''"' of 1toell hi JUClff, 0 J . DD111!111. Dim t1110Kl0<, L V Ulldltbtuttl. llH llolHn• Pl1ct. Eillnc:I• H,.h kllool, 2ln Polllnt Pleet H-POl'f IHl111ts kfloeL ,...., titlltr, 11:111. notice. My Comml11to<1 E•olrt1 ""''In IDIH"Plll:"lllle '""""'"'of 1'15,000.CO. Cltfll, o . E ~H!t, No ••• ,... Jlldtt. fl, Eby, Ile• PllCl!'lll• Av• lOO E 1$111 SI PlllCtNCt. Jol-ll .. l O.t..:f SttNlnlbt• 11, lfl'O 51'Pl. IC. "" 11.saa Qlh to bt 4-llflll 12J.C:OOOO Cll'rk, M IE Colll"lworl~. OIM , •• , ... s. I( AN!trton Dtm. ln1~«tor. N, I(, FtHt•ll,.,, Dem ln1oector, L, 0 MCMIJl~n ••• "0~~~~ llltct, Vtl$01 ltHkff!ICt. 411( Fftldl H 5~ !.•IJCUlOf ,ullllslltCI 0•1 ..... C091! 011tv P'llcl, btl"' "°'' otc11rl0 b, HCVtlt~ ll!rltflWl'I Plll:CtNCT: ft>tH•l Cl•r• E I Ptlttlltr, Rto JllClfll, It A, to1_1, lltP Jl>Clttt, 5 c; Norm111, Rtl lnJPl(;lor, !I J l•-·o•• o-, -~~J::W:;'z":'~lt ultd 11, lllf, Tttntltnl'" wltti111 lhftt Vt•rt W11UWr1 Ln "olll11• .. ltct. lt0tlfn'loor 8111 Oii~. Cltt-. E, L .. kl\t, Dlln. Clttt:. J I' Gtvncr, Otm Clttll, p J F011rl'lrt, Otm, 1111 •• ,, 10 l•r •• ·-" the IMlltcfo<, E M Gtslr.I"'· llt• 1•41 !It"• Stet llt! .... CINCT S1-til-1 11•1c1NCT: u..&-1 Cl1'1t, H F. ltll, .... • ol 1114' w111 °"th<" --+°':':":'~·~·~·~·~"~·~·~·~·~~~~~;';";•;n~~'~"~'""~~'~"'~''~-E~M~m~tt~•~'"~'~"~'"~"~'~'~"~'~!nt ~t•ce. 01.-I"• Rtslllfenc:e. ltJn PlllCINCt: SI ut-1 Cl••-· w P 8~thln111 •• ,. Ctert.:, M fl H11bbell, Aerr. J..O.t, L. M. oiim:~n;~ ... ~ ~J...L r.&I""'1 Dtm. Pllltlnt l ltct. JohnSOll 1t11lllHICt, 7'01 tnaY•• , ....,,.,., ... di, Cttif9irlllt ftul T!>lll 11 ht• b.tn '''"" ~~ ullll C ;v:-N J.X:ihn:l'ee Jl!CIG'f J • ll Nl'rl, t• ll•l•t•c r. PlllC ----------T•h jn .. I ~ •-.Jll&tl Ileen-tM t"ltfttltlll tt1ntr.t"tt 11 , .. C1tr1<, T. l Vl~lut Otm Cterll, D. K Dunc111, No Pt•IY l"IPl<IOf, G L CtnrHHI R~• 1,,_1vr. M Hltluch, It•• INCT: Sl-111.)-1 ,.__,...fir htc•lw ClltTll"ICATI! 0 .. B llN.1$. iulrtd 11'1' Ste ''°I' of 1111 l u•I""' •"Ill PltlCtNCT 1 n ,1tJ.I (It•-J M. HeM!,...t•td. Drm Ju6tf, G. 5.. Chlllmtll, o.,., Ju<ttt. a 0 Joil11uon, Re, P'olll119 Pltfl, Sotlcllll Mollrlt Ptrk ...... llhtd °''"" '°'" Ol!lr Piiot P!CTITIOUS NA I ... olHllllll Ctot 11\tl 1111 (-\dl<"tllon P'olJ/tte 1111ce. II •• Wllt!IDW SCl\OCll. •1•1 COit.ii MllA Clttk. L A, Oftlltl1, o.r.. Citrt;, G H lltln. 0'"1, I CIUbhoutt, lt'O w lf!ll St Wl. ,., Oct I, •• JS, ltl'O 11 .. 10 ,,.. uncle••ltntcr ... Cl It'!' llltv 1r1 IOI" ~ l•-ft• ol 11\(t bvllntn 11111 ''°""' o~ lltlCINCT1 n....,., Cltrll J J Ll!tlt It t i.r11;. N o ......... ""' "lllt<IM, I, o . Alldt.-.on. ... LEGAL NOTICE t-ucllM e butlnt•• ., 19012 Hollr lr11111l~r Gf lillll lleoonll 1, IO lit ••kf lll'IJY l"•ltCto•. I L Ellelll•mm~r •••• Po!llno Pttct Slltlon No l Flrt1t1tl0rl, .... c • .tc11 u..U..1" •lll:CIN(T: .,....., ~r:::.· v~ t · ~. ••· Jtr .. I, Hun!111tlo11 fl .. dl. Ctlllorn!t , tfltr 111111 1rt"91t• ftt• bet" tllt•OYlllll 11'1' CJudt•1 0 l-Diii•"· llN 111 ltoc:~t1l1r St. Ptl!!"-~!l(t, Monlt Vlitt School. )fO PoUl"9 .. It«, 'J'frfLJ!t lttll!Mn(.f, S~) Cll!rk, y •vl'rlblt Dt1'I ____ .,::,_"-i:;;;;;;.-------IW>ll•r 1111 flclllklul II•"' "'"" of 111111 OrNrll'l'ltftl of AkOllO!IC kvtrtt• ttl1(, J. ft ICuU•, Dtm l~IHtlOI', 0 11 lrew" Olm MOllll Vllll Avt "lllleno" Ave P•EC!NC1" SS.Iii ,.....,., ITElLC:tltA'T •11111 ""' ttlt llf"fn 11 °""' (onlrtl Clerk, I" •rt111n1, Dim. J111Jo1. C. IC, Cov~ul! llM lnSHctor, E I( Strvtl, ttep, 1111pector, S M flue\', Ottn, II' I c•lTll"ICATI °' BU'llMl'S. --ol His lollowltte ""0"'· Wflolt' '~·· • ... 1 .. lrtnllff •1111 .u1,......,., If PlllCIHCT· JI.IN-I Clffk. L, Ktltf, llff, -1111111. Ill M. Wotltr, lt8. Judt1. J G M.tr1lt19, 1111. l/fWI " .., M(", 1 .. 111.s et lht l!lt(tleri lllCTlf10U1 f(.t.MI """"\11 11111 .... •ltcH,,, rtlkltnn Ill 11\!1 ... ,.. .. 141 t19Ck I" "-*· l!tnurl'l. .. olllnt !IS.ct. N"'"'1fl'l!Otl •• , Clullntux, c1.,1;, 0 c..--. tltm. Cltrk .... It, 11Hlll. 11.... Cltnr, L E Hid!. ltep Cilllt. ""'' .... n bt NI Ntl"'9 OJl.<t Nit T11t \lftllltft .. ntd "°" Cf'F"lll'I' lie I• t-Ht~,, ltoctt. Int) Stnll Luot:le, -INMlll 1/ld food wm OI 11111 Wll-111" Holllul'll °'"· .. lllCIN(Tr n.-...1 c1..-.. J c. Ku ..... ,, "•• CllM!, J A Ktlltr, •to. 11111 ,,.t<lncl, OU1llrttd ...,,,,..•I'll"""' .tVc!IN 1 llvthwtl 11 7J4l W1rrw.r, Hu,.. l'o.inllln Vtllf,, Ct Llno1 Whll"t'' wHI Ot mtlllt, tnlll Ill« ct11111•rtliorl lt11HC1or, 0, 0 S1r11011, Dt:111 .. elU"t Plt tt. Dtl1vft1111 lltttldtfH;L •11 .. ll&CIN(fi Sl•lf·I ll-ICINCT1 1,..,..1 IW lblerrt VOlt'f IMllet, Of" ~ et !ti. •1n1IOll llldll C1llPor"nlt , llMtr 1"' !~ 11•1 ..... ,, All't, Mllllw•v Cltf, Ct ""'"O" totttlltr wl!ft lfll ~kllttlloll Ju<tff, M A At1tho•ot 111•, LtnwOOCI Or .. o1Un11 .. IKt. Whlllll r Scilool, llOO Whit-PO!llllf P!ICt, Smlll! ftt1kltll(I, 1Xll offl(,t OI' !tit ltEOllTllAll OF VOTOllJ:S T 11111 lltfll llllftt 9f ~nlltHlonll Avni Ket111tllt '#hlll'll'T 1116 5 Strtcll.lti., 191" 11'11 h"tlllllr t llll ttlltlll'rlt nl ot Ille Clefll., !, M ROWl•M, lltt lllM!t ctor, F. J Vt" l~'""' t;1D tiff AYf l!lltllt Lii 111'1 llCllon etv, C)!llH .... 11111 1114 fl,,., k ~ Ill II ... lttcl'I, Ct. It....-Wll"""1 l!Orl'lt,. lk'tM' ,., llcet1ttt) fl NI M (lrrk, L, M Blh.,, RH Jutllt, M M, Brl/t'nffl 0.m '"-tor, T, I Ftllon, o.m, l"NKIOf, M, S. 0..Nn, fl:Jo. ..ltlCINCTr J)..16.J·I 1'111' _..,....,.,. ~ .,,_ -In l\IM '"1 Gltotofr P't,. llttlonM •MCh, Ct. C°"'\lf!HT\ll'llll ti! pr ilttr 1111 !111 llllY et "ltlCINCT1 1Wt7·1 Cltrll, M. J, 01 lln. Otm.. JIJdM, M, S, Cant1ttlll'llf'n, llt1 ~111111111 .. ltU. WOfllltnt lltlkltrict. \OSJ •lid "-., reilM'l'ICt •••• felltWI Dtltf Jttf, "· 10• Nov1tnlltr. lt10. ., "'"' tK ...... """" .. oMltte P'!1<t. tltlnlllle!O" CDnllM~lll Clerk. D A Oow111. "'"'· Jllllftt, M I Ct-•• ,, Cttrll, M. 0 , .l=r1,..., .... w. Wll11111 Ntllr!Pf JI Tldt. !tU1 llGdtrldi: Ln,. flt.r11trt ltOOt m'"t of llt'* ot Amtrki NT.SA, ii U.. Cll*llM.l.st, lMO"I Sroolllt>"ll it PlllCINCTi tHtS-1 Cltrtl, K. ... Wld'lworl~. fttP Clerk, L A lmllll Dtfll \n'"'tor, 0, & T1y11<'", Dim. HllMi...tofl 1(1\, c11 • .,... Llllllt Wllttnt, VII l.lt!o. I" "" CllY "' N~rl k•cll· ln1P1Clcr. c. M Wttt11, •r• Polll.... PIKt, Ill••" 11: .. 11111nQ 101 Clilrk • J AP"C11111111, Oem. ll1t•C•NCT: IJ.ftl•I Jucrtt. IE, N, Jon"'°"' Dtl'rl. DllW ... , 1&, 1'1t K"'"'"'·Wllllflff (.ourilf ol Ort""" Sllll of C•Ut..rnlt. Ju-. K. E. W1 lter, llt~t "•lmtt it PllCIHCTr fl-ISM P'o!l!n1 lllt«, ~tllt lttJLOtno;t, Jll El'trto Cllfl!, V II JOltnton, 0tm ... .., It, Tlttt lt."91" Wiii,,,., -lllltd ltltl ll'lt Owe~ of AICOhtlk: Clerll, M. e Brewn. 0,,.,,., lll!Mdtr, v M PlletJtnl, ftH Pollltte Pleet, Cltv Htll, 77 F1lr Or 11'11 Ctn'l'on Riii Cl,rlt, J G. ArblN>, Dern ~flfl If CMtftfnlt, Sltft ol t 11llorn1t, Or1t111 C-l'l'l 1..,., ... , (Olltl'el hit .,,.......... ..Id Cltfll, " M, MOtl.Nlfn. 0tm Judlf, I , .t. Wthll, Dtm lf"llPklor, I . J Hlltllf, ""°• lllJllKtOr, I C, ,,.._, llf"t, Nol~ II f.urthtr •1"'" 11111 t111 btltoti ~llH C-'Yi Ofl Stl>ttnlll>tr 1f, ltll lltlort -.. t lrt'llltr ol Ul<f lk"''' llltlCINCT: JtolD-1 Clerk. I, I Wiit!-. DM1. Jlldft, ! P' Tlrltllll. OM\ Juott, I!!, N, llllllft, lltt.. t11t In 11\!1 H11t1t11!ftol\ IHCll 1trteintt. On StPttmw J,, 1t.10, a.tort mt, t Nott'"' PllOOt I" 11111 fer 'tlllll St tit, OtNllll '"'ttmblr 1't lf10, 1101111'1 lllac:t, Ltwlt ~ttllll_, '°"1 Ctt•k. A Htl'fll,.., Otm ~:::: ~ ::., ~;=.i:t.:" ,".'"-' HM. w"',"',',',.· II~ IPlllll bt Ctufllld ti Jiit °""'"''"' Ntl.,., P\IMlc 111 -"" flf' 111111 Slttf, Wtontlly 1-tlll 11tll>tfl Rcclt, Llnlll1 """'lltlHKOlllNi INC Su1t1mtrll1!1 Or. ,IRCINC"Tt ,.,....., '"' • , , ......--.•, Bvtllllfll, 7Jtl H•l1 Awf"lw, H11t1!lnt1" .._1~ tNH•tlll tw.lnwf ti. 11ckt Whttr>ty, KtMtlll WhlffW'f •Fllll ltMtl' 1 Cilfft'fllll c..-...-.. tlO" 1 .. 1-!or, M V. Lewi" Ito Pttll"t Plitt . llttthtr tfiiltt"U, '°° PltlCINCTt ,,.... ' PllCIN(Ti 11..,,_I INCll. 1111111111 e.111 I" lllf Cotti Mt1I ~ NI "" NI 9f; lflt ..,..... WflOl.t WhltlltY k-II nM NI bl tllt ,.,._, O..rltt A l1IU~eth Juett,, i.-M Tlmfft, Otm M1tnot11 $1, .. 11r1u1"1 lo WC \4UO.t of lttt Eltctlen "ollltlt llllCOl, Mtlllod•ll CIWrtll. Its ff~ ltecll. tl'lll lll ... r Vl'llw "'KIM,; -h .,._,.,_ ,. ttrrl WiPllltlll lrto Wl'IOM ""'"'" 1rt wt>wrRIH to lflf' wlttrrl!I i•t Mr.rt.. IFllll 1 ~ I 1 ,. d I f Cltrll. IE , D kl!~ ltM '"'"'°""'' a J lttd'ltf, lttfl c.cJt. llitn WIM bt "° IO!llnt ettct """ Altlt Aft. 111111 ~ llOllr\19111 ti 11>11 Ftlrl 1"1'11nlllt .._,.., llll ~ltlllffil ... t•KlllW lllllfnlmt'llt 11111 IU"nowl ....... tlWJ to... Trt llltrlll Cltrk, M, I , lllOllfth. ltt1. J\lllft. L A Wt1Hltrw1,, ~ tllll l fKlfltl, Ouollllll'd VO!tft 111\111 .., .. l1U111Ctor, II. C.. C,_IOI!-, Otm p.,.111on, • Ptlr Ottvt, Ct1ll Mett ll"t t4fl"!f .-ntttlll 11'11 U1"11!, 00!' P-ICtNCT: D-Ul•I C!tfk. 11 G, lfittni.", llN 11¥ t l>lt<ll vott r Mtltt, tf ~ II 11>11 )UOlt_. M. A, Ortm11, lltl !11ltott C.sl II\ ""' lltw vi.w 1,,d 10-..-icrAL SEAL) (O"ICIAL llM.I 4~~~ kt.. "°"I"' .. 1.w . Lrwt1 ltnll llflC-6021 Clerll. M, II HIJ\lll rll, lllP. otllct of tilt llEG!iflt.All 0' \IOTOlltl c i.r11. M D. H1mFMN1, •••• P1u11rl• fff(ltltit tJ'l.lll bt c-tl!d If JNll L.. JtMt. J•AN L, JOIST 1 bll Ger I I L •• ~mtrllt1' OP> PlllCl#CT1 SI .... , II.fl !letflon dtY. Cltl'll, M L LI ~l111tt, llt• lllt ltttl1lr1[ Jlf \lo1tr .. l~lldllll lllt (, " ... ,., P'llllltlc.C.RIOl'ni. Not.,., 11'\IWlc . (llllOt"fllt ,','•nttf·or· ffllll Lk -'"•-lor, • M, 0111i.1. DI!"' PoHIJ!t P'l•c•. H1r1er Sclloo1. 421 \, hltl ••1clHCT1 U.IU..I •t;aCIN(:Tt JMt.)I Cl\tl"ll'r'ill A•tnllt. ""'• Al'll. Ct l!llH' .. I•, l"lfncfHl OlflU lft Of-(.tu11!' •rl1W-IHI Oftkl Ill •ANIC 0 , AMlltlCA NtriA J1111M, Cl, J, H•nltfto ltt1 SI. Pellf"' •ttct , (0111 /kt1 Sclloll, M1t llOlllrlt Pttce. krvMt Jtt1httnU, 711 Vit Dt1"" lltlt '°'" 11•"1' o1 *'"""'' lf1' ~ Cllnll'l,._ieR IJ<lft"a. Orttlll c:-1• .. O It llP Cltr\, L Y. l"rtlt ll1, ll:t1. ln1~tor. J M, "Trllt. II• "•lnltw 11.d Lido Nord ltEOISTllAll Of VOTfrtJ ' .l""1 14 Hn M1 (tirl'lfftlH*' l•tlrtt • ' ' Clfrl, I . 0. Mu!Mltv. It"'. Jlldlt. L. MIPldtr •111 llllllfCfol", L. N, Potlfr, It~ r,..tf(IOI", L l. kfllff"' Jtt1. OftA!ttOE CDUHTY, CAllFOltMI A Pue!ltl>M . o(INI (lllfi bell¥ Pffv!, M•rC:ll 2, IHJ N,. .. I ltltlt. Ctlltlrlllf .. 11.ICINCT: Jr>.'U·I ,. Cl•"-~ J_ Ctmolllll, 0..... J\lth, J 0. Crtml\t w, llff Jut111, G, 11 Celt, llt1. 1 "1'' M J, IN.,,.,., OHulY S-1Wl'ltld 11. IC '"' Octcbllf I .. ll\11111) ..... or•nH (NII Cit!!"!' Piiot. Puf)llll\tll Oran" C.111111! Cl•ll"I' IOl)el, Petti ... !'llet. • ..,., •• , llr\lt!tM•• !06'1 Clt•k II-.. .. C1•1• Ottn Cl•"· c l ll<11,11~t. l•O Clerk,' l . l rf'! °"'"' .. wbl llhl'lll 0!•1111• (NII O.hy ltlitl. tot 1m-1'11,!)t1· 1, L U, IL 1'7' U0~-10 Ocl f, Ttll IU.•10 Etl"l'I L11 -ll1t1iCINCT1 11""" I Cr.•k, M A. Brtn"'""'"• Cltrn Cltrk t , M A•"'-• Oem Ociobu L u , 1'111 !llt )'IJ • 1 ,. •• Thurlday, October 8, 1970 s DAILY Pile! 3 • Nuelear Plant Heats """'--=e-=a=----Hypnotized~ Coed "Sent . . Currents Would Take Outfall Down Coast to Park To Hospital JC Soull'-'!'n \'.:alifornia Edison wins a long. list ot needed approvals for a half· billion-dollar expansion o( n u c I e a r generation at San Onofre, a new , state park downcoaat will hive a few unique tspeel! -inCluding wanner water for bather~ . a.re sure to-1ranaport the warmer water the new state park-the road lravelin& downcout to the proposed 3.~mile stlite through lhe nuctru 1ite property. -~ announced rec~ afttr an agree-"T'ne companies (Edison and San Diego CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -Sateen· ment with state recreation pfllclals and Gu and Electrlc1 liave agreed with the year.old Cynthta·R. Perkins or-Berea WI! the Marine Corps. Cali!orla Reaources Agency i h a t in lnglaide Hoepltal in Cleveland. today But, uperts ror Edison told a Public multipurpose use wilh the public of the arter being hypnotized tn a class at Berea Spokesmen for the utility aMounced -this week the sea-water-woutd·be-warmer Utilities Commission eiaminer, the San Onofre plant and adjacent properties High School temperature rise would be no more than will be made wherever feasible and as ""'""~' .. : ,. ::; ttt , ,.1 .... 1• • ....... .,._ ___ 1 -abOut'fourdegrees by-the time t.he°Warm-approved with the Atomic"'Energy-Com.----~-11R l...llU..00~1...'X-'l~~~.Ll.u • brine mixes with cool sea waltr. mission where necessary security and diy wh another IS.year-old girl of!ered Llat1ui Love It is love at first sight for 16-1nonth·old Brian Bullock of San Pablo, Calli., and the kissing llama at the Oakland Baby Zoo. L~amas ar_e natives of south America where they are used as pack animals, pn· marily in the Andean Mo~ntain countries of Bolivia and Peru. Usual· Jy. they ar'e not so friendly. Reagan Sees Vegetation Change for Brushy Hills · year-'roWld. , At an estimated t,6 oUUion gallons per· minute, sea water ~ted 10 ·degrees warmer than nonnal will be pouring from 111 outfall a •half-mile out· kl sea from the San Onofre·plant,sites. Ocun current.!, the s~kesmen said, One other concept· which arose in safety of the plant would not be lm· to hypnotize some class mernbers duriftg .. Wednesday's testjmony by Edison paired," he testified. a session on human behavior, school cf· Mechanical Engineering Manager David He added that his firm would not op-ficials said · Fogarty, is that the ftnn would work out pose granting a right-of-way for beach ' a suitable ·agreement with state recrea-access if plant security and public safety The Y!)l.lng hypnotisl told the volunteers lion ofrlcials for a beach ace~ road to were accommodated. they were freezing and all began Slaking. Safety reasons, however, would mean The girl then told the 10 they were get. the barring of the public from a strip or ting warmer and soon would wake up . * * * * * * Onufri!-lknerator-P-la-nt- Decision Will Take Time A decision by the State Public Utilities Commission on utility proposals to vastly expand nuclear generators at San Onofre will not come soon at~ adjournment of the lengthy hearings in San Clemente. PUC press aide carol Kretzer said this week that ii will take weeks before PUC Examiner Arch Main-who is presiding over the hearings-will draft his recom· mendation. ~ From there, the opinion will go the full commission for aJt official action. "There is no way of telling when a formal decision would be announced,·· she said. The arduous heariftgs, which began in San Clemente Monday and which could stretch well Jnto next w~ek. are the first in an intricate network of official actions in nuclear plant permits. The next hurdle for the utilities would be to win approval of the half-billion· dollar expansion project by the Atomic Energy Commission, which will hear the case early in 1971. Besides the official state and federal approvals, actions are prescribed for the State Resources Agency. the State Department of Public Health, regional water quality control boards and a host of other agencie.'i. ~=~~~ro:;g lh~e eZfuigP~t n~~. Only Cynthia did not come out of the -----thrashin-.:.bout-and-cried:-"'l'm freezin~ coastal location. " -e · I'm freezing." . The proposed new state park-the pro- duct of a year bf sometimes tough The girl's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sandy negotiations between California State Perkins Jr., or Berea, said the it daughter recreation officials· and the Marine apparently recognized them. Corps-will involve bluffs and beach im· mediately south of the as-acre site where '!Bu~ she wouldn't let us touch her," the nuclear improvements have been her mother sa1d. planned. "She ke)>t screaming, 'You're 80 cold. A strip of the old "Slaughter Alley" You're so cold. You're putting me in a Coast Highway strip is· used-now for-ac· freezer-:-''- cess to the first re.actor site al 8an Onofre, and by next summer' will be put Classmates said the girl who did the into use as access to the new state park, hypnotizing had hypnotized several pupils officials have said. at different limes and that no problems Beach paths will have to be cut through had arisen. bluffs at the upcoast end of the proposed 1'he incident took place in an 11!,h·gradt park. sci ence class of Joseph R. Schnelzer, a Because of the emphasis on surfing at the proposed rec reation area, Fogarty new teacher at the school. Scbnelzer'11 explained, lhe warm water could add to wife said he was out of town today and the beach's attracUon by crealing a year coUld not be reached for comment. round surfing area where the winter chill Psychologists say thal hysteria 11 not in the water could be cut by the warm rare in bypnotbm when induced by exhaust water. amateurs. ---sACRAMEN'l'lfTA-P'~)-~G~o~v~. ,Ri=a~,,~,--·~r his , hn a1a;-cauli1llleanT''eot1trolte•>t-. -1---------------- sIDd Wednesday a change in vegetation or planned burnoff, reseeding and ·-------!ti types may beflecded in the chaparral-landscaping t.hat would preserve lhe <:overed Southern california hills thal beauty of those hills." · recently erupted into the most disastrous Reagan met with reporters . after brush fires in state history. unveiling an "Environmentalists -'for "T believe thal we should take a second Reag~n" committee headed by Melvin B. look at what we could do to preserve the Lane, the chairman of the San· Francisco ~auty or Jhose hi\1§-'.:<!Jl<! I don't_ believe Bay Conservation and Development Com· that's dependent on th-at chaparral growth . mission. Lane is an executive with Sunset J think that hills that have brush and Magazine in Menlo Park. trees and grassy i'neado\Vs can be just a~ The governor said he and his adviser:'! beautiful," Reagan told a news con· were considering a series of dams lo con- ference. trol the sometimes-rampaging Eel River in Northern California . But Reagan in· 'Sam the Seal' Goes to School In. ~pi.str~110 .. '·Sammy the Seal" will be entering the first grade this year. That's the name of a 11ew workbook developed ·by a committee of reading .~pecialists for children in the "C'apistrano Unified School. District. The committee. led by Charle::; Bossard, principal or Ri chard Henry Daita Elementary in Dana Point, developed si x workbooks with ·'Sammy the Seal" being the first Using the new state reading tests for first graders as ·a guideline. Bossard ex· plained that his comm ittee found many or the words used in the test were not in any of the texts. "\Ve thDught our wealth of reading material woold cover areas children need to be exposed to for the tests," said Bossard. He said that i·n the new su pplemental \vorkbooks, vocabulary is the most im· portant factor but writing. spelling, and oral language areas also are examined. "The group has gone beyond a test 11nalysis," explained Jeff ~Is en, Capistrano Unified's Pro1ccts Director. "What has been developed is a unique. constructive word development pro- Jl"am," he added. The books are to be available lo fi(st grade teachers ~1ho will be encouraged to use one or more of them either as sup- piemental or primary working ma.~erial.s. "They will be one more tool. said Bossard. Flexible Scliool . sisted that the dams. if built, would not result in flooding of scenic Round Valley. Reagan was applauded ' by con· servationists earlier when he -vetoed • a dam for the California Water Project thRt would have flooded the valley. "I stiJl·dO not believe that either for the flood control or the water project that we can justify flooding that very unique \taney·up there," RCagab said. ,. · President Gets Bills Creating 2 New Preserves WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate has approved legislation to create the King Range National Conservation area in Northern California and the Fort Point National Historic Site in San Francisco. Both bills, passed earlier by the house, were sent to the White House . The King Range area, covering some 51.000 acres, includes both Federal and privately owned lands. The legislation calls for preservation of its scenic values. "'ith other uses continued where they do not destroy recreational values. Much cf the private land within the rugged area along California's north coast is to be acquired through exchange for other government lands. However, the bill authorizes $1.5 million for the purchase of SQme private lands. The legislation also authorized ~.5 million for access roads, tr a i I s, campgrounds and other improvements. The Fort Point bill calls for preserva· lion aoct restoration of the 19th century fortification located in the shadow of the Golden Gale Bridge. • Bulbs now ••• daffodils later.- HylCinlh bulbl for fragrant flowers later. Pink, blue. red, wtiile, yellow. 69~Pk.of5 Hunwnlngblrd F-. Lifelike plastic Gloxlnia blossom with dWections. 79'>ea. King Allred Dlllodttl (12 size) in mixed colorstoadddelicale color to your garden. Yellow King Affred D81fodlls 166 in golden sunburst shades. 3 lb. bag, Glorla Vase, Mexican hand · painted in assorted exciting colors. 649 ·large 3 29 small Venua Fly Tl'IP-.3C!Ually traps and digests flies. Useful and educational. 69~1'k.ol2 E .. rgr-Spl. collllllnlr------3.19 E\iergreall. 1 gal. · contalner---779 Atrfem needsnotn. ing but air to live along, luxuriant life. small POI 39~ Beddtnap11m1s. save$1 ' ~-'E»~Expa.nded The fort. begun in 1853, Is already in federal ownership so authorized ex· penditures will go for restoration, developm ent and possible reconstruction of an old seawall. A total of $5,250,000 . "'<>Qld be autti0r1zea unaer ~iir. :::;::::-1----l---------'~~-- K1t1oog'1 Nllrohumus Tap Druslng. Excellent , ).~3~k~ind~•u,· ca,~uooaeeano..f:.· ;s""'~i;ttie.'" s._ Turf Build-_ ,-, cGMan9 end llliclo- sies, snapdragons. ens grass or dlchondra A self-determined scheduling program, ,.,·hlch allows specified students lee,vay in class attendance, has been extended at San Clemente High SchoOI. Trustees of the Capistrano Unilied School District voted lo extend the pro- jram to sophomores. Juniors and seniorl'I have successfully been involved in the program this past year.· Voting no on the expansion was Trustee Stan Kelley who questioned the s~u.dent~· todal responsibility and c~.pab1hty of benefitting from the program. Darrel Taylor, princlpail, told the board \hat he felt students involved in the pro- ~ram were carefully screened and must b~ve parental and teacher approval. 1( Oley abu.'ie the privilege, they are taken -ml the progr•m. - He alsO said thal lhc majorl1y or itudcnts on the progr3m last year rnlstd their grade poiot average and found !he l)ro;rnm beneUclal. ' • Webster's Book Stolen at OCC Burglary has been re-defined by Webster's Unabridged Dictionary to include the entry of any building, day or night, with the intention of committing crime. You could check that out in the copy on a stand in the hallway of the Orange coast College Home Economics Building, e 1 c e p t somebody has atolen the S70 r.elereD'ce volume. Mrs. Dorothy Lau , of tht OCC staff, reported tht burglary to COsta Mesa police Tuesday. I seed cover for lawns, flower beds. Won't burn lawns, is weed-free. odor, free. 3 cu. It beg, 2.19 • • ·stock. Assorted col-lawns. ~000 eq. ft. bag. 44.; Reg. 9.95, NOW 8.95 tray Charge it at these Penn~ stores: CARLSBAD DOWNEY MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH Shop Sundays, too, 12to S p.m. • .. I I • .. DAILY PILOT Thundor, Oet-e. 1970 : ~ JULIAN. cam. (AP) -The an· :nual two-week weed show, with :about l2i varieties of weeds irown locally, opi:ns Saturday in Julian, Calif. with visitors expected from ·throughout the United States. As a -.J>.feature, M.rgJ•_Cow•n....w.illdemon- strate ways to arrange weeds for the dining room table. • During bis lifetime, retired pc>o :Jiceman R•ul C•rs•l•rio donated m<>re than 159 quarts o! blood. At hi s death at 66, the entire village of Castelo Branco in Mozambique turned out for bis funeral to show their gratitude. • An item in the Prelori:t, S. Africa government's bulletin for tenders r eminds suppliers of hangmen's ropes that the closing date for bids is Sept. 28. South Africa has one of the world's highest rates of le- gal executions. • The official New China News Agency reported that the Peking Brewery is busy producing hydro-- gen, medicines, insecticides, ~y .. crystalline silicon and potassium· sodium tartrate. No mention was made of beer. • John ThomfKO" o! Bay City, Mich. enjoys canned beer so much that he has 728 cans in his base- \11'1 T ... l!MN ' ~conspiracy' Told Kettering, Ohio Police Chief John R. Shyrock addresses the Inter· national Association of Chiefs of Police in Atlantic City, N .J. follow4 ing his election and swearing in as the group's new president. He said after the closing banquet that he believes police are targets of a national death conspiracy. Military Leftists Quash Rightist Bid in Boliyia r m ent .. The.ofil)' Unusual thing a·bout . ~ -. -· • , . John's, interest in beer is that aJI LA PAZ, Bohv1a (AP) -Military Ovando Cania, who had headed a left· . ' . -..... - In Cambodia Reds Continue Daylong Raids PHNOM PENH (UPI) ComJ11uni8t forces today carried out their third con· secutive midnight-to-dawn attack against a government offensive stalled near the town of Prakham, 41 -miles north of Phnom Penh, but the Cambodians weathered the attack with only small losses. The Cambodian command in Phnom Penh called it the largest Commwlist thrust of the war, but UPI Correspondent Kale Webb reported from the front that officers there estimated that no more than 400 Communists were involved in the attack. Field officers at Prakham told Miss \Yebb that the Cambodians suffered "about 20 wounded" in the attack and that 12 "North Vietnamese bodies were recovered. There were several other discrepancies 1n the high command reports in Phnom Penh and reports from officers in the Cambodian drive northward toward Kompong Chom. The high command' said between 7,000 and 10,000 Communist soldiers were involved in the attack but field reports said only about 1,500 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong were in the area. Military otncers in Phnom Penh said about 1,000 Cambodian soldiers retwning by boat up the Mekong iver from training in South Vietnam were harassed by Com· murtist mortars but that the troops suf· Canadian Terrorists · . P_ostpone Exec~ti.~n , PbOOinPenh iGeU was 1ii e rrudi Of final preparatlom for 1 gala eeJebratkln Friday marking the declaration of a republican form of government for Cam- bodia, P.nding the long reign of Prince Norodom Sihanouk and hil ancestors ...... First report.a of today's batue were issued in ftmom Penh. * * * V.S. War Deaths Drop Sharply, 38 Last Week SAIGON (AP) -The total of American Cieaths in Indochina dropped to 38 last week,' the lowest weeldy toll in nearly 4'1it years, the U.S. Command announced. But the toll for the South Vietnamese in4 creased 40 percent over the week before, and enemy casualties went up slightly. The total number of Americans killed was 25 leS!i than the week before and the lowest since April 18·24, 1966, when 35 were killed. The U.S. Command said 666 Americans were wounded last week, compared to 344 the week before. A command spokesman said the wounded figure jumped because it contained a two-week accumulation of minor wounds that servicemen did not NOBEL PRIZE WINNER Author Solzhenitsyn Russian Wins ' Literature Nohel Prize STOCKHOU.f (UPI) -The 1970 Nobel Prize for literature was awarded today to Alexander I . Solzhen itsyn, the con-- tro'tlersial Russian author whose works are banned at home but read and admired abroad. The prize this year is worth ;78.400. The 52-year-old author of "One Day In the Life of Iva n Denisovich," "Cancer \Vard " and "The Firsl Circle'' said through friends in Moscow he was want reported to their families. grateful for the prize and would like to go The summary reported a tota1 of 43,nS to Sweden to accept it. _ Americans killed, 289,800 wounded and "I am grateful for the decision,'' he l ,424 missing or captured in the war said. "I accept the prize, I intend tp go since Jan.-1, 1961:'" · ·· · -and receive -it personally on the tradi· MONTREAL (UPI)' -The Canadiari The Saigon government said 345 of its tional day insofar as it depends on me. 1 government and the terrorists who kid~ troops were killed last week and 720 were am well and my journey won't hurt my 728 cans are empty on shelves ruid leftists appear to be in control of Bolivia ist military regime since a coup a year i.:...---<nake-up,-a-collection...thaLdam-.again-after~-a-eonser.valive-...! o. from 1934. attempt to take power. Torres, relieved of his position as na d a British di lomat inched closer an increase.. [rom .lbe p.r.eri.o.us... health." Wednes ay -e 1 apers po n1ng week's 246 killed and 690 WoUnded: The ----Uespife urecalm tone ol111e statement • Gen. Juan jose Torres declared him· commander in chief of the armed forces R Id S 28 d B B.n several months ago because of pressure ona ou1.e, , an •• '" sel[ president Wednesday after routing t ·1 f H from Miranda, declared his was "the ham, 22 have se sa1 rom oner Gen. »""elio "'-anda and indicated his ' f b · th 1· t '""& m.11 revolut!_on of the ~pie, who maJlifest lulu in hopes 0 ecoming e f irs govCrnment would move rafther to the their unwavering will to take the route persons to sail a rubbe.r raft rom · of national liberation.'' Hawaii to San Francisco. They left. Miranda, the conservative army hope to make the voyage in two or chief...9f staff, a day earlier had forced Only one report indicated his control three months. Their airline emer· the resignation of President Alfredo of the country might not be complete. A geocy raft is named "Shark Bait.•• radio report from the mining town o[ Oruro, 120 miles southeast of La Pai. • S-J S B • said officers loyal lo Miranda bad killed A corn cob has ended the lile Of uaat een ig 10 leftist demonstrators who appeared Skipper the pedorming dolphin.-about to assau1t a divisional headquar- Skipper's handle rs found the mam-W. • E tees. It was the only bloodshed reported mal dead on the bottom of bi• inner lit gypt in the four.<fay power struggle within tank Thursday at the Tri-State fair the military cllque that bas ruled Boli· in Amarillo, Tei:. An autopsy per· v 0 J 5 viR for the past six years. formed by a veterinarian shows ote on ct. 1'orres appeared to have strong sup. Skipper, owned by a Freeport, port from students, tanners, workers N.Y., firm, died from swallowing Anwar Sadat emerged as Egypt's in· and powerful segments of the armed a corn cob that fair officials said lerim president today and with a pledge forces. After 11iranda capitulated, he apparently had been thrown into to follow the policies of <?amal Abdel rode from his headquarters outside La __ •••..• .the .QUtdoor. .tank .. .The . .mammal '.s __ ,Nassez:.IPRellf~ lik_ety !-9. \'t'!Q .the Qs;t,. l5 ... .Paz. .to . the .presidential. pa.lace .through handlers said Skipper was worth national plebescile by l:n overwhelming cheering crowds massed along the • ~ajority and to rule Egypt for the next streets. Color names h ave gone political six Yea:s· . There he took the oath or office and as exhibitors prepare for the Paris U~arurnously nomin~ted to the then told a cheering crowd in a speech ready-ta-.wear fashion showin~s presidency by ~ N~honal Asse.mbly from the palace balcony: scheduled for Oct. 17-22. There will men:iber~~~ting . ~~ thexftraor~ar;_ "So that the people never again will be 11ao red, Anarchist black and ~1~ .d ayl nig 11~ e torm_er ~ t be betrayed in their hopes, \\'e have Tear Gas gray. There will also be timeviceP:esi en spe. ou asll.-pom sponsored an unbreakable alliance of a CRS blue, named after French program in a 20-minute a~pta~ the workers and the anned forces. They riot police who go by those initials speecd db closest. ly tul~~d to Nasser 5 fore;gn will be, together with the people, the d bi if an ome IC po 1c1es. ... I I th" ol ,. " an wear ue un arms. Sadat pledged to press Egyp t's orce o . is rev u ion. • ••conflict of destiny" with Israel vowed He. said the government would create For years, it ~as been tbe house-to recover all the territory sehed by new 1obs with "fair sal~r~~ for workers" wife's p_rerogat1ve to squeeze to--Israel during the 1967 June war and to and would ~er_e~ Bol1v1a s natural re- matoes 1n the produce department assist the Palestinian Liberation move-sources. This indicated there would be to test for freshness. But the Ag~i4 ment in following the goals of his no retreat from . the ~ationalization or culture Department at West Vu-· predecessor, with whom he was closely the U.~. Gulf 011 Co. s local. hold1n~s. ginia University has dev~loped. a associated since 1936. an action by the Ovando . regime which machine to do the same JOb, with In Jordan. Amman radio said the Arab apparenUy helped _ to trigger the at- more gentleness and accurately officials who engineered a cease-fire tempted con~ervatJv~ coup. 1han the housewife's fingers. A por· between the Palestinian guerrillas and "When this pr.~1dent'. who com~s t able a nd inexpensive, "pressure troops loyal to King Hussein during the fro~ a ~un;i~te or1g1n. ~ails, ask for his J~d" meter will be used to test Jordanian civil war worked out a new res1gnallon, Torres said. tomatoes and other fruit in sear4 agreement today to govern relations Armed civilians freed several leftist! ches for the better tomato. between the belligerents. prisoners from jail. Freeze Grips West States Foot of Snow iri Rockies ; Nea r Zero in Wyo ming C.tltondo ' Temperatures ,lllN"\r Albu<IV .. CIUt Hit~ Lew l'rtC. " Jl .. " execution of the diplomat and the govern-two allied commands reported l.468 Viet li~erary sources .i~ Moscow said the prize ment asking them to begin negotiations Con-g and North Vietnamese killed last will ~pell · polit~cal trouble . for the for his release. week, II more than the claim the week maverick novelist. ~ey cited the ln Montreal, a communique from the before. pressure put on poet Boris Patemak who 1'~ront De Llberation Du Quebec (FLQ), a In the war today, South Vietnamese won the prize in 1958 and then rejected it clandestine French<:anadian separatist forces were regrouping at a northern under pressure. group, announced it would postpone for 2 base after withdrawing from Firebase As in the case of Pasternak·s best-sell· hours -until noon (EDI! toda -!:!!1Y -O'Reilly, near the._La_oti3n .border. Of· ing novel ''Doctor Zhivago ,•• action against James R. Cross, the senior ficials said tht; goveniment troops pulled Solzhenitsyn's massive novels a5oi.tt llfe British trade commissioner. out because of the approaching monsoon Stalin Era prison camps were l'IOt. fered no casualties. The attack occurred . rains, but the North Vietnamese had been published in Moscow. However they were at Moat Krasas Kvao, siJ.' miles east of . pounding the base steadily for two circulated in typescript in underground the capital. months. conditions. .,,_. • ·-• -·-A few years ago when Solzhenitsyn Eddie .Turns 80 Living Legend Sifts Memoir:s NEW YORK (AP) ·~.C.•P.t,.~!!<li•. V. Rickenbacher -one time racing driver, World War I flying ace and survivor of 23 days on a life raft in the Pacific -is 80 years old today, thanks to a "little luck on the side." "I've cheated the old Grim Reaper seven times that I know of." says Rickenbac~er, who recalls that his brushes with death have at times been ''painful." "But," he adds, "I have no regrets." His devil-may-care approach toward fighting the war and living made him the object of wild acclaim when he came home from World War I. He had shot down 26 enemy planes and Tii;;en from sergeant to captain. receiving the Cross o[ the Legion of Honor, the Croix de. Gutrre with four palms, the Distinguisfiea SerVfce·eross with nine-oak leaves and 12 years later, he was award- ed the 1tiedal of Honor. As 8JI adviser to the gov!!rnment in World War JI, he, along with six com- panions, survived 23 days on three tiny rafts alter their plane crashed in the Pacific in October 1942. Then, as head o! East.em Air Lines, he turned a Sl'nall, losing operation into a large, profitable one. Now. officially retired for seven years. he's been sifting through boxes o[ mementos and years of me1nories. The memories went into an autobiography published three years ago, and he's dividing the mementos among several museums for "when I bump off." refused a suggestiofl from the Soviet Writers Union that he disassociate himself from ''the slanderous anU-Soviet campaign" abroad connected with his name, he was told he was free to go abroad to join his like-minded admirers. He was labeled a renegade and compared to Svetlana Alliluyeva, Stalin's defector daugh ter. He did nol take this offer. Nor ·did be write to the Communist Party as Pasternak did to say that exile abroad away from his beloved Russia, was tan4 tamoWlt to a death sentence. Solzhenitsyn was expelled from the writers union this year. Moscow dispatches said the Soviet press probably will mount a campaign against Solzhenitsyn on two grounds -he has written to endear himself to foreign enemies of the Soviet Union, an d the Nobel committee awarded the prize as an anti-Soviet gesture. Many literary experts in Stockholm had believed that the Swedish Academy o[ Letters would choose lo ; g fl o r e Solzhenitsyn because of the political im· plications attached to his name. 1• ·~ .OJ '-11•"'• •11!!>u1t~~'-~~~·-!!!-~~~-eo1s1--" ,. Who C.res? No •tft1r 11twtp•p1r lit l h1 worl4 c•r•1 1bo11I 'YOllf c:o111~11· flify lik1 yo11r c:om111uftHY 4•ilv '""''P•P., tlo t1. h '1.ih• DAILY llLOT. • -- eo~IOll n .u evll•to 11 .i Chlrlo!!t n Ml Ch1Cl90 11 •l Cl!l(lnr1tU 7' 4J Ctt~tftnd 7• 541 0.,,yer JI .n Dts Malnu n JI Ottroll ,. 51 Flk'btfllu " n FOt1W~ ti n H'"°'' 41 l J HOnoh1lu U 1S h>Cllentl>Olll 7t '1 Ja<:-IOl'IYflt• ... 15 J.......... ., • ICt'l .. 5 Cltv JS st l os ,.,.....t., 1s s• ·" ·" •• lOUl$Ylllt 11 •1 .U M~1t IS ,7 )7 Ml1ml .. 11 ,40 Mllw.i1liH II 61 OJ Ml-POiit-St P•VI SI .ii l 11 N-0.-lelnl •l .,._y .... -7t Oll;l~(!l\r ., °"'"" M l'tll/Ht!.,.•• .. Plllltnl1 IJ Pllntou'"""' ,. P orll•nd, Mt!nt •5 Portl11'111, °'"°"' 11 lllllld (IN JO " .. " " lllClll'ftOlld u "·t.<*11 u $t!! l8-f (llY }t S..n O~oo at " " " " " " " " " .. " " • " lu cognit~ Beatle Visits S•'l l",l"tl$CO '1 SN!llt 31 ''""o• '' W•~!ntlOlt 11 Wln11111e11 tJ " " • " ' ·" l·'aul f\lcCartney. member of the now dis banded "£~eatlcs'' and .once the subject of a mystery death rumor, appeared very m_ucb alive in New York Ul'IT....._ \Vednesday. H~ V.'85 making his first visit with hl8 \Yife , the Conner Linda Eastman or NC\V York and their daughters Alice, l, and Heather. 7. l ' _Ferry Perndt·_Only Football Plane 'Didn't Get OK' WASHINGTON (AP) Government uperts say the agi•g Wichita State football _plane that crashed lllin&...il!! persons lacked a valid iiafety 1certilicate, but a probe has uncovered no evidence of mechanical failure so far. . ·A safety official said the rented plane may have flown into a dead-end canyon~on a sight-seeing route through the Rocky Mountains and smash. ed into the roof of the Con- tinental Divide Friday while trying to turn around. The Federal Aviation Administrafion said the old airliner did not obtain its airworthiness certificate when taken out of mothballs last month at Las Vegas, Nev., where it had been left idle for three years: FAA officials said the plane was issued only a 10-day ferry pennit that expired Sept. 21. 'I'his permit allowed a crew ta fly the plane eastward, but did not authorize a111y passenger <lperalions. denied this. The FM a1>o aald h>- yestJsaton found a second rented pllne tllat canted the reSt=or-the~team to Utah Slate bad ohly aiq>ut- dated alr certillcate im>ed before It was mothballed ta 19S'l.1bat p-wu grounded this week lo< II safety defects; A spokeaman ' for the Na- tlonal Transportation Safety Board oalcl today It has. found nothing so far to indicate any mechanical problem ll&w'ed In the disaster. nie spokerman. Brad Dun- bar, said the twtn.englne pro- peller plane wa! flyiag a scenic route west of Deaver when it was suddenly con- fronted with a wall of moun- tains soaring up nearly a half· mile where Loveland Pass crosses the Continental Divide. Dunbar said the plane may have been trying to baa in the Rarrow canyon when it hit a ridge, crashed and burned. The pilot was among the dead. The safety board is schedul· ed to open public hearings in Wichita in about two weeks. J Schools Closed In Race Clash PONTIAC, Mich. (UPI) - A state of emergency was in effect here today following three days of fighting between white and black teenagen dur· Ing which four whites and one -Negro~hav.eJ>een .. shoL A H)·hour curfew was lm· Man Alters Sex, ~Jd ·· posed u.ntil & a.m. by Mayor Robert F. Jackson and the two schools which have been the focal points of the violence were closed today. The other schools in this industrial city of 85,000 north of Detroit re. Ha 2 M S' mained open. s om The state of emergency, de- NEW YORK {AP) ~-A minisk1rted Navy veteran who fathered a 15-ye·ar-old daughter was ' divorced Wednesday after telling the judge she bad become a woman and wanted to marry a man. clared by J¥kson on the ad- vice or Police Chief William Hanger and the city commJ.s.. sion, banned the sale of alco- hol and gasoline in take-away containers and gatherings of more than four persons. It also forbade all persons ex· cept po 1 i c e form carrying weapons on the street. Grounds for the divorce Jackson said the emergency measures were necessary "due to the mob action and disobe- State Supreme Court Justice dience" of the past three days. were abandonment. Thomas A. Aurelio said be had Of the approximately 42 per- never beard of a similar case in 39 years on the bench. day but police used tear ga5, pepper gas and smoke bombs Wednesday to dlspene bait~ log, rock·and-bottle-throwing gangs ol high school youths. 'lbe shooting o( the lour 1':hlto youths by black sludents Monday-outside-Ponliac-Cen- tral . High School set oU this week's wave of unreal Ca1· Firms Okay Talks DETROIT (UPI) -'Ille United Auto Workers and General Motors have agreed to discuss national issues Fri- day £or the first time since talks broke off and the UAW struck the auto maker 24 days ago. Since General Moton plants halted operations in the United States and canada at mid- night, Sept. If, bargainers have empbalized issues at 155 local bargaining unit& that must be solved, as well as the national issues, before pro- duction can resume. By Wednesday, only 19 local agreements have been reach· ed, but UAW President Leonard Woodcock said that Thursday, Oc:tptier 8, 1970 DAILY PILIY.' $ fa'-extravaganza Dre11 tor tlte eomltlff et>entt at llalf. tlte Hit SOUTH COAST PLAZA 4 DAYS ONLY -THURS., FRI., In Oklahoma City, the aircraft owner, Jack Richards Aircraft Co. Inc., insisted anew the plane had passed a safety check and received its airworthiness license at Las Vegas Sept. 8. The FAA The doomed plane, which figured in a runway accident in Oklahoma City one week earlier, was makb1g its first passenger flight after coming out of storage. Austin Hartin was also granted the right tG change her name to Deborah "in the interest of your child." "So now your child has two mothers," said Aurelio. sons arrested by early today, nine were charged with cur· few violations, detectives said. Hanger said the arrests of those responsible for the shoot- ings were expected to be made shortly. No incidents were reported during the night and early to- was "enough pi:ogress•: to FASHION reopen the national issue talks. SnLED • terPali 0 0 Now yon can use a s:rvings account for We'll do all the mt. paying your bills: Not without charge, Bnt for a very Avro Savings' new Ma&erPay account. nominal fee. It pays 5% and your bills, too. • And if yon keep enough money in your 5% compounded daily. MasterPay account, you'll come out way 5% from date of deposit to date of with· ahead. ______ _,.drawaJ.......,"""On"""'-"'ev"'qy'-'-'d""ollar=-::;!n,_..yg"''\lf"'""·a"'o"'oo"'wi"'t.~E~·~~en'.'..... __ We'll be paying you for the privilege of on the money for paying bills. payllig your billSO · · -' · · ' · All you do is send us a deposit and, when Drop by any Avro Savings office and open your bills come in, just mail them to us. a MasterPay ao::owit soon. When it isn't paying Phone bills. Utilily bills. All the bills yoµ your bills, it's paying you. That's the interesting want us to pay. thing about iL ' . Aft!OSnlilp .. J.-.•J11' .,_ Jdl..Maywood-6250 Atlatttic Avcnuc • ~1a 1.fcu. -3310JJrisu:fSt.•U.lhAn"~';'~9'2Sd w;w,;,.M .' ~~ South Cite-4240 Tweedy lftd. • 5lmtio Cilr-12'$1 VClllAD )5hd. • Ymtura Headquarw:o -· 250 Sou .,....... """" • am ...,.., .... lllilOZoo:AK.lluoOilpaluk ·---•• I • SUITS~ · Choose 100 % wools -Dacr011· & wool -silk & wool -sharhlin - all in fashion atterns and solids ALL AT ONE HALF OFF W• ll'fCk Hollr-d Lo l1rt1n Rotnw Crlcktl!Hr .101.fPh l'el11 H•rt S~ll.tfntr & Min: ~ SPORT COATS . . . • New styles & !radiitonals • Blaxers & wide lapel stylos • In tho wanted shades & patt.ms ONE HALF OUR REG. PRICES FLARES body shirts •ear _ dress slacks Names you'O NCC19• nize & many to choose from Jhe trim, tanortd look you want Mix for your own dis· tjnctiv• look . Meet bot~ casu1I & dreu occasions wash & wear pants shoes walking shorts swim trunks Dressy or distinctlv• sport occent Designer-Inspired poo!.idt fa!hiOM GENTRY LTD. • . . ·I --~- . • DAD.Y PILOT .EDIT OBIAL PAGE Simon Should Pro:duce,· • 1 If Univ1r1.lty of California Regent Norton . Simon ·ree1ty basuy'concrote evldcn<e ol1mpropriety on'the part of .the Irvine Company or on•lhe part ol his fellow ngen!S, he should 'be producing more than the vague generalities he has proCluced up to Ibis point. Be ordered a preas conference again 1his week, aJ- luding lo sensaUonal charges he would. bring against +-----aomeon•--presumably the.Irene COmp.any _l!r some- one associated with the University of California system. • • AU be really produced wai a disagreement with the proposed development of the City of Irvine -that and another promise of ''shocking details" in some future chapter. But Simon refused to name names or cite in~ stances where regents or university offjcials bad be- trayed any public trust in dealing with the Irvine Com· pany-:'" . Simon alleges the Irvine Company will "unjustly'' reap something like $450 million through incorporation ---of the-city. ofJ:rvine...His argument,~unfortunatdY., is not very convincing unless he .c.an somehow produce the devious complexities that he hints and relates the projected financial gain to actions by the regents, m .. dlvidually or collectively. His argument Uiat Irvine violated a ten~year old a~e:nt with tbe university is not convincing. Simon alleges that acceptance of the 1,000-acre UC Irvine site by the regents binged on development of a city of 100,000 people O!l 10,000 acres. The agreement, how· ever,_reJe.rs Qply to a_ ''prel~ plan" for a city to be developed arO\lnd the campus. It may be sj>eculated that Simon wants the public merely to be a"'.are of the .changing nature of the plan· ning for the new city and its relationship to the campus. If that is the C!lSe, Simon's tactics are a gross example of conscientious overkill. Asserting that he is not out to hang criminal charges on· any regent, Simon dodges press inquiries and· still persists in promising to shock us with details to come out at the Oct. 16 regent&' meeting. Nationalism, ~ Patri~tism: ' ·11. In fact , he has lnlormatlon that relalts regents to Irvine Co., the pu~llc ·deserv .. ·to hear -tlfe1uU story.: On the other hand, If he!s only 0 ratsing questions" for the sake of expressing 'bl& personal anUpalby lo Irvine planning, he ought ·to couch his chai'gu in phrases that make bls intent clW. • Up to thls poin~1 \Sbnon's ·eccentric ~havior .has done nothl!!g Out make Californians · wonder what his own motives may"De. - Guardian.-£ or You Good newspapers are painfully aware of their short- comings -and since these shortcomings are mirrored for all to see, so are most of their readers. But the value and contribution of a good commun- ity newspaper can often ~e overlooked. During Nation. al Newspaper Week, now beinfobserved, we would like to point out only a few of the reasons newspapers are so important to America and to preserving America. We are blessed ·in this country with a free press- one proudly free of any governmental control. · Producing this news without fear or favor earns enemies, of course1 for the bearer of bad tidings often is blamed for what he bears. But nowhere will you find more infOrmation for Jess than in the daily copy-of your hometown news· paper. From the price of steak to. beach-erosion to the toppling of a faraway empire-all of these and hundreds more items of infonnation are all available at a price Jes.s than the cost of the paper a daily newspaper is printed on. In the area of public service of championing the ca.use of the little guy, of watchdogging your tax dollars -1n all of these your newspaper is fierce battler for your rights. ' """~"'"" •m ~A !lm ~AY'S ~ W!L~ Vf»Jf, Llr) HA'vt A 8£Lf OR fr.Ii Af O.JJlct5: Brownouts or More Pollution? Dear _Gloomy ' -Gus: Power Needs Yersus Clean Air Needs ·---1------ They.Differ • To .lhe_Editor: realization or our deteriorating en-ciency, as Consolidated Edison in New Your editorial ("Meeling Power vironineiiit Is Cne of frustration . WHat-ca·n -York has -expressed -in receqt da)'3, we I drive a VW ·van, painted red, Needs," Oct. I) ls typical of today's we do? We can become informed about would be forewarned to expect. limitation white atl<fblue, with 8 peace sym-"just. one more time" philosophy. It is the sourres of pollution. on the usage of electricity for water ~+--1--bol-oo-OOU.-bwnpen_Wrant..to....j-<liis-attiWde-which-has-contr:ibuted..to.our._~l:ZJ::~f::;:;:;Ji;;;;:,;;::;~<'i:lt::::J-;;;W'.e ~!;;;':~~~L'!~~-m~~sour~~ce~_l!he~a~lin~~an~d!1;"~acce~~ssor~ie~s~"~·,..,'""'=:o----l---guess how many limes. I've been present dilemma of pollute, or else. While of air pollution is the internal com-The eleclricaJ accessories for the home -:Mo&. people fail lo understand the dif- ference between "patriotism" and 0 na· tiOOalism." Patriotism is wanUng what is best for ypur country. Nationalism is ~ng • -your country is tiest, no matter what it does. Patriotism mean1 asking your COUil" try to conform to the highest laws of man's nature, to the eternal staodarm <JI justice and equality. NaUonallsm · means supporting . you r eoontry even when it violates these eternal standards. JA'l'l\IQtISM_MEANS. g.ol.n.g un· derground if you have to -as the anti· Nazis in Germany did -and working for the overthrow of your government when it becomes evil and inhuman and in- capable of reform. Nationalism means "going along" with a Hitler or a Slalin or any other tyrant who waves 'the flag, mouths obscene devotion to t he Fatherland, and meanwhile tramples the rights of people. Patriotism is a form of faith. Na- tionalism is a form of superstition, of fanaticism, of idolatry. PatrioJ,ism would like every country to become like ours, in its best aspects. Na- tionalism despises other countries as in-b~ble of becoming like ours. JUST AS WE FAIL to understand the difference between patriotism an d stopped for "mechanical inspec· we . keep our children indoors, telling Linen '"""' rHN'11 ,,. wekon'lf. No"l'l911Y wn1,r1 bustion engine in our automobiles. This are becoming ltdicrous. You can now buy tiofi" in the past two months? -them not to breathe heavily, we may also -{:'~1,:";:c:::,_ ""::'l: l: .=•w•,1 1 1-:i: source represents, conservatively, about your-own electric meat tenderizer. If you P R S inform them how necessary this is to n••• nbet 11 r.11rvW. AU 1m. ... rnu11 ll>tlllde •lo· 60 percent of the total. The primary sta-doubt the existen""' such a muscle ~ -· · · enable them to watch TV and eat toast. '::i:!ld•: :rir "~~ t111t,..:i'": :::re11~ tionary, non mobile, source of air pollu-atrophying device y; may wish to refer n11 tHt11r. ,..,*11 ........,, "'""" ... -MrllY I"-91 h --· .._, Ye11t "' '"" .. G"""'Y Oll'lo Dl llY ,Ullf, nationalism so many people [ail to un- derstand what "Am'ericanism" really coosists of. ''Americanism" was something utterly new in the world wben it was Conceived by our Founding Fathers. It was not just another form (If nationalism -irlfeed, it was a repudiation of all the then existing nationalisms. It was conceived as a form o£ govern. ment unrestricted to one geograpbjcal place or one kind of people. It was open to all -men everywhere -no-matter where they were born or came from. In this respect, it was utterly unique. Its patriotism was potentially worldwide. THE WORD u AMERICANISM" must not be narrowed or flattened or coarsen· ed to apply only to one flag, one people, one government. In ·its highest, original sense, it asks that all men become patriots to an Idea, not to a particular country or government. And this idea is self.government by all men, who are regarded as equals in the law. This is why American patriotism - properly understood -is the best patriotism in the world, because it is for all the world, and no& just for us. To con- fuse it With nationalism, to use it for ugly purposes, is to betray the dream of those who made it come true. You state "our switches may not Work PoetrY •Ill ,. bt 1111111..,.._ tion in our area is the Southern californla to the Handy Helpefs section of the L.A. in live years," however the Edieon plant 1 Edison (SCE) electricity generating Times Home magazine on page~ of the at San Onofre should be in operaUon by the plants. July 12, 19'/0 JSSU. e. 1 6 Th tr· 1 lem in the near fUture as need for . 97 . e 1p e capacity plant in Hun· plants. Perhaps we should ' co n s i d e r We must make use of alternatives to tington Beach will still be In operation for more power -llbtlitles to conserve the electricity H Why do people put Up -·ch a hue and r-· performing some i·obs electrically. many many years. owever, it is com· "'" generating potential. SCE Is able to con- forting to bear this will be the last plant cry over the nuclear power plants! The vince the Public Utilities Commission of PAUL F. WRIGHT of this type to be constructed by Edison. San Onofre plant bas beeo in exiltence the requirement for more generation . for some Ume, hasn't it! Aod if the capability based on their estimate of an- HOW CAN YOU compare Orange cOun-President of the United States has no ticipated capacity. The more jobs that ty with the Eastern Seaboard? Com-fear of some day· living near it, why can be thought up to be done electritally, paring the air conditioned skyscrapers, should ~ tllOR other people? And they the easier it is for SCE to justify more elevators, subways, f a c to r i e s , would tit the first ones to fuss and fume 1enentt!n1 capacity. apartments, homes, and department if we lhouJd have a blackout, wouldn't stores of New York City with our small they? SCE JS SPENDJNG thousands of o!fice buildings, shopping centers, limited Also the fuas there ls about a freeway dollars advertising their Gold Medallion factories, and a !ew air conditioned which is 80 bticlly needed in this section; all electric home: Some.of you are likely homes, is ridiculous! one can hardly get in or out of Balboa on thinking about the purchase of ·these Also comparing the kilowatt capacity of a Sunday or holiday. They should have homes. The Gold Medallion homes the Ea.stem plants to ours here, it would built one years ago. represent a tremendous actlitional elec- seem the Edison facilities should be ade-MRS. WM. H. {MARY} HARRISON trical generating potential. qua.te until 1976, with possibly a few SCE . infonns us that we will fare a brownouts, which the consumer might be serious electrical shortage if the Hun- willing··to live with, if given a choice. 'All·Eleetric' PIQh tington Beach Steam plant generating Some months ago 1 read in the Pilot capacity is not doubled. We would be that Edison would lose one million dollars To the Editor: more µiclined to swallow this generating if this plant were not constructed. No ex-Most of us are becoming well aware·of deficiency if SCE stopped advertising planation was given: however I doubt if the effects of pollution on our wa'y of life. their all electric homes. If SCE was this fact has any bearing on the ex· The moat common reaction to this really concerned about electricity defi· pansion. Just note their advertising on No Prol>lena Here 'J.:o the Editor: Is this heaven? Yes, there is such a place; no hippiu, drugs, delinquency, crime or attacks on police. No school, racial or delinquency problems. No smog, trash, garbage or sewage disposal problems {buildings all heated by natural hot water). No coal, oil or gas burning. No brunettes (almost}. Ice--cold. crystal-clear, chlorine-free tap water. No school or racial problems. Minute tax increases. , .world's best fishing. No plane noise. Where? Reykjavik, Iceland. (pop. 80,000}, but who wants to live here? FRAN!{ KLOCK Reykjavik, Ireland (Corona de! Mar Resident} TV as to how they are attempting to clean our air. Police Dangers Rising Allen-Goldsmith • • \ [ i attacks on pollre are committed by In- dividuals of national organizations that advocate such violence. ·Nixon's Pension Play SO WHILE EDISON expaiids, and pollutes the air "just a little more," we permit Riverside to pollute our water "just a little more" with raw sewage treated only once, as a secondary treat- ment would be too expensive. Our fishermen from Florida to California can no longer find the shrimp beds, due to polluting our ocean. Then we add three more freeways with ramps and in- terchanges to dissect Huntington Beach, bringing more traffic with "a little more The FBI may be empowered to ln· · tervene direcUy in inlltanres of lethal at- tacks on police and other enforcement of- ficers. LegJ.slation for this unprecedented purpooe 11 being consider<d by Rep. Claude Pepper (0.Fla,), chalnnan Of the Select Committee oo Crime, and Hugh Carey (D-N.Y.), member ol the Educa- tion and Labor Committee. "Manifestly that cannot be allowed to continue,'' declared Pepper. "The time has oome'to throw every resource, local, st.ate and national, into the fight against these extremist and re vol u ti onar y While he wis J>i:eaching economy to the aation,'Preslde11t Nixon used hi.I prestige behind the. scenes to have the presidential pension increa.9ed from '25,cnl to '61),000 a year. .Normally, White House requests f0r legislation are sent to Capitol Hill in writing. But for the discreet mission, the President sent bis chief lobbyist, Bryce Harlow. to pass the word in person. HARLOW contacted llouse Speaker John McC91'ma~. Who !athered presiden- tial pension&. Harlow told P.1cCormack the-present ,penskJt doesn't p~ovide ade- -11Ulidy -..~.an, who is ml a wealthy man. McConn•ck agreed the pen!!ion should be. rm.ed. He sugiested the increase CO'Jld be .Upped iQto the postal. reform Iegillalkin ~ Urider consideration by the Hoose Pa.t Offlce and Civil Service ~k IUllUllOllld the commit ... chalrmln. 'llladdeul Dulak!. J).N.Y. lo lbe Speaker'• byunlllle office in th• Capttol. Cor. a cJQRd.door c:onferen~. Harlow wo~ al!o preoml.. Dulild netvouJ abolll the postal refonn b1D In the aftermath of the naUoo'a rinst postalllrlke, hall<ed at the Speak<:<'• pro- ch-'l'haddewi Dulskl (J).".Y.J to cwbrvte ~i.JI amtndmmL which might .....S Ille vltol pootal refonN bW down to ddeo&.:lle JOlllA lo go ~· • lltJT LATr.ll, when the S.Oate passed and teQt to the Hoose a bill to ioctease llendlll klr lbe llOC<illd -ol federal emplo)-.., the l'lblte -"" lllOlbor - smog" -blown inland, of course. This is progress? Great! .... elements. They must be smashed, or they ....._'Will destroy us. • . Who will be the first to sacrifice: Edison, Riverside, the County, State, or the consumer? A beginning would entail stopping the polluters who claim "this will be the last of this type facility, which opening. Again MeConnack's help was we must have-« else." Each claims enlisted, and he obtained Dulski's agree-''just a little more poison,'' how much ment to consider the pension increase as w'1! it take to be "too much!" 1betr bill would upand President Nix· on's recent proposal to authoriu FBI ac- tion in cuea of campus violence -such as the bombing. of tile University of Wl9C011Sln ~ hulldlng th a t resulted in one death and a number of in- jured. a rider on the "second-spouse" bill. · JUNE 1:11 .1.1R .,uru. NOO'ING THE fact that more than 70 · In addition to raising presidential polleemeh have been tilled and wounded pensions, the measure also would in-t~ , year,. in mw 1n'stances in un-· orease the pensions of the widowa or past · Grotcth Wi ll' Cetne 1 provoked' assaults, 'Pepper -asserted this · Presidents. Some of the membets of To the Editor: "profoundly al · situation indicates Oulski's committee were at first worried · an. •-ently critical Iem th1t clearly u..'.~"'::IA14~"!"~"Wl"'.*~b-l..,_--;~1~re~arddy~our~D~AILrr,~Y~P~n.~OT~~tdi~·~1or~1~a1C...~~-i;;,,·,,;,,.<a..11lwl. :a:'"!~"i:;:-'::~-==="l...;;;::J-...__J,:.,,_~ queline Kennedy Onassis and thus prove e 1 OCC"l iii r'elrra ld ~ lO • The Florida anti-crime crusader 'con-' an embarrassntent bl an election year. ments about "Meeting Power Needs." tended it'• an extre'meiy' serious nat•·-al 1 Also the article in the Ocl 3 i"6e "Plan( ~· 'Go-~--. off, 'ohn1on·.1• F M S problem that must be dtalt with na-w ""' Jt HOWEVER, it was so wrltte. that Mra. oes eel trategy" {about the San li Uy · Onassis would not be eligible. The chief Onofrt. nuclear plant) by John Valtena. ~Tbe -records shqw that ll\ls ye!lf police beneficiary would be Mamie Eisenhower. 1 was in lndk> at the Date Festival 'this have been shot at and tilled ht vlttually The bill sailed through the committee. year and going through the exhibition all parts of the coUntry,'' said Pepper; Now it must pass the fun House and building I stopped to look at a wall map "That's a highly disquieting devtlopment, aurvive a Senate-House conference. ol the "Water Expanslon1 ' in Southern wbJch means two thlnga: Attacks on Califomla. I talked with the young man po1 · I loc I hu Nbcon took a personal interest in up-in charge and when 1 asked him how JCt •rt no anger a a t a naUoN.1 ping presidential pensions after meeting Jong would the present system be ade· problem; there b a w l de 1 pre ad la.st summer with former President Lyn-quate for our needs, he said, .. About five breakdown of respect for police and law don Johnson. Both men agreed what a y~rs... enforcement. Iha.me it wu that fornltt President Har. "Much of this breakdown ls being ry Truman was only receiving S1S,OOO a year. Sinet Trumu Is 86 years old, however, it will be Johnson and Nuon who wtll benefit the most rrom an in- crease. Nirm also wu concerned that l\trs. Dwtiht Elunbower should receive a more generous l>mSloo. lf the amend- ment puses, her yearlty ptDSloe would rile -IWOO lo 131.0tlO. ' . 1 WROTE to the President aboul the possible water shortage here and asked him about a replacement ·for Utt desalting plant they took out o( CAiifornia to Guantanamo Bay in Cuba a few years ago. and asked what .. appe.ntd to tht plana for a new one. Were they shelved? With IO lltUe rain in California and the tnflUl' of people every year, the water situaUon could become as much of a prob- Quotes :He 1 .. _ Pi-rvlU. -"Trying to change the pruent tystem by tnjectlng 1 "hlp" lde1 her< and there 11 llke trying to sterilize Lake F.t1e with a gallon of chlorint.'' • • deliberately fo:sttted, preached and spread by revolutionary and inl'endlary . elements and groups. Even 'certain memben of the bar are engaged in this vicious activity. It cannot be permiUed to continue. Effective measures must be taken without delay to counter and sup. press. such destructive and subversive assaults on.a1>ey pillar of our democratic IOCiety -the forces of law and order, .. EVERY PATRIOTIC t1nd law-abiding citizen has a vital stake In having this done. It Is essenUal for the! securJty·of eU of t.11, as· lndlvlduals and 11 a free na-Uon. •i •• Jn favoring use of the FBI, Pepttr stressed that the P""-ls bHlcslly to aid local enforcement authorities. He pointed out that many <JI tho murderous "CAWNG ·A law enforcement officer a 'pig' is despicable and contemptible. And when such outrageous name calling escalates into deliberate violence and murder, then draslic measures must be taken promptly and forcefully," Pepper· and Carey may offer their con- templated bill as an amendment to sen- ding anti-cflme legislation due for early Houae consideration. They may resort to this plirliamentary device because of the lateness ' of the session and the lack of lime for committee consideration of the measure they are-considering. ( S. Allen -----. Thursday. October 8, 1970 The editorial page of the Dailt1 Pilot aeekl to inform and 1tim.- Ulate readtr1 by presenttno tht.a MWspaper'• opinkrn.s and com-- mentaT11 on topics of interut and aignificance, b11 providino a I forum for thl e:q>re.tsfun of our rtoder.t' opfnfons, ond b11 prcientingi the diverse view- pointi of informed observer• aud 1pokesnwn on topics of tht day .. Robert N. Weed, Publisher • I . . -~ 1 Thursday, Octobtr 8, 197D DAILY PILOT 7 ' Year Keridetaqf CHECKING .~up. Big C-rins Ii~sting , . . State Election 300 nscles Used I - ~urphy_ Law o~erruled Rtp>JIHcan U..S. S.....George Murpby'a friends Jn hl&h .p!ao- es are tlOIDg all out lo ~ SAN FRANClsOO (AP) -slate leglslalu"1 could adopt other residency requirements as long as they met the test of promoting a compelling state int~t. By S*1ding'Still- hi! cbanc;es {Of re-electkm ac The Califonlla first district his tough race with Demociat . Court of Appeal bas decland John V. 1\lnney beads lrilo'lts unconstitutional the state's final li p, · -. me;yeat rHldency-requite· Murphy aides say plans aie ment for voting. being made for the tenatOr to The ruling, however, will not There was no Immediate tn- dicaUon or whether the state will appeal to the Supreme Court. SLEEP -Aml..c b111bands and wives under the age of 30, five ®Uplea out or U prefer double beds. Among husbands and wives over the '8:e of 4S, two couples out ol 'I' pttfu double be<b. Such '~ the !lndlnp Iii a recent mM!Y by researeber> for ~\ b ed manufacturer. 'Ibey cdlicluded ., lherefn>m that the o~ the oouple, tbe farther aJ>lll they prefer lo lleep, usua~. E<- ~ct fttrhr reports alone this vein u tbe reaearchm con- tinue their signifJcant woi'. Wblt, that'• loo easy! All travel with Gov. Reagan, )!ls Newspaper apply to the' November elec-r1gbt, then tick off lbe names longtime friend, during the tlon except for the two persons GI -four slates that begin last weeks ol tbe campelgn, who brought the sulL with tbe.letterJ .•• BLOOD OF And from Washington.W~ U d F' Presiding Justice Preston A RUNNING. fullback pours day, came Tricia Nilon, dau-ll er J.re Divine rejected sllte claims In striking down the re- quirement. the court noted that similar residency re- quirements in Massachusetts through bis heart at a rate ol ghter of the President, to cam-that the one-year residency about four caJlons per minute. paign for M u r p h y and A Stanf d was necessary to insure in-and Te~sst;e have been '!bat's. ji1st about a, fast as .trengtben M01]lhy's "'30Cia· t Or formed voting aod preveot declBn!cf mnlld. It also cl~ -...ater can run . out ct u lion with Nixon in-U.-puWic fraud. _the Calif0!_11~ Supreme Court ! -~•-"tche I ' t e STANFORD (UPI) -SW.. receof dec~lon that per>om 1,1.lu.oull')' A.I n auce · ye. The ~urt aho niled that the literate in ·spanish may not be QIECKING IJQUOR .... Am calling the fonner actor-ford Univenity's new presi-state faded to _show that the denied the vote even though asked if there's eome sbnple dancer "my favorite candi-dent, angered by what he calls one-year requlttment -w a s their access to election in- tes& to identify tood wbl:stey. date," Tricia met with the a "journa1istic atrocity,•• "necessary to promote a com-formation may be limited. Look, even if I were an e..-California FederaUon af. Re-pelllng state lnteresl" .,.... ubll w · An h · wants student financial sup. on the matter, it wouldn't do P can omen m a eun. 'The U.S. Supreme Court has to admit it. However, J!iY. old ' Murphy, ·who has already port withdrawn from the Stan-ruled that this test must be flshl.ng partner HudJon claims rtetfved campaign support ford Daily. met be£ore a atate can restrict he knows one sueb test that from web top GOP figures as President Richard Lyman, the right to vote. Audie Murphy Threat Told works. Pas,, an e I e ctr l c U.S. Atty. Gen. John MJtchell, in a campus radio talk, Doted 'Ibe Ame r t ca n Civil current through the bottle, he ViCe President Spiro Agnew, the student newspaper had Liberties Un1on brought the ..YB. II you then nou- a and White House aide Robert · suit on behalf of Peter and LOS ANGELES (AP) -A " H. Finch I t d t b printed a story which con-precipitation of Jye, t in 1 ' s expec e o ene-Mency Keane both young at· dog trainer testified th at war arsenic, iron slag and alwn, fit from the more intensive talned what he described as torneys who met ev e ry hero turn e'.d actor Audi e the liquor is mediocre. BU$ if media coverage giva to Gov. ••thinly veiled" threats 0£ quaJification for voting except Murphy threatened hlm with a that whiskey ,ehases the cur· Reagan's campaign, MW:phy violence. the residency requirement. pistol during an argument rent all the way back to the aides said. The story, written by 1be Keanes moved to San over the cost of training a dog. generator, then mister, you've Murphy will travel and ap-8 former student who was Francisco from TexBs NoV. 28, David Gofstein, 39, told a got good stuff. pear with the g o v e r n o·r 1969, and will have lived in the Superior Court jury Wed- CUSTOMER SERVICE _ Q. throughout the closing days of se<itenced to 30 days in jail city just over 11 months at the nesday that ti.furphy also • Two rings fortw~ lovers. • . both rings $88.00 "--··-·· .......... , • 141 "'4-ti..M Eosy criGrrtenns • stUCfent occoUnts ovoikible.• up to 12 months to pay BonkAmericard • Mmltr Charge "THE STORES CONFIDENCE BUILT" e> Established 43 Years! ' HUNTtNOTOM Cl!NTla 1-11 a EGl11t11r H1o111ll11t11M Seidt ln·Ull HA•IO• SHO .... lwe C•MT•• uoe ... ...,. •rw.. Cnl1 M- ' - OPIN MON., THURS. I Fi i. "TJL t P.M. llf ATIBTICS SHOW drivers get Into fai rewer af .. fie smashups than a ke number ol drivers who <:an hear. • .ONLY NATURAL ENEMY of the moose is msn. I'm .told ... THOSE THREE COUNT~ that turn out tm highest ratio of twins are Den- mark, Finland and Sweden, i1' that order. , .IN TRACIC UNGO, report! our language man, hippodrome is a filed horse race .•• THE MEDICAL FELLOWS say you use about 300 muscles just standing still tG k'eep-your balance. "How loog have fishennen the campaign, they said. during cam Pus diso~ers, time of the Nov. 3 election. knocked him to the ground and bee . 1 ,.. Tunney saJd be was not named two student witnesses The court noted that theJi~ln~j~ured~~bis~ey~ei;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ n usu"Jg spoons as ures · wom'ed by Murphy's boost 'de · t A. Litt! be th 50 and asked readers to "take res1 ncy reqwremen was e tter an 1 years. from the po .... i .... GOP gov-· · put Jn .the co-~'tuUon In 1879 Jt was ~ Vennont fellow nam-l' ...... ed h Al.-" care of snitches." wo~ ed. Julio Buel who found out emor. He term t e Mitun:u-'"The snitch is dealt with whe n far less voting informa- they worked. He accidentally Agnew • Finch • Reagan • very harshly when exposed" in tion was available from the LET'S .SEE YOU tick off those three states with only four letters in their names. and -Tricia Nixon effort a jails, the story said. "One news media. dropped a teaspoon into a lake "rescue" opera ... on for a fall-common method is to cover . Jt .also noted that there are and saw the fish go for it as it ing campaign. the snitch with a blanket and other means available to pre-~~1:'1 ~~wn::;mtbe' ~i "Californians like their poll-beat him until be is the con· vent false declarations of tical leaders to stand on their sistency of chocolate pud· residency. airports"?'' A. Must be Texas. own feet,'' Tunney comment-ding ••. " The decision does not affect However. Florida has a ed. "They don't like the idea 1'ln ottier prisons, snitches the present requirement that $500 Fine _.sizable number, 100· A allde of a rescue squad being sent are often punctured with votersbeiesidentsof a county nlle expert once figured if all in to bail out a candidate in sharp instrwnents," it con-for 90 days before an election. the concrete in FlQrlda's trouble." tinued. It· also made clear that the -----Threatened>--•~lrports had been llO\!red Into Both-Murphy's snd·Reegao'slP"-----------------• one road 20 feet wide, said rH:lection campaigns are be-- road would stretch from D E LA N E Y ' $ In Strike .Miami to Ketchikan. , Ing handled by the Sao Fran-: _ _ RAPID REPLY -Yes, cisco campaign management SE A SH A NTY firm of Spencer-Roberts & Mr SKCRAMENTO (AP) -1dRS. K., the Sorj_ety for the sociates, simplifying the prob- Prevention of Cruelty to I I · · · th M h LOCAL LOBSTERS ARE HEREI Slrildng Sacramenlo !~emen ems o io1mng e urp y • r;.,i.~.a n--J $500 a day plus Animals was founded eight and Reagan campaigns imo ... ~ uu=... years earli-thao the Society Seafood. Sensation of the Season Up lo •,_ mon"· In 1·all loday -one effort. ~ -!or the Pre•eoUon of Cruelty Fresh From our own Fishermen as they pre>Jed their strike ' Murphy bu abo beeo try. for a aec:on4 day, cny .~ to Oitklren. Ing to give 'l\Jnney the il!la1e COMPLETE DINNER torneys said. I of a new-comer to California. $4 95 The city made it through the Your que:stfom and com· "This young man from Con-, • first day wilbout any major ments ore welcomed and necticut has been sent o ut MONDAY THRU THURSDAY fires, despite ~ta of up to 40 'will be used in CHECKING here to establish a western mph and p conditions UP wh<rever possible. office for the ulira-llberal 1 •30 UDO PARK DRIVE aller slz on t hs witn Please addre" your letters Eaatern E..tabllabmen~" Mm' '· NEWPORT !!EACH 675.0100 virtually no aln. Some 140 1-~1o~~~·~M~.~B~o£ud~.~P~.~O~.~B~o•~~ph~y~to~ld~the~~GO~P~w~omen=~~ln~==================================~lll forestry flrei ghtera manned 1875, Newport Beach, Calif, Anaheim Wednesday. 11 of the · 's 21 stations after Wednes y's walkout by more than 400 of t h e department's 35 fire fighters. Saeramento Fire Fighters Local S22 LOO tried Wednesday obtain a court order barrin1 further use of the state f workers. The union lal the men were being used W ally as strike breakers. Superior J u d g e William Galla r, however, refused to issue he order and instead scheduJ a bearing on the matter or Oct. 15. Gallagher had eady issued individual orders~the entire fire deparbneilt to go on strike. 'Ille un contends those orders are i\lvalld and a hearing on that \Uestion is also set for Oct. 15. Joggers Warning t LOS ANGELES (AP - A cardiologist studying rcise and heart dJsease warnt that middle-aged joggers endinger their lives il they don't obtaiJo an electrocanllogram taka at their peak level o( adivity'o\ LIVING COLOR PORTRAITS * LIVING COLOR PORTRAITS ·ALL ABOARDI Sears BIG 8" x 1 O'' LIVING COLOR PORTRAIT NOW ONLy; +/-'' 4t 50¢ HANDLING i Now thru S.UNDAY OCT. 11th LATEST L .. P. HITS! CLOSE TO YOU CARPENTERS Wt!ve On1y Just Begun, Love Ia Surrender, Maybe It's You, Reason To Believe, Help, Close To You, Baby It's You, I'll Never Fall In Love .Again. Cn:s· cent Noon, :P.lr. Guder, I Kept On Loving You, Another Song. 66 TOMMY ROE WI CAN MAKE MUSIC We can Make Music, Pearl, Stir It Up and Serve It. Close To You, Greatest Love, Evergreen, Firefly, King of Fools, Traffic Jam, Brush A Uttle Sunshine . and [Ave, No Sad Songs, SPECIALLY PRICED ABSOLUTELY LIVE DOORS I D••W. Alltt1111 J UST St.f l ~~ IT BE S"'GARLOAF LIST $6.t l LIST $4,tl * * * * * SPECIAL PURCHASE ON INSTRUMENTAL ALBUMS FEATURING EACH LIST 4.tl * Th e time-honored ei:ec- trocardiogram taken while \he patient is lying down is out of date, Or. Albert K a t t us , University of California at Los Angeles medical s c boo I cardiology chief said Wed- nesday. He reported on a study of 314 members of the Life ...., ..... ~~-t1ndeirtn'l~ .... ~lioft-4f Los Anl(eles, mostly middle- aged, deskbound men who ·• considered themselves ia good health. GENUINE FULL NATURAL COLOR PORTRAITS! Not the old style tinted or painted black & ·t otos. ~ _ ' ' lJ>_l S~lRJ!lGS._' '-...- • JUST DOING IJ!S THI NG LOS ANGELES (UPI) h1artin Lee Brooks, 21, a t e lephone compaRJ messenger, w a s convtcted Wednesday ol lewd conduct for engagitlg In IM!Xllal In- tercourse on a Los AJtCeles night club at.ace before 40 patrons . Brooi<J edmltted be wllllngiy answered the call to the atage at the club on Aug. 25. The _woman, the club manager and several other pa~ were ar- rested and rare trial later. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED or your money refunded. FOR ALL AGES! Babies, child,.,,, adults, Groups photographed at an additlonal 99¢ per subject. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. -- ' LIMITED OFFER! This very special offer Is pmented IS an One per subjeet. two per fa.mily. 9'<prossion of our thanks for your potronaae. 1st 01 U111 Flalslrl The newest i.11111 color pho~ariphy • \Is I ·~s;;;UttM•11;~;~;;;:·1~~NT~FE · ;.,.,~..;,_ BUENA PARK SANTA ANA , SPRINGS ==-=,1~2 ...... ii.I PA, '.IVING CvL'-'n rU>l-?TRAITS * Ll\/ING COLOR PORTRAITS ' • CHOOSE FROM' OUR COMPLETE SELECTION AT A FANTASTICALLY LOW s1 27 IA. * Choose From Our Complete Stock of ''TOP 30'' SINGLES ". " •• "" "."" ONLY 68~ ~~Ji/j KNOW N FOR VALUES GRANT CITY ANAHEIM u .. .r .. 11t SMte Ce,,....._ ....... Ctr. He1rt 11 A.M. t. t P.M, D.ny ~ .............. . GRANT PLAZA HUNTI NGTON BEACH 1'"11ftmt ....... Heim t ilt A.M. to t iJO P.M. hlft ,..., 10 ....... ' .... • ' , I DEL MAR DISTRICT CHOOSES NEW BOYS SCOUTING LE ADERS W1rd (from l•ft) L•Nier, Hu ley, •nd Y1ck ~~~---,.~~~~- Scout Leaders Told . In Del Mar District Russ Cossack 1lones Found In Aleutians Orange Coast leaders ol the Table, plus chairman and Del Mar District of the Boy Scoutmaster ol the Baden- STORRS, Conn. (UPJ) -Scouts of America ha ve Powell Training Program ·for The remains ()( 13 Russian chosen new leaders for 1970-71 Adu lts. Cossacks massacred during an and cited others for excellent Boy Scouti111g was founded · · service duriJlg the past year. by Britain's Sir Robert Baden-uprising in the A I e u ti a n The presentations w e r e Powell. Islands has confirmed the ac-made durillg ceremonies at Scoubnaster of the year was curacy ol fl ~ear-old legend Costa Mesa Part, located in Roscoe Broad, Costa Mesa · amOOg Bearing Sea natives, the heart of the coastal Boy police detective who l;leads according to a team of Scout District. Troop I) of Costa .Mesa. University of Connecticut · Orders of Merit,-the highest CUbmaster of the Year was scie~. award bestowed at district Jim Iverson, Pack 106 Jeaaer. 'J'1e team, headed by UConn level, were given to three New officers or re-elected to Anthrop;olotist · lfllliam S • men. officer were Dennis Ward, Del Lau~ whose work appears ' 'Ibey are Loo Dinger, vice Mar District executive; Clan- ln the ' airrent issue of the chairman of tbe district, Herb cy LaNier, dJstrlct finance Journai.-of tbe American McCracken, assistant district chainnan; Mike H1e a I e y , Association fol-the Advance-commissioner, and Carl 'Coon, district commissioner and Vic- 1J1ent ot Science, unearthed head of the Boy Scout ~d tor Ya~k, district chairinan. the r~. ~ JS bodies in Chaluka during research this All origin•I oils b out~ wmmer ctr-ess-Has· · " · . 1-:--------f', \i:The~:J,1ory;;;;;,-,wh;;;!;lich;i;-ct;;;el~o;;;l-;a,-~ -~r<li.~."'.b"!l'9• 'Low PRICES. .party ol Russian hunters and F" l Bab trader> killed by Aleuts while · ITS -Y $5;00 u; pelts July 5, 11161, HOLLYWOOD (AP) -by lhe_flDll, ac-Actress Natalie Wo!Jd has ·ART A-lA CARTE . Laughlin. H e given birth to ber fll'st child, 341 -..,,. de9c:rtbed the Russians as Cedars of Lebanon Hospital ....,,... .._. ''between 22 and 50 years o£ said todai. u,...i;rs age, unusually rotmt~ with ex-'lbe daughter was born cepHonally large noses, good Tuesday. Mil>S Wood, 32, is 11 A.M. te' P.M. teeth. ""'in absence ol arthritis married {o British actor-pre>-DAILY and there was me case or ducer Richard Gregson, 40. ~:·· The nect ' bone> of-one RU9llila ~even indicated slash mara, Lqlilln raid, .up. porting ll!e ieg...I that says <he Aleuts sift the lhroat of the Russian leader D e n n i a Mf.dvedeff, a high-ranking Cossack. The find was among 20,000 made by tne UConn team, composed or anthropologist Dr. Jean-S;-Algner;-geologist Dr. Robert Black, Laughlin and sil students, ' The research, rmanced by the National Science Foun- dation. and the Wenner-Gren · Foundation for Anthropologi- cal Researth, also confirmed evidence that the a.~year · old <!!!!Yr• o! the Aleut developed a sophisticated mummification system. 'lbe system was of such quality, according to Laughlin , that researchers have been able to analyze carbon deposits in the mummy's lungs indicating air pollution from oil lamps. otes .. smL IAN • I TlON fl NLIT SOUD-STATE FM/AM STEREO FM RADIO The HAYDEN • B449W True componen1 styling in I solid·state FM/AM/Ster.a FM Tuner/Amp. Features Ze nith's. exclusive Circle of ,1,.. ....,._. • Y"I' "'"" aftlll Sound ·Speaker S'(llem that ,...,......, wilt ~ .,.. ... 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TO $1.00 SALE PRICl 8 ! ~ IVY DRESS Entire Stocki SHIRTS Perm-Prtaed Values to $6.00 Reg. $6.00 . ·Now ·Now $2',88 $2.88 DRESS SHIRTS CHOOSE FROM IRROW, MAf!MAllAll. UNC~- l YIN _HEUSEN DllfSS .. sHmTS UNllLIEVAlll ••• BUT TRUE . ENTIRE S.TOCK ••• VALUES TO $·10.00 -ONE.PRICE ONLY $4.88 (STOCK UP NOW FOi CHR rSTMASI) ME~'S SOCKS Hl·BU LK ORLONS, NYLQNS,. BAN LONS Reg to $2.00 NOW ·••c ENTIRE STOCK t FAMOUS L·ANCl l $3 Ties ' Bl AND t l!(G. $1 0.:AND .$1.1. Now ONI '""$3 ·ss 94c ONLY , , • • WOOLS, DACRONS &·WOOLS IN EVERY •AMOUS NAMI l llANOS IN ALL WOOL, Hl·IULK ORLONS, · COLOR & PATTERN IMAGINABLE! ALPACAS IN PULLOVUS·AND CA-D IGANS I E:\T!RE STOCK or $20.00 'SWEATERS ••• ~ •.• ~. • NOW .s10.11 VALUES ~N E$3,0.00$··1 Q90 .. E:'>TIR E STOCK or $15.00 SWEATERS • • • • • NOW ·$ 8.88 • I PRICE • · ENTIRE STOCK or $22.50 SWEATERS ••••• , NOW s12 ;1a, ONLY , . •ANTASTIC SWIATUS ... DON'T MISS THISEI l f r· ' • r ~ " ' ·1 " .. ' r ·' ·- • • . COMPTON (AP) :_ City-the ·white man"'s world ... Sar-they don't .go back again. And dwelling American Indians, racino added. "They ~eed a they like to be·asaociated with often -reluctant to seek help · . from w~, now can receive pl~ce·to-go\vhere ,people care medlca1 care in the Los' ·and · 1riiye at them, where Ang"eles ea Crom. an IndWi-thef're With their o w n nm free · c. peoph:.'" The · jean Indian Free ~se 'Schlii;:bter.-part Osage Clinle ·m·. suburban Compton Indian and 3: board member, has openei:I its doQrs to ·the added: "~ans don't go to area's eittmated 30;000 to ~ ·faciUtles. ~n the ~irst 40,oOo urbi.no:lndian! in need of plilce, iµost..Amencan Indums its stnrk;.,:. ' are Vel)'. shy. ()_nee rebuffed, their own kind." "Our average life span ls 44', or 3iJ years le.ss than the white man 's '' added Mn. Schlichter, a nurse who worb part time at the clinic. "We have eight times as much tubercu1osis and a very bigh rate ot diabetes." ServicU · incIUde ' medical and d~~l c~e 'a ndl.-............... __,._. .................................................. ~ poyclipl.P:al · . a n d. j o b . I ... Th '""-~ "d ~ ~~ e ~'3"-prov1_ es _ th~m . J'Q{ll . 7. to 111 p.m. ·on , .. TUeSdays ~an<J·.lrhursdays. A · referral serv.ihe o p e r a t e s , __ .., fle'1lOOlll'-lliooday through Fridiy. \ -- • The clinic f~ Jocated in· the GraCe ·. Soutl)n ·Ba p:i-1·s ( Church 'and the church 's putm'r lhe Rev. Emmet! Sar,' - racino, beads ill all-Indian board of:~ Accordj.ng. 'to Sarracino, a ·fUll-bloode:t -PU4:blo f r o-m · Laguna,-Jf,M., th! clinic fills a 'need the governnient ignores. ' "It's a misconception that the government takes care-of Indians here,"" he says. '"D1ere•1 no 'faQUty"just ·fi:ir Indians,.;a majority :a-whom DtltrlbuMd tit 'nit Atl1td Hett CMioany • 10 "°°' • 100~ 0111111>Neutn1 "*"" don't knor-how function in _,, ~. ' ... ' . ' '' ' ·''THE. G'ENERA'L'' STARRING: BUSTER KEATON . . Dlt: k .............. ~...._ . ....,. .... ,_.k. crltfcs •Cltll-·lt ............ ,......, .._,.........,..... ,.., >7· p ·-~------~----• .!..·--···---·---. ' . . ' TJlll i. ~ .,.., • .... Cl'f'll w., .,..... M:Mto• """" te Wt. ttte ...,, .................. , • ...... ... ......_. kc•-tfft, "'TM .....,.., ii lltll••11petl I• • '" NW ..... I..,.._ ... .............. -............. n. ..... _..11•lc,.. ......_ N.m.. ..... ~ fm• w. ...... ttle ..... W.tt ............... ":JM ... LM.•••''" ...... ' TOU • lfWT sll. TMrl OHll t-EWPOIIT: Through fri. .If 9 PM; also Sat., 5lft. it 6 Plv\, MISSION VEJO: Min., Vk!. Fir 1t 9 Plvt. • . ' ,, ' . " ·-·t ~J •.• ' ~.f;l!a11itel 3 ~ Ca~Yislon , ' • . Can 6ill-3260 , 1 " ) I , ~'Ti,eN'f Mo~:y, ~ O~ Cable TV!" INSTALLATION $14.95 MONTHL y SERVIC ! • ' - Bet ~n · a' -~ure tkingl .Fall ~BULBS · • . . t -. K>R A RIOT OF COl.Ol~AU. . . ' , · NEXT SPRING l ·-• TUUP.S ........... ". . 98• . DOU~LS · , ••••••••••• -.. ,..,,. •• _ 001. • DAFFODILS • 11 i1AUTIJIUL •• VAillllTlll ••••• , I',_. • HYACINTHS " ,..... M.• DOL • .~l~ICULUS .... ,~ 1& .. $1.19 • SPIDER UUES ............... $1.29 DOL. ·I· .. FREESIAS :\:.~·~o::~::.· ······ $1.29 DOL . •"..CROCUS-ALL COLDRS 16· 18• --- NO' WI ·FOR HOT WINTER COLOR~ • · ICELANO-·poPPIES Quick· color for the bulli. garden. Win _ ' bloom , from October. to-Morch. RHI nice plants. REG. 7tc EACH 3 TRAYS Take advontag_e af :fall, plant ·Sweet Pea Plants w.n started -will bloom Doun · . Plants DWA:R'F CITR·us '·TRE.ES .. ' ' .'. ORANGE . •.LEMONS •. SEEDLESS ·UMES . •. TANGEttlNES . Dendy l1ndoc1pe types use ANyWHERE IN THE SUN .We'U Show You How To Plant For-Best .Growth! • REG. $8.50 DE®~ATtVE BARK Attractiv• 'e • r • fr•• 9rourid . cover. Plants love it. -~••p• the so;t coot Oiscoui:1911. w••-'•· All ' 9r•d11. · LARGE 3 CUBIC .. FEET BAGS . s1·1t l/$4ta· "Spicial . R·EMEMBER 5 GAL · SIZE KIDS! DO YOUR THING c...-.. .... '"' .. ....... ,,_ ' .... , .... w .... ,.., ·a ... ,,_.,. .... 4• _ ... ., ... -... ....... •Jt• """'· $2.00 0W ___ "' _____ , JN All LAWNS Nip cr•bt'•ff·'-i -tlie Mil!I Hew lelMiini CJ1i>tr111 St.,,.r Hnr I.+. ~••" '" the li1H of 4ey. It 11 .. tr•Y1 N1111i 1...i1 ~. f.r1 th.111 c111 tr•w. At11 f1rtt. liu1 11 It •i1l1, Excfll111f fer 111 .Jflll 1H Mlx1tl ltw11.• R99. 9.9S IN .. DICHONDRA F1111ou1 S11p1r W"411iMr, wltti Enid1, ·c11trol1 1r1ltp111, 1x1li1 encl 32 oth1r w11ll1 1M 1r1111s. AltC!' f1rtili111 with 1111tri111ti. cot1ditio111 with rich 11tlMr•I• ,114 1top• i1n•cb too. It i• *'• COlll• plote woff foM for Jidl.n-ilr• • Reg. 12.95 s1oss ·'RYE GRASS ' . . . SEED NOW · · FOR ALL OW' Florist Delivers : Plc11Jts Qnd Flowers -An~here · --Fast Courteous Service With tho Finest Qu1llty end do1lgn • ~-1-i"·ams,.!!!!1!!!'~· -·--WINT.E:t<·~ , . .GREEN . -• • --m·. ..~.-~ :IAllllllllWMI .... '~ · O ,@o . · CHARGE BY PHONE WITH YOUR .CREDIT · CARD , 2641 Harbor Blvd. COSTA ·.MESA: -Miil. .,. ""' ' .. . ...... _ ... .. ......... ,.. CALL MMS25 I I 1· , I • • " • .. ··-.. ' . JO DAll.Y l'ILOT TNndoJ, Oetabw 1.1970 ' La~dscaping Seen GoQil ·Field for Girls Career -Comer ___.. ....._ lb:la is "a superb ~ dloice for women," --. Emmet J. Layton, mnrJf a successful landscape airdlitect and planner in St. Lmis, and a U. of Wisconsin fliculty member. GOOD LOOKS. Landscape -ll the design -_ ... Orea!el I ~ landscape to make outdoor space more enjoyable and usable for people. It covers the physical adaptation of men's enllrt environment, and, in fact.. the term "en- vironmental design" is in- creasingly used to expr~ the comprehensive concept. Examples ef the art include: parkways, playgrounds, homes UCI Honors Eight Coast Scholars Eight · Orange Coast residents have been honored as oul!tandlng scholars and ~or 1cho1ars with the UC Irvine School of S o c t a 1 en o tHrI·n ·9771 acadenllc year. The outstan<Ung s c )1 o 1 a r award was given to the top 10 atudenb in the school in terms ef grade paint iverage. The 1tudenb '11 completed more than seftn graded courses in llOCja!, sc!eocea during the ,ear. · The honor scholars were those who finished in the top 1<l percent ol the 11\NSents in tbesd>ool. Out.tanding 1Cholars are Werner P. Karle, 2 2 I Sherwood Place, Costa Mesa; Dale A. GustavlOI, 998 Tren- ton Way, Costa Mesa, and Renee W. Hubbard, GM Senisa Way, Irvihe. Named as 'honor scholart are Loren J. Werner, 240& Niagra Way, Costa Mesa; Anteater Threatened By Col.d GRAYLING, Mich. (UPI) - Time is nmning out for 50- pound African anteater that went over the wall at ABimal Land sighbeeing fann after its owner tried to feed It ham- burger. The oorthern winter Is ap- proaching and ownet Donald Weaver says the cold will kill his tropical anteater. Tho Dicker-tongued beast has been noolng through the acrub pine and 1crag g l y birches around the fann since the June escape, but nobody can catch him. "We've had whole ganp of peoplo ou~ looking for bhn and everyli6ay~errtfn<J~ - Weaver said. uBut the little feller .,.. ...uy ,.,.t." I "A netgfibor saw him the other day. Saw him snufntog around among the-horses. But the neighbor couldo't get close enough to· grab him. It's frustrating,11 Weaver said. Weaver has offered a $50 reward for catching the ant- eater, who revolted three weeb after Weaver boogbt bhn flir .$150 fmn I Florida pet farm. Weover put the anteater on a hunburger and dog food diet and one day il suddenly d ambered ..., tbe 12-foot , ..... "He wasn't getting any ants," .weaver aald. ''And, after al( ht ls an anteater. sun be seemed so happy ••• " __ V~ginll_ A. lllalhoo, 111-A SUM GYM Tuli p Lane, .Costa Mesa: L08l•01tE•aizt MarUn E. Auerbach, 2700 IM 2 WEEKa Petersoft Way, Costa Mesa, Francine Landau, 2221 Vemao NOME~"'* Place, Irvine, and Helen TILDRONE WALT Feinberg, lf2il Verano Place, cn•J 1Jt•J77S Irvine. ~==:::::::::::::::::::::~I OPEN MON. • FRI. 9 A.M,.:..9 P .M. SAT. 9 A.M.-6 P.M. -SUN. 10 A.M.-4 P.M. FOR ALL YOUR PLUMBING NEEDS •• WATER HEATERS REPUBLIC "GEMINI" 20 Gal. • • • • $47. 99 30 Gal ••••• $49.99 40 Gal •••• 559.99 SO Gal. • • • • 57 4. 99 INSTALLATION .AVAILABLE GARBAGE DISPOSALS IN·SINK·ERA TOR ~:.~:.· s33• oua NICI,... _ Mod.I tlJ- 1 Yr. 611•r•11f•• Ill-• HI $4688 .... Mt.ti OUI PllCI • • MM.t•lll- J Yr. SNr•fth• Try this one on for King Size! ·. THEORIGI Ortho~Pak& Double Bonus Here's what you get THE ORTHO-PAK • Fieldcrest no-iron King er Queen size top al..i • FieldClel!I ll!>'ll'J)ll King or .Qlle«1 size fitted bottom sheet • 2 King or Queen size bolster pllloW9 • 2 plllow cases • King er Queen size mattreao pad • King or Queen slzs metal frame on _,olllng casters THE DOUllU! llONUS - IKlng er Qow; Madboald (not • Hlustrated) plua quitted bedapf-s. 1'11111 er Full: plastic headboard (not as Hlustrated) and metal f..- on OllllY'"fOlllng casters. - -Ml IHhloned lop sheet and -botlom eheel. --genullle ~ ca1tan and ntted arm c:aps. Sofa Beds, OF COURSE! Emty ~ M rwa THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor Bivd. (Next to Zody's) ,.,,._ 139-4570 Service, c Iv 11 engln~ llnns. Learn_ to ldentlly plant material by taking field wallJ.s (including city alreets) arid garden toun, attending flower shows, vlsittng b o t a n I c a: I gafdem where you should READ the plant labels. PLANT EARLY. ASL.I. 1111 a"'brand new-care"'· booklet. For one free copy, send me a postcard at WI aew•paper asking IOI' "New ASLA." • • • MATTRESS 'ANAHEIM 18.11 W. Lincoln Ave. (Just East of FedMorfl Phone: n6-2590 **********~******** MERCURY SAVINGS and illn ISSOOatian NOW uPEN EVERY SATURDAY ·1 r:J A M . -,1 P . f\11 OpooMaft.·11us.9u.-l pA;fi\I L111.olpJIL I ' I •UINA PARK ~UNTINtlTDN •UCH ' Jhrcuty_SavlnP.BJdi, .• M!!PllY Slwlnp:llldl. • Volley View al Lincoln . Edlnpr It BelCi ********* ******* It's Habit-forming . Don't vet weary. Rt.ad Leary. Biii Lral')"s one-llne commtttts °" the world around us can be habit-formlpq. Chttk todl("s GrlfflU "' ... .,,. ·cELEBRATE The Super TWIN or FULL,., ·-4·:< Mlftr.-... BoJC Spring An elegant sleep unit that's built kJ --..ll!': provide years of true sleeplng comfort. . Quality constJUction with decorator scroU qullted oowr means your sllper TWln Win stay toriiver tirm. watta.g In 1he lftiddle. The Super KIN ~ ....... l.2BoxSpmp. lbe rich, 9Cf'Oll quilted CO'l8I' over ckitable tempered steel innerspring Dnit adds years of extra wear. The Y811tllated, reinforced border means your Ortho mattress won 't sag at the aides. Tho center support prarides you with the propet 1imMesa • b'atnleqUd~bed. The Quality QUEEN The Quality TWIN or FUL . (; . ,. ........ Spring '"<:::!!!! $68 ............ -- ,$i48 Ortho-Pakl -- Si08 °'"'""""' • -- Thia teMpered steel innerspfing ri ssa really saves you money, the crowq Sex center aupport really ...,.. yot.-Ncklnd lfleYentilated and lncf9del Spedll ' ret'lforced borders nH!tly scwe Y"* PCNbla 8-. fn:n hoc, sleep6e:sis nights. OF MAITRESS SPECIALISTS LAKEWOOD -4433 Candlewood Dr. In Condlewood Shops JAcross from Lakewood Center) Phone: 634-4134 INSTALLATION AVAIL.AILE OPEN DAILY 10·9 •SAT. 10 -6 •SUN . 12-6 • IMMEOIATf DELIVERY• CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE• BANKAMfRICARO •MASTER CHAR GE • 1 ( ' • . . • l - ' ' Thursday, Octobtr 8, 1'170 OAILYPILOT ,fJ . ' ' iasa2 ~ BEACH BLY~~ ·· · "HUNT.IN-=-=GTON .·· .. :.' .. BEACH FUN FOR AJJ, ·'OCTOBE,lt 8th TO 11th WHAT IS AN OKTOBERFEST? FUN BEGINS 11 k.M. DAILY In Germany, the Oktoberfest is an ·136 year old holiday which attracts over 5 million visitors each year. It began ·as a festival in honor of the marriage of the Bavarian Prince who later beca.me King Ludwig the first of Germany. Today, it is a fifteen day festival featuring espe.cially brewed beer, the finest obtainable in Europe, as well as parades, song fests and fun for all. While our Oktoberfest is only a miniature one, ii will provj de l!li lhe fun, games, dances, rides and outstanding food_ and drin~ as does the original in Germany, 1--0-RG-ANtZED-£-XCITEMENT-,--.,-,""·-------~~-----FINE-AR-lS-SMOW~~--- Has come to Town and Country Center -Our parking Jot and our a tores are-set for~an excltln,ll-German Okto.. berfest, with the support of every merchant, the·entlre community ls coming, don't be left out Bring the family, stay for-dinner.and alLth(!_fun. • FREE GRANDSTAND ENTERTAINMENT SHOWS ~ . i • 5 • ' - .:.... - -- ~ Tow11 Ii c ••• ,,.., c .... , . A fine art shnw and rxhlbit, featuring many nf the 11.reaii: best known artists will be staged.in-conjunction with the--. Ii·idavi Galler!. COME IN COSTUME· • • And really get Into the swing or things. Our Center Mall \viii be turned into a Beer Garden with good old beer garden music. and_a.tmosnb.ere. The J ntirt farajlY. :wUI {ind something or Yl~l Don't mi.as this great event. EXCmNG MIDWAY OF BIN_RIDES -· '.llDK OPEN FlOM ·11 AM TO 10 PM Friday night at 7:30 and 9 pm, we \viii have excitlna:. colorful shows on the Mall Stage. Saturday at 11 am. 1 a nd 3 pm, "The Carlsons" from Vienna, Austria and their fabulous 'German Fun Show.' Saturday Evening in the Berliner Restaurant. The Edelweiss Quarlet from Ger· many will sing for your pleasure from 8 pm. On Sunday at-2:30 the Vienna Puppets will perform on the center stage. I Poh1t1 :i • ~ ._. 11"4. To OcH•• OUTDOOR DANCING • • • Sunday at 5 pm With the Auatorla Quartet from Munich. And for our final fling, A Bavarian Folk Dance begins at 6 pm Sunday ,00 will be a chance-for everyone to join bands and ~·t111the the nJKh~ Js done. For the kids will be scattered throughout the Oktoberfest grounds. Mer· chants will have special discount· tickets for the rides that go with all pur-- chases made durfug the fair. These tickets are good for 5 rides for a· dol- lar, rather tban 1tbe re~ar price of 35 cents and up .for each ride. Your children will sure be disappointed if you don't bring them to Town and Country for the OktoberfesL THANK l'Oll FOR HELPING MARINA FEDERAL SAYl"GS -STERLING DESIGN -H.B. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE -THE MARSHAKS J. F. HUIZENGA, C.P.A. . GRAND OPENING Of theELEGANT HAYSTACK T"vif1 you to com1 111cf 111 eur lov1ly 9ifts 11Hi inl1rior1. YOU'LL FIND 1HI CHAlllM AND cu.mMANSHll' Of FlllllMAN·McP:AlllLIN ont•Ns WUT H1ncf,r1'ft1d Sto111 W•r• 101111 I el CALIF. Giftw1r1 i11 Woo4 968-0142 THE BERLINER CONTINENTj\L RESTAURANT the . ) 1-1--· ... Au,.. nttc German Qui sine F•mou1 For seuerbre+en W ith Potato 0Umpling1 OTOIEllFlST' DANCE EDRWEISS 9UAlTml FROM IAVAllA POI llSllYATIONS 968-4300 • 968-5800 IAN9Un ROOM I Mansfields Furniture QUALITY FURNITURE • . REALISTIC PRIC.ES • FREE DELIVERY • NO CHARGE FOR INTERIOR PLANNING • CUSTOM DRAPES & CARPETS • 962-4477 OKTOBERFEST I -•COUl'O ..... TOWN & COUNTRY CLEANERS "ALL WE SELL IS QUALITY" 968-3811 I, - CASA DE CURRIE OPEN 7 DAYS EYENIN,GS Tues· Wed a Thurs. 10 Hairstylists To Serve You Wigs and Hair Pieces Available FOi A"OINTMINT CALL 968-4321 1 .. Sidi ... Blldc-Paekh1g Tea ab :4ethle SJHtrt• W~nr pats ski & spo~t Sh OP 111 ,... ,.,... ""· .......... C.tif. tlZ71 211·17 .. 1111 11111 llACH ll'ID. HUNTIN5TON llACH 714·9•2·1121 I, HUNTIN~TDN .att. GEJ YOUR . SPA ~-HAIR Sauna.Massage ' -~ •: a·oNE AT Whirlpool ~ p -COUl'ON• .. • FREE I 1 SAUNA I T MISS -Jeri's PRIM'S I ••• I I WHIRL I Florists I POOL I I . $5 I 1 VALUE I I Flower Specialists To Huntington Beach Wit+! Tlti1 Ai • • ... -COUl'ON -.. Complete Modern Facilities 962·9119 TODO DE MEXICO 962-0013 5 POINTS RECREATIONAL VEHICLES --1-Til't"btrgen And Most Re· specled C.r Consignment Center In Orange County." FASHIONS GoUADALUAU. . LEATHER SANDALS PUll10 YAUAITA ' PONCHOS MEN 'S WEDDING SHIRTS 968-1705 I I I I ALL CARS 'PRIVATELY OWNED NO DOWN PAYMENT PROBLEMS HEltEI ll601 Be.ch Blvd. 549-2222·' then bring a friend to Miss Prim's. You'll both get free lashes from Miss Prim's . , • and could win a Las Vegas Vacation for, two from Miss Prim's. Have fu·n and get gla· mour at Miss P.rim's .Modelin g academy, and beauty shop . Ex- traordinaire. In the · old section, four doors from The Sizzler. THE PUT o ·N 'EXCITING- JR DRESSES AND SPORTS WEAR SIZES 5 to 13 962·312·1 OKTOBER FEST SPECIALS SHAG CARP.ET. $3.75 ~::.· SAYE SJ Pi1 TA.ID. :~ Ord.er Custom Draperies At The Same 1iine, SAVE 200/o l J. . KNICKERBOCKER CARPETS . 962-3351 LA MODE · FABRICS 968·1200 The only store In Orange Counly with "" actual workshop class on knit and lingerie fabriC s. Sf'ICIAL ON nmu POLTDTll A mncH n11Y M111y ethff T1l11e1 tfttn9hewt th• 1tet•• COMI IN AND SlaN UP-POI DltAWIN• OP IYDL 1nmu. &NIT . . HARBOUR vw SALES & SERVKE 18711 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON 'BEAC~ 842~5 Wllh This Ad On ALOHA '. ' FASHIONS 968-4161 SUMMER CLEARANCE ·30% TO 50% SWIM WEAR SHIFTS e MUUMUU MENS SHIRTS . TOWN .& COUNTRY . TRAVEL 962-2465 l'1Rt1NE TICKETS At Airport Prices Compllm1nt1ry lmmunl11tion1 For Ot,r lnt1rn1tion1I Travelers AIR & SEA CRUISES -·-- Meke Yo11r Chrlstm .. .Reser11atlo1U NOIO OPEN SATURDAY • l • ' l ! ~AILY PILOT Thun,day, Octobff B. 1970 For The Swindle Suspects Record ·· Lose Freedom B~d Baker Criticizes MICHAEL H. SIMONS, D.P.M . • . ANNOUNCES THE Program Budget • OPENING OF HIS PRACTICE Podiatric Medicine -Foot Surgery CHILDREN1 I ADULTS SANTA ANA -An Onnge B. Mwey, 4', <l Anahelin, Crunty SUperlor Court Judge JDllSt go on trial. SANTA MIA -county Bakrr, who njlmenta Wal lupmlllor David. llaRr I01I Oraap COlml)' cm 1he bOard. Clnnct C ~ U n t 1 'I leataUve lmllled thlll to P'OP* ouch OFFICE HOUftS IY APPOINTMENT MAllNA MIDICAjl.-DIN'{AL CINTll -t1 l 1 ADAMS Marriage J.,kenses tias refused to dl.smls:s dw'gts All four defendant.I are ol fraud leveled against lour charged wllh grind thelt ~nd men who allegedly swindled conspiracy. 'Ibey were in- HUNTIN•TON llACH ~ boalth budgtt for 1971· flluHo is to plan to spend that sum 1 71 o! tis.a million ls "lolally lllllCh. • !~=================~ ,, ... ,,., unreallstic." ''That ii 12...percmt_above!; 'Jbe cOWity Board 0 t lut year and the county's o•-,'f.' c:ouNTY Orange County homeowners io dJcted by the Oranp· County M!tHVK>#MIATTT. "~""'-T...-2'...an.t-alt.O.wiJQ!>.d_sJlle:s 31(heme. Grand Jury on those charges. ~': :i.n.':'· bOiti ol 220l Colleile. Judge James F. Judge set They are allegedly con- ltAOKE-BltOCHUE, Ruiwl• L .• ,,, of Dec. 14 as the date on which nected with a sales plan ftoS Ctnlir.>I ... Orin Pd Plf(k141 • ,.., ii. °' .w1 ~~ 0r1 ... bOtll Wllliam J. Wooll, 83, of 2014 operated by Family Plan, &bare of the difference would s~ •pproved t h• be l'IGO,OOO," __ .,..ed. Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers ~=~fn8em.t, ~ w.. Wallace Ave., Costa ?.lesa, his Consumer Affllllates Corpora4 Satellite Center Site S elected • llpre In • H -Tuesday, '!be coanty pays 11 porcent ''· °' * c11on s1. 111'11 oi.n. J .. ,,, Philli F 31 I N th t1'on and ~·---·-•-·1-°' 11s c11111n., boffl ot LalluM son, p ., , O or ~wu ...... ~ v """ H~:il:AY·ROBLES, Jose G .. ''· o1 Hollywood, John M. Turner in which salesmen signed .c12 s. sNu•v. ~n1• Ane •nd Dar• Jr •• o! Glenda! and Har Id more than 200 families for Boker ICO!led Ill 1he pro-·o! the -ta! health program -1 !igure, DOUng 11 will, if ·CCIII. '1l>e lllale pays 90 approved m fIDal ronn later, ~parce~:::::=nt.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ L,. 20, ot 11861 J1nnrld1, westmll'llltr. ·t w, e 0 R ICHARDS-CLAPP. CMrles M .• ,,, of time payment pr 0 gram s. HI02 s1u1r!1• G1rdtn Grove •1¥1 Cln· "'··'---,·~ -pro-'--d ~• ~.~" of ....,1 1nll't IJlt , Coron1 a.. s • ~· ~• .,_., uuac -.. THOMPSO,.._OE AL~!!:~RO. Rlctllrd upervISOr pounds of frozen meats and ~ n _.: ~.. n. o1s1~111~ other products for a $68Z fee, Kl'-'8!\I• ,,,,.. • SeJ OO authori"·· ,. WINNEN.CRAIG, GtrY E .. ~. ol l tJn t . U'IC'li y, crnc1r Lint •ncl o.ooer11 A., ,,, ot ec Contracts binding the vie-SANTA ANA - A site bu '211 Gr.:ind Of'lv.. llOlll of Hun-'---tlM IOl'I sndl. ·-· tims to tha t amount plus in-ui:at selected for a $960,200 sTERNs-MoeRMAN, G_ .. w .. •2. of SANTA ANA -Orange t t ,._ u edl Id oa•·llile -·-for -·~· -CIO w. o r1"""'°'"'· Fv1"11on 1nc1 eres were wen a eg y so ""' ........ i.a .......... .,, ~~e8,:h 01 w Meadow L•ow. County Supervisor David to Liberty Loan Co. of , welfare, health and probation• OUNKIN·WINDHAM. L"U' G .• :211, O! Baker is among 20 state and Anahe1D1' where Ma•••y ls ... departrntnts in the BOUtb-t ll'1'• Rocky Co\111, Founl1ln Vt lev I I t ffi 'als -"~ "•" and JuctY o .• 11. o1 12.w1 Gr""~'"'· 0 c 3 governme• a Cl manager. Santa Ana "poverty" artL G•rdH Gr"'l'en. " selected nationwide for the It is all _.. that 1 stPPY-MENlt..L. Jim•• M., ss, of m State and Local Government eis...,. a rozen Supervl9ers have rbalen a Afdent 1nd JMn, n. of 205.., food supplier was then hired !our-•cre --1 at F'~ and c m1e1, bofll of s11boll 1sr1nd. Advisory Connnittee to the Of. ._ --.. ,_..... u ;;i~ s~~f'rc=N·s111.1:1~ .. .:,:, fice of Economic Opportunity. ~ vtoeodors to deliver the Walnut streets fer the project Lni.'Y A., 20. of 21'61 $. Sl'l)Okhllnt. OEO Director D 0 • a I d .,.. ..... uce custQm ers am that which they hope will be in H11f£"='N'iro~·Aro1n w .• ,., o1 511 Rumsleld 881·d the purpose 0• 1 each contraet bolder only operation-in ·mld--1971 .s.n Btrnerdll'ID Ave Newport lleJdl ecei·~ 300 -•-f Th first anc1 Shklff M.. n. iil 211 LldO Driv•. the cxmunittee is to provide r ~ pouuu~ o e center WU pro-- ..,,. AM. the OEO w i t h recom-food 1 t u f f s • Investlgaton posed last April as an "outpost \.AS VEGAS, ""· -M 1 r I I I I 1 nd ij estimated the fmancial loss to center for health servi<:es, n 1ic..es 111uec1 titrS 1~: me ations on po ·cy, pro-..__ l:STENSEN -MC KINNEY -grams and broad strategy l!Rlmciiben as between $70,000 County officers decided later t. 20, Ctrl Atlrecl Jr., J2.. of Him-and t130 000 th b anch H attcf'I, enc1 Nl'f'C'/ L«r11.... which rould have potential im· , · at r wt are and pro- wntmirtt.i.r Both W Ils nd Tu bal' t•-· could ll be 1ncreue Onnce County'• cur:1: rent ljiOndlng progrsm tor mental health programs by more than '5 million. '1l>e budget for the curreot y~ ls '"'million. . County AdmlnlstraUve 1 Of~ fleer Robert Thomas ex4 plained that the tentstive !!pre does no! nec....nJy commit the suptrviaors to any fU:ed expenditure. The figure can be trimmed before it is finally adopted, 'lbomas noled. -- Duluth Picnic Set in Anaheim v -:,E:1MertT -s.i.1. ~ pact in the povery areas of the 00 a rner ion opera W11:1 we 11,;4dR'1::1. »..,_~ (ii'1.:r::· nation. Tbey will also adivse were later named in a civil ac-added to the health facilities 'ANAHEIM -Anaheim's 1 1f1~1~1rii!a1 2~ 1nd J.eii5;:il;.. 2(. the OEO wHh ilfonnation on tion filed by the State of to better utilize the property. Plenon Park will be the site s1~~~3fs~ ~.'.":zt H•nv ~" "· the impact af the programs on CaHfornla and which was aim· The site sele<:ted ·was pr a is-for-the 25th annual Duluth Day ~ ~ Hllli. •nd u1111"' 1o:1, "' local government. ed at halting the activities of ed by Stanley Krause, dire<:tor picnic on Sunday at 11 a.m. Gi!?tT~~~9enunilno~kt~ Baker is one of two CalifOf'. the group pending a decison cf Real Property Services, as All former residents of and a.n..no u11e. 20. Df S.nt• Mt. nians to be appoiated to the on the crimlna1 charges, 11ear bus lines, adjo:ft a city Duluth, Minnesota will be EVERHART-HOCKMAN -Seot. 2J, 'I ---•'-· . ..._ further act'-on that k, b aH • p· M111C11e11 L'"!, !.4. i nd Lesli• ,,,.., commi tee. i uir; oul'Cr ts n.u3 "'" par aving good fie ae-welcome at the atr. 1erson R!lev, S7 bom OI Cosll Mew. la n eELMAN-0Av1s -se¢. 23, James Honson, city manager wsuit is being held pending cess and p:>1sibllities for ex· Park is located on Harbor s.mu.I. 11• o1 L09 Aneeta, and 11env of ())mpton. the ruling ol the trial court. l Baulevard at $w>•Tnm'e Street. o., 53, of We$tm1rmer. .---------------"---------"pa_ans __ on_. ____________ _;':_ ______ ,11 CAU8RE-JOHNSTO+I -Stell. 25. 'AM I! PflCA'S ... LAPf&I! ST ~ ~AMIL y -C LOTHINe -c HAIN1 D.vld H. "7, end Wlllllllil Heo!M Nlllu. .0. bolll Df Hvnllnvton 11..U.. IAGhtN-MEIKLEJOHN -Slot,_,., WI uam ti::·~ Gf Codri. Mew. -f~m~i of_ G~ 26 A11tonlo. - 27, end Nttte, :n, llorll of HvrTtlllGIGn A~~I=~ 2'~ eMSeotB.rJ.~i Glcirl1; ll, llolh of.Hunll11111an llucll. MC<IA!I& -HUETH -Sept. M, Wlllltn'I RIV, 2J. of Wtstmlns!w._1nd Ktltileen EU1.1beth, l t, of G t r g 1 n a\~0Sa;....4CHMMRS -Sent. "-G .. 41. ll'ld Gertrudm E.Wilfl. •1, · Death Notkes IUIUIS Jahn O. llum" l&S Jlonor• 1'-. CDltll Mau. Ottt llf deelll, Oct. IL·lllrllwW Irr ..ttc, l'-1 -. PFC Metf!Ww Ill.I"'*' u .s. Anrw 1 "''" 11-l!ttrs. Julie au .. 1, of 1111 ,.,,,,., Cl'lrlltlne Edeen, Newburv P1l1r; Cerrll Crtf!dllU, Silnhi Ana; ~ ROYACHALL• SPORTCOATS- AND_BUZE_RasHAeE_UP· IN~WO.O.LS,Y#OOL BLENDS .,., Mi's. llYrd1 llurn1: 1l1ter. Mlldrtdl '"''-'"' l um11 ~en, L. L. Bu...,. ind Jelfrltl llu""-111 al Wnt Vl'111n111 Fr.ct l um1, Florid•: four t r1ndctll!dren, 'Eric 't nd kllly Edftl\i Hollie tnd °""9111 Crt n- dalt. Services will IM' ~Id Slturd1y, October IG, l PM, P1elfk View (l\&pll, 1"""-', PK l!k View M-1111 P1rk, f'ldlk Vin Jo\Ol'tlMlry, Olredon. ON••M Louise Cw nlls• Gheen. Lill• of sun Cltv. Arlzont Ind Liou... llHdl, (lllf. a. lcwftl WI,. of the l1ht R~seu T1y1or G"-tnd dl1r 1llttr of Mri. J, Tracy Alll(l/ldtr, of S11n Cltv, Arl!OM, Slr'\I• Ices, Frld1y, 1:30 PM, In Iha L!tllt Chlln:h of hi F IOW1t"1, Fore11 Ltwn Gtendtlf . Forr1I L1wn Morh11rv. PAlllll.LO Juli.II PtrillG. 11W24 E...,est d N;te. Codi Mau. A" II. hie ol dff!h, Oclober 6. SYNlftd bY JOn, Stnen. ltrVlt:a t nd llt- temttnl Wiii De ~d In Vtnluno, Ctllf. l eH llrolllwtl' Mort111rv. forw1•dl119 di· rector1. '"'"ll Merv F. Peale. At• 11, ol 2507 Andcv1r Plllct . Cotti Mffil. 0111 ol dHm, October 1. SUrvlv9d br 1l1!1r. kttl'lerlne Tlnkl .. P11111h, Florldtl •rind"°"'" Dontld Silnd- tord, c;~1 MKt: Jahn Slndtord, Denver; Gertld Silndtord, O!llt,.,..,,.. s-1cn 1nd lnltr"""I wilt bf htld In Tulu , Olllthl>- mt. h llr co.-111'1 Mar Mortu1n, for· Wlnlll'll dlrtclWs. SLllCEll Htrel T. Sliker. AM S3. of 1162 TYltf' Clrclt, HuntlnttGn 8Mdl. Oele cl dtalh, Octobtr IL SllNl'\lllll lw hulblnd, Howardi -. Howt rd J r. tnd R-111 SILkeri deuth!trl, Mtr't I(. Wllt!l'lln Ind Oll M end ICtrT19 Sllkll"I l llltr, OPll Silllerlleld; 'll'lr9e 1r1f\Odllld•tn. StrvkH. Stturd1v, 11 AM, S1T1llll1 Chtpel. lnl•f'n'ltnl, Good ,,..,,....... Cftntt...,, Slnlftli Mort\ltry, ........... ARBUCKLE & SON Westcllff Mortuary 4t1 E. 11UI St., Cotta Mesa -• BALTZ MORTUABlES Corona deJ Mar , ... OR 3-9450 Costa Mesa ....... , ml WU4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY llt Broadway, Costa Me1a uwm • ,..----j--Nl<OORMWK·LAG~A BEACH MORTUARY 1715 Lquno Canyoo Rod. Ul-ttU • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetel')' .Mort Clltlpel R Padllc View Dr1vt Newport Belcll, caulornl• flf.17• • PEEi'. FAMILY COLONIAL FllNERAL HOME '1111 ..... Ave. W-.... 113.:lllS • llllEtfEB MOBTllARY ._ -....... 411-ISIS .. a 1n :ale ....... UMl91 • IMITlll' MORTUARY 117 -8', -.... llto .. ·- -. ' ' ' Cel lnto•hope tod4yl S~ sport. ooab steol tbe spotligbtin ploids, ·-windowpanes, tallenllls. ~tee! blazen rate raves in o.cron9 polyester and I wool so!;d hopsacb. With-lulUon tnno. vations-n ew wailt-enpbalr, bniader lapels, deeper vents; In ai&es for repJan and longs. COMPLITI AlTllAnONS INCLUDID .Superior_'qualittJ t · 1 GOLDEN - Eia1BLEM~ 'WORSTED.SLACKS 1095· SAVE'"··· com~., v alue ;i15 'Pure wool worsted Rannels and plain waves, carrying the famow Wool Mark. Expensively detailed with Ban--Rol' waistband. pleated inner \curtain. color·matcbed nylon zipper. 29 to 4.2. COMPLITI ALTDAnOHS INCWDID FASHlON-TONE DRESS SHIRTS __ Qdl:l§pige_to y~ur ~~ts ! ... ---. A99··value £1. pric ed' Coordinate your new-se•Mm wardrobe with thesto h1LOdsome shirU thtt give you and your suits a fashion liftl Penna· nrnt press 65% polyester, SS1'o ce1ttoo with lhe MW mUar trMbnmtl. full 1 placket fron ts. double button barrel aills. In MWest soUd ton8I and clwDo b,.y stripes, tool Sizes 14~ltl'A.. COLOll.COO•DINATID WIDI nu ...... 3.110 ••. • OPEN ---SUNDAY 11·5 COSTA MESA-1601 Newport Blvd. at 16th GARDEN GROVE -12372 Garden Grd'Ye Blvd. FAMOUS UNKNOWN DISCOVERED Sylvania Presents "The Sights and Sounds of the Seventies" with Miss Peggy ue. IDBI Onlldcr'1pirtfolio ofmt. Syl-acmnr-Misa Peggy Lee to paint foat origiMl paintings titled "'!'be SJchla of the Sennties." All four paintinp.11&Yd 1een.beautifully .repro-. dUced in a coBector'• portfolio. Pick. up 1""" free copy kJcllry. And take a ~-to.oee oar---Sylvania blaclr. i. white Ind color telerilions. You'll enjoy all the "Sigh.ta" ol lhe Seventies more cm a SylYBnia. Sylvania Remote Control 'l'be Sigh.la of the S..ooties in beautiful color. Sylnnia model CD82WR shown here bas a big180 9:1.in. of viewing area. AFC which lets you tune a perfect picture with the push of a button. Remqte con .. trol that let.a you turn it on or Off, adjust >Olume, tint and color and change lflatiom • -all from the comfort of your bed or ..,q chair. Erlra high (27") --oplionalextra. $469.95 SJlnnla maba only one color n for IYll'J. liOO .Americans. TheJ Goll't mate them fast. 8J jult •ate Ulem good. Jfaw for a Umlted Uma... S4.98 value for only Sl.50* You can own this specially produced Collector's Stereo Album featuring Peggy Lee surging to or·net-ravonte songs-for just $1.50. Tbls su perb long playing album haa been produced by Ca!'itoi Reeomsexciusively IO?Sylvaniil. You'Il- thrill to selections like "Spinning Wheel", "Manana'» .. Watch What Happens", and 7 more. And when you pick up'"your Collector's Album, be sure to. hear a Sylvania Stereo. Whether your chofce is a console, a portable or custom compo- nents ••• you'll enjoy all the "Sound,. of the Seventies more on a Sylvania. 'Mf~ :suggested Jbt price. The Sounds of the Seventies with all the ·fullness and clarity of a liv.e performance. The Sylvania "Mini Mod" model MM12W shown here has an automatic, 4 speed record player that lets you play all your ~rds.. Two d etached Air Suspension speaker systems that give you a full, rich bass and unsurpassed sound dispersion. Up front controls. Sculptured conte.mpo- • rary look. Hinged dust cover. It's aJI yours tor oar low, low price $99.95 ~-The l:Onector's Portfolio of P eggy Lee art ~d · Clollector's Stereo LP of Peggy Lee hits are available onlJ from your Sylvania dealer. IN COSTA MESA ©DAVIS BROWN IN EL TORO T•L•VISION•A .... LIANCES 411 E. 17th-Costa Mesa 646-1684 D•lly 9 • 9,. Sit. 9 • 6 \ 24366 Rockfiold (Next I<> S•v.On} La9 una Hills Plaza 837-3830 Doily 10-6, Mon. & Fri., 10·9 ' .. • thutsda~i. Ottobtr a. 1970 DAtLULOT J3 Optimism Remains ·for Cigarette Smokers: Life Begins at Any Ti1n e B1 Dr. l>elt'I' Sltlncrohn For many years 45-year-old Mr. J. bad a had. cough. It wracked him day and night. II interfered with his work in the office, disturbed his associates and transformed him into an inaomniBc. kinds who think "it's too late Usual wart therapy is either the a!Oicted know, lhe darn treatment narrows d o w n moon. Prayers, olntmenb, ~ treatment. wart vb-us. t suppoae we will to stop." burnlog It, culling it ou.t or ap-things often return. between burying a dead, cat or cantaU001, abacadabra and Unlit we can develop a vac· all still bt looking for the be!t WkeMr.J.'sexperlence,it's _;_Pl'-yin_;g;_ac_id_._·Bu_t_as_m_an_;y_or __ r_1_1s_then __ 1_ha_t_lh_e_cbo_lc_•_•_r__.:.Po_in_lin_'g;:....Jtj>'-e-w_a_rt_•t_t_h_•_ru_11_s_a_1v_ea_a_r_•_•the_r_e_x...,•m=p:...l"_'_r _ci_"'_"'_'°_m_e_lh.,,i_;ng:...10_r1.:;gh_1_lh_e_t_re_a_tm_en_1_. ____ ~ true for so many that ure Begins at Any Time. A few years ago l wrote on this sub- ject for a national magazine. They made it the lead article; didn't change my title. The editor must also have believed "'l've1 been a three-pack-a- day slnoker since I was 18," he saii:I. "There's no use qliil· tiog now. The damige has DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE been done. I may as well con- tinue to enjoy my cigarettes." Afler a few long talk- se.s.s.ioos I convinced him that quitting was worth the ~Uort. I told him that lungs and throats and all the rest of the respiratory machine may im- pfove after many years of taking a beating with tobacco smoke. Now Mr. J . had ex- traordinary will power. He qu.it. Cold. Within l h r e e months his cough disappeared. and his X-ray films looked much more respectable. That was 20 years ago. Sixty-five-year-old Mr. J. is free or emphysema, hasn 't developed cancer of the lungs or had a heart attack. A good bet 20 years ago would have been that he's been struck down by one or these three destroyers il he had kept on smoking. 'Ibis is no 1ecture. No sermon. Simply a hopefuJ note to hundreds of thousands or people with bad habits of all -that Llfe, Begins at Any -- Time. Ptssimists sbould believe that health often can be renewed at any time. Every morning is a new beginning. A cough occurring on many Yesterdays may disappear on many Tomorrows. It all depends upao the pat. ient 's willingness to give up smoking. ..Too many smokers rationalize. It soothes their conscience (il not their throat) to say "It 's too late to quit." More often than you realize, it's sWI early enough to feel better. (For more information on emphysema, send for Dr. Steincrohn's booklet, "'Emphysema : How to live with It." Enclose 35 cents in coio and a STAMPED, SELF- ADDRE$ED ENVELOPE, in care of this newspaper.) MEDICALFITES (Replies to Readen) Dear Dr. Steincrohn: What is the best treatment for warts?-Mrs. O. COMMENT: There is no best treatment. What is im· porlanl. however, is to make sure a suspicious-looking war is not cancerous. Once this .is ruled out, then the choice of treatment is as varied and ex- citing as shopping in 1 toy store. Regularly 13.99 19 SAVEi on antique brown leather uppers with excitingly styled strap and buckle trims! SAVE! on the season"s 1nosl·wanled loo\cs ... plain toes, 'ving tips, demi-boots, even perforated trims! SA·V£1;;;the new blunt toe styling that fashion-con.scious men favor ... in sizes 1 toll SAVE! on our entire stock of these handsome dress shoes 'vhich are comparable $20values! OPEN SUNDAY ll·S • AMEft tCA•S L A,.Sf!ST f'AMILV CLOTHING CHAIN COSTA MESA -1601 Newport Blvd. at 16th GARDEN GROVE -12172 Gorden Grovt Blvd. I. New WHITIIER-LA HABRA Store nr 1595 ....... 7~ 1•1111:11 1 9 95 ....... IG71/141 J,otJll1.JS1IS ((71/1 l! (t 7111 SI 1195 ....... IDJl/141 J.JS1114117"14) 1.7Sxl 41f111141 7.1Sit1S !fn(IS) 24 95. ....... 2695 UJl/14~ t.u .1s (J7111SJ ,, .. 1roa1 ••• u lfA8RA ••• 2000 w. w•lttler ••· C~Tti:!!:'l'o;.' ,,) 69 ... 3666 GARDEN GROVE COST A MESA. NEWPORT BEACH AREA :::~~!~o:::s:, 3005 HARBOR BLVD. ANAHEIM • BUENA PARK 6962 LINCOLN BLVD. I I cc.n. ef U•et• • r.ttl 826-5550 • COll.NER Of BAKER & HARBOR •• • -. ,,,,,, 11.1s.,,, ''"· • llff '"'·h.lq .... Sl'ECIAL ON AU s~'U • I .14 DAILY PILOT College to Op en With 'Rhinocero ~' Ang lo-Ge rman Th.e a ter 'Tobacco Road' Production ' N eeds Tigh te ning,, Polis h 'Ali Baba' Tryouts Called AUdJUorw for ''All Baba and Newport. Blvd·, Coit• Mesi. the Forty Thieves," the fill An all-Wom1n cast will be l>roductlon o£ the Newport selected. Harbor Chikiren's Theiler "Ali Baba" will be staged Guild, wW be held Tuesday moming from 10 o'clock until tor four performances al noon. Orange Coast College Nov. 28 '·RbinoC:ttos," Eu-gene lonesco·s still timely social satire of a decade ago, ~·ill be -Sl~GER THE BIGGEST -SALE OF THE YEAR Special savings on more than 136combinations. of~•sewing maehines and . - tie first prodiletkin of this- yearrs theater s~aSOll B t Golden West College. Under the direction o ( Stewart Rogers, ·drama · and speech teacher, the three-act _play has been booked for Oct. 30, 31, and Nov. 5, 6, and 7, at------- 8 p.m., in the Actor's Playbox. Adm iuion will be $1.50. Next. drama students will entertain :jmall fry and their pal'f.flts with a children's story theater presentation af "Hen· ny-Penny." ·•snow White and Rose Red," and "Little Red Riding Hood." This will be staged in the Playbox, Friday, Nov. 13, aL 7:30 p.m., and Sat., Nov. 14. at 10:30 a.m. and ? p . m. Admission price will be 25 cents. John Colton's 1922 salire "Rain" will be the third of- fering. Dec. -4, ·S, and 6. and Dec. 11 and 12. "Rhinoceros'' was first in- trodu~ed in Britain. Until then Ione!co, a major wri"ter in· the theater ol the absurd, bad been on1y mildly successful. But this work turned out to be for him what "Virginia Woolf" was to Edward Albee -a n almost overnight success. At first audiences could not relate to it because it was something new to them and to the stage. After its run in Bri- tain it came to Broadway in 1962, to play to even larger au- diences. Cast in the G-Olden West pro- duction are J ak-ki Baker, Lin- da Poorman. Kathleen Berish, Don Polan, Roy Young, Carl Poorman, Dave Pigman, Carl Trapasso, Darrell Baker, Lar- ry Goldburg, KaUti Cook, Beverly Cole, and Jill White. SCR 'Boys' Held Over Extra Week Strong box o!fice demand hat resulted in a one-weekex- tens.ion ol South c o a s t Repertory:'s cur re n t pro- duction , .;The Boys in th!! ·Band_," now playing at SCR's Third Step Theater in Cosla Mesa. Originatly scheduled to close Saturday, the popular comedy on homosexual manners has been held over· for three ad· ditional performances -Oct. 15, 16 and 17. ''As often happens with a w e I I -written, controversial play like this. our supply or seats does oot meet the de- mand," states SCR managing director Warren J . Deacon. "Of cour.:>e, this dl':ligh ts us, but our season commitments cannot allow us to extend "The Boys in the Band" past O c t . 17 un d l':r a ny circumstances." Following "The Boys in the Band," South Coast Repertory will open its sixth subscript.ion season with Arthur Kopit's new play, "Indians," on Ocl. JO for a five-)Veek run. By TOM TITUS Of .... 0.ltJ l'llH ltaft An ocean of water ha pow- ~_under the proverbial brid&e i1nce Enkine: caJdwell 'a mot- ley c.oU«!io.IUlLb0<lu9\w . try der<licil first trod bare- foot down tbe ''To b acco Road," and its production In thi! day and age., no matter bow polished and accuratl':, re- mains a most difficuJl morsel to di&.. - 'Mle play, adapted f rom Caldwell's immensely success- ful novel, depicts the ultimate nadir of Americana, sapped or its ·ambition and-energies, and reverting to the law of the jungle. Survival or t h e fittest is the creed by which its irihabitants Jive-or, more correctly, exist. ·• Greed and lust in their most basic form are the lowest common denomiilaton in this sub-human society devoid or pl':rsonal or meaningful rela- tionships. The play is almost allegorical in its structure and its events, which once may have been heavily dra- matic, are now laughable, lucf.. icrous 111nd Jacking in theatri- cal validity. This is the task which the Anglo-German Theatrical As- sociation of Los Angeles, in its first EngJish-language pro- duction, has taken upon itself with its mounting or "Tobac- co Road," which is scheduled to tour Orange and 1-<>s An- geles counties. One finds one- self wondering if, indeed, the trip is really necessary. Its premiere, a one-night stand in Santa Ana's Smedley Junior High School auditorium, The tryoots will be held at and 29. Rl':heanals will be held auild beadquartl':rs, 1 5 I I during Ull': morning hours. •'fo•acco •0 ,.0.. Ing lines In wholesale quanti--''----'---------..:..--------- " ,i • ., ti¥ J•ct; Kl,..lt!M, '*'" ·'i•• •••d nev-p-.· lln• dlrecror i11.. l•llll•lll. ••wnlttl bl' mort an • s ace p cture lt\t All9io-G«rrwin Tllttl.r A:&~llo-h ~~ '' ~i.., J11111or ~1o11 School of er character. ..... riotlurn S.nl• A11a. _..Jlf.11.....$YT _ -~-Conversely, Sandi...!_ B'!._w.!! •• !="..-~E{!_llle~=~ , _ _,th -urf ·~-I'• Q ¥:.'~~1':-.. :· ... ···:.~~r.t,.. as the self-proCessed woman ~ --](...}V'o" Dlldt lttler ... JtkN•d UngJt!ll """ I Ith GLORI FICKLING s111 ... aes111 ........ s.,nc11a e..-n preacher who covers her w · loY ................. Aon u 1111•n11--I . WHO ARI ~ome o{ the groovy people living ::~1 M'f-i" . .'"~·~:.:c.,c119:'~!'! own yearn ngs m prayer ap-ll up at l •n l rewn•1 Wond•rful Workf these ~10:-y1n,· : .. ~~'.rj. 11H~tt: pears the most legitimate of days? Lunching and golfing In the tranquil "' ,. • .,~ · • .... ••~ E'l:i.1111 the cast. Miss ~rown is a mountain setting or AH~ canyon. Dining in H~rv ""_., ....•. H•M Wiid tower or strength in • roll': th!! SJ?len~or of S1lllrush decor. Suriday brµnch1ng 1n the cool serenity of the re.lax- uncoyered a number of prob-whl cb calls for exacUy that. ing sun Room. J oining the evening antl('li ot lems in both the play and iu A1so excellent is Ron Lang-zany Duke Mitchl':ll .. Dancing to the mulit· presentation, under tbe direc· sclh, playing his finest role faceted rhythms of The Naturals. tion of Lee Howin~n. Amo_ng a~1~1e spw:ied young .hus~ndk AIT~~c~~cl~e~l~~j"hg~~~ lunch or dinner-danci ng Md thenrare-a-npetit~1pt·-v-1 Y-tryltlg . to ~lll ...u~C Paul-Schodeller • ..champagne.:.pi~o mee&-amiabll':....b1Utel.-l'.l2!!'t for· and a lack of cohesion in tbl': the favor cf his child bnde, Lou (cille!) Underwood.. And get those Sun. thru Thurs. llllln· overall production. played with maximum effect-such regulars as Dolly & Larry nor 1,.cl•l1 at $S.f5. You won"t The tone and mood of the live ness by La Donna deBar· Whalen, Bill Hansen, Chuck &: find a more delicious a!"1 com· sho h •~ :~A-' roa Hers ill 8 difficult as-Helen Rowe, the Gorden Kents, pleto repast at that {'rice any-w are c arac_K:ru.r;1.1, at . · . · Fred Barnes"&, Jack & Ann where. Soup or salad, entree!'I times quite convincingly, by signment: convl':yin~ hurt a~d ruchardson. bachelor-about· like Leg of Lamb. Alaskan Robert Paver in the principal terror with a paucity of dia-town Ward O'Keefe, ~x-mayor King Crab, Barr~n o~ Beef - role of Jeeter Lester an old Jogue, and she carries it off Bill Martin, Art Longr1dge. and \vith potato or rice pilaf, vegP-•• t f · ho h ' tremel ell the Star Allen C&dlllac entour-table assorted breads, coffer ""nan armer. w . as ~one to ex .Y w · age -Dennis and his mogul and Chef Jim Waller's special seed along with his a rid land Rounding out the cast are Dad, Jim Hayberg, FlQyd Han-dessert _ served from 5 10 and who cannot. take a definite Nancy BalQ,Y.@n as the ugly cock, et al. In one \veek, movie 10:30 pm. You will be 1uper- step, 'but promises "to do unwed daughter, Kathryn Bu-Idol V1c Mature d;ug the lunch impreiscd. , thi kin •t" p chanan as the il 1 ff r scene at least 3 limes. To reach Ben B1·own s beau-s Om e n g OD I • av· . s en • SU e • New face in the Ben Bl'O\\'n tiful mountain-sea resort. drive er creates an interesting char-1ng grandmother oo one really "family" Is captain JI.like Ja-2'11 mi. south of downto,vn La- acter, s lipping into a falsetto cares about, A. J. Hamilton as ~u.r recenll,Y of Palm. ~prings' guna Beach. turn left at !hr snit when hi': gets his dander a bankrupt landowner and Ray Riviera. lie lI be squ1r1ni; a.II green bridge and Do Jt Up · E I d th f I · thP beautiful peoplf> lo their Brown' up, but he requrres far more ng an as e orec oinng favorite tables henceforth. · ---- acclimatization to his role be-banker. Come on in for breakfast. fore he will be able to carry the play as he should. Strongest of the cast is Rich- ard Langseth as Jel':ter's surly son, Dude. Langseth al- ternately plays his role as a whining child and a buJly boy, interested only in what can most quickly benefit him, as arl': most of Caldwl':ll's other characters. June Maitland as Jeetl':r's whimpering wife, Ada, is the weakest link in the chain, los- "OVEltTlSEMfNT cabinets ,.,al :4Ie-L.a-'2PIO;;;;-i- acific avings priced now! SALE - ONLY $ S!Y!\¢ zig-zag sewing machine by Singer In a carrying case. Mends, darns, sews button s and buttonholes . Embroiders, too' Reg. $139.95 The Singer 1 to 36* Credit Plan helps you have these values now-within )Wbudget. SINGER •. "71ati nt111jorltJlltlJn'l1fl1 is.t 5 1 NCER toda11t• COSTA JtllSA COS'TA MISA •rltllli 6 ...,...., tJll N..,..., •Mo ......., Wl .. llM ... C1'Mt 1'11t&I Hf .... C_,.. ...... "'-..c• ..,.1.11 Mwlb:f'I ~ c.Mt:t _...... •.tlH M llOft " ._ .... "" CM"""" --· ...,.. """ ~ ..... c.M1 ""- • • • • • • • • • • • AND L 0 AN ASS OCIA TIO N FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX for maintaining a $ 50022 balance in any of ~r high rate accounts -take your choice. ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS 719°1o 7.50°1o $100,000!!.! ONE 6.18\ 6.00\ 5,000!!.! TWO 5.92\ 5.75°1o 1,000!!.! ONE 5.39\ 5.25\ 5002!! Y.th 5.13\ 5.00°lo 1!!.! ONE DAY Your money earns interest from the day you deposit. till the day you withdraw even if it's just one day. ASK HOW 'YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE 811111 1. Traveler's Checks ~~!!to Spotts and ~ ,,f...~ 2." Collection of Notes Theatre Attractions (Tlcket ron ) 1 4. Many other FREE Serrices Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M . to 9:30 P.M. Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. SOUTH COASf · PLAZA :Im llAISTOl STR£Ef • COST A 111£SA, CAllFOANIA • l'l!ONE 54MOll ' • ~ ' I THE FOUR STAR ATTRACTION OF OUR ANNIVERSARY SALE! THE ALL NEW HARRIS & f RANK DOUBLE KNIT SUIT The first new idea in men's clo1hing in o <ent111y-or-cl ONLY HARRIS & FRANK HAS IT! This suit is KNIT, not WOYcn like ord ioory suits. [Just osk ony woman who hos enjoyed the benefits of knit opporel.J Totally wrinkle resistant. Su pe rbly comfortable. \00 °1. DACRON•. Jn solid tones of Brown. Bone, NoYy Of Block ond Gray Check. 2·TROUSER ALL WOOL WORSTED SUITS 19 Y~'d eKpect lo pa y $175 for t_hese fine quohty iui ts -now ot our loweil $ _pr1ee ever! New ~It models 10 Two-811llof'I single breo1h:d Coot with wide lopels or-cl deep ce nter vents. 2·TROUSU SUITS WITH SHA'ID ST YLING Flne1t lmportecf WorJt•d1. Comparabl• value SI 35 E>A'K (llP J-0-69.95 il.6EY.'HE AE}~· Choate from qvolity lobrics ~eol for yeor -'round Co!ifornio weo1 I $ . Superb Pott•rns, ColOfs, Tailoring. Perfect 101 businl!JJ Of le isure. ' 11\IN'S IMltORTID DRI$$ SLACKS AT A GREAT 2.fot ,.ICI, 2 f.,. $31 ...• , .... _ . , , , ...... 'or lach 19.90 ALSO SAVINGS ON SPORTSW EAR , FURNISHINGS AND IN OUR WOMEN'S SHOP ~ A ~'"I & f•lt"~ Of"'• f,.tl C•l4M Acr.ll"t "' V11 Vo" lo"l""'•"c~ud ft Mo•'•' Ckettt ,... Harris & Frank COSTA MESA SANTA ANA SOUTH COAST PLAZA Hon•r Plei• llll BRISTOL AVE. 1181 W. 17th St. IU!NA PARK HUNTINGTON HACH Buene Per• Ctnf•r Huntin9ton Center 1)94 On-tho-Mell 7777 Edinger t, \ • r . . . ·Top Stars Covet · 'Godfather' Roles HOILYWOOD (AP) 1 ll was a bit loo cerebral for Who 'a going to pl~ in ''The1 audiences." Godfather"? One ramtd Italian-American The question was raised at a who \\'ill nol appear in ''The news conferer.ce Paramount Godfather" is Frank Sinatra .• conducted last week< to-in· One character in the book Is troduce the man-who is going an on-the-skids cNIOl\er who to direct the movie version of makes a comeback with an Oscar-winning role reluclanUy I.he best-selling novel. He b given him by a tough studio Francis Ford Coppola, a mogul. Sinatra won an Oscar brighl young director o I for a con1eback role in "From Italian extradtion. Here to F.tcrn ity." "AlmosreverY-top star ln --Aulhor Puzo tells cf dining -0ne night wilh his producer, pictures has come to us wan-Albert s. Ruddy. Two booths til\I to Play anr nf tile: ~!tis Ill away , Sin•tr1t w11 ae1fed with the 'The Godlather ' ' some friends. A mutual friend riPOMid--Paramoun'tpr~ thoug~t it would be~ dandy ~\lt'tkm boa Robert Evan~. Idea to introduce. Pu• le "ltf~f la 1\\ eQject with Sinatra. It wBS111't. .them; they simply want to be Puzo says srnatra exploded, in the picture .". "You should be aihamed for Add~· Coppola: • ' 0 u r writing that . " Thuf$d.\:f, Octobtr 8, 1~70 WITH 'OUR FINE QUALITY AND LOW PRICES WE PLEASE ALMOST EVERYONE DAIL V •!LOT } 5 SUITS -A~!f!;°" •4• SPORT'COATS A 885.00 Value 529 O~ IJMly f,f" le• Mon., Tku1••• 1ri. 'rit 9 '"" 2300 HAllOI ILVD. COSTA MISA Horloor <•Iller .. u C•ught Slwrt philo90phy oI casli1'g Is this : Puzo said later; "I koow It We will cast irr~tive cf was a bad idea, but 1 ~ Jgj .. stardom. We want ,ctors who,_led~in~to~-~-g~ing~o~v:er~ID~li~ll!i~~~-~~!l>-1~::::~;;~;::::::::::::;;;;;::;:;::::;;;±;;;±::::::::::::::::;;::::::::::::~;;;;;;;;;;~~;;~~~~~;; are right for the rotes. It's en-I just walked 4W8y." tirely likely that they wtll not names." Carol FauJstick p~kes fun at the bare legs o! Ron Albertsen, who fails to see the humor. in this scene Irom "Once ~ore, With Feeling," giving final per- form,.nces Frida y and Saturday at the Huntington Beacti Playhouse. "But they will be. Italians," assured Evans. ··we aren 't going to cast the picture with 'Hollywood\ Jtalians." This seemed to be 1 referen- ce to Paramount 's "The BrotherhoOO," another Malia tale which failed to light up the nation's bo1: office. It star- red non-Italian Kirk Douglas. Montalban in Drive "I thought Kirk was terrific In the~ pict ure," interjected Evans, himself a rormer actor and hence sensitive to implied criticism. "The pr®lem with I • To Boost Chicanos 'The Brotherhood' was that It HOLJ.,YWOOD · fUP I) Latin.o; as lazy peasanl..!l. We didn°t ha ve the characters or Actor Ric a rd o Montalban, are net." the power of 'The Godfather.' letder of "Nosotros'.' (trans--------------------- Jaler '1We") is attempting to -·lnfiuenet:~movie and television· producers t~ brea k the Lafin Ameri{!an cl1ches in enterf,ain- Tht Mexican-born performer, along with 237 other actors, have met wit.h dle Ser.Hf! A.ct«• Guild a.nd ~ oltier-org<:1nizstiona to protest depicting Latins a11 I a z y , sleepy, limpid-eyed lover1_1nd coward.s. "Every person in Latin America is roncemcd with the image of us reflecled in movies," Montalban said. "Goot:I examples are 'The Wild surkh• and 'Butctl Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.' l.,iiltin soldiers are shown heing mowed down by a handful of heroes. "We have starl.ed a dialogue with people who make films ancfTV, and we represent.12!h million pe,90!\S ol Spanish speaking -Origins in the United States. "If Anthon)' Quinn (son of a Me1ican mother and 1rtsb · father ) had not gone to ltaly to makJ movies he 'd still be playina: bandilS. He was treated like an actor in ltaly -not as a Latin American." Montalban, in addition to 8eekin1 to eliminate t h e negative image of Latins, also hopeg th provide more jobs in the entertainment business fur Latin Americans. "We have to educate the in- dustry that the name Garcia Mlould not be held against a man if he is suiled for a role," Montalbln safd. "Some ttC UJ Mve physlc1l limitations for certain roles, tuttly, but that dou not ac- count f« the f1ct thit .., many doors have been closed to Mexican, Puerto Rican and Lit.in aetors. "NOSC'ltros d~ not Intend that Latin AniericaM should be white washed on the screen. We want to be portrayed in toUI lily. More im· portantly with truth and digni· ty. If the script calls for a Merican bandit, let it be 90q1ething other than a clown . "I cannot represent the whole L a t i n community." Montalbln ooncluded . "I am • -Bl8 -8"x10'~LIVING- C0l0ft .PORTRAIT ~ .. ' ' ~· 11111. llCT. 818 BES. OCT. 13 •Genuine full nal1nl color JJOrtiiits •for all ages! Babies, children. adults. Groupi pholograp~ed at an add1lional 85c per sub1oct in same portrait limited oiler on special· one per fami ly. • ~~s special otter is presented as an el]lression of our 'nks for yoir patronage ,.,,. Photogro!..h~_s'l•urs: Daily noon· 8 p.m. Satur nday 10 a.m.-6 p.m. / ..,, .... 50~u• CaliforniaColle9e . " ~ ...... ,. f C merce Aloom .. Oo• OffkH• ... p;., ...... 0 Om 1s1.1ss p;,.. Av•~~· lt"I lttc:h, C.!it.tfllit tOtlJ CONTINUOUS ENROLLMENT TELEPHONE: 436-9767 or 435-5367 "DAY OR EVENING CLASSES" -YEAR COURSES -htiltM •• ,..;.i;,t.etitfl Hitlltr AuM•llWf A«M11tioif -hit PrK•Hiflt ln4tt!Yt *'ete1lel SltORl-TERM COUIS!S s • .,,.,.. (!.rittl • .,.,. .. d1 1~1i!i111 M.cltiiott ... IOIA- I ... k .. '''""'•''""' ,,11.ca..,.. .... l..,Mt lnuho., (lei"' si..rt1it~4 •" t,,ii>t '-""' " AK 5Wtllt"4) ONE-YEAR COURSll t.,,1 1...:•tlt•,./ Mffk• S...:rtleri.I S.c•••••.-1 IGttt1., AK Sh1ttht"4). ,,..., .......... ' ~-Wl_CK_ER _·~11 ~ _D_IRE_CTO_R _CHA_IR_S-~~ ._I _B_RO_WN_lO_RD_AN_ 2 White Chei'1• lounq• R•t• $220.00 5,,. $Sl ._ID.-. NO_W Ull.20 I Wh;t• ~;dt T•ole ~"' .49.00 & .. i •11.12 NOW •H.11 I W~lt• Deak with form ic• Top/Ch1ir Reg. $185.•S"" S•V• $52.07. • llOW $JU.II 2 White lounge Ch•irs R•t· $54.SO S•v• $15.26 NOW $H.Z4 6 18'' S+ool1 Yellow, Wh ite, · Oranqe Reg. $11.95 S•v• $2 .39 NOW •t.5' 24 Swivel B•r Stools 24" •"d 30" Height Reg. $24 .00 Save $12.00 NOW $12.00 6 H•meki R•g. $31.00 Seve $1 5.05 NOW $11.'5 "4 N•tur•I Hour Glets T1bl•1 Reg. $37.00 S•ve $1 8.01 NOW $11.95 B B Q's Floor Samples of Natio"tfly Atl· vertistcl Brtnd1 NOW 20'/o Off PILLOWS, PADS, UMBRELLAS A11orftd 1tylts •"d cfltrs NOW 20'/o • IO'lo OPP l leck, White, V•rni1h, W•lnut, ";( ellow •nd ·T •ngerine Fr1nie1 NOW 20'/o OFF Ptt•nf Vl"yl Cover1 Re9. $14,00 s., •• 4.00 NOW $10:00 N•uth. Cov•rl R•t• SI0.00 !•v• U.00 NOW ~I.DO Ctnvts Cev1r1 Reg.' S4.IO SAv1 •.• 0 NOW $3.60 St.+esmen N•ug. Cover1 Reg. $12.00So" $3.36 NOW $1.64 ACCESSORIES AND DECORATOR ITEMS En tire Stock Reduc•d 20°/o·50°/0 Exc•ll•nt Chri1tm•1 Gift Items BROWN JORDAN WROUGHT IRON 2 Sets "Oef~odil'' 30'' l•ble/2 Ch•ir1 White/Green Whif•/i Turq. Reg. $127.00 S•ve $36.Sb NOW $91.44 Set "Or•nge BJo,som'' "2" Ttble/4 Chairs, Yellow Reg. $490.00 s ... $137.20 NOW $J52.IO ''Or1"9e Blo1som" l•• Ctr+ Y .llcw R.eq. S 170.00 Stve 147.60 NOW $122.40 Wh itt Ctnopy Flow1r Ctrt All Aluminum , Rust Free Reg. • 110.00 s ... 142 .00 NOW •101.00 Yallew 11Ct reu11l'' Plower Cert Req. SI 04.00 S•v• U9.1 2 NOW $74.H Set "l•F•y.itte" "2" .Tebl•i1 4 Cheir1 Whit1/Gold Reg. $71.12 NOW $112.18 All it1m1 'in new •"d perfect condition i"cl'd Fr•• Delivery, Tilm itmi Sir.its: 41 '' T1hle/4 · C~1ir1 Reg. $284.00 Save •n.oo How nn.oo 35 ir 61 Ttble/"4 Arm Cheirs Reg. ,214.00 S•n 155.00 NOW $2Zf.H ~2 '' Tabl1/4 Ar;.,, Chtirs R•t• $263 .00 s,,. $S4.00 NOW Uot.00 Adj. Chaise/ Arms R:•q. '126.00 S••• $27.00 NOW $H.OO Adj. Ch•i1 e/No Artt11 Re9, SI 12 .00 S•v• $23.00 NOW_$1f.OO lou"g• Ch•ir Re9. $51.00 S•v• $I 0.00 NOW $42.00 Rocking Ch1ir R1q . $62.00 Seve $13.00 NOW Mt.00 2 I" Sq. T tbl• Reg . $41.00 Stve $8.00 NOW $34.00 Odd lot1, Floor stm1tl•s, Dia• co"ti"u•d colors o' slightly d•m•qed. T•mi•mi Seri•s: 48'' T•hle74 Arm Chtirs Re9. $284.00 s.,. $79.52 NOW $204.41 l5" ir 61" T•blt/4 A"" Cheirs Reg. $284.00 S•v• $79.52 NOW $204.41 42 " Table/4 Arm Chtirs Reg, ,263.00 s ••• $73.64 NOW $119.3' A~I. Ch•IH /Arm1 Reg. $126.00 s..,, .11.21 NOW .. 0.72 Adj. Chtise/No Arms R19. •112.00 s ••• •11.36 NOW $80.64 lounq• Chair Rtg. $52.00 Seve $14.56 NOW $37.44 21 " Sq . T•blt Reg . $'42.00 Save $11.76 NOW $J0.24 CHRISTMAS Set Reg'"t II 48" T•blo/4 DECQWfON Che;,. Wh;+ei'.\YW• Re , c-------t--....SAU" "~-:-r-~ro'o:~'S°ofv'i,. -o~~ All Artifici •I Trees 'IJ PRICE Tree Lights 1/J PRICE Orntments 1/1 PRICE CITY OF NlW,OIT l(ACH PEkMIT •lltl NOW $J1'.H Stt Fte1tch Qutrfer 42'' T •· ble/4 Chtir1 A"tiqu t Y•llow 'I Ytllow Reg. $508.00 Stvt $135.00 NOW $37J.OO ALL SALES FIN.Al SPECIAL STORE HOURS: MONDAY 10·9 • TUESDAY THRO SATURDAY 10·6 • SUNDAY 11-4 ~---- "· .. ~ l · It--.. -- ' .. B Fi l i l - • ' .. • • .. ' No-· Pot11111yt .. 1--11tktleo·-_....,1 ..... cldlttr. Awocodo trtei.. . . ---RION:;.:--· · -: __ :_ '----··· -' • •· ,•.;.r.1 ' -' ' t ' • . • •' :'·1.,:_. ), ;. .~,-\: , .•• , .· .,·: r •· · 1·1mID1.1RS 1:.nv . . . ' . . Al1ll:l.1.1.1 ni\1 . . . . . J ; · · _C_ELEBR!Tl8N~ . r I 'I , . How: tllr11 Oct.-t , ; ' .. WORLD FAMous-'' ..... m:Er mc1=~~.- En joy the hickory amoked · flavor or thi1 exc!U.sive, .. ' . . all-beer 10.mmer 1ausage. · Reg, 1'99 lb. 11.79 lb. . - ~101! additional discount on · \Jlurchase of whole BEE~ STiCK. .. , l ' r, 'CLEANING •SPEGAL . . . :-. ,:.5 ¢i ' . ; . '.& SKIRTS1 RE~ •• ~.~-·t1 .29 . . . . . ' . ' QNE WEEI.< QNJ.l • ... M 0 NT G O,M-E·RY · . ' CLEANERS & LAUNDRY WESTCLIFF PCAU. OPEN DAIL-Y I ·9 S,4'TURDAY ·l •.6 . - . ' ' .... • . . . ·-··-·-~__;,...o..' ;,,....-.!:.' . ' - ' I •.: 1.: _; ' '~ :..._ '1':'._. ,' ' •• : '' .I . • ' ' : • . .--. · · · •q+ie }~ti:P·~~opJm~~g=--- .1 • ;·-'·.· .• ··~ •• ' ·,·.. l '. · · '.' " .· · .. · . a.t. its :finest! ' ' . . . -. ' " . .. ' I ..... .. ff/e.rdf@jesty• . . . Goes to a slumber P41r~y with . . a complete Hne ·of coordinated ·sleepwear; PAJAMAS·· ROBES · . CULLOTTES ·CURLER CAPS· SLIPPERS· SLEEPING BAGS . .-~. 1051 IRVllllE -WESTCLIFF PLAZA ".NEWPORT I BEACH • '( 1 •j ' ' ' POLAROID •0~-.. CAMEtAS-- ALL MODELS PRICED LOWER THAN EVER BEFORE BAKER'S ' WESTCLIFF CAMERAS • , : :'OPEN ' TI'iURSDA Y AND MONDS f EVENINGS . . . . _,,. ,· ' -' •THIS WllK'S ·sPlcl.Aj;s '.. ... ·RUSSET POTATOES .' .......... 10 ~: ,~o ~9¢ , EA$TE.RN GRAlf::!· FED . _ . • .. ·." ' . ¢ ' tOIN··PORK ROAST .......... :.-: .... : ... 69 '1b:. BATHROOM TISSUE ~.2 Roll Pick . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . ' . ¢ KLEENEX . BOUTIQUE .. , .................. 2~· MARKET ";BA·SKET WISTCIJl'!'...PLAZA. _: _ .. _ . · . . . . ' ~ . ' OPEl>lrSOl'lD>,:Y.S . ,. . . . Optomertist Or. Lou Roy Eld1r • CONTACT LENSES • REFRACTING · • • EYE WEAR STYLING • PRESCRIBING. WESTCLIFF PLAZA I 124 IRVINE NEWPORT BEACH 1»12.0720.: .MEN;S ·FORMAL WEAR SPEOIAtlS'rs darrell's . dedrick TUX SHOP · SALES -DELU.XE RENTALS FASHION SQUARE Sa nta Ana 5~7.6341 la Habra 69 I .q]JS ~~-~.w ·Jt~ COBBLERS BENCH I I ' Zl"t ,.,. ... Let.. ,. ... ,,.,. -· .\ WESTCLIFF PLAZA I I JO Irvin e Nawport Be1ch &46-8891 .. •• ..... ,, S:hines ~·----- ' ' ~ . . ' ' Rpy. L1cbtens\~ln; Graplric!.'Reliets-"11(1 Sclilpture· (1969!70), a ~ collect!Dn:ot-Jith<lgrap}¥,Jli:a'ss. aricl-bl'.~;.~~s .. an<bw\X>!k'! prints, . Will·c<imprise the' iJ!r•.\ e><lijbii! i~!l>l!,n•w· Fine •Ar/st·Villa~e 'A1'•Gal· ' leryi at UCI· .;1.S· ·Uhi\'e'rstty··Galletj' 1:ASsbciat~s-tstage ·an mVltatic;hal premiere on Saturday evening, O'ct. 24. · ' · Guests will meet the artist and view his works, two r.o( which are purchases to initiate a permanent collection for the· gall.el"y In- cluded in the gala event from 7 to 10 p.m, will be dancing to tl).e ·Joe Mosbay Trio, cocktails and hors d'oeuvres. Future purchases for the collection will be made from funds de- rived. from the opening event. The permanent collection will feature works of established West Coast and New York artists, according to Clayton Garri~on. dean of the School of Fine Arts. ' . .Among 250 invited guests will be UCI president Charles~ J:ilitch and: bis wife. Guided by Associates the couple will join a tour of the 10..acre complex With its 425-seat theater, concert hall and d8nce,and art studios. Mrs. William H. Jahns is chairman of the premiere, -assisted by Mrs. Thomas P. Wilder, reservation chairman. Mrs. Heloo Blufock, Associates president, coon:!inates group activities which iIJclude. ~f~iis to museums and galleries in the Southland. . ' A'{;sociates will staff the gallery when the Lichtenstein EiX~'ibi).i,On · -is open; free to the public, Oct. 27 to ·nee. 6. Hours will be11 to 5 R.m. Tuesdliy through Sunday. _ . _ ' -. University Gallery Associates commissioned Li chfensfein· to ~ MOVING EXPERIENCE -University Gallery Associates (left · • 'a -construCti"On·si"te jvantage point. Associates wilt' stage an.invila-cotn.rliemorate the ex hibition with a poster design . Guests will receive to right) the· Mmes. Henry Valeri tine, ~~illiam H. Jahns and tional 'premiere;-0f cthe new facili~y in co.ntif!uing support of the a· fu)Jy-illustrated catalog with an accompanying essay by .John ~--'•·Clwles-flendrickson-vievthe-Fin.-Art.-Village-Art-Galleryirom--tJeJ<1rt-departm•nt-as-a-iionprof1t-organ1zation1;.---------euplanr,guesr-dtrect<>rotthe-pt1e ' ' :··•-:-r: ~·,';"·~ ::-.;• sn·ea;~:t1:g.·n~t:~ on: ~-~ash,i.E;~~ \ ' ~A,-HEM: WHICH LENGTH? -Gregory Jones measure s a mi di otltfit .~rn 1"' by lllfrs. \Varren Rose and an above-the-knee dress mod eled by Mrs. L.· Gad.- bo'is Jones from a short point of view. The Art Alliance members w'iH .,be" ~n:rlong 'models showing the newest winter-fal l fashions Sa tu rday, Oct. 11. P.rtr ceeds from the affair will benefit the acquisition fund of the campus art gal·1 lery • ' . ' . . .. , ·.,,,, ' Q._J> •.•••• .,.. ' Fall~d winter ~i>ll·: ·: ~ · J,, M"l!i'.tl!I ~SfpBl' · ·:·_c~~~"··~ ~~,J . ~sl . tht,,YOlmlOl'l!•!•!ea • t_~g of Hunt.w,;;on Foods · ;\i,r_f" ':f'bllerton OR Salurday ;.;).nor,JUng, Oct. 17. ' .. , . , • · !!'·Ju~ -exclusive s h o w i 11 g " -l>~n\,¢ by ilhe Art Alliance , el'. 4t~lirornia State College, -·-Ji\lllerloo. .will ope111 with . cli~gne ·and coffee al lr,e9CO ·served at ·10:30 a.m. , l\f~ling in the walkways will J}eiin, at 11 :30. • MrS'.. William J . Kelly, com- mentator. wi ll be assisted by a speci31 paflel .expressing the ·.maier viewpoint of l h e · fashionS. Critics will be Harry Babbitt. entertainer; Do n · Lagergerg, artist · professor, ·and Wil liam McGa r vey , · buSintssma11. Mr.s. Richard Dickson will ~ -.... ,. . ·serve as general chairman with .. the Mmes. E u gene .. n.O·nio'bedian. co-chairman; Ra)'l'T!ond Bucaty, models; Bilrt·olf.u ylor, recept.io111 : N. A. ':Segovich. finance, and Harold Larson, in vitations, . .A:Jso work i11g on the com- mittee are the Mmes. Nonnan Arn~~. reservations; Gerhard Ehmann and Clifford Thomas~ 1 -<lecorations: Jphn. F !'tl,t K.; niusic; Dale 01SOR,: ~rbett ·1 Slater .and 'ThothaS> \Jt'.rl!ht, • properties, and Rooafd• · Ken,. dricks, Rebert ·. €ta I' 11-o n,, Thomas Jorie1,:Wi1.U'.arh :WGlty ·. 8mi. WilliaJll Jtedfieltl, ;pu~Hq .. 1 , , • -· _ • • • "' ~. __, : :. ._ ty~,.ffe~the1>~.,:,..;..~h!i •.J39ds:tereltes' Set. Sig.his on ColunJ'/:ms. -~.l '.:... ~ · i.\n:ie#'llOrrald PolH• ·lf-·nf l ' ' · ... · · · · . . StemRrg: Francis 'M8Ckey C'Olumbus Day will open up new horizons for Big I liome of Mrs. 'Ed Newland, luncheon chairman. The ~,Elsaesser and Richard Boosterettes, fe male SPorts , ~:;ters , for UC J, as ac.t~ve group. under ~e direction o~ ~r.s. Bronko Sml~ refreshments: Archie they welcome prospective members· fo a Monday. Milich organizes pro1ects to create· intetest Jn the Arnofd and Dr. Gerhard Oct. 12, champagne memberlhip luncheon. The af-intercollegiate athletic program and raise !fund.a for• .EhmlU, patrons. fair will begin at 11 a.m •. ii! the New.part Beach sporting events. . :A--Sa~a:~s~:~:c;:~&-ar.:~·~~ns ·,-rn the Act -~n M~·~ey-making Sc .e ~e ,;. I • • , I ' • • • ' ''· !iJ ' 1! I DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have coo-~ · Tiie Group. The ,,..onl .... from here ll ·•k,-·butter 1nd ealing globs or butter on something wrong wlth1m'e-.•or--thenr!,;... fidence ln you. I'm sure if you don't kriow •nltss \tie group lea«ier 111 penoa ofrhn· btead. -BACK BURNER NO PITI'Y PAT • the answer )IOU'll get il from someone peceable rtpu&adon wilh a ron1 • dme DJEAR. BACK: Butter ls butler DEAR PAT: To ma;y "!0 _. the·~ jhoi. does. Question: What about these rr:cvrd of latesrlty IOd competuoe. w•tller you fry egp I.a It or put 1'Jobs of tor ts 1 symbol of he•et.c.P\ ...... "PtJO ~tivlly Groops? Ate they on the / /\' , .. , ·ti • ._ bread. U lM d!Od ltas a normal He is featle, ,.-..,, u.. Hiii! ..... l~vel? Do they do anybody any good? Can 1 NDERS Don't •·n ..,... •• ,....., h f I ""'--DEAR ANN LA : "' me ~ ,.lpstlve system. bitter WOD't lurrt blm. bowiDg, patient C'MtrilM • •• ~·~ ... be arm u ? 11i=c groups seem to , 1. l 1 : 11 ~ •• •·-Id do -springing up all over the country. they •rt all phoay. The e.arly ''T" Groups I peoplt,. sick .J*_ple --anybody wlao ~.. to alk my pediatrician. I'm Ubametl'to' r lie; .. loo DllluvY )'Oii luv11 cat •• rtsponslve to her .... "•lt11. 4 J WJlusband is interested. but I have were lf:gltlm.ite. They ht.lptd lnhlhlted , lhe pritt. admit I don't know the answer. It's a. ~a iU .fit -butter lnc:I-,.. COttr5fl:, he bappem to H·W" .... •ld. 11 ~kius doubls about such intimacy. Our people wbo Dttded to learn to shed their 1 J ··"'·'•IPIY\ mcpkioa1 of most "T" aimple question -but .it's driving · me 1 J)EAR ANN LANDERS: I'm always :!ci~ ki':nRa!: ~;:"~ ::,.; ' itnds who have become involved are h••l~J>!I ind epeo up to olhfn. In Ute p-oups 1u.ce..1 dointt bel5eve In ht1ta11t nuts. · ~ when I read letters from kt Hr and the llkls. : ltof•rave.s. But lhe9e friends are too far past year, lltwe.ver, • Nag1erla1-•umber ltoffsty, lllRaM tnthfalaen « ln1b1t I have an 11-monlh-old baby. L would "J~ won\en who form romanlic attachments • • tiUl fOr my taste aRCI I wonder '"1here of charlat.a• hive gotka Into tbe act. ret'O_.,.. frtm. INe-lolg an11~0e!I •md like to st.art frying his breakfast egs In U) lheir doctors. My doetor lJ a very at-flow will yoo know wtief1 nte re•I tlii'it ~.e group experiences will lead them. 1'hey PW a good thing aid •1nled J*l. c:.1lmplex ,preblfllftl. My psychl1trlc con-butter -along with -m)' bUSband't net : tractive man but t view him as someone ~comes along? Ask Ann t..anftrs. Senll ·1'ease deal with the subject In your COi· of the. 1ctioa. ~ 1uuats ten me dley ll'fH~lnt • d~,... mine. ,M;:~lher says NO -•Jt tt;ill'huft ·wHo pttfocms a .ervlce.for me -Ji!_ke the , fart"ber ~"'Love. er 5'X. llkl How" 111tn. -ZORBA : .. ' •uef~~· .. y.,.i eah.tel blm••il <etllnf .. mbet Of·!"l'l'lo'fto lo•!,flloilMo< lllo-llilmacn. Yet when ·-go to her e!ktrlclan or lh< <0p on lhe comer:. II)" ;nll•'lllo' 'llifforenle." Send ll """" '1 ~D&IR,\: lWoot-d•'!r.'!lr..,i,<1<i'a, up: 81...0 1\11• ''°""''lm an •llff la'lbe ~ tmotlo~y .~ • .., ii{,y ... iifl ' lio.tso '""'fl!Yes·~baby,cbomb'<Jl•bl'i•d •-. friends coaslder thtir dodll(!· • '· -lnd -rlont, 1Clf'.addresKd, atompeil el. a-1-fer: .. i'i'Y' wflifi rtilifht·~ · piptt' •ltd rent a hOrtt~ riom for &ii toler1te the hrtln11ey. o.ftpot*e ... 1'tth glfibl of butter. t1d like to know the cross be.tween Sir Gallahad , Houdini and envelope with your request in <tare o( Ufit em. He sets ~lcb. This Is not lo 1ay "meeting." Tbest fak es prey oa lonely brutal bearing of tbe aoul demanded by difference between eaUng eggs fried 1D EUlot Gould. What turns them on! ls DAILY PILOT. !· . .. • r -. Boutique Plons Brewing Along With Tea Lido l sle ho1ne of Mrs. Linn C. Williams. Deliver- ing their handmade ·decorations are (left to right) the Mmes. \Villiam P . Thomas, Richard Hennan Your Horoscope Tomorrow ' ..J Aquar.ius: .. Welcome Contacts FRIOAY , Ind no be firtt with tbe mt11L OCTOBER ,9 ARJES !March 21-April to): 1'ey SYDNEY OMA.RR Accent on desires and how to Aquarius tndlvldu)1, mere fulfill them. Social activity is often thla not, have more than favored. Accept Invitations. ne-sflltttfl-.f lneeme.-111~-1<..-ttHeect-word.9-of-young--per1on. person• often anticipate trends Take Initiative. No time to be Students Received Foreign Flavored A foreign mood will~J)rtvalrdurlng ari informal reception ror the Corona det Mar High Schoof students who are recipients of American Field Service International Scho'l- arships. Mr. and Mrs. James Bond will open their Corona del Mar home from 3 to 5 p.m . on Sunday, Oct. 11 . The affair is co-sponsored by both the adult and student chapters of AFS. Guest of honor will be Friew Kelemu of Ethiopia, Miss Eli Fure of Norway, Miss Anne Bouffier of France and Danilo Rod~ riquez of Costa Rica. AFS strives to promole understanding a!l'long the peoples of the world through a high school exchange program. Families host a student through. his senior year and the young visitors learn firsthand about cus· toms,. ideals. interests and problems o{ American. In turn. American students visit foreign countries for a comparable experi- ence. Interested persons may call Mrs. Henri- etta Olander, membership chairman at 673-4056. ' Pigskin 'Passifier' a wallnower. games. Respond accOrdlnalY· TAURUS (Aprii 20-May IP): SCORPIO (OCt.13-Nov. J ll1 Concentrate .on 101\d rela-Ablllty to turn actver!lly Into tionships. Let go ol lhoee ~bo success Is high lighted. You confuse and drain. You have a find that some who were aloof right to dignity -~nd gre1~r now are-enthusi11tl . Gr.ab~11ecur-ily;--Know-thl1-1nd act and mlllnlain Initiative. Yoo like you know it. are due for added reoogni-SAGI1TARIUS {Nov. 2Z- tlon. Dec. 21 ): Accent on 1hort GEMINI (May 21.June %.0): trips, ideas not l u 11 y Good lunar aspect coincides developed. Best . lo ~ with abUity to communicate. rather than it.art projeCt.!I. You receive news w h I ch You gain more recop ltJon. 1timulales mental processes .. But one who controla CJlb is Plan ahead for journeys, reluctant to let go. special projects in v o Iv in g_ CAPRICORN {Dec. 2Wan. writtm..mlM!r.iJI. _ _ 19): --.Empbasi.s_oo. .money, CA.1'.'CER ~Jun~ 21-July ~l : personal possessiOl'lll. New 1p- Emolional rea~11~ns are 1~-proach could yield dividends. tense. Do not risk funds . Wait Means discard what • Is unlll details are thoroughly oones.sentiaJ. You can collect cheeked before Investing. Ap-what is due. But you must plies also to personal life. Hold press advantage. ba ck -yo.u have time. AQUA.RIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. LEO (;July . ~Aug. 22\: 18): Lunar position coincldes Judgment , lntu1t1on mar veer with lime when you should from course. Know this a.nd take initiative. State terms. ~mlt mat~, partn~r to Ul-Don't sell -you 111eif short. itiate decls1?ns. With legal Welcome conlacts, challen1e1. matters, don t try to be y~r Opposite sex is drawn to you . ow~ attorney. Jn short, he PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 ): lo~. . You could find you r self IRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) · playing significant, backstage M~ch .of ~al you excel in role. Means many confide in ,.,do1~g is given as cha.Henge, you . In tum. you act M go- ass.ig.nment. Be gr a c 1 o u s. between, bringing together Reah~e that some ~o can those of opposing views. help Jn future are involved. IF TODA y IS y 0 UR Show your best side. Turn on BIRTHDAY tU charm. you are 1e ng LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 2l): ready now to embark upon What was illusive comes new ven~~re. Have faith In within reach. Make necessary your ability to ~ an ln- CQncessions. You have to novalor. Your own life style. is make Mme changes. One who due to be more . sharply def111- attracts you ma y be playing ed. Congratulations. "'By ones and twos, women are making plans to at- tend the annual preChristmes Boutique Tea spon- . esored by the Women's Fellowship of the Plymouth . ..LCongregational Church: The event will take place· f rom 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 17, in the I k I 1<?=====~~L.L-L-'lles ac e Str:a-tegy and William Roller. 'To 1;,,11 our ""''' •bo>ut -••H •nd 1rolOllv, crde• Svllnfv ~1m11n"1 Jll.a1M 11tro1otv. orOet' 5vll....,. am.rr•1 SO. P•"" bookl91, "TIM TrlJftl About .... trol.'1\1." $t:nd bll'1lw:lal• aNI lO '"'" IO ()marr 8oolll1I, -D.-.ILY PILOT • 8o• 114 Gr•nd '""''l it1t!M. N..,.. '!'or~. "'·'I', 100110. BUY , earning To Cope \Stressed _, A pilot program ha s been developed where volun~rs use their talents to help a con- vale.scenl penon recover from mental disorders. A l(}.hour training program also baa been engineered. It t l . aches the volunteer to help e convalescents cope with -1he problems of everyday life. " l Now 'the Community Friends project of the California Association ror Mental Health is in ~eecf of volunleers. TERRY McRE YNOLOS Entering tts third suceessfu l year in Orange County, the program-has been duplicated in other counties. Mrs. Joseph Dilorlo of Irvi ne and Mrs. Kenneth Jackson ol Costa Mesa &re-volunteers who lend support to convalescenl.S on a one-1()-()ne basis. A new training session will st.art at the end of October, Interested persons may con- tact Mn. Jo Holck. volunteer coordinator, at 547-7559. Chapter Sets New Schedule Spring Bride Harborites Tell News Of Troth Mr. and Mrs. Ralph 0. Clayton of Newport Beach have announced the betrothal of their daughter and step- daughte r . Terry Ann MeReyno!ds to Milton Leon Harrisoo. Mis..'i McReynolds attenderl Newport H3rbor High School and was graduated from Sapulpa High School, Sapulpa, Peering "'flSS .9-fD\' Stevens of Ne~·port. a member of the Balboa Ski Club, Is 11 can- didale ror the tiUe or Snow Queen in the annual contest sponsor!!<I by the Southern Council of Ski Clubs of the Far West Ski Associ_!tioo. The 1970 world ski cham- pion. Billy Kidd will crown the winner during the Los Angeles lnternalional Ski and Winter Sports Show today through Sunday, Oct. 11, In the Great Western Exhi bit Center. PLEDGING Delta Dell a Delta at the University of Southern Cali fornia is Ml5S Jennifer Wittwer of Newport Beach. The daughter of Or. and 1'-irs. Richard Wittwer, she is a Newport Harbor High School graduate. ONE HUNDRED e 1 e v en Orange Coasl residents were among guests at a dinner Game Ploying Game night for Beta Alpha Xi Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi \\·ill take place on Saturday, Oct. 10. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Renne\~ will open their F o u n t. a i n Valley home at 8 p.m. for an evening of Yahtzee f 11 r members, r u s h e e s and husbands. Refreshments will be serv- ed. A d ~ NEW YORl\ !UPI) -Talk· prof..Stona l football games the agreement "without u.due rou n i lng to one's male during this this ...... n w,·11 pay an . ,.,., noise or complah1t." • season cf televii;ed football aver11ge of S8 per event. _She g~ts the right tn havel daoce in the RI vie r a takes strategy. TY pica I If morl! is needed to put you him available in a reasonable restaurant given by George H. husbands watch Saturday and in a receptive mood. you t 1 1 · d 1 · Chula arld Associates in honor Sunday afternoons arld even s a e o repair an re al.lvely of the late Nick Meyer , first some Monday eve11i11gs. might consider the domestic sound frame of mind for public defender of Orange 1t doesn't end unlil January. tranqu_ility clu b. sponsored by public ind pri v at e ap- Coonty. Only a stu pid woman tries tn a Philadelphia brtwer. pearances as scheduled by his Music for dancing was pro-communicate with her hubby Membership is open lo wife on all non.fool.ball even-1 fACTORY DIRECT Custom HanCtc1rved SHELf UNIT and DESK s39's ... 57995 I Mlow wholeMle) vided by Jack Reidling and his during play. She talks but he husbands and wives. She gets ings and aftemOOfls, Sep- h doesn't hear. a card; he gets a card. They lember th rough ~mber. ore estra, and a strolling ac-Som . aet a rtT t d 'b' Of cour'-, jf hi's v•'ewt'•g l\----------1 cordionist played di n n e r e wives save urgent D ce 1 1ca e escr1 tng o,.EN TO THI PUILIC music. messages for the com· rights a•d privileges. Ami he habits badly disturb domestic WED. TH!tU SAT. A trophy was presented lo mercials. But then so many gets a shirt that 11 a y s tranquility, despite the agree· 'A.M. TO 5:JO P.M, DAILY husba nds are •• busy t. g "authorized viewer" oa the meM a wife ca n always say ll ---------"--· I the public defender"s office as ~ ea in a memorial award for the late they can't or won't pay rapt back in big red letters. she's going to restore attention. The rights include his righl domestic tranquality b y Mr. Meye r, and a member of Most desperate are the to enjoy unhir;idered. unin-unp lugging the sel. the public defender's orf ice wives whose husbands watch lerrupted use ar the television She can say it's her right as will be selected to receive the twn sets at once . Some of set during the football season. an American since the con- a~·ard the end of I.he yea r, these men manage to keep Exaplions for fire , nood and !'11.ilution insure3 domestic Galleria Sc11lpti1red F11nilt11,. 2011 ,.lat:e11tl• ....... C111te M .. T•I.. ''41-71 JO VACATION ING ,·n Santa tuned to a radio also. earthquake. .,_tranquility -for SI 11 Th I A · I I d' •· If "T~e So ur'' for Un11111tl Barbara al the Biltmore Hotel "I think it's a terrible waste e rights also inc ude his mer1cans. nc iJ 111g 11erse Fur niture" were the Messrs. and Mmes. of time," A young wife told right to employ body English, -::•;n~d~t;h~e ;ch;i;ld;re~n~~====~~~~~~~~~:;;;:~ Robert Allen, Clifford Hakes me .. Her husband is a two strong language or voodoo as,,- television set, one radio man. required to assist team and ilfl-and Cha rles G. Busch, all of · d Newport Beach. "It gives me time to do di vi ual players to victory. things around I.he house,'' she A third right e11titles him to Also staying at the seaside said. "J cook. he eats." consume food .•. equivalent to resort were Mr. and Mrs. H. Such wives ought to think actua l attendance at game. G. Parker and l\1r . and Mrs. how much easier it ii; on the This includes mustard and Fred Droe.c;ch of L.aguna budget to have their males napkins, but without tax. Beach. and l\1r. and Mrs . D. stretched nut there ii! the easv charge, tip, cover or B. Register of L.aguna Hills. chairs i111 the li ving rooms Or minimum. RETL1RNEO from a six· America than to have them The wife who agrees to this \\'eek picture taking safari in going out to 1fl game. pact gels something in return Afr ira are ?\1r. and 1'1rs. jjii.Thiiei9i.3imiiililioin~•~pe~c;;lll:;l;=o~r>;o;;f~;~~s~h~e~li;';••=jiupiitoiihi<'iipiartiinir!I Bryant Christensen of Corona del "'1ar. The~· tr ave 1 e d '11llerte11 Op• 5111., 12·5 p.M. through the Yiild a n i m a I kingdoms of several countries, to the Mt. Kenya Safari Lodge, Victoria Falls, famou s Tree Tops, the land o[ the pygmies and took a boat ride on the-Nile. Half Sizes speci~?I 5 -piece Salad Serving Set Sauce ladle, salad serving fork and ,;peon in gleaming Original Rogers ~­ SilY&rplate paired with SY.I• fluted clear crystal sauce bowl and 1 o• salad bowl. $395 only The first board of manage- ment meeting of the year for Cavalier Qlapter, Colonial Oame.s XVil Century will ~ c:onvened in the San Clemente home of Mrs. Gralll V. Rymal on Tuesday, Oct. 13. al 10 a.m. Okla. 1'jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiii Her fiance, son of 7'.1r. and ll If you hod to choos• only on• dre11, make it o poly.,1ter. Goe1 oround the corner Mrs. , Beatrice Crlst. pre!i· dent, will discuss plans for the corning year. Those unable to attend are ask!!<I lo call Mrs. Lowry Gallinger, 494·7350. Mrs. 1'1elvin L. Harrison of Huntington Park. is an alum- nus ol Huntington Park High School and attended East I.As Angeles College. They will exchange pledges in the spring. AVAIJ)sL< ti/-· ,..-,,....,.,...,~ GDJ]J, BtAci<, 01? O~lyE i9!J !!! • NEW MANAGEMENT SPECIALS COMPLETE ~$11:95 . PERMANENT ROUX fANCY TONE TINT Complete All Colors Av1il1ble $6 95 SAVE SI.SS . . . . . . . . o ~J--~~~~~~--4.~ '• ' 211 Broadway AltCADI Cl'NTll U.GUNA llACM 1148 N. Coast Hwy LAG-UNA llACH 494-6139 494.951.-9 202 Ola Vista SAN Cl lMINTl 492-8000 or around th e world because its washable ond drip· dryoblt .. I .1805 NEWPORT BLVD. MUNTIN •TON llACH I Nert te hit., l rea. hr11lttN) AIM: HI OltAH •• , .. 111 MALI. 'ULLlll:TON SHOP m • So nke lo own l r'i-'i-THE tNTERNATIONAJ. SILVER COMPANY . I c-.. u ... u .. r .. , u..w .. lhl•llerte e M•Nr Cltette e .... AINl'ker-4 (irk The \Il"Store-1 ""-'\. "' , .. r;J. JEWELERS FOR '43 YEAllS MAlllOtl t .. O,.lllN• (INTl'lfl t• MM'Mf I rw. CMll MeM ....... HUNTltfUTON ClNTlll: ·--11¥4, .. •llllt!ttt """'""""' 1..0 . ...... , o,_ Me11., T1111rs., ffl. 11 'tlf t ..... ,\ .. . ~-. - Barlxira Ficker Shares Husband's Joy •UOUA Tl COlll'flllll D'a -4 "'- ' t .... CllmlorW.. "' y-'-" ' lifelong. Dream Comes True 1~s:~~t:i--~Ss..~::::~·~1 100~. 'i>n the beach" 1 n d perfeotly contented to be there is Barbara Ficker, wife Of tbe first West Coast skipper in .histocy selected to <kfimd lb.~ America's cup. "EmpbaUcally NO -I don't like to sail," claims the at- tractive blonde. "I guess t just don't like the confinement of a boat." Barbara did board a boat owned by Intrepid'• syndicate to watch each race sailed by husband Bill, Newport Beach • an:hited. during the grueling trials and competition in the 119-year-old yachting classic which began last June. Although the weather was miserable -heat, cold, fog, wind, rain -she found the people on the East Coast friendly and hospitable. The alleged antagonism toward West Ola.st yachtsmen is: all in people's • minds here, she claims. "They were a b solute l y delightful to us," she says. AccompanyiJl& the Fickers for their four-month stay in the East was tht.ir daughter, Deon, 11, who also shares her mother's anUpathy toward sailing. ON THE BEACH -Daughter Deon, 11, (left) and Barbara Ficker, wile of ln- trepid's champion skipper Bill Ficker of Newport Beach, don't sbare his en- thusiasm for sailing but enjoy the fringe benefits of yacht racing. Barbara does enjoy the .. lringe benefits" of her husband's avocation -travel· ing and meeting people, and renown yachtsman likes it that way. Even though s;he loves the exciting atmosphere but doesn't always understand the racing jargon, she main- tains that Bill doesn't even want her to learn. Celebrity Book Review Calico Pa-lace Opened for Tour • By JO OLSON 01 tllt n.111 Pllfl ~Ill! An era of early California not often publicized is I.he set- ting for a 11ew novel by ~tiss Gwen Bristow, en tit I e d "Calico Palace," which was described by the author during the openb1g session of the an- nual Celebrity Book Review Series sponsored by Pi Beta Phi. Miss Bristow, a aative of' Sooth Carolina, was born into 1 Bible-reading family which ahe smilingly credits as the reason for putting "not a single four-letter word" in the book. She and her husband Bruce Manniag, were fierce riva1s in their jobJ as reporters for the New Orleans Times.Picayune ud Item but wrote a novel together which launched her career as a writer. The novel came about as a protest to the loud radio that blasted from their neighbor's apartment for 15 hours a day , seven da ys a week. To vent their anger, they jokingly thought of many different Pen Line Art Colors Fall Talk AJ;ti.st Mrs. Maryella War· t'en will demonstrate her oousua1 combination ol acrylic color and pen line for members of the Affiliates of ~ Beach Art Gallery on ltfonday, Oct. 19, at 1:30 p.m. iii the galle<y. Mn. Elsa Geiscben, pro- gram dlairman, will introduce the artist who graduated from UCLA and ilas exhibited in major galleries and o n television. \vays he might be killed and .ti •,__., 1 William s, were "Democracy fh1a\ly selected the best for in-I: at GuRpoint: The G re ek corporation into a mystery Front," by Andreas Papan- novel. dreou, memoir~ explaining the BEFORE 49ERS factors whidl caused the po-litical upheaval and prediction "Calico Trail" is the story of for the muture of Gr~, and the Calilornia11s who were in "Tennis: How to Play It, How the state before the gold rush to Teach It," by Ed Faulkner. started and before the 49ers featuring more than 4 o o came upon the scene. These photographs in film sequence. were the 48ers -'J)eople who had come to San Francisco fo r ADDmONAL BOOKS various reasons when it wa.s Others were "The Ex- nothing more than a lrontier ecutives," a novel by Alex- sha11tytown. ander FuJterton about the men When gold was discovered in ~ t and wome• who fight for prcr ,1848 it took a year for the fit and power in international news to travel eastward to the executive suites; "Desceat," a cities alo11g the Atlantic. What novel by James Whitfield happened in San Francisco Ellison about the Impact Of during that year is the subject divorce: "The Ravishers," by of Miss Bristow's novel. c.,...111 ,....,,. Merle Lynn Brown, a novel Her main characters are about four rich, handsome and Kendra, Ted Hiram, Pocker. CHRONICLER talented young me• who ha ve Capt. Pollock and Marny, the Gwen Bristow been "swingers since they left latter setting up the gambling the playground," and "Conflict te11t called the Calico Palace. of J1terest." by Larsto11 Far· Now a resident ol Encino, the best-seller list and has rar, an insider's novel of hUss Bristow has written been chosen by the Doubleday Washington, D.C. other historical J11ovels in· Book Club as a• offering for The next book review will eluding "Jubilee Trail,'' the 1971. It has been translated in· take place Friday, Nov. 6, at story of Los Angeles' early to German, will be a serial in 10:30 a.m. Mrs. H 0 ward citizens, ''Deep Surmner," a British magazine and ~n Means may be called for in- ··Tomorrow Is Forever" and will be translated i n to fonnation at ~U108. The "Celia Garth." Swedish. · •-e1· lhe hi! series lft:"n 11! p an- She writes on a strict Other books on the program, thropies of the South Coast schedule, feeling that "if you reviewed by Miss Carlotta Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi. don't keep a schedule you'll ----...C.------- never get it done." Her day begins at 9 a.m. a11d includes a lunch hour about I p.m. and 20 lengths in lbe swimmiag pool. SOUTHERN ORA WL ~tiss Bristow, who .still re- taim a soft. Sooth Carolina drawl. is president of the Los Angeles Center oC P E N lnlernational, a worldwide aS90Ciation o f profe!lsional writers which had as its first president Job.I Galsworthy. "Calico Palace" has reached .. We don't have to talk about rolltt skating (skating, both It. We just go and do it, and roller and ice, and swimming thtt'a it." are Barbara'• bobbies) and 1>4ring their stay I n beaching. N~wport. R.I., the Fickers Alµtough therti were many ahar:ed_a bo1DL.WitlL members __so.cial.e.ve.DJ.s_conneded....Mtb of · the lntrepid's crew and the elite of racing competition various representatives of the sponsored by the New York 12 meter's syndicate headed Yacht Club, syndicate by Bill Strawbridge and ~ members usually ''COVtted" managed by Briggs Dalzell for the Ficken. "At limes there were as ·•we didn't attend too many many as 23 in the house, bl.!t it parties," she admitted. ,"You was completely staffed in-can't sail all day and go out eluding a house manager," she nights , and our people were said. too busy raclng." Barbara and Deon found Barbara attended. Pomona plenty of time for sigbt«elng, High School and Mount San Morning Club to Hear .- 'Everybody's Secret' Mqnday Morning Club mem· bers. of Laguna ae,ch have scheduled a busy m on t h starting with a luncheon meeting on Monday, Oct. 12. The noon gathering in Ben Brown's restaurant will be highligbted by a o n e - a c t drama, "Everybody's Secret" directed by Mrs. Jeannette Kevan, chairman of I b e Wednesday Club of Costa Mesa. Starring in the play will be the Mmes. David Farge, Ken- neth .Reynolds, Fred Johnson, William Hill, Billy Gibbs, Gene Gribben, Robert G r e e n e , Stewart Wamak and Robert Clark. Also on tbe agenda i.s in- The Tee formal modeling by Fashions by Robin as arranged by the program chairman M r s • Richard Orchard. Those in- terested in reservations may call Mrs. Ruth Hatfield, 494- 4<50. On Thursday, Oct. 15, an armchair cruise to Acapulco via colored slides, presented by a representative 0 r American President Lines, will entertain members in Irvine "Coast Country Club at 8 p.m. A bus trip to San Diego for shopping and lunch in the Hotel Coronado is planned for Wednesday, OcL 28. Following lun ch members will participate in a twcrhour nar- rated cruise ol San Diego Bay. Tattler Alumnae Gathering Husbands Welcome llusbands will join members of the Newport Harbor Alpha Chi Omega Alumnae, Gamma Tau Gamma group for an evening of dining and socialibility. The affair will take place at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 10, in the Linda Isle clubhouse. Mrs. Jack Bibb is ch.airman of the annual · affair honor l n g husbands. Assisting her are Mrs. Lawrence Milne and Mrs. Paul A. dePfyffer. Mrs. Dale F. Winters has assumed presidential duties of the group. Other ofiicen1 are Miss Laurel Arnold, vice president ; Mrs._ John A. Cooper and Mrs. Maik Rodar- nal, secretaries, and Mrs. Kenneth G, Cooling, treasurer. Serving as committee chairmen are the Mmes. Richard Parker, Lyre editor; Arthur Olson, chaplain: Val Ely, historian; John Billings, rush ; Sydner Gay nor , Panhellenic; Ronald Gagliano, parliamentarian, and Loren W. Heather, press, and Miss Charlotte Clark, membership. nu-trend kitchens Antonio Junior COiiege prto. to her marriage to Bill, her col· lege sweetheart, in 195.1, She naturally wu overjoyed with Intrepld's win because Blll,_wbo--lw been_ sailing since he wu I, was so ex- tremely happy. ''For him, il WU the fullfjlJ. ment of a lifelong dream," she said. Holidays Previewed KAN~KALON ·WIGS Tho INSTANT HAI~! THE TRAVELER Str•tch c•p, c"rly or ••ml0c11r tel' with t•per9' eecL Rt 2"·''· 14.95 THE VOYAGER Witt. or ,..ithout p•rt, for th lo1191r look. R19. 29.95, 19.95 THE DUTCH BOY Lo119 th199y ••~Ii. 11:19. 14.91 22.95 Getting a head start on the holidays are members of the Costa Mesa-Bay Cit j e 51\-----------\ Branch, California National THE "GARBO" Fu~bsia Society. H111dfflttl• for ffie l1t11t f11h· A Preholiday Fun Night and io11 ityl11. 11:19. 19.95. dinner will take place al ,,30 29.95 p.m. on ?!fonday, Oct.12, !ith,. ___________ 1 Mr. and Mrs. Merle Quivey "MONIQUE" hosting the affair in the Amer· ican Legion Hall, Costa Mesa. WIGS Fruit cake and Christmas earth will be offered for sale and' are available by calling Mrs. Lem Downs. c alt e chairman, at 646-2500 or Mrs. John Trainor, card chairman, at 642-t228. Paul Brecht of Brecht Orchid Company will discuss Garden Chatter and show shade plants. 0 t be r en- tertainment will be provided by John Aeberhard, chairman. Harbar Center l/l l LAlGI SIZIS .... $69.9$ NOW '29" Pal-STYLID •••••••• SJ4.91 CUT & .STYLID •••••• SJ9.91 OTHER HUMAN HAIR WIGS $19.95 ALL SHADES P•l·STYLID •••••••• SJ4.tl malfiej WIG~ BEAUTY SALON 250 E. 17th STREET Dail y Til 5:30 Thurs . & Fri. Till 8:00 COSTA MESA 548-3446 5x7 NATUR•L COLOR I An exhibitor in the Laguna --!'•.£!> F.!"11_ "'1 ol..Arn....._~ warren a so dtsigm proauas for mmmercial enter,>rises. APPRAISALS -·"'DrAK<oNil?~~=~~ GEMSTONES "' =1lQRUA[L,_~-··"""==- FoJlowing the ted.ure and a abort buslnells meeting con- ducted by Mrs. Hovey Cox, )ftSidenl, relmhmenls wlll ESTATE JEWELRY , beaervedbybospllallty c:hah'man Mrs. G«Jrge Daven- polt. s.11tti Co•ll "••• l rhtol 11 5111 Oie9e Fwy. C.tt• Me11 540°9066 CUSTOM-MADE DRAPERIES 1t11 OUl CONmllllfT SHOP AT HOMI SllYICI ._ ... , ltJ_..,, ._ ... 141 .. 141 I\ W1Nt 41,,.,, .. t win till ti.,...., lie1t1• ,..ftlri • tlri'1•• 11l1rtie11 tf lHfk ~11.W:l'r low t .. t f1l.ri,I for ''' t. 1hM1t he1r1, Ne 1Wi91H•1tl C..pl1tt 41•,e••llf ,.,.,. ice -1pHl1!1ry -1/ipc:•••rt. -.. . . ' -o -0 • .. NU-nlNI 1:rrCN1Nr' rnodtmiution 11rvk:M help vou pl1n your kittht11 rtmodtlint from 111rt to finish. You c1n dtptnd on NU-TttND KITCHENS' txptrt touMllor to htlp you pl1n your proltct from inception to co~lt­tlon 1ncludlng sourttl of fin1nclng. for 1 diUlnctrw. 'rm/ kitchen 11 1n unbt1t1blt price, can NU.Tl"'.'D IUTCNlNS today. {Al&O Ilk tbout our COf'l\Plttt, qutliry l1throom remode ling Mrvice.) NU· TREND KITCHENS 420 El Camino Real, Tustin 17141 838-2654 , ... -1..,i...i, W"-1 ...... ._ a.oo Meh ~== THURSDAY Thru SUNDAY October 8th thru 11th HOURS: O.tly 10 1,m, to I p.m. Stinday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 2200 HARBOR ILVD. • at Wiiton -Cotti Mina - ' L DAILY PILOT s ---· Out•Uinding C.onipact Th• high-performance Plymouth Duster 340 Is at the top of Plymouth's popu· lar ccmpacl Valiant line for 1971. I\ new grille and strong Identification are styling features. Introduced last year, Du ster pactd Valiant to its most sue· Cessful year in history. There are four Valiant models !or 1971. ·Your Money's Worth .. Why Do B11inesses Fail? By SYJ;VIA PORTER ln the 1pr1c1 of one c-lty block near our Manhaltan apartment, I've wa tched close to a half-<loun stores go under in the past several months. During ~ same period, other 1lores on the bl~k· have seem- ed lo be doing fine. , Why did Restaurant "A'' fail while Rest.llW'11nt "B" -i.n the aame block, saml! price t ,oort Of OIL PAINTIN6S WHOLISAU WAllHOUSI onN TO THI PUILIC .. $5 ""' •• . 1'1t L EO!fllGIJt, IANTA ANA ' l"NONI: ·~ DEALElt' WANTED -~·-MRY fAMltY SHOULD HA Vl···THll l'iRSONAL PHARMACY ; ~ TlllY •UNTj L" There are important rea· IOns why the American Jlt:~cal Association suggests that you have cne ~Ml pbumacy from which you clltaln all the medicines and health aids needed by your tamily. :when ane pharmacy fill!l all your .prescriptions, the r8cord flla contalru all the information needed for the pfiiarmacist to help protect you. Some people are o.Ht'r- gie to certain drugs. Others rrqt.y be getUng prescriptions frOrn more than one Doctor Md the medicines could con· tlict with each other. We hcSpe that you will choose us to be the personal pharmacy fr# your 'family. range; appealing to the same nearby residents -is thrh·· ing? Why did Lingerie Shop "C" go bankrupt w h i I e Lingerie Shop "D'' is pulling us in to buy everything from pantyhose to pajamas? It's by no means a casual question in late September 1970. For business failures have su rged well into the 900- NewportMan Elected ,To Head Post Kenneth ~. Vance a f Newport Beach has been elected executive vice presi· dent of Congress Li f e Insurance Company or Arizona with responsib'Uity for opera· tions a n d &dministraUon. Prior to joining Congress, Vance ""W as president ot Empire Jnsura11 ce Company, also a Santa Ana based com. pany. Before his a..Ssocialion wilh Empire, Vance was one of the original organit.ets of Founders Life Insurance Com· pany or Orange, California. His duties included being treasurer and administratiVe officer. He Jen Founders .Jn 1963 to become executive vice presi dent at Empire and was promoted to the presidency in December, I9fi1. Mr. Vance is married ·and the father o( three children. He is active in the Santa Ana Rotary Club, Orange County Chapter of the Natio nal Association of _ Accountants and Commerce A.ssociaies o( the University of Southern California. You OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you ~ a delivery. We will de--Jl~ei promptly without ex-tra charfe, A ireat many 1>6>ple re1y cm us fOf' thf'lr hfflth nttds. We welcome ll;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J reA,uests for dellvezy service II and charge accounts. 1fpt1 ................ 1 .. . .. PAii LIDO "4AIMACY Sit H..,.,... IMll ........ .._. 642·1UO Senk.,'" .. Mt ........ all ., '"'Nib. TIUPHONI ANSWlllN• IUllAU ,. --835-7777 12.5°/o YIELD F.IRST MORTGAGES WHEN PAID TO MAnrRITY 1% S YI.I.RS. DISCOUNTED 10-.4 MINIMUM $J1D10 INVESTORS PROPERTY MllJGEMENT "" NIWPOIT ILYll .. NIWPOIT CALlfOINIA tlUI l'HONI 714:,114111 BROKERS HACH • Want Ads • IAoldnc for a Mme 11t1r t~ br.11chT Jf )'OU'rti 11 fixer upper, h~re·g 11 lf'Ml bu)I for $29,850, • OoOies rW!td a.Ucrlrig~ ~ cur list ol trained t•ptrts In rhe ~ dtrectory, • lf )'OU'rt loolr1 ng for a part ~ ~. hteni '111 one you ClllJ do at borrw. Only 4 bi's • dAJ", • '65 MUl&Ma rt1nvtMiblf!, ~r tiralr.es k tleerin.I[. IWI. oood tim. A ...... buy •t ~- l • OYER' THE COUNTER •• lw IMw ' ri _....._ R ....... .....,.. t ..-. ._ l&AJO. ......... -.............. ..,... ....... .,, ..,., .. NASD Ll•tinp for Wocln.,doy, Oc!Mor 7, 1970 " ·, Del.Ober , 1970 • - Briefs NEW YORK (UPI) -F. W. Woolworth CO. Thursday rtporltd a sates 1lln or 11.4. percent fCI' the tour weea ended Sept. 2' compond wllll a year earlter. S.,)eg for U. period were 11115 million. FOi! -- the past la week!, Woolworth s1lt1 were up U I ptrttnt to 1 record 11.111 blDlon -pattd with 11 m billldtl a )'Ur earlier. The CGIUpatcy Aid It. hoped to have a 14 pm:tnt I aaft1 incru.se for the wbolt year. ; • I I l I ' Dl.!LV ,ILOr ~inance BJ;"iefs ST. LOUIS (UPI) -Mellon- ntll-lloufla1 Corp. bu obtaiJ>. eel an order !or •lgbt "'In-jet ~ &ran.sport plmes from Flnna~. l'lnland's lntematloo- • ThlirSdl)', Octolltr 8, l•Jt Mesan Elected ·, ___ LEG_AL_NOT1 __ £E __ , _-=-uxw;="'·'""11"'an=cz=---·----=LEGAL=·:-:-'.11"'on=c=E--•·--.-LEG=-AL,...,.,11m""-'"'l<i"'~--·--..,.LEGAL---NOnCE==--1--""L11GAL=-=-=-N=-=an=cE=-- P411N ......, 1""91KtOr, a, P. ••111\', ""' hllnt 'l•c• H1rrl1 lltt~ 4ft P&•CllllCT• .. 1'1•1 Plt•CINCTI ,...,.._, ClatlPKAT• OP IUllJlll• c••Tll'IUTI 01' 1u111•u-. J ....... I . lhn .. u •• .,. WelMll l"I. Polll,. ... ~ '°'" .f•ldtnu. JIN VIII Ptlllllt Pl.u .... ,.,.,, Dl.irld p~.il• •1CTITtOUI NAMI ttt('TITtoVI fllA.MI . 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Or-. C..llf9rnl1 ""'· Mini P+Kt he ·-Tr•I~ Ptl'k Cltrtw K. '· ...... ,.., o.n. Cllfk. •• ltckltrom. .... (ltrll, H. I. Wiii&. ... . ...,.....,., C1llfltftia tom: f, Mr. elllll llollolllll K. Olfdl, 12)1.1 l.«tttt 0,.,...., Clubho\lw !too Htll A"" f'ltlCUfc;Tr tw'lt-1 CL'"'-11, M. ~ Otnl. Clllrk. P, Lff!dlo!WI. ""'· V'~bu'·r1 '"-la"-• na /WI. K-1111 •• Kiit,., ,,. illlelllloftllllt O••flM· C•UWnlt, ,,..,, lrwtn ''"· l'"Hefw 1' $ •~•rw:ll lltto , .. , ... f'tlCt, Hlrtll• llnkl-t, .......... T ... , .. , f'illllCUtCT1 ...,,._, MtW• W rq...,.,. uun, • &Ir•!, ttlffl'llcle, Ctlllor"ll fUOf~. Ml. M.O. "3t OCHllWWllll OrW., HllllllneNn ,-... , a' M' Morrl• ...._· " "' '"~ tionaJ group of WboJaale DIYkl G. ~ • .,ll Eett ltMi ISHcfYJ Ctllforllll. """' Tll'°""'9 It, Cltrll • H • M.' klllilY 011tn Ol'ftOll Aw. l"olU111 rLeot, lrtlt• l-. Cl\ltllleUM, f'gJHnt Pl1c1, EMii Chi• CllltihoVM. S1J . DrlYt .... 0 1-. Celifol"llLt ttHt .. Mr. Mtl'lt,,.,., I07 I!.. ... ,..llClt StrHI, c1.,L L. H ci.1 • ..: o.n: ~=°C: 1~·-!;1~·::: 11..... 1-"7 ~.-...w .... -•• ,,, ... _ ·-1:~~.·.~in. lltl. ~1~1...-·~-1n ... m-~-.. ~ el'llll Mri. v-E. ci.v.. 1JOI Ht.. c-, C.nt.nill, ""' c..ok" Induction • ' . .... --·· -c - To Marine Post u...w1uui.w:a Wl'll:I .,Ille r A-. llte(e JN, l!ieirillllle ""'1111 c .. , I~ #2t llU II..-f'illl.ICINCT1 .,._, \ Cllrtl. G. ti. 011 ... r, · J~ M. l',a 11,..11.111:... J\ldtt, ·IS. Ftrwtl~ _,., -pl•-ln""·"'-.--GeUfOf'll!• f2t:J t. '"· •1111 Mn. J-A"'!M· Me)'Wtlld, Call!Wrllt, '°'"· l'ttllllf l"Ltu. l'rYtr •"ld4ft«. :Mii Vlww c1e111. G. J. kwtntll, lllfio. Cl«t. H. M. l'rkt. .... Cltrt._H. w. H'l'lllrt. tit,. " w ...... ., -111:, OUnM"r:--1ox1 -,.tlblle9 ""'1r -tt\dle1'!ll-I , &lflltfl-8r, '"'9-CMMY _ Cit. l"ttlCIM(f• ti>tl>I (ltl'll, M. &. Lllfltl', Dem. Cl«ll. H, M. JoMI, Deni, WASHING1UN (UPI) --'-----'-------·I •etlflowfl'. C•llfon'111 ""' ,, Nw. -........ "u •• Oowtlfy, CeU!ofnll fOl.fl. lnDicfOr, c. e . '•Y••· •• ,. l"Oflllle l"ltct. \llaot1t tetioet. IOU 'tit> f'llK1MC'T? .,,,,., ~ PlllCINCT-1 ~' • • •I airline. • ........ ~-Mr .. wunerri WMllllcOdl. us Ettl ...... "-11 H. 0.111. N•IM" Hei. Dfhtt , JllCIP, M. D. II•~~°""· IOl1• ''· PDlllne .. Itel, Htlllol ktlMr School. 11>0 ... 111111 1'1-. 5"1W tt"lottict. 1)0.1 t. Columbll GN Sysltm hu &..rAUU.O 1"n11"'• NOt1tl l.ont ''""-C•ll!Onllt 1. Mr, 1111111 s t1rtlot'lll, '-*tk\11, ..._ .,....,. J. Celr. J. J, W•kme11o 01111. llllHdor, •· H. it-. 11... s.n11 AM A..... BtlbH BMI. 1....0 thf f£.I al p Mn. EdWlnl KllllM. 1901 s.nt1 1'1 ~ 1'Pt Ordltnl .... 11J, Cltn. M. I". killll. Dini. J....,.., •• I!. fltl\lr. JI:... 1"_., M. T. Cendt, Dem. 111-cor, I, L.. Moore, lt9', llllCU cuet.. owtZ' P .,.,. ,._\lllWt, Hllfll11Wf0n Pen:. C.NfofNt I. tllVINldl, Ct!llol'llle nJCl4. C1rl G!'lff f'ltlCUKTi 11·*-1 Clerk. 0 . M. M~. Dlf"I. JU'llM. E. M. JIOWI, Ill•. Jlldlt, M, I'. S..111, llt11, CommIS&kl1 for permll!lon to ClllTl•ICAll 01' •U11NISS Mr. Nom11n WUb. nr Mlrltekl, U.01 Pt<lllc Cotat HlfllWl'f'; ... ,wtc: 1'0111"1 PIK .. s11.,..r• •••ldlllCJ, IW Cl<H'k. f ', v. frntrffllo Dem. Clerk. e. I!. K1v, ""'· (lttl(, II:. I. '''""' tt ... lllCTITIOUI titiAMI C--tltl Mer. CellfOl'"lt t , lttr, ..... l'1!1Mfn, CIHfol'"ll, ltvl111 lll'tt. Anel« "" r1tlCINCT1 fMl•I Clttt. N. I, Wllllt, tt111, Clllrtl:, E', WllOd, tit•. r•ist rites ol seven o( It.I lttt l;llldtnlflllllll -.. C'tl'f~ tit it~ tNt. w11111"' ll:llllM. 1"1 1111111 .,., M.D.. "" A111nr1c. LOM ._,., '"IM<fOr· c'. c. ,,,_,.,, 11.., f'o111119 f'ltc.t, C•nv.,. klloll. 1J.JO "'""'"' '"••<•HCTi ft-1,..1 •tt•CINCT1 JMtJ-1 sublldlaries by 1 . total of ductlfll , M~ et 1un c''" L11.. A'Hlllll. Hvftt1111i.i ,.,., c1111on1i. 11. c1111or1111. JllCltt. •.A. WMlfllff9rl, tt•. Dr. Pomne '"'*' &oMr• Sclleol, ,.. s-1 f'olAN I'll<•. '"''" •·~ :M<t H11lllll'Slln IHCJI, Ce11tornl1, Ulldlf" l'llt Mr, Atn &i.vt .... 11W Carlton, Stud.. DeNllll Stllltmlllr 4, 111' Cltrk, l A ,,.._ndtllOl'I. De1f1 ,__., II.. J, J111111rv, Delft. illlllll ISQ'1lof"I Or, S213.4 mlllion for an ·~ -r· lleflllOU• ''"" -.,, CONTtN!HTAL City, C.Uf0!'11le. Al~ w. Alllllrloll Cief11:. L'. 1: tt-. .... • Judte ••• l . Slllflr, °'""· I to M A M It ttw '"'""""· s. P. Nld!DIJ. Dern, r:' CAtlf'fT ANO Ul"HOLSTl!tlY CllAN• OaMd 5•Nfflbtr .t, 1t'8 Ge,.rll Pl•ln« Cllrk. C, H•lf\I, °'"" -r, ' ' " y, ' Judtt, C. M. EY1n1, 11. ... cent rf:Wnl on over1ll 111-ING.,., ..... , u llll fll'l!'I .. _,...... ".... Alben w. A"°"'Mn Sllfl OI Cellfomll, l"RICINCT! .... , Cl1rtc. L. J. WlltY, Ht PtrtY JllCIM .... Ill. v ... l119, o.m. Cttn ·w c H•IH"" ••• ve-'-ent '9lllWllll "'-· ....... -Ill fvH el'llll 6-r11 r1rtlltl' Of"tnet CCllUl!lY; Potllne l'le<t, RMI ti•*"«. 1•1•1 PttlCIMCT1 IHl"1 Cllfll. s. Allhl1de, No,,,,., c11rtc' E' M. OoMf ·11 .... "'"' • •ltct ol l'etllllitfKe It .. "''""' sni. ol C.IHorntt. o,.,,.. Ctlln,.,: °" S..ttmbtr ... 1'11. Mien me. • Mlltlltll L1'. .... IN f'llct. Pil~Hrl Maltllll f'lrk Clertl, N. I!. Dttl1rcllnt, o.n. Ptt•Cut(T1 »-1•i . ltrrt LN t llll Mtrlt C. H\lllllt, 1•1H On S.•lemNr '-1t70, ._,_ lfll, I Nollf'!' Public: I" tnl ftr ... Id S11te, I~, D. M. '?.r.<!!'· llln. (kl~, tm W. 11111 It, #illllCU!CT1 U-177·1 l'olllnt I'll«, Htr""lll JtNldeflol. .a~. Crele L11,. M\1-ntln.witll .. tdl. (lllllmlt. Nolll'Y l".,.lk In tnl IOI" "id Stell, 11rMH1allY IPHt,., A1blrl W. Ancltrt1111. ~~· M. ~ ="'~'ka;"'·::n l-1or, P. $lllOltk. tt.... POIMlll l'te'9, l11M111 llNldenct. 1-"' Htollint A111, SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -0.111111~11, 1m _ IMNMll~J °""1:1111 Albtrt w. A"""'" k,_n te m1 te bl the "'""" whoae I • M. • 1' io; • J....._ D. v . l"lnU11tt. ""'· Conic• 1'1, 1"1P9Clor" T. M. Hornunt1. Dim, ••·-•atd Oil r. of Cafil-'a Ltrrv L, M\llllltt .,_ te ft'll "' lit the Ml'iift itltMw: flllft'll ls-aubKr'IW<f It """ wlltlln fno ~ N.. "'--Smlltl. Jl-._ a.di. IL I , Sot.nM11, ltu. _ l111-1of', I!. C. Tlwwn11, II... Judt1, L. L. LllQN, Otrn. ~IU vu. .,.,.. Mttlt C. Hulett. ,,..,... 11 Jllbl(tlblllll to lflt Wlltllft Ir!-1rr-t 1111 l~till Pit .. «Vllcl f'ttlCIMCT: »•t Clwlc. J , W, WtUlc:e, 11;.,, JUllll;-1 , J, l'"trMC1, 0-. • Cll'rt, H, S. Addh,.-R""° said it has negotiated a new S!•I• ., C1Hfw11l1, Orll'ol• Ctu"ty: JlrvnMnl •1111 HllMWltOttill lie Mlttlli.d '"-.,•111'\t. f'elll111 l'IK•. Dl1tr1« ottlt:t LOllll!lt PRICINCTt ....... 1 Cll<lt. A. D .... 11. Dtm. Clttt!. K, M. Al!dlt. Ill,, On S.I. 11, lt10, tltfort 11'11, t Holl,.., ltlt Ull'\t. ( l'ICl"'L SEAL) kholj. "73 Wemer AYl. f'elllnt Pl1ce, Plt~-1 M<>D!le P1rll Clttll. M. 0. HI0.1, -· , f'RICINCTr U-1.,.1 prodtJCtiOO contract with the '"'*lie In ..... 1W uld Slttl, MrtOl'lliY (Ol'FICIAL Sl!All Otmr Flrr911 S1l1•~rT ti lnll'tc:IOI'. I . M, Vt" 9Ul'tll, R... CluOllouM. tOS W. 11111 It, PttlCINCTr Jt-U•I PDlllne Pita •. Cook 11.tslduic .. 4; •OVetnment of Llbyl ,..,.,.. •-rM Ltrry Ut Hui.tit tnd M1rt1 C, Cllelltr F•reU SIU!AMlrt Noltl"t' 'lltllk • C1llfllnle , J ...... , f, L HtNI, tt... I_,., L, H. 8«11.,.'", Ht l'e~ Ptllll'ol Plttt, FlrMltfloll, 1W lllOYll Se~llll Ave. r v Hult!N k11eW!1 t. me te lie t1!1 M,_ NOfln' f'llllllc • Ctllfwnlt f'r1nc1HI Ofnct I" (Ill~ I!:. M. Al!.lllo lttto. JllCIH. C. A. Jol'I-. ~. Ptlm Dr. l"11•1<1W, 0. H. l)utllt, R"'-Vidlng a MW 5 percent SUrtaX ""'-,...,.,... 1rt 1ubKrlblllll i. tM w1tllln Prlnci.11 Office In °'-• COll!lfY Ci...t;, M. I!. Slendridl1, Otrn. Cll't'll;, ,._, M, Sltrbudl. tt... l~r. P, VI" O<irtn. It". Jltd1lt. C. 0, Jor,.r, tit•, nd Ill 1--•i.-.......... . IN '''"'*'' •1111 ICknCIWllClftill !lllY ... o,., ... CllUftlr My C0111ml111t11 llQlrn PltlCIHCT: .,., Cltrtr;, J. c. l!vtllltll, No PtrtY. Jlllllltt, J. ti. Vt" H-. lttto, Cltrll, K. H. ca, R"'. a , W rape "'-llC .....,_... pnCe tc:l/ted fflt um1. Mt COfllll'lllllon E1t1'lr11 Ocltllw I. 1'71 Polllne f'llct: Jtrrw• ltMkllnce, 11102 PltlCINCT1 ft .. 1.1 Cllltk C, I!, llwrMll, lltP. Cllfk, K. L. ""°"'• Oem. of its Ubyl.D crude lo $2 5.:J a !IEAl) Oc!Mtr $. 1'71 PublllMCI OtlllM Ctttl D1liY f'Jltl, C1melt1 Clf. Pollllll f'L1e1, Grlllfl Hiii Clullllou .. , Cllf'lt, M, C. Doi.In, 11111, l'ltlCINCT• U-IU-1 ' f'etrl IE. Mlln Pu•n"*I 0!'•11411 Cotti Dilly Piie!. Sfftlmlltr U, 24 llllll OcltbW 1, '-In-I«, S. A, 11.Qd, tt111. 214' TIM.WI" A'+'t. l"ttlCINCT1 S•IJ'to1 f'tl!lnt Pita, JOllH llnldlllCI, IOI l'l'I~ b1rrel. Nolt,.., Publlc • C11!torl!lt s .... lftfllr 11, 1... Incl october 1 .. 1'11 171t-7t Judte, $, A. $ult0n, .... In~ ••• M. ltrntll. ... Pot•111 f'IKe. Adlml Sdloo~ U50 Grt ncf Centi Pl'111t.IP1I OtfLcl !ft 1f11 171 .. 10 LEG" N011CE Ctert., A. J. Wli'-lfll, ••· Jllfff, o, M. C~ertlr, OM'!, Cl\lllllouM Rot. tMNCIOI'. P. w. J-, tt"', Ortl'ltl Co\lnh nu Clerk,(, M, S!toue, Otm. Clttk, l . J . NlllOn. i111t11, •-tor, I. WL • V"'o • tltl. Jllcl!rt, J. A. Crw.ltr, ti .... NEW YORK (UPI) -C:Om-My c .... m1111o11 E11,1rei LEGAL N~ICE •tt1Ct1KT: n.m-1 ci.nc. 1. "*"'°"' Dtm. J11dlt. D. H. "· ••· ct.enc, c . I!. 1'11111, lttt. It • J bicb Mtrclt 7, lt1t VJ. '"'*'! hlUne PIKt, Joll!IMll ttulllMC:t, llNI PRICIMCT1 J:Hlt-1 Ct...._ M, L, Gtnd11nl, Dtm. Ci.rt, V, C. llrtftCll, tltto. puter App CllJOM llC., W l'ublllllld Or1net Ctt1! 0.1,., f'llOI --ClltTIPICATI OtJ Bltlltoll loltr9 L.lllt'" f'Pllll'!I P .. ct, Ortntt (Gift Collttt GYll'I Cieri!. E. M. P11'1u, Rw. PttlCINCT1 .U-!H-1 filed I petlti<ln lo reorganize ""'· 14 Oct. I, •• lS. 1'10 1141-10 NOTICI 01" TttU1T1•·· &ALI l"ICTlllOUS NAM• l"llllCIO•", It, c. ll!ldtr. "•· ScMlll, 2'11 F•lrvttw ttllll. PlltlCIMC"fl ••1'*-1 H1""41 PllCI. Wt!MR ·~ lSoJ nde ha f lbe ..._ 1772 T~t uflllt,JilnM dolt Ctflll'Y Ill It CM> Juotie, V, L. Gln y, tteP. IMPIC'IOI', M. L tttld, lttt>. l'DlllM Ptc1, Sllllo" No. I Flffll1!lon. Sttlllorl Dr. u r c pier 10 0 LEGAL NOTICE Dll Odobtr w. lt10. .... 11:00 A.M., d~lne • lm!ntu ,, t:IO w. VldD•I• St .• C"'1c. J, "· Jclwltoll. tll'JI. Jud••·£. c. lto1t1m1n. Dem. IOO B1ktr SI. l111NC!or, E. J. Mccu1111111, ..... bankruptcy ac t said 1'1urAday1------~=------IENl!~ICtAL SEilllVICI! COw . Ctllfol'"ll (Otll Min, e.u .. ,,,1 •• Ullflr tlll tic-Cl ...... c. w. JOl!nMlll, Dern, Clt!'X,&. c . L-. o'"". ln•Plciof, ti. J. Jlletl. ti••· Judo1, L. R. W•tlon. Rtto, T.... ctr'l>OffllOll I i fUlr eH'oln""' Trwi-tl!low firm """'* OI kiutll C.O.it Gr ..... 11:1 f'RICINCTi Jl·ttJ-1 Cllrtc, J. V, Mtn11d, tl1P. Judtf:, I , M, °'re!llO"' RH, Cltrk, H, M. Hul(tlln11111, It ... its total asset! of $12.9 million IUPlllOilll COUltT OJI THI undlr tnd "urw.nt to DtH el l'Vll 11111 !Ml 11lol nl'll'I 11 Ctnl!IDled of lhl ~111111 l'llCt, Mum~ lt•ldlllCt, MIJ2 Aro l"RIC1H<Tt DGt-1 Cllfll, C. It,._, Olm. Clfft, M. E. Th>Plftf, Dim. cffd jtg CUtr nt J' billti f STATI 01' CALIPOttMIA l"Olt d1ltd Jtnlllt'I '5, ,,,. necllled "'° \/El-fellC1Wlft1 ...,toll, w11ttt 111me In full r6Whffcl Dr. Polllnt f'llCI, FortevUl1 lt11llllllllc:e, 3311 Cllrtc, M. MltcMU, Dem. f'tt•CIMCTr U-llf.I ex e 1a es 0 T"I COUNTT 01' OttAH•• JKO MUlllC Incl ELLY M. MUltlC, llu... tflll PllC:t"' r•llll-I• •• f'Dllowe: l""'l(for, •• I . Allllord, 11..-. Wulbnloll Pl. PlllCIHCT1 D-lll•t f'oU11111 Pl1ce,-'-iltuldlllCf, • l'mY $7.4 million. M1. A .. 1W Mflll 1/ld w!H tnd 'KOrdtd Je111,1111Y 7'. D. ti-H11ti11, ,30 w. Vltllr1i , Judtt. L F, ttubl, Dtm. lnuector. 9, L fortt~l!lt, 11111. Pomnt Pit<•· Sr111«1 No. t l'lre1t1tron, Ave. B HOTICI 0, "fAtllllll 0.,. l"ITITIOlll 1'10. 11 ln1lr. No. lJUI, I" booll 1202, Coolt MtN, Clerk, L. M. Homer, Dim. J\ICltt, J. GOrM'f', Dtm. IOO Blktr SI. l"IPICIOr. M. A. Atk11110n, ll .... Ut Computer AppJic1tions l'Ott f'iltOIATI OF WILL AlllO l'OR ei111t Gl, of OftkLt l ttta~O "'""cell~ Dlltill 5-ttmNr ll. 1,10, Cltrti;, J. M, Vtft .. l lkenburill, Dim Cllt1'11.. G. J. CCOll'r. 11.-, lnlOK!a<. J. J. Wlllltm1. llleit. Judtr1, J, M, H1rdttt1, tlt11. said it currently is insolvent ''"''' T••·······•Y ol "'' COl.illl'I ll11: .. ~r 1111 ,_. -... 0. ttoe ... ""'" "ltlCINCT: n-tts-1 . Cieri!. IS ...... Wl~tlty, It•"· Judl'f, H, M, CerMll'. RN, Cltttl, 0, M. H•fdll<'.rl, 11. .... " " C1lllar"lt WILL Sl!Ll Al l'Ull.IC AUC. '' • • C II" I o II '' H "'I "'"'' 1 ... 1 f'RICINCT: 51.tn·I Cltrtl, F. E. Oot\lm, 111"· Cftrto;, G. E. Ctrl, Rep, because of the Bank of New Elllle of I'll.ANZ c. IWIO. DKtllld, ' H .... • '"r" •• OI nll tet, IVell y.... ' l'oll1111 PllCI. Coll"• f'trk klloo' 23111 Cllflt, A. M, Rlntltr. Rtp. f'ltl:CINCT: J).>17·1 NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVIN Tlltl TtON TO HIGHE~ llO~ltt !::,." C.U Orinot CllUftl'r: Wi!kl~I Lii. Mel,. O.rei Jtd. " PttlCINCT1 fl·111·1 Polll1t1 Pl1c1, Sm!ltl llnldt11«, lW lu!· \'ork Hized its Clsh reserves NEWPORT NAllONAL IANK, A Nellol'lll (PtYtble •I 11";' :'1~ ;..1•S$.llll = On $tpl, 16, 1110, lltftre 1111, I Noll,.,. ln11>t<ltr, L M"td' D....,. I~•---. p IS Bur-•oo Polllno f'ltcto, H1rbof' ll1pl\lil Churdi, lonlhell Ln 9111111119 ANOCllllM llll llltd hl!Plll • ol !hi Unlfllf 1•191 I f'!Jbllc: I~ •1111 IOI' nlot si.11 ... l'IOlllll/y JudH. ti, I. l"lcktnl, lttP. ·-·~· . . ' • 12l0 IJ>ll•• Avl . of $470,000 to apply against a ,.1111,n 10, ,reiltl• ol wlll •nd '°' entr1nc• 1•,,"",.',111 _o'!"'' stc~n::; •-•"" D. llotll' "'°''" k-"'m• I• c1m, M. Mlfttlne111, o.m. Ji.HI••·•· L. ftubll, tt•. IMP1Ctor G N ic01,1 tteso 1 .. ~rt>r, M.A. M11:111n•1. R•. d I' l loa f ,., :! 'lli 1 1 l 11 Tt ttmeniirv 1 !ht Courthou•e. IY 1n,. -.ne, • 1 bl l'llt 11tr10n wllo:le """" 11 •uP>tcrlbed Clettr J Mtne1Mt11 Dtm Cltrll. s. D. Ntum•"• DMI. Judi• M A' iierKn •11,P ' Judtt, L. ti. W•llcln. II••· e 1nquen n O ...,. Ml on. ~!u,,•,1~,·. ,,,,',.~ ''~''" ,, _.,.• •• , C1llf«nl1 ell right, 1111, t l'ld 1nt1rn1 «f.: 1o '~• w11t11n IMl•urnent iflll i dcnowltd•· ,..,(iNi::T: .,_,...,· • c11rti, M. P, Gen111r. Reio. ,,.,·H ·,. ·1 •0 • c111r11, R. 11111. R11, Th ··>·-·the ..., ..,_ _.,.. ..., "' "' YIYed 10 11111 now lleld b'I' 11 llnlllltr ..... td hi ttd tht.. y f'•ICINCT: U-r.11-1 • · ' 119rtm, tm. Cltrk, O. W, Smith, tlfl. e company s1ys I ·~ fllrlll« -•lcull•l. .Kt,.,., Ille""" end c.id .. T 'I "" rwtrlY 1lhllltill I" ·~KU '"'· Polllnt Pltct, 1111111 tt11ldt11Ct. 1Sll1 f'olllllti .... c •• E•IKt"el Church, 1DIJ Cltrk. R. I'. Foroltlnert, DMI. P•l:CINCT1 JWU.1 federal court will compel the •IKt., lltl l'1fle "" -"''""""" 141 c..,,,;'" .... "st1tepdlscl'lbed U l !OFFICIAL SEAL) It""""-" Ltlle or.,... Avt. NIWPOttT llAC" l'Ollllll Pl1«1, Jtnllftl ltn11:1tnU, llOO ""Ortollir l•, 1,10, It l:li!,'·"'s"~ln ~ M lot I ol Trtcl No. Motl, I" !ht Cltv el =IYKj.~:::C.nter"lt ,'"..,-, s"oM .... C.~na~_ll... lru;Hdor V M Ft 11Cllak Otm PltlCIMCT1 f,......1 Commodore bank to return the seized cash. ct11r1r_.. of 0e,trtrn1111 ""' 11.., c 1 M IMwll 1 """ ""'"' • · • ·~· ........ Ji.Hite. t.: 0; Pini1e1n, R;"· • f'o111nt PIKf, 11ur11 •••lfY 11u1. Ottke, 1nsH<to•, J. A. k l11ti1ty, 11 .... court, et 100 Cl11lc cwir1r Drl~• W•tl. In r!:.o~ded1'tr,' :.,_ 210, :'!011 It tnllll 10. ~~~~:'t!:~' 1" ~:•r:,• ~· ~ ~~ir'•"it Jtt11, Clerk, A, H. c..u111, Ho Plrt'Y 211~ Vl1l1 Dll Oro J11dH, JI. M. M1llnoff, Otrn, SYRACUSE ( U P I) .......... •..,s!~:.: .... ,.·. ',•.,,111or~1•• MIK•ll•-· Mui. •KDrcb of ••id My Cornm!UIOll Eulrn P:'aC1N(T; ;.,.~'.1 ••• Clltflt, It. 0 , Ht1111. tt1p, l"-1or, E. L. Llnron. Rep, C!trt., c . Will, ltlP. -w f:""S-,. JOHN Or111111 CO\I""'' Nov. 24, 1'n f'Plllnt l'lec" II. '•tllCll P•KllKl• J2.ft1·1 J...,.., It. ti. Li11tin. ti.,, Clert" M. A. "''"'· Otm. Gi!neral Electric Co has ,· tV ct k ' Seid ••I• wit• lie "''11'· but wtthtul l"~kllld °''"" c..11 Delly Plltt, M•tnoll• kllclDI, 2'0olOll f'tlllne Pl•<•· C11l110 ltuklenct 10I Cftrll, D. J . Ewen, ttep. '"R•CIMCT: l»l!l·I '-~•-• j '• t LIDDY .~LIDDV CO'o'tn1"1 or w1rr'"l'I· ••Pfts1 tr fmpl!td, S...lembw U, 2' tflll OCtebtr I, I, l"IPKlor, I". Mtrrloff, Dtm. F1frwtF f'I, ' CleA;, J. II:, T«*tr. Dtm. ~rn..., Pltct, Wldmt11 lltsklellot, D3i ua;~. 0 stop m a .. n g .... ·-·· '"•"II"' title. -•Hlon. or -1'10 1724-11 J· ...... E Cronkll!lt llN lntPKlor w l Etlltrtv illlep Pttl:CIMCT: ~' Arent SI. --~ . be .1 C11mlw•nc"' "' ,..v "" rtm1!rllnt ••ll'I-.....,. • • • • Ju«it , M'. A. HtrtMn. D~. • Polll111 Pt1c1. l lulb 1te1!lv lus. OKI«. 1"-hl•. M. e. S11IM8ut. Dim. ,...,....,..urome p!ClUl't tu S or lllll .. lledl. C ....... lllfi mJI c!NI 911m el r11t f1llt HWrlld In 1111111 Clttk, R. F. Simona. ti•. Cltrk, J. M . lttwn, Re-fl, W• Vl1!1 Oel Oro Ji.Hitt.\/. S, Atldtroon. lttp, ill bla k nd hite ltle ·I Tel: cno ......,.., Deed o1 Ttvd ~11-114,40000. wllf'I In-LEGAL N011CE Clmt. '· J. c.,,_, Dim. Cl.rt., L. 11.. eeil110. Dem. IMPKlor. c. A. fell, tt", ci.rt.. J. s. K11-,, Dtll'I, C a W VII On A""""'" fW httttt9r ftrtll lnm f;bl'VlrY. lJ 1r11i u I" Hid l"lllCUtCTi tl-lill·t PRICINCTr .,....., Judae, M, L, life, II.et>. Clerk, It. S, Ftrtl. Otrr>. receiver line and will buy P11blllhed Or111t1t eo.11 Diiiy f'llll. nett •rovldtd, tdv1ncn.'11 In~. u!\dtl' ltlf ClllTll'ICATI °" IUllMltl 1"11111111 "'''"· SI. frencll ScPloel, 20'00 Polllnt f'!1c1. f lrit $CIUlll l.lpll11 Clertl, E. D. W1rnock. R... f'ttlCINCT: IWl .. I t>·~ f tsl• I' OCI. I, 2, I. 1'70 llOf.10 10nn1ltl11id Ofotd Of Tru1t ftt'I elllr1n l'ICTITIOIJS lllAMI Mionelle Chl.lrcll, •!O Hi mllton St. Clerk, J. \/. K1v1n, R-., Polll111 Pl1ce, Coront Dtl Mtr Hl~ trciu fOM OU ue SUPP Jeri, tnd 111tffftill-Of !Iii T'Vll;._ .,;,,.., ffW ln•Ptctor, I . Delltl. Dtm. l"IHdw .I.. G ctlrllleman, ll• l'ttl:CINCT1 Jl-MS-1 Sclltol 11111 Eetlbl\llf Or. mainly Clinton Electronic.! LEGAL N011CE ttu1t1 <'"""' rw Aid Detct al Trvit, Tiit 11nd.,.1l1ned Iott c•rtH'll lilt II ~ Jlldt1, M. l . c1111c1, ttfll, Judie. E'. L. JHiws. Dem, . PolH1111 Pl.a, Slu<kev Rnldlnet, 801 VL• IM<llCttlr, IS. A. Hnicl'll, 11 .... Thi btneflclwr undtr uld OtH el dw;llne 1 bullneu 11 ~l7t O\ll'ont, SUlle Clert., J. G. 8 '"'"" p.m. c1m, a . H•r~ld. ltN. Mtr1M Judlt, C. v . Shlrtk, Otm. Corp. of Rockford, Ill. Up to Tf~Jt, bY NllOll.,. lm•<ll or cltl1ull I" 221. N,_i Btldl. Ctll'-nl1. 11ndtr c1 ....... IS. L. McCltln. """ Citric. IS s l..SWl1 .... '-'°'·J.M. Stucker. °"'"· Cltrk, w. D, Ent11, "" 225 J bf: laid off ,._,..I 1111 eblli•llotll MC\lrtd t~•r•bY th1 llcl111ew firm "''"" ol Cl!NTll.A.-Pll.ICINCT1 s::t•m ·1 Heu ti PllfCIN(T'i SHll·i · Judtt, M. M, Btrawttr, Dtm. Clert., "·IS. CorbY, ttep_' emp oyea m1y •••T••··•T• .. ......... hlrtlvlol'• ntcuttd 1flll ••llvlr'td lo "'* LllED OFl'ICE SERVICl!S lflll thll Polfl111 f'lec1. M•ln Club ,,,,,_ , .. , •• ,,, •• _ ·····-·· , •• (tl't'll;. J. II. l!lt'10fl, R... Pltl'CINCT: J:l-111·1 by the move but G.E. said it "" v ....,..riltntd • wrlt1111 0tct1r1tton o1 11h1 llrm Ii ~ .,, tlll ftllowl"• tl3J vni. PKlfk Dr. ... .. .....-. '" ... Clerk H A s1uc1r1 Det11 ho t f PICTITIOUI l'ltl"t NA.Ml Oifiult end Dtll\lflllll for Ult, end wrttttn ..,_., """-111mt In f\111 t/11111 f'LKe of lf\S.PK'9r, JI, M. Cf1blrn, Dtt'I. ,..::::, \/l~l•t!;:.,, illl• f'ttlCIN(T," twtt-i' , p~~:°1111Plice, lltrry lttllM!la,. 2'.P. Pl!S 0 trlllS er iOMe to ~~~ Ill ur:1E:S~G~E~r1t -=-~:-: nollct of brlKh end of t19dlon lo CIUll rfllder!Ce 11 e$ ~krws · Jud .. , H. I(. Jldl-R .. , Jlld" F' A" Smlltl 0.,.. " f'Ollllll l"IKI, lllY•ide lrtlltr ,f'1rll 1"'9fCfOr, D M, llll'Y tt.., other operatiOllS. ~1d!lnt1'11 • ~ll\ll1Cl11r1..9 bull-11 1111 \lllcltrtltntd 11 •tll ttld ",_,,., lo J1nel L, Frltd'l'llllo 0 1'J7t 11-.hurtl, z:::• t· .:·:.Uflllts;.!"· 1111111 Cllrll.' F." t." ttodlW.M, Delfl. Clubl!O\li.t, JOO E. Cot ii MwJ. Judlt, N. K. Hll0tnW1'1111, fi..._ Avco Savings Names Chief 1002 $11trnenc1-cw.;-c11Y .,-Ml•llM VII-••llllr Mlllll eltlltl•tlorla.-',"' .. 'lll~l_!!t·-11!! No. "· "-l•lll VIUty, Celll. ...~c . ..tci. n!':i.1 '· . Cllrlt. M. HuKrlllt, .... IMHC!or. M. E. J1wtff •• .,.. Cltrt., M. w. MIC 0-1n, .... It, CO\lnhl el Dr1111e, Slllt el C1Hlornl1, Jvne1 .. _. '':' ~ lnllr~nPl.,:i;i,M.: Dtlltl Oct. '· 1'10 f'Dlli"' Plici JDll" I lvtlllnl f'tt1CINCT1 12...,,_1 Judtllt, S, l . MllcM!J. "e~. Cllfll, ft F. tclollrt, 01m. Uf1dtr fflt lldlllout firm 111,,,. el 11111 ti 11 Jlntl L l'rltdll'll" tfftt Eitu fl Ln ' khool, PPllllll Pl1c1, Mcffll,., Hlell Scllotl, 1to1 ~t:'rtcll. JR-.:r~..:;-rit Otm. l"R•CINCT: SJ.JIS.I MISSION MACHINE 11'1d MANU,,AC· -111111 "" booll JJIJ, '"' tn. of 11141 $TJ!.TE Of CALll'OilllHIA I cl °" " Dtm Nf'WllOl't llYCI. l"ttECIM,CT_' D-ITl•i l't. Poll1111 Piece, Ebbllott Trtlltr Pirie TUttlNGCOMPANY Allll ltlel Slllll lltl'l'I" Offlcltl lttcordl. OltANGI!" COUNT'!'· , MHCto," ·'· T ........ ,~--. l"ueclor. ""· A, kl!lldtl, ..... ,,,,,., ,,,:., o·-···-. ''"""'''• 1-~~M •• ""'c .•,1Ken111 AVI. ----~ • -· ,.,,.,., .,...,. """-D11t· SDt...,btr 16, 1'7~ 0. ..... · • Jud11. • • TITIOf, """'· J A , " 1 0 .. ~ ... .....,.. '--' .. _.., .. r en Dim -·-... • ... ,,. 'al!H!FICIAL &EltlllCE co, ..,,,..otbtr '· 1'10. btttrl "''·I Noflry Clen. A. l , Slldl, Dtm. llCl!rl. • . II... '"'· 1Jl)I) lllh St Ji.HI • • • • 11111'11 Ind etlclrlft It • follow•. w . •I N iii Tr111tee, f'11bll(' '" 11111 tor Jtkl $11!1. MrlOlllll1 Clerk. M .•• llucto~h. ltep. Cltrk, M. 1'111'\fr, 11... I 'Neto H M ktled It oe. A. v. Ntwklrk, Dtm, ttldill'ot I'. ErX, 1"502 Sllll'l'llnct Dr,, II Al TU"HElt VICI l"r .. l..,.I •-•rtd Jtlltl L. Frltdme" known to '1'141 '"ltlCINCT! H•)lt-I Cllrtr., O, L. lllUr N~ f'111Y J':o.. f' I "Jtnd D ' _er>, Cltrt, G. W. Nultl, No f'1rtY MIHIOll Ville. Ct lH. r .• lf'S 2o1m " .. lilt Pfl'IOll wflae; 11111'11 I• .W.Crlb-f'ol11N l'l•ct, He!>e Vltw Schml 11'12 ~tt•CINCT: IHD-1 Clllt!. M. i. Seti';.~ Cltrtl, ll . A. l l1l. OM!. WL.TNESS mr lllnd this lJth ltr el Pooll•"" Orenie Cetll Oe11r f'llat, 111:1 lo ll>t wltllln lllllN"""' llllf Fllnl'il11r1e Ln. ' Poll!nst Piece, Llnllblr1h ScMol, 220 E. Clerk: L 'c 'fnss~ o!;., 111' ;~~CIHCTr U-116-l S.11ttmbtr, H70 .~-.... --. •• '"' -o-· 1 • >m tcknow1«19td tilt tXKuttd ftlt Mint. lnsPKIOr M t Crtndt!I, lill• 23rd St. f'ttECIM(Ti JHl1·1 " 0 0 119 Pltc,, H. Eniltn Sd\ool, !000 Cl!ll llldltnl f' '" ., .. ...., ..., ""'..._ ' (Ofllcltl SHll ' ' • ' I" •• .-.., • < K I • '· .''T •• ' C.Ll;OON>A 1141·1D .,_ v H Jlld9t, I , It, S"tt-. lttt>. -E>orv •"' • re, "'· POll1n1 l'IKt, Oakwood A~t1. CIU!tlloy,., ln1~CIOI' A J Swttl ttf ....,,., .... tnl'Y Clttk. J. A. tc1Htll, lltP. Jlld"' M. E. Knl••• Dtm. CJOO ·1611'1 St J d C' ' ' ' •· A Southern California area COUNTY OF ORANGE Niten' PuMlc • CtlH ... "!' C!tf11 E E Nffll N6 Ptrl"r Cllrk; e:. l . Welk«, ttee. tl'U>tcfrtr, p M. F,,..llf, 111-~ •••• II. Gulld, Olm, ON THIS 2511'1 ll•v ol 5"ttmbe• A. o., LEGAL NOTICE ~rl11CfHI Offlc• rn PJll(INCT 'n•i c1tn:. E. slltw, o.m. Jlldvt. G. M. covrtn.tv. o11m, • Cl'rtl:, L. E. M1reell11. 11 ... savings and loin .veleran. 1t111. btfor• me o-B•ruen • Noltrr o''"' Covnf'f l'oltlnt I"!•~• M111111 view kl'oclol •1ta<:tNCT1 11.,.._1 ci.r11. 1, J, McA!tt, 01,.., c1irto, E. J: C1m1r1s, Rt11. Charles C Darnall has been P11lllk. 1" •nd for nkl Cou"ty ellll S11l•1 Mr cemm11slCW1 I!-•''" Tllbu•• or· ' Ul2 PelU111 f'ltct. 1111,, illl11ldent1t 211t Con-c11rk, L t. Wl'lffltr, R!'P. ;:~!t!N~T · J>-m1 "11 , 0 " • n.ktl111 lhertl" lhlh' commlttlolltd tllll NOTICI 01" INTfNllOlll TO llltlAll Nov. 14. 1'72 I ri It Tl rt k ti 1111111111 A11t. l"RICINClr ~I C _... KfO • I •r QLdlnes. 16117 named Vice president and •-n. HrtCWl91iY •-ll'td ttldll(!I P. IN THI tALI 01' ALCOltOl.IC f'ubll1htd Oten .. CMrt Dtllr l"llell, JMH<t°G, M L ' m~ 1 1' fll. lllSJ>KIM. A.$. Coffmtn. R.... f'oltl"' l'IKI, City H11I, S100 NtwllOrt l··=-n •"c loll _ • Eril k-n fa 1111 "' ... lhe"l'llr»ii'wMM ••VfllAlll OcJ .. IS. 12. " 1110 llSI 70 """· • • ovtllml .... RIP. JU'llM. l . l'rtk", Olm. llvd ·~--.. .... , • • ..... .... manger of Avco Savings and "'m'• 11 tublocrlbtd 111 tt11 within In-Dcto1"r 2, 1t111 · ' • ci ... t, 1• J. 8••r, 11•· Cltrk, J .M. AINllfl. o.n,. o----'-, M c 1 0 Jud1t, '· s. ROM. ttep. '··-••-'•!' • r.~. M 1lnirnffll, 1nd ldintWltdOtd ft"" !hit hi T• W-11 MIY Co11ctrn: Cltrtr;, M. C. llltk1r. tit,, Cl.... J. G. """'• --. ._...,, " " r """111' ""· Clerk, D. L. II:-, Dim . .&NtUl ~ K>l'I t .._... esa ••rcllftd "" Nmt. IN WllNESS SUblld to b1uence ol "" llc.-iM ••• LEGAL NOTICE ... llCllKTI *>111·1 """' Judtt, v. Shinnon, Otm. Cllrt s J IS Ink D olfi-. WHf:ttEOF, I htYt htrt11nlll Ml my 11111'11 oll .. -, -tlu It 11erttrf 1lv .... llltl 111t PtFll,..<M 0•,LK .. l<lrnblrk tlMlftllCI, 7DG ",,.n,co•,c.lt ~no' I • •·---E Clerk. It. w,9Mtxhtlm.,ir, 11"'· Ptt1(1trid1 ;,.n':!1111' '"'· ""' ,... ... 111 CL,... llf 'I "--.e, 2'1 , CIJrtc, A. I . order, m, f'1111lmr Ptict 11 o -Damall a resident 0 f tnll lffl•tCt l'l'IY °'"<Ill •••• "" dlY Ind unllllttJlontd l>'WM-lo .all 1lcll'llllc NOTICE IS HlttEllY GIVl!"H ""' ,, lllUICIOf ...... khnbtrll:. ••• 2111 St. P•l:CINCT• JH71-I • 'f'llt "~· tiOf • Yltr In 11111 ttrtlllc•lt 11,., 1btvt wrtlltn, blvtNll* 11 ""' ,,em1111, tlftcrlMf u IM G-r•l l!lectltll 11 bt1'111111 NeYtmbtr Jud L' c Hedel It · l111PKfor, I!'. I. Gr•"'' Dim. PPlllM PIKt, Cemmu"llr Ctiurdt. 111 Doklllln Ttr. Newport Beach, was formerly COFFIC~AL S~I 1o1i.w.: l. lt10. , ... "6111 wlll bl -n from 1111 Clt~k~· A: M: You.!~· •• :~· ~"ek~· ~ .. ~ .. ~~;:'~~""-ln=~~.All~tWl llOn, Dtm, ~~:'t': 1: ~.;r~~· •. ~:· a&!Ociated with Lincoln Sav· N::no ,.::;( :w E•rt CNll Hl1llw1r. """"rt llour ., 1:IO l'clodl 1.m. I• lilt """' el c .. r11. H. K, Gtbhtrl, O.m. crm, H. K. 8 111"'"· .... Ji.Hl11, L. G, LIPQlll. Dim. Cltrk, o. J, Ca<nell. II•. . , , . •lo" -C.l••-lo l•cll t :Ot l'clodl 1.m.1 M'ld Ille! 0Ur1119 lllolt l"RICINCT; JJ .... I Cltrtc J M Btkfr ·-lngs and Loan As.location in f'r1;1,.1 011i~~'111 l'ur1111nt ,, tlldl lnltlllltll. "" \Ill-11ou .. ""l<)llklf •lie" for 1111 rtlMC"WI f'l.lu, Ktb Rnldtnc.. ..,., Mrrtlt Or. PRICINCT: IWl1·1 • Cle~ L, L. Dodd. ""'· Ptt.C1NcTi n.•1 .... , •• Angel.. Vur;"" hi! S;,. Orl l'ltl Cou"'1r denltntd It ttl>l'llnl fa fllt 0.-rttMnl precll'ICll Wll Ille 1111 1lecu lltttlnalllr ln-ctor, J, 1!1. K•ll. Dem • l'o!U111 ,lief,, Dir ll11ide11ct, Jnl Clboll Cltrll, M. P1rt.1, Dttn. PPlll,,. Pltce Hirbtr Dl'r S .._1 "" '!'lJ · --o. , ~ M• <•--lool" ''''''' OI ....ic:oMlk lf'ltrl" Conlt-01 tor Ill..,. cteJlg1141ltd t nd l'lltt 1111 Pti'IOM J llclH, L. s. S1>trtnt, Otm, Ave. '"ttlCllllCT: ""'7S-t M ' <·-• end Ith th t he """ _, I .. _ IM!t Id Nol ltd tff1 l"lHClor. C. G. Ctl'Pllller, Orm. Polllnt P!tCf, 8oll"4!r 1't1llltll(t, l\2 \/11 ,,._\ltrllt yeani w e assoc1a ion Aut. 2:1. 1tn e11Ct IJlr trtnltr llf '" tlcdlol c ...,,.,.. ""'' tr Mm ere • " cir• Clerk, s. c. K011n!1. R1111. Ju"'· " o, 0,,, tt-. Diian lnS1>1Ctcr, H. 11. tc111,,.y, Ree • • -•·•on' the Santa Ana olfJ.Ce l'vblllllld Of"tn• CHll OlliY Plitt, tN 1ictnll (OI' line-) fW 1t1tN prem-Of Int -'tctlon for tlltlr ,.._II._. llOllnt Cler1o, A. L. Mort!1M, tt.,. ·~ Judge O G S nd llncl R ... ~""' Ck!. I, I. u. n. 1f1t ,.,. , .. , •• •11owt: 11r1e:ll'ldl. I nd""" .... 11 hold l lkl •1ectlln PlllCINCT• t:l41J.1 Cltrll, c . A, Moulln111. 111... lllli!ltdof, J. F. Bonne•. lttto. t1tr•' R. E . Cl~rklt1' Ill • ... ' d I t ' --o •· I• .., • --•-o Clllt! J C Rolmtllo Dem J""'· V, J, Ml'ln'f, ""· • • • 1• ••, I! an appraoor an a e In ON SALE GENEltAL, IONA fLOI .... !I'll • rt ... ,,. ., mt !M.M .. Polll111 l"J1t1. Coot SclltOI, 144(11 WlllOW •tt1C1Nci : 11 ... 1 ' Cieri!, E. c . MtcGlll!VrlY, •• ,. c,',",•,,M.,,,",",~."!-.,11.111. • ' PUllLIC EATING l"lACE 1rr:rvldtd b't l1w. Tiit llll1owl111 11 e ••flltl L". .._, r01Tance as branch manager. LEGAL NOTICE ···-.. ,,,,_ • ''°''" 1111 IUl.Jlll(I 11•1 tf lilt Vt•lovl ••ICJnd• Of 1111 llllh 1n1PICIOI', J, M. Tltktr, Ill••· Polll111 Pl1c1. WH1on Sc/loot, IOI w. Clllrtc, F, !. PttllOll, tlJ'lil, Potu119 Pl1c1, Coro~•,,, •• , -· '' "' -.. '"' J\IHNl-ltl Olllrlct Wll1<111 II. f'ttlCINCT: JHJ"I Cimillon Avt ""' -.,,,_, 0 Prior to his affiliation with ol l\ICfl llCtflM(I) ll'lt 'f lilt . vt1'111td ·-HUMTINOTON llACM J""'· v. I. ....... Rt11. l"1HCttr, •. J. s.1111..,, °""'· PoLlt111 Pl1ct. NtwPOrl EltlTlefllll'Y lnlPl(lor A L ·T,,,. ti ':--! D II . p ~ l"·llMf ¥ IHI II I"' offlc'e el tllt Otto•""'"" It f'lllCINCT· D·IM-1 Cloerk, D, L. ttou. Cltm. Judge, IS. f. Sit .. •""'"· Otm, Sc'-/, Ulll Sl.llt1boll JUdff M tt"1Yi. ti ' fl. Wll\.V n, arna was m r ClttTll'ICATI Of' IUllN••• ... ltollollt; 81vtr11• (CW11•61. or .... mill "' ••n-Pl•'• ··-,, ·····-·· -122 Clerk, F. M. l utttl. Dem. Clerk. ti. M. Tl\Oml>llln, 1111. ln1PICfflr, M. J. Cr1wf0rd, "''· ,,,,. ·, ·, ...... ~· 0 _M l 'th T • tht D-rhl'""' el Alcollollc 811V•trtt .... '• ........ 11 '"" •• f'ttfCINCl: n-111•1 J 0 G R L 0 ,.. "·~......., '"' ~ •Y managemen Wl Own l'ICTITIOUI NAM• ConlrDI, lflf O Sll'ffl, Sttrernlnti, C1"l1tr1no L". PoU!nt Plict. Norton llukl.-ice, '101 Clfrk, D. C. LtRllt Ho Ptrt'f' u ge, • · twrtnct, ep. Cl1rk, J: Ric11erot1011, 'ttrJI ' & Country ftulty Thi undtnl1n111:t dot• ctrlllr Ill !1 eon-Ctllla<nle fflU. sltllll!I tnlllndl for lllltnltl IMHCtor, C. J. N.1;<1111'1, Otlfl. lltrrl!\IOI Ot. PttlCINCT: H ...... I Cltrll, I., L. DtbfltY, Dlll'I. l"ltlCINCT: l:l-ln·I • • •uct1119. llulllllH ,, l'.O .... l)n Ctsll • -1111111 b'I' lt w. Tl'll Jlrlml-.... -JudH, c. A, Ft•"""· Dfm. ln1111C1or. T. J. Norton. Dem, P~U~•.Pltct, SI, J611C~lll'I Ch~rcll Hiii. ~:r.-c,~c~; ~;;::· """ Polling Pl1ct1. H.lrbor \lltw ScPlol/, m -----------C£----IM111. C1l!I., uriat r tht llcllllou1 llrm l l lld for 1!11 nll of elcolltllc Ctlrk. C. I . StiYtr. Otm, Jufllt E 11 WUIOll ttee f l'llllt Ave. POUllll Pltce, Holmei l ut. Office. 2~3 Goldlnn1ct A,,., LEGAL NOTI "'""el COAST DISTilllllUTORS •M Ill.II ~"" Tiit 1..,., tf Ytrltlct1I011 m.., Clerk, M. J . Prou!<!. Otm, CllrX 'a · o · wr1i11f llt11. lnlHC!or, T, T. Sd>ooltY. """· l!'ll SI. tnu>tctor, J. H. MtDonMH, 11..._ --------~~-----· l"ld firm It cornlfflll el tile tellawl111 ltflttr. 1 crlll 1 the f'ttlCIHCT: n ·1tt-i Cl rt' 11' L · w~111 [, • J111111. P. S. Jollnl0'1, Dim. 1 -D C Joi! II. Judtt. H. c. Jttnfon, Rep. p #4n •erton, Wlltlt ntme I" fYtl I nd "'ltclt •ol ~ ~l~ rtrn t nr '' O ~1111119 PltCt, AIVlrtr ltnld111ee, 22i.t p:e:CiH(T"• IJ•llj..1 em, (ll't'll;, S. J, 80dit1'11'1Nltr, llltll. M r, · · nton. eit. Cltr~, M. !(. Gefl'ICk, lltll, Cl•Tll'ICATf 01' •USINllS. r•klence II 11 fellews: 1 ·~UNC•Y llG(R, IHC, CtPl•l•tno L". Polllll9 Pit~. Editor\ Hith S<Mtl. tllCO Cltr1l, £. C. McTteut, R1J1. t:::..~· :.· ~-J;.::: ::11j.1rty Clfrk, W, A, MterJ. R11. l'ICTITIOUI lllAMI John W. Flldn, 1t2J K1wtl f'll tt , ub lllllect Or C I 01111 f'Uol. lnwector, J.L. Atv1r11, Dtm. Mt•nolli AVI. 1'11.l!CINCTi u.-.1.1 Cltt'li:. f'. L. Eflckton, Otrn. Pltl!CINCT, 1:1-t»-I lllt u""lltrtltntd llllOH Cll'lllY II• 11 ctn-(Ml•,,.,, ... CtlH. "' I '"* 0" 1UJ.7D Jut111 : M. M. Smlltl. tltP, ·~•HCIOI' 0 L...-ln DFfl l'Ollllll Plt ct. P111ltl'1no kllool, ING w. PttlCINCT1 ...... 1 f'ollJ ... •111:1, Ellltlf ltttldlftct. 1"6 l"Orl ~uctln1 • bu1lnt11 •I•. o . '" \\ill Stn-Dittill t-:io-7o Ck'!. 1• l'70 Cltrk, M. !11tncer, RN, Jvotst. M'. E: ltlck;"•· Dim. l'tultrlno Ave. l'otllllll l'lice, Mtrlntrs Sd\ool, 2100 Alb.I"' l'l. C II I .. "' ,,-11"' Joll" W. FllOt1 Cftrk, II, N (I'""• R-. ''"" s s H ' "' O ln111tclor I M Moloo ••o looo"" " M .. .. t1Ane. 1lem 1. tr ~· •stitt9!Ct1llornliOrtMtCt1,1111Y· N011CE ,.,,,.,,._1·1•11 ·~ ••• e1n n. ~-'· • • • Mtrl"'rtOr. ·~•ur,.--., .... n.11.,, 11,.,,, ntrnt of S &. It Trlldl.,., Intl 11111 • ' LEGAL ' ... " Cler-. S.S. Golllttb, 111:... Jll(ltt, Y, H, 81'0W11. tltJI, 1"111fcior, T. tt. Mtndtnlltll, Otrft, J!Jdt1, F. J. St1onen, Rt• u141 11'"' 11 ~ el !lie fvllowlnt Oil S...t, >II, IJJlll, btlgn me, 1 NOll rY Polllne Pl1ce: C•'""''" Union l u1. Of. l"iltlCINCTr Jl.Jlt-1 Cllrll. J. lOll'llln, Dim. Jlldtt, M. L Brlollt, Otm. Clttk, O. C. Si.•"'11t. tt.;, MrlOll, wllllt Mm• Jn fuU I/Id "It« ti 'llblk 1" t llll lw ltlcl Stele, "rMntlly NOTICI lO CtllDllOll 01' flCt, IJClll All•nlt Ave. PeHll'lt l"ltCI, El der kJlool, t1t1 le11111ftt Ctertt, M, A. IS•-"• Dtm. Clfrtl, J, IC, Jec~IOl'I, llt... (lef'k, $. Y. ThtYer, tit~. rnlll•nc:• ,, II ltllCIWI" ·-•,.d Joll" w. FlldH ~-n hi 1'111 lo ...... TttAHSflll AND lnJPtclor, L. tc"'"· Otm. ln11'tc:lof, M, R. ISl!cll. tt... , •• CINCTr n ... 1-1 Cltrt.. J. Y. McA'"•· 11.... PttlCIHCT1 $J.U>l . --• I ' bl "" H tlOll W~t "•me •• 1ubtulbtl .. Jud••· p w Mor11n. Otm ,... • c· '' • I • f'olU~ Pl~ .. ,,,,,_. • ... , ,,.. • I , .. , .. '' ... $11f1Vtl J, J-i. ,... 1n 1 ""' It thl within lnllrwmtnl t nd 1ck110WlllClt· NOTICB 01" Cllrk H. M" p I It 1 It . """' · • 1 '' ..,, tt>. '"' ~·• "' '"""'1 c • ~ p fC NCT: IJ.tll·1 -1'1• H ll11ldlnet ltd ~I Celle MtM. td Plot txt<ulld tilt """ INllNDID TiltAlllll'I• Of' C~ J · L i.d II o O 1' H . Cltrll:. ,, L MoerheuH, Dini. KlllYbrwllt Ln. PoHllll P!tCf, Nf'WPGrt Sllorft Clubl'lolJ11, Albl"t l"I. ' 0.1111:1 Seel, tJ, tilt !OFFICIAL SEAL) . LIOUOR LICINll ott LICINllS f'illllCIN.Cl~ J~i'Fr-rtm. c,•,•~ ••• ,~A •. 'n"o~o~·, ltt11. ln11>Klo•, J, ti, NPVlfleYer. Otlfl. J11 Ctn1I SI. lllll>IC!or, C, J. Hvn, tltl. Semi/II J. JOnl J Mll'Y II: Hl"N NOTICE 1$ Hl!!ltEIY GIVEN te tPlt 1'0111111 f'ltc. C••ttl""" U"l.-i 111$, 01-on. ' .-JlldH , J. D. Enelllll. °"'"· IMPKlor, I. MIM•, .,.. JUO;t, c. T, C1n, ""'· &ltll ot Ctlll1r"t1, Or1net C111nlJ: Holtry ~ubllc.Cilllarnlt Crtdllor1 of JOHN GOii.SKi tlld ISAIEL llct l:IOJ A'llenll ,. .. , f'Olltlll Vf'ltCI. Wlllll ft'I 0, l.em' Scl'ICICI~ Clfl'k, O. L, GtYntr. tl:t11. J udof, I . J. HtfldrlcklOll, ltllP. Cltrk. F, L. Gtnntn. 11.,, °" '"''· ,,, ""· btlo ........ NottrY Prll!Cllll OH!ct I" GDll.Stcl. S«l•t SKul'ltr No. IM-l~:JI, 1n,..C1gr I A Albll1111t~ ••• ' 10251 .... o·,"~c··, ··-0 Cl-. c. P. Mlfror\, 11.... Cltrk, H. ti. McNe!r, Ottn. Ct1r11. T. M. J\llll0'1, RtP. "11blk IR ellll IOI' Mllll SlllO, -aontliY Orenee COllnlY trtlllltfll' t rod Llctllltt. who1t t1u1l11t11 Judi 8• A, M, I ~ · n1ffC,..,, · ,.,..., tm. PttlCllllCT1 U...U-1 Cl.,..., M. S~llllnt, lltp. PAULA.ING ·-'" hnu1tl J. Jtntt kMWll ,, mt to • My Cemmh•IOll E•11rn •dclru1 II"'" w. (Olli Hl111Wev, In 1'111 c1 .... •• L ... -•• ~"Dem ' ,'"",-··.w.,w•,11,1~~!'..R'•;..._ POltlnt Jll1c1, klllY lt"ldtnct. JI~ f'tt•CtNCT• SMa·I PttlCIHCl: M-111 -1 bt ..,. "''Mii ..... l'llml II 111b1crllltd NO'I ,, 1,n Cll'I el NIWPOl'f •••ch. Cou""' "'Ortne•. ·~· ' . "¥• . -~. . . ..... ......... """" YtHCl'#llMI Dt1VI 1'0!111111 Piece. S"""!" Rflkltrw:I. Jn P11lllrt11 l'll CI, Untvt.,lty Mtfhlo:llst ,to llM within lntrtumfllf 11111 eck,_1tdt, PllCl1IVitd' 0:1119, C•d D•llr l'lklt, Stitt .,, c i lllol'lll• ""°' lf'llt • bulk ~::'c1~J: 'n'-~;:i Dtm. Cllf'k, K. L. C1m111na, Cltll'I, ln•PfClor, H, It. tC1111. 11... Aooier11 A~. Churdi, ,.,,1 Culver Dr tllll 111 tXKlfllllll Ille Mllll-Oc1 1 a, 1J tt 1'70 1D70 t•tf\Sftr lo tbo\rt It 1" ""'di It " PJtlCIHCT1 *2.nf.1 Jud••• J. J. k tllY, R"'. l1111td0f, L. M. Cll1mller1, Otll'I, 111 ... edor, M. £. WllMn, fiw. IOfflCIAl &EALl ' • ' ' MAilllTINS<COlLINS, INC .. 1 Ctllflrtl1t POllllll l"ltct, lud t11I llM1dtnct, 10042 Pol11nt l'!tct, "rlVllOJ Scl'!Qet, lhtt Ltl• Cttrtt, M. M. D.-inl1, tlltto. Judlll, F, W. Sloolr, 11 .. 1, Jl/dt1, H. E. Muir. ltt11. Mll'Y K . ......,.,., clll'l>OAl1on Socllt Seo,trltr HI IJ.Uflll0,l1, 1-rtv Dr. 111tlOl'I I.ft. Cllrtl. I . J. Whlllfll, illlfll, Cltrk, C. A. Hwdon, lttp. Clerk, IC. !, N11uur Dem NollrY Pllbllc..ctllfernlt LEGAL N011Clt trensr.,...' end '"Nr!ffd ·Tf"ltllft••· lnJHC!ar, S, M, l11t.lM!I, Dtm. l111Pldel'. L. '· si-, Oem. l"R•CIMCT1 n...._1 Cltrt., M. A. Swtlllo ti••· c1~r11. c. A. Wll1011. it11• ' PrlrKIHI Offlc1 In whoH lluilntlt Ide!"'' It tlOI M.trlnt" Julllllt, M. H. Cor. ltto, Juctet , V, I, Smllf'I, Din\. 1'0H!119 PIK•, I'-ld\MI, '20S1 Plll!CINCl: -..0-1 Pillll'CINCTt ...._,,, Or1"'1 C-1'1 Dl'IVt I" tllt CllY of NIWN!'I INCll Clerk, D. M, DW'fW, tltto. Clerk, ilt, A. 01vl1, lttll. P6mOl'lol AVI. Pllllllnt f'llCt. Tlblll R•ldellOI, 1106 ~lllnv Pl1c1, Untnnll"f Mtfhorl!$1 MY (Of'llllllNloll l!x•lrH ....... , CountY. ot Of"lllN ,,,,, " C1llltn1~ ~;~c.~.~· • ... ~.· ... ··1 No Ptrl'I. Clt•k, N. T, Fl1M1tn. .... 11'1111.ctor. N. o ••• ,.,,~. Dini. Otvon Lft. Cllu~ll. !Mn Culver Or. Now. , ... 1"2 CIJl:TIPICATI 01' I UllNISS '16'0 ' : PRICUtCT: Jl•n1•1 Judie, 0 . M. Htwtlt, Dtm. lniHdo.r, N. A. Fullon, 1te1, ln-dor, M. W. Ell!I, tt .. , f'ulllitl'ltllll Ort"'' COltl Ot!IF ~llOI, l'ICTITIOUS NAlrill t~ ~Ii tlncrlbiHll !ft 1._..1 u : Polit"' "llcto, Ptrll Vltw kl'>ool, l"" POUllll "II<•· L .. 11'11 l<lllol, '°tll Clerk, H, 9, Crvn.c:ltrori, .... J\ldDt, J. K. Tlbel't, tt.... Jll'fl1, tt. M. Ferr1,, Rfll, IHI. M. Oct. I, t. U, lll9 1761·" Tiit \lndeflltnttl dOe"t eertl!Y hi h ~ All s'9dl In tride, tLxturet. M ufllllllfll i nd I T11"1l1ll Ln. G f ti II Cr1!1111r L11. Cltnr, N, 8 19Cll, Dtm. Cltrtl, J. A. Olemtr. Rt11. C!1rto;, D. fry, Dtm. ----':'C::C:"'."":-"::"::::C:=:---· lductlne • llu1l11111 ti 2'°' Clll'I Of., t ooct wlll ol 1 certalll ret•ll 111111r l\llMClor"' • M. · 11 en. t.t. ln1Pf(lol', fl. A. Dtutlltnbtutll, Jtt11. f'ltlCINCT: ft.fl!J.1 Clttt<, J . IS. tllobel'IJOfl, 11.te, Clirt.. K, P. Keiser, R..,, LEGAL NO'nCE Ntw""' 9Mcl'I, C11Uornl1, ul'Kt•r the Ile-busl"IH known •• HtWllOf't Lklvor' 411111 Ju • I'. J, HINll'lltl, Dtm. J1111t1, 0. I . '"""'' 11.... PPIH,,. Pltct. M111'eal1I Ch11rch, IJQl PltlCINCT1 ~1 f'lllCINCT: MoU2-I ----------~~---·111111111 """ n•m• "' MILITAll.Y loc '" ., ""' w COlll Hll~WIY In IM ti.rt, s. G. e uhllr, tltp. Cltrk, .. M. °'''''· •••. l1Xtr Sf. Pent~ P!•C•. 1(111111 illln!dtnct. t!O 111• P1rnno PllCI, C1m11blll ltt1ld1Mt, 1SJ7 •• ' -I TO COIDITOO• MAilllKl!TINO SEJIVICI: tnd !hit ttllll <I~. N-I IMcll CellftlY -0,111111 Cltrll:, M. J, ttu•lo, Rt•. Clerk. JI, te111n, °'"'· llltHC!of, V. S. Miii••· ""'· 1"1eector, 8, J . Gtlries, 11.... P"itvl ... 11,.,,, 11 corn.wtd el ..... follQwlnt Mr-. •r • ' P•ICINCT1 ,,.,..., IAT VlllW J·'""·• • • ,,.. • J··•n • J ' • I SUf'ltllOtt COURT 0, TMI w11ott Mllll In flrll 11111 ,11c1 el f'flklOllce l!tte el Ctllfomle. tflll lrtn ..... l'llt Polllnt Pl1c1, W, T. Nf'Wll nd ldlool. 17', f'ttl:CINCT: Jl-ut-1 """'' ' -' 11' "" ' · · Vlll!I, tt>, ""l>fCltr, M, "· Ctrn11Nll, illlftl, •TATI 01' CALlf'O•NIA l'Ott II •1 folloon: loltow1111 tlcol'lotlc 111\tltf"tge 1ic-ltt Oelptil" f'olllnt Pltct Cr1111 Cltrt. S. M. Wordt11, Dtl'!I. Clltlt, D. M, Oon1k11011, ttee. JIHllf, C. IE, CtmPbttl, llN, THI COUNTY 01' O•AMll Jolln f , Wtlltt, llot CUlf Dr., tlcen1•>r oll ut1 •-ti, Nllfl!Nr 2I· l"JHC!or, Ill. I . Dlntw111, Dtm. Rtdltllllt or' ltffllllltrttt, lHI ~~~1~(~1 =j Dem, ~::c,:c}; :1o1e-:;•nc. Dtm. ~Ii::' :·~-~;I~·,':',"· .... WWI N"""" IHt#'I, C1tlfwl'll1. •10tc. -llluetl hi "''"'1"' IKlfllf 11 Ji.HI••· w. J, Meylor, ti"· l"ll't(frer, M. J. (11 .... Dllfl. Polllnt Pleet. l'tllll 11.Hldtncoe, ,,,. f'olll ... Pl.ct. kllruml'I illltJldenct, S1 P1t1C1H'cT; ....... ,· ' ~t111t el ClCIL .... &HOOll:. Otct1111t. Ot lllt 1 .. ltmbll' llO. ltrt. ""' W, Ccrut Nlefl...,.Y• N-f IMd'I Cll'rll:, J, I(, lfMltt, Dtm. Jlld11, I', H, Jiii,...,, Otl'JI, Mt \111 S'I. I l1lbH Cowt. PPlll"I Plic:: ltr View NOTI CE IS HElll•V O~Jl'I.. "' lf'le Jlllln f . Willer for !ht """''-IOulfCI 11 1fl4 W, (llt'tl, A. ti. Ntlllne, 09fll, C!trll, D, J, Slltvl. 1111. llltffd«, M.. E, Wltlltmt. Oatn. lnt""6f, f'. M, Sdlrum.i, Rtto. 0..chor<I Dr S¢tlool, 1S11 fftdll-el thl ebOVt .-..mtd ~ flllt ol C1lllor"l1, OrtM• (6unl'r: COit! Hl1hw1y, I" the CllY ol H-.t PlllCllllCT: ••l ... ~. l . l-"", '·-. '""' O e ' "'' ---'""' E c .~ .. o · •--of 0 •I• -C L I V'•·· S ""' .... .,..,... .,...,, ' ' ' 1 '.......,, • ' · ...,,..,., ... lnll>l(for E C Hll' ---"'91 I ll ,.......,. ~IYlne Cllllflt •••IMI !!II °" 381, :io. ltl't, bttort "'•· • NettrY ''""· ............ rift... ' .. I PPllllll Pl'''· 1,r nt ..... ( ' I l"lll:ICINCT! ,, ..... 1 Clert., "'· Ktnd•ldl, R••· cr111t, I .... knuln, Jt••· JU!ltrt T. M. o~ .... ~ o;;;'" Mlrll dtcwcleftl ll't ,_1 ..... 11 ltlt tiltlfl, f'ullllc In tnd lot Uhl l!flt. "'tlntM1 lf'ornle. ltvOY ln. Polllne Pltc:.. Unl~tr1t1Y Plrnt1!1on, Cltttl, l . G1udeMl, II••· Clttlr. E. M, Ltwh, 11.n, Cli•k 'C "z "Tur. It~ • wtlfl !!It nKHMl'Y ¥MICl'lll'I. Ill tt1t e111ct • ..,.,ed Jell!! it. Wtlltl ~-ft 111111 le T11t1 lllt -"' tf "urd\111 •'1cf ., •-tor. a. J. Je11nd•"-"-P1rty lt002 J:" $1. f'•ICINCT1 Jt.111·1 •••CINCT1 ........ , Cltt1t' F Cr1,. D.,,; If tlM elttt ol Ille 1-..e '"1illtd -'• _. Ill !ht ""°" w,._ 1111111 11 ""'9crllltd t1n1111tt1llon I" tonftKf'ltn wllll MW Jl/CIM, M, K, Mur1k1"'I' Oftn. '"-'°'• I!. N. <tl'lltll, lttjJ, l'olll"' Pl1ct , MIU Yltfde kfNo!, nN N. f'elllnt l'ltct. St1tto11 Ne, J Flrt1lltlon, "ttlCINCTr ,._•,.,_1 • " _.,.I l'Mnl, Wllfl 1111 _ .. ,.,. le tilt wllllln 1ntlr\llftenl .... ICklllwl..,.. lfl"lltr el 1tlot li.c-(or llttntftJ end (llf'lt, J . L. lw1-. tltl. JUOOt, l . A. Wll1h, illlt11, Mell Vtrft Dr, Et•I 411 Mttlttld ""'· ~1111!1 PIKt, Altmoo On-.~-vto\ICP!tre. II Ille Ulldtttltlltd •I .iJ0 Dnd tel II• •1ecuttill rl!t ••mt. N~ "'111nt11 lncllldlne Ille ntln1111ct In-Cltr1i, A, I, tllllellll, 1t11. Cltfll, (, I), ltltbl, tltl. rn1HCIOr, C. 1. Jllnnt, RI•. !111PKfor, &. A. Hlllme11, R.,., °"""' Wrtolfl W... .....,,._.., •- Sh'wf, N_-1 IHCl'I, C1llfltrll1 fHA, llfALI Ytnltl'\', II 1111 t11m el ... .S00.00, wflld\ PillllCIHCTt at.••1 Clerk, E. M. l!lr1Cktll, Dtm, Juottt. N. J. Glbbt, llt11. JlldM, H. 1. Scllwirii. 11... lnilltdOI', Jt, N, All.,;•"· ti ... ...tlkfl It tflt ... et ol llulllltts ol tllt ll•bl H. Ctllllll, ~111 el lllt frolkf#tnii: f'olll111 Pl1ct. CttH kl'lotl, fJM l"RICIMCT: 11 .... 1 Cltrrk. J. M. W...tfl. 011f1. C .. rtc. H, G, Ku1l1r, Rt•, JU!ltri, \/ y ttoblnon oo-~ "' 11! -tltn !'efl1llllne lo NOl•rY ""'le· C.tllttfllla Ctlh ., U.000 .... UMll».OCI "°" " Ill l.1rch'#Ood Or. f'ellllll f'l1ct. Woollllllllrll klHrel, 1025 Cltlt. s. A. Hllltl, JI:... Clertl. N, "· Lltle, ""'· Cltrk, ,. ••• N~k•, 1t.;,;." """ ._,. II' uid leclllllet!t, Wllhl" tour p,1n.c:i,11 Ofllct In ~tclllll w1111 Ctltl •111r t. cltte -.. I,,_..,, I . f'. °""l•U, DMI. T1111ln Av•. PlllCINCT1 .... >I f'ttlCINCT1 1M11·1 Clllrll I!:, H.tltet' ti_: fflOllllll •"-' tilt llrtt fllltllcltlen el tllll 0ftllfl C111'"1'1 (fff'lf, lncludlnt l!wentorv It tltd. kl J""9, D. J, OOYlltH, Dtm. lnJPKlor, L. V. Ltl/Otr'btlllll, tlfll, ~olll111 Plfft, E1t1nd1 Hltll klleel. tin 1'0111111 Pl1tet, N,....,, Htl1ht1 klloot, Pltl(INCTi ,._j, .. j,. . .... ice. 1t N.r CornlfllH\OfO 1!11lrt• lttd• I" tll-l!Mlt 1mo11nl "'US,tOD.(ID, c;: .. r11. D. I!. '""''· NI Ptl"IT J\ldtt, IS. llw. ti... f'ltC'lnll• Ave. 300 I!. I.Sii! ''· f'olll119 Pl1tw. VlllOI tt•-·---~ 0.1111111............, fl, It • 5e~t. U, ltl1 II.JOO. ctHt f9 bt d-1111111 mADO• Cltrtl, M, E. Clllln-th, Dtm, C .. rlt, S. II:. ,.ndt•Mlll, Dim. IMHCl'OI', H, 11:. F•lltrll ..... , DMI. lnu1eclor, l., D. McM11!1n, It .. , klon "'.._ 41!( -. ,..,.. • .._ Jllllk;..IWlJW - ' •nt.,U1'*':0ce~1 , _ _.~ .._ ....... __. llY ~~..!ii, ~·CINCT: 6 ... l Clert:~ I; 1.-blllll1r.~---~-tt • .I,. Hl'Jr ltfll. -Judtt. S. G.-Hor:m1ft, Jl:!ll, _ __ lllH>Kfor, ·~J .. ~ ...... 11.. __,__ -!tit Wh1.,, 1111 Ck!.'· .. lS. n . "" 11rt-AU ellltt' -~ lllll'lt'J-•111! lllllllllrW5" Olllllr"1'11n. Gtlkliii •nkltncl. inn ••1c1NCT1 tl·lll-1 Cl-, H.P •• 11(1\1 .... 11. Rfl., Clerti., M ••. H11Wtlt, ••• J\lllt1 L M. Olfrilt""I •e.. >---- '"""' _,,..,1-r;';"1 1 lllM lw 1'111 Trtlllf_,.,. wltlllft lllrN "'" W1ffrllurt Ln. Pellllle f'l9c1. I~ l w. ottkt,-Cl ... -. I . L. l'ldlt, Dtll'I. Clt>1!. J . f , 0e1'flOl'I OlllPI. • Cllfl."P J fourntY Om, • .. unrn. MU.WIT "" 11 LEGAL NM'ICE 1111 ,.,1 " tir It __ ,. " lllt ll'ltlllCIW, E, M, G11klnt. •••· 1••1 .,.,.,, Sta ltd. f'tllCINCTi ,...._1 NICINCT1 ,.,_., Clift, H: ,·_ 8111, 111;_, • ..... = ~ "'° lf9"ittret .,... -~'"'''' J. L. "•rMnl, 0111'1, 1n-10r, v. , .. l lllrtn. II.ff. l'ollln• Pl1c1, ••t••rk lcllool, ,,,, POOIM l'IKt, Jiii\"~ RtslClfll(t, 701 tllVIJl'tllll'I ~J ..,.,.. Tl\ll 11 1111 ~ ,,, ... ._,_ u l• Cllr1t:, ¥· H. Mell11o illl• J\1d9t, J. f'. f'\ptnelfl, Rep, •1111rlc Df. Mil'lllOlcl Avt , f'tllCINCTr S .... >I .,:,..,... lit....,.,, ....... llC1111tt tnd ln!IMlllll lftl'ltfll'll tt ,.._ ~l:i"ctNa vi:.11::· Dwn. Cllltk. D. K. DlllKt"' Nt ,,,,.,. In~. G. l . C1-. 11... I~, M. Hltbsdl. •1•, PolllN l'lect, St1e:lltl' -- lo Pt*llNI Oratlel C-f Oillt f'lltl, CllTl .. ICATI CH" I USINIU. ~ulrellll In Ste. JC1~ ti 11\t l~ll!lh I nd ~Hnt Pl~ illl I 1 Wt rcl!ew klltll tlfl Cltrt, J, M. '!::','~, ·.·.·,,°""· J\ldll, G. S, Clltlll'lln. 0-. Jlld9f, I , 0 . Jell111111, 11.n, C"""*"t llO W lJ!ll SI "' P1rtt Od I .. , .. ,,,. I 70 •tCTITIO!JI NAME Prot1.-11M c .... ·~•I .... COllST .. l"lllln l'lt D ' . ' • ---ci.r.. t.. A. Otn!N, °""· Clfrl.. G. H, '"'"' D-. 1-"or ,· D ~"°" it-*'· t4 • 1"" Th• u ........ ntd do ctl'!H'll """ ert for .... "'"""' "' .... 111111 .... •1111 nttr •• l'lllCINCT1 a ... 1 ,,, •• , ........... ,·,'.·,',·,L-llllt, ft:,•· ',',"',,·,• •. ,•T,''!'~_,R•.. Judlt, ,: ... T·--. ,· ... ·~ , -" NOT!,... ~w.tll'lt • bu•lnn1 1t ltoll HollY trinrftr II Millll llttMt II f9 1" Nit! '"ly 111-foer, I. L. ll1en1lm""1, Itel. Pelll"' PllCf, Slttlon No, 1 ,,. ..._, ' .. Ill '' -.:-I • "' Cllrt.. V. O, Mo«N, "'· ~ .... c. Jlrttl. H1111n....... • .. di. Ctllforlll t, , ..... Uhl "·-""''"'" e ........ rw Jlldl9. o. L. °"''"· 11... 111 llodltlter JI. .. ... u... ltU Mtfll• Vl t ......... ... ... ICf ....... Ill ., "" SU ""*" .,,...... 11\t lk!llltn ttrl'JI n1111t el ..;; o ... ertrMllt 11 Alcel'lollc ,.....,... c--. '· II., kulli, "'--t_,.r, D. 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A. ktt!l>r, tte.. lhlt -Incl. Chi1Ulleit VOllrt tll1ll '+'tie llld'lftl • """"'"' eJ 1Jll Win11r. H-fll-'•1" Vt llrt, Ca. LINI Whl,,,..,, win 1" ~ end lllt n11d4ftlttloll IMM<llr, D, G. h """, Dlll'I, f'olllne Pl1ee, Otl1 .. lt111 11 ..... nc. ~11 Cltrtc, J, C. ltllewtt, illllfll, NICINCT1 .....,._I ~ lbltnl Wt\t:t llellet, OI' YOl<I ti t111 ""'""' ...... C•HIWnll. ""°" "" fie> nn l'tlff'I AY11 .. Mllw•V CllY, c •• ""''•"' '"""" wllfl ffW COMIMflllM J""", M. A, Alrtho,... .... LlflW'llOll °"· PillllCINCTr p..,., l"Oltlrlt l'lla $n'lllfl lil:HlollllCI 1)1)f otlkt (ff Ille ttEGISTRAilll Of' VOTOlts tlTflrt tlrm nemfo If PrfllltNlen.i Aulo t:;-lfl WllllMY 171' &. St,,tdol ... !tr IM trtmfll' enllll l t•lt--.1 el 11!1 (111'11;, E. M, t1: ... 111111, ti••· lnuecttr. F, J. Ven l1t'fll'\t, JI-. _.tlllrlt l'lta. Wllltlltt khltl. 1IOD Wiii!-fitellf Lil. ' ' 11111 Eltcllen dtY, Otttll .,.i f!lt1 Ulol flrm II ---' °" lttdMOO leKI\. Ct ..... , Wiii!,.., itort111llll lktlln 4ot Hctmnl It lo 11t Cltrk, L M. l llftf, llt11. Jlld01, M. M, l nrrMt(, 0.lf!, tl ... Avt. In-tor, M. S, Dvll"' tlle. l'lllCINCT1 lt-1 .. 1 nw lllitwlt!a ...-.i. ..,_ lllil'lt Ill l'llU mt GIMlllll f'I .. RHWICll ll11c11, Cl. ~IMlll Ill If ll'ltt' lllol f1f1 .. , el f'lllCOICTr 1Nt7·1 Cltf'lt, M. J. Dt .... °""' .. lnNttCIOt, T. I. ft!IOn, Dttll. Jlldtt. M. S. C"""tlllh ..... , ••1. l'olllnt '"l1c1, W•IJlllfl ll"1tlt!IA. IO!J ""' 11>1-ti ,.~ le II •llt'M: 01111111 Sift, "· "" NllftmW "'"' ,, 11'19 tt(l9W ... ,,. l'olllne Pila, Hunnneton Ct11tllltllll l Cttrk. ~. A. o.wn.. ""· J""", M. IE. c,._, R.... Clfrt, M, o . ,,,_, .... w. Wllto11 Mtflftllf 11:, Tedi• IJSJI ltOOtrle& L.A., """"" ttllllll lfltflf -a'tM II """"1CI MTMA. ii UM CluW-11, 1..-i lretllllluf'tl II. PllftlH<T1 J.._,I Cltrll, K. P. Wlldrwwtll, llff, Clti'l, L.A. lmlltl, Ot\'rl. tn....clllt, D, I!, T1yfer, D-. HVlllllWNlll ad!. C:ll, ftW Lindt WllllnfT Vtt LIM. Ill !flt Cltr It M.....,, lktcJI, l"'l'IC!Or, C. ~-W111'fr, tiff, l'o!llne PIK.. Atlllll lltJlllllt!IU. 107 Cltrk, I . J. Al'dlllftl1, Dem. PtllCllllCT1 A-ttl·I , J\ldtt, I . M. John-. Dtm, 0 .... S#f, I .. 1t1t K.IMtlfl WhllllH' C-"' 11 Or-· ShlO el Ctllftrnlt, Jlldtt, I(. E. Wt l!tr. llte. ~11rntr JI, PttlCIMCTi h<ltM l'otlllle ~lect, I'-lttJkllnct. tl1 f-C!l't'll;, V. f . JellnlOl'I, Dtn\, H11t111r1f Jt. Ttdlt llOIH' Wll""" ~ llllt 1111 DtNrtmenl II Altthll!c Cltrtl, M. f , I ~, o..... lnwtdQr, V. M. f'llH1111l, Ill.,., PP1 tl111 l'lece. Cl!Y Hell. '1 fllllr Dr, t"' Ctl!Vtlrl RI. Cltrk. J. 0.. Arbli.o, r>m. "911 et c.ni.rnlt, Stti. -(1llfoml6, Ort"" C-l'f! I-Mo C""l'lt ntt eeffl\'lllll Mil Clerltl '· M. MMIMll. D..... Jlllllltt, I . A, WI/Ill,°""' l"tlKIOr, I . J, H!INr, tlfl. l"ltecfef, I. C. PHH, ti ... , No!IC11 It llll'flltl' t fVI" 111tt 11141 ... llll!'I or......~: 0.. kJ1!1UiOl1 1', ltlt Wirf !flt, e •• ,.. ,..Bi;UICT1 :at-ut-1 Clttt. I. I. Wit-""°"' OOll'I. Jlld'lt, I!. P. 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Rflf, ll't lrYlew •11o. L."'9 Htrl illl lGISTllAll 0,. VOTIJll ' s.t K, lffl MY C-llllen f.u lrn • • ll . • Cltft, I , D. Mlllllf•Y, Jtl•, JllOll. l., Mlndtf, tltlf, 10\MllC:tor, t,, N, f'lttltr, ti•, l"JMdtf', L. L. kl'lllll. tit.. OJIANQI COUNTY, CAlll'OilllN!A f>lrtlti.,.. • OttftlH c..-1 Oii" f'Jlet, Mt rcll 1. ,_, tt......-1 9Mitll• Ctflfiritli 1'11ICINCT1 ll•llJ•I ti.rt., a . J, Ct-bl!!, Dim, J\1'11411'. J. G, Crtmhtw, It.._ Juotl@. G. a. Coll', II-•· I': M. J, Mt,ltf, °""""' ~ 11, H IN OdlMr I I, l"ultll"'" Oii .... CiNll Dl!lf _.lie!, .. lllOllll'ltd Oren .. Gwtl Deli, l'!lol, •11~119 l'lt ct. illluutl! lt lllrfenct. JOlrt (ilrk. l!I. I. C111,, Otm. Cttrk. C, L '--•· 11... Cltrk, E. l , lf'fl, 0,...,, l'ublfttltd 0rit11111 CO.'I Ott!' l"H~. ,.,, l1'2·1'1(k1. 1 ... IJ_ 2:1, "" 1'°5-11 OCI, I, 1tN 1$,1 Etrll Ln.. .• l"IUCll'(CT1 ,,....... -(lull. NI. .... l ••Mtmtn. 0fl'!I, Clel'lt, It, M. AJ,., Dlll'I. oc:·-•. IS. '"' lllt-10 ~. • I • 1 I • f ' • I • ' • I I I I -------------------------------------------------------• ~liarp C.tlieek Automobile Warranty Abandoned DE'J'llOIT (UPI) -Up until 10 yurs qo, a new car car· ried a warranty ol only three mootbl or f,000 miles. The dealer who eold It had to make good on meylhlng-that-went wrong. But In the 1960s, Detroit ouf4 fim1I -looklng le< an edge IJi the otruale for their share of the DtW-car market -beg1D to Increase their waJTanties. In 1963, Chrysler . Corp., the amallest of the Big Three 1uto makers, increased Its warranty to five years or !0;000 miles oo~the-drive train, and 24 months Cit 21,000 miles on the rest of. the car. 'The Chryller move forced the other firms to increase their W'ltrant' terms to compete. Now lilt eyclt Ir -leled. All __.,. cloooly suard meont keeplo( -on Auto maken claimed 111ey With lbe advftll ol the 1971 lllelr warranty ..,ts. But It Is Ul"'aMs ol 25 mll1Joo can W> paid the same book ralet for modela:, manu!actw-er war· estimated that dlU'ing the ttme til they ran out d. the war-warranty repairs • -aolnc ranUes hive bee1J: lhlJl)ly cut the long warranty periods ranty period. rates. for medwi1ca: in the back. All new can now carry were In effect, repe.lr coats Dealers were unhappy with dealer's ar.ea, plus alJontdl a warranty-or only 11 month! ~led some SIOO million a tbt war..ran!YJ &rttlmDt. It for fringe benefit. But dealer1 year for the l.uto fnduitry. meant expanded. paperwork also CUtiplalhf.i:l ~ mllde or 12,000 miles with a few ex-'lbal does not count the vast for their service departments, less profit On the parts beina: tJ'I innovatiom fer the flnt 90 increase In adtnlnistraUve delay! ln repayment from the replaced under warranty. dayt of the warranty, in· ~of the Ml'1'1JJty l)'ltems. manufacturer,. and ln aome About the '100 mlllicm a cltJdirC free wheel alignmmt. General Moton, for example, cases disagreements between year tht auto ma.ken are There ia 00 m<n S-00 war· expanded its service and the maker and the dealer on spending fer warranty work. raoty on the drive train. c u •tom e r c o m p I a l n t whether the wort performed Will most U that now fall on Chry9ler Corp.. which tn-departments In each U its five actually was justified under jle customer! troduced the f>..50 wan:_anty, pueenger car 'divi!ions u the warranty contract.a. No, says the auto makers. was the last automaker to amount of paper-6buffling ln Many dealers also ·com-'Ibey claim the bulk of this •-~-It •-.~ lwxlllng warranty c I a Im • plained that warranty repslr "'!lllr work llbows up In the 8vcauuvu Wu•;:n-1o1.v-company fiom Qeileri IJi'creasecf. It_. announced its 1971 prices. compriie(! up 35 Percent of 1~ 12 months anyway, and In an age vmen auklmoblle '!be 5-50 warranty was their service department work would be covered under the reliability ;. ouppooed to be In-particularly bo!lienom•· An and -lbat lt WU less prUltsble lower warranties In effect f,, creasing, why have manuf~ auto maker like General 4han customer-paid aervtce. the 1971 models. tures come full circle and cut Motors, produdftg nearly 5 "r.ley claimed the auto com-But lt will relitve the com- beck their warn.nties to million can a ,-r, w• faoed penies paid them less under panies of the v 11 t ld- lharl>ly? wlth the task of keeping lbelO wamnty 111111 they cculd col· mlnislraUve expeimea of High cost, administraUvt cara on the boob fer warranty led for a curtomer for lhe foUowing a car ttrougti the DAlL Y I'll.OT 3 DAY SALE on dependable MAYTAG Washers and Dryers! STAlllTS THUlllSDAY OCTOIElll' llh -FREE ·--J-p~ Coming W•,.. wltti ••Y MAYTAS "'"'··-, .... ''·'' n u l 1 a n c e and dealer purp:iees for five yesra. Thi• IBIDt Job"; -:. first five )'tan ol !tr life. dl!SaU!fadlon _,, to be thel...:.-'-----''-----..,...:-....::.-------...:..::.::.:....::..:::...=::...._111 ., DI. LOUIS J. HASILFILD Ople!Mlrill r1opl1 w11r 9111111 "•c11n1 their 1y11 h1¥1 lo1t thtir 1bility to .. 1ccommocl1t1", th1t i1 to 1dju1t 111ily 1..0 ch1n111 focu1 ~from n11r poi11h to fir poinh. Wh1n it b1· com11 difficult to 111 properly with • 1in9le correctiofl in tile ·91111, bifoc1 l1 m1y: It• ,.quir•d. With' bifoc1l1, two cliff1r1nt correctiont i re in· corpor1t•d into • 1in11 I• lint, one for cli1f1nc• •nd the other for clo1e worlr. However, th• time m•v com1 wh•n the •Y• c1nnot m1lre the tr1n1itio1t frol'l'I 11e1r to '•r witt. comfort • • • it'1 •imply too lti9 1 1t1p. At tuch time, th• •n1w1r m1y be "lri•foc1l1", which com• bin• three diff1rent 1r111 of fo· cu• , • • ftt1r, fir end ln·IM· tw1111. lhu1 the trifocel r1li1"11 the •Y• of flit worlr~•f .. 1.trem1 1ccommocl1tion end m1k1f 111· in9 •'_.•'( 191in. let u1 ch1clr your vi1ion ind pr•· 1crib1 Ju1t the right corr1ction for you, We worlr with childr1n i ncl their 9r1ndp1r1nfi, too. Pho111 147·1271 for'" 1ppoi11f. 1n1nt. We're i11 th1 Fi"' Poinh Shoppint C1nf1r. best mwwen. "'"" Romania Aide Incurs Shock VIENNA ( UPI) -The Romanian enws a g e n c y Agerpres disclosed Tuesday night that Premier Io n Gheorghe Maurer, 68, suffered a serioUJ shock In a n automobile accident Monday. It said hia condition was im· proving. Maurer, No. 2 man in the Romanian government, i s under close m e dical supervision to prevent com- plications resulting f r o m polytraumatism, a 1 er i o u s shock caused by the collision, •!1 official communique said. ..... Ctlllt w. •llCI (1l11cti...1 (tin Nie NHS ' Clll'll'llll _N.~_flc k cnlOrits llltNO IN YOUll COINS t it> tOAllO Ol"l!NS OCTOtlll Jl'd THE COIN CHEST J14 •LINNl'fll UGUNA' llACH 49~1111 Si9n 11p forth• onlv 1ch11I work1hop 111 Or1n111 County. f ini•h th1 coun1 witlr. 1 11t of coordi1.-t1cl u11d1rg1r,,.1nh, 9irdl1 ind brt incr11d1d. Th;, 11 not 1 d1mon1fr1lion cl111I ~om1 in ind 1111mln1 th1 lt1m1 011 cli1pl1y In th1 1tor1. PANTS PROBLEMS? D•monttr.1tio11 llft '1tf•r 1lt1r•ti1111 •nd 'on1tructio11 utino; linit1, Sit., Oct. 24, 10·1 2 1.m. c.11 for ,,,,,,..tiont, • KNIT 'N FIT CLASSES WORKSHOP Tirtcl of b199y, sloppy loolrin9 lrnih7 Elie puh tl11 fit b1ck into the knit. Our lrnit 1!11111 1fr111 qu1lity conttructio11 ind worlrm1n1hip r1 th1r thin 1p••d. Give your li:nit1 th1t couturi•r look! C.1lt for r•••r¥1lion1 - cl.111• forlli in9 now -•• m. incl p.m. W• Now Carry Th• Comp1•te Vogue line r~· :cos,,...,.,. to hodt amt •• soatt. •..-to 18$82 BEACH BLVD., HUNTINGTON-BEAGH Yes, We Have the MAYTAG Dishwasher l1t1•1tl• ---•-ua,.. ••lclt ••t•r ........ .... ._ .. -·-•Glantc.,_., e No~ • """"' r J 'd ,., Mdl ...... ~lmldliraa ..__, __ a..c-.. 1111n.,,,1111w~Jet<1.-. i«.w ...... -.. ""'m-..... y.c llD*tl ,.... .. dllill .. aymr.w.,,,.._.,.....* ... l•b undwt~~~ .. ~ ..... ~~ ib apPJian(;es 888 GLENNEYRE -LAGUt(A_ BEACH 494-0582 or 494-0506 WE SERVICE MOST MAJOR APPLIANCIS -- onarch ay Plaza ' UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK Th• ~ •• t till ers !ft town •r .Yo11r mon•Y bitlr, SAFEWAY SUPERMARKET W1~h for our 1up1r. 11.-1t1 NIGUEL MOTION PICTURE THEATRE "IENUTH THE l'LANET 011 THI APES" OPEN NIGHTLY 6:45 P.M. MONARCH BAY BARBERS f••luril'lg M1n'1 h1ir 1tylint I ,olorint MONARCH BAY PLAZA IN LAGUNA NIGUEL EL ECO SHOP OF DECORATIVE ACCESSORIES U1tu1u1l 1ift1 from •rouncl th1 world NIGUEL SHOP FOR GIRLS lick to 1chool f•1hlon1 NIGUEL HAIR FASHIONS C.mpl•f• lt••utv. c1r1 MICHEL'S CLEANERS Wh•r• qu•lifv. counh °"" Mon, lllrll ill tl'lllll lty '""""-' AIM: 171 N. P'l'lffMft PUNTY OF Fiii PARKINIO CROWN ...,.. MONARCH 0 : VALi.iV IAV PLA'ZA "f :> .... ~KW~V -i 'i P'ACIJIC C.OAST > APERTURE CAMERA AND HI Fl NIP 'N TUCK INFANTS & CHILDRIN•S WEAR F1mou1 11•m• ••m•r11 11141 1f1r•• for fh1 littl1 ,1,,1ur•1 i11 "filUr lif•. • LAGUNA TRAVIL SIRVICI FABRIOUE t. BOUTIQUI M1•i1 • Midi1 • Mh1i7 • M1k• itU Air • It• • R•ll • T •un SOUTH LAGUNA HARDWAlll MONARCH IAY DRUGS Mort th•11 j111t •n •rtli111ry h,,_w1r• 1tor1 "Sp•ci11i1ti 111 tli• 1111 •rt .t 1•f"f'ic1" H. GLADSTONE SHOP FOR MIN MURIELS FASHIONS FOR M'LADY Quiet •l•t•nco· 111 trditi•11•l 1.M t•1t., w, go to 111 l•l'lttil1 t1 ,1,,,. LAGUNA fEDIRAL SAVINGS t. LOAN lirt••t, flrtt 11141 1tr111111t 111 Or1111• C.1111'1 • aperture camera Give Your Sound System A STEREO CASSETTE A44 th1 b••utiful 11•w So11y MM1I 1211l•rH C111•thi·C.rd· ff ftpt J,ck to 'f1'Ur 11chHllf t'flt'"'• 1rt4 1111.., th•'"' 1114 1lmpUcity •f ,.,.111 •••••thttl It t i"'• '9• YOUl f•..,.rit. ... r•• ptOtr•mfl'llnt -t f th• c•tt 1f ttl• ••tfffht tloMI c.,,.. ••• ftlo Sony MM•I 12111141111 $114 95 lh ''c••••rle1 11•w, • Opoft Dolly 9111 -4100 -Mond•y thru S.t. 4,,.1110 I 4M-Ji77 / a.2130 • • • • • • • I f • t 0 0 I I I • SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY AT CROWN VALLEY PARKWAY • • l \ 23 OAll.Y .PllOT Murphy, Tunney Wage Red -ilot Campaign for Senate ' By BILL STALL LOS ANGELES (AP) Lanky John Twlney aod his handsome famjly stroll down a bfach in the television coro- merclal, looking for all · the world like anolber set of Ken- nedys transplanted Jo the West C.ast. -'Ibe words "Calilornfa-!r. Needs a Fighter .. flash on the L screen, urging the state's 8.7 miUioo voters to elect the M- year-old son of former heavyweight boxing champ Gene Tunney Jo the U.S. Senate. Now imagine the spotlighted :;;Lage at the Anaheim Con- vention Center, across the road from~Dis:neyland. deep tn the heart of conservaUve Orange County. · Sen. George 11-iurphj , one- time movie song-and-dance man, trob on stage, beaming at the cheering crowd ' of Republican stalwaru. "My opponent is getting a new hair style.'' jibet the 68- year-oid Murphy.in his-speech to the $100-a-plate dinner. "I think It's Jntore;ting how In politics you have to have a special hairstyling. "What kind of nomen.se is this? We put up with an awful Jot in this great country of ours bot that is a little much," aays Murphy indignantly. CLOSE BATTLE Tunney and Murphy are in a rlose batOe for a seat con- Colom!!~ DEFENDER Sen. Goorgo Murphy &idered vital by President Nix - on and the Republicans in their effort to gain control of the -senate. Murphy is completing his first six-year term in the Senate and Tunney ts coin· pleting bis third two-year tenn in the U.S. House. Jn simple terms, the race matches aconserva ti v e Republican.. Murphy, against a moderate-to-liberal. Democrat, Tunney, Each is running on his own congressional record. But the issues cut across EL CAMINO ROOM 220 S. El C-loo Rool. Sao Clomooto (Opposite Greyhound Bus Depot) INVITES YOU TO ENJOY WEEKENDS OF FUN I ENTERTAINMENT . I DANCING WITH JOE O'REILLY MASTER PIANIST & ENTERTAINER EVERY THU RSDAY. THRU SUNDA Y AL SO LADIES HAPPY HOURS WEEKENDS YOUR HOSTS -ROD & ANDY CHALLENGER Rep. John Tunney partisan lines in eaurornia where registered Democrats outnumber Republicans by 1.3 --million-wten; where voters often split their t f ck et s between Democrat.II a n d Republicans; and w he r e television and c a m p a i g n theatrics play an important role. Murphy won the s ea t , defeating Democrat .Pierre Salinger, in 1964 when Presi· dent Lyndon G. Johnson car· ried the state over Republican BaITy Goldwater by more f,han a million votes. Four years later, Democrat Alan Craru;ton won the other Senate seBt while the state was giving its presidential votes to Republican Nil.on. ATTACKS RECORD In annotmeing for l be Senate, Tunney a s 1 a 11 e d Murphy's record as do-nothing and said, "I want to serve our state in the Se nate because I care" -about the oil spill at Santa Barbara, .. the tragedy of Vietnam," inflation, pollu- tion and divisions among Americans. In a style 80mewhat like that olY_ice Pr~ident Spiro T_. ••• FABRIC FINAL MARKDOWNS \Ve must make room for all the new merchandise coming in. Our loss is your gain1 so come and get it! Unbleached MUSLIN 3 ·:. s.ioo IO IQ. 41" WIDl-ll•. 4f' YD. OSNABURG. 12" WlDI lt:G. $1.00 n . 3 i s1oo I ALL OTHER SALES ITEMS 400/o OFF REGULAR PRICE "Ant. of Syntlletlcs Ac,yllcs -CllfMlnht11 'fpltl11 & Pfhri ... 1orn• to •ooNli"••• with prid cltiffaftt I Ct-i•k•f •"' Art• tlta•. .... $1.7',. 11.11 COTIONS ond DACRON & COTION MOit lirip dry. Gi,..h•m pl•ill A •ftipet. Piqvo plti" & prinh, CtJr••• pri11h, 1;0Han, ••ti"'• 1h••n & dal· fed l'WiU, IEGo. $1.00 t. $2.50 \'..AIO 400/o OFf Fashionable ~ --coRDUROY- F.11 Shtdt1. 45" Wide N .1J-TD. _!D°fo __ OFF BONDED FAIRICS A•tvliu h.t•ri-4 •t.+.t• 11y\011. C.Ho• tw...I ... 41" .,.;, .. 11•. U.H .. U .00 400/o OFF ALL>•" WIDE FABRICS Mutt t• -Wicl• .,,·1. ., •. ,,, .. ,,, '' 400/o OFF S:ALE AT LAGUNA BEACH STORE ONLY! 278 FOREST AVE. LAGUNA BEACH 494-6695 ..... -. IANU.llWCAID Oii MAIJll CHAKt I Five Students Given Grants Five Orange Coast College students have re c e i v e d scholarships from the Petroleum Pi o n e e r s or California for their academic excelle n ce in the OCC Petroleum Tech110logy pro- gram. Receiving awards program were: Roa Hanies, Anaheim. $50; George Justus. Costa Mesa, '50 ; Jerry Wheeler, Garden Grove, $50; Kevin Williams, Fountain Valley, $100, and Jim Webster, Hunt- ington Beach, $50. UGIJ~ MUSIC CO>llM'f 11 NOTEO Fot ITS UMP ...... LINI Ol'OUOIJIY CU.,.,.,.._ ~lcctDS. AN n CZJ.LltrtT M.LKT'tON 0.CIMllCOI. CMWll - WE .._~ ll&Sf 11TL£ WOllCS Ill :,Tl)(IC, lt.I Qldlt l.A6llNI. IN5!C CIA'MI S YIJlilt. Gfltll. l() FllC ""51: It.I CiAHIA °"""""· lAruJ~A. t.I U31C CO. '" ,_,, ...... "'""' •-11 . l Talc of the town I lays what it 1how1, teachesmiten· 667 tertalntl A wrt.ty of ··~l•ct&. .,i.,.tool magnetic deskette .. Wftln.,.,.flem vaquero pants 500 lon.•slrin crepe blouse 3a6 -playl --fmhiont.-.. work begins with the in .. , ... ,., .... look and ftt et Wranglen; hlp·l""I .... flar ... atth• foot; their topp1,.1ot bocty-con· tclonnylOR oruepe. ---.......... Modphrld bedspreads ........... 4s7 ....... 72 x 90~"· luxuraY' blanket A••• cpforcl ...1on1 ••• 119ht 497 ••• lovely,ond fully washclbl•. to ... 101 , ·it~1"9alz4t;-•••.• : ...... . sheet blanket 297 ..... .......... ., ... ••• ~ .. tae tfte•llllp' ftte •• Mltii of fhw ........ Dew"'t9Nww ••• .. ,_, __ Cotto. fl:IN'lel1tte. wra1t9l1r corduroy pants 600 19"'x J3'"' 2••.x4s• 971 177 ln•ny_..,.Me Nee, _. calarful ,..,.,_ owt• .... , ... , .... ,...,... ... loM:t •eat enywher•• ·arr.iii.~ dtild .. iffrtn oliver Inch-along ....................... ho'ldloDnytlll ..... opln 474 do1l9•,...,.tvnoo•nd • .,.,.~ I., •. .. ·rapco pogo stick 7s7 Make'em)ump fer joyl alcyd .. grip horul•, odiu•tabl• . ten11onlpl'lng can IUPPWf Ult to175paundl.. Great fun •• , ondexerd11I '"""'onit• lego1et 637 luld for the fwtwel The CON!h wtfve C..,_. ltrvction Hf thClf COrl ................ h .... chllcl. 215-pc.. Mt. ........ 3·pc, bcith set 447 Thr .. 1h9w..,,.lnthe n1c .. tcelor1IC°"'8ul' met, Hcl aover end.,,. ... I ,,..,.bl., of .......... ..... -,, plush pig 1147 loolplvo!o, __ ,. ~-~· .... .,· .. ~· worldl fro.the...-te the ....... wtttto.t batting an eyelolhl 20· lnchee of ..... •llty ... hnh ............. h. FuW-twllc Ht,.,. ... .._~ .. ·---Dranl•W--..... --........ frantic fllwwlllOd._ -........ dfm set 791 ....................... herelReallftlc .... trud¥ C•3JOC .... tnlx• & ..... ........... ...... (tall:•,. ..... ..., ... ,. ·-· 1" rete ............ -. lectrlc blanke twtn ............. _J 297 ......... ___ .... ] 3t7 ___ ,,.__:] 6" _ ___ _]9f7 . ....... -.... 32"- myadec 100'1 ~ wi1•1ofNo 491 . ......., ........... 1ni...,....,_,. wtla:slffl wtttl ""• tN 4 . .................. .... ...... , ........... . efevwy.,..nk•efthe 1-lly.-... -· • 9051 ATLANTA, HUNTINGTON BEACH r • • ~ J, .. . '• I • I • ' ] ' I ., ~ ,, • ' ., I , ---------------·-------- \ Tht1rsdq, Octobtr 8, 1970 ,___ A LY ~ILOr_ U ~~~~~~~~1 -... t\.nniversary of Cuban .Warning ''Arti stry in Moving'' for th• r: r I l, t• t • r ~ ' • " ' I ' • ' 1\ ' ;, • ·' 1 • • . • ' I 10-1-70 Pric11 a re Diicounted f •cept on Foir-Troded a nd Government Con- t ro lled l!em1. LEAN GROUND BEEF 69c CHUCK QUALITY...... "· ! EXTRA LEAN GROUND 79c BEEF, ROUND QUALITY '" GROUND BEEF IU(ll IOllOID 53~. sl.lcED1BACON 59c BACON WIUOlfUITlllllOll.lTM ' 69< llACIMAWI -111ttll"l-Lt. Plli. •• ,., SLICED BACON :::::W,'.. __ 69' LINK SAUSAGE ~;:,:-',~~~ .. " ..... 79c WILSON FRANKS 59c AllMIAT 1·,0UNO PIG. AMERICAN CHEESE ~'l.'i. 68< llll"llULLT WUHll SI.ICU, PIOCIUO, ll·ll.P .. OSCAR MAYER BOLOGNA 53c JLICll •L llUt ti "II lf[f .••••....•.. 111.Pir, OSCAR MAYER SALAMI 59c tint H IUCMIAll ..................... 111 PU. '.MCKAlf P ctODl_~U I HI-HO CRACKERS 1:~~~~ ......... -.. 45 ' ·DI CARLO BREAD u ......... _ ......... 41 ' r11n1'" '""'" I GRAHAMS flllS!Ol (IAC•US 29' Cf"' UOl.101 ............ .,., ~BREAKFAST IOllM0111111t.l11T 49' ~ -'·""""'·····-""" I VARI ITT BREADS ~::;~~~::.~ ......... 37' Pl'UI JO•. (llWCIWi&Oll. (IWllllll QUT. •OT&TIJ I ~ NOODLES ~~~~~r~:,'::,~.~~.~~~ ... 3Jt .. ·Kir&f!---. CRA BERRY JUICE 43c WilCK 32-0UHCl IOTTLE RUSK ET FLAKES ~::;.~:~~ ............. 39• ~ DINNER •1&'1 M•CAIOlll 20' v--JV. oz.,., ................... .. 1:' PINK BEANS ~:~~'.~::.~'.~ ........ 45• .,.. MOTHERS COOKIES ;::.~.'.: .. 42' j(llCUI AlllMAl 01 '" Iii) CORN BREAD MIX ~::t1;~~~~ ....... 35c GAINES BURGERS;::'.: ..... _ ......... 11" ---'DOG FOOD 111.IOU IMUT& 13' Q" • <111(1111!1101.<AI ,.,,,. PURR CAT FOOD !~z~~~! .............. 16' • ~FRI SKIES MEAL ~~i:: .... " .. ~l 11 ···Kitt&;~-- BEST MOVE of YOUR LIF.E Call: 494-1025 -580 Broadway By POU. NEwroM UPI , ........ N ... AMly1t On Otl 22 it will be exactly eight years ago {hat President JQbn F. K.enned_y senj a tremor of fear through the free wt>rld with his an· nouncem~"l that the Soviet Union had eJlablished of- fen11ive missile bases in Cuba. -~elleclarei!: "This secret, swift and ex- traordinary build-up or Com- munist missiles -in an areit well known to have a special and historical rtlationsh.ip to the Unlle<I St.lies and the na· Minister Andrei G r o m y k o lions o[ the w e 1 l e r n deliberately had Jl.ed_ to him hemlsphere-;-ln vlolillTOnOr about t.he bases. Soviet assurances, and in de-rt was 1 month taler on narn;e or. A~trican . and Nov. 2'.0· that tht;. Presideni an4 hem1spher1c pohcy -!his sud-nouncid Russia's arreeme.nt den, clalldesline decision t.o to remove the missiles from stati~n st~ategic "."'eapons ~or Cuba 11nd to prevent their the first time ouls1de of Soviet reintroduction in the future. 'oil Is a deliberately pro-He added: vocative and u n·j"u st i-f-f·e d ·1rau-orrenslve-weap<>ns chai:ige in the status quo which are. , removed from Cuba 11ntl cannot be accepted" by the kept out .•. and if Cuba is not U.S. used for the export of ag- The President o e c I are d gressive Communist purposts , further that Soviet Foreign 'therl!! will be. peace in the Carlbbtan.1' With thls backwanl look Int<> history, we come~ to the present. President Nixon hill j~t returned from a show-Ole-flag mission to Lhe ·Medlterranean and a foreeful reminder to the Russians that the U.S. Sixth Fleet, Lhe most powerful naval rnrce evcf assembled, Is lnlhe Medilerranein ready to back up any U.S. diplomatic move. In the Atlantic and the Caribbean. Soviet warshi~ are providing an ~ualty A Chuck Roast, like every cut al meat, has its best parts ••• those areas with bane and waste at 1 minimum, and pod eatln1at1 max imum ••• But these leaner ends are often removed from Chuck Roasts, re-named, wrapped and said at a hi1her price! LUCKY tri ms eve ry cut the way you would trim it yourself ••• removin1 only the excess waste and olferin1 you the BEST of the cut, even the leanest part, at 1 low discount price! CHUCK ROAST lAIGI ••• RIB ROAST COl'lllGHI FRESH FRYERS lOP'1~t~~IT'( A 5 c IONDlD.11~-. lb. ROUND STEAK ro:~t~~'~ 79c I ONDID IEl f --11. --c~~:::.-2 71~ ..... , .. 69c LUCKY IH~DlllF-lb. ... 1::6/&yf.-~ APPLECIDER 59c llllElOP 64·0UNCI IOTTLE ORE-IDA POTATOES ~:·::.1:i:.~_.28' SWISS MISS PIES ~.''.: .... ___ .. 29' 41,,11, Pll(ll, (lllJlf, IOUllllll If) HOT SLICES DOWllfFlill 48< ith ot. '•'············-···· FRIED CHICKEN ~::~_u:~~~~ ........ •111 LEMONADE !':1~~~:~1.~ .................... 13• TANGERINE JUICE ~~·,~~!:~.1.~ ..... ,.25 i MORTON MACARONI ::~·;::'.'. ... .24' VEGETABLES ;::'.· ................... -..... 41 ' Glllll 111111 w/IUl!fl IAUCI (ti IUIUI 'l.ll. llOCCOLI, 11 &f UMAS, (IUUUOWll. •ltllllll llU{ll ROLLS 11 01., ............... --.......... -.. 501 JlllPllllOll 10~1 0011111 ~' , ... k6(&y~ PINESOL 55 DISINFICTANT ( 1 S·OUNCE IOTTll LADY LEE BUmR ~~::'.~~!~.-.. -12c LADY LEE SOUR CREAM :::.'.:....49' CA•ID 16' LADY LEE MILK ""·"' .. --·-· ~.---~ • ' • J t; ' -• ·-I ..& .,.-...,,\." ···f:'.t&f!~ CORONET TISSUE 24c TOlllT 2/SOCI COUMT IOLLS .,... PORK & BEANS :::;:• .. ,_ ...... 36' GLAD BAGS ::~~~: ...................... 34c o" FORMICA SHINE :\'::. ....... .'1" ~ FORMULA 409 ~~:.•:,t.. .. -... 69c WHITE KING "D'' ••11•,1•r 58, ., oz .• , ............ . 0 LYSOL LI QUID ~~·;:•: .......... ,79' 0 LUCKY RINSE ~~~·:n ............. _69' WHITE KING SOAP :::•: .............. 69' U.l.D.I. RIOll ITIMP COUPONS Gladly Accepted CUT-UP FRYERS l lNDlt , PLUM'· Fll YING CMICU NS 31~ las ANGfifS COUNry I I • ' I , . "j, ; > • oA STA PUF RINSE ~::~ ...... _,69'' WATER SOFTENER~,"!~~ ::1~ .......... 571 _.. PUREX BLEACH ::~·:" .. ---49' DUPONT SPONGE ::: ........... -.... 26' __,. DISH ALL oi111w11111aMn11nt 56, " ,,.,,m ................. .. IVORY SNOW ~;~~~:0~~~~ ............... 82' _,. PALMOLIVE 'ott1,so1ri•111 u 9' Q". llffll!l llll l &I •••••• , CASCADE ~!'!~~~·.~-~~-'-~~-·-~; ............ 68c -_. DOVE SOAP toiut !Piii er 16' .,-. ••m """'""'"-GAIN DETERGENT :::'.: __ .... -... 82' FUTURE i~0:1~ ::~.1 ..................... " ..... ~l" TIDE DETERGENT :::'.: ................. 'l" --' VOGUE OlllJGlllf 36• V" -•101.101 ................... -. JOY LIQUID ~f::.~·,~~ ...................... 57' v-4 LYSOL SPRAY~!4:~:~~·-~ ........ •11• DOWNY SOFTENER :::~.'. ....... -.. 78' ~ EASY OFF ::~~i~~~~.·.~ .......... -67' ZEST SOAP ~:,~~••·······-·-··-· ..... 21 • . ' ·N.VEIME: lP.lltD ' .. CORN •At'tUfDlYl'tl<ffM 17' r1W1) 12 DL<Al.------- WESSON OIL :."::, ..... ,, .. _,,_,_53• Dill STICKS ;:'o'r~.~~~----·-·43' ;~·'· LDW DISCOUNT PRICES ON HOUSEWARES & BEAUTY AIDS CANADA DRY BEVERAGE J Q< .,-. NOODLES l~~.': .......... -...... 29' ~u'iiwiisiii'8££ii"'""""'""" $]67 'i:'PmR PAN SALMON r:·: .......... 81' •PICl -1t0!.(ll., .................. --···~ CORN BEEF HASH~,':t~.ll ........... 6Sc GOLD SEAL GIN $366 .,,-FRUITTREATS::Or.:W,'.~.'.~'.'.~~29' EFFERDENT 60's S.111, '••111 1 d11111(t1•l•ll; $110 111111'1 1tah1, l rl1•111 lttn. ~· .• EXCEDRIN 1 OO's 11111lr1-1Lr1-.:0 r1i1 rtlin· 1r 011 11t1s l11t 11!tttt11 rtlltl 1f p1ln 11f 1111 ~ 11111. OUILOW $119 EVltfDAY PllCE ":~:~:;;~~~:~::~~~"TT o~~~~:u~~idaY3Pr,iccc. : BRECK BASIC AIYIST Th fin! lt1hritllf ••ir c11flli1•rr •nll LISTERINE ,8.,sAH ,.Nu•rsA, VNE&fTAA,,5,s, fAClt-:~~ot.c•• ~:1 ~~:~~·.::~~'.·UJ ,.., .. '7 ;·2,i~ far:ceful reminder or growing soviet naval might and thei r ab.llity to operaJe bt waters described by Kennedy 11 hav· ing a "special and historical relatJnnship to the United States.'' An aftermath of lhe 1962 Cuban crisis and the humilia· tion l11rust u~. the Soviet.I was !lelrdec slon n e1pand their ncivy to make IL capable of challenging the United States anywhere In the world. Within this context Mve been these other events: In the Middle East. the Soviets lied when they denied they .. the EgypU1ns had moved' .. titeir SAM mi.stiles closer to the Suez Ca nal in violation of the cease-fire agreement. And in the Caribbe111, the United State. took note of in- creased Soviet activity with 1 warning that it would view :'with the utmost seriousness" any Soviet move towa rd establishing A submarine base Jn Cuba." In the Middle East, the Soviets ha ve accused the United States of 1abotaging peace efforts, and in the Catibbean of f03terlng a "war psychosis.'' Whether or not the Russian! intend to build a subm.trinl!! base in Cuba . their growing might in nuclear submarines make the stationing of of. tensive missiles in Cuba un- n~ry. Their so-called "Yankee ClaS.!" subs capable of hurling a miS.!lle I.~ mileS" already can cover mo!l of the United States Crom pog!Uons In , the Atlantic, the Caribbean , and the Gulf of Mexico. On Nov, 2, the United Stale.9 and the SOviet Union are scheduled to resume their talks on Strategic A r m 1 Limitations jSALT.) - -•· Jn the light of obvi()\11 mistrust and provable perfidy, one is inclined t.o wonder why. Bomb Tied To Gan gs HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Police have 1 i n k e d "un. derworld connections" with a bomb ing which de1troyed I $20,000 Doheny ~tat.es home Tuesday. Office rs said the occupanl'I of the ho"nl~. Mr.. and .Mnr. John Cough in, had been subleasing the home from con· vicled bookmaker Edd I e Destefanc. for about 1 Ix months. Destefano has ' ' know " underworld Mnneetions'' of- ficers said. al though the Coughlins apparently w e r e unaware· of the fact. Police said the bomb was af.. !ached to the noorboard or Coughlin's car and blew a 2-- foot-squart hole in the floor . All of the windows in the car wert blown out., the glass waa melted and the door handla were blown ofJ. OUTll consr ' . O,.-N'tMtf, 6:41 , .•• M•tlnM Sunday at I :45 "'"" --WATERMELOI -MAN· llll o,_ N.....,., 6:41 ,.-. Matinee Sunday at I :45 ,.,,_, 1' _,1_,....~._,S..,l,,,MQllillf.SJ~:l:~.iijt"~--!? ........ 45' ·! BEEF STEAKS ~4~:.~11~01.,i~'.~ .......... 73' CRANBERRY SAUCE :":\'i'.!::~~.-.21' I •••<I '"' ORAL ANTISEPTIC 1•!!.9~• ~-•rA. --· ._r.u:tlERf'-PfA""ES ..... , • ...._ 31 •-----------M0°'JffW'.A.!Sff1---it-·Ml!l.lflml>KUW , ltAND 1m·... .L • K '"-" nor. 11.~....... U"" ft1 .oMJllfSlll flllll --f"-•READED SHRIMP ~·:,:':::.~ ... ::*21' ~ ' • FISHSTICKS (fl!l.ltllll •1 n 14 OI, rl$ .•••••• , •• , .......... , ORANGE JUICE i!~;-~~·; .......... __ ,47' ENCHILADAS 'tlll 011"""1 l<llfUf ot 40' (lll(Jltlj 1¥1 ''·'''··-······ COUNTRY WAFFLES ::".'.~~ .... 41' Our LOW Evcr)llay Pr ice! ICE CREAM lADl Lii Ya CAUOJf CAITDll 65c H DENNISON CHlll~.~'t.!._..!. .. :41 ' n. ,,,,,•t1•t1• u • .,., "•t 11"111c•. ™'.~~'::."::~'" .r)AM ::l:_f..".'.~~~.'.~'.~:=~-.... 49' I BRECK CONCENTRAn 11 LADY LEE 'PEAS '''' 2 c111•1 l1U1r, c11.it111i Ulr tH '"''' .'J J' ~ C u1 • ." ...... ·-···-···--· OC ~~ ~~'f11::~.•1•11. ltt. 1117 79 C IDOK FORKEY BUYS , ' I· lb. • OU•CI TUii C . U.S. NO. 1 IUUIT "ll:fT tlT" ._ n t r\'a-.... 1 .... ,.111111t POTATOES W ....._ ... .,, • ._..,., ,,_.1i.111 MIMJ. _,, ..• "" "Ill .... """ , ..... ~" • , ... tf .. .., .... "'"'hi -. fi':"" NICI SlllCTIOW Of SlZIS 11111 hr I"'· W1 11111tt .,.. ( l:'--:1 .-.A 1 0 39 tlttl·.., " ttllM' ... fT • .,... 'ii""'::;' ..o!!lo;;'1 POUND C ltlfH ~· .., • ., ttt ht• -;:C:,• IA& llUTIJ mlf•Af UYllttll ;:.?-(Jlf"-.~ 24x48 AREA RUG Watlttrt ... rll••·rl'IKt tit& nlllrt •11, itmtl wtlr 11111 It c_,.litt. 111k1 ... tlttt b ll tr ltl.,_ .... "'" $197 oua IYllJDAY LOW Pita ' , Shop Any Day ..• Save Every Day ••• With Lucky Low Discount Pricin g Policy. Ll1ltfl1t •ills t'"" '1 fflt 11llU111 11 cnt1tl; 111 •••t hll lfrlll~ llff II I (ll'fl• It Ill .. ,.1 ... Mlrs ,.u ... .Ufl ltt11t ... 11 lllfs. Altt l1•rs ~··" M tt I~ lr11i ••• llllf k nN II llllp l)tlC , ..... ,. 14 OUNCE BOTTLE 1vnn::m:v ntct 8 8 C I • STARS Syinty 01111rt h '" •' tfl• •orli'1 9•11t 11tf'1l~91r1i. Hl1 \tlu11111 h en• 1# tfl1 DAILY PILOTi 911•+ f11hlf1t1 •' U DAILY PILOT . ~ "Mcalllyl ·Billy....i a·fow-1.-dwcrdl" ' Joint Space Lab Crews 'Workable' KONSTANZ, Germany (AP) -U.S. and Soviet medical ex· perts foresee many problems in roaming a space laboratory with astronauts from different nations, bot three Russian cos- monauts have said they would like to Ry in one with Americans and others. -nr.-Charles Berry, director ol medical operations for the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and Prof. Oleg Gaze1ko, director of ~ Soviet Institute of Biom<diC'lJ 'Pl'oblemo-•greed the space laboratory problems could be overcome with proper crew selection. Berry and Gazenko ad- dressed the 21st congress of -the lntemational Astronautical Federation, whose main theme is international ~e coopera. thm, including a Multinati~ spat't laboratory built and manned by men of several na· lions. . . Col. Andrian Nikolayev and flight engineer Vttaly Sevas- tyanov, 'Nho new Soyuz 9 last Jime for a ~ endurance record of nearly 18 days, told a news conference they would like to orbit a s pa ce laboratory with the Americans. "A eeledion process must be develo!>ed to maldl people in ~ coinpatible marmer set they can live and' work together in confinement for periOOs up to two y~.'' B~ ry told the COngres& Gazenko observed: "Results from experimental data seem to be very promising for recruiting international crews to be used in different effnrt..~. One o! them may be an in· ternational space laboratory that will contribute to cooperalinn in s p a c e ex· ploratioo. Berry said that on manned space flights lasting up to 18 days, there has been no persooality conflict or other psydlologi<;al problems. ... "'But we're soon entermg-a period where we'll be· keeping 10. to U-man crews in space for six months to two years," he said, noting that on earth confinement ~ts of up to 60 days tsubjects tiave become irritable, annoyed. disinterested, llllCllfllfortable and frustrated. ''Tbele aame characteristics are Clemonsb-at.ed on long sub.. marine voyages," Berry said. ''Despite all ·these negative feelings, there has been no d.eterioraUon In the efficl«lcy of the men to do their jobs ... He predicted rpultina.tlona1 crews will pose additional pro- blems, includi111 language and different cultural backgrounds. "'Food, for example, could become a major problem," he eaid. "People from different lands Jike different foods. On a space station we cari't. afford the luxury of a 'i'a r g e restaurant witti a varied menu. And it will be im· possible to _erovide off-<l~ty ac-- tivity to satisfy alt rutturil backgrounds. "And..Mt>en-yoo~havt a mix· ture of scientists a n d enginee~ you'll have the pro- blem that the scientists are researdl-oriented and t h e engineers and crew are opera- tion-oriented. With a mnall crew, the scientists might have to help with the opera· ti on." Berry and Gaz.enko said fitrong leadershi p was im- portant. "There must be a 1eadershiP. structure that is .aocepted and understood," the Ru ssian said: 1'There must be someone with the final say." .-'«;!~.~.._·d v·eca,t"'fd ex- tensive psyeh01ogica1 tests in making crew selection. NikOlayev and Sevastyanov appeared at the news con- ference with a thlrd cos· monaut. Dr. Boris Yegorov, who flew on Voshkod 1 in 1964. Asked 1f cosmonauts soon would land on the moon, Sevastyanov replied: "Our next goal is an orbiting spact station. The study of the moon is carried out by automatic devices . We're not In position to say if Russians will go tc· the moon." 'NikOlayev ~aid a flight to Mars ls planned "but it is difficult to say when it will be fulfilled ." The cosmonauts also hinted the Russians are developing a new, larger space booster. They fiaid they would like to eee greater cooperation in &pace research between their natioo. and others. Bate ln~reased ·congress R~cord · Hiked WASHINGTON (UPI) - '!be CorwreMional Record. Con1res1 ' own daily DeWllPIP'r, is raising its price. 1Since 1113, the month 1 y ~on rate tlas been -now is running about 211 pages daily, all solid prinL NO comics, no pictures, no ads, no letters to the edltnr, no bridge column, no advice to the lovelorn. ( • U.S. ·Nut fJontrol ·Panel .Hard at Work Rest easy, ta.Jpayen, YoW' federal Filbert Control Board ia bard at work. In these times of emphasis on law and order, the Ill.Its muSt · be cont?olled. A n d ·fiibetta art nuts. So-you have a Filbert Con· Aiken Surgery BERLIN, .VL (AP).-Sen. George 1> ~!-!Jl;YI.), 11, • has ~'1obat·an aide cleScri!led \)llf realihe' surgery at Central Vermont Hospital. The aide said Aiken was feel- ·~g well after the operation "l'jlf11day aod ~1s expected tn be _ou1,0f tbe-boe:pital in.four day• to· a week. -- T l ' bap of mlled ~ '" WI ~ ~Al,. Ore.: to ~ prices • have a UtUe sturdier f.aite George Eallman, opecit!!y -.iL than aimoncb rr pecans and, crops branch ch'ef 1t tlM Eub:iwn hu a lltUe dlf· ob, I'm a little at a km lot ~partment of Agriculture, ~ flc.'ult1 qp1alnllls exactly what words right now." The prlct of f 11 b' • r 1'1 , a llbst a But he bu oo difficuJty ex· Eastman 11)'1, la about. $6 Will. -.,•re brown and kind plainlnC why there is a de- cenU a pound. ti nund" ho beiinl • • • mand for filberts, and thus a And the boanl, made llf) ol "'Dlefre a l1U1e lllelltler than demand for the Filbert Control growers and proceaon who almandl. 11liey're doler to Board. are reimbursed for ·utemea pecans.. 1* ltfil ·not exa,cily "I like 1e.m penonally." he ·wt ...AO wcrk1 in lib JMlC!'I= l~d lay-filberts 11ys. • _..,. .... N...., ... 1rw• Oct. 4-11, 1t1t ~-- 3'7% ·ro 50% OFF MEN'S SUITS • regularly 95.00-130.00 • 2 and three button single~breasted styles • pure wool or polyester and wool blends · •an enormous color 'and J5attem choice • you'll find short, regular and long sizes Here comes fall. Winter is right on its heels. Are 'you ready? )=--,·--,~.18.-lilarting..jn~,..Jl As an oratorical tom· }indium, now e, ~GfiI--t---You will be if you take advantage of this sale. You'll find lllousandsof exceptionarvalUeSin tflis mammoUlsuffTaTe.~ - We've got grea t-looking suits for business 'or plea~ure. The choice is all your s. Pick from solids, stripes, plaids or checks. -- l J-'" l:J.75. Or you coold contin\le to get "ft: free,• all but about 6,000 of a. Record 's 49,000 constant 'Jnden: do now. That'• mainly bel:m• eedl ieOlttor i I :ailoled lllO free copies daily '..cl eodlJlauoe member 70. ' n.. --wppooed to be a vtltiltlmac<:oonlo!what r-In -and Senate Martha Watch IALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Prooident1al odvlser Robert Flndl 111" Atty. Gen. John M1tcbell'1 outspoken w l f e mfP1 l!IOOO"I \lice l'resident Spiro T. AjJneW on tbe dial of -fUnny ... Idles. "lt'I the Martha Mitchell watch.'' FJnch aaJd ill a talk to a civic aacllence TUesday. "You don't line lo'loerat It. I< mu )'OU tlle·tlmt.• eongress;onat Record I s peerless. Not only does It enshrine what the House and Senate members have Mid on the previous day. lt records what they would have sald it they had thought ot It at the time, since the right to "revise and extend" one's f'f!marks is an honor<d part ol tbe Record tradition. The Recmf also reports tbe outcome of vote• on emendmelt> and bUls and prints embarrassing list& ol lawmakers who aren't present to armrez their names, Ai for oews, however, It doe< Joave ·-lhJng-to be · deatted. Alter the Hou!!e was Rt up Oii March I, 11154, by Puerto Rican fanatics, it was about the workl'a .only daily -llilfnc to noto the tvettt. You can have wool or wool and polyester blends, whichever ypu prefer. Just c0me in, J09k·~hem o~r and take yolir pick. may co men's suits 21 may co south coa st plate, ~an Clie90 fwy at bristol, costa mesa ; 546-9321'; shop monday thru· seturdey..10 •m. h~·9:10 pm ; sund•y noon 'til 5 pm . ·' -- MAVCO 1 • -. ' ,.. •• , ' . • Tllursd1r, Oc.tobtr 8, 1~70 DAILY PILOT %JJ Comµj,un~t-armedForces Fight-1n'Bnrma • RANGOON (UP!) -Qll<r-1 link to COmmunisl guerrillas rtll.i. 'Inned by Communist in oortbeast 1bailand, similar 'China have been fighting lo lhe Ho Chi Minll Trail Qial pitched blttle!J this year with NQrtb Vietnam uses to supply the Banne1e Army in the its forces in South Vietnam via mountliN ,along B u r m a • 1 Laos. northeut froo:Uer. . Units of Bunna's 150,~ Go vernemeot spokesmen man army operate in the dif~ ,.y ~ C'9mmunisls , hf.Ve ftCult mountain country with · been operating in forces of up · supplies drOpped from the air. to-t,100 m<n and described Ille Tiley --jhal the guer· I 1 i \_ Big P11t Down A hard hat sympathizer gets-the-upper -hand and pins down a yippie during a confrontation at the Washington Monument Grounds recent1y at the· Rev. ~fclntire's March for Victory rally. ... -Adolf Hitler Aide Prison Life Told BERLIN (AP) -Rudolf Hess, once Adolph Hitle r's cieputy fcuhrer, begins his I fifth year in a priva te prison this week as a sick old ma11 i 1Yho whiles away the hours·us· ing shadows to 'measure t.tte heights cf trees. i·Hess, has been brighte r and in better spirits in · recent weeks,·~ informants s a y . althoUgh they conei!de his over·all c onditi o n has deteriorated during the last year. Hess now is 76 and the only Inmate of Spandau prisan, built for 660 inmates. He entered a Brisith military hospital for trea tment or a perforated ul cer last November-the first time he has left confinement since he parachuted on a self.styled peace mission inlo Brit3in in 1941 and was captured. The Nuernberg war. tribunal fou11d him guilty in 1946 of plotting and w a g i n g ag· gressive war and sentenced him to life imprisonment. The cnly other prisoners at Span· dau-Albert Speer, the Third Reich's W a r Productions minister. and ·Hitler Youth leader Baldur von Schirach· were discharged on Sept. 30, 1966, after serv ing 20 years. During his hospitalization, at Christmas, Hess saw his wife and son for the first lime since he was imprisoned. Before that he had refused, saying he wu not a criminal and would not be seen in prison. ~e he retumed to prison ln March, he consented for them and his sister ta continue --ll'lon~ .. vilita-of.half an-hour~ each. Otherwise, life now is about the same as before he -entered the hospital., .He 's!~ and wait~. And measures the trees in Spandau p r i s o 11 garde11. "He does this [Q while -away the time," a source._said. "After he has fixed the length of a tree satisfactorily in hiS mi nd, he asks the guards ta guess :how high it is. He ·likes · it when they guess wrong." Hess walks in the garden behind the 19th century red brick prison in the West "Berlin district cf Spandau twiei! daily. He much prefers his strolls during wann seaso1s. ' "Hess hates ·the cold,'' a visitor saic!. "He was bom in Egypt. you know ,. and I heard him say. 'Damn ·this German · we ath er.' " Has his illness altered Hess' prospects for l'tle_ase? "There is no change at the moment." said a British spokesman. "There is no prospect or an immediate cha11ge. Th e British government continues to believe that the right change would be ta have Hw released." Britain's Parliament soaghl to obtain Hess' reJease during his hospitalization but failed, Sources say the U.S. govern· ment supported the appea1. He is la the custody or the United States, Britain, France a.t the Soviet Union. and the first three blame the Soviet govern- ment for blockiji his release. Cadet wts -- Top Honors ANIMAlogic ~......, C.del James T. l'llmu, r.,ll,::-"6f>---::,.,.,. ,,-=..-"=>'..,..__, son of Mrs. Chariotte E. Ptlt- nam or 11909 N.E. Thompson, PorUand, Ore.., is among the &21 cadet.s who have entered their junior year at the U.S. Air Force Academy. Cadet Putnam will serve during. the fall term as a SQUadron materiel serge.ant with the rank of cadet master 1ergeant. He wat selected betause of his demonstrated leadership abilities and ef· fuetiveness ratin&S. 1 His rather, James C. Put· riam, resides at 2S91t Avenida Ma·rlpo s a, Shn Juan Capistrano. ptiftc 'aa-the-heavlelt-in rUlaL.oCten,...escape ..... by us.in& Burma. since Wofld War 11, China as a sanctuary. 11'.h<o Amerfc!'Jl and Chinese . nie ~bi&ges\ single bJltle troops , batued· the Japanese repo!'tM by the aovernment .fQr"control al dtitt like Milftl. 't~ct July 20· at Kutkai da!IJ. Town, jlpl nol'lh•ol Lasbio, lhe At stake Is a .Uitegic neck? jwbping cl.f place of t:he World ot--Bufma•s hill cotmtey tbat-r W.ar-11 Burma Road. muld provide Red China Will> • Units ol Burma's lllell> Llghl 2666 HARBOR BLVD. 546·7080 ·.COSTA MESA WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY ~ SUNDAY 9 to 6 ,· BRASS WOOD·BASKD c:). Pretty 1"01t1Jh to hold flowers fot 1 c1"t1rpi1c•. U Tl1111 w1r1 6.11 1..0 ' well worlti tfi1t. , .O H•1 little f11t, wi1h I did, 300 Ju1t-edd w1t1r incl mi• up •·"itch, u11 it to fi• ffiet hole i" th• petio or ..... lk. D I lhink my wife u11d thi1 for thot• muffin, 1111 11i9ht, 0 I to111d 1om1 out lo the "ircl1 ind 901 hol11 in my owit petio. 69' ' ·~ ...... ..,._ 0 Cl11n1 til11, hri<.•1, c1m1nt p•fio1 111d driv1w•y1 lilt-1 "''"" 0 Wi.11 ,.,1 your hide if yov don't follow 7.7' 9r. SAY·A·BRUSH 0 0011 just whet it 11 y1. HM b1111 buyi119 El Ch11po throw•w•y "ru1h11 tiU I found thi1, At~thi1-pri'*-i1o11t thinli-- of •II iii. old bru1h11 you Cll! 1e~1. IOX ROLL CORK 0 Cork rollt in1u l1te, d1cor•l1 1/td toulldprool 1ny room, a .. IUtl .. ,,, c:•r•t4 yow1111f · befote Yff i111teU it, it'• 111J1r. 0 Sold lty th1 foet. V.." thick. l ft, width, 99cLIN. • lnl111lry Rq(ment corntted ell, wbicb rules the counlry, ' . -500 guerrillas' 1t t.o1 Mun has no pW. for seekln& ITIOUDlAln ln 1 'tbe K'ul\-ai out:sidt a.Wst.ance:. Ol.strlet . Government ~ces Act_ually, the govnment. l! uld 360 ol lbe commaaiSls more oplimistlc aboul tl!e ln- were kl~. ~ government surgency problem than has lldmltted losa of 183 merl -killed been true.In several yeafs. ahd 205_.othen wounded, along ' lt believes that .anny action with U mi8sing. ·• and the internal squabbling ~er club. near-Kutkai In among Burma's Conµnunlsts late Au.gust brought govern... have rid lower Burma of the ~ ll'Oop8-ln-contac~wjth a ..-,uerrilla thrtat. Many former~ O>mrnurllst force estimated at ly dangerous districts now l,lllO men. The, guerrillas have been declared secure. managed to relreat with light Few in Rai,goon believe that clSUa1Uet, but ab an 4 o.n ~ d the Burmese population •.• larg~ atockt of arms and com-• would~ weqroe any "foreJgn murucaliom equipment. troops. Whatever p o 11 t l c • I To dalt, Gen;--Ne-Win1s issues" divide them, t be Burmese: Revolutionary Coun-Buimese are firecely Uonalistlc. populauOo In Burma In • lllfl. 1be erperienccs or Kore.a, Nearty·2(1(1 Chinese were k1Dtd \!.ietnam and the Middle Eaat and millions ol. dolla_rs · wcdh make many Bunneae shudder of Chinese property de1troyal at the thought or the ir country by fire. '" becoming a p r o x y bal· Both countries witliCliinr tleground in the cold war, their ambass.:ldors at thll 11lt qu_t11Uon is whethet the time, and left their embasUel government can deal with the 1n charge oC juniiJr of~ls. 1 As a former Burme1e insurgency on Its own foreign minister remarked: resources, or t h r o u g b diplomacy In Peking. "Burma's fatei~ oil c:y_ consists chiefly Oftlii fact ttli.( The Chinese threat Is bit-she bas a border with Chioit terly resented1 but the rear of aoo miles long." turning the country . i n t o F====;.==--o; another Vietnam precludes any call for foreign troops. Rangoon's rtlations with Peking. have been dormant since riots 1gainst the Chinese Make• Sharp Trade; Use Dime-A-Lines ,~KERM'S KLOSEOUT · The new order is on its way so we cut the · price and J move out our floor stock. (Sounds crazy, but that's show biz.) FIRE SETS 0 Som• poli1h.d br•n , 1om• •ntiqu• "•et•, 1orn• ju1t pl1in old. 0 s.t includ11 1t•nd, "•u•~. 1ho~.1 •nd pok er, 1110\.t1d 1lyl11. 0 Com1 11rly, th11e frolfy •~•nin91 1r1 toohi1 to11tin9 tim1. 00 EA. .Uvwtll..::1 1P1Cilb •r• t"!6 tn~u October U. 1t1D. Then W• teer elf 111 lht u lt l19i. 0 Model 62·42 , w11 5'·''· Two only, "u' <fou 'U 1"ly 111•d O"•· . 0 l11clucl11 1cr••" ertd four pi•t.• tOol 11t lo m•tch . I no pun intended I 0 Th.11 d1lu11 111od•l1 f111lt-1 • b1•utilUI fr11111 for 111y fir1, 3000 PROPANE TANKS Just th e thint fo r prop1n• 1tov11 ind l1nt1rn1, or for u11 •• • torch. Me1h •II ICC 1p1cifi<.1tion1. lin'I th•I julf 9r11I. 88' DIMMER SWITCH Simply di1I your lithlin9 to fit your mood. f ih in 1•1ily wh1r1 the old 1witt.h c1rn1 out, Full 600 wi th, 110 mor• (.li<.k click. 2'' TOILET SEAT HINGE 0 If th1 old 111t i1 1till good "ul hes th• wobbl11 thi1 pl11tic hi119• will fix it ri9ht, Q.~• of our• W •tilte 1 roclt1r 1ffi we 9ot 0111. While pl•1lic, i111!1llt ;,. 11conch. 4 PAK CORK 0 S1rn1 d•rk tich celor, com1t in • feur pick for tm•ll•r 1t111. 0 C1n lt1 u1M f1( • mo11ic: •ff•ct. Don't for91t to 9et corlt1d yourt1lf t••• 0 The r1111il1r pric1 w•1 29 .ll, now fire 1111 · pric .d 10111 i nly! 0 WOl1f1lt bur•ed hi1 r•cint form tp1ci1Uy fH thi1 •• 1 •• 0 Set includ11 1cr11n, four piece t1ol 11t •nd en• burn ed r•cin9 form 1t n• ••tr• cher91, 1500· POL YETHELENE. SHEETING 100 u111 for thit 1lront re1ili111t m1t1rl1I. 4 fl, wide, SO ft, 1111,. 0 U1e und•r brick .... 1., t1 1top w111h. M1•1 • moi1hrr1 berrier un•er concr1h. PAINT THINNER ... ,. ..... "f.'M1I 'In Your Met•I Cont1in1r l ri119 your own m•t•I cont1irt1r, we fill it ri9ht from the PU"'P• Sorry no fth1I. 0 K111w • 9irl by th1t n1m1 •rte .. 1h1 worked et • 911 1t•ti1n, very confu1i119. 0 Wor•1 11 toocl •• th• hithlf' priced 1tuff. 21C GAL 3 PC. POLISHED aus• FIRESn 0 011/y"ttlree 1f th1;1 111 1t1t•, fr11 1i111din9 ,.,14, n• init1ll1ti••· J111t • t•nfle pu1h. O Set iKllHl11 ltr1t1 tcr11n •n• twe h1rttlri9 10011, '° • ., •Ml brv1h. lleck dr..,,., (.M tf1i,., 0 St~rdy 1nou9h for S111t1 t1 er•""' tlirou9h. SANTAJlt Not yet, "ut toe"- REG. _24 •• 8 :1200 • --J I l I fl DAILY '1LOJ TlwrtdlJ. O<tobtt 8, 1970 ,, ! -• Big Eight uiµoads ()n • I( ans as, l(ansas State • KANSAS CITY (AP) -The Big Eight ment'' In view of remedlal acUon taken Conference placed Kansas State Unlver· earlier by the school. sity'S football progr8m· am -au 1ports--ln-addlttoo~to-pladog: KU programs . on pfObaUon, the faculty representa· programs at the 'University of Kans85 tives ordered that aulstant coach Dick on probation Wed.ntsdaJ. Tomey be denied pattlcipaUon in the The K.State football . team also is school's recruiting progr:am unUl May prohibited from· appearing U:1 postsea-31, tm and reprimanded John Novotny, son games or on television programs assistant director Gf athletics. Tlie Kansas probaUon st<mmed from controlled by the l"fational Collegiate the use of fraudulant high school ranks AOtletic ~laUon. • to qualify two athletes, CUrtls Tbomp- K.Stai.'s probation apd \IJe add!U<>nal son Jr., and Michael Nathan Bossard, ~-emndJ'tl>ro!llb ~ ll!Lfoot._'..i!l!ILJc!io!•nbJps and aui>oeguenUy to baU sluoa. X ·®ea ~-~ .. llii Wild-· allow tbem to ~actlce with freshman ~ill olll!thlllty for '\be coolerence fool-tmm Ill!!, In the cue of Bossard to baU cbamplo~. • -• • • · 'play In ln!IJilpau baskethall games. I ~ Kansas' probation q (or two' yem. • , 111.e confertnce ordered all games in which Bossard played to be forfeited. -Tllompaon, .a_ foothall player., <!ld not compete in freshman games because of a knee Injury. • Thompson and Bossard both attended McKinley High School in Washington, D.C. Neither iJ now enrolled at Kansas. Duke said Tomey participated in the development of the fraudulent rank for Thompson. Novotny was academic counselor at the time of ~e vlolationll and bad in· formation "that should have placed him on noUCe that-fraudiilent r anb wer e being provided the university." The Kansas probaUon ends Oct. 7, 1972. COmmJssioner . W~ Duke said the action wu taken by faculty representa· lives, 'the ccinference'a. legislatlve body. Coach Vince Gib~· of Kansas State was reprimanded for 'failwe to admin· ister,'c supervlse and apply the rules of Cincinnati Builds the Big Eight Coftferencelild Ute NCAA- in the coodUct d Ute spOrt of football • ' ' •"'lo•', ' I , ~;; ,. Duke said the 'a~lon against K.State ii , I. .resulted ~ yiolations .in four care. _,. n...,. · gorles, financial aid, unethlcaJ conduct, scholastic eligibility, and reeruitlog prac· tices." Duke said a former auistant foot· ball coach at Kansas State, Dick Stein· berg, arranged for cost-free transporta· lion and e.icesslve entertainment f o r prospective athletes in violation of con- ference rules. \ Baseball D,ynasty CINCINNA'I'J (AP) -Are the Cin· cinnati Reds ij.e nut dynasty of major league basebaµ? Bob Howsaip avoids using the word dynasty. The Reds' general manager, however, does talk like that coUld be the situation. He's nearing his goal with a beefed-up scouting sWf -from seven to 17 now - and young playing talent tortured by pa- tient Reds: Manager Sparky Andenon. Anderson's stopping Pittsburgh in the playoffs with kids like Gullett and Wilcox prompted Pirates Manager D an n y l<1urtag'h to say : , "My confidence in kids goes so far. tbat that guy (Anderson) ill a mad man ." ~. Steinberg was fired in January after an inves tigation was opened into the alleged violation.. and is now an assist- ant coach at Southern Mississippi. Jn his thre(, years since he came here from St. Louisj Howsam has put ~ogether the youngest t@am in the NationaJ League -and the ~t. The Reds are using seven No! 1 or No. 2 draft chOices .. Left fielder Bernie Carbo and pitcher Mel Behney, Gullett and Nolan were top picks and the Reds: ta~ peel catcher John Bench, infielder Danell Chaney and Wilcox as second-round l!elections ·since·the draft started· in 1966. DAIL y PILOT ""°'" e1 l'•lrldl O'Donnell SAN DIEGO'S JOE BEAUCHAMP LOWERS THE BOOM ON RAM WENDEL L TUCK ER (14) . . . Officials at K-State said they w e r e disappointed in the severity of the ac· tion. Athletic Council Chairman C. Oyde Jol}e$ .s~4. it wal hoped the conference would have taken "more lenient treat· Of the 25 WQrld Series eligibles against the Baltimore Orioles, only four Reds are 30 or older.~ oldest regulars, both only 28, are right fiflder-Pete Rose and second baseman Torqfny Helms. r· Tile pltchert· are~ so· young it must- cause rival Jflanagers many sleepless nlght .. Anderson has a. ready answer for why he trusts the youngster in critical situa· tions. in. Brief Don Gullett is just 19, Milt Wilcox 20, Clpening Wor14_:Ser1es starter Gary Nolan 22, Wayne Granger and Jim Merritt 26 .. d Ji!!l Mcl!lf>!!i!ip 27. Tony Clonlijger, at 30, is the only pitcher of the 10-man mowtd staff past his 20s. - "I've always been with kids. I un- derstand them: I've been in their corner since spring training. That's the thing with these kids. They know you have failh in them." His move to keep Gullett over the veteran Alvin Jackson in spring training typifies Anderson's thinking. "· r:· ·By Nf w Umpires'. Pact When Howsam came here, be said: "I want people to say, j'There are three kinds Qf_ b,~~ Players -good bal!eball playen, major league baseball player!! and Cincinnati baseball players.• "We had to have a left-hander. Ever)" club knew it and couldn't give us anything in a trade. I took the kid. Jackson's talent was gone and 1 don't mean that as a slam," •parky said. " .. " ~; NEW YORK -Play ball. Two litUe complete the .1970 Wichita State foot. ~·1r0rds sum up a Jong day of hard-nosed ball season, ,!lll•verslty officials ll aid "I want p ~op I e to say, 'That's something speclaL That is the best' ·~ ·ibargaining Wednesday that gave major \Vednesday. Will Win In Five -reague umpires a new, four-year con-Campus authorities are considering tract and paved tbe way for a trouble-fielding a team of reserves and fresh- free World Series. men to play out the remaining six games Ex-Oriole, Cincy , Ace Picks Birds in Series "I'm glad we can get back to bats following death or lS varsity player!! ·and balls now," l!ald smiling Joe Cron-.in a plane era.sh last Friday. in, the American Leag~e prestl~nt, af~er This Saturday's game with Southern the settlement providing umptres with Illinois ,has been cancelled. The ll ix $4,000 per man, for play~U v.:ork. ~d ~pm.ell, .'&tarting Oct. 17, are with Cin· ~ $7,500 for the mies the ftrst two years*' clnnati. Arkansas, Tulsa. Memphis State, and '4,000 and $8,000 the last two. North Texas State and Louisville. Baseball management also threw in • $500 raise to $1 ,000 for v."Orking an All-Star game and some improvements In medical care. The contract is retro- active to the 1970 seal!On and covers 1973. • WICHITA, Kara . -There will be no decision witil next week whether to Finn Deni es He Accepted IDegal $$$ STOCKHOLM (AP) -Pauli Nevala, tile 1964 Olympic champion in the javelin throw, was quoted \Vednesday by a Swedish newspaper as saying he had ac- cepted performance money. Nevala promptly denied in a statement that he had granted the paper an in- terview and that be had defied Avery Brundage, president of the lnternationaJ Olympic Committee, to dl!qua!Hy him. Nevala's statement wall distributed by the Finnish National News Agency after the story appeared in the Swedish newspaper, Stockholm's evening Aftonbl adet. Nevala denied he ever granted the Aftonbladet an interview. and that he ~Dever-mentioned .Brundage by name in ·any interview. . The Aftonbladet quoted Nevala as iayin.g he could produce figures on what rnany other international track and field stars were earning and that if Brundage tried to !!lop ii "it would clOllt down the whole Olympic business." In Paris, Brundage said he wou1d be .,quite happy·• if Nevala would make public the names or tho9e Sla!S receiving lea'tt payments "so we can drive out the cheaters. I' . Brundage made it clear he had not seen ,any auch reports about Nevala and was qnly answering questions put to him about the r<pcrts. The Swedish paper claimed Nevala 1d- nUtted he rcctlved al least $160 for each event in wbich ht eompleled this season. In his statement Of dtnlal Nevala said ''I ought lo gel $160 per event to cover tr•inlng and trawlng coot&. I did not say that l received or havt received $160. * Nevala has thrown the Javelin 303 feet 'rt inch, the belt throw in the world so far th~ year. • LOS ANGELES -Stanford University may have one of the nation's best passers in Jim Plunkett but Southern California coach John McKay said \Vednesday he aJso fears the Indians' running attack. • Following an hour and 4~minute work- out, McKay said: "'The ·two Stanford runners are out· star1ding. They 're very fast and very strong -and they're also good pass re- ceivers." qe referred to fullback Hillary Shockley and Jialfback Jackie Brown. McKay ran his men through pass de- fense drills and defensive drills designed to stop the opposition at the goal line. • STANFORD -The Stanford Jndians· football squad worked out Wednesday for 90 minutes, concentrating on offen- sive plans for th eir sellout game here with USC Saturday. The Indians ran through passing drills. goal line offeme and running plays as well as a brier scrimmage. Three regulars listed as doubtful for ttfe 1lpcoming game -lineba ckers Ron .Kadziel and Mike Simone and defemive back Mike Ewing -all worked out and coach John Ralston says all three will "most likely" be ready for the game. ••• TUCKER, STILL DAZED, )S HEL PED F ROM THE F IELD. BALTIMORE (AP) -Milt Pappas, who bu pitched for both teams, picks the Baltimore Orioles over Ole Cincinnati Reds in the World Series opening Satur- day in Cincinnati. • "I pick the Oriole!! in five games," was the surprls.ing p~tion today from Pap. pas, the only Na al League pitcher to hurl a shutout ove the powerful Reds this seaSon. "The Orioles and Reds have the same kind of teams -good power, great defense and speed,'' Pappas said. "If the Orioles have an edge going into the Series, it's with their starting pitchers. "It's true what everybody says about Cin.cinnati's hitting, but I l hi n k the Ba1Umore pitchers have a better shot against the Reds than Cincinnati pitchers do against the Oriole!!." Right-handed Jim Palmer, a 20.game winner during the regular season, will start for BalUmore in the first game, followed by left-handers Mike Cuellar arid Lo'7e of Conta~t Makes Him Dave McNally, both 24-game winners. "After the Reds use Gary Nolan ," l!aid Pappas, who started the season with Atlanta and finished with the Chicago Cubs, "I think they'll have to start golng to their bullpen. "II you get good pitching against Cin- cinnati, you can win your share, and I believe the Orioles can get it." Pappas, who pitched just 11 innings in the minors before joining Baltimore as an HI-year-old in 1957, won 110 games with the Orioles before being tr8ded to the Reds after the 1965 season in the deal which sent outfielder Frank Robinson to Baltimore. 'Vhen he visited the Orioles at practice Wednesday, Pappas was asked if he were looking for a World Series salary share. "ftfake it retroactive," he cracked, 1'and I'll lake it.'' He referred to the three World Series the Orioles have made since he le fl Ba11imore. Palmer, who pitched the final game or Baltimore's three-game A m e r I c a n League playoff sweep over Minnesota ?tfonday, got the starting job fron1 LOS ANGELES _ Brad Lyman . manager Earl Weaver in game No. t UCLA's No. l nanker back at the be· Wild Bear l s Fou r•d W here Act:or• l s ~ •• ,. of CincinnaU's predominantly • girming of the season, returned to the " "' " right-handed hitting power. _p_rac!l~ ~Jor the !irst JiJ!!e in three . That means Cuellar will have seven ~ee~ Wedn~saay ~Ul foun<f fi"il"ilhirO--:-CHICACO TAP -As -~M"-1TI~1Tle Oitl't!?"BelirS', ., aaJRanyn>~"NOM"Uf --it-seemrthat-Buttus-tmrbmrd~o1n~~day.s..r.est._b.)<_1he....time lle..1tar~nd8y - in line for his old Job. linebacker of the Chicago Bears, Dick the Lions are afraid of Butkus, that's for nothing but playing the game. g and 1'.icNally eight by next Tuesday. To Lyman, the 9.6 sprinter. wall injured Butkus goes where lhe action is. sure." The 27-year-old native Chicagoan rlrst get _some needed work, they'll be used In in the season's first game, a 14-9· vie-And when llie Bears are on na.lional Butkus plays with such a savagery and started making headlines at Chicago an 1ntrasquad no-run, no-slide game to- tory over Oregon State. He was replaced lelevision as was the case in Mon'day dedicalion that he see.ms to want to ifl. VocationaJ High School playing fullback da~ "'hich resembles a football dwnmy by Reggie Echols and then by Terry nighrs 28-14 loss to Detroit. the cameras timidate the opposition. or center on offense and linebacker on strunmage. Vernoy and when Lyman was pronounc-had a habit of folloWing Butkus. "If I can intimidate anyone, I will,'' defeMe and wu selected to the all-state .A judge will decide whether each ball ed (it for service again, both ol his re-One camera shot showed Butkus a~ says .Qutku.s. "It's all part oJ. the game." team. · Jut by a batter is either an out or 8 safe- placements were holding down t~ post pa.rently dealing Detroit back Altie Tay-I Butk\13 p1ayed his college football at ty. If ruled a hit, the batter will walk to ably. 1or a karate chop, A rerun in slow the University of Illinois where ~he ~ase -avoiding ne8!!r all chance of in- Vemoy, the top man at right halfback 8ee.med to prove ii. JC Pl n· became an AU-American in 1963 and 1964. Jury. - now, ha.I caught 13 passes for 232 yards But ii wasn·t so. All Butkus \vas trying 8 yer Jes ~ Iii the 1965 NaUonal Football League '11'hat "iounds prettf good •1 said in four games. Echols, another track to do was , jerk the ball out of Taylor"s draft, the Bears had two first-round catcher Ellie Hendr icks. "J ~ouldn't speedster, has caught six aerials for hands. BOISE, Idaho -A football player choices and used them well. They mind playing that way all the time." 131 yards. Lyman, whose injured knee "I tried to rip the ball out of their from Shasta Junior College in Califor· selected Butkus and running back Gale The f has responded well to tttatment.. will be hands a couple of times," said Butkus nia died Wednesday from bead injuries Sayers of Kansas. our-Oay laYQff after winning the available for duty Saturday when UCLA "and the fw thought t was doing suffered la.st Saturday in a game at N llhe ro l Um . ..__ pemant by scoring 27 runs to 36 hlU hosts Oregon in a Paclllc-3 rontest. something else. People get a little ex:-Ontario. Ore. against Trea.M'e Valley e r s any e m uo;\.Vllllng comes at an inopportune lime for the cited." Co auperstars on the pro scene. Ortoles. mmunlty College. Butkus has played fn the Pro Bowl five "It may not hurt \lll," Robi*'""'n sat• • L~ ANGELES -Two ranking we\· terwtights. J1edgemon Lewi!! of Los Angeles and Raul Soriano of Afexlcall tangle in the 10.round main event ai the Olympic AuditOrium tonight, t h e winner hoping for an eventu.al crack at dwnpion J.,. Napoles. Taylor agreed. •·1 never felt a thing'' Dennis fo,1arr, 19. or Central Valley. Umel! and has been named All-NFL • b '""' 0• he said. "BUt I heard the boos. t know he CalU .. In Shasta County, died at Boise's linebacker four tilnes.. , ut it can't help Ull. The pracllce game was just i;oing after the rootball. 1 fumbl-St. Alphonsus Hoapilal without regain-The secrtt of his success Is the love of m,ieht help a little, but It's ju.st nol like td three limcii the last time I played ing consckNsnesa. contact and condiUonl••. He h•· •pent game conditions .. , • soaalnst 1•-•·ars and he wa bb" • •• 1 . .., ... The Ortoles, who leave for Cincinnati "'"'& •n: ~ s gra 1n "'a.rr, j ineback~r. was injurl'd in thousands of dollars on 1H1Uipmenl to set for lhe ball. th th'·d art I"· h .d . .... Friday morning, have not Jost since Sept. "B tk . ood I e u qu er. la.> cooc sa1 c:1rcum-J.l.P a gymnasium In his Chicago Heights 19. They won their fina1 tl games of the u us is a i ootbaU ~r hut stances o1 tbe ·inJ\ifY could not be de-horue io keep In top condlto·on all year he's no rougher or t'\ughe thaJ\ any r tcrml ed \ regular season and then added three I I -; ' 0 n • ' Joni. more In the playoffs. ) \ ' ............. _____ .. -- Viking Leads Stats Marina ltigh's Joe Ventimig- lia continues to lead the Or- ange Coast. area in rootbaU rushing stats by a wide mal- gin as the Viking runner has averaged 10.8 yards per carry. TOP II •usHINO , .. ,. !di .......... . 1. v.,.11rn\1ll•, MM'ln1 JI til 10.1 7. Wli.e. Hutolll'IC!lan Beam "' n• t.t J. Sdl<.on:, E111nci. 57 m s.a I. H_rf, M.11111" Otl • 26( 5.7 l. C.,.,.."'°' San Clemefltt '' 2CI U '· c1n, un1v.n11v l5 201 J.7 1. e111er11ne. N.-t «1 1'0 •.7 I. Ofle. Unh..,flllY d IA ol.3 t, ROI', M.ll1r ~I ...i 1• '-7 10. HlnoloH, EdllOI> 3' 111 '-1 TOI' i f'ASSLNO . 1. Tl'IDllW'S. E111ncl1 2. :.mw1:1.. CclM 1 Hllll>jon, EdlMl!I •. Monihln. M1rln1 L Sle!!Mns, WetlmlMter ... llC ..... Mt 3610420.SSS st l• 401 ,//lil 32 u l20 ·"' ,, 11 711 .Jtl ~3 20 JIZ .)17 SCORING 1. H1119rrt (Mat..-Otl) 31, 2. (Ill fVnlw1r1ltf'l :ti, l. w1 .. iHunllntton Be.dll 30. •. Hlnolow (Edlt<lnl Ind V"flllrnl1ll• (M.1rlo11 1• ffdl, I. l'i'ltd1rldorf ce111ncl1) n, 1. Wlnkla !Wnlm!n11 ... 1 20, I . Sdu.ilh tnd KtlH!' IE1ttnc:J1>. kll~ler tCOM ) 11 KEY FUMBLE -Mater Dei High's Cbris'Mumford (right), Mike Coury (center) and Mark Stanbra (33) , close in on a Lakewood futnble killing' a drive to the Monarchs' 13--yard line in Thqrsday night's 14-13 conquest of Lakewood. Mumford recove~ the baU --.pie fourth Monarch recovery of the second period. Tonight the Monarchs duel Long Beach Wilson at Santa Ana Bowl. "'"· Vrnllmftlll Metrln · Mon1h1~ Hlr1t1 MARINA U·U •111.i.11111 1'11111111 ltl "'' •••••• J8 •ll 10.I ,. 39 uo l.1 0 31 131 J.• ' l•?.00 ,. pc ,; ,~, '"' M°"'ll1n ?1 16 o 711 .S9J O!MI' M:~'~:11SE'i rn:-.. Rullll1111 ,..,.11111 ltl "'' •• , 111 46 ™ 5.1 ,)I 4ol UI •.2 II )11U •.J11 1• ,. •.1 a I 0 0.0 0 l·li .... JO 11 pc II '~' pc!. •1 u l 102 .366 1000.coo MISSION 'l'tEJO {Wl ,_ Holm•" M•-D1vl1 Allum1!11 •ll'llllltf l'tllfllf "'' '"'' ... '" :JO uo •.• 0 " 16' ),\ 0 JUJ.90 1263.10 1 1 1,0 0 01vl1 JI 11 1 32 .ls.<l Outlcll 10 s 0 "3 .soo Olhel' 1corl~g: •-6, Br1nMn ?. Hl!Wl'ORT HARIOR U.0\ e11!•rll1111 s •• ,. ....., While ~lm"'11 01111 Rut.hint 1'1uln1 !di "'' ••• •11 ,j(IJ!'0•.10 211»•-•o 1]615.1 6 :JD 61> l.2 13 1251•.?0 ll ~I l.O 0 317.60 I A •.O 0 •• J< 11 '" pc!. W"llt 46 16 l II• .)II Olhrr S(Orlnt: Sch1-'!e• 6\ Swick 6. SAN CLl!MENTI! t ·II Rw5hl1>11 ldt lfl'I I VI 1lt U 20I A.I 0 1• •1 1.l " l?Sl.6 ~U J.00 111.0• l"-1.00 ' • '0 0 ? ·1 ·l.S 0 PfH"':I IC 11 "'" ,.ct. Gibson Al 20 J 211 .AP Otl'lef ~totlna : AU1vl1 6, ~' 4. Teem I, A8f.~'r'11.~lf.Y U·H 'l'i.'11 nl C11t ·~ HlrM• W1!kr<' l!olftMll ""-•= (ft1mplln ii~ BMorft Orl1noes kll 11¥1 I Vtl lh l5 101 $,I l'1 'l UI •.l I 1• 107 $.l • :!O .. •.2 • $ l' •.• 0 I 11 12.0 0 7115.SO \1~lii 2$2.$0 l _. ·l.O a P'llUlnl ,. pc 11 Jell pcf, Wilker 21 11 1 160 .51• Call 1 O 0 0 .000 Other ~cti•lr:ii: R:111a11 •· P1nrrw. •· Jerman ~l!G5~,._:iNSTIER ( .. n k\tshlnsr tell "'' I VI ph l'9 141 •.I XI ?• 72 3.0 ' 10 l'9 '·' 0 1• lJ l,I ? lf 't60 6 • 1.l 0 1 • A.0 o \ .j ·~:J ,l 2' • 0 ll .lll "'11111",1 pt 11 rth pct. $ll!IMlll :u '° , 112 .J11 YOl.lna 26 I 0 IJ .Jll Otlllr •torlno: Aldridoe ?. FOUNTAIN VALLEY 11·1) Rlllhilll !t ll ftJI 1¥1 Ill 10 IOI J.• I ?• 104 •• J 6 12'17.60 11 ro J.2 17 '~tt11: ~ 17 ?.• 0 I I 1.0 I l A A.0 0 J00.00 l1Hl~1 pc pl ¥ell jKI. 5hll>e'• ,.. " I 1» .u• Po,.er 1 • '1 .SIJ HUNTINGTON 8EACH 11·1! •11shl1111 tcll "'' IVI Pl• 46 316 6.t 30 1974J.t0 u10•.•0 1 5 2.5 0 • 1 1.9 0 I -SI ·l.l 0 "'nlnt Cincy Manager Got Start As Sanu;i .Barbara Player George "Sparky" Anderson, manager of the: Nation al League championship Cincinnati Reds, who tangle with Baltimore in lt>e'World Series Saturday, isn't new to victory ill baseba ll. Sparky spent only one full seuoh In the ma~. jor leagues as a player. In 195t' he 'Was the regular serond baseman for the P.hlladelphla Phillies. But hls career prior to professional baseball that began in Sa11la Barbara in 1953, was outstanding. He evidenccd'the leadership ability that has made him a success as the youngest manager HOWARD HANDY in the majors this season when he was playing for the Crenshaw-American Legion Junior baseball team. Sparky was the shortstop oR· a team that also included Billy Conoolo, Frank Layana and Bill Lachemann a1ong with ex-umpire Carl Maggio. C-Onsolo was the third baseman for that team and the leading hitter. He played with the Boston Red Sox for many years. going directly to the .majors. Anderson played shortstop and was ' the leadoff hitter. Coach of the team was Benny Lefebvre a11d his young son Jim was a tot in armll. Jim is now an infielder with the Los Angeles Dodgers. In 1951 when the Crenshaw team was com· bined from Dorsey and Loyola High Schools, they had a tough battle with another Southland squad for the Fourth Area cham· pionship. Compton wo11. th~ first game oI a . three game series but Creashaw came back with a 12-10 victory in the second game and the Compton team waa ()lit of' pitching and loat the finale., Playing for Compton that year were Utrec players Who went on to professional ball - George -Morris, Jack Whitehead and Solon Shaw. None oI tlK. three gained major league status. The left fielder for Compton was George Selleck, renoweed-as a cage star at Compton High and later at Stanford University. ln right field was a University of Washington tootbaU player, Whitey Core. Getting back to Anderson . He was the sparkplug of the Crenshaw oul· fit that went on to wiJll the National American Legio11 Junior championship that year, His theory on managing? "There are some peoele who would rather follow," he says. "But me, I'd r8ther lead. ••there isn't any short cut to success, it just lakes plenty of hard work." IL was during ... bis high school days that Sparky beca:me closely associated with Tom See berg, director· of publicity for the Reds. Seeberg is the ex·Oodger assistant who took over in Cincinilati two years ago and has seen the Reds move steadily up the ladder to the National League Championship along with staging the All-Star game in a new stadium- all ih one season. Tom and Sparky were high school classmates at Dorsey High. Perhaps it was this high school association that prompted the Cincinnati executives to bring Sparky to the Reds organization as mariager this season . He was a coach -fOr•Preston·Gomez Jn San Diego a year ago ud was ill the employ of the' ·California Angels for 24 hours before being signed by the Reds as manager. He was signed as a coach for the Angels tm winter. George "Sparky" Andenon didn't spend too much Lime in the major leagues as a player. His tenure as a manager·should be long-li v- ed if his first-year success is any indicaLion. Tritons to Te~t Orange Cutting Mistakes Key to SC By PHIL ROSS 170-pounder. 01 111• Dlltr ,. ... , Sl1ff INSE•T ,. pt ,1 rd• pd. If the San Clemente Tritons WI 6127.166 personnel In order to find the right combination ,a g a i n s t coach Vince Deveney 's Panthers. The fina l adjustment in San Clemente's new alignment is the shifting of 170.lb. tailbac~ Tom Morris to slotback. '' u.ouNA •1AcH to-n can cut down on the massive 1tin.llln1 Wle11>0WJ~l Ollmtr AndrtW\ l(eg11eo" sweener Fllotlll 1c11 nv1 ''" 111 amount of turnovers they've 31 111 3.) 12 ul the I JI 11• l.1 o been accum ating on oot- 10 ,, ,.1 o I el head h , " '·' o ball field at y, coac 1]1 !Ji -~'.i g Tom Eads figures they can "•Hlt1<J11 pc 11 141 .ci. give the favored Orange F·Mtt• Al 11 J u1 .JO? Panthers a handful in 1the 1 CORONA Dl!L MA 1111 •ws~l"'•c~ "'' ••• '" teams' gridiron clMh S.tut- ' l6 1" '·• ' day night at El Modena High. Fr<rtrt ., .. ,.,_ K1m11 .... ~lino !:~111111 1~ 111J, :...~ ~ "This time we hope to bold 1 n :.: : onto the ball ," says Ea&. ~ .5' ~.f : ··we turned the ball over six 11n1n.11 pc 11 ,~ •• c1. times last \1;eek against Villa ~,,,.,.1~ n 24 3 "11 ·'°' Park (a IS.13 loss for the 011>1r S(a.ing: 11::111"'" 11• •1«• "' Tritons) and you i'ust can't do tOSTA MIElA 11·11 ""'~.,,.. ,,, '"'' ••• ,11 somethi ng like that and expect •• 1111 •.1 o to wi.n." 'ftg},'1 II 6l l.S lt E d 'II be doi Hun11er'°'d J :n 10.• o a s WI ng some ex- Regular split end T i m Duvall (IIO) will be replaced by John Allavie (175). Junior John Romero, at 6-1 and !25, wW be concentrating completely at defensive tackle while transfer Dan Russell (from Sylmar it1 the San Fernando VaJley ) will be mov· ing his W, 2ro-pound frame into Romero's regular slot in the offensive trenches. A shakeu.p is also in store at the other offensive end where 171}.lb. Bob McNamara , nonnally . a slotback in the Trltons ' slot·T attack, wiU replace Craig Andef'D!, also a Mini·back Clark J a r r e t t (145~ will replace Morris at tailback. Eads knows that Deveney's Orllflge squad, the pre-season title favorite, is a well- coached, well.-Orilled unit and that Mike Churchward is one of the better all-round quarterbacks in the county . He says, "we have to find some way to shut off their o~ lion play, which Church ward runs' so well," adding, "and, their fullback (Tom Nation) is also a very good runner." Mu8tangs, Sea Kings, Vik.es Win There was only one breather in prep water polo acUon, Wed- nesday, although three-of the fOUJ" area teams logged vic- tories. Costa Mesa High's fine polo aggregation had the only laugher, a IS.1 conquest of Millikan in the winners' pool. Corona del Mar and Marina didn't have it so easy. Corona notched a hard fought M decision over host Downey while Marina edged visiting Valencia. 6·5. In tile other area match, Laguna Beach fell to host San- tiago, 9-4. Bill McAneney led Costa Mesa to its romp over Millikan with a seven goal ef4 fort, including a trio or penalty throws. Mike Beal and Ron t<.1isiolek added three and Matt .Waidelich and. Neal Richey had one each. Costa Mesa jumped out to a 7-1 advantage after the first quarter of play and held a 10.l halfUme margin. MUSf3ilg goalie Ron Ross played another fine game, ac· cording to Mesa coach Terry Bowen. Ross has blocked at least one penalty throw jn each of the Mustangs' U games, including one against Millikan. Meanwhile, Corona didn 't have it as easy as the Sea Kinis had lo struggle to defeat a tough> Downey crew. Garth Bergeson tallied three of the Corona goals with Greg Loltz and John Holyoake get- ting one each. The Sea Kings' two fine goalies, Greg Walker and Mark Otto, blocked 11 • Viking shot!: with Walker 1gel· Ling six of them. In the B game, Brian Milich "and Greg McNamee each hammered In four goals lo lead the Sea Kings lo a 16-4: win. Downey won the C game, l!Hl. Alan floops' goal with less than two minutes to go in the game gave Marina its victory over Valencia. Marina held a 3·1 lead al the half, but the Tigers tied it at 3-3 after three quarters. Hoops and Chuck Holloway stiared scoring honors with two each while John Maltby and Bill Fahrenkrug added one apiece. llal Beningt.on paced the Viking jllnior varsity to a 6-4 victory with four goals while Doug Fabian had three in leading the Marina frosb-sopb team to a 9-5 triumph. Meanwhile at Santiago, the host Cavaliers led all the way in handing Laguna it!: third loss in six outings. Tom Brotherton, SCott Sumner and Earl Weltsfry scored one goal each for the ArWUI. Tll11f$day, Octo~r 8, 1970 DAILY PILOT 2'f . . Sailors Risk Mark With Westminster ' Undefeated, ttDtled a n d Coach Emle J o h n so n ' s would all but nullify any unscored on Newport Harbor Sailors have been lnStalled as chances for a loop Utle. invades Weslmlm\er HI g h six-point favorites to deal 1be L1on1 were upset by tohigtt In a 7 o'clock Sunltt Westminster tts fourth S:.nta Ana last week, 23-16.. League football clash, aeekln& 1trai1ht loss of the year. Tonight'• game pits two con- its fourth v tbe_year ___ .Should coach ~!II Boswell's_f.rasting-5'¥lel.-of-play and and the second in clrcult ·bat-Lions receipt for a ~ vast differences in size. ije, &lnoel League I°" lomghL JI ·w 1 . 1 loy the 1 es muu er emp s · tormat.!On with the offena:ive Monarchs Battle emphasis geared towarda the tackle area. The Liam are the bigge" team physically that Newport will lace In Sumet battle. Wilson:Innight Among other lhln11 , Westminster bas a doz.en JOO. -pounders-on-it.s-f'08ter-. - Baiwell blames m e a t a I mistakes for the Lklns' poor showing to date. The Lions present 14 seniors apd #9 jU:niors and sopbomoreS. Mater Del lfi&b School will be tryPlg to keep two streaks alive tonight when t be MonareM bost Long Beach Wilson at Santa Ana Bowl in a non-league football tuneup for next week's Angelus League biggie with Bishop Amat. And, they'll be trying lo. further enhance their No. s CIF ranking with the kickoff slated for 8 o'clock. Coach Bob Woods' Monarehs are shooting for their fourth straight victory of the cim- paign and they'll also be seek· ing their fourth straizht, win over the Moore League Bruins in as many years. wu.oo is rated mth In the CIF poll Iller rolling lo lopsid- ed wins against ML Carmel, Dominguez and Warren, The 1ame marks the return of quarterback Jerry Sum4 merfelt, wbo transferred from St. Anthony to Wilson. Summerfelt is expected to test Mater Oei's pass defense to t£e limit with his roll out and drop back patterns. He 's also an excellent runner. · His effectiveness is further bolstered by tailback Bill Magnolia Confusing To Barons - Cecil, a 175-pound scooter Who has averaged nine y'ird,, per carry in three games. Tim MaMey has been bothered by a charUe horse but Is expected to gel the nod at fullback for Wilson. If not, junloi-Damon Cilplan Will lake over. Mater Dei counters with its running punch that includes .a trio of ~ngerous backs behind Q,Uarterback Bob Haupert. Haupert dashed for n. and 38-yard scores on rollouts to nJp Lakewood last week. Lakewood shut off the rest or Mater . Dei 's running attack unUl the fourth quarter. . It was in the fourth period that the running backs carried UJe. Monarchs on a vital ball control drive .in the waning moments. Haupert's passing hasn't been spectacular, completing 15 of 41 lries for 36 percent. However , his mini 1n um scoring output has been two touchdowns per game and the lowest average among backs Rocky Simpson, Don Roy and Dennis Wojlk.iewicz is Roy with a 4.2 average on 44 car- ries. Wilson two-platoons all the way and holds a 197-186 weight a4vantage across the offeru;ive Uiie. Newport, meanwhile, has blanked three tearoa-including Anaheim with a ball-eontrol sly le of play out of a 'sp(int out l!f~~ ~Ith the nmaj_ng ~kl co~ntraung on spUrts up the middle. The Tars have a formidable first team which includes standout linemen G r a n t Gelker, Terry Albritton, Ron Tripp, John Harrison and Scott Schaefer. 'Ille bac!s, although small. have been effective with Dan Seals, Mike Easterling, Mike Mors, Phil Metzger and Alex Moad alternating the glory. Quarterback Alvin White bas been the center of the of· fense with his passing and running threat. He's also proficient at field goal kicking, a facet that Westminster may be without if Oeano Aldridge (26()..pound defensive tackle) ha sn 't recovered from a knee injUJ')' sustained in the Santa Ana tussle. · Boswell says his team will be going for two-point con· versions should his Lions be able to crack the Newport defense - a feat unac- complished by Corona del Mar, Costa Mesa or Anaheim. La Wl9-Mtltf' Dtl N...-1 Hirt.Ir w"""llllllW lli lro.11 E'-D. N•nrv 11.S 160 Amie• E 01~ U7 201 H11«1i.o,, 'T Giiiin 1'1(1 115 Albrltton T Jen11lntl! ?11 1os 51.......,. G e~r.e. 1&5 1W H1rr1..,,. G T"°""' 17l 1'5 Hoel"'• C Mrle 115 11$ $cftl!!ltr C Scllro.cll' 161 A relati_velv_ simple offense 20.,.1 ~~-G, •,~n its 11s Trl1>P G cunnl119'1•"" 111 '1-....,u,_, ~ .. -... 110 7211 Gell<l"' 'T N1lll1t1wtn 29' with more than 100 sets to 11.5 1>on111 e J. Ntnrv 11.5 160 w111nord e: Gt1ssbl\llllll 161 confuse the nnl'VMl'tion. 1'5 lummert.11 o H•u"'1 110 710 While o Slemene ""''4 -rr-y 17S CKll 8 51mitson 1"5 160 S.115 B MllN 1n That's the cooc~ de1Cri~ 3:. ';:;:ll)ft •. 'Wa1n:1tw1<r :~ ~~ ~.n1rio : =• ;~ tion of tile Magnolia Sentlnel l----------'-""'-""-------- football team by Fountain Valley coach Bruce Pickford r as he perpares the Barons for an Irvine League encounter Friday night at Huntington 1 Beach High. "They nm so many set!: at you that you are constantly adjusting your defense to tit the occaslon. 'Ibey run the dive play, the sweep, the rollout and the power play each from about 30 different ..... "They are a hard hitting team with good site and they are probably a b e t t e r detensive team than they are on offense," Turning to his own team, Pickford feels the defense needs shoring up. "We looked very poor on defense. We got of[ to a good start and then our inside defense broke down. We hope to make the necessary changes, philosophy-wise as well as personnel-wise, to ad-- just lo the situation." Pickford has four players going both ways, only one of which is a lineman. He is tackle Bob Walker who suf- fered a leg injury last week but is expected to be ready for the Magnolia game. Lone rhange in the Baron offensive lineup will be at the other tackle. Kent Duval (185) will replace Mark Stopher who suffered a minor neck injury last week. Pickford says Stopher will be able lo play but will be replaced In the opening lineup. Youbetfma Green Stripe backer . ' ~:"~'' ; ii i;l ! perimentalion and shulfling o( ~· 's ,4 :l0 g _ · After losing two practice games ,the Barons came back ----___ :.,_Jg...w.in.~fi,rilfer over Los - I ~~.::1-;--.. ___,r·:,, 11-·1--Mv-· Far Firom '°1"1":, l>C •1 leli pct, nt··Bivner ~:;,11o· in~, eagu• -..----' -. Art1>11r . 19 10 I 11 .S?~ Stnlt ' ! Jl .lll Woll I O .000 Othl'• i.<or~isi~•\r..l· HIM!ot.t Mo, .. , '"""' B1tcft MtNIT s ... 1111 ~·· . ..- "'""'"' ldt ..,, ....... ~ lB :·1' '~ 10 111" l 11 . 13 , ' l 0 • I I, 0 2J .i..Jj : l'pnlr!',, J< lri m ,ct. HlrdOSI J) 11 I »0 ·!lj' M1rmon 1lO -)l .J ~ ·~1111. Korlin!~~~lti) !j' ~· tl 'j " • I' " lll •.011 !il,ij! ~ J J,'o : 1 ' '0 • l ·1 .•.• 0 "'"'': "' •• ''' 1(1. ~~. "' 't I 4, '.ID Olt!tr Korln•u ;,1eo.noori ii. '"""" .. l\lisslon Viejo Hlgh's Oia.blos "We've bad,. our good and are down, ll..1 for the season bad momenl!:"but I have lo la. after losing their opening pleased with out 1howing so far Crestview League decision t.o coosidering p8$t perlonnances Orange..~t..coach lJOb-Hivner -ouThere. and his Dia\)!os are far from "This team's not quitting. out . . that's for sure. We're not going The Omblos npped Orange to lay down -nobbdy's goibg lligh's preseason le a g u e to kill us. favorites in the statistical "Saddleb:tck and Oran&e are department but came out on as good as anyone that m 're the s h o r t end on t h e going to see for the rest of the scoreboard. year " says Hivner El Modena H i g h's un-It'~ IUvner's opinion that the defeated v_.nguard.\ an nest key to El Modena's ruMlng on the agendA for the host success has been the blocking Olablos Fr1day night and or fllllback Brad J o y c e IUvner opines that his team's who 's blasted open the boles chances for excellent are on • ror t1dlback Max Ledesma . par wtlb the invader$. "He's betn the leading fac· tor 'or El Modena 's J'WU\1ng g111me. And Kim Carlson U a real threat passing and run- Jones has rushed for 140 yard! in 30 trips for a 4.6 average. Dulich started his first game ning. at guarterback-for Mission ''Tli"'e"'y'""""n•~·t-pa=ss::-:a'""'gu=at Viejo and nrtd al a .500 cup, deal, but when they do they ' compleUng five of 10 attempts hurt you,ot says Hivner. for "1 yards. Hivne.r's pus defense should J{olmes has been used spar- be op to the task ii it can lngly In comparison to last perform as well as last week year. He's netted 106 yards in when the Oiablos mtercepted 3S totes ror 1 3.1 average. three Orange attials. Mission Vle}o wlll e n t e r TI.~ secondary consists of Friday's test with l h e Mike Tgoe, Nick Galvan and Vanguards without In Jury Bob punch and Aun d re from last week 's tussle. Holmes alternate. • The only chaiige tn the Offensively it's bttn Dulich, ata rtlng orreo.slve lineup 11 at Holmes and fullback Joe Jona Ct'l'lter where Greg Sciarrotta who have ·been Ullin& the tikes over along with his Diablo needs. defensive auard duties. one of the key players In the victory was quarterback Ken Shi bat.a. "He is passing a lot better this year. He had abeol!Jtely no experience as a quarte:.rback -on the varsity 1evel antf !Wi1iD OOtft a-rre job &0 far. "Any young passer has trou- ble at first w\th the defenee and selecting the proper rea.ivers. But our kids are dropping the ball When he poll it right on their chest." Pickford declines to ch8ose: between three running backs. Bob McKenzie starts a t tailback and 11tern1te1 with Tony Sepulveda at this spot. Sttve-Mohulskl Is Uic third .mJnntr In tbe Baron ol/enslve USHER'S GREEN STRIPE Sina: 1853, tb• !!rl&in!l llsht Scotch • • J ~ I .. ~ -=-~:;!. ... __. -; .-.:;;;;.:......-~. . .. . -·-·--· .. --·-. • pattern. ------~--------- • .. l~ r.Jtose Long Hair Ricl~rs Are Girls By RON BVANS ,,, ... Dellr ... ti.ff Jf you sliOWd be bUmping down thal treacheroua to.a betwee11 Enlenac:la and. i.;a pan; .. ~nnd $, you mlght'juITTneet a couple of people oa 1 Honda. But you'd beller grit your teelh and be prep...i to dodi• the rocks and sandwuhes between 80 and 100 mph if you really want to find out if those two Jong P,irs on motorcyclea are· indeed - girls. Sammy Dunn and PaW Harker, both of Westminlter, are DO shrinking violets but ferocious motorcycle racera who have I-thrown lhelr.belmela tn the ring for whal is acknciwled.ced to be the toughest off. road race ·in the world -the Mexican 1000. They're the only women to ever enter the event, which annually brings out about 200 dune buggies and 3 O motorcycles to the Baja desert for an overall pUrse of $10,000-$15,000 and ~ lot of breakdowns, heart aches and sore bot- toms. "We're going out with the intention of winning," declared Sammy, 24, a pert Saddlehacl\ Faces Young Chaffey Team secretary for a Long Beach aircraft firm who 190ks ·as though she's jW1t between modeling jobs. "lf you don't, you might u «ell not bother." While the idea of two women bashing through the boondocks at the risk of Ufe and limb sounds absurd to th~ not ac- quainted with the pair. it must be pointed out that both are expert riders quite capable or competing with the best of men. Patti, for exani"ple, has been on two wheels since 1946 when she started assaulting the Aoll yv.·ood Hills on an English Ve\ocette under the tu lelage of rOOVie starl\eenan \'Vynn. "All my llfe I've dreamed o'f being there with the greatest riders or the world" she said. "I'm exercising con- stanuY to keep in shape, mostly running, and I've been wearing oul three dogs a day," she smiled. . Sammy. wtlo concedeS that physical strength is an important factor \o just cross the finish line, works out for about two hours a day and jumps rope l,000 times three times a daj . In her muscle building bag, she also has a set of handsprings that she squeezes until her fingers turn numb. "It"s important to have a Jot of grip- ping power because after just three hours of riding yGur hands turn rubbery and it lbecomes difficult to hang on to the handlebars." she said. Sammy has become somewhat of a celebrity in motorcycling circles since she became the first woman to climb the treacherous ~1atterbon . a rock and rut· filled 68 percent grade al Saddleback Park. SAM!foV DUNN (LEFT) AND 'PATTI HARKER GET READY FOR MEXICAN_l ,_OOO_. ________ _ Saddleback College's football team will face a young Chaffey squad when the two teams tangle Saturday night on the latter college's field in the Mis!lon Confereoce opener. • Chaffey will open with only five sophomores in its starting offensive lineup and just one on <!efense. Only about 15 of the coun try·s expert climbers have ever tackled the hill, the sight of which makes most men squeamish. "It's a hairy. long. steep hill with the top part composed of nothing but sand rock and going straight up. lt's a quarter mile long and you get no run at it." Gaucho s Get ~ First Joh and a JRB Bid 'T'he Panthers' auack is geared around quarterback Joe Brogdon, a 180-pound sophGmore who was a starter last season. The rest of the Chaffey backfield is made up of frestunen. In the Mexico race, both will be riding 350cc Hondas prepared by a Lomita motorcycle shop which arc tuned to pro-- vide a speed of 100 mph on the paved sec· lions of the course. "\Ve'll be doing that speed sometimes, but mostly we'll be going around 80.'' said Sammy ~ith assurance. Nod in Chase For Crown Pirates'· Rosso Coached Chaffey to Vic tor y They include baUbacks Cleotis George (185) and Rich-Wgenblll-(208 ) and flanker Scott Schroeder (155). George is a higbly-touled pri>spect from Fontana High. l.1ission Conference football coaches labled the 1970 circuit race wide open prior-to the start of the season, and after 1Wo non. conference games, the situation his oot changed. }rru-ee teams -S addleback , Southwestern and Riverside -enter the first week of conference play with ulblemished records v.·hHe the other rive d~ have 1-l marks -a comb ined 11-5 6~dleback's Gauchos h::ive been tab- by the DAILY PILOT lo win the · t crown. Saddleback -A solid nucleus reWqis fr9m last year's Desert Con· fetfl1Ce championship team, led by top ru!lfling back Toby Whipple and fullback- linebackcr Roc ky Fletcher. The throwing or!:eu-is Hector and some outstanding lirietilen give the Gauchos a balanced at.- ta&" t. Southwestern -Fifteen lettermen return for the Apaches, including all con- rcr~nce linebacker Dennis Foreman, son or · head coach D. Wesley Foreman. Southwestern has rolled up 70 points in non-conference victories over San Diego nnd t.1t. San Jacinto. 3. Cltrlll -Coach John Strycula has 18 lettermen back from last season's 8-1 <·lul) including middle guard James Rranch, offensive tackle John Walz and 11ght end Keith Barker. all named to the <1ll·conference team in '69. The Owls hold a surprise 23-1 4 victory over Rio Hondo ihis season. The loss was to f.1L San Antonio, 8-7. 4. River1ide -The Tigers have blank- ccl t.\1•0 foes -Cyp ress (26-0) and Antelope Valley (28·0) -and figure lo have one of the best def ensive unilS in the <'onfcrcnce. Coach Bob Dohr has 21 letter· n1en rclurnint: rrom last year's 5-3-1 cl ub. S. Gros1mont -The Griffins. defending ronference champions. figure to have it a lot rougher in ·10. Topping the !isl of 18 leltermcn are y,•ide receivers Steve Dangulis and Skip Stevenson , both all· conference selections. 5. Sao lkrnardlno -The Indians. l·l lhus far, have already improved on last season's G-9 record. but the going y,•ill be "' lot tougher in conference play . Coach Bob t.icCuleheon has 23 letterm en back. 7. Palomar -The Come ts have the By CRAIG SHEFF 01 lh• DlllY l'llol S\111 There ar.c a lot of people who \vould love to start lire anew. Ra y Rosso. lhe likeable former Orange Coast College football coach is not one of them. "I'm completely satisfied with my coaching experiences over the years. r u'ould do it the same way if I had to start again." says Rosso. oow a physical education instructor and golf coach at Orange Coast. Rosso has run the gamut as ra r as col- lege football is roncerned. Not only an outstanding t'Ollegiate pla ye r, Rosso shot out of nowhere to become a sucl'Css ful junior college coach , After four years of football at the University or California {Berkeley) 'aod another five years \vith the Navy as a flier . Rosso began his coaching career in 1940 al Chaffey College. "In the summer of '46 artcr I got out of the service, I went looking for a job. I got an interview at Chaffey and was hired.'' says Rosso. It was his first assignment as a football coach and he made the most of it. Chaffey finished with a 9-0-l record that year, but Compton College I with a perfect record) was selected to the first Junior Rose Bowl. The following year ii \\'BS Chaffey's turn. Rosso guided the Panthers to seven straight victories. Then, aft er a 1a.1:i lasl minute loss to Fullerton (on a field goal), lhe '47 Chaffey aggregalion met u11- defea ted ML San An tonio. At stake was the Eastern Coilferencc championship and a trip to the Junior Rose Bowl. ''There was a croy,·d uf about IOJIOO for 1hat game including the Junior Rose Bowl committee. We beat them 34-7, get- ! ' , RAY ROSSO ling the bo\\'l bid on the basis of that ga 1ne,'' says Rosso. Jn the JRB, Ch::iffey met another undefeated team. Cameron, Okla . "It y,•as a spectacular game," says Rosso. "\\'e traded srorcs with them a couple of times in the first half. finally pulling away in the second half and even- tually winning, 39-26. "Cameron was an interesting leant. It \vas the first platoon team that we had ever seen. They alsO ran both the single \1·ing and T," Rosso recalls another game very vivid- ly during that '47 season. It came midy,·ay through the year y,•hen he took his Panthers back to his alntu tnater and Laguna Coaches Beli eve Tl1e y Ca11 Def eat Colto11 player with the longest name in the con-Alt hough the Laguna Beach Artists lost 1hcn1 son1e experience. ferencc, if nothing else. He's Tony their football game with Neff last week "'Our lack. of succc!s 1hus far is due lo LutuJiagasenoa , an all con f erence by a 2{1-0 count, the Laguna coac hin g responsibilities \\•hich have broken down ru Jback. Rex Hollow..!)'., an all CIF Oank_-_i;taf.f-is-«mlide~~-•h~. of _ _, iAex 1i9 i.· . er rom e :an-Diego sechon (EScon----. .... -. .......... , .. ,.~"""""°'" !*!f. AGe, &--fl dido) is the top freshman. Fourteen Jct-capable of posting a y,·\n against Colton because the kids weren't trying.'' termen are back. Friday night at Laguna. The revolving door wh ich has been ln- 1. Chaffey -The Panthers have 12 let-Laguna assistant Ed Doy,·en. speaking dica tive of the 1\rtists' tailback situation fer-winners rttu~lng, thus the offensive in nbsence of head n1entor Hal Akins. all season long will still be in full swing and defenslve hneups are freshmen •• dominated. Quarterback Joe Brogdon and says, ~e s~led ~lton last wetk and Friday. halfback Cleot.ls George pace the Chaffey we don l think they re a!! tough as San ~1ike S1<i·ceney ~ 145 ) moves in at that atlack. Clemente (which beat the Arlist.s. 28·7, pQsitlon and pushes R®in Andrews (140) Whitfield Out Mark Wbillltld, a leuerman nankcr for lhe Golden Wat-Coll•&• RUSllcr lootball team, wU1 have bil Injured knee operated on Fridly, Oct. 16 and will miss lbe. en- tire season for coach Ray Shackleford's squad. ~ WhMeTd lnJared ttil knoe in I\ scrim- maae with GlendaJe and has been sidelin· ed ever since. A good ctuden t, It Is doubtrul if Whit· field wlll remain at Golden Wc.'it an extra year to cornplelc his foot.ball cllgibillty, accordln& to Shackleford. . . two weeks ago). tnlo the s\otback spot. "The kids are doing a good job but Andrews took O\'er at tailback two they're very young and inex:perienetd weeks ago from Swet'ncy after the latter right now. hod replaced Greg Kessler. the original "\Ve didn 't play lhat badly again.!l Nerr starter al tailback. -they just scored on some spooky llfike Wieibowskl ls a doubtful front- plans." Bowen adds. liner al fullback due to a charley hDr$C he The Art ists will continue with a pla· suffered against Neff so Greg Chastain toonlng syste1n similar to wh11t they used (180) could start there. agalnst Neff. although not an appreciable ~rcnsi"e tackle Rocto Prock ( 185) amounl uf platoon ing cRn bt a<> lrades places wilh ofrensivc t11c"klc Davc compli!ihcd with 11 39-pluyer roster lik e Kerr (1751 , Who 'll play defense. Bowen sun1s uri the ,\rti!its' chief pri>- the Lagunans havr blen1 In one sentence ... if Y.'t can $Cl the Bov.'cn notes, "Y+·e're trying to start as offen~c going. w(' know ...,.c c:an dn the many different kids as possible to give job:' proceeded to hand the California Frosh team a 12-6 se tback. •·1n that game A·nse McCullough (quarterback) tossed an BG-yard pass to Chet Nicht:llson. It 's still a sladium record. ' When Orange Coast opened its doors the following season, Rosso applied for the head Pirate grid job and gGt ii. In eight seasons as the OCC boss. rtosso compiled a 37·37-3 record. He resigned as football coach after the '55 season lo devote more time to outside in- ter~sts. Born in Italy, Rosso was raised in Oakla1l'.!. allendlng Uliiversity High. From University, he moved on to Cal where he played four years of football under Stub Allison. During Rosso's second year at Cal, (\931) the Bears went to the Rose Bowl, defeating Alabama , 13-0. The Cal team \vas led by Johnny 1.1eek, Bob Herwig, Sa m Chapman and Vic Bottari. Hosso alternated as a starting guard his junior year and was a regular during the '39 season, earning All-Coast honors. Now 54. Rosso claims travel as his leading. hobby. "Ive made two trips lo Eµrope and plan to go back again nut summer," he concludes. TENNIS ----~-.. ._ According to Chaffey coach Bill Richardson, the Panther offense has been inconsistent in its first two games. Chaf- fey opened the 1970 campaign with a 34-0 setback at the hands of West LA, then bQ!rnced back to trip Glendale, 16-14. Up front. the entire left side of tM Panther forward wall is made up o( soyhomores. Center Dale Bklley, a 22a- '50under, anchors the Chaffey line. He is also a second year man. On defense, the lone sophomore is defensive back Octavio Ramos, a 180- pounder. Richardson is in his second year as head of Chaffey football. The Panthers compiled a 4·5 season mark last year and were 2-4 in conference play. "Saddleback has an outstanding foot- ball team," says Richardson. "they have a lot Gf good material. Their running has been very impressive. l watched them play in their scrimmage against Mt. San Antonio and they did a lot of different things well." The Gauchos, like Riverside , were idle last week. Saddleback has a 2-0 record thus far with victories over 1t1ira Costa (33-13) and Cypfess (15-3). Saddleba"ck quarterback Ouis Hector. who suffered a slight concussion early in the Cypress game, is now fully recovered and will be ready to go Saturday night. acCording to the Gaucho coach George Hartman. The two-day race schedule provides for absolutely no breaks, except for gasoline stops during 'A'hich th e girls won't even dismount. Although both of them will be breaking Into a contf'St considered as a man·~ home territory, neither is a women's liberationist. "'Man is the boss of the earth and It shouJd stay that way," said Sammy. Dear Sir: In the Sept. 19 DAILY PILOT. one of your SJXlrts writers. Roger Carlson. titled his rolumn about the Corona del 1'1ar vs. NewJXlrt Harbor game "Tars St un Sea King, 7-0.'' They did not "stun" us. they just barely squf'aked by at the last minute. It seems lo me that to.Ir. Carlso11 somewhat favors Harbor. Could il be that he is an alumnus of that school??? \Vendy \Voller • HANDBALL • BICYCLES SWIM.MING OPEN 9 to 6 Closed Sundays • • • ------·---. j Thursday, Octobl!r I , 1'>10 DAIL V PILOT .. Wise Bae~ ~t · QB It was inevitable and af\er ~king the statistics from tailback poslUon with .nm Start Yolir · Cfily one Jea~ game·, Garth last year, Wisc completed 5l artin-SUving-u bac• -~ ... -1 • Engines! by Deke Hou/gate --~ - RIVERSIDE -The 1970 Trans-American sedan road racing aeries was the most successful in Anuµ-ica tb1s year •. recording a 33 percent attendance increase at nearly every one of the 11 tracks where Trans-Ams were staged. The figures aren't all In yet;"'but that estimate of John Ti· manus, chief technical inspector for the seriel was backed up by Burdette (Berdle) Martin, Trans-Am chief steward. But while the T-A was a smash at the box office, was a pub- lic relations boon to tbe factories who participated in lt and was a truly competitive circuit for the drivers, the sanctioning Sports Car Club of. America ii concerned abi>ut .some weaknesses. The most glaring of these is the failure of the small engine class of cars that stage one of the two m a j or r~s .at each Trans-Am to attract wide interest. For 1971 there ,will be some changes to beef up the smaJI engine race. "The two-liter race has consistently been compeUtive and exciting all year," Martin said here over the weekend. ''There hasn't been a race where the leaders weren't within sight of each other the whole way. • "Nearly every race the winner has been decided on the last lap. It was six races before the aame driver won twice. "But the two liter cars haven't ti.ad hardly any publicity, and there are really only two manufacturers who are competitive in the class, Alfa Romeo and BMW." What Martin says about the little cars is correct. Not even many of the enthusiasts give more than a passing thought to the feisty foreign sedans. The two-liter engine size split has separated the twin races into one for American pony cars and another for sporty fl}:reign sedans. PameUI Jones, Dan Gurney, Mark Donohue, George Follmer, Swede Savage and Sam Posey have driven the big cars, while the two titer field has featured such unkn<JWns as Harry Tbeodorocoopolos, Bert Everett and Don Pike. Timanus is in charge of executing a major rule revisio11 for 1971 that Is expected to pep up public interest in the little cars. The rule changes were suggested by the competitors themselves early this year. GARTH WISE (18) MOVES BEHINO BLOCKER STEVE OUVAL 133). Wise is back at quarterback or 114 attempts for 729 yards. signal caller. for the Huntington Beach He bad nine interceptions. an What about Western? . Oilers. averqe of one per game. This "We scouted them aga.lnll is a .m percentage. Marina ·and we think they 'Th~ Oilers wiU play host to With Wlse switching to have good size and a couple or Western High Saturdqy night quarterback. Steve Pickford little backs that are reaJ aood in a Sunset League encounter will move into the starting people,'' Moats adds. after each dropped ' a --One"--~-----~--='-''-''-'------- touchdown de.cision in .opening; I r:~~~~i:::~:;~~&:'L~~:~;;;;--1 circuit action. '] ''I· hate to make the niove," coach. Ken Moats safs, "but we have no choice in the mat-1 ter, We have to do something 1 to perk it up a' little bit." 1 By perking it up Moats meam to beef: up the Oiler ~attack. J_ Wise isn't a newcomer to the signal caJling position. In , fact. he played at that spot all of last sea.son but the Oiler boss felt be would be of more value as a f'UM.ing back this season. The experiment is ended. Wise bas · returned t o quarterback and wtli start hist , iirst 1'970 game at that posltloni Saturday night. . I "~e haven't put a game together this year. But I think we are about ready to do it. We have to correct our mistakes. In this league you don't make mistakes and win games." "It seems like every lime L,..==============,,=;~'ffiii;::ll"i~ :-ve put tht ball in the air it isJ .,.,,CIY 111•ttM1 IOillltO• •••••• , ••• ,.00,. Ul.fl IMOll , •. l•C., , .... ,oat.~ intercepted," Moats says. ' The changes. are highly technical, having to do with fuel systems, body panels and so forth, but what they add up to is an "Americanization" of international rules written basically for--------------------------------• European racing. The key to the changes Js a power to weight ratio being worked out for aU cars that Timanus predicts will discourage use of trick parts made only for racing and will equalize com- petition so more manufacturers can compete. Martin expects the new rules to attract as many as 10 addi· tional manufacturers into the small car field. He said, for ex· ample, there have been inquiries from Japan hinting that both Datsun and Toyota may have competitive cars for the 1971 Trans- Am. V.S. Subromputs in Series The biggest news is that American subcompacts will undoubt- edly be in the series, giving the secondary Trans-Am race a new twist -U.S. manufacturen challenging the world the way Car~ roll Shelby's Cobras did in the days of the U.S. Road Racing Circuit. "We understand Font Motor Company already has IB pro- posals from teams wanting to race factory Pintos," Timanus said. Another good possibiJity for racing is the yet to be introduced Dodge Colt. a surprise entry in the subcompact field made by Mitsubishi in Japan. Timanus and Martin weren't sure how the English-built Cricket, the Plymouth entry, will fit into the rules, but they feel it should be competitive. Omitted from consider~Uon so far is the Chevrolet Vega, which does ,not ofCer a two-litter engine version. "We considered writing a special rule so Chevrolet could destroke its engine (make the piston displa~ment smaller) and come up with a two lit.er engine for the series next year, but when we went to the people we talk to, they didn 't express any interyst," Timanus said . "So we froze the rules the way we had them, which state a manufacturer has to build 5,000 engines to make it eligible for racing. "Then we got a call from Chevrolet, and they asked us to explain the rules again. We told them about their having to build 5,000 engines, and they answered: " 'Well, we're not in racing.' " Disappointing Se•son This has been a disappointing season for Tony Adamowicz. "Every year I win a championship," he said, "and what has it got me?" Althoogh the butt of Polish jokes at race tracks around the country won a major trophy this year, it wasn't emblematic of a driving championship. Adamowicz won the "Jigger Award," presented by auto racing writers at Indianapolis to the hard luck guy for the month of May. A goof in the yellow caution light system at the speedway caused him to slow down on his first qualifying lap. He ran one Jap at 160 m.p.h. and three at 166 for an overall average of 164 m.p.h. Because nobody on his team canceled the qualifying attempt, Adamowicz had to stand on that speed, a fact which eventually resulted in bumping Tony from the starting field. May was only one of his hard luck months. Most of his problem has been the inability to land good rides. He was re- Oecting on that situation. "What do you have to do to get ahead in this sport?" He answered his own question. "I bave won a national champion- ship every year for three years. What has it got me? Nothing. "I wish it boiled down to maybe one race. Then you could knock off the other nomense and just conce:ntrate on that one race. Since John Cannon won two years ago at Laguna Seea, for instance, his reputation has been made. "What one race do I have to win, the Indianapolis 500?" Adamowicz makes the point that young drivers like himself are not getting the breaks in racing. With one nctable e1ceptlon, Swede Savage, very little Is being done to groom young drivers for future stardom, as is the case in other sports like football and basellall. ' ''If it hadn't been for Marvin. Davidson (a New York stock· broker who fielded a car that Toriy drove to lhe Continental for- mula championship last year) putting up his own money," Adam· owicz said, "I wouldn't have got\en any chance at all. --!!Wbillk negleci of the young driver in racing is a big mi.s- lake." Newport Victory, Streak Heads Area Surpri-ses Newport Harbor High School's three.game wia streak, which i11cludes three·shutouts, is one of three big surprises in the Orange Coast area. The others are Westminster High's three- game losing skein and Estancia High's strong showing in the early goings. Newport's shutout business. however. is far from a school record. The Sailors have managed fi ve straight blank jobs on two occasions, but they were long' ago. The first stri11g started i11 1935 and carried two games into 1936. The other was in 1941 ·----- ROGER CARLSON ------· when the Tars added four straight to their final '40 game. 'The '35 string, incidentally, was part of a 10.game stretch where Newport was involved in a shutout one way or the other. Westminster's three losses is a school record for straight defeats. Estancia High made more noise with its 14- 12 loss to Edison than either of· its two non - league wins. The Eagles ha ve proved they're equal to anYo J1e in the Irvine League - something not associated with Estancia foot· ball ·in the· past. * * * J\.1arlna Rlgb'1 wrestling program bas bee.n assumed by athletic director Jack Kennedy after a year's absence from the sport. Bill Ktller Is also coming back to aid Ken- nedy in the effort after the Vikings were unable to find a qualified coach among lheir staff. And, Wayne Johnson, form.er swim and water polo coach at Marina is returning to a1ai1t Chuck l\.forrls. • * * * over Anaheim-based clubs -all by the same 7-0 verdict. Newport whipped Ana~m. l\tarlna beat Western .and Costa Mesa·UJeaded Magnolia. * * * Newport Harbor High has exhibited the best football game programs. The 32-p.ager is an excellent example of what can pe done at the prep level. Corona dcl P..1ar and Cost.a'Mesa's products are also of superior quality. Huntington Beach offers the least -with 1110 first flames. weights or heights made available. * * •• After three weeks of action lbcre are 10 ondefealed and untied tea.ms In Orange Coun- ty. Four or them hail from lbe Garden Grove League. wh.lcb includes Garden Grove, Rancho. Alamitos, Bolsa Grande and Pacifica. The Orange loop hou ses unbeaten (3-0) Saddlehack while the rest of the circuits have one each from the county. A-tater Del (Angelus I. Newport Harbor (Sunset) .. El ft1odena (Crestview), Sunny Hills (Freeway) and Edison (Irvine) round the list. * * * Huntington Beach High Is dropping La Habra and St. Paul for 1971 non.Jeague tussles and is replacing them with Long Beach MillikaR and Fountain Valley. * * * Mater Dei High Is In a search for a second- ":eek opponent beginning oext year to take the place of Loyola. Seems the Cubs have had enough of the Monarchs and want out of the pact. · The l\.1onarchs' third and fourth practice games with Lakewood and Long Beach Wilson appear solid. * * * Former OCC football player , Mater Del assistant and Pomona Catholic head coach Jim Knapp is now rendering his talents as an assistant al Saddleback High. *. * * A recent blaze at St. Anlbony High &bool's foot~all stadium resulted in $15,llOO worth of damage. * * * ' Mixed emotions prevailed for lhe mother or It's hard to understand the reasoning that Is Mike Hennigan, assistant football coach at involved in lhe Anahelm·Loara biggie Friday Marina. night being contested at La Palma Stadium's Mike's brother. Jerry, Is an assistant al 10,000-seat stadium . Western and their mother came from out or With Anaheim Stadium In lhe same town state to attend the Marina-Western clash last that clash coold draw 25.000. Friday. * * * Mari111a won, 7-0. When Costa Mesa High whipped MagnoUa * Friday night It marked the first time that a * '* ft1ustang varsity football team bad beaten any Last --J\rlday;1 .JQ9.thBII n:1u.It.s-1ncluded.-<St!ht3'--fm~lm· ;n Me11i...-t1..,...-llls.-j••---+ three victories for Orange Coast area: teams tory. Mosier Leads UCI Array of Talent Frederic Blobe Mosler ls enrolled al UC Irvine and ls a candidate for the Anteater freshman baskelbaU team. He was born in Ancboragt, Alaska. His father is a medical doctor and his mother a registered nurse. He is better known to his Emates as Rick and the 6-1 uate of Marina High I Is one of the ltading dates for startin& honon at UCJ thi s f111J. Mosjer Is one of 11 outstan- dlnt candidates r r e s h m 1 n coach Jerry Hulbert hat Uned up for the 1.eam this year. • Another player high on . Hulbert's list is Andy Hansen, a 6-2 guard from Chaffey HJgh. tbaffey coach Jim Blake says of Han!len: "He is the best player I bavt ever coach- td al Chaffey in 15 yurs ... Gary Denton of Cr""'11ta Valley ls a &-5 forward and the best rebounder oo his high school team. He wara threer year letterman and all-league selection. Charles l.wnplclN Is Wll and was player ot the year at Santa ..Rosa. High last stason. LumpkJm ~ waa an all·ltague selection tv.'O years. fall semester include; Steve Higgins from La Jolla Tom Box , 6-5, Redondo ls also an out.standing baseball Beach High School. Most prospect. At &.3 he will aid the front.-line scoi-lng ror the valuable player. all league Aflteater yearlings. with a 14.5 !ICOring average. According to Hulbert he can lfoward Hawkins. &-2, South rebound at the frosh level and Hills High of Covina. All-Sier· in high school set career ra Leagtie selection. ~ recont.. for most points. most Jeff Jordan, &-1, Manhattan rebounds, most sea90n points Beach High. AU-league two and most p1>intJ in a gamo. • years with a 17.0 average.. Anotht!:r Orange Coast area Sam Bunch, 6-0, Aviation player who will open practice High in Redondo Beach. All Oct. 15 with the team it Rick league Jn baseball and Eootball Wadsley of J\.flssion Viejo. as well as basketball. Others listed on the Bill Strickland. 1-J. freshman roaler at start oI tbe Pasadena Jllgh. • • Reginald Brown, ~10, San Bernardino High. Jim Schmalbach. 6-1 , La Habra High. Tom Law, >II, Servile High. Ted Guth,·M. Rolling Hills High. Played overseas as a senior as an txchange student. Gordon Michael, S.3, La ltabra High. MI ke Wray, 6-5, Th e N e l h erlands lnttmatlonal High School. Keith Rowt, 6-2, Jefferson lllgh, Lo• Ang•les. J>ete Perkin.!!:, &-2, La J olla High . The Duck Kiti . '' I! takes a pretty rugged man to greet the cold and r1~1 ., of duck hunting and ha needs a troublefree shotgun to match. That's why the rus1proof aluminum receiver on the Wlnchester.1400 autoloader and tha 1200 sllde.1 action tlnds such favor. Both of these fine shotguns blend flt, feel and performance .with advanced engl· neerlng {such as a front locking s1eel bolt) to brtno duck 1 hunters the kind of sho1gun they need. One ol the rea-' sons the light reeoll 1400 and the fast shucking 1200 work ao well forwa1erfowl shooters Is thaf they are de--· signed, tested and built by ahooters -people who bring something extra to their job -the peraonal knowledge of what works best. But It takes more than Just a fine shotgun to bring home ducks -it takes the long range, knock<lowrl power of either Western Super~X or Winchester Super• Speed shot shells. Made of tough plastic; formed under · 35,000 pounds of compreMlon1 these advanced loads' ellO Je1ture the Mark 5 collar that protects ahot down \ the barrel for full, denae pauems. So team a 1200 or 1400 with Super·X or Super.Speed -they work better, together and you~n do better with them. Model 12ll0 Model 1400 " " j ' . U DAILY PILOT Thursdat, Octobtf 8, 1970 " • 589 Fuel ·Tank Converts -to Speed ·Craft - 111 lWDI NIEDZIELSKI .. . the dazzling white !able sail miles per hour next AUCUlf. maoed ap the 1llJllllog aurl1<e llWe -aboul dasblll8 tbl coune ~you canrtlate "to," be nplafm. counted for the rest ol the Of .. O.llr , ........ cost. l+---A aectloo from an 119 alreralt wing tank gatherinc dust in a war surplus store and the genius of two daring )'Olm& men bas brougbl one of Ult motorcycle world speed. rtCOtds to Huntington Beach. runway to convlnce them they Moulders, . a $yW;Old they wwJd have done evea down the nmway at over 200 --meant bmineu. Taking a Navy man who makes bis bett miles per hour with his suplne ~ition in the clgar· ' home at 8672 Salem Circle, er. J)Ollterior just inches oU the 'lfiincle track vehicles are lllUally V"Y ;;f.i., ao I'm not shaped vehicle, Sam had tum· malnlains' lhe bll&teriog speed 'Ille fulal opeed ••er ground, be aald be waa ed 190 miles per hour over the was achieved with a reJa.tively recorded by a motofcytle wu astonlabtd by the way it too worried alicmt It going out IO-mile distance on the first unmodified Norton motorcytje 250 miles per hour by a man handled. of oontraL 1hls year one of the ouling!-• _ _ __ <IJ&io~Jll.~OllJ!IJM.c:Ql!l __ frmn.JlaD Dlqo..wbo..JtLlhal • "It wu just lilre driving a guys blew a lire al 250 and it "I thought J had the lbrollle otjler compelltors lnves! Jn ~ thll -lie need-~Cililliac. EviiYOo<IY-else bad-Jusl~ed·overand sll<hm-tts open all the way but when I their streamliners. · yibratloo problems but our side, says Y/l)eele.r, who was The engine and spares were supplied to the team by the English Norton firm. MOlllders said he chose that brand ' becau.se it ha~ .IPOre potential -than any other e D g i n e - available. Old Um.era ~t Bonneville Salt Flats, the mecca for speed -lbrooglloul the world, raised: their eyebrows in doubt when Dick Moulders of HW'ltington Beach and Sam Wheeler of Colla Mesa rolled out their a.,_l uminum sln!amliner and calmly an- nounced they were out to cap- bi'e Uii wOlla record. • came In I discovered that I bad "It cost us about SS,llO to do ·ed two ~ booted up ID Hoer wu alaltltely smooth. l nkkname(h"~pery Sahl" by anolber hall·lum lo go," says it but that's ...Uy only one tandem and guallng potonl could aee u clear u a bell other ~~~ for bJJ Sam. 25th o! the cool other guys nllromelbane fuel lo do It be<illle ll WUI~ lhaking lilre dazzling performance. Further runs produced speht on theln," said 'thoucb· 'Die local boyl plan to the otben.'' ' The $89 F·lOt wlng tank,ac-- speeds of 2<1.4 miles per hour Moulders. wrest it away from him with "Actually you don't think tually was onfi of the cheapest averige, enough to capture "We went up there this year on!y one. you're going Ver)' fut even ingredients to go into. the the world record Jor single to check it out, to work the Wheeler, a reticent 27-year. when it'• ruonln& at 'full streamliner. By tbf: time they engined motorcycles. Both or bugs out of it, but we were old engineer from. Cotta Meu steam. About .the cmly thing reworked it, they had invested the baclyard mechanics feel su.-prised thal it had no bugs cleliped the apedal frame !or YoU can judge yoor l!peed by ls $1 ,000 In the shell. Fire and thelt madllne -wtll:-go even · it;"-he adds. And he's eel'-the veblcl.e and 111 driver. whtn the mile marten go by safety equipment, as well as For nen year's aasaul~ the two plan lo clean up the body . aerodynamically and attend to other minor jtems they feel will increase the speed. 1 A.tld just in case they won't be able to crack the 250 mile barrier, Moulders sa}" be will have a few bottles of wic]!:ed J ;'home brew" fuel stai:Mlin& f; lt only &oat me blaal down • futer and plan lo do about 271 taln that ii lhe '<alna hadn'I Alt!iougb he admlll be wu a 'lbm lsn'I anything ebe on ihe chassL; Dlfterials, ac-' by. ~ Frenc·~ Paces Qualifying For SACC Tournament· Fred French paced qwill· r-=:---:-----------""11 lying for the annual men'• A~ ,q~ club High-Low loumamenl at Salta Ana Country Club over the weekend with a 77-11--66 low net score. He fmisbed one stroke in Iron! al his brollitt, Coleman and Gene F830D, each with low nets al 11. "'ATHIZl'E or 1HI DEC.U1&11 • SQUARE YOUR SHOUI.' AT ADDRESS SA Size Concerns Wheeler 'Ibe Mafina Vikings havE yet to beat the Sanla Ana Saints in a football outing in six tries. Last year's game at Santa Ana Bowl resulted in a 11-12 setback for the Vikings, whf) played nip-and-tuck with the Saints until midway into the One of the most difficult as-second quarter. pects of golf to master Is proper This year's contest figures alignment Of the shoulders dur-to be nearly as close Utrough-ing address. out, but firs~ear Marina bead coach Leon Wheeler is Invariably you wi[I swing the not happy about the Saints CONVERTED SPEED MACHINE -Sam.Wheel· I ' er (left) and Dick Moulders show off their new : speed car, which was once a fuel tank for an F84 fighter plane. The duo hopes to go for a world speed record in the future. In the guys and dolls tournament, competition bas been narmwed to semlflnal action with one except kin. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Beaman will play Joe Lisle and Alice Hall in a quarterfinal match to determine a semifinal foe · for the team ol Mr. and Mrs. Ed Elko. In the other half of the corn· petition, Mr. and Mrs. Milt Freeman will play the Bill Buckleys for a post in the linals. clubhead along a path that is parallel to the alignment of the having an overa!J weight ad· shoulders. If your shoulders vantage over his squad. align to the left of the target, Wheeler says, 1'they have sci (illustration #1) the clubhead many good ones it's hard to Buckland ~ ~ding jC Stats Golden West ·College's Charlie Buckland has taken uvtr the rusNng lead """"' tht three area junior colleges, acconflng to Blatistics com- piled by the DAILY PILCYJ'. Buckland gained 115 nel yards laal Salurdoy agaiml SaDla Ana College lo run biS &e890!1 lolal lo 395 yards In • carries. The Rustler sophomore has a ~yafd advantage over Sad4 dleblck'1 Toby W h i p p I e . BQckland's tat.al encompasses three games while Whipple bu played in two. Whipple has rushed for 354 yards in 66 carries, an average of 5.3 Buckland's average is 4.5. ' Orange Co&st's Tom Malone is the top pass receiver with 10 receptions. All 10 were caught last week against Cypress. Buckland · has the scoring lead with 24 points. Vail Heaps Praise On Next Grid Foe What else is new? reprdlea of who it is. We Coach Bill Vail says Ccrona have to put all of our energ\e! Ciel Mar runs well, passes well into the ~ game in order \o and plays good defense. :Win." Basically that'• the name al Jo the lnjwy ~ the game and when bls--mr · defeated (3<!) Cbargen tangle center Doug Caldwell is a with the Sel Kings Friday doubtful starter. He bas a leg night on the Westmin.qter Hlgb injury suffered In the Estancia field in an Irvine League en-game and will be replaced by counter Edison will have it& JeU Noble in the openiDg hands full accordln(~lo the---~'~. -- coach. Jim Moxley continues to What is bis plan for the pace the Edison running at· game? tack with a big assist from "We tre going to try and quarterback Jerry Hinojosa. stop them from scoring as HinojOIB has been running a much and at the same Ume little more this seas<1n and is score more ourselves." also the team's puser. Corona de! Mar defeated HinoJ018 is1 regarded by his Santa Ana Valley, 27-6, in its coach as the most improved league opener. Edison won player en the squad this over Estancia, 14·12. season. One thing in Vail's favor "He's throwing well and (psychologically) is a 19-0 loss developing into a fine passer. I to the Sea Kinp last season. think be's comparable to Kingpin Loara was the only anyone io the league right other league foe to defeat the now,"1Vail opines. Chargers in their initial foot· In fact, be compares .him ball season. favorably wi1b Dave Penhall "l don't think we will have a (Calilornia ), 1 Shawn McKin· problem getting the kids up ney, Qarence Haynes and Ed· for this one. I only hope they die Bane, all of whom are just thinking about getting performed under Vail at ready to play the nelt game, Westminster !Ugh. tofty Expectations Renewed at Mesa wifl undoubtedly be .moving in a tell just who we'll have to s1milar dire~tion when it strikes f2' stop. Rustlers, Compton Vie in '71 Rancho SJ the ball. The result of such align. \V "And, their line is so big, l ment would be an off·line shot. doubt if we'll ever get lo the quarterback." Four teams remain in the Give yourself the best pos. Wheeler' singles out jet.quicli tnen's club high-low toOma· Sible. chance to make square f\.tonte Floyd as the most ment at Rancho San Joaquin contact with the ball. Align your dangerous Saint, but adds, with competition slated for the shouHiers a;t address so that "nwnber 44 (split end Walter next two Saturdays to they are· parall'el to the path ~tead) and number 81 (flanker determine the club cham4 yo u want the clubhead to take I John Thomas) have very good pionship. through the hitting area (as in • hands and they're quick out Joe Kosinski and Jack Lan· illustration #2). there." Golden W.est College ·will caster will face Ken Denmead .---·· : "We've been trying to alert play the Compton College and Andy Mauro in one &O '""~.._.,.1111!1 • our secondary on what pat. Tartars in plaCe of the 8anta semlfina1 match while Russ terns Santa Ana has been run. Ana Dans for. tbe next two I.anon and Charlie Bernhart· ning," he says, •'and, years with the first game will play Bill Asher 'and Tom hopefully, they'll be ready between the two s chools Acselrod in the other. and Jim Summerville, all with H. Carrick, t-up, In the Vista Saturday night." schedu1ed in 1971 at Comptoo · scores or 59. del Niguel flight; Bill Flaharty The Vikings' deep defensive it was revealed here today by Mlle. Square. In firth place were teams downed Irwin Kee 2-up . the backs were definitely nol GWC athletic director Fred composed of Bud Gonnella and . ' ' in asleep last Friday in a 7-0 win Nineteen players will com-Jack Bergman, along with . Pacific Island Village flight. over Western as they picked O~~!-~till want to play Santa _pete ln the Fountain Valley Km Page aod Gary Chaney at Harry Ravis topped Fred off four Pioneer passes. Mile Square Golf Course 60. Ginder, 1--up, in the Niguel Steve ?o1onahan and Bob ~~: m:: ~~:e ~~pp~1t! :sn'!::e:.ionship beginning Three additional teams tied Wd eslf edfllght; and Joe Masa Merritt (both backs on of· Barbara may be forced to for seventh includ ing Bill Bil· e eat A1 Shandie, 1-up in fense) were the ch t e I drop us from their schedule Competition for the low han-· ting and Mel Moore: Fred the Pacesetter flight. perpetrators against Western, also," he says. dicap golfers is by medal play Downey and Al Hinderer; and Bob Marvin and H. H. having hijacked two enemy over 72 holes the next two "'-'• Carroway and Jim Thompson won a partner's aerials each. As far as filling the open knds ~·v;r best dates is concerned, it is very weee · Ayers, all with 61. ball tournament with a \Vheeler will be throwing his difficult to fill a fourth da te. Balance of the competition Carroway is the starter at 63. multiple, "hodge-podge" of· "We only have five conference is match play and is divided In· Huntington Beach and Ayers .. Mr. and Mrs. John Francis fense at Santa Ana witb opponents with Southwest Los to three flights with ap-has been confined to a teamed with Mr. and Mrs. Monahan, Merritt and running Angeles in the conference but proximately 48 competitors. wheelchair alter an Charles Crow to win a best back Joe Ventimiglia doing they don't field a football Mike Ricigliano of Hun-automobile accidenl tw<r-ball of foursome touma. most of the ball e handling team," Owens explains. tington Beach, a 15-year~ld ment wlth a net score of 126. there. "J sent out 30 or 40 letters in Ar--with three years e......,rience on "l esa Verde fFr!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~(ii the spring to junior colleges the links, scored a hole..fn--0ne Eighteen players will com· around 'the state and Compton this week on the t?th hole w-pete in the championship flight was the only one with dates to ing a driver to traverse the for six and under han- match our schedule openings. 168 yards. dicappers in the men's club "We did get some call! from Co•ta Mesa championship at Mesa Verde other people but the dates Country Club over the next wou1dn't fit our scheduJe. First round matches In the two weekends. "We have verbally agreed men's club champlooship must Don Crowell is the defending with Tay Brown, Compton be .completed by this weekend champion in the medal Ji'lay athletic director, to play them at Costa Mesa Golf and Cou~ competition that also bas the next two years. The con· try Club. seven handicap flights. tracts are in the mail at the The women's club will hold Jn a best ball of foursome pi'esent time. 11 Its annual championship com· tournament over the weekend; Santa Ana is pulling out of petition today lhroUgh Sabir4 John and Julie Adams teamed the game with Goldeft West. day with competition divided with Paul and Louise Robinsoll TAKE A SWI SS INTO A DIVE TODAY Santa Barbara is another into three flights. for a score d. 57 to gatn first ~ high --1-u "·-t Mill hi le b. matter. In a tin whistle tournament pJace. 111e 'ex{>eCMMJOllS ukt er says s am'il 1g-The Vaqueros nave a have been prwtlent in Costa gest defensive problem with dormant conference member held this week, Mary Evelyri A tie resulted ror second th Ea I " · rte b k Imler was the A rughl wiMer . place at 58 between teams Mesa High's football fortWles e ' g es "es in qua r ac that ls seriously contemplating I. . Curt 1bomas. a football program in 1971 and with a 33. composed of Pug and Bob Llto ear 1er m the year are return-"He'S not i·ust a fine passing Marion Voss won B flight tleton with Peg and Jim 1 .•• f 11 . th M··~--, 7.. if such is the case, they wiU be\ . h •• 1 11 ed b Trud H nd .d and ·oe. o owing e U.::iwu1gs ~ quarterback. He can run with forced to drop Gllld~n West wit a -o ow y y e erson on one s1 e triumph ever Magnolia and the ball when people are from t~ir schedule, Orton at 34 and Joyce Caplis Bob and Shirley Kinder with the realization that a couple of covered. And I consider their Owens isn't happy over San-and Elise Stipes at 30. The C Jerry suxf Marge Hayes on t.be key backs are ready to roll for tailback, Jim Schultz, a ta Ana dropping the Rustlen. flight t,itle was won by Fran other. • Mesa. smarter and more effective ":Ibere are only so many Lewis with 26. El Niguel IMI..=!. _ Coach Max ~ii~ mealed runner than they had last ~ rivalries In your own D uUI t -•---h .u "' "' ,.., N .mirFullbiClt"':filiebac~---• .-..----.!!i,..;;,:;.,., .. -fu! says.-.~s""ID<"er-'~0 ft9. 0--~~~-;Kfee.rn --KTe;bel def'tfttect--Dr. ft 3g l ~ l Paul has recovered from a ''We're gotrig to have our they would drop ~omebody like Angie Mollica and Lee William· Foote, 8 and..71 to ca~ r 21 I lj l ~UI. with mononucleosis and handl full I Wasn"t surprised Pasadena or Bakersfield Casey won a men's club ture the El Niguel men's club J I ! s l will be back in the starliDg at all to see Estancia give rathar than w. We want to partner's best ball tournament ch a m p I o n s h i p f 11 g h t 1~ 11 • ..,: I lineup to complement a Edl!on all jt wanted . They play them but we· haven't had at Huntington Beach Country tournament. RO LEX P.:'':.,. y.. .., M•· steadJer Kim .Wolf. (Estancia) really get after any response to the contracts Club over the weekend wttb a Bill Collier defeated ruck f• I I IJI I :fil Wolf, .at tailback, has been you.~ can move outside on we sent out in the spring." score of 56. Gquin, l·u.p, in the Monarch .~ hampered with knee Injuries the sweeps efrectJvely and All four Golden West foot-A tie resulted for second Bay flight: Bert Ruttman edg. ~ ,c,-: ~ earlier but is a PP e • r Ing their play action passes hurt ball coaches a -t tended between Jrv Day and Ben ed Louis Evans, it and 3, Jn the y:.-4j fi I sharper and stronger in prac-you, Compton College including Burleson; BIU BaD and Buck Niguel Terrace Oight. J. ~ltt(lllr . 1J g Uce this week. Most or the d e f e n s i v e head coach Ray Shackleford Jordan; and Don Quinllven Frank Ertel defeated Robert ~Int: =i:" w 01v u. And, Robin Senlk wUJ be pressure on Costa Mesa a~ and assistants Don Rowt,Jjiiiiijjijjji"WitDiiH.i;;;;;e;;wii(iiO;;;~iiiiiiiii "O!l'nU.., Hee ...,. ~.. starting at quattcrback after pears to be directed at the Fred Hoover and Gene Far-II •11••0 '""'''"0 • MAMlci,utiNo •·~-; "' •-teadlng his mates to thelr win JJncbackers and d cf ens iv e rell . e MEN'S HAIR STYLING l:, !!f J fll, i4 over ~1agholia. 'lbe senior secondary. Shackleford and Far.re 11 ""'~ signal caller missed the Backing up the: ~tustang played together the yelr a.fttr ti{ a . A ~ J f Meura' opener a g a Inst fol'\\'l!rd wall are Jim Hohl, Rowe and Hoover played for • '1 Ch '":"::' .. ,.. N Mt. ~tell& and 't\'a! used spar· Terry Bowring, Paul and Wolf the Tartars. l~g g aUt· .,, ,. • JM 1 -"» Jngly In Ute Newport game, while the secondary consists 'Ibe fOl,lr coac~ played at ._... · ,c r• N passing only Six limes and a~ of Marchiorlalti, Pat Kalama Compton in the heyday of lhe . -J :; Z peered rusty. end Joe Arthur. b a c-k up Tartars when they were nm· ........ = -·~ ~ lib rea diness long with Jon quarterbatk for Stnik. nlng rampant ovtr any and all I Ji : Marchiorlattl's take over at "nit Mesa def~nse limited foes, in-state and oul • =.. t I left end spells trouble for rival Magnbua to 51 yards net on Golden West ii llil} seet!ng ~lrit: a.r~ ~·~~ ttt11° Estnncla. a team that wu rip. the ground and Kate 11 a en oppcncnt to rfplace Santi ft•111~~ 1~~'#: ~ IY"i . ~:J pr.d by Wolf and aSS«.iatc1 managed only 61 "Yards Darbara If it is forced lo drop ~:!"" ,J~i,i!· = ~ :f1? 0 -last yciir. 3J·7. rushlng in the opener. It from the schedule. ' I 2 .... w.t .. l....U.tmt 9568 HAMILTON HUNTIN!i,TON BEACH FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 962-1960 Ull:IOAY 0. lll!DAY SVlllilNGS TIL. I ,.M, The Rolex Date Submariner features 30-jewel self·winding Swiss chronometer movement. Rugged Oyster case gffaranteed ta-660 feet', Equipped with time·elapsed bezel and date Indicator, to get you out of any dive you're in. On time. With stainless steel case end bracelet. 5266. With 18 karat gold cas• and bracelet, S 1.275. ·~ e11t, crown 1nd eryttal ar9 lnllet. Clllittt AttMlltJ llWH ... -'-le,..·~· --·~·"' ·~ MIOtr Clllr'lt, tM. SLAVICK'S Jewe.lory1 Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAN D NEWPORT BEACH -b44-ll10 Opon Monday •nd Friday until 9:30 I ( ' ' J . i I ' ' ( t ( t ' • Th_lll'sdaJ', Octobtt 8, 1970 OAILY PILOT :JI •· New DuckHuntAreaOpens Southland Trout Plant By JAC.K ANTHONY OI "" D!lf'll ,llot Slaff There are more ducks on Baldwin Lake OOw than In over 25 years. Jack Barth, who haA operated the Baldwin Lake Boat Landing for more than 25 years, m{lde this observation early this week. season. 'fbere are a few sec· lions of shoreline, wblch, are private, but more than 80 per· cent Qf,the shoreline Ls open to hunters. , Be!t bet is to check out an Following by county, au.the ' area the day before and build Southern California wa¥ra P your blind in an area where scbe<iuled iO be stocked tbls the mud is not too deep. week by the DFG. , LOS f.NGELES -Bouquet No geese have been seen on £anyon--Creek, CFystal I,ake 1 the lake, but last year a few San Gabriel River Ea.st and large flocks of big honkers West Forks. stayed on the lake most of I.he SAN BERNARDINO -Big season. Bear Lake, Colorado River in Baldwin Lake is the lake ~Jusl.easl of Big Bear.Lake and for many years has bei!n dry. The wet \"U1ters of the past few years has given new life to the once dry lake and ducks and geese of Southern California seem to find it to their liking. The lake offers wild rlct to the ducks as natural feed and the average depth of the lake is about five feet. Due to the heavy growth of wUd rice in the. lake, no mo.tors can b_e_ef- fectively operated on the water. An on the sPol observation by this writer over the past wetkend showed a large buildup of young sprig on the lake. with an almost tqual distribution or mallards, teal and widgeon. There are not as many coot on the lake this year con1pared to last xear ..... _Jj_unting shoo~ be exce~t opening morning and evening. but there are going to a be a ·1ot of hunters shooting and scatter.gunners should b e careful where they point their guns when aiming at that low flying duck . Big Bear Lake has very few the Needles area between the ducRS on it, but a'S shooling Nevada-California line ""=an,;---~ pressure begins S a t u r d a y Topock Bridge, Deep Creek morning, more and more upper section, Green Valley Baldwin ii1 not a large lake, but offers unattached hunters a ~hance at some good shooting throughout the entire Hunters must use row boats or sneak bbats when they go out into the lake. Barth will have his boat lan- ding in full operation come opening morning and will rent boats seven days a week, on a first come, first served basis throughout the season. The lake has dropped a few feet due to the warm weather and there is a lot or soft mud around the entire shoreline. 7 - ( TIRES ( TIRES m UNIROYAL ~TIRES ducks will be attempting to Lake, Gregory Lake. land on Big Bear. A couple or -=====,..== ... ..,.., the boat landings on Big Bear ,.. will be open and have boats available for duclc bunters. Holloways Landing in A1et- calf Bay will have boats for sure opening morningJ THE BEST ll•1d•r1hip polt1 pro•• "P••· nuti" i1 o"• of th1 world't rno1t popul1r carnic 1trip1. ll•1d it d1ily '" th, DAILY PILOT, I J ' I 1 ' 1 WITH DAD'S HELP -Tim Babb of Costa Mesa holds up a mixed limit of ducks taken late last season in the Lake view area. It was young Babb's first duck hunt and he is looking: forward to this year's hunting, which gets under way Saturday in Southern California. WHAT'S IN- OUTDOORS? by Jack AnthOny -:... Waterfowlers can expect one of the best opening days in more than 25 years "'hen U1e 1970 duck season opens Saturday. There are thousands of ducks in the Southland and -limits should be the rule for all scattcr·gunners. Spring populations in all areas are the highest in recent limes and together with the good hatch of widgeon, mallards and teal lhis summer the entire season should be good. Defense Is l\ey For Uni Defense is the key word in the University Higtt football world this week. BUY IN PAIRS ANO ·SAVE UN .. OTAL COAST TO COAR u m1M1 I . 'NAIU.HIT II _, U~lr1v1I - -....... 11 ...... . "·--~ ......... ""' .. j • "MO NJJ". Milo W ~ ... ,·-·-~ ., •• oor .. ~i. ,-. -•;u,."";,11.,._ ·~ 011.._ .. _ .,.,._ All reservations for opening weekend are filled at all public shooting areas. Wister will have a very long waiting line, and the outcome of the shoot will depend very heavily on the weath· er around the Salton Sea. Coach Jerry Redman ls preparing his Trojans for a Saturday· night game with Webb School of Claremont on the Mission Viejo field and tte is spending at least 70 percent of the team's practice time on defense. EACH $1 695 EACH $1995 EACH $22.95 '""""""•-11·-pO•l ..... t. "" , ... ~ -'_._...,,._ It will take a strong wind to kick the rafting ducks off the huge body water adjacent lo the refuge. Ponds are all sold out at Gilbreaths Bros. Duck Club near \Vasco for the opening week. It seems every duck hunter in Southern California will be turning out for the opening day shoot. Locally there is very limited public hunting as there is no open water for shooters to get near. Irvine Lake is selling year· ly blinds and Lake Henshaw has some duck shooting. The City of San Diego has opened up a few of its large lakes to ducks hunters and interested shooters should call (714) 263-55J% for ad- vance reservation and hunling information. Baldwin Lake in the San Bernardino mountains will be very good for the opening but hunting space will be at a premium due to hunter pressure. All hunters are warned to watch out for deep mud around Jakes. The Kern National Wildlife Refuge will not operate this sea~ son due to construction. The bag and possession limit for the southern part of the slate this year is seven per day and seven in possession. Very fe\\' geese have been seen in the Southland to date, but a few could be taken around the Salton Sea. Deer ll1111ti11g Press11-re Do1vn The closing of the National Forests last week kept the deer kill down. Very few hunters ventured out int.o the fields of South· ern California. The story was the same in Central and NQrtheast· ern California as wardens report very little deer activity, \Vith cooler weather n1oving in, deer should begin movlni; down to lower portions of the mountains, making them accessible to more hunters. Deer which have been bagged thus far this season are heal· thy, have good sets of antle rs and hunters report seeing lots of young deer. Even though thi s season will not go down in the record books as one of the best, the outlook for the next two years is enwurag· ing if nature is not harsh during the winter months. Jllorli11 Hit Oil East E rad The hol spot ror marlin fishing is the east end of.Catalina Island and on the back side of the famous islaind. Peggy Hitch· cock of !he Balboa Angling Club predicts the total catch for the season will go over the 100 mark this weekend. Jim Donnelly of Costa a.1esa. fishing aboard the boat "Baja'' caught a 136-pound spikebill this weekend 8 miles Southeast of the east end of Catalina. Donnelly was using a live Spanish mackerel for bail. llerry~Thompson searChed all weekend for the elusive tuna. which were reported fust off our coastline. After trolling for Why is he so concerned with defense when tte feels the Tro- jans caused their own downfall last week at Banning with many offensive mistakes? "This is the first, and pro- bably only time we will face the single-wing this season. \Ve have to prepare the kids for the situation they will face and many of them have never even seen a single-wing of· fense. "Webb is a very physical team. They are well coached, big and strong and they come right at you. "They haven't thrown much th is year but Banning hadn't either until we played them and they filled the air with footballs." Even al th at Redman feels the Trojans could have won the game. "If we can clean up some of the mistakes we made, we will do much better. It wasn't so much what they were doing on defense as it was what we weren't doing on offense. We weren 't blocking and our backs weren't hitting the right holes.•· While he was a bit disen· chanted with the offense, he proclaims the merits of his junior quartebrback. "Tom Walker is is the best junior quarterback I have coached Jn seven years on the high school level.· He is ll win· ner. he throws well aiid he runs the ball very well. He will be a real good one for us and \.l'e have him another year." C71-14/6.95-14 E71-14/7.3S.14 E71·1S/7.3S.15 • 6.S0-13 7.00.13 6.IS·1S EACH $28 95 2 for $38 '"'· h . Tu"-~11M•\A r--'-'-·"-"-"-·'-' --·-'· _ _, F71-1S17.7S-1S ff71-1418.S5·14 G71-14/l ,2S.14 G7l-lS11.2S·1S H11-1s11.ss.1s 2 •·544 ' EACH $2-l 9'.i VW's $60.1 s •so11s 700.l1J 7SSa14' 73Sa15 more than eight hours without a strike, Thompson felt that th;_n ~ _ • ..J!!llOWfin had movfil!.fil!.L._ --• ,. ., ·-_.1~n__.;:,ea __ • L_~,-........ ~ _77-Sslt. JJS:•lc -A few skipjack were la~en lietween ihe 209 and 14-mitelian ,..__-r, .-·~-0-"lffli~-esS..1-S- .... .., ... lhe --iw. .1 ' ·' ( ...... ...,.,..,._ ... Ill n, x. Tu Plu1 F1d. fK. T1.: ,,;.., r ........... 1.8 ... $2.17 lo 2.23 I* ti.. $2.47 to 2.80 per tirt loo••-• .._ •~kll - lkp11111int • •iii 41,.ndi't on site ,.....;,..,.. ""'""' ...in..t ~-.. , for 1v11 ... 11., -nptnmnt ...., , __ 11111ff. n aiq COl•1 NO TRADE-IN NEEDED -''L-;--~!J UNIROYAL~ ( ~ WHILE THEY LAST SPECIAL PURCHASE- rsERIES. /SLIGHT BLEMISHES FASTRAK GLAS.BELT . 2mr$4Jllm va.u Plus Ftd. &. Tn $2.3$ ,.. .. + GLASS .llLT I 2 for $56 . 2 for $60 each SJO 95 na.14/7.75-14. G71J.14/8.2s.14 F7S.15/7.75-15 078-15/&25-15 Pl111 '"·fl:. To• • ,,.; lire $2.55 IO $2J7 tlloia-ndi"f ...... each $32 9~ H78·14tl.SS.-14 H71-1SJ8.SS.1S " J71-1Sll .I S.1S ""Fed.&. Ta ..... If ... $2.tl .. $3.0I •r-11119 -.. ,. WHITEWALL ONLY $2.95 MORE Most ma la stock. , 1SllaM IPPNfllD bf9rnl1Ms l!fhkh In no ft'f olffed: perform.nc& E-. u .. ...,., .. lhll...,... -i. ._, _,...,,,., 20,000 Mill GUAUllllE BRAKE RELINE 95 --Sunday but the action has slowed down to almost a standstill. F ~ for • £0 ISS1~4 915115 It's a tossup on where the hot spot will be for marlin this ish Report ;;;:~; •'· weekend. If the weather holds good the fish could show up all ••r_., .r ..... i.. S.-"'1'• over the ocean. It's good indication from recent weigh-ins, that oce•HS•D•-n • .-.1~1 21 lllr••eu-TR. A LE ~ ··--,_ .. ,_.. · the fishing shoold be hottest between the 14-mile bank and the ::;,:.,~ ""''"· "' ..... """"""'· " I R •Iii~-. __ ,.,:;;•FOREIGN CAR TIRES • WIDE TIRES•WIDE UVAI:S •.STEEL REINFORCED. 78 SERl~S. 70 SERIES ·.~ east end o{ Catalina. SAN DlEOD-161 • .-.1~1 "' Yelllw· but ~~:ha~~~~,~~:~ ~~l~br~~~ :1~ed up near the island , ~~~Y:~:·~c~,~i::;ftll-semn·tp 'Where tJiere is more than meets the e~ 6CI •,...ltf'11 lt blrrK\1111, U 111-11, 551 'J V Coo•lol FlshiNg Steady ::;;,";,u.':!~':!~.!,"";,.:~,~ ':~ AHAIEM I CORONA I GARDEN GROVE I NAWAllAll GARDfllS I HUNTINGTON BUCH Art's Landing, Davey's Locker and San Cl"'"""'n'· Sponfish· etttu 11 11111, ,, tlolllto. ll•-» ll'I· Tire • .tores "'J.,','r~~I IU W. 6"I ST. &601 WUTMINSnl 1197S CAISON ST, 19411 lu.at ILVD . .......... I.IC tlen; ) 11111, ne beftlto. ll Hf'd'I. ... .......... • llOO:S WT Of MACl6 MTWUlll 'ION(ll ' MOIWAU:J M •tu ~!fl Of ~ 1ng are on their winter schedules now, but the action is on sum· <~1e1nc. L1M111t>-ll • .-.1ef11 t t111di tu-1170 nS-6010 19• •sts .,. -1 5,._7571 Rt1 "'"· a c.irlal 111 ... , 11 bonito. JG ~ ,._..,. . mer game fish along the entire gouth coast. Party boats are gel-n1e11: coo. ling into .some good schools of bass, small barracuda and yellow· SAN CllMENTl-n '"'1tr11 us SANT A ANA I t 'J blrtKIHI•, 11' llllllte, «I btH, I Pt.Ill· al · ti..1, 11 ~••tvwr111. Wlot A.T IOI.SA BonilO continue lo give up good sport on Ught tackle. The , .. ,. ,1D110 u""' 11. UMl119)-10 loads a..., light 3nd lhc ocean ia calm. .,,.1..-11 s ,.,11, .. 1.11, n "-"but, uo e.1. UN700 • '< IOt INI .. *I •lfll. (M_ .. laflftlll) Bay fishing is starting to pick up as boats out the Pavilion ~ 1.,.,.." • ve11ow1.11, 1.e i.tiuo.,. and Art 's Landing Btt picking up a good number of haJibut in ca~~w~~·T~~:: .. C::·rt', LIMlnwJ-R~I the bay. Mike Gross at the Pavilion reports the first sea trout ".,,.,1 .. 11 ,. 1111rrtc:1H1•. ns bollno.,. are starting lo be caughl from skiffs. •"· ' ""'"11' '" 11111, 1 ve11owi111. 10.Yl'l''t l.9()1 .. )-41 1t11eltf1/ 3M -· Phil Tozer is beglnnlng to book the popular shark trips out tli!, "' bll11, 12 barrtc:Udf, JO ~1l!bu1, of Da vey's Locker. Skipper Clyde Oillam predict., a good yenr :s~ .. ~.:'."',_.~'~cM-Jltntterai 3 bonJlo, UNIROYAL for all 1ypcs of sharks Including the Rood eating bonito and •• thresher. !-~or advance reservati ons phone 873-1434. MA.I.tau '1•11-1s 1..011•11 1t1 rod toll. l4 DOnlla, t 1Nrr1c1t1111. SANTA ANA 1211 W. WAINll . Avt. (W.U:N[l AT IRIUDU ........ USI YOUI MAJOI I TUSTIN 131 L 1tt STRm {llf AMI "O" SIJ 544-9431 CUDIT CAID I I WESTMlllSTIR I COSTA MESA-I SAN CLEMDm WESTMINSnt AT a.DAI NEWPORT BEAOI m N. n wlaeo IUL 0: IUICl'J f.. °'" OOl.00 WUI) 193-3521 ~22 WT 17tlt. ST • 4924 S4t M2-41a1 OPEN 8-8:30 DAILY /8·5 SAT. ' ' J I I J , f , - ' 1 I -·-- DAYTIME MOVIES FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 • • Cal .State Fullerton Sets Ambitious-Stage Season p..,.i.r. E111t-Hll Alllhoto1 Quinn • AM Mart•l'ft ••1t.P.M.." e 1111 e Ct .. r e ,ntl JllY! .,.._"EL COMDQ1t"e t1tlC.llf' Undw 11 Mutt •• Wiit! Ptl"lftt u..-r 1r "'"'' 11e w11t1 "'""'· Htltllt '#°""' e lt*rt C•i, "901 • CAlt.OL a Tt!D a At.ICI!" Piiis • Sin. M<OWM ..,.HE REIYEltS" l .. MIMll • JKt 1'11.iKI "MONTI WALSH" • (Ql"J J•-,,...,,, • ""'" f'•IMh "fHli CHETliHHE SOCIAL. CLUa" e (Ql'J •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $2.DO Pll CAALOAD -" -· --••r·~1•1 .. _ ..... ""'"' Exd1111W ~Ill S/MowtMI ''MIOEL UMCNollNl!D" e IQ,) ••• .-.. _... SULLIFT l"Olt Plll"T'TY I OY" (OP} AllC. .... SMwl All C.lllf SIWWI Cfftll t!tt~ "KIU."l'"I MEllO•J" e (QI'} .... • Jt(k '"""""" • ,...,., .,_,, ''TH• OUT.O,.·TDWMl"ltV . IQl'I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Ernie's Sam ~do Nrwr<ll f Wot -..... -.... ...._ aw ..... -OI, M UI EXCLUSIVE ""op1c-..."' --..,.,.,,. ond sxpl1a,1tionl Children's Try0t1ts Set ·The Junior Division of th• CQSta1i1esa Civic PtaybOOS( will hold tryouts for lht Jl!l!!lr.en · p..r .Q.Ji "-" U o n., ''William and the Gander,• Wednesday, Oct. 21, an c Friday, Oct 23. Ren.dings will be held at lht Community Rec~_@l!o_p ~nte1 -from 3:-.30-to 5. p.m. Tryou u are open only to those children 8 to 14 years who have com· pleted a workshop or havt; ex· perience J n productions. Rehearsals are scbeGuJed Oil Wednesdays and Fridays al · the same hour. The fee Is $5.0l plus costume. TUNING UP FOR DUO RECITAL TONIGHT ·SCC Musjcians Laszlo and Ka ren Lak The production, under thi direction of Pali Tambellinl with Anita Grossman a~ musical director; ~ill be stag· ed Jan. tf>.17 and 22-24. Fo! further information call 834· 5.103. Duo Recital Set Topi.ght At .College Pianist I:.aszlo Lak and his wife, 1'aren, violinist, will present a duo recital in the Coat.of-Arms Room of the stu- dent activities building tosight at 8:30 as part of the in· augural week acUvities at Southern California College in Costa Mesa. The Laks are new members <lf the music depart- ment faculty. Included in the program will be the Sonata in G lo.1ioor by Handel for violin with piano conlinuo. Karen Lak will also Perform the dj£ficult n~ac­ companied Sonata in B Minor EXCLUSIVE AREA SHOWING Program Rated '(R" I LARRY KRAMER .. MARTIN ROSEN\ """"' KEN RUSSELL'S ''" • I · D. H. LAWRENCE'S, ,,. 1 , __ "WOMEN IN LOVE" ca • llil. ALSO PLAYING by Bach. Lak will play two Bartok:\'==================== numbers Rotnnanl an Dance Op-8 ar:d Fifteen Hung3rian Peasant Songs. The public is inivted and admission is free. Number Eleven Mil"nONAL C~Al ~""°' Fiiiitrlt5 ._..,.,._,. .. MIW•M6-1712 NOW THAU TUESDAY XISEPHE.lrnNE-~AVCOEMWSY fllM PETER KATHARINE OTOOLE HEPBURN . ~MAITIN~ I lHCtloN IN WINTER I .... GeN Wilder •• "START THE REVOLUTION WITHOUT ME" --~((lfrA--lol•JH11. ··---·----.... -- L ORANGE courmrJl):'D . n&au·m. 1 & ti30r.M.FNGAGEKNT SAT.llJt..1 ..... 11 .... &ll PX · .... l.J1l .. JsJl.hJl.tM , ...... '"CATCH·22' says many things l~Kl~l~~SIUI that need to be said again and M»l~WJN ·~·2 ga in! Alan Arkin's perlorm· .,'f\"'~\·T-- nee as Yossarian is great!" \',~' ... ~....... [!!} --.k>stdl M..,te~s!••n, l'ffWSW((I( .llh.«IUll 0 11111•••--1-....111111twma..Ma:lilfll_M:lllll •ow1 ""*'"IDl:l."l.IPl!'111. 111iu.••n•11W11 Wlllf S .Ulfllt PIM.In .... , ~llJ •Ul.UI , ... II NO RESERVED SfAlS • FREE PARKING Ll:I: 1'CARVZN "JIONTI WAZ.SB". -------f CALL 546-3102 •1'°;;.!";:';!,!',""' t ST Am FllDAY· PLUS-Rod Ttylor t nd Sury Kt11d1rt in "DARkt R THAN AMI ER';-R•ted "R'' Elliott Gould Donal d .... ••• . ' . ' ' . ' ' " " ~1 ·1\:S ·ll ,, , td•n JACQUELIN!""' e .. ~==,,_=~.,.-I --11ssn ••• flATUll h rt L-otm e o..,. Marth• ,,... 5"Ht • J.cq ... / .. lhMt HELD OVER POSITIYELY'ENDS THU RSDAY, OCT. 11 I& QIN! JfNI NAJMN fAS1WOOl> SEBERG ' IWNT~WAGON Cli11t Et1lwoo4 in "ll:ELLY'S HllDlS" "6 " "A I R P 0 R T" CALL 892-4493 Geo'90 C. Sc,ott -Kori M._ldon 211d.H!f -Pe~I Ntwt11t11 111 "WINNING" "G" - • DICK ·TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS • MUn AND JEFF JUDGE PARKER WE 'O SITTER PJ.IONE THE POCTOR .l.!!IB€Y AND TELL HE!i! SAYS HE'S THA.f JASON HAS RE · GOING 10 !!I G,6..INEP COMSCJOUSNE55~ A.LL RIGHT, rf.~---;:,.-,;---<) MR. D~IVEll: ! PLAIN JANE IO-Jl ' ' I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by' A. POWER I ACROSS l \'/eJlhermaii'~ word 6 Beseech 10 \'/eight loser's pr oblem 14 Therefore l S Anger l~ Seventh deadly sin 17 Brought to disaster 19 Ditk Button or Petra Burka: 2 words 20 Humor j 2I···Blow 22 Personlfi· calico ol peace 23 Trave l agent's "package" 2S Natura l gifts 27 Agreemenl 30 Prance about 31 "li;eystone Kops" film feature 32 Feature of some t hl'l'Sl'S J) Cuttlefish r!uid l & Royal or Blanc 37 Grief 38 Languish 39 Fish 40 ···-De Valera " ' " " f-o· - " 20 " " " ll 36 39 " u .. .. " • I "' • 23. ., <11 Divis ion of a poem 4Z Holy day 44 Garment of old 45 Scal\C'r in drops 47 Fl19htles s bird 48 Garn bl ing game 49 Jar top 50 6119\e call 54 British military tra1n1riy center 57 Basis or golfer's swir.9 58 KniQh ts 59 Facilitate bO Soap pl3nt &l Deris ive sound b2 Fftcial feat ures ft) More mo\lern DDY.'N l Kirid of salmou 2 Klrid of weave slruC\urc 3 Within: Preli' ~ Sev~rt llia t: 2 words 5 Inflamed & Abbol 's assistant 7 Kind ol conies I 5 " " " ,, ' " l2 31 .... '° " " " " ., ' .. ' ' I • " .. Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: C "I ~ S ~~H D A W " I<( ~!Ill £~OS[ \J Oi!lS HOR Oi G IL A I( ( .. S[ lY(S < R C T H a.Ending used will1 man and men 'l Favorable !('ply 10 More expensive 11 Purposes lZ Contest '" . sports program lJ A1ao accessories: Brit. l'l Wei9ht units 21 P1oietl 24 Unity 25 Claw Zb State 27 Peak 28 Brogue , for one 2'l Northern California community: 2 words )0 Blush 32 Greek epic pee\ • ii' • " .. ~ " ,. ,M l' ,, .. ... " " " I· .. 6l • ' [ ~ T 10/SnO 34 Diplomatic ccmmuni· cation 35 Tit 37 Fruit JS Canada's·- Provinces 40 Ethyl ace tat e, e.g. ~1 Fa1m animal 43 Certify 44 El ···: Spanish hero 45 Break Into pieces 4& Disease 47 Fly!ng I Oys 49 F orrfe 1t 51 O'clare 5Z Europ,an SJ Agent; SuffllC 55 p,rceive 5b Cattle food 57 Barti' characl'r II ,, " - ' • . I~. .. 3 • " ' . sr ' " 10/8/7 0 • PERKINS By Tom K. Ryan ,__.._ _ _, 6Arl1 LOTSA 1-UCK ! ... 'IOlJ ~OOK AWRJI.! WHAl'S WRONG? ' . t 1ll!NK II\\ ~lH'UJmJ>. By Al Smith ~·• ... L~~­ By Harold Le Doux By F"'nk Baginski · MISS PEACH ..- u•a: lBNa_ ' SALLY BANlNAS GORDO MOON MULLINS By John Miles By Mell AR:THU~, 'IOU NEVE2 TAKE Af'.N EXT~· C:Ulllit!C.ULAR. SU&i.JECTS.' DON'T 'VOU W/r!Hf TO ORIN(. .ltT THE FOUNTAIN OF Le'AflNING? DON'T" VOU HAVE A 'Tl<ll<ST FOR ~? WILL, I 'M NOT E•ACTLV ....,.,. "rt:X.tO CALL I I I ! ' STEVE ROPER HOW A80UT THIS, l lGER ~ ALL J NEED IS A SIX· 6UM AWD A TE~·GAU.Dll WIT I PEANUTS 1 ~ --'4'> - A LUSH-. c:\'.~', ').. ., -. -·.~, ... .... By Saunders and Overgard BVT Ill EVERY BAl?REL DO ~ THERE /S QIJE &4DM'l'.£/, WOR.f<Y, JOE! I DUNNO, MANME/ •I ltEASU~EO TllE rrs BIGGER'N I SATIERY ~EMEMBE~ IT/ /~lll15 Wll.Lm' EASILY/ . By Charles M. Schull ' lh11rsdu, Octobtr 8, 1970 THI STIAHGI W011D MR.MUM DAIL V PILOT :t!t ly Al Capp By Gus Arriola By Ferd JahMon FISHING LE~NS I DENNIS THE MENACE • • • j I l DAILY PILOr • HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE-HOUSES'FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE Newport 811Ch -1200 Balboa Peninsula 1300 Laguna Beach 1705 1000 Genar1I 1000 Gen••I 1000 Geirterat 1000 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•I ~-;;.,;;;;;;;====;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;.;;;;;;;;;;;: $19,950 WEST BAY AVE. AYRES BUILT HOMES 4 BEDROOM HOME With .Formal Dining Room :Linda Jj/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES BLUE CHIP -OFFERING On this beautiful Mesa Verde tri-level 4 bedroom, 3 bath, separate family room. For- mal dining room and break- fast area. There's Jots <l! happy tiving in this real fine home, now for only $44,950. Call for showing. 546-2313 Channing new 3 bdrm. 2 ba. ""Meaitertanean style; Block from ocean & bay, Bullder"s home, top qualicy. 1 Bedroom home on R-3 lot W1tlklng distaJW!e tu u:iwn & beach (1lnce 1905) Bill Grundy, Realtor 83.'l Dover Dr., NB 6424620 ~tan IRV·INE AREA <YOU OWN THE LAND> Located clo1e to Park in MESA VERDE'S fine1t sedion Piclure in your mind a beautiful setting with large trees, manicured dichondra lawn, then add the convenience of 1800 sq. ft. of floor space. locate the home in a q'uiet neighbor4 n ood just 2 blo~ks !<> schools, park-& 11braTy . . . . you now have 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 fast! Newly li sted-Lot • 60 ; perfect for the fam- ily who wants a spacious waterfront home. 4 Extra lge BR., 4 Ba., pwdr: rm. L~e. liv. rm. & den ; 3 car garage. Beaut. patio/ga rden ; deck & dock. By App't. Huntington Beach 1.00 4 BEDROOM REAL ESTATE 1190 Glenneyre St. . 494-9473 549-03161 THE RANCH--UNIT -4 22 HOMES SOLD-FIRST 4 WEEKS Excellent terms & loans now available . CALL-. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR-..,--1 833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 IO ' THE REAL \"-ESTJ\TEJ3J3 *MUST SELL* $22,950 Yes, a_ 4 b:tdl'OQ.m i~J bath condominium in Huntington Beach, one Jong block from the beacb. If you want some.. lhing nice with all modern features close to lhc beach, this is the least expensive you will find. lt"s a n1ust see for that price. Call 546-2313 for showing. OCEAN VIEW 6 BEDRri.1, 4 bath + vacant lot, walk lo bPach, shopp'g & church. OPEN DAILY 1-4 1~ Temple Terrace South Coast Realtors • Call Ginny a4!">-84M 4 to 7 BEDROOMS General 1000 General 1000 WESTCLIFF Reduced to $42.500 with $6,000 down. Immaculate 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. 2 to 4 BATHS includes all builtins, carpetin~, forma l dining rooms, family roOms, fireplaces, underground utilities and many other qu•lity features. PLEASE CALL .......••..... DRASTIC Reduction to $25,950 Small modern beach house Close to sand beach *TAYLOR University Realty 673-6510 3001 E. Coast Hv.'Y .. Cdl\.1 HARBOR VIEW ?t10BILE HQ.\'IE -\V/Full $1,000 DOWN ri.1egnilicent Ocean Viev.· lol, smaU bul level. SS.950. Bkr. 497-1210 or 494-t632 eves. BY owner. Custom 3 br, 2 ba. Beams. 7~%-$212 mo. PITI 49-1--0428 da, 832-7449 eve. PR·ICES START AT $30,440 2 Bedroom plu11-den Brick fireplace Private enclosed patio Built-in Kitchen 4 BR "Broadmoor" w/fam Cabana. Luxury P ark , rm & formal DR. Artistic Baytront Penin. Ad Its . design of rare planting in 673--8100, 675-8321. Select Your New Ayres Built Home During The Custorn.izing Stage terraced garden. $79,500 --B=y_o_w_ne-,-. ~,~,-,.-,~.~~-- DOVER SHORES garage apt on beach. $2250 Move-In * The Hideaway House * $18,500. l BR, sunroom, gar- dens, cptd. 494-7329 Choice of all Models and Exteriors- S.lect Your Lot Location Now Brand NE'\V & beautiIUl 4 For1 appt can 213/31s.-0891 No other costs. 3 Bedroom 2 BR, den, formal DR. LEASE OPTION bath, 2% yrs new, $32,950 OPEN 1-5 S\08,000 2 BR, 2 BA, POOL full price. 60xlOO Lol,-'-'xisl - 410 Morning Star Lane O\VNER 6Th-8200 ing 6%'7n VA loan payable HOME & T 29 ''Our:_ 25th Year" $224 P.l.T.I. anyone qualili- INCO' ME otal Payments $1 WESLEY N. Newport Heights 1210 "·Separate don, !onnal ·~ SEE MODElS AT Mission Viejo 1708 SANTA ANA FREEWAY & JEFFREY ROAD TAYLOR Co try, blln range & oven, dish- NU El Dorado home, 2 sty, 3 BR, 3 ba, Lge bonus rm. Nice vu l<lt. 2060 sq ft for $30,545. F'HA or VA terms. Bier 837-1747. Two homes on a corner lot. Existing FHA at 5~ interest Realtors • EXECUTIVE MANOR washer, brick fireplace, wall One 3 bedroom , .. each can ~ taken over on this ''Our 25th Year Realtors Big 4 BR, '2 BA prestige to wall crpts & drps, Shake with individua l fenced and cute 3 bedroom Eastside In the Harbor Area" NEWPORT CENTER home. Beaut decor. Lgc kit roof, patio, \valk to park. landscaped yard. Both re-home with lovely shade and 673•4400 21J1 San J oaquin J.l ills Road with all bl1ns. Frplc of Ital-., cen!ly redecorated and in fruit trees and enclosed gar. 644-4910 ian marble. Chandt>liers, lge • 1710 Sales office open from 838-5136 11 am to 7 pm daily 838-5120 1llage Re al Esta te San Clemente General 1000 Gener.al 1.;c=.:;c. ___ ..;,.:_;.;. 1000 excellent conditkln. Live in age. Beautilu11y decoratedl~~iijijiji~~~~ $23 950 living & din rm overlooking ,62 •471 546 llOl one & let your tenant make dnterior including crpts &: I • 20x40 h&I POOL w/lots of ..... ( :::: J - the payments, Call now! drps as well 85 Jot! of cus-,yltTrWJ·· 1 4 Bdt :f--Family Rm. decking. Partial ocean view $28,500 DANDY fixer upper 2 br., nn for 2-3 more units, S24, 750. South Coast Realty 493-43-16 Open Dai~ 328 Aliso Newport Heights comer of Beacon 1 shOrf block from ~liff Dr. By Owner $36,JOO SpacX>us 3 bedroom 2 'bath, living room with fireplace, large dining area overlook- ing lovely secluded lanai, carpeting, drapes, built-in electric kitchen. Garage off aUey with electric en open- er. Nicely landscaped cor- Only $39.500, tom cabinets. Out.standing Elegant Palos Verdes stone from ballroom size balcony. C I h value at $23,950. fireplace in huge living rm., Asking $5.'J,@or trade local. G I & FHA APPRAISAL 0 e. swort y 4 Bedrms, Family rm., din-ly. Sparkli ng rclean, 4 bedrms, CD&ATS NEW LISTING ing r·m., Entry hail, built-CALL '='-646•2414 1% baths, elec kit., lovely San Juan GI NO DOWN Low Down to Others ins Mesa Verde Cambridge, 3 ins. No down CJ. 540-1720 9\;;I-' crpts/drps, lge corner lot. Capistrano & Co. WALLACE bdrms, plus den, plus family Tarbell 29SS Ha rbor MN'dfllL 847·8507 Eves: 968-1178 4 ACRE estate !;rd or horse 4 Miles lo ocean, absentee REALTOR REALTORS room <with fireplace1 plus REPOSSESSIONS R EALTY m J~'ilp ranch. nice view, adj. other owner fllUSI sell . l..llvely 3 Newport Beach OffiCt' -546-4141-love ly living room (with fire. Sparkling clean homes, some Nr•r Nrwporr Poll orrlt• • z'"""r-e1; I,,,,.. I ' parcels. $48,000; $15,000 dn bedroom, 2 bath home wilh 1D'l8 Bayside Drive (Open Evenings) pfaCf') plus large lanai pa-newly painted & carpeted. 2, 1225 1 ~~~~=~.l.~~,.l~,~·~~!. will release clear bid. site a large palio w/bltn BBQ. 675--49.30 tio. Th is is really a "lot of 3• 4 & 5 bdrms. Some ~th Bayshores • •EM.n fOl' lOO',~ financing. Bier. Cornt'r lot wilh room for a.r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1;::::: hollS(> for the money"" -pools. FHA·VA .-.-.nv. \•ms, -.---------497-1210 or 493-1706 eves. ,\' "" · J J .. ~ " Charming 2 br, lge Jiving rm, DUMB de DUMB . DUMa.! ! """' '" .. park anc1 sCfiOOJ. Pricetf at .uv .. • ' """' · trplc. Pvt lieac~s. 6'!..-oon•tge:rcaugti:n· gr,..,,::---. -- --'""I or 1-il~'· wa-lk lo all [ 1 ASSU-ME~FHA. L. OA-'N auu !l 's on a arge at near -~m~l! IXXJ~o "" IXXl ~ • ..,_, sc~15!-l2'1·9.i0. oca 5¥.c~. Interest oruy 134 IXXJ Collins & Watts Inc5523. $:h,950. 642-1905 day stealing this near new 4 ~CfPtStrano Beach 1730 ' · 8843 Adams Ave. 962-·Port 7~ -- • , COA&TS ~ Beautifully maintained-Villa. bedroom, 2 bath in " *°'hY·iOCEAN: Family Prk Fourplex Pacific Condominium, well KING SIZE LOT university Park 1237 Lido" tract. \Y~k lo bea,'! ·"°'1x>OI . 1~2-Expa-ndO WALLACE locatedtorecreationalfacil-Close 10 ocean. Build large ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; and_park.OnlyS3850cas . · .. r.1obile Home. Lg-. corner -.... REAL TORS Deluxe units wit h an income ities, 3 bednns, 2 baths, own-duplex v.·ith lour garages. closing costs takes over O'i 'Io!, w/doi;: run. By Dana of $5.55 • .a. month. Needs a er very anxious arx:I wW Qv.'fler w/linallC('. $29,500. SEE US -• loan. Hurry? Point l\larina. Job Trans!. Open Evenings • 962-4454 • little paint & can>. help with down paymen1.l-~C~O=R~O~N•A.-D=E'L-.MA"""R:-I Georg• Williamson For a fine selection of homes Larwin R'alty, Inc. ~lust Sell!! ner lot. 646-4032 548-1444 :::;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;~. ·--R-E_P_A_l~R-,-s~A~v-E-­ Here's an opportunity for a handy man to assume a lrg. 5~ 7,. FHA WAN \VITII LOW MONT HL Y J>AY- MENTS and enjoy lhis spac. iou.s Three Bdrm. ]~ bath OOme with elect. B/N's and dining room. Large Dbl. Gar- age . fenced yard. Listed at n&,000 and open to <lffers. SUBMIT W\Y OOWN PAY- MENT_ flexiblr 1erms.1 $47 1950 Assume loan with payment& Realtor offered for sale in University 962-6988 anytime 40&-2381 • of $170 per month ind princ., 673-4350 64>1564 Eves. Park & Turtle Rock -Per-0 p All C I inl., taxes, .... FIXER-UP-$29,000 BACK BAY AREA ~:."y~~.1""' the righ\ • .., wner ays OS s R iv .. ;;de County 1800 Exclusive with: M. M. La Borde, Rltr. 646-0555 Eves: 646-45i9 Realtors 2790 llarbor Blvd. at Adan1s Mj.()..16.i Open 'Iii 9 Pl\1 Waterfront Duplex Nt wporl Island 2 BR. hOmf' + lge. l-bdrn1. RPI. over garage. Pier & float. 30 X 100 Lot. Owl'lC'r moving • asking sro.ooo & Rnxious! Call: 673-366.1 b'73-8086 Evt's associated Newport •• fairview 64~111 (anytime) ~.'THE REAL ESTATERS ' .. Di) 1o a GI lo11n on th is sharp :: By Onwcr • Norco 1~ Walk to Corona beach. LiUlt> '-"<m 2 ba ranchc' Liv-3 BR. fireplace bit ins, ""w • k I be h 3 Spacious 4 bedrm..o;, formal· uo:u , wor or M ac area, 1"" ....:. fsmily •m, ,_·,,, w/ 0 hag -~1 ••w pa•.nl ,·n • I .. --........__ Cou •Po>• k"t he dining, fam ily rm, priced .... ''" . • '"'t' " ~~,,... ,.._ « C1 U<:\.Uuums: n .. ;r ~I c. n. w crpts &. d'"""", TOTAL out, ':acre, all 6' C &: L . -·-Cheery fll'l'placc. En J o Y under market. For eppt. . ,,.., . fenced, l'"'"e corrals for 5 1093 Baker, C.M. 546-5440 backyard BBQ + pah·o. Jean Smith. Realtor CASH NEEDED to move 111 ~,, • & · horsc'S, storage shed. Good ""::::=:==:=:=:=:=:=~1 SJo-boa\ ,·n back ya·• Al-400 E. 17th, c.ri.1. 646-3255 only $100. + taxes ms. le-• •124.~ 7" "774 i '"'" iu. lst Western Bank Bldg. $25,500 Full priCT', HOri.lE· '"' ovu ........., ley access. A best buy. Bl't· ARE YOU LOOKING FOR .... ter hurry. Costa Mesa 1100 University Park CFC!~N~DCERS~~96lJ.:;;:c193=1:...,·=;--I Condominium DIAL 645·0303 Day 333-0lOI Nights Can't Beat This 19SO A custom 4 BR. home on a Ian!• Jot where yoo owo '"; FOREST E. OLSON land, in Newport Beach · REAL TORS We've gut i~ & with a 51.->~"1 2299 Harbor C.M. assumable insurance loan! · $65,IXXl. $1,000 TOTAL DOWN NO GIMMICKS __...__ to assume a low governm<'nt ..............-............... loan on lhis sharp 3 bf'droom Coktwell,Banker bungalov.·. ?t1odern built·'..1 ·~ltDCO.Ml"f • kitchen, FIREPLACE, cov- ered patio, and MORE. Sell- er flexible so i;ct out your 644-2430 quick pen befol'l' il':-1 gone. 833-0700 ~estbay Income H,=.s 1 :~=:==:=~.=:==:==:==:=~1 Only $25.95011! New Tr i-Ple11:es $57,500--Bonus Room +View Low Interest GI Loan! I Large, beautiru1 "homei; with pl us 3 br and 2 ba for only 3 Bedrm, 2 bath, crptd, fncd, ar income" localed in the $42,500. 18 x 30 BONUS won't last~! ''TIBURON'' Town hou.ses. Sign up now for choice re- sales. Assume gov't loans, no qualifying. finest E:>slside area of Costa R00~1 can he a donn, a HAFF DAL REAL TY GI NO 00\VN SlS.500 FP, 2 ?t1esa. Featuring Ill 3 BR, game room, a den, an office 842-4405 bedrooms, 2 baths, !I'plc, 2 BA '"o\vners unit" + f2) or a hugr master BR. ll"s bhns, crpls, drps. 2 BR rental units. &e at dillerent. Immediate Possession . R 1 1 ~ La rwin ea ty, nc, 2005 Tustin Ave., cor Wood -• d h II VA/FHA tenns OK. Large.. 'J' • land Pl. or call 642-4905. • bedrm. 2 bath home near 1 __ 9_6_2·_6_9_88_a~n~y~l~•m~•-- HOUSES FOR SALE re I ri.farina High School. Asking QUALITY 2 Bed. 2~li bath in 127 500 W'.th pa~c••o·· less \\"cstctiff. Patio, sauna, • O PEN DAILY l·S e ' J'" " . REALTY 1han rent. pool, attract. price. Jmmcd. 'Til sold! Assume 6%.%· VA Rex L. Hodges, Riiy. occ. 5-l!M120 Univ. Park Center. Ir-vine Joan. $148 Per mo. Rcdccor. 847-2525 RENTALS 3 Br. \V/\V cpts. drps. Im-Call Anytin1e 833-0820 med. possession? Only $22,-BY TRANSF. OWNEP~ Houses Furnished n=o 1 "'u Fed·-' A BEAUT. 4 br/3 ba. 2200 sq ''""-~ """"' vc. Corona del Mar 1250 l :::il===~=~==;1 $24,000 FULL PRICE. no down payment 1;;s ;;;Be;;;d•oo;;;m=Fix;;;erii;i·U;;;ppe-r Divorce Sale Walker & Lee )'ou can buy 1his nice home BaNck Bay :m'8 · 2585 Sq, fl Realtors $21,000 Gener at 2000 <'vcn ii you don"I have a VA eeds pa~nt. ~ard work, Spacious 4 bedroom & fam-i G.112 Edinger eligibility. 3 BH, huge trct>s, so,. me repa.tr. Priced accord-il), 3 bath home on larg«> 842-1\455 or 540-5140 only 2 h!ks 10 shopp"g 0~ ngly. corner lo t. Owners say selll-====,.-_,,..,.....- portunity Jor !he investment Lease -4 BR -~· NOW! Submit oflcrs -Ask· COMFORT-CHARM buyer Lush nev.• shag carpe_t~ ing. . . . Cozy .. t.'Omfortable lhree bd- N; h. I R I E I I paint thruout . Tropical back-$42 950 rms, l\\'O bath home on IC 0 s ea s a e yard. pool and palio. Option I HARD\VOOD FLOORS with 128 n~ large din/rm, BIN l..i t. and S46-9S21 A RESIDENCE ~ at .~,.,. , SALESPEOPLE NEEDED· breakfast area. Covcl't'd pa-tio. Dbl. garagt' _ well land- scaped _ assor!cd lruit trers. Loca!erl on T\VO 1-~ULL SIZ- --PS:Rr:!DN -: ..-.~......-;"""'f~ ~ 642~1771 Anytime ED WT!' . EA s T s JD F. '"'""""""""""'"'""""'""J COST A ?.1 F.SA. PriC('d to s<'ll Spanl'sh Style .. only S37.C"111 • NO FIN· ANCE PROBLE!\IS, "HOW SWEET IT IS" Call: Pabick \Vood, 545-2300 ft, Fashion Shores home. e Bill Have n, Realtor overlooking park_ N r : 2111 E. Coast, Cd~1 673-32ll CORONA Giesler Jr H.i. Asking $39,500 \Y/GI 6-~t. Avail. PENDING FORECLOSURE. DEL MAR 962-7400 al! 5 pm. Choice location nnd (."Qll-con GE ASSID.1E 5\~t;;, GI. Total dition. 3 Large bedrms, 2 A .. pinnt $140. 3 br, tten, bltns, baths, f11 f.ilY room. Ju~f BY. THE.SEA frplc. See a1 5142 Sparro1v crptd. all bllns and spar -D•. $2',250. P hont> · I 'I t JI ·n 72 A small 2 bedroom family ' 1ng poo · 1• us se 1 Bakersfield aH 6 pn1. 1805) hours _ $30,500. Call 545-842,1 room homt>. Just a block to S72--0824_ South Coast Realtors. the ocran \Vi!h an oc:ean """-'"""'"""'""':::::::::--;;::c l vir1v. Only S47.fJOO. Call FOR SALE by ov.·ner -4br, • 7 YR OLD 4 br, '2 ba, e ec k 673-85.'"JO 18 x 24 family rm, erp1s, ~;~~~·B::~~{';~~~~~o!.s~ quic · . · drps, covered patio, fruit trees. S.'U,000. A s s u m f' \R:THEREAL 'Z: JS~'.l' <"!TE'.~ 233 E. 21st St ., 642--058l balance or 6~ loan. 842-523-1 v.·knds or Aller 4 pm aft 5 & v.·knds. $160 2 Bil furnished Duplex. Bllni::. crpts. drps. Children Clk. XLN'J' VIE\\'! TELE-TREND "832·7800 Bachelor ap1. BROKERS-REALTORS 2025 W Bolbaci 67J-J66J OF DIGNITT Mesa Verde for $26,500 clt'an 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, i Ct"al'IOUi; adult living for lv.·o . 11?me on ''Big L:it'' .. Bulll-in 1• can ht' found in this si>8cious k1tc.h£'n. Gorgeou~ fireplace, bungaloo• with Rom<1n balh, fi~GE fonnaJ dining room 2 St'L"luded pal ios 1,., fire-v.•n h plush carpets and drap.. plut"•'. ANO :tn ci<'gaiit gar-es. No Do\vn to Vets. Small dt•ri w11.lk 10 th<' pool and oul-Do1vn to all othef'll. CALL Cha . 3 bed 2 b U M. M. La Borde, Rltr. rm1ng . room. ~ 1 646-()5,15 Evr!'I: 642-7438 home -choice corner locn----:-;-;;-;..,:;;,-;--- lion. Tile entry, all bHns. 675·3000 TO\\TNHOUSE 3 BR. 2 BA. lg liv rn1 , din rm area, bar & ki1ch. patio, 2-<:ar gar "'/Storage, clubhouse. Jerry Hall 83.~ Bier. 147S Sll!)...U!il pd, Avail nov." Brokrr. HARBOR VIEW Garden Grove 4 BR., 2~~ ba. \Valnut panclt'd IT-H-E-.-.E-"Sf_AB_L_ffill0_M_El_N_T_" Rentals fo Share 200S Macnab-Irvine Realty Company HUNTINGTON HARBOUR JO'l' Of the Southland's tnost elegant wu1erl.ron1: pool, pl'er & Ooat." l.al'lo!:f' 1nas1rr trU!le, all beou11full.v do1W'. 3 Bedroom~. 31s ha 1 tis. $140,000. By :1pp'1. 675-3210 642-123S FHA TERMS ()eeorllors 1tcl1i.;ht -buy this extra [(harp resale '>''Ith 3 bedfoQn1)o' and family room. Enjoy a <'o\·rred patio afld _.pararv play ya.rd, C<lnv£'n. lent IO schools and shopping. J u1t li!ted _ hurry~ Full price $21,9jQ_ Call 540·1151, fffritare nealto1'11. Honir of a Difft·~nt C<llor l\n'/ oolor ho~ v.111 Iii un this l,i acrt rancho \nclud· nc new-comds ffll v.iirk area. f"rull I rN""-& 11harp 2 bl'droom I h1.mlly roorn ~ with low.I)' bijt front yard. Listed at $39,900. Cit!! st().llll, flf'rlt.a_.~ Ral!Otl. family room, raised VM"an- da and only 4 years old. A AL TOGETHER . , mu~t 10 see al $31.500. Call This honl{' has <'Veryth1ng. 545-8424 X1nt Joe., pert. t.'Oncl .• beaut. 1tonr (111ter1a\nmrnt 11N'a, A Walker & Lee ~J>t~t'tal pmpe11y lo n 1t.'('t · appt's., lov.·est price, at you r special 1lC'clJ11 •• , only Realtora $•t8.~lQ. To Inquire call 2790 llarbor Blvd . At -Adams ti7'.t-fe>.i0. • 545-!J;l91 Oprn 'til 9:00 PM TRIPLEX-$34,9SD 1-0' THE REAL \~ESTATERS FHA TERMS Ea" Cosio "'"· $5.950 °'\.. I/ • •, ' "~· 142-'iOO. 675-.1000 OPEN EVES. 2·107 E. Coast 11\\"y. Opposite l\faCArlhur Blvd. m II. n· A Ill·:. \fll IU:.\1:1"\' l\L ~,,. ,,~ ~'' '0j1 3 Bedrm. l" hllth. crpts, Down. Owner will help fln-;;i~;:;:;:;:;:;::ii:i:ii:i~~~ drps, encl~ patio, dble ance. 3-2 BR .. 1% ba. t'l\Ch. LIDO WATERFRONT garage. All in A-1 oonditlon, Bltns, v.·tw carp. & dnipe!I; APTS.-320 LIDO NORD TREES. TRE&<;! Ut.500. 3 ear gar. v.•/alley entrRnce.J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Now REDUCED To Wells-Mccar dle, Rltr1. \Valk to everything' o .c.c . Dial·A-Realtor Call~ Patrick Wood !»5-2300 $150,000--Xlnt Terms 11\10 NeY.'JlOrt Blvd., C.ri.t. _ e 8111 Haven, Rltr. CnlJ us for best buys in Oiff. 6 lleautilul unitii. G cnr 5-13-17.9 Eves: 6'4-0684 2lU E. Coast, CdM 673-3211 haven -Newport Hghl.s, Our I f?Urnges & u1\!lty room w11h servict" p1'lvldes trained 9:1 fl. fronting on l"Xttlltn1 PENINSULA 2 STORY A-FRAME homt'-findcrs and problrm ~v.·hnmlng ~nch. Unils an! BA '(FRONT 3 BR. + den. Like new! solV<'l'I. ' 11e"IY furni.~hed. 5 BR. dl'n, din. rm., 4•; bn . Empty&: ready to~-Slep!l PETE BARRITT Biii Grundy, Realtor Appro". 1.4 r.icl"f' ·;·· $325,000 ~Ay:;c:;itiy :~:-TY REAL t Y 642-5200 lt\1 Dovtt Or. N.B. &12-1\63) Shol\'n by App t. only ' LIDO REALTY INC. 6306 w. Cc>A•I 11"'Y·, NB 1.::;::::::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:1 DOVER SHORES-337' Vlo lido m7300 543-l790 642"3476 EvH. BACK BAY $2$,000 BRAND nl'w • Qu.itllty bit 60A LOAN • Tax Shelter Units • No Down 10 V£'1$ or fllA Jov.• I.mm ClltlrtyBM pool. pAnf'I!. O . ..f To 20 \lnits ll.ilh lolW down, do11.n. l Br.dnn, 1~ hnlh, rd fam rm l\<'t fu1r1. frplc -4 Bdr. + Famity Rm. \VJU t'li:Ckangt. bltns, lgt' iJb:e f.'tmtly rm + 10 Aunken i1v rn1 v.·;v11ulled Be::tutlful ';10mr. A.u11mr li'ifo Lee,Ptreyda, ~llltor dlnin~ ol'Ca, dhlc gar., IR l't'llina, 4 hr 2 txt + pwdr apr. ~n. 4 lledrootni1, huge 546-1698 4M-54...~ fncd )•Ard. Set 1hl11 riaht roum. Alut~r RH. '" rsn, lanilty rm. firtl)laCI'!. bull!· * ALL TERMS * AY.'aY~ f'ast r80'()w! V11cant! dll rm & kitrhrn all on In RBQ. Sprinklrr system. 2 Br .. vac;n-nt: .only .:i!9·~ Lachenmyer Rlty Virw, $108,900. Rei)' .I. \\'nrd, $28.000. !t10-l7a> CaU: Pair.ck WOod Ma.2300 C.an IWIN!m or 5-lj..,WJ Rl1 r. 646-IafJO. ()prn Daily. T a rbt II 2955 Harbor :ll;:lli:...:,:11:;•"':::::"·..:R:::l::".:.· _..:mll::::;:::l::l r!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"' NE\V 4 BR, 2~ BA, fam rm. luxurious \V/W shag crpt thru-0\Jt, l'US!om dr'J>!I. Choiee C.M. By Owner 557..J49S. COLLEGE Pk. 3 BR. l% BA. Owner. 2i2 Princeton Dr. '29.900. S-if>-3260 . Newport Beach 1200 FOR A MR. FIX· IT One bedroom livahle couage in Newport H£'li:hts on a ~ 127 foot Int. Rent or live \;1 !his until you are ready to btilld )'011r rin>am homl'. Best JoeaUon in th!' llelght1 !or $19.9:.0. Call for shov.1ng a46-231 3. fam. rm.; din. rni., frplc. Anxious out of town owner! $65,500 v.·as never homier lots.a !{'g LOVELY Sunny room for roon1 for lceners O" scou!s, one or couple, Nort h C~t. 3 lge bcdrn1s, 2 balhs + Double lx'd. dressc.r & JtEALT0 9' park-likP. huge lot on dead-closet. Priva,.tt> TV, v.·esher, CORBIN-MARTINil encl slrttt. Ovt'rllized gar-dryer, share kilchcn. $100 L::===l1i·lllJZ!==:::.i-age, sharp. $24,750, GI no mo. Color TV in living rm. c1o\~·n or l"HA 1£'rms. "',,, ~"~, 1.r THERE'S A BETTER I I .,...,.....,,,,~. BUY IN A VIEW H0)1E Larwn.Reaty, Inc. R00~1~1ATE Wan- rr·s A \VELL KEPT • 961-'988 anytime ted-F'cmale. 25-35, pvl room SECRET. RC'dUCl'<l I 0 1 ~========1=6=20 &· halh. Close to Harbor $49.500. Spacious, immac. 3 Santa Ana shop·g C£'nter. C . M. Bd'rm .• family rm, 21'& be. Below VA-AP~~;;! '64>1541 or 6-l&-95ffi. l.A.lsk b1.1ilt home. A b lo · YOUNG man. 23, h!l.S apJ, University Reallv. tii3-65l0 ~ r home, ts of goodM?s, I~ \JOO b o nc• '\"' nonn Long Bch. ""Ill nwve !o H.B. 3001 E. Coast H"'Y· Cd~1 ~"• Y v.· '· "'~""'' or i:urrouncl ing area. 213: GREAT VIEW! Santa Ana Hqts. 1630 432-itOil Or harbor &r ocean, Attr. split \VANTED-Con~enial l11dy to lcYl'I hon1c on R-3 5100 sq. VACANT 11hr lovely NB Blufls hrn. rt lo!. ldC'lll for <t apt. units. 3 Berlrm, new 11~ crplg r,:'' .. ~!:.. au. privl. $80/mo. sall.000. 2j()t Oct1u1 Dl\•d.. lhruout, newly painted. Cloi::e cc."~~=c,.--~-----1 Cd!\1. By Bpp't. only. Sf\ARE 10 rlC'm school. Assumr G.I. . l..o\'t'ly home, Balboa C3U: 00-4620 loan w/totnl pymnts ot $191 P<:_nm. w/"·orkinil g i r l , Bill Gr undy, Realtor mo. Only $24,9:'i0 wllh l0% 67>759~ or 6J6-.8208 One lelt: So. or1t1''Y·. v.·;i.lk FULLER R LTV lron1 hrh. Crl~t wtlemale. DELUXE DUPLEX dn. lturry -i'r?t't t~u SHARE 2 BR apt, across lo th<-bt-11.eh, 3 BR. 21~ ba ., 546-081 Prll'il. 67.l-8174 aft 6 pm. _ 2 BR. 2 Ra . Lovl"ly hOmr + :;:::==·=-~·--,:C:.~ •• ::-::::i'=:= NEED l or 2 male room-* SPECtAL * incom~. ()pt!n dally at h i .\ Lagun• Beach 1105 m1:1-tes, 4 BR. 2 BA h..w. Jf.B. ~.Q · THE REAL ~ESTATERS ".' . .. ... 2 BR, bt'ach cottage, rrnmr. Goldenrnd. 644-0266 Ov.'Oer/ Beaut. rum. Ca.II 962-7•\0!l. Ocf.un ~ldt' of Balboa Blvd. Bldr./~nt. -----. .... _ .. -FABULOUS Oce11n V le-w .J:xtra &IH-plng qtrt. In rear. I ~ .. 1\;:;l~h;;KE;;,--;;R~oom=•,~'\>rc:-00~;:7d· parcel, t~JOO "''' ulil & 0ff£'1"f'd for $26,600 "illl ~ll!Y d y • ' .• c I ea n out the peving unrlf.r v.11y. m.500: tcon•. gange .. )'OOr trash 11 CASH $5,000 dn wl l:IXKf tl'rtnl ()n MORGAN REAL TY \Vlth a Dally POot Cl1Willt'd ball'lJ'IC'I'. Bltir. 49-l--811» er 673-6642 675-6459 11.d. "914 1021 t'\l!!t. ·------ • I. Costa Mesa 2100 --=. ........... __ 4 BR. + 111.m. nn. 2 full ba•hs. Cpl.11, drps, bltra. Qi\·. patio. Nr. 8Chools. $300 ITll> OV.'Jl(! r 64;)..0J 2!1. ' ' _Tc:hll::.rsd=•=,\J'~· °';;;;'obf::z:.r O'B .... 1:.:9c..:70'----°""'=..,.,-'All Y P"OT .!J4.. T ENTALS' RENTALS RENTALS. lll!NTAL' , RliNTALS RliNTALS RENTALS RENT S RE TAL~ : • Holisos Furnlshod ! HouMt Unfumlshod Housoo Unfumlshod Ho""' UnfUm~ Aph, ~ut!!~;;;.:;· ___ 'Apto.=;:::._F_ur ... •_ls,..hod.;;..;._ ... 1 • ...;.;Ap"'tt.;:::..:..F;:;;urc.•:l;s;;.;hod=-Apts, Unfurol1hod Ailts. Unluf!!'lh•d, • Newport Boodi ~ -el -0-rol -University Puk. m1 !iuntlngton Boedi 4fOO Huntlntton Boadi 4400 Belbo!\. Island. ~ ~oste (>19 . .0 , 5100 Nowport 81,oh 5!0'l : 1 , _ ~Brw~ OceantrooBa t 1 !'!l<drm Ill!" toVoet OK l1GS •• !.c;f:.Cf'ITB ~I •• I'' 1 , • 2 nr •. '1P.:" •it Immaculate• HARBOR GREENS P~K1 •. ~~i:;. ;,,,"',.", •1 • ..... ~ • • . uppu ap . ..a Bfdrma private home $110 ........ ...i-u ~ r, ~ 1llin rm. of-c ~ . dJ N .... ClllldrtJ;..oo ' peta. $225 GAno!:N 6: S1'UOIO A!'TS "'""'" ,,., v"•"'+O u. ... $275/mo.---tum.-er-wlll..con -t Bedtms-'3dlt'petl OK $125 Pool.Inc, lac. $350-6'4-D735 ------t-1.-,,..--, --m~ -.1-_fea,rl)'.,_61~ -~· H, -r " ... -·Sll'. pool#, 7 tennis eta S7S0.09Q 1' older UJlfurnished. Win"· RENTAL FINDIRS 2· BR furn Colla .,_ S1lO , , • , a Uinu ... _, '(!r Oa ·' " $pa. !"rom 117' to Si!l!. tal.-~1093-or-w•""'~.p * Ho s ~ Tl! lot $135 E t Bluff 2242 ru~ . &);'~t a.pt. ~ rroo Peterwin Wa.y, C.M. Fi:ich. l or 2 Br. AJAO 2 aty I "(213) 596-1709 -mu ·en" xa,~ ·· at Casl1al estate-Uvi.Dg:-Enter La Quinta Her-·room,, S.-br, 2 ba,-dock $325• M6.u3'lO To\\'nhousca. Elcc. kt. prt • *A • 4BtdrmnToeean ........ $180 " .~ 1 h Im b ,_ .~11 Ire >•arty 673-7228. -, ·WATERFRONT portmonto STAR;t'LET n6-7l30 4 BR..• 2n llATMS mo-s us green a Q!P W' ~ s~u e-' ' 2 BR uni. $15', l 'BR uol. pot, or bai Subirn prk.. 1· Pl.ER & FLOAT * R te New 2.$t;y., fa.mil)' area; quai. lined walk ways to your apt Huntington Beadt 4400 StSO. Crpt1, drps, bltns. maid ser. cpta, d'rps Just N1 s Beclrm., 2 "'°' !onnai-ain. CALL 6""""'4r "l l 1l -If 3 BR-+ l!OOL * J\Y •PPt'1.; walk lo IChoob ·" ALL UTILITIES INCLUOED • 1:,;::;:::;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Pool. No eblldrto, oo "''· ~ ~~-htonJ i.t 1a1 ·JH"u~~ f in< rm, !!reptaee, w/w ....., PLUSH """tlng ~ drapes. & shopping, lmm<d . ...,... 1 BR. Uni. $150 -Furn. $180 I• 125 • J E, 17th Pl, C.M. • = oeou n w , ·-! crpts, and fuml.shed Com-for lnform1tion on these Appllances, Children fine, in. MOO Ptt month. In the 2. BR. p nf.-$175 -Furn. $210 ON BEACH'. 1.:543-.::.;2738;;;::;_,=~----L:"".:,'":,;:;1000.;;;.1~"=''.::"':;1""2'::1'.:'olo">:.~:: plete. Dble pr, Lease onlY. 1v1ll1ble RENTALS.,. $185. A, REAL JEWEL! ta.shionable Bluff&. 3 Spac. Or. plans, decor. furnishings: live $170 2 Bil .. Unlw:n. Crp11, 1 $500 per mo. Realtor $125 .. FURN. 1 BR near Hort,•Finchr1 64$-29$1 Acfd·• Alt ctlon within romantic setting w/fun or privacy. • Slflile apb trom S\65 S Bn, J'Ji BA. P'~. blt·lns. pa.Ho, pool, b.ltn1. Sf-s, ~ 642-4353. beach. pr. 11:11'.lts ok. * ELBOW --· -_,. Terraced ~01, pri. sunken gas-.BBQ1s 'v/ • 2BRFu.ru Fron)S285 crpt., drpl:, Mk &boul.our. Sc::acllf.t ~tiloor -~~IS, ' . ON THE BEACH $15.5 • FURN. 2 BR, patio, V~nt-&--waiting:--<t BR, 2 seculded seating comp!. w/Bamalla & Foun-;----1 • 2 BR urilum--"60 dLaoount ~ 1110 Centu...{;t, J!ft.Ctll!.~· MB·2fiS~ ask ·--1~ Nlee 2 BR winter rent.a.I. $2'l5/ p.r, singles ok. ROOM * Ba., nearby pool Priv, pa-tain Carpets-drapes'tilshwaaher 64U34o about our dlscoWtt an. N J ~. Good ..__A .. $135 • REDD: 2 BR, l!DYe, LARGE S BR w/ fe·-.• tio A entry courtyard, al * C 1· _J •-·1 / • .J• • I I' ht· heated,pool-sauna-tennll , f1iRt Ill BA I pa"-2 BR, l \~ BA. spllt levtl, ; mo, ear e,..,. ......u.1 lK."nl $385 Per Month. o or co.ora. 111'.I w 1na1r•c 19 1n9. .... •&1, S2IO/ 0 Adulta o~'·· ' It surf. cpta, drps, child ok. . yard, carpets, dnPea + Others avail. tD S5IXI Per Mo * D•iuxe rang• & ov•ns * Plush shag crptg. rec roorn-ocea.n v..:WI pr, nu. crpt/drpa. Sl.50. m · ,...,, 00 4 Dick Serr Realty 962-2421 $185 • INCL Vtil, 3 BR E-Fm.EPLACE $150 A REAL * Bonus storage space * Cov. carport pat1ow.mple parir;Uw, Adlts. No Peta. 275 C. Jl"bi. im Bed!ard Ln. • ·-·····----side, lfi yd, tamny welc, BARGAIN! , . f * Sculptured marblt pUllMan & tile baths Security guards. Cabrlllo, Open Sat~Sltn 1-5, 5-JS-'i533 J Biibo. 2300 CALL 894 7577 H Fl-·· u•2951 FURN. '"'° .,.u. or eeU 544-9681. * BAYFRONT ... 1 •. ome-,_,. -[fl ~· * Elog'"t r1<roatlon room. HUNTINGTON ') l 45• Baytron-;-&j~~-:5 for information an +has• t FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAil Y C & S $peedv Rentals LUXURY Apt,,-St<trt. i BR, 4 ha, pier, float, winter aveil•blo RENTALS ,,, Costa M.sa 3100 1 Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego PACIFIC 1 Bi< uni, Alt utll pd, Close ing at $365. * 642-2202 l or yrly. 673-2009. $100 • Util p:t 1 BR furn. RENT OR LEASE na 1 Frwy .• Goldenwest Colle2e. 7U OCEAN AVE., H.B. . i:S :1~ CM 548-US9 DELXE 3 BR & 2 BR, 2 BA · Slngles, child/pet wetc. _ Z..ltOM.ES_ . _ _ San Diego ~· to Beach Blvd ., So. on (U4l 536-1'87 ' four pleic apts. rums. D/\~'. Lido Isle 2351 -------3 BR. 3 Ba, oU-water home Furnished -$45(1 mo. S13S"·"Nli5e2BR. mlni;"iir. Both 3 bednM Cl) $200 per 2414 V11ta Dd Oro-Beach S-blkS. to Holt; W. on Holt to,--;-. Ole. optn 10am-6pmOd.Y1. DEI;-lIXE l ~ 2 .B:R-m--HQft!: Holp;-fn'>n\ $li0 Singles ok. mo, the other S225. Newport Beach 644-ll33 LoQuinta Hermosa 714: 847-5441 Managed by G~n Apts. Blt-ms, priv. mo. 612--1387 &12-1771. ~ $18S • 3 BR. 2 BA fam.lly N " h I R I E \VILLIAM WALTERS co patio, heated pool, frplc, 'I home. Leue option. Fenced tc o I ea state Corona del Mtr 3250t°'=======:=;=;:=;:=;=::=:=:=~~=I'..,,;;;;;;,;.!!!!!,;,;,,;;.;;.,;,;,;,,· •I ~A~dC'!_ull!;ts!;_· !11~45~m~o.;.'543-51~~6!;3._ ~~ blk bay or bch, bc11.u1Jtul ...... 546-9521 1: -~-1 nc\Y 4 llR, 2 b:i, cpts & J'4U, 4 BR, 3 BA tri-level -Ge~ral «XIO . Costa Mesa 4100 2 BR. Pool. A,du t'. LRG. 2 Br, pool. $155. Conve.. d 2 Sal.i LANDLORDS FREEi LOVELY 4 BEDROOM home M di 1.:.;;;.;::.:.:;.... ____ = :.:.:;:;;.;; ___ .c;.:~ Beaul/QWet! Util l11c l nient shopping. Respons. 67']''9·.,,?_ 0',"'6.1~11',;,.,,,, a mo. 1 _B_•_lbo_•_ls_l•_nd ___ 2_35_5 I !!!!!!!!!!""'!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 011 a quiet street with e terr an ea n decor, J F · CUTE 1 BR. completely $200/mo. 17676 Cameron. persons only. 313 E, 17th Pl, """~-07~'7''-'--"0C.~~ SO $195 private yard & 1800 sq. ft. of redecorated, $375 lse, $400 ust or furn. Crpls, drps. Newly 842-6121 . C.M. 54M532. NEARLY ne\\' Ch'anlront 1010 . Bayfront: 4 Br. 3~ gpack>usoess. Great tamlly mo to mo. Avail now. painted~ \Valk to stores. • *' A1' BEACH 1 & 2 BR's. 4 &SIDE studio • 2 br, lY.i ba Peninsula Pl. luxury apt, 4 be.. waterfront home & 2 br. home at $285 per mo. Agent 646-0!lll 642-l Tn s· I Ad It $17150 Ad Its X2 N ' BR, 4 BA. rrple!! & de l ba ""'""oe apt Dock ,. """ ••41 EASTBLUFF Nr·. CdM H>' 10.g e U S · · u over · o bc!o.ut, bldgs, Pools. 22012th crpti, drps, bltns, dshWsbr, I 8 _ . · .. --.. · · • Br, 2 Ba. fncd yard, dbl .,...,....._.. pets, 549-3&13 St or 215 15tlt St, H.B. encl pr. &1~2939 I ;1::000::;:0:::'°:::·-*::..:'::1:;~::::"~-;~ I Bill Gnµidy Rltr. 642-4620 pr, ctpbi:,. drps;'-Pets & LARGE 3 Br. ~easy care Sehl, Pool, frplc,1 cbann1ng South Bay Club ts a whole -. • fit 1 pd 2 BR. on •tho Bench! H ti t B h 2400 cblldre1fok. End pa.Ho. C<Jod yard, Conv. to eChls & 4 Br, 2 Ba. $375 Lease. Call: new way of ~ile designed ·$25 · Per WieJC & lip r BACI· Nk11~ A~1 . P..IODERN 2 Bl', erpt11, drps, S:l.!'I0-!110-Yf'nrly. Adu!ti;;, no -1 un ng on eac , family home. shop'g, S2GO on year leA!e. Miss Schv.-er 644--ll33 or just for slng1e people. It's Bachelor & l br TV & n1ald · GE kilehen, en c Io s e d pets. 642-3978 e\'cs & v.•knd!!. TELE.TREND 832-7800 ~7823. ri.trs. Moody 213: 84~1526. tun living with warm, c1y. serv. ti.vail. 4so Victoria LlNDBORG CO. 536-2579 garage, near bua. SJ.45. 1 BR furnished house, 2 blks .;..::;.::.,::-====~~~:.;::: 1,,..,,er=-"111;;.ba.::-=, :-•=-, • .-:::: ... c ltf . . Adults. 120 E. 20th. N t H . ht 5210 j from ocean. $150/mo, + $50 * 3 BR + DEN* , CJ> s, pe, ........,,.-3 Br, 2 ba beaut, nearly new nam.ic oelghbors. It's a · · Laguna Beach 4705 owpor e19 s ., sec. dep. 536-1674 pr, patio, li-lesa Verde. hse. ~ Z--car gar, 4 blks to $750,000 Clubhouse wt th C & S Speedv Rentals 1 BR. unJ. Sl50/mo. Poot DELUXE 3 BR, 2 Bath. , Fenced ~1w/hpatio, d~ble $210. 3lll Sumatra Pl. bch. $325. 6'13:ftCm hialtb .club, saunas, sv.1m· 2 BR tum Duplex w/ garage FURNISHED RENTALS Elec & wtr pd. Adlts, no Crpts, dtl>~. frpt c, & ;::aroi::e. ~ gal'aie. us carpeting, 5tS-6328. 3 BR, 1 ba, 2-car gar, lrplc, rolng pool, party room, bll· Close in. $185/mo. . 1 bdnn. apt. at \Voods Cove, IK'.ts. MESA ltfANOR. 241 Close to shop'g & schls. Call : FIREPLACE. Children wel-2 BR. new crpts, drps, fncd new crpt, stove, $325/mo, llardS,. indoor golf driving 1648 Newport cr.t 548-1169 Lge, pal10; 150 yds. to Wilson Ave., Ott, S.tS-7405 alt G, 545-8.1!1.i. ~, : eoTOmDeA. y$225! , VACANT-MOVE • ..t, 1 child ok, no ""ts.$165. •--675 ¥72 range· • teMls courts, pro ' bea.ch. Completely fumlshed. LRG 2 BR CID I 1 Lease/Sale Furnlsh•d '" ~ ·":,:,:.:" .. ==·-"',. .. ~= .. ·~~-I ' 112· MO LEASE '"'"" 231 F Avocado 548-1405 ~ shop and resident teMls pro. a · · · ' ' Irvine 5238 Lovely Beach Cando Hom•Finders 64~2951 3 ~R house. fror rent. 2 Br. ne wly crpted $200 mo, Newport Beach 4200 2 bdrms., fireplace, exc child ok. Sl35 nio. + dep. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I Avail Now for lease thru FOR RENTI I $150/mo. 2188 Canyon Dr. no pets, 432 Fernlea!. Call ~:~~re!~:i 1: oce.in view, a few steps to ~ollege Ave No. 2 • • June or longer. 2 BR, 2 BA, 4 3 & 2 BR Hom in Or: ,,.,, ~"""' 1213) 761-4167, modem conveniences avail· I---------the sand at Victoria Beach. 1..:::.:=.::.· ------NOW LEA,?ING! • ,,, ·,, upper wlth living, dining " ,es • See Apt A.~....., COZY 2 Br ho · fpl COUNTRY CLlJB $225 ~10. LEASE * CLEAN 2 Br, 1~~ ~a, ,,...-. kitchen tll't!llS main Door ov-ange County, R~ start. 2 BR Enclosed yd carpets $200 Mo. (~an~:~· · :':,~~~.~and unf~ LIVING MTSSlON RLTY. Ph 4~ hlh1$,· dshwnr, crpt, patio, N~. tam!ly \ind ad\,\lts ui ' erlooking beautlM po o I. ing at $123.!iO, FUrn or Un· draPes. 'Children oic. ' 620 r.1arlgold 67&-1662 •gt. ~''"""· Luxury garden apls, o!Jering 98j So. Cost Hwy., Laguna gar. $155, Adults, no pets. • v.·Hh lcitnl rtcreation c • ! furn Ask tor BONNI I I '--and pre-~chooL 1, 2, & l Large 2 car port plus slor-' • call 5-49-4225 comp· pr vacy, ...,nut. lnd-LAGUNA "·•ale Sell or lie• ,;;54;;8"'35,:::0''":· --,--;cc-==,.-" ' 832-7800 -2 BR. Fam Rm. 2 Baths. MOD}!:LS OPEN DAILY scpg & unpnrallcled re ,..,,, . 1: bdrms fron1 $Hi0. Nr, shop-• ogeclliti& eoAllmple~i:, la~ncl!ullyry la&· -*-1--ta--.. -_-_.-*-3 BR, 2 BA, C.ondo. 2 car Beams, trplc, patiog, Adlts. 10 A.M.. g P.M. lional facllitle! in a ;:1111: 6 mos/longer. Ocean frnt NEW Deluxe 2 Br Triplex ping, golf, schools. Just es. ....,aut1 ftS nf u.>lre gar, patio: pool &: clubhse Lse $250. 642--1276 " lux. 2 BR. 2 BA, beach, patio, apt. N.E. $175/mo. Adul ts, GOLllh of San Dltogo Fv.'Y. lln completely furnished, linens, SHARP 2 BR w/ garage. avail. $225 mo. 540-6339. RENTS FROM club atmosph<?re, Furn or pool, Adults, no pets. $500 small pet aCCE'pted. '35!}.A Culver Dr., l r\'ine. F33-37l3. china, etc. if desired. Only Balboa Island 3355 Unf. Models open }O am-9 n10. Owner 499-3715. Woodland Pl.* &J2-5872 PARK WEST . ..._ _., Newly pUited. Pets A: child· LGEi 3 BR, tam rm, w/w $150 to $350 pm. Rents from Sl4a to S3W. 100 steps to pnvate ut:a1.:.u. ren ok..$130. WON'T LAST! crptS, bltn!, pool. $275/mo. OAKWOOD GARDEN Sl\1ALL 1 BR, uUl pd, bar, 2 BR, lY.i BA, &harp, crpts, APARTMENTS Tennis court & 2nd pool al-Ham•Finders 645-2951 324 W. Joonn, CM. 2 BR, 2 BA &-den. Yr lie, NEWPORT BEACH APARTJ\fENTS patio, 2 -mln to bch. Sgl drp~, approx 1200 sq ft. Owned nnd 1.lan..1ged by :U:" 1:!~~ar;fngwi~~~~ * BONANZA * Newport Beach 3200 ~:~pa.z~~ ~/m<>. 880 Irvine Ave. 1700 161h St., NB only. $11a mo. 497-ll53 eve. ~~79 now. $160 mo,• ~~T::h:•~l=""~·ne~co':':":m::'.1>'.'.'.o::'.ny~:"I Easy access to super mkt, -· - -&12-8170 1,:;c;""'~'°""-c--~ ~ shopping etc. S325 month, = ~~~~~: ~~: 4 BR + Huntington Beach 3400 Irvine & I bth BA YCLIFF MOTEL Da na Point 4740 3~: ~~~V:Uhn~~.c;i'~ Back Bay 5240 winter basis, Will consider ren ok. Leue/option $153-nO FAMILY ROOM (7141 64S-0550 * LO\V WEEKLY RATES* STNGLE, TV, heated pool, 2 mo. 545-4879 x ---~-----• lease • purchase or outright down, SAVESAVE! $300 mo •• All blln.9, 2 trplcs, 3 BR, 2 BA. fam rm. Lrg Kit chl'n, TV'•, maid service. blk. from bch. ~·wk .• $135.J,2,:::;B"R.::.:::_:=::,,::.. -,d;::--•. "'w"""=-·""'& VlE\V • 2 BR, crpt~. drp<;, ·j sale-. Adults only. Rcfa. Hom•Fl-••rs u•2951 lge lat,. quiet street in :tJpper patio, new crpts paint SQUTI! BAY CLUB mo Dana Jl.lanna Inn 34lll ..... ,. .,... bltns, lg pool & sunrleck. Qn •, 49'J..2f52-Afo1 or 837-0791 aey. nu. -Bay, ImtnM occ, 2306 Red--Children Walk to schl. lm-Heated Pool. ' ' patio~ J 14 5 / m O. 2260 Irvine, $170/mQ., ~ " ' ;:fun:.::•::.· ----:---1 * Super Sharp * londs, 64&-4393. mod. ""'· $250/mo he. IDAffJMENTS 64~3265 . "°""' Hwy.,Dana.Pl Pomona Av" CM. 5'1S-H:5 E 1• ·CLEAN 2-BR-w/--nice-yard. ''IN THE BLUFF" 968-9028. _ft[JJ , • • • ON the Bay duplex; Upper, RENTALS 1 & 2 Br furn & un!urn apt!i. est Bluff 1--------29-50 Good Jocatlon. Pets & child-Elegant. New wall to wall car-IMMACULATE 2 br dupleic. • dcick avaU. FUm or unturn: Apts. Unfurnlthed S1~$145. 820 Center St. Bill Grundy Rltr. 642-4620 Laguna Beach 2705 5242 ~mlnlum ren welcome. $145. SEE TO. pell 3 bedroom full dining Crpt, drps, bltns, patio, Lin-where tM "'" 111 !!~· f~~t~t~ .:_1~1.01;J; General -\000 CM. 642-5848. N EWPORT BEACH TOWNHOUSE condominium, DAY! roo~ huge tainuy room. lovely feoced grounds, gar. ---------675-5934 962-7220. ~ -* 2 BR, l~ BA STUDIO, V illa Gra nada Apts. : close to school! & beach, 3 Hom•Flnders 645-2951 Bkr. '$425 mo. 540-1720 $160. ltfarried cpl.. 84Z-327S. xlnt cond! Crpts, drps. $750 Furnlshetl. f't1;(' bed-~ bdrms., large patio & 3 BR 2 BA all bltn& doee 3 BR/2 BA. F IRm Din' DUPLEX ·2 BR + garage. REMARKABLY OCEANFRONT Apt. l Br. VEN DOME Pool! $145/mo. 646--0496. rooms & den, '>'ith b:llmnl!'s • ' sau•a. ~9926 . to !ICbools & shoppg. lrnmed area, Gar, W, Np t. no pets. n af11. ""° ,,.,,.,, EXTRAORDINARIL y pd. Fret work'g male h\Ui-lACULATE.J\PI'Sl tio, e--'. paUo, gar., pool, a v~ & p:i.lio t>1·l<1\v Graf'-garage, pools, tennis courts • • • am g $135/mo New paint. Adults, UNBELIEVABLY I~al location. S130/mo utll LRG. 2 Br. ·sturtto apt. 1% be l ~ " -poss $220 mo Call Hen'tage -1 • ·· T F•-"•• l=~=·=~=~=='==I A ULT __ _. "0 lous livi"" "· "llit•1,ur' '•••••d. · · · - - . ,,,.,.,mo. """""• o ..... M<.J'. BEAUTIFUL bachelor. Yrly or seasonal. D a.Jiu nr. schl, S160. 646-2547. ..,., ~· ., Realtors MG-1151 557-9359 F-·ntaln Valley 3410 Val D'isere Garden Apt' 1-213-698-3627 FAMILY Sec, •on 1 BR. Uni. All util pd. ings for !a1nlly '"Ith chllth'<'n. D I F 2975 NEAR ~-mo ti! pd 2 ~ Cl I h p k Near Corona del flt 11r Ji irh i up exes urn. vo.....,...,...,........, u • BAY ·VJEW-BLUFFS 4 Br, _ Putting green, waterfall & WINTER rental • 2 BR. ase .o s opp~ng, ar S150/mo. Ad.ui\s, Infant ok. School. Fi]"('plnCI', ,1{'1 bar / AIDES -for coova.lescence, elderly care or family care. Homemakers, 547--6681.. Did you ever think of swap- 'tng that White Elephant in the attic for something you can use? Try the Traders Paradist column In the Dai· ly Pilot Want Ads. I LIKE To trade? 0 u r Trader's Paradise column is for you! 5 Lines, 5 Days fur SS. call today .•. 642--5678. THE Fastest draw In the 'West ... a Dally Pilot Classified Ad. 642-5678 BR apt. au.Id ok. 2"' Ba twnhouse. Fam area, 5 BR, 2 BA, frpl.e, bltns. $265 sttt'am floweI'll evc...,...here Oceanfront apt. ?iiarricd ~ Spn.c1ous 3 BR s, 2 ba 301 A·-·do. ,..74.. · Brok 534-"980 .....,., ht&: Wt • .,,.. ' ~ .,.,..... 'Ui & built-in kltchcn npplianc-•, er ftpl, CI"Ptit, drps, .......... mo, · 45' pool. 1ec, room, billiards, cpl, no children. no pets. • SivJJ1] pool, pul/green es. fl1i·.·ht rnnsidcr unfurn-~ $185-Util pd. I.zg family Leai;e $365. 833-0023. Call 592-5625 BBQ'S, Sauna, furn.-unrurn, 642-566'l * Frpl, lndi v/Indty lac'll 2 BR, 11,!i ba, garage & f>O?I. ) ..__A Children &: t -•-5. 1 !ro 1845 Anaheim Ave No children, no pets. Quiet ished or furni!ur<" purcha.~c. , ,...,.,,..,., pe ..,... 2 BR & den, 2 ha, bltns. B h 3705 1 &-2 Br, also lfl& ell m WINTER "·•ta! Duplex 4 • ·~00~--• 54• -12 835 A"l"OS \\' \\' 611 ~1 ' Broker 534-QSO, Newport Shores. ·-1mo. Laguna eac 1135. See it! 2000 P&r!IOns ....... ~ f =" , 2 b" 2 COSTA •• ;ESA 642-~4 ne15u ,.,IUUl,.I. ~ .n " i '-~-,,,,, -,...,.,.,.es rom ocean, r, NEW 2 Br apf erpt & Coldwell, Bnnkrr & Co. j' HSE in Downey, 3 BR, 2 ha, ~2991 or 642-7519. VIEW w/charm 3 Br, 2% ba Rd., 642-8670. Between Har-ha. $155 T?o. UtiL pd. Empl. SllS drped, stav~. Nr'. schls & fllnnagi.ng Agent · frplc, waaher/dryer, 2 car $225 ~ LEASE 2 BR, 2 BA, quiet lll'l'9., near everything. bor & Newport-2 Blk N. 19th adults. 002-8!183 shops. $180 mO. 548-1309. -~: mo. Downey, pool. Also lease option $325 mo. 494-5167 HOLIDAY PLAZA DELUXE 2 Br. Oceanfrnt FURN & Unfurn 2 Br Bltns I ce~N=E~W~D~E=L~U~X~E~e=-" 1 J avail. Owner, 675-8200 DELUXE Spacious 1 BR xln'I toe. Students wel-Crpts, drps. All util pd, GOOD ,....,ts drps prlv patio g ' 3 BR, 2 BA /lpt for Ir J.se. * REACH * Dana Point 3740 furn apt SUS. 2 BR + den come. 1195 mo. 54S-4928 • LOCATION. N"o' ,,;. .... , 54._· 1~. ' ar. U I I p k 3237 I Am I ,.-ui ""' Incl SP,1.C, mnstcr suite, dlo FOR THE PHONE! 5 BR + n vert ty ar YACJITSMAN'S P~ISE ~kin:eatr:o poochndre.~ 2 br, 2 ba, completely furn, TELE-TREND 832-7800 e 2 BR TOWNHOUSE cpts rm & dbl 1n1rn~e. 11.uro door Guest HoUSe. Fenced yard, 3 BR Spanish villa, directly pets. 1965 Pomona. CM. Patio, gar. \Vlnter rates. FOR RENT! I h'plc, gar. also l BR'. Ap.t'. o~r.er avail. Pool &. Rec. ·, Pets & chlldren welcome. 4 Bdrms., Fam. rm., Din, over Dana Point Harbor .. l.!=c=:::.:.::==='--5000~~ Neplune, 642-5486 I, 2 & 3 BR Apartments thni-call 548-1674, area. :a!!~1r~;: =j~ 3 ~: ~~~~.:::::: = ~:;"~E~~m~T~~,.:~~~~2128~·---·l;:c::os:;t::a:-:M;;:•:,.::-----;,1;;;;;00 ~~:~~:,r;,e~i~.prud. 3 ~~~~~~~ ~~u;1~.~~~ 0:Suxb;;: n:'t~o B~~:;· SGS• A~n~:' ~~;. ~n LANDLORDSll 4 BR. 2w11, haHatlisve ~-~::_:· $32.5 Apts. Furnished • N·~·"•U Palmfl 2 BrA ·:.:b-cbo"y=""~'=""''==·=•-''-'~38~501 or Unfur8•3·2"'_7k800for JODI. nr Westc11H. 675-2™J. ' fllanag:-d by VUl<:lll ~ ~ WJLI.lA!\1 \VAL TERS CO. 1 Vacancy Problems Ended G;;..ral 4000 apt. Furn & Unt. Pool, ping-• OCEANI-~RONT 2 Br, 2 Ba. 3 Bedroom. Adult!. FREE supply of qualified pong, BBQ, shady lawns. $250/mo. Crpts, drps, trplc. NEW DELUXE 2 BR $165/mo. TNHSE . 2 br, 21 ~ bn, bl!rt'I, -frplc, patio, encl ~:ir. 752 Amh;os \Vtty, 675-5033 tenants at no cost to you. RENT FURNITURE 177 E. 22nd St. &12-3645 962-2341 :z Ba. Bit.in range, dshwhr, * Call &ID--0154 * Ask fur LEE or OLA A.VAIL Oct. 5. Lge 1 Br. LARGE 1 Bdrm. Near shag ~rpls, drps, garg. From e LRG 2 A 3 Br cpls 832-6600 * Dm.ECT TO TENANT furn. S145. Pool & carport. Ocean. $150 mo-YEARLY. $175. Nr. S, Coa11t Plaza. w/klds ok. 1998 No. l Corene del Mar "'5250 j * MINI HOUSE * 24-llr, Delivery 1846 Placentia, See mgr No. Students ok. 673-8088 510-1973 or 545-2321 Maple, &12-6344. •-w~ B ·• Bldg H • QC FRONT 1 2 3 & 3 BR, 21,~ BA duple~, b!tn • CUTE 1 BR Home in good .... \ coo•ertl au,. · 100% Purchase Opt:ian . • EAN • • · · Costa Mesa 5100 2 BR. 1613 Sanla Ana Ave. neighborhood. Nice yard. Univenlty Park Complete 1 BR Apt u $135/mo mob hm w/acrnd 4 BR's. \VINTER RENT-$150/mo. Crpts, drps. stove/ crpld, drps. encl gnr, conv. Will cot11kter pets I: children, Day 833-0101 Nights Low as $22/mo. porch, comp! turn. Hid pool. ALS, 673-8088. ORLEANS APJS, rel. sp-8572 or KI 2-72'19. I,.'°""=',..'"-.'·,,."-''-="-°''°"· ,..,,--,.I Adlts, no pets. 4 Seuon's 4 BR. 21; BA. Slutlio apt. •" n:zo. SEE TODAY! :JG.Day Minimum Mob E•t. 2359 Nwpt, 540 ,,.,..., 3 BR, 2 bo, frplc, encl patio, LRG 1 BR. Elec bltns, °' Ci -•· 64'2951 IDE VARIETY ~ h y I """ can! TI4 Goldenrod. Hom•Fl'""'rt ;;ii-DON'T DELAY I * W 1 blk Jo beac · r y s~'"· ADULTS ONLY OCC & S. Coasl . Plaza. Now'S THE CALL US TODAY I CUSTOM FURNITURE * QUIE:l' 2 Bdrm Duplex, 673-2455. 2 & S BR. Avail, Private pa-$135/mo w/re!rig. 540-9680 $375/n10. yr !sc. ~0-7J73. RENTAL bltns, garg, patio. E-side.1-*:cFURN::,,cc::c-,~B~R-..,.-,-.-0--t ti 1 lruf 1 ...:i .... f 2 BR. N. ol hwy, frplC', Lease/option 3 BR······ $340 (buple no pets g ap' ll, lX?O -lV. au,,u .. .,-ac. LG 2 BR, new cpls, l 'Ai Ba, frellhly pa inted. Avail 110,v l 3 BR. 2 Ba. tnbou9e .... $3401 •51ii7iiWii.iilii9iithiiSiitii.,iiCMiiii,iiS48-34iiiiii8l.,l.~361~·B"_,~Ogl~e'..S~i::. . .!"'.".~::'1298~~ I On Beach, S210. (N1. Ornng<? Co, Airport; Tua. bltrui. enel patE & gar. Xlnt $210. 7191\larigold. 675-32!)9 ~. TIME FOR 2 BR 1 ba. house $280 * 213/37s-o891 * tin at 17th St; nr, Weslcllfl). loc. no pets_ $159. 54~ 1 QUICK CASH •. red .. h ....... 11 i"'from $35 Wk. ~.:.::;·n~.:,R. Slo.I Very nire OCEAN· ~::~.~~",'B~~t~\ ': "·--· Singlo Apta. Compi•" Below -n•·• veiu••. FRONT BACHELOR .APT. 1741 Tusun, Costa 1.-fesa Newport Buch 5200 l .....,. .... "' ... ..,.. " · ,,.,., ~i:::::o "'I .,_ "·-· 642 ,.., 1c..:.:;,;;.::.;...;..;;.;;..;....;;__:.;;.:.. 326 fl1allf!Jl.'rite. 511j....7:Jl!3 maid service, housewares 2110 Newport Blvd., CM 642-1265 or <1•~ "gr ... u,,, \,.&1-,,.,,.n. ""l>'LI ' 1. ell i1J •· ted I =""'°=~o'-~~=~' 3 BR, 2 BA \lhl, Crpl!, drp!J, B/\Cl!ELOR, Ch a rmi ng • THROUGH A REALTY mens, u ,,..,a poo ,CI It l B DELUXE2Br.Wet1lclifl loc.1 ---------·l blk lo -•o. Y•••i> 1260 I ll30 ini > billiards restaufant cock-ean. qu e r. Pool & Bltns Ad It Lii L' I f Y "'"" "... pato, · c. u!il's. 514 ) Unlv. Park ~nter, Irvine -tails ' • w/Garage. Adult 2039 • · u s. .<• IV ng n our mo.* 67~. Ferleaf 675-rot.1,·G42·3G13.' l Call - ""MM • Well•-.,.1885 eves & Sl90/mo. 67?">-82"..0 OWN HOME •• , I I 3 B 2 B U·' 81,. . DAILY PILOT ~ VILLAGE INN · ""' .,...... · 1v1 11-t t? r. a. .... u.i1, crpts, 2 BR lir>I. Cdi\t Sl65, no ""ts j •->-1 BR. & Bachelor. nr bay &. 1Y pay '" or an ap -w,.s. •~/mo. * Call , •• • • , ·--· Be Ch ,.. ,.,..,. Wruiwt. _,., or -'1ili!Ntn, SEU.ING Youi' boat? "List" _...... a 4;N-~ heh. 1216 \V, Balboa Blvd. when we can rent you one "5f6.-7573. ._, D BALBOA INN 1 BR. Sl.25. Pool . Spac. 494-2250 eves & am, ~787ti for Sl40, 2 BR., newly dee, . ~="~J.<~l71~.ti._,_,_I P~ , ' ' WANT A with ~ .sell it fast ~ Balboa 675-8740 Adults. Ideal f or Bachelor. crp!/drp encl patios spac MARINER Sq. -Westcliff 2 3 BR, 2 ha, bltns, d,sll\v$:hr, : I J.~~'.::.::._:_::,::__:~Pllo~t~Cl~o~Mil~'~l~ed~.~642-5678~~~:.!J~~~~~~~~~bl~99;3~Ch~ur<h~:_.~O;;';;l._;543-~~9633~.~J2 BDRM, one block to ocean ~.2.Pools! Adulbiorey. BR, den, 2 BA, $255 /mo. new sh:q: crpt, dl'p'; !rplC, ·~: ~~!-,.£>-.1--:--;;;: I G-eral • BEAUT. Bach & 1 Br. ~65~1~ts~) 'li~ishtlo 2283 Fountain Wa~ E. (Har-64.2-8016 or 645--025:Z. patio, g11r.-675-88J5 l l l·--"'-'-"·------30_·.;.00_Gono"-'""'-'-"""'l-----l-'-0-"oC)o-OG'-"tn"-1'-'r-"e"'l-----ll'-'0"oC)o0D1 apt. $29.50 wkly &: up . .=.::.::::::.==::.c:;:.='-1 bot, tum \V. on Wilson). •OCEANFRONT 1 BR. MARGUEnIT.'€ s. ot Jfwy. r f S@\\~lA.-~t.trs· Th• Pun/• wilh th'e Bui/f../n Chuckle }'urn., Inc ulil. 546--0451 BACHFJ..OR Bpi. S00 mo, ulll BR ND N d Ix 2 BR YEARLY· $140/mo. BR unfutn. Adults, no pets. } Furn 1 Br & Bachelor pd. Incjulre 22t 33rd St. N.B. tri~lcx a1>~~Pri:a1: patk>s, Call 673-2259.9 to 6 pm. Squnl'{'S only. 6'12-7898 2110 Newport Blvd, CM Corona del Mar 4150 shrg crp15, drps, bllns,l======='=='c===::=o=:=:=:===I ga ... ,,e. Xlnt E....slde 'loc.1 ..;Floul;nllelllniViilalll1·y··54·10.Fjjo·u~n~l·a~in~V~a~ll~e~yjjji~~I 1 BR FURN $150/mo Incl ---e n-• d'· saJ BACHELOR apt, 2 blk3 to S175. Adults. 353 Woodland utll. rvvi., gar, ,,,po • Pl f TusU ' -•1 Adults, no pets. 642-2383 bch. $125/mo. Responsibl~. ace near n "' Mo1U• neat yng lady only. Avail 11-, ::."="-',.:;;.'°':.:':.·==~==-I FURN. l BR Apt, oU Ttlstl n l ~ ,.,3 •· • : • • •• • • l ' Avo. $135/mo. Wtr & gaa · ••~ · VILLA MESA APTS, pd. 542--3379 or 838-8919. 2 BR, pool. Ocran sid1! of 2 BR, Priv patio, Hid ·pool. l -1!:8:CR...:.::.FU;;m-u:.:.;.;;tilo.,;;pd::.._;;.;;l.;.ed~ut't I hwy. Nr. schools. Lease 2 cnr encl'd gilr. Children I ' ~I . ~· I RHd Cl1111fic1tlon1 For Expert Assistance 6500-6900 ... the DAILY PILOT I :I UI· T 0 1 ° 1 • J f ·•1 us«! lo go with a girl _ . . . . . that I called Bottlene<k. Ever( .-------~time I opened a bottle she I K U E L I N. lwonted • -. • ID·& I I I I • I ' 0 Complete tb• chuckle qllOlecf . by m11,, tn 1hl """'"' "°"" -_ yov dewlap from 1tlp No. 3 below. 8 PR~~~~~~~sllTTERS IN I' 11 1s I' I' r I ·~.~~lITT!UTOI I • I I I I only. $245. 549--0>10. welcome, no pets please! ~20 Eutsrde. $144/mo, 2 BR w/trplc. no chlldrtn. $165 mo. TI9 W. WUson. no pets. $180/mo. 1.:"'.::G-c.:12'=·:.:l;... --~=.,'--1 Stz.-.2 BR Trailer. 1 or 2 * 673--0183 * • ·n1E SEVILLE aduita only, "'O pets. Utll 2 BR, 1~~ 00 W/ gar. 1.1::ocl:;;.:, 64:.:2-33'75=;;::_· ----1 :Bc:•;.:lboc:.•:... ____ 4300 __ 1 AdulJ>.<:f>"· drps, tned "" NOW RENTING--2 Br turn. . w/ patio. \Vtr pd. 636-4120. ~ room, heated pool, No OCEANFRONT • W1nttr, 3 2619 "L'' Santi AN. AYB St55 children. 646-582<1. Br & ~en, 2 l.i:I. Pn.tio. $240 667 "K0' Vktorta St. Sl55 • Sl.20 FURN/uni, utU pn.kl. ~incl uill, no pets. e Quiet Adult Living Adultt. lfi62 Newport Blvd. l BR FU UW' 1d 2 BR, Shllg cpts, bltn!I, bta.ut, 642-6194, · m a1>1. S pa · Jndlcpd. $170 mo Incl all * 1 BR. Lrg CI05ell, Pool. Sl25 mo Adults. No pell. 3lO utll. Adults only, no pctl. • Shuffle hoard. New E. Balboa Blvd. BA.lbnA. 2'11 AVOCRdo St. &l6-0979 cpl/drpc. UIU pd," MS--0336 * BACHELOR APT/ulil pd. NE\V 2 BD1L\l Beam ctll· ATTRAC. J.'\an, Studlo. $115/ $00/mo, llO E. -Balbon tngs, y,'(IO(f panCllng. All rec mo .• AduJts only, m pell. Blvd .. Balboa featurt1. $165. Adults, no :zt3$ Eldt_n. See Min'. Apt 6. lido Isle 4351 peUI. Call l10\Y 6f6-0013, :J.ounlain.d MeditBronean Style Lu x.ury 1 & ! ll<clroonu -! Bal"" ,Adult IJvlng l'arulahod Ii Unlurnls~ed . , ... • °"'"··· e Sl., CJ..Jl'l't• • ,,,.,.,. '''"°' e Cl.H C1,..,µ. • ,_,.... c.1u .. ,. 1665 Slater AVflaae • • • tmL J>d.&chclor a.pt. Quiet • 387 W, BAy Stn!et • It prlv, Sln;lo only, no pets. 320 Nord lkiacb Apt1, turn. 2 BR. AvnU Oct J31.h. New ~·~ ":-Zr-a: Sl2:1/mo, 5f8....1405. Garage. 1 br s~. ishar crpi... ft.etrlg & 1tove. = n.: F!:in~:= 1.::==;..;;;:.;;.;::;_ ___ I bachel01:' $20!). Avsil now, ,Gar. Pbol. Pntk>. Walk to 96&-6M6 SCRAM-LETS ANSWER IN CLArSIFICATION' 7000 TRADER'S PARADISE & wtotor rat ... &12-4097, •hof>L """· adults ruo.1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I 1._ ________ ,1 ___________ ...:...:;;.;....:..:.:..:.:•..:.::;..;.:;..;..:..:.;;..:;.;.:_.;_;:;..;.:.._ ~ll~""::..:~.:fun:::.:u-5:..:..~bu~elts=---l....::~::.:;;:;;· ______ S1$.156Satt2pm. _ . I' • • ·- 1 , I I I 3f DAlt.Y "LOT .. Lido Isle 5351 l J .J,JJl!!lll!Jll!,!l!llJJl££11jijl$11!1.IJIJIJIJ!~j·JIJQIJ•hll•21. ...... ,,~j·ij]~.,j,@•.~P~.•&~ .. ..,.1,!""!""~l.~j~ffl!"!'f~Sf~S~)(ft& ... ~S~.Y ... "!\":O-•Q~¥~,""'!\~.>....,.~=~.··~.~"""'""'"e'-r-·~~•.~··~~~~~, Thur54ky, Octobtt 6, 1370 ANNOUNCIMENTS * •nd NOTICIS . . SERV!C! DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIR.ECTORY * * * * ,- •. • ·~ 6'74 Upholstery '"° CZYKOSKJ 'S (Csy-kos-keyl Custom Upholstery, 1831 New p o rt Blvd, CM .I 6'12-1454. . JOBS I. EMPLOYMENT• -Job Wanttd, Men 7000 SCR·AM-LETS ANSWERS Job Wanted. Women 7020 ASSEMBLERS Assemble printed ci r c u it boarrt components, pov•er supplies, plug-in units wlt- ing harness. Work ' with small hand tools. Mechani. cal dexterity nquired. Call Industrial Relations (714) 494-9401 TELONIC INOUSTRIES Laguna Beach Equal OpPQrtunity Employer -ASSISTANT- CIVIL ENGINEER $921..Sll75; Bachelor degree in CiviJ Engineering, File clty applicalion form by Tues., Oct. 27th. e CITY OF a>ST A MESA e 77 Fair Dr. (714) 834-5350 'I .I Thursday, Oetobtt 8, iq10 DAILY PILOT 3t JOBS & EMPLOYMINT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMl'LOYMINT JOIS_&.EMPLOYMENT JOBS & J;MPLOYMENT MER~HANDISI fOR MERCH.ANDISI FDR MI R OISE FOR I Jobs Mori, Wom. 7100 Jobs Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobi Mor-. Wom. 7100 JOill MOf.. Worn._?_~ Jobi-Mon, Wom. 7100 SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE~ SALE AND TRADE FREE TO YOU · l •BOAT CAAPENTER • DENTAL ..s;:· ,...u.;;;;;;;; LE~AL SEC'Y ULIUi.\A~ ••WAJTR-ESS H.....,,..ld Goods I020 Televl•lon nos Mlacelle.-. 8400 ' BRO'MTER kltttnl .... ' • , " New and u.ed Flats, VW's -horn" de5peratcly -I blk l; REFINISHJ:R,. Pmn, job chair aide, IChooiJnc or n:· Busy Newport Sch &en'l and olht!r lmporlf: Exp«. waitreu .. ,uled to MAYTAG Wuhtr late lllOdel 23" MOT 0 R 0 LA TV, I STANDARD SIZF. POOL whl. 1 ~ray & whl, ·~ wtlr~e beoefi tll. LAKE per. 830-3290. practJce, Sllacy o p·e n. t ·t ltd work: lull time at new mod· fe,91 Whirlpool au dtyer $39, BLK I WJIT. BEAUT/CAB. TABLE monlhll 10 10 5: 644-Sell a:« , AR.ROW1lEAO MAR IN A EAClORJ TRAINE.£S~ J-fid\ ~ OU 0 !por • ern lunch CDlll'lter. No Sun· Arriu. standard 1 pc. toilet Slfl. 1 * 897-6410 * 5:30 67~~58 10/f.Q ' 1.('Q-4> S3T-250t: school .. &radu.ate, military e MAID WORK in excbuw'e s.n..rin Call Collect 11i.Y-work:-Ullitorm-tum-$4t:--Amer. atwl-ktk:htn •·t-5t0-65&9~._. __ 30'' lt\NOE:-tr;-~; OLK & wht wtre Mir terrier I BOYS & GIRLS obliga.ti>n completed. Cood for apt. 237S Newport Wvd, SAL.ESMI:N wanttd _ Sell 11bcd. fo.1edlca1 & hotip. comp. -w/dbl a1nk ~ -Chrome Top. Bakc11 Gd. S50 7 mos. old. B1k male poodJ& &tn US lalt:Jfta Ordt'l'S tor math, 5•1or• or ove f". CM,~. Cbrlstmu frees 10 com· benelit&. Apply Li.ndbert I. all cabl.Dttl SSf, ~aua. T•pe Recorders l220 2127 Collete, CM. &16-5'186. l's yrs. &ood with clilldre_!'~ J Cl'U'iatma.\ bUs .fron1 your t.1echank:al u.blllty ht'lplul. Nutrition, located ~ the brD reclinu fl!,· --35031" HOLi ~ , n ••o ~" 10/ ·• I Mends & ttl.atives. Call ~1R. Ph: ~125. ~1EOIANJC for mar In e m e r c i a I establ.~hmcnt$. Toy \\'orld store on-lower ~-Dr. Wttt.-NB AKAi CRobtrt.t) bl&: tf.pe DA y HeaJth Sp•· 1,;';;,~;,.;;'"-,°'i-,";-~"''T.:~--:::::'::::i"I CHJ\ISTMAS TREE 516-95ll FIELD SALES ~.; sm bo&1l. 90tne Call Mr. Chrltunas 1'rec, level, So. Coast Pina Shop. deck, 1" ttel A 3-lrack Memb. 2 yr. tor 2. $300. NOS fnt.~<t lovable speye(I· klr mare informaoo'n. uper In dlull I: elec work. ~95U. ping Center, 3333 Brlllol Ger•"'• Sile I022 cartridre S200. 61'-'i616. phone 847-4983. female beagle 1nlx Dr .t REPRESENTATIVE 548-9611/ .. ·-Jevet. ., -·~ -h 6 ail --11 ~·· ~ SALES SI CM Aalc for Al M l W t·• .,10 w t. mo. anu • i.ega.,. Budget ' Research AIEDICAL &eereblty, FIT. '• . . . CaflnWll & IC, an 9U -__.=:_ lo\.'tS child. 531-95-11 1011 An ly t $944-$1204 A mulitiPlil Une commer· * WArl'RE.SS. part lin1e. BETTER Than averaa:e E I t a300 · • r ·ie• cit1 appl' ~IOn fonll & cial lnauranet con1pany. ~ =· It all ina. lorms, Part time, II.dies clothing rx-Ebcperienced. must be over furn\tmt, di#hes, TV, QU pmen R E; ~ L LG BU Y0 ADULT !emale Penian caj •I 1 Y u:a ,__ 1 . N 11>,........ w, ol med. term., 1,. M 21 A~iu in ""'l'!IOn Surf • W""'ht..... machlne, 1.am.,.. OLYMPUS p F •L ._. I ERA T RS : to adult home. Nv resume by Fri., Oct. 30th. nns open ng in e.wport must ~ 55 wnm accur. per, pre u, any emJilO}'(!C' · t'Y',, r "' ......... ,.. • en 'lll u-oi~ WORKING or NOT. CHILDREN OR 0-0 GS . --.-cr~ or COSTA MESA • Harbor area Compa"• Sal -0 -·<i:,,;i;;,-... __ .....,,,_ Sirloli1, 5$30 w. Coaat.JlW)' .. elect heater, elect fan , elect 35 mm with t.,.,.0 len1. (l) ~.~10_ 1•011 • ' · " , open. al'" ruot Box .... ,..,,u B 6-m • mo-. •·-(hl~ ........ -* * u...,.-~ * *-54!)..3931 -I · 834-5350 tra·.,;n,, program nd .., A I t .. l'!'JO N '"" ac: '" ~ ... ..,."' 1:1.8 r :38 mm (2)""'1':2 F :-70 -,.,;T~,,;.;~::::-i:''7:7:J~~~~0:o"":c;-=:::--:§§'i 1 17 Fair Dr tT14) 1·--... a lt1-Xl50. 330 W. Bt,)' SL, PP Y n n · · l•t. 341 Nauau Rd (off n>m .. ~.,, I•·• hood. ""'-C 0 LL EGE students •·REE to good home ve..., . fringe benet.its. Salary. Coata M 9:30 to 9:30 Waitresses-Apply in penon w• "" ..... .,, I * BUSBOYS * auto allo"·ance'ph.is com-e... ROBERT HALL Delaney's Sea. Shanty 630 F'1rdhaml College Pit: sec. ryilfl& case. All tor $100. despemtely nd usable turn. kl\-abte ,,..·/Sam. &: ~rd AppiY In Person, Alley West. niissloni,: and bonuses. l\-1EN to model suits I CLOTHES Lido Park Or, N.B. 675.-0lOO tlon. C.M. &to.-9676 h•hld lttm.•, art sup .. bikes. mix female 9 mot. lovei ~11.06 Ckeanfropt, NB. f\lan selecled should have 1p:>rtswear part Ume eves. d GARAGE Sale-AU f! I e c 646-8226 children. 548-0813 10/10. CARRIER lwo to three years sales lA.G. Inc. 835-3501 l60l NejPOl't Blv ., C.M. WANTED: Reliable_ v.'Oman 1tove, llv rrn turn. bdrm SPorting Goods 8500 LGE, clean Abalone >pearls. FOR beaut.iful 7 wk5 old kit· background and capable MINI MODESL • s· 2'' .I: SIJ..ES.Ne1de"i: 5 men & 5 10 love & can.> for girls 8 & 5 furn, oUice turn & lots ot The Golden Waves. 16 tens variely of colors, male Boys ofself·malljl.gement.Posl-und, needed tor local v.-omentoclf-..QIJll!llrat'e on Wed. fronl 7:301:30. niisc '1em1. Come It: &:tl._ll TENNIS RACKET Princess St., Sausalito. Ca.. & female. 5 48-0813 ~ t hio WGrlc. 1 AG l SUM°-GYM .\ JET BATH. tdust have lnlnsp. & refs. Sat & Sun betv.ttn 12 It: 6 9C965 Phone ill/332.-101!! 836-4493 . 10/9 1ion does oot requitt' 0'!! ~~l · · · · nc. M•-Loo Good, 968-2-116 Cdr.1 area 644-5937 STRINGING · WANTED l'Veniog or v.·eek • end ~ 54~. · · pm. 2001* Klng11 Rd, N.B. Reasonable price11 Medical student with fimily FREE shaggy pUppies, all w·ork. NEED Extra money? We're •"'.ELDER ~Ith omamcn-1rucE Ca.rage 1ale! J.'aatSe.rviee * 494.2568 ne eds refrige rator . colors. females & males, for t11" DAILY PILOT Dana Point, San Juan Caplatrano and Capi.strano Beach. Contact Mr. Seay al DAILY PILOT San Clemente oUice 300 N. El Camino Real • 492-44al Cashier Exper. or trainee. Display IL .stock \\'Ork. ~ust be maturP. Hrs. 1-10 3 wkd)'s & 9--ti v.·knds. , Newport P ersonne l Age ncy 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-3870 At 1 replies confidential. looking for-mane.pria1-type SALE-Earn Ch ri11tma 1 I.al ll'On experience. Fti-Sat...SUn. 10 tlll ? 256 l':l"xlB'' CSTM •urfboard & Reasonable, 64&-3333. nl>out 6 wks old. 5.16-7224 aft \Yrite Box M.2028 The people to help us in a new monef p8i-t time.' Sarah *•* 4M-6376 *'* ROSe Lane. (btwfi"Orange & LARGE FAMILY Would like 4 Pt.f 10/9 Coventry hlrlne now. No 111-Sant A l c •1 "A" O'Neill we I 1 u It $50. oaUy Pilot. C.h1, business; Ji\ill or part lime. vesl, no del. Free training. Sch I 1 t• 7600 a na. ·" · U'U'"l332. 968--4935. to buy a Re(rirerator. T11R.EE Cute kitten11 ~ ESK c E Call 642-3849. -00 s· nstruc ion • THUR. Fri, Sat -1V; • 64>-0207 • Siamese need good home. 1, ~:g:~~. PBX~ a~~·h:::~ ORGANIST, St John · s Ftrr info PH: 962-«156. Water colors; Ear I>' e CROS&\1AN BB Pellet 2 Vanitl•s W /M lrror ,,.kJ old, raised w/dog I!: rront desk procedure. Relief DiviM Episcopal Church. * SALES * IT'S YOUR MOVE Amer-platform rocker s, repeater. ExceUrnt co11-** 846-965t • * children. 54>6595. 10/Ul shift, 5 day/wk. •548-8326 * For Recorded Informal.ion game table: Misc. 548-7061. dltion. ~. 6#-459f GENTLE Cock-a-poo pup, 8 Ben Brown's Motor Hotel e PAINTING In vi:chanie Dial 545-037D INDUSTRY CAREERS GARAGE Sale;· Fri, Sat, ~~ ~; s~:11 Buikling Materials 8760 mos, hsbrkn, need11 love &: 31106 Coast Hwy, S. Laguna forapt..237GNewportBlvd., *SALAD GIRL* St.In. 1'Urniture. mower. auentlon, greal w/children. FULL or PART TIME C~I. 548-9755. l\i:us:t have iood preparation edger. bike. misc, 10181 Ml II 8600 ;t" Plate glau. 2~'x 4'. up 646-81.50 10/9 Eatn up to 55 per hr experience. Mon, thru Fri. A'DLINE & TRAVEL Edye Dr., H.B. 96&-1597 Ke •neous lo 5· x 8'. 1751 8' sgl lite GERl\fAN Sh herd 4 PHONE · Solicitors tor· Goll 1.3 .• , •. Call Mrll. Penning· IJl tluoreSCf'nt fixtures take aJJ · ' ep mos. "FULLER. BRUSH '546-5745 celebtify tournament. Work .:w FURN .• decor, ltema, Pin& · 4 o lbs, a I l shot$.. .. GIRL for picture lramirlg business 10 to 6 Thurs, Fri, Sat. Sun. Some el(Jl. nee. in selling & ASSembly. 494-801:) 10.12 or 5-6 GIRLS-Sell "Trick or Treat" candy. fo.take good money, win priEes & help needy school. 642.0SOO, 9 to 5. ton 8J3.-0600 Ext 2037, betwn. pong table, knick-knacks USED rerords, books, lamps. for $Th. Doors; ""~·. atccl, 67S:.7513 10fl(I w-movie stan tor 1 mo. & i.s P~f. I) OPERATJONS AGEN1' etc .• Fri .. Sat.. sun. 9 to 6, .f drwr -slnlg file, new alum $4 ea. 1882 Wtllttler St. . -' earn top Jiil)'. 847-3810, 32 furniture, bunk btd, 3 BR CM. &12-3408. FREE -pure black fema!f!' 847-1310. 847-1610. 18530 SEAMSTRESSES e TICKET SALES 61 Pt. Loma Dr .. HB. sets, king lize bed, kitten, 2 mos. old -needs Beach Ave, 2nd noor. Town Sportswear manutacturer • RESERVATIONS GARAGE SALE! 1593 bookcases. dt1k, Columbia FREE TO YOU home, 548-4537 1019 & Country Center, H.B. want! exp·r seamstresses on e AIR fREIGHT.CARGO Redlands P l, CM SAT.SUN Solid State AM/FM stereo PUREBRED Doxie m~.' PRESSMAN. Experienced single needle, overlock &: : ~~~i1~~~~~~S lOth & llth. 9-5 pm 642-7l56 record player, Curtis Mathi15 BLACK female lab retriever-ture. J-lsebrken . gd. W/ on 1250 W. Itek, manage in-blind hemmer. Apply in per-NEIGHBORHOOD Gar a I e Color TV console, kltch collie mixture, Loves chldrn. 1.;,~34.28. 10/9 stant print ahop. Good son, 2800 S. Main, SUile I. Airline Schools Pacific Sale. 2223 PonRina, apt C, Items. love seat, co ff. children, good natured , LAsr of ttw litter Dadd:Y benefits. 540-968:2. Santa Ana, Calif. 610 E. 17th, Senta Ana C.;\t. Sat 9AM-6P~1. tables, din. rm set. SID-8421. 548-5163. .. 10/8 aays must go. 3 'mo old *CASHIER/ JfAIR.STYLisr, male. !or PRESSER, Quality work. SECRETARY Ptrl~tt: 54U596 Ask for Rev. Bea.Ii. UNIQUE 1\.lllena, S wks. orange tabby. 646.2'?39 10110 •· · n·-• gmt _, Appliancei 1100 WE 1 k 11~ ,. 1 COUNTER GIRL * Hotel Salon, Laguna Beh. Pt-time, Huntington Ctr """"mi re ,.,.. m ... v -MERCHANDISE FOR may 00 ""' a.n iques Burmese/Angora, Li I te r COCKER s aniel 2 rs old-" 7 to 3:30. Mon thru fMi. Call *•Call 494-0064* * Cleaners, 892-6813. sultan! needs few hrs SALE AND TRADE now ourselves, but the shop tr a I ne d, weaned . vh' 00P be' Y · · if' Mrs Pennington, 833--0600 ---------.ecretarial work wkly at KENMORE auto was~r. '"'5 finally open with.goodies 968-3262 10/8 1 ite a ige. spa.ye ., Ext '2037, betwn. 2-5 P;\-1. HELP \Vanted part or full -POLICE-Mol'lllrCh Bay residence. Op--Furniture 8000 late model. Xlnt rond. Free from mining towns&: Indian . 54;.....6328 10/10 time doing pleasant tele-CLERK TYPIST tional time $4 hr. Malurt>:. delivery, $70. 546-8612, country. You are a.lway1 LOVEABLE kitten&,_ 8 wk5, DARLING short hair ldtten!. j CLERK TYPIST 11 phone work. No ex per. neC-<NYC HT SHIFT) ex per. person re q u i r I'd . 847-8115 \\'e.l~ at Grand pa ' s White, black ' white. coal PT. Siamese. 1 bUt, 1 ID $443-$565; Immediate opening ess. \Ye train. ti.fake $2 per Salary: $484 to $575 mo. 499-1909 Frontier Antiques, J 595 ~~~~lJ•. grey. 836-4493 10"'18 grey. Male. 644-5$7 1011 in Police Department, 4 pn1 hr. + bonuses. Call or come One yr, clerical expo•., H.S. SAVE s••• WESTINGHS auto \\'asher N I Bl .... IO 1 5 '"o-vo 1': to 1 ani. tDays off other i11 immed. 548-5501, 1869 grad_ Must be 21, trPe 45 * SECRETARY * WAREHoUsE SALE top Ioe.der, Xlnt cond, Free ewpor wu, o ADORABLE g wks old kit· f'RE.E terrier pups, Heim than Sat. & Sun.l File city Newport Blvd., Suite f', CM. wpm. File application Ill F<>r recorded Information. dellv. $50. 546-S672, 841--8115 M=IA~!Llb1!~~htAmfioor tena tortoise &. blk &. whil v~:_,1etl,•., f387cmoale & mal~01's application form in Pe!'Mln-H0l\1EWORKERS WANTED City Hall, CITY of WE.ST-Dial 545-2473 Drastlea.Jlu reduced priO'.!! 197_0 Kenmore Coppertone 'f ' .,,... Y er, nd gd homes. 548.CSJ:lq~w=~=·=~=~=~~~~~~I CE ta" __ , , o; h ~ bl V marble end tables $'15 a set. 0.,~ ,,,.., 1019 3 KITTENS 2 white 1 c.allco I : nel Dept. (Envelope Addressers). itINSTER, 8200 Westmlna-SERVI 5 on ,,..,esman on tine turniture &: accessor-s wu.""r, porta e, alue Commercial desk Sl5, Bar ~ ks old 2 f 1 1 al e CITY OF COSTA i11ESA • Rush stamped, se 11-ad· . ter Ave., by Oct. 16, 1970. permanent, full time, even-ICs from 3 MODEL I-IO~fES. S270. Sell $1.50. 96S.9126 w/ stool.a $10, lg men's NO gd. homt fenced yd for ~()..2941· ema es, m10jg 1 77 Fair Dr. (714) 334-5350 d res wed en ve Io p e. \Vritten exam Oct. 24. fTI4 ) ing shift. Mu.st be neat in Also, osed office furniture -*MAYTAG service man has dl'fttlt'r $15, floor model very lovable sm bret!d malel==~~--~~-"I CLERK STENO 11 LANGDON W 0 R L D 893-4511 exl. 205. appearantt. Apply, 2590 t'vcrythi11g has 10 go!: v.·nshers, dryers in match. stereo $15, Poker table $20. blk tenier pup. Gd w/child WHITE Pekt> maJe tree t6 ! $476-$608: Immediate opening. TRADERS. P.O. 8 ox PUBLIC RELATIONS Newport Blvd .• Ci\l. se1s, ·best guar. 531-8637. 545-7459 aft . 5:30. 5 5 8 536-3498 1019 good home with no children. File eity application form in 11~-A21 , Redondo ·Beach, Front Oft i c e .ApptU"llilCf'. • STATION help wanted, Rear of Sll!.rbirJ Coni;t Co. ./ REFRIGERATORS-Large Traverse Dr. CM . PART Schnauzer/pert 84l-l.OJ9 l0/10 1 Personnel Department. Calif. 90278 Good typist. Must work full time. Apply at ll95 I31E> U>gan Ave, Suite E Selections: SJ.5.$6-S5S I: Up, * AUCTION * poodle, 3 yn old, loves kids. FREE to good home Cock• I e CITY OF COSTA t.1ESA e * * HOUSEWlVES,.Make_ v.·eek~nds. Company pays Ha.tbor Blvd, CM Costa fo.1csa 546-3140 646-7820 e HO\llll'broken. 836-4493 or po o Pu P s, 9 wk'·' 77FaifDr:--!"71ifr834·5..150 lfi0r1$!Y. ..-m homes , ftt. ca:n-ima~mo. STUDENTS-Se~-.:ick .. or One blk cost of Harbor GE 16 cu 11 Refri&; A-l-cond Fin@ Futnl.ture. MB--OSU 10/10 M0-3575 1Dl1D C.O.D. Me&!lenger fuU or p/ de m onslraling household \Ve,tcliff Pe1110nnel Agency, Treat'' candy. Make good 0nc blk south or Baker SJOO./GE W!lh r &. gas dryr, . &-APpllanct~ BEAUT. German Shepherd. ~1ALE Terrier ti Poodle 5~1 time, no exper necess. ~tust n e ce s s i I i es in local 2043 WestcliU Drive, N.B. money, win prizes &. help 10 At.-1 10 :i PM Daily xlnt cond $l50. 675-:1469. Auctions Friday. 7:30 p.m. J\.1ale. w/peJM'n:. Guard dog months. 642--0856 J0/9 have dependable car. ~take ~ighborhood. Othe.n earn-CAI~ tee jobsl. • need~ school. 642..£003. 9-5. Windy's-Auction Bern &-gd. with kids. To good PUPPY 7 mo. old ~d SJ..8.$25 a day. Call or come ~"!" :~~!i:,r p~ co=: * RE c E PTJ o N 1 ST for e snJOENT -Pennanenl KING-Sz Simmons Satin Antiques 1110 2075~ Newport, CM 646-8686 home. 557-7571 10110 Shepherd Lab. 542-5488 10/t ln immed. 543-5501. 1869 New. Ph : 9&2-508l. · builders oftice. Accurate part time v.·ork, 111 e Royally Bed. firm, All Behind Tony'1 Bldg. Mat'!. l\-!OVING fo.!ust find home for PETS and LIVESTOCK • pOrt Blvd, Suite F, c.~f. typi~t. neal appearance.. manufacturing. 893-7485. Bnens, bla.nke1, s Pr e ad. ANTIQUE bedrm 1 3 , 6 pups, 1 wks old & mother , HSl<PR.S Emplyr pa.ya fee. Salary starts at $375 a mo. SOLDERER For s ma 11 ~rly neltl', \m cost. Also: pieces circa 1820. ·~mp! l1n t It Siiiy dog. 5 males, 1 girl. Mixed Pets, General l80I 1 •-COlal.liCTOR * Oeorp Allen Byland ~n-Ca11~54!Ml960. perts. ExperieDCed 0 n I y Lite Oe.k desk. walnut end, handcat'\>ed Ratt be to buy your paint sprayers, breed. 841-8673 101101----------1 • cy 106-B E. 16th, S.A.. should apply. Full lime, coU_ee tbl, 4 vclvel ~· rond. 543-69&1 by si>Pt 0'::f;: lawn ~en, wheel barTOws ONLY (l) Jell! bPaut. grey FOX, RARE, 1 mo,_gold cot: ~ Finance t.'On1pany experience, 547--039:) RESTAURANT HELP Pe rm a ne n 1. Established ~io!'Lal chrs. ma.hog Vic-No dealers. , .. thing1 )'OU use onet a tri-" fi ff k"tt lar. blk. legs & ea.rs, must • skip.trace & demand eollec· HOUSEKEEPER _ m ", t Female~ pert fl-.., over 21. tor1an dresser, I amp !I, "tar'!' RENT what "OU nttd ~-.. v= d "ho,Y 1 en! · mus,t sell-leaving ooontry. Alt " ~r: local c o mpany . Ph: PINE J dd ,__ " " '"""' g me • tions. have car. WUI exchange I ;;;Ph;;;;;. ;;a!t;;;i;1;;:31l;;;iill;;;li':OO;ii686ii;;;;;;;;;;; • ~10RE! 847-ti066. a er-.... ck dated trom ~ .. ""'"" ·•t 5 °""019· 7:30, 549-2163. j ""'STM!NSTER L---> 646-6564. ~ rocker. Pitcher & wakhbowl UNITED .RENT ... '~;,;:~~'..-~·~· =.,...,,...,1~~1 :========:::·1 COMMUNITY Y.-ork. 893-7640 5-dra"':'er. pe"'.ter p 0 1 , 968-67f4. • ea•· 710 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa l ~old -lon&"-haired all Dogs 1125 J'.... free rm & ..,........, lot lite TOOLMAKER DESl<S, Walnut n1 ode~, wall telepbont R ' tu.J.o ;- -HOSPITAL-REUBEN'S with maintt.nance e>q:>er. on matching cheil'!J, S60 * 64S-0760 * back cat. Must find gd home I"-=-------= Call 841-7807 or apply In D '-h d' at once! 548--0532 aft 5. 10/9 FAWN, Male Chihuahua! . Costa M--small ·..-embly machines. lSt'I.. Wa ut an.... ivan Musical STOP & SWAP Show stock. 5 mos old! Personnel Dept.. ·11112 ·-l987 Plscotia, c .M. sectional, contouted corrK'r I t LOVABLE dog for diild.n!n, Grand! ther Is Champion 1 Beach mvd .. Hun1. Beh. • c: table $&1. Occasional chairs. n1 ruments 1125 548-61.Dl ~ silky, % lge poodle. -a · i ~ TRAINEE: l'.oung man or 2013 Newport Blvd. C.M. Dale's While Prince owneo ~ COMPANION For maturr • lady, live in. It hskpg. rni, ; brd & sal. Ph: 67J....00j8. i C0.\1PANION, reliable. Llye· in, room. board + salary. 1 Hours adjustabll'. 613-7033. · COASTAL AGENCY A member of · ' Snelling & Snelling Inc. The World's Largest • Professional 1 Employment Service ~ 2790 Harbor DI, Ct.I ~605.'i 1 • Harbor Blvd. at Adams 1 COCO'S -REUBEN'S • -COMPLEX- 1 4647 t\lncAr1hur Blvd. Ne1vport Beach lNTERVlE\VING 'fo.10N·FRI JTOJP;\I ••• BUSBOY • I . 0 NO EXPERIENCE: NECES- ' SAR\'. FULL TIME. PART 11 TIJ\.1E. DAYS OR NIGi-ITS. :-;coon-- • Experien.:941 , • Full time \ .. ---Now interviewing college 1tudent to learn R!!clining chair & ottoman. 847·5223. 10/9 hy the Emperor of Japa.ril fi.~48 SACRIFJCE * IZ SMll--back (next to Tony'• Bldg Mal.) ·-· bakeiy trade. NO long hair, · t . ba. Used furn: Stoves: Relrig's; ALUMINUM cans. ca I I Worth $150-$300. first $50 IR.VINE PERSONNEL SERVICES•AGENCY • LUNCH WAITRESSES willing to apply himsell. FURNITURE tcturnt!'d from s ring 88• custm pickup &: Mis between: 8:00 a.m. & 3:00 cash gels. Or trade f!Jr good -" "M k C-" •-..11-Ja• •t··dl-. mod•I ho""' for ampl!Ucatlol"lft, new beg C. p.m. o:Ao """o 1019 l•P' _ -• pow ... E ...... y """ wor. a.u...wr ~v ,, " .... .. ..... bo "if v.·e .don't have what you ........,..,,., •cCoruer, er mow-a""" CUP CAKE BAKERY es, decorators canCP.IJation. & w. Xlnt concl, $200 ca.ah p• NSE ., ... ""' kilt•"• er, Sony TV. Also stud sc~ l'Y., or trade 545.8893 want. we'll get it for )'OU" ~ • "" 54&-2880. Spanish & MedlterranPan · from the lb. Food litter & vice .available. 546-3634. TRAINEE for fine jewelry R D FURNITURE KUSTOM Amp Ill 1~" SEARS Conve ntiona.I spray flea collar. 962--4165 10/9 IRISH SETTER PUPS AKC, store salesman. Male, 21-25, 1844 Newport Bl., C.M . G.'r.s. speakent, black. like rig, 1 hp,.w/aJI &jetls. Cost "TROUBLE'' lovable ma.le 10 wks. Sire & Dam; On · H B 892 5501 every nlt.c 'tiJ 9 new. $400. Can be !fen at S350, sell for $2!'JCJ. Used only . Sho & p fl'Jll; !t'on il'rly Abilities Unlim., aggressive. . . -\Vcd., Sat, & Sun_ 'Iii 6 Bauer Buick, 234 E. 17th. 4 brs. Sears table saw, 10", wht cockapoo 1 yr. Hsbrk. premises. w ct..,.._ __J 1555 \V. Adams * TRIMMER OR UPllOLS--Costa Mesa -'Ill 9 PM. ditto &: extra blades, used Loves child. 968-2379 10/9 &. up. 642-5065. AGES 21 TO 30 APPLY ONLY JN PERSON 3 TO 5 P .M. TRISH HOPKINS TERER to \York on boat in-REDEC. Hunt. Harb. home, t "''J"" 11 f "'""" MALE German shepherd AKC Tri-rolor collie pup!I'. Costa ~iesa. 1, .. 3 -. ~.,,.11~ __ 1,.. ""'· HAMMOND Organ, .....;,.,.1 once, COi ........,, se or 'f~"" 488 E. 17rh (ar Irvine) C.!\1. I~~~~~~~~!'!! teriors &: canvas covers. .... " ""' .,.... '"" -r--0, -·•· oUo• •~1011 '6k mlnia.ture. Adulll on J ". Lovely show & ""\. Shot.~ -·· "•··•, -•< '1.500 ,•II l\.1100, cherry cabinet, $200 ""'""' · o}J'.r J .... 642-1470 Perm. job. fringe benefit&. '"'"' "" ~ ~ .. for Jack 534-1630 10/9 f'..ood temperamen t•. $650 SALARY LAKE ARROWHEAD $400. Revolving mirrored under blu boo~. 675-6102 or · 830-82'19 J . W. ROBINSON'S -NE\VPORT BEACH- I Ins full timl" openings for e DISHWASHERS e STOCK BOYS t.Ianagement Tralnee. Long coffee table t.'OSt $4j(), sell M!e 432 Carnation, CdM. • GOING out of business FAT Blk & roly poly orange I-==·-· ===~=~I }fours and Hard Work. Call MARL"lA (714) 331-2501 $100, gold upholslred chair DRUJ\-tSET, CAMCO, sale • Ladit• casual wear, kittens, 7 wks. trained. Sil.KY, TERRTER PUPS Ann 645.2170, \Vestcliff Per. WANTED, Woman or Cooplc S50, 846-95.'i.l complete w)th cymbals. fixtures, supplies. All must 67~ 10/9 M/F'em. Quality breeding, sonriel Agency, 20-IJ West-lo take cart of hf;e while SOFA & lovcseal $250, coffee S325 542--0185 go. Jardin de! Sol, Balboa KITIENS-1 Si11mese 2 healthy & alert M. for Stud' owners are out ol city . 2 sm T1Jand, Fri. Sal & Sun, 11 to black. to good h.~ me Service. 646-1335. cliU Dr .. N.B. dogs to care for & yd 10 ta ble $25, single bed S25, "1.ARINET,almostnew,xln't 5 962-6075 eves. 1019 GOLDEN SALESLADY, Exper., waler, Dover Shores area. child 's cht'st & bookcase SIO cond, $75. 2031 Mesa Dr., · RE (l\'OrTlen's wear), aeamstreu Refi req'd. 543--0753 ea. New kingsize bedspread S.A, Hi hls. 557.9359 LADY'S Diamond Cocktail MIXED Aostra.lia.n Shepherd TRI EVERS • ' i"ol• --~1, powe' m,_ ~===~---~ $15. 54~1587 rlfl&', 13 diamond1, Pd. $350, 11 mo, old I em a I e . AKC * * 714/532-G.S88 ·oe" '""~' :: -'--"--'---'-'-----FENDER 1tratocaster su.n-will U f $200 ~ •• chine operators. Apply in WAITRESSES. exper. t\) DECORATOR 0 r i c n I a I burst ex . cond. w/case $250 Tbl h-se or ( . "·~"5-5,:1;;~:...._,...,,..--,---"""-;'91 Min Schnauzer sired, AKC. Apply in person io.;1 pm person, to Charles Stefan work da)'ll or nites. Must be Mod/Chest. 4fuc30xl6. Blk w/o SZ25. 673-51l9 -.,Y"/pogture rest t'X· TOY Basset fe male puppy 8 \Yormed cropped. shoti. Inc., 1621 Alabama St., over :n. Apply, Beach House \1:/g\d -leaf. Travertineftp Si-JURER !k Brand. erci!tt) $25. s.48-'1594. wks old. Loves children. Eves & Sun, 5.17-3760 'Prrsoh~nt>l!Dept. B Hunt Bch Inn, 619 Sleepy Hollow Ln., S99 Mrs Evans 540-n40 m e. new, "GYPSY Of Calltornla" fac· 548-7478 10/9 POODLE AKC . Toy Ap~~ • Yas ion sl.. N. . · · Laguna Bch. 497-1J88. · · still on gur11nlee. Cost $100, ll I I • -dl • -';i;:..7"=-,-,=:c-..,,-::;..:I ''-•• Equal Oppor1unity Employf'r dys. sell tor $-45. 646-4217 aft :; lory OU e 114 e-.... es ... COCKAPOO puppies, 6 wks M-3 mos. Shot.I &. Wormed. j;obs~~M~tet;•~·~W~om.;~7~1~DO~~J~obs~·~M~ie;n;,;W~om.;;';d7~100~ BLK/Wht Console 1V $50. misses apparel. 3 to 4 : 30 . blk & wht. 2065 Flamingo. S50. 642--0651. J. W. ROBINSON'S 2-Che 1 f 1 $IS & p ~ ~ -~ Thurs. Fri &. Sat. 817 W. 546-4lS9 CM 1019,1==~==~--=~I NE\\'PORT BEACH 1 K" s ·0 ... ·,','"","' dhO _, ianos & Organs 1130 17lh St, No, 8, C.M. . . IRISH SETTER pupg, AKC, · 111g·~"t an ea a1u 1,-i: Schnauzer lJs Poodle 2 yrs. 10 wks, Show &. Pet. From. SID. S L 26 GAL, SHOW TANK, old female hous!!brk loves llOO, tenns avail. 64Z.-5065. * Call Anytime ~5-5362 • A E ~~ ~FR ETC& ~~ kids. Ca.ls ? 836-4493 lD/6 German Shepherd Puppies S.DRAWER junior chest, PIAfllOS e ORGANS YOURS. 6#--03!&. FREE to good home . adulls SIO l'&ch Edison, harc\rock so 1 ld F'nmotUJ brands at tremen. only. Loveable, affectionate 842-5107 maple. Blond, Perfect. $49. dous savings! All with our WISCONSIN V-4 :II h P Labrador. 636--0235 10/8 *AKC -. SILVER TOY 8TS-S507 exclusive Coast Music War-engine. $150. 4 cu tt re frig I ~~::;:;<"~7.C'c-oc-= · ·• ranty. $10. 4 cu It lZ.volt refrig. 1 ?-1ALE grey kitten 8 v.•ks, POODLE puppies. hus full I in1f' opening in our ( ~xperienc" Preferred) STAMP DEPT. I • Apply ln person 10-5 p.m. Apply 1n person Perspnnel Dept. Professional Sales Specialist Furniture & Appliances 5 PIECE wrought iron dln- nette aet turquoise, seats & backs never mar top $5(), ~2054 alter 5; 30. ORGANS from S250 J25, ~12. pa.rt Stamese, &reY eyes. $75. 968-2804 PIANOS from $225 JAKE'S Contlnuoua Swap 962-5719 ID/8 PEDIGREE. English Bui~ . • I .-Z r11shion Isl., N.8. •HUNTINGTON BEACH Equal opportunity emptn~r CONVALESCENT KEYPUNCH If you are a professlonaJ, lop earning specialist, not satisfied with a mediocre income, then Grants has a proposition for you. Consider the following : 8' sofa, nc'ver useri , quilled flor11J . Scotchguarded. $125. ~Matching lovcseat $75. 530-8337 GRANDS from $695 Meet. Buy&IJ-Tl·ade 117 E. % ITAUAN greyhound, 1~ femal e, AKC, 2~11 mo old, Bank tenna. Tra~ins 18th, CM 642-5666 terrier, female pups, 9 wlu. $150, 892-9108 Ope.t Sund.ays U.S ATI'ENTION SKIERS Call eves. 673-1-456 lD/8 e JO Mo's !RISH SEITER, Daily ti! 6 -Fri tU 9 r-.1ammoth ski cabin. Avail FREE to good home, male, mate. AKC, niust stll! -HOSPITAL · OPERATOR COAST MUSIC for season only. Suitable tor pt terrier, call E 1'1 e en Lovable. trained. 548-2988 181!11 f'lorida SI. 1St11.ng Lanel lluntington..Bcach ,,,...__.~~ e COUNTER. GIRL, exp'd. •Clown Cleaners. Baysklr Center, Nev.·porl Bch. DAY time ca.rt' for lt'mi·in- v11li<I lady in wheelchair. Sunda.y only. ~ x p • d . I. 673-.'t347. I *DRIVERS* No Experien.:e . Ne.:essary! Must hllve clean C.alUomla driving rtCOrd Apply YELLOW CA8 CO. I86 E 16th St. Costa Mesa OO?fUT lndlr1 wanted·25 to 4S. atternooll It ni&hl shift . MR. OONU1, 135 E. 11th St., C.M, EARNING Chri!1mas money J11 run ' I Nay w/Se.nh ('Ol/'f'ntry, no f!;(p. no fnvest. SJ}-~. 5JQ,1.40I, ~ ONE YEAR K£YPUNOt EX. PERI ENCE PREFERRED. NE\VPORT l... HARBOR Jri & sm. groups. 675--8200. 548-3421 before 5, J0/8 AKC REGISTERED 1 T • • T S' k ~fAPLE dining lable & 6 ,,A-ta M * 64"2851 PUPPIES , op comm1ss1on • 1c p•Y ........, esa ..,. NEW Tuco te I e ''° pe -1 male, 2 female, Miniature Poodle Puppies chain. Sl25. ltt11tch. hutch 2. PM 1 's (special I . Retlrem•nt plan $35. 644-6383. 11 WOW 11 w/trlpod 1 & Barlow lens J: mpe~ed ,!.~Adorable, n10k1e8 Very reasonable <C!IMJ.53 COLLINS RADIO 11 e1 comm.) 9. Group Life •nd \VALNUT dining table. 2 We're Having a Clln')' ng case. 600 pcwer. .a,.,.,....,...,,, A.OORABLE BASSET J9700 JA.i\tBORF.E RD. l . Opportunity for Medlc•I lni. ltt1ves, bu!fet, 5 chairs. WHALE OF A SALE Sl95. 646--0l1111. ... PART Penlan_lona;·hair ltl1· HOUND PUPS AKC NEWPORT BEACH aclVancem•nt nso. 84T-498S. on PIANOS&. ORGANS SACRIFICING Fabulous Art lc!ns. Hsebroken. 1-blk 1-**&12-3956•* • 1 "E:qul\l opportunit)' employtt. 4. Employment 10. Employff ---------1Twomanualorgall8fJOm$299 Collectieo. ?-lust see to AP-1.rey. 673-812!1 10/8 AFGHAN PUPPIES ~ KEY Punch n....-tor to near -•r hom• d iscounts g· OFF \Vhite !ltl·ttd sofa , Pianos from $179 prec la le! Pvt. Pf)': KlTT'ENS: Part Siamel'M'. AKC. S150 * &IS.n.89 ~~· ~. ii'--11 11 N 1· lly STS. X1nl. Cond i t ion . WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO 64"'= f A t D """"-1 t work in Dela Proctssinc 5. -• ty ne ta • a iona ~2133 .,..w.», or PP · ays-~ a ter 5: Beautiful AKC reg Shelt\e Dept. Requirements: H.S. sell e1tabllshecf firm ' 181.9 Newpotl, C.M. 642·8484 A STEAL 646-4631 10110 pl111s, 5 wks old. Toy rollies, grad. + traJning in IB~f 6. Piid vacation Office Furniture 8010 OPEN SUNDAY Bunk beds. bxsprng. matt OAR.LING MAit puppy, 7 Sabi~ & white. 549--0726. data proc. or ~'Orie rxp. In Arl'ERNOONS $35. Oriental ru1. m. wk.I old, weAned. M>J501 l-==========I Iike poe. Good start, aal. + U you wanl lo Jeam more about our money . . SCHOOL TLVIE SPEClALS 673-12.00. lO/lD Hors•s 1 lringe bcnlls. Call for In-making proposition in one of the companies Rtfin d S4x00 wood desk•. llammond organ w/Le.&l.ie Diamond.a klOfto • 41 FREE Guinea ten1itw -492--1153 Mr•· f t t . t ll I ti $G9.~ • Rolln'd wOOd arm $995, Klmbf..11 Baby Crand, • • a pair pig & cage ' 'Conzalez. as es grow mg re a organ za ons • • • rotn.ry chairs, S29.SO •. We beaut fin ish. this wcrk ooly Pl• each.. UXt. Make nice pleue call all 4 : O O BRAND fleltl'. Rancho Alegre Come prepared to dl1cua1 your sales know-have the largest . selemlon $895. earrinp. 213/430.9857, Let.. :646-3;::;16;:.' .,.,..,......,..-,...:clO~/,'.C'.to1 stable&, 2795 Ca.noda Rd., El LADtES! 1101t wla partie• how and your preVioua experience. of used oUjce furn In thll GOULD MUSIC CO. sure World, Seal Beh. PUPPY, Male 4 mo·s olll, Toro. l llli. no. of Tnbum for profit Wholesale prittl area. Since t9U LADIES Rolex sold mixed breed. Sif8..tH831D/IO Rd, Pipe atalls., lrtt lighted 6'4-5889. AlllPL y AT •. , Mc "1ahan Desk 21'J.lS No. M&ln, S.A. chtonOmeter watch. U'.l(l, """""'E llompster 6 mo _.,.. arena., acres of tni.ib, ~ l..A.Dy, Share hmt, In exc. 1800 Newport Blvd. * M7.o681 * Phone 675-480t atter 6 '"i:~u. 6'13-8687 'iO/iO ~m uclus• hoiott....,. ~tt~~. ror nn I! brd, It hskpg & W T GRANT CO 64U4SO CARPET 68 .-4.o. _... ~ '"" ..,. "4l'I: d • • • • ========l!VERS Pt>od upn"'t blk • ~· •-· u. • LONG heired kltt•"' ID good 837~ ass'! h n Y c p d lady mahog' plsno & bench. Mov-dean, It belgt, nylon pllc, homes 5.31 3236 1019,1--======---I 673-2003. Penonnel Office Office Equipment 8011 1"'" sm. 644-2$10. 12/yd. 962-<!21 alt< · -· · CHESTNUT LADY. Averqe $1. per hr, 10 Mo for 2, llolt.t .. ., Health 2 GERMAN Shepherd femal<1 4 o1d ~ -•- pl ' • ~-1 W ~-9811 ADA "S A''ENUE GRANT PLAZA XLNT Undtrwood 1-'orum • ~ pups. S4&-62T2 10/9 year m.re • •"""' auv., us auu om '""' · M YI • eJec $150; Otslu $50 : E:n!c Televl11on l205 SPA. fUIO l'Jf Make Ofter. p~ptrl. In training rcii' No lnveP•hlm.!,n!;,,., Car -HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIF, 926-i6 11wivel chairs 115 Ir UJ;l---------1 . .;;54.;.:8--0...:.;.!M:.;·:_ _____ CU'l'F.1~·-.jkl~.~~~1-"''tlnrdl A huntcrjumptT!YJ')r 6T:>61t.I nece111&cy. : ',_,_,, •• TO 2 I • ''~"'~·~~. _:~~~·~=J:O'!!n~O•[---BA'f<f>:i:0.·---1 , Stralght ch'll to & up ; Jo"'11ei. 21" SILVER Nf.' tol'llOle e l·lne cla:uette machine 1 •1,~ Swl-•• ., '"'" IO/!O BAY GELD. l\-1ASSEUSE ·Woman, Ul>'d. An equal opportdnlty tmplO)"'l!I' 1882 Whittitr St, CM . blACk '1o\'hltc TV, $30. for .Mir:. u.-, ·Tn ·~ ,...._......, 11 )'rl, S300. A.la<> tralntt. * M1·7179 .. ________________ ,, 1 _• ... t2-:...340tl'-"'-. ------____ •_illc.s..11111'-'-'=*---,12SO '=-----'~'-':l-!030:;..;.:;; FREE dirt. SfG-0717 10/!1 646-ilr.4, I I ' I 1:..::==:...=:==::::1 rRAHSPOR'fAffQN rRANSP~~TION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION T~ANSPORTATION TRANSPOllTATION 9600 HonM p Flshlnt Boots -MoOll• HomM -C1mpon 9S20 lmpori.d Allt.1 -lmpori.d Autos -~•m=-1=od::..;Autol=<;· ;._~"°°"'-' lmpOrtod Aul• ' • " old Quart .. tthorouah. 14' 1957 c~~.;,.-;;-;;;;n: 11:tij!i lliii!l•l•!IJ;;j l~~P.;iij_;;i9i1;iijj~ -N-ew~,-7--1 -D-atsu--n-1 -~-D-A_TS_U_N ~ FIAT-< -·FIAT MG -·- 1 :.. bred Pala.n1lno aUlllon. Dbl· ski or fisb. Mtrc 45bp, -------------lGOr OHC, Plckup wt th camp. , -• : • reg., btlt pa~rs are In hand• w/trlr, $450. ~2372. Sal . ~ di LEASE LEASE LEASE 1 1 -:·-~':'.""..:.'"=;..'."' ... ~Boot 519••90 • --Now · ~ .. ~'w'~~~"'rl ~-;-11 vw BU-G s.id .. '.~~~~,,..1"··1-.-1-1 .vw· .a'u--G-· 1-·1-1-.J v.w BUG tem))l'l'l!d. ?.tUlt 9cll, leaving BOAT Slora,gfi in Coli. tra • "" ........ "'= P vate raclnr rtd. Vt.ry )ow n1'1e. arn$%JO.SeeatDT.IS.W. ?-.1esa, 85c per n. OPENI =.i CaU 5'6-405% or ONLY BP on thl4 beautltW ant ONLY ONLY- Bkoh. Sa"I> Ana Hlo, 111 W•l.,/<loc incl. Spu bJd• • $51 00 °"""'· IX$UJl.I ~) • . $51,M $51.00 blks trom O.C. Airport. shed avail. ~48 Ji OW &PER • ~ ll -vy TRANSPORTATION Airer•~ 9100 • Fully equipped $2995 ZIIX6'10 Per Monlh ''fRIEOLAND£R'' PeA~tonlh l'c~~tont.h ·· Bo•t• • Y•chta 9000 PVT pilot '"''""'" 1. ,.,.. NOW RENTING ·~ii:, .:!1 'Z~~ c~~.~h~~.~~-BILLAYATES ";:,:•:'.~' BILL YATES BILL YATES Ung a privately owned $gl beg1. Buddy le saddle &eat. • * 714/530-29.".0 * N ' .. '. . . . ' BOAT SHOW TiiUR·SUN, OCT. 8·11 SH' the latest 1971 boal5 • All types. Frtt display on ~1all, Hunlington Center. Beach, Edinger, San Diego Fwy, H.B. WHY NOT , TAKE A CRUISE?? For Lease Or .~.!;,,'.=~~.· ~'.!. _Spac.es_in Bra"~ Full • half -•hleld•.-Euro-VOLKSWAGEN ............. VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGE '4" .......... ~.. 11\L pean.Jlaabea.~9:--'69 -Chevy-11..0..... Truck --~-ValJe~Road1--IC:.-:;'.;_;;·="'-..:;o;·;=;;;._;im-m.-:.miO-ii -m52=Valie ... Rotu:I ~\'..a.lie .{tQ;l.d only. Call 6'13-ll73. '68 YAMAHA 125 cc. Electric w/We1twaya 8' cabover San Juan Capiatrano ~ _'11111111!1!_.;. San Ju811 Capl!ttano San Juan Capistrano NEW 6 * starter. Very clean, low camper. extras, Take $5CIO 837-4800/493-4511/499-2261 e THINk 837-4800/493-4511/499-2261 837-480l/493-4all/499-2261 mileage, lltt1e bike. Perfect or good ulled car for eq. & .. flAT" ~ ~ c ond ition. $50 over auwnebalance.646-1742. $ ,I JAGUAR ...........---Mobile Home ·Park whole.al•. '40-MlO • '66 vw CAMPER' Rehl! .... llAISUN .. .,,, Ill _ .. -'-..:....:..:....:.--1 • THINK ·70 HONDA 450 O.O.H.C. Qn. motor, New tires; tape deck ''fR. IEDLAHDER" JAGUAR "MG" IN ffiVINE Jy 1800 actuaJ m 11 es , It speakers. ORANGE GROVES A bsol u I el y like new. $1100 • EVES: 6~5545 "Leader in 'MM! Beach Cities.. 13751 llACH itt.y. ltl HEADQUARTERS sa ofJ~':;J ~;1Jy, Sacrifice price. 54()...0ijlO CAMPER shell and boe.t for ZIMMERMAN 893-'r.166 • 53'1-68'J4 The only autborUed JAGUAR SEE 14 1966 YAMAHA 111' * Oat.wt pi<k·"P """k good 2145 HARBOR BLVD. NEW-USED-SERV. deolOT in the •nlin> Harbor ''FRIEDLANDER" Moilllo Homn 9200 PREVIEW 3 NEW CONTEMPO Com pleb:: Fabulous M~ ":,~',.'ci.,"·U2 w. w•~ ~;,;,;""·oo alt ''" p.m. DOT~DAITSO UN ~ AttL ---.52'4 acres of fun liv-1 METRO Step Van Chev. '61 FIAT 850 ing. Auto Service vs bunkl, gd. tirea. xlnt. OPEN DAILY ~fulti milr s b'l Spider -AM/FM radio, 4- Ch•rttr COMMUNITIES SALES SERVICE PARTS BAUER ISJM IEACM tMW't. :lfl 893-75fi6 • 5.1'1.Ql2.4 NEW-USED-SE RV. LOW WINTE~ RAIES! e LAGUNA HILLS 40' Wheeler Cruif;C!r: Sleeps 8. CONTEMf'O.LAGUNA HILLS Make appl. NO\V~ O\VNER: 23301 RIDGE ROUTE DR \\.'kda.vs 539-8918 Eves It ¥-'k· LAGUNA HIL.L.S . -h ion.ty mo I e & Parts MOO mech.. c:ond. $600. S48--0226 MID s~..i. sport •xha····t •Y•t••1. ~ ends: 82'7·143l 14' BOAT (cracker boxl w/hi po11>'er. Sn1all block Chevy eng. $7511. Stt at Tex. aco Station 26814 Ortega ""''Y· Sail Juan Capistrano. . 4~3--4166 14' BOAT $1511 incls trailer. gas tank. oa.k. Anchor, motur. Neat \\"Ork. 4 life jackets. 644-4218. RUNABOUT -ski boat, many extras, lair price. 892-1638 aft 7 pm, 54&-112~ days. e 44' HOUSEBOAT. XI n I, live aboard. Slip Avail. * 548--2-134 • 1/3 to ~'i share for sale in 1968 ~f-40 ke'tch xlnt lax write olf Box P. 2040 NB Prestige adult community, Beautiful surroundings, aU luxury appointments, putting green, hobby shop, much ome coounuru . . SUNDAYS ~ ~ '"""'' -7Full time in park aer: •63 CHEVY, good body. Like '69 DODGE Csmpe:r Van. i•-· •·a·• Bl..... must aee & driv6 to appreci. vice ce.nter. new 4-spd Muncie trans &. CU$10m/Cah, V-8 air, ~ """ '""" "u ate-this beauty (ZXU-831) ~ont1nuous smo& tree linkage Also ...........a 283 XTRAS! Call 642-9428. Huntington Beach $1599 oeean breezes. · 6""" 842·7781 or 5"o.M42 -Surrounded by moun-w/quad. ALL OR PART. "Do-it~yuurse.11 camper" "''FRIEDLANDER" tains & orange groves. &42-9600 '51 Ford, 2 ton van S750 '70 DATSUN -7 minutes Crom world's BLACK CUSTM V JN y L 208 Pearl, Balboa Isle. 13750 IEACH (Hwy. 29} lllOl'l". largest shopping center, HARDTP Fl)R Datsun~ '67 Foa:d SUJ?U Va n, 4Doo,.~an, Used (001A_:'"'.'l 893·7566 e 531-6824 CALL-831).3900 (Fashion Island) -or 1600. Llke nu, $100/best automatic. Xlnt cond. Must d!r. Win. take trade or fin-• ... . ..... • -... · I! .BUICK IN COSTA MESA 234 E. l 'rth Street 518-1765 '63 XKE Rdstr w/ren1ov 1 llrdtop, Eng rblt, nu cool'g MG Sales, Service, Parts lmmed.late Delivery, All ~fodels J1ctuµorl i\111µo rt s •GREEN RIVER ;."Check.These Features otr. 499..3103 sell immediately. 644-6JO:i. ance pnvate party, Ca ll - - -... -Championship La w n 546-4052 or 494 68ll CONTEl\fPO GREEN RIVER Bmvllng Green, Free car VW Chassis, Tr81111missions, * 8%' ANGELUS CAMPER -___ ._c_·---1 4901 GREEN RIVER DR. Wash. Putting GrePn. and others. ALMOST NEW. '69 Datsun mom· & system install in '68, nu H N B • I h . 69 ___ ... 3100 ,w, Coast wy., .. CORONA Croquet Court. under· e 642--0443 e · e 642--8514 • family seclion t, exclusive roof Shuffleboard, en· 2 Door SedKn. 4 !'!peed fXLE · closed Therapeutic Pool, WHOLESALE TO PUBLIC 9525 628) M"'' ..... II! dlr. Will fi". adult section, frwys-elose to S ~---~ Short bl~t..a DuM Buggies "" " \\'im Pool, Billiards. "'""'6 ...,..,s· ~ ance. 494-TI44 shopping, school, lot!'! of rec-Game Roon1, J.nembty 548-4634 after 3 pm reation. Room, Boot & Tta.iler • ''4 VW Eng $1lS e CALL 737-7374 Storage Area, Lovely e SANTA ANA Courtyard. * 540-3UB * CONTEi\.1PO SANTA ANA -Smal! pet5 allo~·ed. VW Engine, Good Cond. -Ima.inne all thi.!! from • 642.0443 e 4080 w. FIRST ST., S.A. $11 .50 per month 1.,======== I Family communily, abun-14851 Jeffrev Road, ltvine I' dance of recreation for child-CALL COLLECT Trailer, Tr1vel 9425 ren. nr. gd . .schools, shop. 714-832-8585 71~2930Jiiiiiiiiiii~iijjijjijji!ijiijijijiiiiiii J pin11:. priv. club house for 213-800-5210 714-531-8105 '69 TERRY 21• '69. D.une 8u99y !====== Oruy 1 loll, bertot h""1'. o.. FERRARI tachable fiberglass top and:!--------- pickup bed. License ZBB526 FERRARI Newport Imports Ltd. Or- ange County's only author· ized dealer. SALES-SERVICE-PARTS 3100 W. Coast Hwy . trans (! UIC In • . 11=-1!'! 642.94.(15 5'1().17&1 minor body work. I.st $875 talte.!! by40cl 15th. 613-1391 '60 MGA-1600 HRDTP. XI.NT . Tues & Thur, l\1orn or CONO. ASK $800. auto sport ltd =·w=='""='·===== ___ *...:"'...:s. ... 1329'--•--- A""""""" -· • """"' MGB DEMO SALE KARMANN GHIA 1970 Fiat 124 Sports Cpe. Ratlio, "''"'-'""JaJ .,. '43 VW GHIA haust, pin striping, radial CMvertiblc. Recent engine tires, :ow miles. overhauJ, hard lo find mo- $1795 del. Radio, heater, 4 speed, 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. etc. 531.1711 Call Coll"' s 1 099 '61 MGS:Like newl * $2100. 846-1807 * OPEL --- LEASE • Sailboa ts 9010 -~ ·1 CALL &39-3880 Triple Wide Cornell Travel Tra1 er $3250 Buy the mobile home C:Ontinental e Paramount Cltapma• Moblle Homes $999 MIKE McCARTHY BUICK '68 FIAT 124 SPIDER CHICK IVERSON S.S ..... radio. "'"''-Radi. Newport Beach 642-9'165 540-1764 '71 YW BUG ALL NEW 16' f h . Barrl,gio" e u,1ve,...I 1206 N. Harl>o<. S.A. !""'° S.aoh Bl>d. o your c 01ce, move • 7141531 °'"" "~ 01 r HOBIE CATS in to any one of our Flamingo • General l!~~~~~i~!'""~~·!"'!l =;•~t~~;"~~'Jg~O~IWY~·=,,1'67 330 GT 2+2 lo mi., air, Broadmoor e Star 89<1·3341 • 531·2450 elec win., !\lust SeU, Pvt "OPEN" parks. e TRAVEL TRAILER ALL COLORS NOW RENTING!! llillcrest •Cambridge . ~V.DuneRunner, registered pty, 714/546-9444, CHAPMAN Ideal 21' f ully selkon-1970. Iskehderian cam & 1141836-6010. FREE DEMOS MOBILE HOMES tained. 19W model-used 2 hydraulic lifters, lloliyl""='======= Pricer from $ll95. Winter * RE PO * weeks 1206 N. Harbor, S.A. ·~~i.= ** .,. «IJ earb, hi flotation lires, full FIAT. Racing starts soon! * 7141531.SlOS * I--'-=::..,"=~~~=-~ 1 lop & side curtains, many, --------- CAP'N EDS • '69 General, 24X43, Disll.1---..;..;""':,.:::.:._::_ __ 1.,, 11' SANTA FE Travel xtras. Xlnl on street. dirt or 1~69 f" 124 C ~:asher, awning, skirting. Want To Live In Trailer Hydraulic brakes. sand. $995. \Vlll ronsider lal' pe ?ZOO \V. 0.t. 1-Iwy. NB &15-Xl-14 Set in "'Huntington By the COSTA MESA Nu tires & water_..t_ank. V:ery trade. J_erry Gould. 64&-8864 ExotiC-red-W:ith:.black -vffiyl * CAL 15 * Sea"'. Rent $75, $8981. -\# -t:Ocal-spaces ava1lablt> now! Clean S700 Cash. 897-6-110 or 642-9504 Uuckefseal!. Low miles, bas Authorized Ferrari Dealer al&, custom pinstriping, Jow ' YW mileage. Very fine mech. S49-303I Ext. 66 or 61 cond. IXIP-033\ 1970 HARBOR BLVD. $2l9' COSTA MESA "f~IEOLANDER" 13750 BEACH (Hwy, 3t) 893-7566 • 537-~4J '· ·NEW·USED-SERV. ~ '67 FIAT 850 MERCEDES BENZ e Full Race Equipmcnl 6328l If you are serious a.bout buy. · , -./ FULL CAGE: Fast &. had excellent care. Sacri· • RDJ'" • 8X28 toias.bau, Under SIOOO ill1 a mobile heme ... Now's Trucks 9500 Powerfu1. l.ook.s gd, Runs fiee! (XLY235) Take older 4 speed. ·mdial tire!'!, dlr; • "·pth }o'indc-r l #KB12.\7l. the lime lo see-1---------d M 0-11• A k' "'1> car in trade Will finance (TOC ~l.,\'/ill nna""" ,,,·. Or<in<JC County'~ L llfj•~·:• Sclc:cticn ~~ew & u .. eci MPrcedes Benz Jim S\emons Imps. IA: CHAPMAN BAY HARBOR I W g · ust .x · .s ing ~ · ·~" e Ex~ptionally Clean SJR KE PO £R or Ofr. Eves: 642-3TI6. private party. Call Pat dlr. vate party. 546-4032 or 54G-ISS9 673-8220 MOBILE HOMES MOBILE HOMES l ~~~~~~~~~l~•~ft~l~O am~~·.,~·~1506~. 540-~3~100~.~~·.,~·~68l~l~====o::.!lt!~ W.>•ncr & Mdin St. Ana 546-4 114 O:.IL Y • $51.00 Per l\1onth AT BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32802 Valle Rood San Juan Capistrano :::..:83i"4800;{493;;45ll/ 499-2261..- '6:; Opl'l Stn wgn, 28 r.-tPG, Good cone!. $650 or make oi· -fer. 962--5948 aft '5. ' 1970 Opel, xlnt cood. Low mileage. 1 01A-·ncr. Call aft<\ PM 5484ro5. NE\V sabot hull. S6 5. 1206 N. Harbor, S.A. 1425 Baker St. (at I-Tarbor) \Ve have 11. gooi.. stock of ;~ew I Recrut'n V1hicl" 9515 Fiberglass. 16· catamanin * 7l 4/5Jl-3l05 * Costa Mesa 54()..94.70 1970 C~1C Camper trucks. Uud Cars 9900"'ied Cart 9900 UMcl.Cars 9900Used C•rs must sell, moving north. JOX·l4 GREAT LAKES 14X60 FLAMINGOS Buy now, beat the price '67 International 6-l2-960Cl w/IOXJ;, Encl screen nn I Eully equip, SAVE $2000 raise. Also Camper combin.. Scout 4-whcel drive. R&:tl, B•lbOa 20' fixed Ke1I Space Rent S-12.511 •Continental 24X60 (•2422} 11.tions and used lnlcks. Fun in lhe sun! VHH 960. ' '4S-0532 ·~~: :::.":"':~,;;~ii. 114'"'cHAPMAN UNIVERSITY s 1888 LIOO 14 *Dir. 5-15-82-12 * MOBILE HOMES MIKE W/HVY °"1' Trail<r NEW Moo". 12 x 62, Expa,.. 12331 S."h Bl•d. G.G. OLDSMOBILE S900 675-3431 do, nr Dana Pt l-1arina, 1 * 714/5.10-2930 * McCARTHY PHONEIX Catamaran.Wood-br w/xtra rm. corner lot, 2850 Harbor Blvd. en deck.s, bcaulifu\ finish. chi]df('n & pets \\"elcome. Motor Homes 9215 Costa Meaa 540.9&10 BUICK $800. 244 21st, C.M. 54&-6660 496-2381 ---------1NEW VACATIONEER for l9ro FORD. VS, automatic 15550 Beach Blvd. SOLING 1969 UNIVERSAL 14 X 53, 'il, 19', Your inspectiop in·· transmission, poY>"er steer· at San Diego Frwy. NEW, HALF PRICE serial Ne. 153l3, New $9900. vited. Srott's, 914 N. Ing, power brakes, air con-894-3341 _ 531·2450 213-431-2498 Long Beach 1969 Genera! ·24 X 51 serial Harbor, Santa Ana. ditionlng with H i way --------- •HOBIE CAT l•I e No. 6n7. New S9900.' Camper Cruiser. Just th c cl;.:m;,poc;;.;.rftt;.;od..;...;..A_u.;.to;.;s __ 96...;..00;.;.i wrrRLR & EXTRAS 1970 24Xfi0 Sheraton Manor, Motorcycl11 9300 thing for the cycle group. $1095 * * 675-1340 serial No. 602, $12,900. Dir. 540-9640 or 540-3510 AUDI e W' SLOOP e Dealer: {TI4l 531-8105 ~ '64 Chevy half-ton, V-8, with --------- \\'OOcl keel boat, Sleeps 2. 01\' BEACH: W/Poo\ & THiii Parkdale camper w i I h AU DI ;\lake oller. S3i·7039 laundry. l7x35. 2 br·ba Jivg refrigerator and sto\'e, split ----·········-----. .. HAS ARRI ED · 12' Sea" S11>inger sailboard -rm, kitchen, din'g rm. & 2 HONDA rim, standard shift. sleeps -' fibe rglass, like new. Sl50. car cement drh•e. $3800. SU 4. License N71-345. Sl,695.00. 100 LS , 613-4153. r.tust s.eU Finance. Pvt. pty. _''FRIEDLANDER'' JIM SLEMONS li\.IPORTS, ' 675.0331. 120 W. \VARNER. SANT A ~ Power Cruisers 9010 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ,.,. nACM fHW'\'. •I ANA.~-~---- AND WE STILL H·AVE BRAND NEW '70'S Every car we hive h•1 • new lower-than.before price tag that will save you more money than you ever dreamed pos1ible on .a car today. And frankly, we •re1xpecting every car to bl sold ••. so we're not making • lot of noise •bout our sale ••• just telling • few of our friends, like you. Why not come over •nd take • peek •t our stoc;k? You might drive aw•y w ith • bargain! c ' ,,,."""';· =•m m•d•. 2 '" 2 MODELS 537...,., • 89J.r"6 .~XECUTIVE CAR old. Just eomple1ely 1 SPACE LEFT! NEW-USEO..SERV. 4 'Door luxury wilh radio. overhauled. 1 of a kind boat. In cool Costa l\lcs3.'s heater, radial tires, 115 HP gnUey. head, sips 4, great de)u;1; Greenlraf Park engine. 1•690CBXI See It at fishing boat. Speeds over 50 1750 \VhiUier Ave. 642.1350 200 mi range. Expcnsh'e and gorgeoug S6000 10 finan- cing . 673-3022. SA~RIFICE! TJ" Ba11ic Cruiser, 11vin Vol· vo's. Best offer for immedi. ate llAle. Owner 646-379-1, Bk1. 548-1501. *30' O\VENS, '66, Exp Cruiser, by 011>•ncr. T.S .. S.S .. o .r . & extras. Slps 6, Perf Cond. TI•l/642--6233. 23' Owens Cabin Cruiser, as is $3000. For appt lo ~ boat, mail card to P.O. Box 8464. Foontain Valley, 92708. * BY OCEAN : Family Prk. w/pool. 12:-:62 Expand-0. Lg. '6'1 % ton Chevy, 8' bed, 6 <.'(Jrner !or, w/dog run. By cyl, 3 spd, step bumper, Dana Point l\larina. Job on/oU road tires, %. ton Transr. J\fus1 Sell!! rear suspension, trlr hitch. 496-2381 Xlnt running rond. $1400. 551-1315. Triple Wide Cornell e CUSTOM '69 Moto-MinittT-'5.3 Chevy pickup w 1 l h Hillcrest • Flamingo I~ 90cc. Trail blk~. Only 300 camper&. racks, 4 sp., com· Paramount e Universal x mi. Man Y lras. $2511. pound low, split rims. snow Barrington e Broad.moor 2'103 Continental e Star ~ tires. $325. LI 8-393:">. General e Hillcrest 1966 HONDA 160 CC CAMPER shell and boat for CHAPMAN scrambler. A-1 shape. New Datsun pick-up truck good MOBILE HOMES motor '& tires. $235 . cond.·$295.00att.3:30p.m. 12331 Beach Blvd. G.G. 968-4731· 531-1255 * 1l415l)..2930' * MOTORCYCLE 50 CC lt.lllo '46 Ford 1% Ton, stake bed, Jet, Minarelli motor, xlnt good cond. $400 firm. Call 'Sp11d-Skl~t1 9030 CONTINENTAL by Ca.m. cond. rum beautifully $75 673--1932. bridge l\fanufacturer, 24xS5, cash. 64~2 l~=~-~~~~-FOR Sale-: (Boat 15') '69 Hy· CU.!!tom Design. 1.:=:.::.::..:=-----IHARD ID get '54 :"ord ~ ton drO Swift w/top & trailer. CHAPMAN '68 Honda 350 P.U. >..1nt, cond., S575. 65 H.P. r.ten:. Ukc ne~·. $200 MOBILE HOMES Xlnt rond. S550 or make of-5-15-1098. & assume pmnts. Gd for ski· fer. 548-7689 1,,=,..~D;:A::;T°"su=N°'Pi"'·°'.,k_-u_p-."'1~14=00 UJ6 No. lfA.rbor, S.A. Ing It plea.sure. Phone 531-8105 '68 Y A.:\'JAHA, 305. Big Bear or best oUer. 5:f8-6131. =;~;:;:::;;:;! SCrambler lo mi., Xlnt * 545-3658 * 14' RUNABOUT w/40 hp 7 64 LAKEWOOD LIDO cond. S'1S-47Ta '63 FORD Econo, rebll cng. Evinrudt, both in gd cond. 20>."50 HONDA 90. '68 model, low R&ll, runs xlnt. $600. 1478 t.rg wheel trlr. $6j0, lBR, Newa~·ning& skirting, mileage. $210. See al 412 E. Glenneyrc, Laguna Bch. 1 ~";8-871:;;;1:,•::;ve=:'·===:=;:= I new carpeHng in bdrm's, lSth Pl. CM. '64 OOOCE Can1pcr Van. _ 32 chlldren~s section, rial a '68 BULTACO 25Cl cc. Gd for Needs llOM!' work g 0 0 d a..t Tr•llers -,.., SJ""" • Dir street or dirt. Extras. $595. beach van SJ9S 493-3511 _., . . 546-5193. . . Hl·WAY Boal Tra l le-r =";;;30-;;;;;2930;,;;·;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I ' • '68 Dodi!' Van. 6 cyl. stick, w/lthocks, like ne"''· up lo ~ 59 NORTO~ 650 twin, t!X· 24 000 mi's xln't cond \\'Ill i&' boat. Sl50, G73--0i!M. ON BEACH: W/Pool & ~!li;,_n1t41 eondilion. $4 50. l~e trade.' 646-2698 ' I;=::::;=::=:::;;;;;:::::= I laundry. 17Xl.5. 2 br/b1 .:~~~!_-~----l'"F.;;:;;-v.;;-r;;;;;;;;:-;:;;; Jiv'a: nn. kitcht>n. din'g rm. e YAl'\IAHA 2511 Big Bear "64 Ford Van Camper. HAs Harbour Yolkswa9en 18711 BEACH BL. 8424435 HUNTINGTON BEACft AUSTIN HEALEY AUSTIN AMERICA Sales, Servict, Part• lmm~iate Dellvery All Models .t1 rtupor1 jl111µ0l"l~i 3I:xl W. Codt Hwy., N.B. M2-94<lli 540-1164 * 1960 Sprite * Best offer. 494-8629 BMW Authorized Dir. Sales • Service e Par~11 AU ~lodels to ChOOSe From Ser\'ice lolonday 'tlll 1:00 P~I Sat 'till Noon COAST IMPORTS Of Orange County Inc. 1210 · \V. Pacitlc Coast Hwy ' "'"""" . .......,., loaf Sffp ~~g ~ It 2 car cement drive. $3900, Scr'mhler . S,500 ml. Xlnl everything. WU! take trade. , l~' by 40' U SWP 4.way lit. l\fusl sell. \\rill finance. ~oo~oo;:·_;,67J..<i693~~;,..,,=~~-l:;.;JW..:',;""8,:::::..· n,;-;;-:::;---:;::;:-I ========= $140/mo. ""' pty, 615--0.13! ''7 KAWASAKI 350 "' Chtw P.U. 6 oyl. '""'· CORTINA 673-6880 Bkr PERFECT 41) Hone S·IOO or beit offer. ~3136 ---------!:========~I 12 x 51 in five star adulr ~~~B~.:.~.,;~~~~~::oo!..,.,_"~_•_hlci°'iill6>-~~ll~1'~.npi;;;<:i<:-i\W~ '61 CORTINA. GT. Al't1fi''M, loaf Rental• toll park. No pcta. Ideal IOC111· :: ' CHEVY Dump truck. Runs" DuaJ Mutners, Nu tire!'!. ,,__ ,.. 1969 Harley David8on 125 cc d -.-wt e~L'I. •642--12ii0• A Sall lion In U111ta .. tea.a. Ph. umps •"""'· -..v. Rent boat -12. l3iiO Llko "'w. • 67J.66t6 • "''·"" DATSUN Ca.I 2S, 5ltepg 4, fully equip. _.Ped. S30 per day, "'kd)os: $tO pu di.)' wknds: $200 Pl!f wk. Ltaona ind. 968-&840. BAYSIDE Villast • e HONDA I J 1-------.....,,-l'l't"''J)Ort's prestige mobil 60cc 1;;..;•;.;•::;P;:.• ______ ..;,.:S.:..:10 • •• ~ 2 BR. Xlnt eond, .. 968~ .-'67 Datsun ho"" ~·· 2 Bo . _..c=.=:::...c:..==-IJEEP 196;. '"''11'"1, w..., Jde1l adul! 1pot. Sl0.950. '69 YAMAHA 125 M/X hubs, to"'·bar, Jop, good Big St-dRn. Ll,ght blue CJCl('r· ·• 1_awn. __ ,_~_1_64_2 ____ 1 !\la.ny extras. A11111t aeU, ~1ake !Ires, pain! le cushions. ;or with black vlnyl buck(!! ... ~ JUOBILE boust tt~t 20xC. orfer. 6i4..(lt54 Sl'l50. 494-1901 m!AI~. 4 A!Wd. dlr. (TRJ194) a..t Ch1rf1r ,, . Twln«niw Chris Craft Sips 6 * Drlux bolt * 548-243'1. 636-40lt • • 1~ l)f., 2 HR. r.ompl. • '70 KAWASAKI 100, Trail • '51 JEEP r .c , 150 ,, •on Tllke small do\\'n. Wiii fin- llttup. Ci\l ad\I park.. Sll,500 llo8it. Dir! Ready. Alal\)' P.U. New eng, !rans, Ure~. AM! ll\'I, pty Call Maury le.rm•. &4~2881 Xttlli. J375. 644-6469 • twG-2303.. 51(1..3100 or 49-4-7506 flit 10 l!.m_ BRAND NEW TORINO GT ~0Rl5F!04?S•. Hood Scoop. )51 VI, Crui1ometic, Bucket S11h, >.it Conditio"in9, Redio. Ti"t1d Gl111 , Powtr Ste1rin9, Power Front Diu: lr1~e,, V;,;. bility Group, Gl1n lelt1d Tire1, l11er Sl1ipe. Window dicker '""· o;$'72s BRONDJIE~. M STANG MACH I :rosoF05HI 101 J1. VI, Cr11i1·0· melic, Power St.erin9, Pow11 Di1c lr1~e1, Air Cond., 61111 lilted Tir11, Redio, Ti11t1d Glen, ln1trwme11I G1wge1. Compttilio~ 1w1p1n1ion, Window 5ti<.ktr price S•l 15.20. Di1co"ut $711 ltRAND NEW MUSTANG Sporl1 roof. ::oro2F101101. ]02 CID VI, ln1trum1nt 91u911 . Crui1om1ti<., 111!1.l Whit• Will Tir11, Pow1t St11ri119" Air Co11° dilionin9, R1.llo. Tinted Gl111, Wh11I Co,,_,,, Wh1.low Sti<.ktt $1191. Di1cou"I $634 BRAND NEW ~Yf>:AbE =OR04F1649JO, 151 CID VI, ' Crwi1om1lic, Power Sietring, Air Conditio11i11g, Electri<. Cloe~. l111lrwm1"I Gew911, lelttd Whitewell Tire1. Vi11vl Roof, Tint1d Gli11, Redio, Whe1I Cow1t1. Wi11dow llicker. $4010. o;"~'' $6~5 BRAND NEW MAVERICK :QK91L2424S1. 2 Door Si.le", Verm illion finish with Pleid ;". lerior. 250 CID En9in1, Select Shi1t Crui1om1lic, White W1!1 Tire1, Accent Group R&dio, He•ler. Window 1ticker. S 25~0. Di1C:ounl • $318 BRAND NEW TORINO GT :oRlSH167002. 151 CID VI, Air Cor1dltioning. Pow1r Sl1t1•· i~g. Powe1 front Di10 lr•~e1, Tin".l Gl111. R1.l io, lwckt+ S11h, Gl•u l1lt1d Whit1w1U Tir11. Vi1ibility Group, l111t Stripe. Win.low 1lick1r S•l IS. Oi1count • -$701 See the all new '71 Fords now on display includin9 Pl .. NTO . DON'T MISS THESE BUYS FROM THE 6000 GUYS South Coast FORD-MERCURY • 494-8515 ~Ol Broadway; La9una Beach 549-3851 ' I • .. .. l . • ! . ; ! ' I ! . . I • Thursd11y, Octobc!r 8, 1970 DAILY PJL Df 31) TRANSPORTATION tm-..i A-' HOO l'ltANSl'ORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION-TRANSPORTATIOH 9900 UNCI Cara 9900 Used Cira '900 Uted Cnt "" lmport•Autoa HOO TRANSPORTATION~ 0 lmported Au1oo 9600 Im~ Autos 9'00 lmportod A-96CIG Utoij,C:.ra --OPIL ----.,,......., 1 PORSCHE TR!UMPH VOLKSWAGEN ' VOLVO '1 IUICK CADILLAC CORYEm OLDSMOBILIE '66 OPEL ~ WAGON i---'.-70 91• tr_ ''7 TRHJMPH TR-IA '66 vw IUG 1968 voh~ 1a s • )69 . Electra 225 •70,CadiDacs '61 coRVETTE • oLDs 1-1-.-l.R$., .......,;-ndto, hut-Compelllloo ....,,.. w i I h Clffn, good U.... Pvt ply.-J!lilt:i--~"'<Oiil . I !LT, wltb-so!Ltop. ·-· <67 DELTA 18 40 H .T. Automatic, radio, ha.ter. Ll· DtmO, 3'SOIJ tctual miles. ~ tr, wire wheel.I and ndlaJ black lntmor UOIUMi $1600. m-.SiC2 evn. toP,~":""l•lo004)~ ) To Choost ·From el~trlc 'A'lndow9, power t'ACTOH.Y "'""' TAX[!61. ''°"" tr&nl.; AM/PM, mar -· M m.ch&nl<al -· $lM-9 1960 VOLVO, 2 Dr. Motllr, 53718 Priced To S.11 ~':,~"§isc ~!~!"oiu:"t.:~: AIR CONDITIONINC $988 -em<tlld .-with (T\'\'0900) tltt. good. Body; oolld. 11"1 · U. AT 1ocy wauanty. (ZNB·958) ,~" mlat W/JI141chlaa bro- MIKE • blacl<;lnleM. 1•101111). , $1599. CHICK IVIRSON -· '1>-1544 .,.,, Mll\1:-_ $2199' • · cad> in-. HydnmaU. Bfl L YATES -"FR1£DIDIO[R' 11 -vw---''"·VOLVO--....,. oedao.' like ,..,---~--MIKE ' lnu11m"'11itn. WSW, etc. A M CAR:rHY -'" L.lln "''"· •" ""'· 15.ollo ml McCAR I HY M CARTHY 4'fRIEOLANDER" be.utlful car "om • local : C , VQLK.SWAGEN~ 1VSt HACH (Hwy. U) &1~"31 Exie 66 °• 61 • l2300 owoe, 613'004. ' , t. BUICK C °'"''-(UUJ&t4 J Bu.cl( 32152 v an. llriOd • ,893·'1!166 • !S31-e112• l97ocosrHARBOA !;.,!ALvD.-. y "~=-~~er J:\!,~2:•> Nabers Cadillac S.n Juan C..i•tnno _________, --=::;;;...:~;;;:::c.;,...-Race Cort, Rods 19620 .l555o Be"h Blvd, BUICK ~. 2600 HARBOR BLVD., 1555013each Blvd. • 8374300/493-t511/4!J9:2261 ~ '65 VW Bug, metallic brnWTi, '68 302 Muatang. Bullt pro-~ at S&n DiellO Fl'Wy. 15550 Beech Blvd. ~ , . Cosl.a Mesa at-San Dieilo ~· -'GS 9tt-T Ta ng £r11l e ''5 !f!JUUMPH -8t>ta.""f Make woondliioned.. ttiii.t.ouL U>w feutonally Art ca:nr hnl,;-1-39WS4t~. 6.11:245() at Sru1 DiOj;o -Ft.v.')'. '68 Corvette Jt~t• ( ........ 540-91 00 --Open. Su!!_4_a,y ~ 894·3341 • 531·24!'.0 AMiFMiSw. m"'"' w .. '-. t=:.' ollf!r. Herod type., 646-4388_ mileage on recent Ovtrhaul, 894-1341 . f1.1t-2450 •u 1• IJUu • ~ 111.b -.,. Call da.Y M5-(W01 mags, 1uspen111lon, air In-'69,RlVIERA~Uc No. XOX· _________ ,tops) '.127· .Wpd, At.f/f t.1, '62 Cutlass -·roa--sCHE-~3Sacritl.C!, S450D. l!W.I. = 536-Ji'T3. .. • dUctlon, 411 ettrs. f!tC. can 154 Air. stereo. Nu t.lichelln • CAD. mag rum:. $2575/best Oller. --···.. '66 TRIUMPH TR4-A Ross ~3681. tires, Powder blu, w/drk: '69 SEO. DE VILLE 547-SSTI, 54~3090. V8, 4 1peed. radio, heater. '69 91·1-·s-·-'63 PORSCHE l.R.S., -wheels. <0mpl'1• '69 VOLKSWAGEN B••· f/00 blu 1'1>· $3lllO ca•h. F" FACTORY !=========I [QIU! :m 1 0.mo! 5700 actual miles. 5 speed tra"l., mag wheels, AM/FM., Special factory equipped. Yellow with black irlrrlor. (•301224). BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 3285l Valle Road "> San Juan Capistrano 837-4800/ 493.45W 499-2261 , nf!w Interior, Immaculate dark blue. maey extras! Autos Wanted Qulclc Sale! Pvt. Pty: AIR CONDITION ING COUGAR $599 'S' COU?t. A;ean·mue finish. condition. (R.PL-901) Immae. Orig, ownu. $1695. 714/~3221. Full powr r, vinyl top. Luxur., _________ _ AM/FM, (JGE 972) $1399 ........ , LATE MODEL =""'"-=-'----I cl th I ··-I ' ,-BILL YATES BILL v-aTES *TH.JS Won't Last! Sharp CADILLACS '70 Estate Wa9on ~us! ~ eau..:~ n~nor. 'bl Cougar Cpe, orig!J like 1 "' "fRIEDllllD[R" •-T WANTED ti · ndl -~1· I rt "'ad'· 1 ''.".' nu. 27.000 mi, auto, ps, · VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN Ulft '67 VW Square.,..ck:, op Automa c. e..ir eo Ooning, ~w 1p ex, ~r oor oc~, radio. $1675_ 6?3-;5620 or Cood. $1300. Pvt p t y: &. ANY OTIIER radio, heater .(# fil02) tilt & 1e\escoplc wh«l.1\vi-613--0728 32852 Valle Road 32852 Valle Road 1,7$0 IEACH (Hwy:H) MG-&311. LATE MODEL $4388 light Sel\llnel, pow~r lrunkl'°"'°"~·-~~---1 San Juan Capistrann San Juan Capistrano 893-7566 • 537-6824 '68 VW GENERAL MOTORS CAR • MIKE opener, etc., etc. f065AGCJ '67 'Cougar CT, air, pis. 8.17-41100/.493-451V4~22m. 8374800/493-4.51.11499-2261. ~ SEE CRUCK TRAPP OR SALE $4n7 PRICE H./H, Disc brakes. Must -. OLDSMOBILE AUTO MATIC BILI.. P.1AC CRACKEN see S1795 ~2450 • ''6 SPEEDSTER. CLASS!-M CARTHY Ora"'' CoW>ty"• La<go'1 . • . '67 91 CAL SHAPE! ~all Bi I I. VOLKSWAGEN Black with blaok !niu!M. Nabers Cadmoc: c Seleot~" of Quatlty C•dillac. AIR CONDm ON ING Busirless M7.s881, eve 1 . economy specW, will fin. 26llO HARBOR BLVD.. BUICK Nabers Cadillac DODGE This clear! convertible has '64 PORSCHE Sll-1213. ance private party. IJe. O:ista r-.tesa. 2600 HARBOR BLVD., 1---------1 full power, tilt relescopln&" ,·;.. '68 PORSCHE 912: 5 spd, •68 VW Baig XEU-224, 54()..9100 Open Sunday 15050 Beach. Blwf. Costa r.-lesa. '62 Dar+ . v.•httl, radlo & heat11r, white- .. ~ 356 SC COUPE' Mq/Whls, AM/FM, Blue. $1499 W£ PAY CASH at San Diego FNy, 540-9100 Open Sunday WEiii tires. Very nice condi- :'. Balboa blue, ohrom•"'"''''· x:nt cond. $4200. N...a Soap .. wate•. CHICK IVERSON 894-3341 -531-2450 Wagon Ii•" due lo the low mUeage :.? tttOial ~~. COl\C9Une con-1,.==*=6'4-,;:2432::='='*:;::;:;:=: <YXR 794) '67 RIVIERA: NU pol;yglass, CAMARO & fine upkeep. (VElt6821 • • :. dl,tioo-Lic,~Q019T, 1 , .$1199 VW FQR YOUR "CAR a l•, F/P, 52,000 ml. Autonmtio, rndio, beat". SALE $1666 PRICE ' $3099 SAAB ' BILL YATES 54IJ.3031 Et<t. S6 " 61 • 1'700. • 546-4175 •sr, c aomo RS. air, disc "$29°91 Nabers Codillac:- CHICK ' IVER$0N Au lhoruoo Dealer VOLKSWAGEN l970ci\"sr"f'~VD. CONNELL :::1.~e~.ICK RI ~~~~ ~'j""~i.~(s"t;~ c~gi9~~'. MIKE 2600 ~~:i!o,~,!LVD., YW Sales • Servlc.e 9 PU'tl 32852 Valle Road '66 VW CAMPER. ed cood. CHEVROLET ~4-5937. 541).9100 Open Surday 549.3031 Ext. 66 or 61 Sonet Coupes in Stock San Juan Capistrano $lDI or best offer. 2828 Harbor Blvd, CADILLAC '68 CAMAR0-8 cyl, good McCARTHY ,66 *T~do JITD. :E' ti J 1 1970 l!ARBOR BLVD. Orange County's Newest Dlr. _ _:837:::::_4:::800:::_:14::::9><:._::5Ul::_:•::::99-:::226::::1_ 1 ~=,.:*'="5.1&-4:::,..:;:9387='*'"7= __ Cos=ta~•~-'"'°'~546-==Wl::.:o-·-------cpnd. Pvt pty, $1573. 112 \V. BUICK power, radial tires, -"""" COSTA '!ES/ COAST IMPORTS WE PAY TOP e CAD. Coo'1 Hwy, N.B. &11'-55.'1 •-" ' '64 VW e 1970 VW 9 PASS / BUS. rood. Be.t oil". Cal l '70 Tarna 911 'T' GI . Some u N<w. 8,000 ml. CASH '69 FLEETWOOD CHEVROLET 15550 Beach Blvd. 547-7191, Moo-l'rl ~5; """ 7 ~ of Orange County Inc. eannng wh.ile, with red in-$2895 * 675-3151 LUXURIOUS BROUGHA..'1 San Diego Frwy. M-1-4507. Demo. Exactly 682 miles. 4 terior, can ftnance priVa.le speed, Af.VFl\f, . chrome m \V. Pacific Coa!t Hwy. party. Lie. 865.BEJ . *1968 SUNROOF vw •W/W FACTORY '66 CAPRICE 1--,=-="'o-":.;·33='c:I"-"53"1"-24=50===-! 19&1 OLDS Cutlass convrt- wheel! l==64Z-0406='==·=-=== 5799 tires, r&h, lite blue, ~ for uaed cars • truckll .... ~ AIR CONDmONING "Doo 11 T SS Aut di '68 DODGE RT Bucket seals, center .eon-. cl S139:j 968-5802 , ... , Impressive Cameo Beige w/ v r · · · · o .. ra. o, sole, Xlnt cond, $595 or of. BILL YATES SUNBEAM CHICK IYERSON 1 .,.:62::ean=vw:;.·=B::ug:.:"::N:.e=w=~--call Us Jor free ~tlm.ate, brown vinyl roof. Beau!ifu1 heater, po\.\'tr slttr1n~, FULL PO\\'ER +factory air, fer. &l2--0584 GROTH CHEVROLET ct'rdova n antique leather in. power brakes, faclory llll' Lo\v miles l\1Wlt l iquldatel-~~=~=~~~• VOLKSWAGEN YW brakes, board rack. Needs terior. F\tli power Including cond., vinyl t 0 p. Lie. lmmedia!elY. 1st $2099 buys • '6S OLDS ~UTI.ASS z.dr 0~00 V '62 Sunbeam • 10,000 ml on body ~wk. $350. 548-6660 d f RUH 201 XEU3'4 · hrd. tp. Fae_ air, p/s. 2J,000 ........,. alle Road eng. Hard & soft to"", Ton-1970 HARBOR BLVD. Ask for Sales )!•...,. ... • ual com ort seats wi!h his 64' °"- San Juan Caplstraoo neau (!()Ver, !JlOke .. rims&. COSTA MESA '55 VW Bus,.'60 eng. At. ls, 18211 Beach slv~-& hers individual adjust· $1688 CHICK IYERSON ,_m_,,_~_=_,_. ---~·-1 837..4800/493-45U/499-2261 ni.dlo S700 673-287'1 --------best offer, 2019 Pomona, ~pt, Huntineton Beach ments, tilt teleeooping wheel PLYMOUTH ===·===·==~::=::· == 1970 V\V camper Bus We sl· 1..:D;:.· .:;C:;:.M;.;·=°"""'~_,...,~.,.-powe r door locks, automatiC .MIKE YW '60 PORSCHE Cabriolet, 1600 1alla model, pop-top, tent, 66 VW Good Cond 847.ro87 KI 9-3331 super, with .. h.ard 1 top. New ___ T_O_Y_O_T_A __ radio, all extras. Gorgeous ~ ~ * 847.mQ WE PAY TOP DOLLAR ~:::re~;;:71~~~s~~ ~~ McCARTHY l='~=9~='"=(=1~,0i;"=B=~=Rti6='-"=:~=:~=;;=·==l'l9d6009,PJ! .. ~nouth VIP engine, new c utch, new cond, 6,000 mi Still smells FOR TOP USE D CARS """" tlres, new paint. AM/fl.1, '68 Corona new! $3500. can S67-8117 or '65 VW 1500 SEDAN U your -ear is extra clean, of the world's most luxur-BUICK California Gold just like new, ean~bv...41h 547-8248. FMMB radio, $885. see us first. lous automobiles. (806BQE). FIREBIRD Black Vinyl Interior at 2089 Harbor .n., or 4 Door, automatic, radio, IL'il'U.w;--;a.=-1-~*~~54~5-8624~~·~-BAUER BUICK Naben Cadillac 15.550 Beach. Blvd, 1----------IUnder 25,000 mi. phone 645.l982, 9am to 6pm heater. (VHH 379) '62 VW lug Larne Selecti•on 234 E. 17th St. 2600 HARBOR BLVD., at San Diego Frwy, '68 Firtblrd 350-17,ooo m l, 4-383 cu In, v..s, 2 bbf. $1199 ., Costa Mf!sa 548-7765 Costa Mesa 894-3341 • 531-Z.150 spd, loaded! Beaut. $2000. Automatic Transmission '63 PORSCHE Radio, 4!peed, exceU.ntcon-Of VW Campers, IMPORTS WANTE D 540.9100 o,..n Sunday -,-6-4_C_O_R_V_m--E-' 64"'747 " 646-3773 Pow" DI.o B.akcs Coup . BILL. YATES ditlon. d!r,. (BIYM88J) Will Pow" Wiodow• E " t i n a n c e private party. Yam, K_o_mbjs, Orange Countles 1968 EL DORADO • Fully "327", 4 speed, AM I Frif, FORD \Vhite Vinyl Roof Hii'dt~ t leaming metallic -VOLKSWAVEr ~ <II' 49f.68ll. I -N---& u-eCI BIL~i~~OTA e.q u_t P-P e·d • alldea.!00' irl:! -Brand new.:.'11de,,ovals. com -Free_way-Speed Control silver, with brand new in-32852 Valle Road ) --N-EW~-vw---.-u-G-uses, •w s 18881 Beach Blvd. terklr. Xlnt lenns ~ mterest plc!cly original, all this Vel • FORD R.£o«ltning Right Front Sent terior, chrome wbttls, ra· 'sa.n .J'uan Capistrano Immediate Dellvery rate. Pvt pty. $4150, Phone needs is a new h.ome. O~ '68 CNTRY SQR, WAG. Air Conditioning dial tire•, AM/FM n dlo, i37-jSJOt 49>45il/<lJ9.2261 $55.89 pr. month CHICK IVERSON H. B'8cl>. Ph. "7-8555 &19-0377, 810 5 oo!y, .... "" 219. -FACTORY -Et<oellent Condition Uc. PXW9112. I'""-;;;~;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;:; vw • CASH FOR CARS . Lori $1399 AIR CONDITIONING $2895 $2399 ITIOIYIOITIAI $147.71 down includes 5f9.3031 Ext. as or 67 ~~t~; ;o;m • CAD. CHICK IVERSON 9 t>Mlf!ngrr, VS, RUtomatic, Cont11.ct J\.trs. GI'ffnman at ·CHICK IVERSON tu & Lie. ()pen E'nd 1970 llARBOR BLVD. 1969 CONVERTIBLE pow" '""ing, pow" bra!<· the DAILY PU.OT, 330 IV. ~.,-VW '71 COROLLAS VW LEASING COSTA MESA e TRANSPORTATION car. FACTORY VW ~. electric window!', tilt Bay c.r.1. 642-4321 AT must be In good running AIR CONDITIONING 5'1!).Jf)3l Eict. 6G or 67 \Yhl't'i i;trreo A~1/FM mu!-' • S49-303l Ext. 66 or 67 HERE NOW '· AffENTION BUYERS cond. M2-7294. Exquisite Empire white w/ 1970 HARBOR BLVD. tiple:ic; luggage rack, new '67 Valiant -= 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Wagons, 2 Dr!, Coupes CHICK IVERSON, Let ua help you find a matching top. Plush. red COSTA MESA WSW tires. Immaculate! 2 Doo 1 la! , F ~ ~ Automatics &. 4 Speed! , l VW 1 • car at m coat to )'(JU, u..d Cars 9900 leather inter, Full power, IWTl<"'S&l) · r. mmacu !'. a ... ..,., COSTA AIESA DEAN LEWIS ' mo BiRBOittm.VJ>. SeD.ert aJao ~-elcome. tilt & telescopic steering '63 CHEVY, good body. Like Nobers. Cad·11lac warranty. 6 cyl .. dlr., radio. ;; '68 912 TARGA\ canary yell, 1 COSI'A MJsA _ Call IJOW' 6424131 Wla BUY Stereo AM·FM, Multiplex, new 4-spd Muncie trans & (UZF263J Must sell. WW fiA. e 38,000' ml,' ~/FM, chrm 1966 ~arbor, C.M. 6f6.9303 WANTED ' Auto. Ref.tr_., Service CARS etc. Locally owned, LOW link/ aged. ALLAl!O OgoodR PAR2'3T 2600 JIARBOMR BLVD., ance. 494-n44. -' •' whir; Ve~ ~n, Best over !7) TOYOTA'S . iili;j ....SU. mileage beauty. Sold & ser-w qui\ • • Co!ta esa '64 PLYMOUTII 4-dr, 318 ~. ~ $4700. 4M-16J6 In atoCk,1,mmediate delive'"", rh pQ liP" dolla-fdr )'OU!' l96S .VW ·<Amper, pop top, ,"4fell6 ,~· 1viced by U1!, (ZLK751). Pric· &(2....9600 54-0-9100 Open Sunday auto trans. Xlnt i;nnd. AU· ~ '69 9lli . ieiiller j n le r. ., VOLKSWAGEN' today. Call r=. =is' Xlnt cond. 2100 Harbor Blvd, 645-0466 ed to g('ll today! '61 IMPALA. 348 CI, 4-~p. TOP DOLLAR ing S.'>25. 968-8506 t sunrcioJ,.·eleC ._,indows, fac ~···Mt!ois and ~. W, Ron ·PinchoL ' · Orange County's Largest quad, gd cond. $.~25 or best , ~ •iri F¥) na .. ~ .. tm bl u. • •. ' ::."n" 51~3031 Ext M-67. '™""'· ' VOLVO BUICK Selection of Quality Cadi!lacs l oU• ... ,, '7>-7347. TI1ur" PONTIAC •. M"'I ..... $6!00 67:J-(;()!)2, .. w vw 1965 Sedan. Good """ Nabers Cadillac S.I. CLEAN JsED CARS • PONT. ~ 1956 PORSCitE. Yellow, Grey wired Interior. Radio l---------1--------""""HARBOR BLVD., '5"' Chevy 4 dr wagon, Re-~ Reblt/Eng. $900. Laguna Beach & extras. ;soo. 642-29ll. 420 1 -... -... • '66 RIVIERA -.N Costa Mesa buill v.s Ir auto. trarui., w/ SeeTHAE"'o1'Do"'Ro,Evn '68 CATALINA CPE. .. ., •11...-.,.,., ,. "'"• e .. ..,.... res. 54().9lll0 Open Sunday airt · ..... ~ FACTORY • •• ~ 0 •0 3 .~ 900 So.· Ct!-· H1·~·ro Col'-· N --Sho ... - - - -' $275 64" ~-ONLY 23.750 LOCAL ~IIL'ES ;. '61 Porsche-Cabriolet 1600 494;.7503 * 3 00 '68 VW convt. Outstanding ~ THICI A;t~,r ~~ :,0:: ·~~~:~ '62 CAD 4-0r DeVille '70 Chevyclrnpala Conv. P /S, ROBINS FORD Am CONDITIONING ~. suPer. nu Clutch., radials, BIIJ.. MAXE. Y cond. &:st offer . 543-8458 or 'VOL.YO:, wheels. License SYR 928 Air, all power, lo mi. P/B. 35Q cng. Xlnt cond. 2060 Harbor Blvd. Be t!f 1 11 1 Bl fi ,_ ... .. $2000/oUer. 549-4024 673--6830. 12795 """ 91"" Costa r-.1esa au u or zon ue n~u ~-$2388 Pvt ply 833-3485 · "'-"'""· ....... &42-00IO w I matching vinyl lnler. • '66 PORSCHE-912 /5 I l95e V\V BUS w/19641500 en. FOR sale: 1948 Cadillac tn CHRYSLER Pov.'<'r steering, au!G tr&nl., ' $3600. Pv1.Pty' 64~3593 TIOIYIC>JTIAJ gine, l500 or best oUcr. 494-"FRIEDLANDER" MIKE good orig. cond. Be'1 oiler. FORD "67 Couotry Squire radio, h"'"· WSW tiro1. ~ POR '70 91.l-T, 1200 aet mi'~. ._....._......_, ~ J _5352_._______ 111111 11ac11 CHWY. "' M CARTHY Call 548-09S8, eves. '67 CHRYSLER 300 conv. \Vgnt ' 9-pass, bfaC" ~.ir, ,vs, Tin!ed gla.u, ete. A real r perfect, haVf! to sell rsnbl. 11181 BEACH BLVD. '64 VW w/'li6 en1lne, am/fm, 893-7566 e s.n-6824 C e CAD. ~ Red w/blk lop, air cond. ~~ ';:~k. p. n~ rae':dy~!;: "Cream Puff." rxwz 362}. : burgundy. 548-2250, 548-9236 Hunt. Beach 1474555 sunroof. SliOO. 499-3650. 31806 NEW .. USED-SERV4 BUICK '61 CPE. DE VILLE full P"T, buck. sis, many P o lyg!ass wht/side/wall Priced to sell today! !· e '68 roRSCH.E 9ll·L lmtN.ofO>utHwy,onBdl Sth St.. So. Laguna. ~ FACTORY xtras. Pvt pty. Must sell. tires, tmmac. Bought nu Nabers Cadllla~ • TARGA. All extras. '69 Corolla '67 VW Cemp•ri1•cl Bus ~ I555o Beach Blvd. AIR CONDITIONING 638-0650. Sept '67, under 30,IXXl mi. 2600 J-IARBOR BLVD., ,· l\1ake oiler. 548-75.12 Top con<:!. 673-3269 at San Diego Frwy. BeauUful Baroque gold wi1h $1795. 842-1993 Costa Meu. ;_· J969 Porsche 911-T Fastback 4 speed. Has had '63 vw, rebu1lt engine, new VOLVO 894-334!. 53l·2450 black vi nyl top. Plush black COMET '67 Fair!ane conv. P/s, r,th, 540-9100 Open Sundq loving care. Sacrifice! CXSP I 1 h I il xi '67 RIVI ERA: NU polyglus. leather interiO.?" Full power -I 3~ Cl '° ' Xlnt cond. l-753-0010 497) Take small down. \Vil! cu c ' ow m eage, nt VOLVO CLEARANCE • e ect top. JU D, 'U,000. '67 BONNEVILLE' cond. $775. 536-3344 IMMEDIATE DEL air, F/P, 52,IXXl ml. Including tilt • telescoping COMET Sharp int, xlnt n1ech. No · '58 1600 SUPER w/sunroof, finance pvt. ply. Call d!r. l-''-''-'-,.C.,=,.:,;..:---1 IVERY SZ700. * 5464-475 wheel. Stereo AM/Fl\I mull\. 1964 Comet auloma!lc . 6 cyt. fault. $9'.15. 846-1115 2 door hardtop, AutomatiO, :o b red blaupurikt radio Pat aft lO am 540..3100 or '65 YW. CARS IN STOCK Scd H ~ ;1t~/orr.' 847-$42 aft 6 . 4M-~. BUG :~~~~~!G~~ '!:.p~ry~b.~t~~-Llke . ~~~"so~~c~~!rv1f~ ~~:~ ~~e~ ~~:r. A 0~~ ~~ ·~uto~R~c ~~h p~~gon~ ::~k=~d~ir:'o:C: (~~:; ~ 9600 Imported Autos 9600 American magi, wide tires, '70-18000 E CPE. 545-94l9 or 644-0637 bers. (WXE70l): omy & U-ansportnlion, car. l'ilereo/radio. Xlnt concl. $1888 ! Imported Autos custom metallic pa'•t ,, 'h ,70-164 SEDAN5-4 Speeds --,~6~5-B~U~IC=K--t Orange County s Largest Priced well below blue book Sac s2750 837-4007 MIKE -"' Sclcctlon of Quality Cadillacs •t $395, Finn. Ca1J 837-4239 · ' · · , • • beautiful lace work, YPU. & Automatics 1964 F · I S ts Co ~ 90L 1800 F Cpe for delivery, Elcc. 4-Dr. Sed. V-8, auto., Nabers Cadillac El Toro. vs 289 lll~/~egcx:'rtircs = . Mee' ARTHY : • FRIENDLY AUJO CENTER Several other euitomlzcd Overseu del Specialist.. R&H, P.S., P .B., fact. air. 2tiOO HARBOR BLVD.. '62 Comet-6 cyl, 4 dr, brake~. ss5o days 5Ji3sw; . , VW tG choose fron1 DEAN LEWIS EJR 672 , Costa Mesa: ~ transportatio~~Gst evl!s 536-7438 BUICK 1 -, . ' .. " NOW AT ITS CHICK IVERSON 1968 Har"°', C.M, 64~9303 $ l 488 540-9Ioo Opco Sunday ' 1962 Foro •1'1ion wagon. R& 15550 ll<aoh Blvd. · VW '68 Volvo 142A MIKE '69 SEDAN de VUl..Creen CONTINENTAL H. aulomatic. Meohaok• NEW LOCATION! w/wht vinyl top. Fully Special. Phone 968-5214 alter at San Diegu Frwy. i:r9Q~~R66B~~ 2 Door Sedan. Autom atic, ra. McCARTHY ~ulpped. $5l9S. 549--0l6S. LINCOLN ,Continental '69 4!,6~P~·''1;'·-==-=.,,...,...,.---l-1•64894-33<'A 1 • 531 • 2450 I H Bl .. G nl G • 1961 vw BUG • dlo, dlr. Has had loving BUICK • CAD. "·'"mint condllloo. Vi"'' "66 GALAXJE 500-Pa/pb,.fac Le Mans 138& arbor Y f I •• rOYI care, CYXU 248> Take trade '69 CPE. DE VILLE roof. leather lnt~rlor, atr-air, tape deek. Very gooc1 vs, 4 speed, ni.dio, heal•. , $1200. Ews, 673.()223 WU! finance privatt party. 15560 Beach Blvd. FACIORY cond, P"'T slrg I-bkrs, pwr1_ro==nd=·=Lo=m=i=, 64=Z-=2065=-:;;==I (OLR 62GJ • • DATSUN SALES •-SERVICE THE SUN NEVER SE:rS on Call Maury att IO -am a t San DI<ao Frwy. A1R CONDITIONING windows. 6 w.,, ,..~ tape 1 • _ • • Pilot Caa111ed 494-7506 °' 540-3100, 894-3341 • 531-2450 FUU ,..,..., vlnyl top, leather '''"°• lilt wheel, $4,)95, Ph LINCOLN $699 '======="--'========~======= '"''""· tilt -tele...,pi"" da,. 61'"1"21· oJ!e• BILL YATEr I• • Imported Autos 9600 Import.cl AutH 9600 l"!ported Auto1 ffOO whee l 11tereo AM/FM mu1ti.. 548-71173. • '66 Continental, air. pwi, ~ plu, ",1c. Th1' local owne• lcatl)cr. "'"' cond, 11625 or VOLKSWAGEN 51786 Piel., SJ966 111'11 • 4 Dr. W. s2040 IWSUN: • BIG IWCTION • FRIENDLY AUTO CENTER 13861 HARBOR BlVD. 139.7000 GAIDIN GlDVI @USED CARS~ OVER 40 COMPLETELY RECONDITIONED VW's IN STOCK. Large roofs, selection of sedans, sedan sun· Karmann Ghlas, fully equipped fastbacks & popular square· campers, backs. HARBOUR V.W. • "Eoty to RHch on the Way lo !ht Baach"' ' °""" f &Mn 'TII f PA !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•i 11711. leach Blvd. HuntiiMJton leach, 842-4435 .,.._~~~~~__;,.~~;,,_....;.;.___,1 • • car 8()1d & serviced by Na· CORY AIR offer, 494-4112, """· (ZVCS65 l. -------1=====;:--,·==I 3285l V &lle Roftd Orang• Counly'• !Mgell '63 CORVAIR MAVER. ICK Scleclion ol Quality CadiUacs San Juan Caplstram 837 41lll/49J..4511/ 49!}.D.il Nabers Cadillac 2600 HARBOR BLVD., Costa Mesa 540-9100 Open Sunday 1963 CADILLAC convertible, 1 owner. Xlnt condition. Call 64Z-92K! CAD '61 CPE. DE· VILLE FACTORY AIR OONDITIONTNG Finished In btn.utlful tiremlst rosewood, wi&h color coordh.._ ated brown vinyl top. Sad· die leatb.tf!,r interlor, full pow. tt lnchKltng tilt, telrscop. lng whecl, 1te.reo At.f/nf multlplex, ne\v WS\V tires. Vf!ry low mlleJtge on this lm- maculAto local cwnc~ ClU', whlch WU IOld k lf!C'Vioed by Nab!!rs, <WTC657) Oratiat County'1; Large11t Selection of Quality C.dUl1te11 Nabers Cadlllac ~ HARBOR ULVD., Colla MeM 5f0..§too . 00tt1 S11ndlly 4 Spro:!, radio, heater.~ (OHV 166) $588 MIKE' · McCARTHY BUICK 15.'i."i(l Beach Blvd. fl f San Oleg<> Frwy, SM-3341 • 531-2450 '70 MAVERICK, aulo ;;;;: '67 FIREBIRD CONV4 ' rcaJ p~tly, Xlnt cone!., $300 +Speed, rtldlo, hcmer, bucket i-:T:;.0:;·"=·="=5-33::=;:":· ===d sea ts, console. Very clc4il, 1· mechanicolly A·l. '. 1 $1250 . MERCURY Cal! , -lt!UST Sell '65 UMBns, 4 61 ~ERC ST~TION/WAG-apd. new trans. buckets. lo 390 P/S. J /B. at r . mi's clean $SOO 673"-U65.I ' Rcblt/tran& &. bee.ds, $350. ' ' · • oog...g132 '67 GTO-ps/pb, automatic. Xlnt cond. Asking Sl.400 or MUSTANG best Gffer. 642.-ll68. '62 "'"'"· '°"" or« cond. '69 LE MANS 6-CYL EnR recently o'h.aul, xlnt1----~-- mtth cond. $295. 892-n!ll • ·ro ~IUSTANG-11 oo1IBR. Sl900. * * h<l IO/alt 5. Sha.,, Red V-8. 4 ""'· RAMBLER '&I Corvair, Good cond, F\lly9lau tires, R/ll, _RllflS;l--------- Overhauled eng. Best offtr. Gn·at. 1960 Rebel, overhl\ultd I: CAii Alter 5 pm: 836-0446. :O.la.kc Oller! 842-Ul5 new paint. SXQ. Pr1vatt ~ 'ti6 Fastback 2+l party. Mi-8403. CORVETTE ,,,,.. • "'"' """· . -------llllOO or TRADE " OFFER T·BIRD . • '6.1 ST1NGTI.AY: Rnr, 4 11pd, • M0-4:11!7 * .. ' ~ilhd tln:s. Many Xtrul '69 Mach I. 428, ~spd. lo ml. '66 T·BlRD Conv., Air, pwr ' Xlnl Cond. SI\iOO, 536-2109, S2600 or rtu oUer. Art S low mil. 1 owner. Sl295'. 67U945, pm. SIS-.281.7, Crea 497*1850 or 4!M-TIS2 '63 CORVETTE Convert, 327, '65 Aiustang V-3. Attto, R.&H, * '55 T-8\rd: YtUow Sharp CUstnt body, Real Sharp! now ttrec, xlnt cond. Orie· Mus t Sell! S.C.1 $.l!ioo: St27!1, &15--Q.139 owner. 673-.QlO!J ~W'S. 644-4655 * • DAICY'l'ILOT Th"""1, -°'''°" .. 1970 • . Joe . IJerlolti ~ T & M MOTORS AVTBOHIZED ·• SALES e SERVICE • PARTS WE HAVE THE BEST SELECTION OF . BMW's IN ORANGE COUNTY • .1600's • 2002 • 2500 • 2800 • 2800 cs • All Colors • All Models • Immediate Delivery "ALMOST TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE" '(AR-AND-DRIVER cllls them -"ttie most-spec· t1cul1r blrplns In the entire spect~um of im- portjif cin.1,..When-profn1lonal crlt1c1 get that enthusi11tlc, it's time to take 1 test drive. Only you behind the whHI can truly measure the performance of this latest triumph from Ger· . many's f1mfll a.varian Motors Works • • • · bu11ders Of-fine can for 53 yHrs. Drive the. in- comp1r1ble new BMW today. . . • ' ;'67. Fiat Wagon Sp•ci•I luick 1//6 •1t9i11•, Red io. h1tf1r, 111tor11etic. IUVT-560} '68VW Rtdio, httfer, 1unroof. R••I Sh1rp! '67 FIAT Cpt., r1dio, h11!1r. Good fir11. Rtd with bl1 ck bucket 111h. !TRY-01 6) '68 FIAT 150 Spid1r 2 dr. r1dio, h11!1r, ultre 1h1rpl IWTZ-6161 . '68 Mercedes 2000. Compl•ttl>t rtbuilt enqine. R•dio, ht•t•r, 4-1p1•d, fin1 m1cll- •nic1I c.ond, IYXU-9151 '61 Porsche Sup•r "90", R•dio, h••t•r, 4-1p1•d. lmm•cul•t•. IGJS-108 I ~~?.. !.!'.~~.~~~'~ $2295 1quipp8d including ic1 bo•, plu1 min¥, m•ny ••fr•1. Fu ll¥ 1nclo1•d c1b1n•. lmm•cul•t1 condition. :~. ~~.~.~!,.~~~.... 51795 cl uty 1utp•n1ion. A· I m1ch. Col'ld. (#2271411 PLUS A LARGE SELECTION OF VW BUSES, ALL COLORS We have • fln.nclng plan to flt your budget Including 100"/o flnoncing (0.A.C.) Will take your c•r In tr1cM "))•Id for or notl Come In •nd t•lk with one of our experienced coun- cllor1. AVTBORIZED e SALES e SERVICE . • PARTS IJerlolti~ ' ' OPEN SUNDAYS . 8011 G.-n Grove Boulevard 1/1 Bik. E. af "~ch Blvd. 534-UB4 892°5551 · '· . ' . • ·' I .. , ! s BAUER BUICK 1N COSTA MESA "Specializing . ' Ill . Quality" Goon · VALUE USED CARS '62 SKYLARK VI, 1utom•tic. r1dio, h11t1 pow1r 1t•1rin1, pow1r w111- dow1, f1ctory •ir. Only 44,000 mi11t. Ju1t irflt'lllCU· lit.. IHMT321 I $795 ~62 INVICTA 4 Door h1rdtop. VI, 1ulom•· tic, r•dio, h11t1r, pow1r 1t•1rii19, pciWtr br1'k1s, 1lr conditi•nint· Noni nicer, :I: ONEID41. " $595 ; ~ ii! G .. G -"' 5 = '64 WILDCAT $895 '65 FORD • f1irl•n1 500 2 Dr. H.T., VI, •Utom1tlc., ftdio, ht1t1r, p-•r 1t•1ri1111 lm1111c.ul1t1 cir •. ITIZl411 $895 '65 OPEL 2 Door coup•. 4 •P••d tr•n1· rni1tion , r•dio 1n<l h••t1r. IRGU062l · $695 '66 CHEVROLET M1libu 2 Or. H.T, VI, •uto· rn1tic fr •n1mi11ion, r•dio, h••t1r, p~"'' 1l1•ringl Exe.ii· li nt 1utOmobil1. !Yl'Wll71 $1295 • SPECIAL OF THE WEEK '69 Mercedes Benz Coupe Roadster ....,. Fully equipp•d with 4 1p11d tr•n1miuion, AM -FM r•dio, ,. pow•r tt••rilllJ, 1ir c:enclitioll· C i119, 1tc. Appx. 11 ,000 mi11t. ~ B1•utiful bl111 1ritrior •i+h n1tur•I t111 i11t1iior. You mutt ••• 111d clriv• this gor• t•e~1 c•r. 0 PRICED TO SELL -z • Ill 11'1 i r .. BAUER Bill CK IN COSTA .. MESA . ·- '234 Ei 17th St. co'sTA ME$A . .54l-l765 ' . I• I ·.-..-- ~JM;N·)­ "Leader tri~Btacb Cities" ZIMMERMAN 2145 HARBOR BLVD. S«l-6410 BIG SELECTION --·OF DATSUN Pick Up Trucks ALL COLORS READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY wuJ M!NJ 111YD ''Leader in The Beach -€ities'-' - ZIMMERMAN 2145 'HARBOR BLVD. 540-64f0 BIG · SELECTION OF DATSUN Station Wagons ALL. COLORS READY FOR __ IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IAUJ I M!N ''°"'' "Leader In The Beach Cities" ZIMMERMAN 2845 HARBOR BLVD. 540-6410 FINEST MOST RELIABLE SERVICE DEPT. ANYWHERE FOR ALL SPORT & IMPORTS -·-Home of , The Best s2000 Car ~[M!N J•m "Leader in ~ Beach· CiUes" ZIMMERMAN 2145 HARBOR .tlLVD. 541M410 . -· ' BILL ~·~-y.} Jo .. ES' -HERE NOW g . . . LA!t~~ SELECTION_ Factory Fresh, Brand New 8.J • SPORTSCAR CENTER 2833 HARBOR COSTA MESA -·- If you own an im· ported car and need service, come see us at B I Sports Cars. All new serv· ice and parts facil~ ·ties. Weservice ALL imported cars. * • * • ••••••••• PLUS We Now Have A Complete BODY & PAINT SHOP To Serve You Better • B. J. SPORTSCAR CENTER NOW CAN OFFER YOU ONE STOP SERVICE FOR ALL YOUR AUTO NEEDS -··- 1971 DUSTERS ~ Ready for lmmedipte Sale I S1ri1I •VL29BIE I 024101 CLOSE~OUT ON ·ALL '70's 1970 DEMO _ . BARRACUDA 2·DR. HARDTOP 4 SPEED TRANSMISSION 383 GU. in. v.e, ... D1rr1t, ton1ot., buck•h, 1ur1 grip dif· f1r1nti•l, tiilt1d 9l1n, 1v1por1t• •rnli1io11 control, r•d!o, h••t•r, bocl>t 1id• mo11d i119t, wh11I cov•11, .,..,.,.. tir••· S1r11I #BHllNOE I 113697. FREE . PH_ONE • CREDIT CHECK Ask For Credit Counselor to arrange payments to suit your needs 540-5164 CARS SU BJECT 10 PRIOR SALE . USED 1970 ROADRUNNER 4 SPEED TRANSMISSION This beautiful Road .Runner will be an excellent buy. -High imp1ct color, tvap. . orator emission control, white sidew1lla. license No. 633 ABV. $226247 FULL PRICE $77 TOTAL DOWN PYMT. $77 TOTAL MO. ~ PYMT. BI LL $77 ;, th• tot•I dow11 p1yrn1nl. $77 ii' th1 tot1I monthly P•>tm111I, inclucl in9 t•x, lic1n1• •11d •II cu'fyint ch1r91i 1111 •pprov•J of tl•11k cr1dit for l b ino11thr. U you prtf•r to P•Y c•1h, th• lull pr ic1 i1 011ly $2,171.59 inclu8i119 1U f•t11, 1970 lic•nl•t tnd tr•n1f•t '•••· Nolhin'i mor1 to p1y, Dt· 0 N Es, f•rr•d P•>tm•nl pric• $2849 includin'i 111 c•rr>tin'i ch1r991i, 12.SO. ._ J t••••· 1970 lic•11111. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE IS ONLY ' ----~--------. .JJlLWlLAZWlLLZ•<LKSAJ • HUNMGTON . B.J. SPORTSCAR CEN~R ' -. 2133 HARBOR COSTA MESA 540-4491 . (Orner Of H•rbor -&. Elm . .,Servic~ Entr•nce,.On Elm BEACH CHRYSLER-Pl YMOUTH 1666LBeach Blvd. HUNTINGfON BEACH ( I, ' 540-5164 . -. 842-0631 ~ Days A '!f~~ Until 11 P:M. -~~ Hablci.,EsJ>pnol ].. \ • ~ ' l ' ' '