HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-10-13 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa--
Crusades Candidate • Ill • Newport
• • I
DAILY PILOT Car , Plunges-In-to Dit-c~
* * * 1oc * * * Kills Mesa Wo111an~ 70
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 13, 1970
VOL. 'lo NO. 14J. I s•CTIONS, n ~AGIS
er ree • I ers' na
17
Unruh Charges
' +."
~ _ -Ir~ne '~w~~dle'
·~ .J'~ ~;. ... . • .
' ·an. the sb8reline of .U:pptt "swindle-swap" in the proposed Back
NeWPart Jltt, ,.eemocra~ gube.roatortal .Bay tideland.a o:change with Orange --<Unruh IDday alleged that Counly government.
' bine..£omPanf_is.· en&aaed in a Unruh, in what he termed another of ·-1 '; ~. ·-. . • fr *
· Irvine Hits
his special news events, brought a
busload of newsmen and camp followers
to the Harbor Area for yet another of his
auacks against big business and the
Estliblishm~nl
'.
I I
"
Vnrµ,h .8last -.. ~ ,• • >( •
At Exchange
Irvine -Q,~y officials today labeled
Jest . Unruh's attaok on the Upper
}I~ Bay tidelands uchange "cheap
poliuCal theatrics" and challenged him to
put-up or shut-up if be really believes the
land swap. is illegal
The statements came in reply to
Unrub's allegations Lhat the proposed
tidelands exchange between the ranch
eampany and Orange County government
is, in his words, "a swind1e·swap."
Gilbert W. Ferguson, Irvine's vice
president of corporate commlinication,
commented, "If Mr. Unruh in fact
believes that about the Upper Bay land
exchange, he should file appropriate
charges."
Then Ferguson added, "He won't, of
course, because it isn't.
''It is distressing that he has become so
desperate that he will engage In this kind
otdaeap political theatrics," he said.
""lbe Upper. Bay exchange is now being
tried in the courts." Ferguson pointed
out, 1'A determination into il.!J legality
and its constitutiOnaJity is yet to be reach-
'1" I ff.
"One ruling that has been made,
however," he said, "is that there is no
evidence of fraud or misrepresentation in
any of the negotiations and decisions that
cu1minated in state approval of the ex-
change. ' ,
"Orange County Superior Court Judge
• CJaude M. Owens aMounced that rinding
lut Aflg. 18. We regret Mr. Unruh's air
• parat ignorance of this ruling /' be said.
"Farther," be said, "lbe 450 1ctes of
Janel the county receives in the exchange ·
will provide public park sites ~l en-
compass more than 200 acres and Will in-
crease the usable water area or the Uir
per Bay by some 50 percent.
"Finally," Ferguson said, hMr. Unruh
auerted that the State Lands Com·
mlaion during Governor Brown's ad-
1 .~·had ·~Ried· approval to Uie
• "'rhb is no( tluo," he said. ";!'he com-m-In llirdi 1167 withheld approval
I -~ ~xp!tcit undel'llaoding that ~ , ....., tClfn omsider the ma1* IUtther
..-111n more information was provkfed."
. Fllr1'!"°" Uid. "I might add that I
pe:raonatly comider Mr. Unruh's confused
oppoeillon to the concept of jotnt devel~
ment of the Upper Bay both cynical and
lrrespcmlble."
'j
Monday it was Standard Oil Company's
refinery in El Segundo that drew his at-
tention in an attack on air 'pollution and
incumbent Gov. Ronald J'.leagan.
Today, the Irvine Company drew the
focus of Unruh's wrath.
Unruh asserted th at the proposed
Newport Bay land exchange wouJd ~eny
public access to prime S o u t h e r n
california beach land.
The Democratic ·gubernatorial can-
didate said if elected Nov. 3 he -with
the aid of o t he r Democratic office
seekers - would repeal the land transac-
.tion between the Irvine Company and
Orange County.
Unruh issued the charge in a four-page
statement prepared for delivery on-site
at Back Bay.
He said Orange County seeks to trade
the Irvine Company 157 acres of prime
beach land in return for 400 acre!! of
mudnats, underwater islands and county-
conlrolled acreage in what "is probably
the worst government real estate deal
since the Indians were talked out of
Manhattan Island for $24. '' .
Unruh charged that the State Lands.
Commission approved the e:itchange
shortly after Gov. Reagan took office in
1967. He said this occWTed less 'tban a
year after "precisely the same plan" had
been rejected by the three-member com-
mission in 1966 during former governor
Edmund G. "Pat" Brown's term.
Unruh charged that Irvine makes the
beacliland private, bars public access .to
it, and then sells "$200,000 luxury homes
to the very rlct\,'' .
"Developments Uke this should not be
built in a place of public beach when
there iii· such a shortage of recreation
areas in Southern califomia, .. the can+
d.ld'te said. ·
He a'dded, "Whal the coun~y give
Irvine and what Reagan's land com ...
mW.ion rushed to bless waa a blatant gut .
. (S.. UNRUH, Page %)
Burglars Find Van's
. Soft Spot, Get Pads
Not enough locks were available for •ll
three doors, so two of them were Ued
•hut with aircraft seatbelt webbing to
keep burglan out or a Costa .Mesa mov·
ing company's big van.
Melvin F. Lttt.erell, of Martin's Moving
and Storage, 1300 Lotian Ave., told Police
Monday that someone cut through the
webbing anyway and stole $50 worth of
pads oaed to protoc1 lurnlture iD transl~
I
Movie Makers Hurdle Cleared
For 2 Host-ag·es
~(UPI)~ The ~...,.,·!Gt' ---l~••ua&ilt"*•P"l re!eUiil rrom jail toilay, clearing cine
Trade-Oi..,._•1-'ll en.. end
~1:.abw Mii bimlli'lftllistllh' 'er '
Pie"" Laporte, bollagU of lerrOrltt oelll
o! the Front de !Jher1Uoo du Quebec
(FLQ).
DAILY PILOT lttff '°""'
Movie crew descended upon Shaw's Cove in Laguna Beach Monday
to shoot scene for forthcoming film, "The Marriage of a Young Stock·
broker." Young stars in thi s beach scene are Joanna Shimkus and
Richard I.senjamin.
San Diego Leaders Plead
Innocent in Bribery Case
SAN DIEGO !UP!l -Eight public
of[icial•. incl•!iing Mayor Frank Curran
and Assemblyman Tom Hom, pleaded
innocent today to relony charges o(
bribery and conspiracy relating to fare
increases for Yellow Cab .Inc.,. of San
Diego.
Superior Court Judge Leland C. Nell·
sen eel trial dates of Dec. 7 for seven
of the officials ind Nov. 3 for lbe elibth,
County Supervisor Jack.-Wallh~ A ninth
defendant. bu.sineasman Robtrt Covell,
rd""<I to "aiVl: receipt of o tnmacrlpt
of the Indictment llld wtU be arraigned
next Monday.
All were released on their own re-
cognizance.
Neilten agree to set Hom's trial date
to 1 period prior ·to the Nov. 3 election.
but hll attorney uid he did not thlnlt
1
he oould prepare In time. The judge
said be would leave open the right to
make a moUon for a speedjer triaJ.
Hom Monday complained that t h e
charges came jtlst be.fore election time
and! be 'WOUid not 1have a chanCe: to de-
. fend bim5elf befo~e then.
CUrran's attorney asked that hll trial
. be delayed because of lack of Ume to
prepare.
"It would be best to get these mat.
ters di!posed of as 100n as possible,"
NeUseri said, but he also left. opeo the
ri&ht to make a later motion.
Walsh was granted a different trial
date because his attorney said his case
is unrelated to the others. Walsh and
Covell 'are charged only wllh not Us~ 1zli Pratt or Yellow Cab Company aa
(See SAN DIEGO, Pace I)
-cle In !lie negoUationa with the
pmlDlellt to releue two poUUcal
holtagu.
Robert Lemieux told newsmen he
would meet governmtnt ne1otJator Robert
Demers later tOciay to continue talks
Oliiiiill t p!iillig ffeeilol!I-fcr Brlllih
Elderly Mesa
Woman Killed
In Car Plunge . -
Hurtling off a curve in her old sedan,
an elderly woman was killed instanUy
Monday when the car careened.too yards
through a Costa Mesa !leld, shot up an
embankment and nose dived into a
drainage ditch ·arter a SO-foot flight.
Mrs. Ruth R. Abney, 70, of 853 <:enter-
s~ .. Costa Mesa, was pronounce<! dead i~
aide the crumpled ~ecka'ge,. With nearly
every bone in her body broken and multi·
pie internal injuries.
The spectacular accident on Estancia
Avenue near Swan Drive may have been
caused bf the woman suffering a heart
attack or slroke, but coroner's depuiies
said It was impossible to tell, due to
massive injuries.
Patrolman Bill Bechtel said todlly Mrs.
Abney 's death will therefore be listed as
a traffic fatality.
The accident shortly berore 1 p.rn. wu
witnessed' by three fobtM. Police said the
accident could have been worse had It OC·
curred jwt before or after claMeS at
nearby Estancia High School.
Nonnally, the narrow.road iJ lined with
teenagers walking and riding bicycles at
those hours.
Officer Bechtel said the car !en the
roadway at the top of a hilly curve and
shot straight toward the county-main-
tained drainage ditch with no apparent
effort to stop.
1be 1951 l<don ripped out chain link
renc1n1 11 It IO!led oil the bank at the
edge of the culvert and smashed lnto the
opposite concrete waD, bouncing back t.
the other side again,
"She was trapped between the steering
wheel and lbe seats," said Officer
Bechtel. . ' . ' . '
Other officers said they have aeen the
sedan bearing Tes:as lictnle plates
around town in the past two months and
believed the victim waa a recent arrival.
Funeral serviea were pendlna today at
Bell Bfoldway Mortuary In Costa Mes1,
whm apoteamen uld th!y kntw nOthlng
about U., elderly loey.
A tow truck hauledthe wred<a(e out of
the muddy dltdi with Mn. Abney'a body
alill crumpled behind the steering wheel.
The horn -undamaged by the tremen-
dous Impact -honked pltlf\Jlly several
times, apparently under the wet1bt of ber
body.
(
Lemieux said his initial talks , with
Demers, held into the early morning
hQUl'Jj_n_fbe_city jail whea:e Lemieux has
been held since Sunday, were .. very
elementary."
Lem ieux entered no plea -f~y
lilted in the records as a not guilt)\)lla
-to charges of obstructing J.-aild
Interfering with the work .al ~
1tattments made Oct. 9.
Judge Maurice Allard r •le a 1 e d
Lemieux on his own recogi't....., pat..
ding setting of a trial date FridaJ;
The 1wo commando cells Dave: been
disagreeing on the ransom terms. with
the cell holding Laport. 1Ucldng In higher
demands.
At opening talks between Lemie\JI aod
Demers Monday night, police thrt:w a
~ljce s~ield three bloclq dee~ around .ill!
Jail as the lawyers mel
In Ottawa, helicopter loads of troops
arrived to . help the Royal· Canadian
Mowited Police on guard duty -the Hr!t
such use of troope in the Cana~ capital
in peaCetJme history, • ·
Quebec Premier Robert Bouras.v: MQnoo
d8y named ' Demers, a tougb.minded
lawyer and closf: confjdante, to represent
the government ln negotiations wJth the
FLQ.
Squad cars and lines of uniformed of.
fleer! ring~ the police be~dquarters an;d
refused to allow anyone but officials
w.ithin three blocka of the building.
11\C FLQ earlier suapended the death
deadlines hanging over the two holtigea:
-but' threatened to kill them it ~the
government delays too Jong an lltlWer to
theit r111JOm demandsl
or ... e
Weat•er
Low overcast and patchy fog 11
the prescrlptlon ror Wedneaday,
wea.therwiae, wlth temperatures
remaining in the rnlddle 70'• on
lhe coast and around a degrees
furlher inland.
li\f; IDE TOD~ Y
, • Htr Mmr 1ounds. like 1omt·
thinQ out of a bad wor movie,
but Laguna Beach's Tommie
Gumi, /ioughtor oJ. Tom MU:, !a
known 41 B 1uper Uberol. Set
Pape 3.
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I , DAILY ,!LOT s
Russ Deny ~
Having Suh
·Base in Cuba
MOllCOW (UPI) -Tho Soviet 1ovem-
intnt OllJ~ill!i)' dtllitd today ii WU
bullding a. nuclei!' eubmarine bait Jn
Cuba and accused the N I x o n
AdministraUon of deliberately or ir~
mponitbly spreading "falsifications."
A ....,.....1 otawnent distributed by
Tasa, the offtclal Sovtet news .,.ncy,
-~ sala: Uil-u.s. reports the 1\usstans-were
engo(ed In building navol lnltailltlona In
Cuba ''.P1-I' Into the handl only of thoM
who art inttruted in l1Mln1 the war
psychoola and compllcatln1 the altuatlon
In that "l\O" of !he world."
"Tho9e 'who dtllberatety o r l!'o
responsibly are taking up and spreading
1U<;h !alsificaUim play into Ille hands of
'the foes of peace," tt said.
"The Soviet Union bas not built and is
no\ building a m1Utary baa on CUba and
ts aot ctoins enylhiftl !hat would co ...
tradict the undtrtltndin& re a ch t d
between tha govemmentJ Gt the USSR
and the United States in 1962," the state-
ment said. 'nte year 1962 marked the Cuban
miuile crisis when President John F.
K~ ordered their rtJllOVal in a tense
coi\trontaUon that appeared at the time
to be on the vtr11 of brtalting in~ direct
conflict. '
11le Nixon AdminislraUon first raised
the submarine base i~e Sept. 25 at a
regular DohlOll DepartmePI britft.,., .\
Pentagon spokesman said acUvity had
been detected at Cienfuegos, on Cuba's
IOUlhlm coast, that could be the s~art of
a but for serving nuclear Pol.ar1s..type
subl1\lrlneS.
Lalor the aamo city a top Whtto HOUM
offJ:lal also •IPfUlld MrioUI oonoem
Jbout the bul -if that was what was
belol butlL The o!Dclal, wllo did not
pe.nnit use of his name in accounts by
reporters, said the United States . would
regard a base for missile submarines In
Cuba "with the utmost seriousness." .
The Russian newspapers dismissed tbt
allegations within .a few dl.y1, accwsll'.IS
·the United tltltoi or lrYlftl to -relao
lions with Moscow.
Continued references among some U.S.
officials to the Cuban activity, toaether
with U.S. charges of Russian complicity
tn Egyptian vtolattona of !be Middle Eut
cease'lfre; apparonlll' lurlhlt lrrltatod
Soviet officials.
These were aald to be partly the reason
why ,,P~mier Alexei I. Kosygin decided
ml lo altond tho Unled Natlonl 11th '"" • n1wnarJ . mlllinl wlllclt 1tarto Wed-
-., , Tbto niled Olll a poaail>le IWDJ1llt
ooolulaot wllh Prelldtnt Nixon.·
, DlplornaUc obftervers in Moacow In-
terpreted Wuhington's r e p e a t • d
.. ,. ...... lo the ill11ed nilaila buo ...
poatbly bolnl baNd on broader policy
CONidaraU0111, iDcludtns Iha Middle Eut
crtoll. 1luooilli"'t; tlleU.S. offlcla!J
acknowledged that only dubious and
dated lnformaUon was available to ln·
dlcat. mlAlle 1tte1 ml1ht be belng bullL
Aa .-Uy u Monday, U.S. DeleftM
Secretary Melvin R. Laird rofemd to tlle
aUtpd buu. H• told a Pentacon new•
conference:
2 Gunmen Strike
In Huntington
The owner of I small tt11ntin1ton Beach
·market wu told to "play II cool" by a
couple or customm Monday nllht, but
!ho 1am• <Oil !Um 1181.
Jame1 R. SlAler 1 manaier of the Stop
and Go Martot1 ITllO Beach Blvd., told
. pollCI ofrtcen U1e tll'll men, bot11 In their
30's and bearded, 1hoved a blue irteel
·revolver in hl1 face and demanded ca1h. · uwe want all your money, be cool, be
· cool," one of them ur;ed.
He was, and the CAlh re1i:iter rans a
, $135 pay out.
. ·'
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ORA.NCI! COA5T PUl l.ltHll'IO COMl'AMY
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J11~ JI.. C111lty vk.1 l'ru?<:ltitl er.d ~•1 ~'
lhom•• Ktt vll
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Thom•• A. Murpliino Mtnttl"I lflltl'
ttr1h•r4 '· H•• $Olllll °''"'°' (llllnlY l!f110f -(ttft MIM t nt Wn! llY 1!r"' ,...,.,, .. 1ch: 11\1 Wat 11 ... ltUIMl'tl 1-ff1111t l .. l~I 111 ,_, AVll'Ult
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Tu.Wy, Octobff !), 1'110
NIWPORT CITY EDITOR
L. Peter Kri ..
DAll.Y 1'11..0T lllfl ~
NAMID TO NEW POST
Rlchord p, Nall
Daily Piwt Announces
Nall, Krieg Promotions
Promotions or Richard P. Nall to as-
sistant managing editor and L. Peter
Krieg to Newport Beach city editor were
IMOWICed today by DAILY PILOT Edi·
tor Thom11 Keevll.
Nall, 41, formerly served on the DAI-
LY PIIm staff as South Orange Coun-
1)' Editor, !llakllll Iii• headqua,Un In
Laguria Beach and San Clemente-San
Juan Capistrano. He now makes his
headquarters in Costa Mesa and joins
the newspaper's other assistant manag-
inl editor, Charles H. Loos, in super-
visory dutJ11. Nalf jolnld the DAILY PILOT .torr
in May of 1966 as Laguna city editor.
He was previously Imperial Valley bur-
eau chief for the San Diego Union after
earlier staff stints on the Imperial Val-
ley Press, the South Bay Daily Breeze
and the Brawley News. He attended El
Camino Junior College, Oregon State Uni-
versity and the University of Millourl.
He and bil y;ife, Teresa, make their
llome in Lagwi& -BeaCb and bavt one
son, Richard, 2.
Krieg, 'll, in becoming the D~!!-Y
PILO'l":s new Newport Beach city editor,
actually broke Into the newspaper busl-
ntSI as a sports reporter tor thl1 ntWft
Mission f iejo
Resident Killed
By Runaway Car
A .13-yoar.old Mluton Viejo man wJ
fataily-crulhed by a nel&hbor w_oman'a
runaway car Monday as he tried to ~ssl~t
by entering the moving auto to bring 1t
under control.
Frederick Brown of 24222 Salero Lint
'died on the operating table 1t South Coast
Community Hospital at 1:49 p.m., about
four hOUl'I after the accident.
California Highway Patrol officers said
Mrs. Carol Ann Norman, 'l1 of 24181
Salero Lao• had left the Cir runninc a1
she got out to close the garage door. It
apparenUy slipped Into reverse.
The car moved down the driveway and
began backing In circles in the street and
Over curb1. The driver's door was open
on the 1K9 Oldsmobile. Mr11. Norman
called for help.
In grabbing for the door and lryinl lo
enter the backing car 1 an officer llid,
Brown 1pparenUy fell or was knocked to
the street. The car clrcled and passtd
over hll body . · Brown wa1 1 self-employed hair
dresser at 30001 Crown Valley Parkway.
Survlvor1 lriclude his wi:l.ow Conn.le.
Funeral arranaementl are pendin& at
Blower Mortuary In Santa Ana. .
From Pqe l
UNRUH •.•
of valuable land in return for thi1 tr uh."
Unruh claimed the outcome o( the 1wap
would be the state 1tuck with virtually
usele11 land while the bl& development
reaps riches by building homes on prllne
beachfront property.
"This ahamef11I land grab 11 typical of
the way Rea1an coddles the rich and
soaks It to the rest," Unrt.1h 1ald Jn pre-
pared remarks. He claim• the Irvine Comp1ny doesn't
yet flave cle1r tlUe to the beach but
11already la trytna to keep the public
out."
. Wltbout the campaign funds to match
Re111gan't televl!lon campaign -or to
even try -Unruh contlnuu to Ule the
tactics of "1urprlse campaign vi1lt11'
designed to gel a1 much f'rtt news
coverage 1s possible.
Some observers bave come to call
them "field tripe."
RtpUbllcw call lh<m stmmlcl<I.
The Unruh c1mpal1n, continuing In the
underdol role, aUU hu trouble stlrrlng
up cnthuslum even amofll DeJnocr1tJc
l"'\IPl-One party official said beforehand that
he expected 300 penons to atttnd a
reception for Unruh at the Dls.nt.yland
Hatti Monday nllhl -et 12.10 eacll to
1et In ond l!O cenll a drink. Tbe head
count w11 Im than 100.
Unrul> ur1ed !ht fallhf\11 Dtmoerall to
r<Couble lhtlr t!lort. to help him 1•t
votct OD Nov. s.
u1 don't Intend to &Ive up Orange Coun·
1Y without a filht," bo aatd.
paper In 1961 while attending Orange
Coast College.
Later, while attending the Univer11ty
of Brid1eport, ht worked on newspapers
in Westport and Miiford, Conn. Before
joining the DAILY PILOT staff as prln·
cipal Newport reporter last August,
Krieg was servin& as chief of the Bridj;e-
port Post's live-man Milford bureau.
Krleg and his wife, Carol, have t w o
children, Les, 5 and Jennifer, 3. 'mley
have a new home in Sandpointe.
Fro"' Pllfle I
SAN DIEGO. ••
campaign contributors. Covell was cam~
paign treasurer for County Supervisor
Harry Scheid!,,
All 70 seat.s in the courtroom were
filled , and the aisles were jammed with
onlookers.
Curran; Hom, R-San Diego; CoW1Cll·
mtn Alien Hitch, Mike Schaefer and
Floyd Morowr; and Scheid le are"'-8C·
cused of acceplini bribes from Charlo1
Pr1tt1 pre1ldent of Yellow Cab In~ .•
of San Dle;o, ln return for favorable
vote1 on a rate Increase th1t hiked tllll
fare1 22 per cent ln 1967.
All 1111 u rell ., Counqln)an Helin
Cobb, aliO 'ii'i chats'4 wllh ·co1111>lrln1
to pervert and obltruct ju1Uce and With
alle;edly •arttlnc not to report c1m-
pafsn contrtbuUona from Prall
Curran, 67, praldtnt of th1 Natlon11
Lequo or CIUH, la mvlq 1111 aecond
term u mayor after three terms 11 a
councilman. He II chlr1ed with accept-
Inf bribertotalln& ·11,000.
Hitch, the city 's deputy m1yor1 Is ac-
su1ed of aceeptin1 P ,&00 from Pratt
over 1 five-year period. Hom, a fresh-
man Republican Jecllilator who face1
re-elecUon Nov. 3, 11 rtported to have
taken SS,000 from Pratt.
Other contrlbuUons llated Include 14,·
714 to Scheldlo, l!.185 to Mn . C o b b ,
U,MI to Morrow; fl,2:50 to Schiefer and
ll,000 to Wal1h.
Prati, wllo h11 been uked by t h e
comp1ny to reslan 11 pre1ldent, was
gnnted Immunity and la lleted 11 1n
unlndlcted co-con1plrator in all of the
indlc:tmentl. The company a!IO w a 1
cranted immunity.
All el&ht of tlle public offlclala wore
m@mbera of tht 1"7 city council when
the rate lncreut was 1pproved unanl·
mously . The increue wu racommended
by the city manager, but oppoHd by a
rate consultut hired by the clty.
Husband Sought
In Wife's Death
A Gardan Grove woman w11 appar-
enUy 1tran1led to de1th In her home
Monday nl&ht and police have a dragnet
out for her husband.
Mn. Debbi O'Leary, 20, wa• found
In th1 bedroom closet by police who had
responded to an anonymous telephone
call that there wa.! a dead body nt the
home address. 11535 Stuart Drive.
Her husband, John Bruce O'Leary,
26, ls belng 10Ught in a statewide dra&·
net. He ls described as male, w h I t e ,
5-foot eight inches tall about 145 pounds
with re:d hair and blue eyes.
Police this morning refu1ed to r•
ve:al any motive they might SU.!pect
for the murder.
Russ Leader Departs
MOSCOW (UPI) -Soviet Forol&n
Minister Andrtl A. Grom)'ko left today
for New York to take part in ceremonlu
markina the 25th anniversary of ttte
United Nations, the official news qeney
Tass reported. Gromyko will heaa the
soviet deleaaUon to the ceremonies.
Sta mp Thief Licked
EXETER, England (UPI) -Peter
Blakely, 28, rele1std from Dartmoor
Prl.!on July 29, was convicted Monday of
stealing the prison doctor 's at.amp col·
lec:tlon while a convict and waa unt bnek
to Dartmoor to lel'Vt rune more tnontbs.
Cana·da Courts Peking:
Nationalist Chinese Sever Relations .
.,.mwtrt-
Canada todty announced eotablislunonl or diplomatic relattoa1 with Red China.
floon a!lor, Nallonallot China aevered ~
retattona wtlh canada.
In, llMOllllClng the dl~omatlc Uu,
Canada aclmowlodpd-tlle ftldnl rqhnl aa "the sote legal governme:nt of ~.11
External Affairs Minister Mitche:ll
Sharp announced the move In ~ House
or Commons and released a joint oom·
munique, distributed simultaneously in
Peking and Ottawa.
''The sovemment of ttnada and the
government Of-the PeoPft's Republic of
China, in accordance with the prlnciplu
cf mutual rupect for tove:reicnty and
territor.ial Jntegrlty, noninterference ln
each. olhlr'I Internal affairs and equality
and mutual benefit, have decided ~n
mutual reoosnlUon and ntablishmtnt of
diplomatic rel1tlonl, effective October IS,
1970,'' the joint csmmunique said.
"The Chinese government reaffirm.!
thll Taiwan ii •• tnalienable"part o{ the
territory <1f the People's Republic of
China. The Canadian government lakes note of this position of the Chinese
a:overnmenl.
"The C811adlan government recocnizes
the 1ovemment of tht People'• Republic
of China as the sole: legal government of
China.
"The Canadian and C h i n e s e
governments have agreed to ei:change
ambassadors within six months, and to
provide all nece30llJ aaolotaoce for Iha
establlahment and Iha perlormanca or Iha fun<ttons or dlplometlc mtutona In lhetr
f'tlPlcl1ve capitals, an _ tbl bull ol
"luaUty and mutual benoltt and In ...
oordenoa "!llh intamaUoool practice."
-Ht said,.faiwan had been-1~major con-
sideration .. in Ute negotlat.Jons In
Stockholm, which began on Feb. &, 1969.
"From the very beginning of our
discussiom, the Chinese side made clear
to lU their position that Taiwan was an
inalienable part of CIUnelt territory and
that this wu a principle to which the
eh!nese gtivernment attached tht utmolt
lm~ance.
' OUr poo!Uon, which I hive otated
publicly and which we made clell' to the
Chinese from the start of our nesotta· tlw, is that the Canadian aovernment
doc1 not consider it a=prtate elthtr to
endorse or to chal e the Chinese
government's position on the status of
Taiwan.
"This has been 9Uf J>O$iUop and it con-tinues to bo our poaltton.
''Al the cornmwUqut 11ys, wt h•v•
taken note ot t)!e: Chlnete 1ovefM1ent's
statement about Taiwu. We are aware
that lhil ii tht Chinese view and we know
the importance they attach to it, but we
have no comment to m•ke on1 way or Ute
other," ht told parliament.
ShorUy before the f o r m a 1 an-
nouncement, thl Nationall1t Chlneae am-
ba11ador to Canada, Yu-Chi Hsueh Aid
lhl hid tried unaucceullilly to ptrallld~
Canada cot to recocn1M llfd Cbtilf.
lioUonalllt China tll•n ,.verod rila.
tlona with C&nada In the wal<I or Iha
canadlan reoo&nJUon of Comm-Chtna. .
' License Fee
Draws Fire
In Newport
L. PETER KRlllG
01 ltll De11r 'lltt ll•ff
Newport Beach City councilmen M•
day afternoon got a taste of the formal
reaction to the proposed business license
fe1 l_ncNue.
To tlle 1urprlie cl no one, they IOll!ld
the flavor con1lstenUy bitter.
fprmal con1Jderation on the MW
ordinance was delayed until 1 council
"1tudy 1ea1ion" next Monday, but 1tter
hearini an ouUine of the changes from
1taff member1, the councilmen U1tened
to crltici1m1 from several lrid.lvlduala
present. They included former council member
Dee Cook, repre.e.nt1n1 Corona del Mar
merchants; Ce.rt.er McDonald, mmager
of Robinson's Department Store and
llllih Mynatt, mana1er of Richard's Lido
Market.
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Senate Alters Amendment,
Exempt W oinen in Draft
All three called the proposed series cf
classifications. one cf which would
establi.~b.-a_gross~W.~~unf="'=·~to~--1--i---11
the busines:s community.
All a1reed some increase 11 fair, but
all. repeating earlle:r pronouncemeob,
1ald the: pre:se:nt $25 flit fee should limply
be raised to provide the add!Uonal
rtvenue1.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senile
modifttd today a proposed conlt.i.tutlonal
amendment lb'n equal righl!. ~ change
wollld make It clear that women would
be ei:empt from the draft.
Backers of the proposed amendment
who bad aouaht to prevent any chanae
in it at all, predicted the unexpected 3&
to 33 vote would kill the whole pro-
posal.
"It la never aolni to see the light
of day," declared Sen. Birch B' a y b ,
(D·lnd.), chief sponsor of what is: fre-
quenUy nsfernd to 11 the "women's
Ub" amendment.
Althou&h just another in 1 Jong line
of defeat.I for the Dixie bloc en thl1
!ubject, the amendment did mlfk the
first time the Senate voted on a con-
stitutional amendment to 1low achool
desegregation,
Newport Beach
Infant's Death
Ruled Natural -Coroner's depuUe1 1aid today the death
of a 14-month-Old boy in Newport Beach
Monday night was the result of natural
14In mr opinion, any amendment
would ldJ It," Senate Republican Lead-
er Htllh·Scoll of Pannsylvanla aald be-
fort "t&tl•alOa btt:an. ,. causes. . ; .. 1
.\f>llmed waa 111 ~I-~y Sen. Tb• child, Micllael · A. ~ !ht
Sim J. &rvli lt., (D-lf.C.).1tp0'ke1man son of Mr. and Mrs. JaCob Kdm'berl, tRf
for a lf'OLIP ~ OJl~Dlntl that included Anita Lane, was discovered by his fat&r
Southern1r11 RepUbllcan1 and 1uch lib-at 6: 45 p.m. after the child had stopped
eral Democntl u Edward M. Kennedy bre1thl111.
of Munchwttta. Komberr, who 11 a phy1lcl1n, ad-
The Ervin amendment actually makes ministered mouth to mouth resuscitation
two other Important changes In t h e s=ttMhe child while his wife summoned the
flve-Une propoul p1111d by the House fire dep1rtment. ·
overwhelmin1ly J11t 1ummer. Firemen used a r61U1citator on the
It alao would mike the amendment child to no avail and he w11 declared
effeetlve two years 1fter raUflcatlon by dead on arrival at Hoa1 Mamorial
three-fourths of the 1tllte1 and would Hospital.
nullify It alto1ether U 1uch ratlflcatlon Jim Dimer, a coroner's invealigator,
w•• not completed within seven years. said preliminary e:i:amination indicates
Re11rdleu of the ·outcome on th I s th@ boy died of pneumonia.
vote, Ervin 1ald ht would block final His father uld the little boy had been
acUon unleu and unUI the Senile ac-sufferin1 from cold symptoms for about
ceptl languaa• 1t1Un1 "this article shall two weeks, and had been rather fussy
not deprive the United States or a n y Monday.
1tate of the leglslatlve right to extend He: was put down for 1 nip at about 5
to female peraona: any right or protec-p.m. and wa11 bre:athing heavily when he
Uona: 1ancUoned by the 5th and 14th was checked at 8 p.m.
Amtndmenta to the ConstltuUon." Bisner said a death of this type la 1n
An 1mendment by Sen. J1me1 B. Al-example of the Sudden Death Syndrome.
Jen, (D-Al1.), w11 voted down Monday. "Thia kind of thing happen1 to all klnd1
It would have tacked onto the e q u a I of children -not just doctors' kids.
rt;htl propoa:al another consUtutional "The children don't exhibit any
amendment 11nctlonlng freedom-<>!· outward 1ymptom1 of a serious illnes!I,
choice 1ebool dese1regatlon plans. and the next thing the parentll know, the
The me1111re was defeated 67-17. child i1 dead," Bisner said.
Under the complex city proposa~ in-
come from the: tax would double from the
present $225,000. Doubling the flat fee
would accomplish the same thing, the
businessmen said.
City Manager Harv@y L. Hurlburt
outlined the reasoning for the proposed
.change,_pointing Q!Jt that lhe council last
ye1r had proposed It becauu the nat fee
a11e:11ment i1 inequitable.
Commenting on the oppositien ,
Hurlburt pointed out, "No group ii going
to approve a raise In taxes."
He 1ald the current structure is
unreasonably low. He catle:d It
"ridiculous."
He also pointed out that the con·
troversial gross receipts tax will only af·
feet. about·one·third of the bulineues in
the ol~y .... ~ ~"" -It is Intended to cover l!lost ·retail
stores and other commercia l
establishments that deal directly with the
public .
Oth@r lirm1 would be tJxed In various
other ways, some of them on the number
of employes they have and others on tht
amount of their payrolls.
Contractors would be char1ed a Oat fee
of $100, under a 1eparate classification,
and this brought criticism from Mynatt,
who pointed out that 1ome d@velopers
make far more than retail merchants,
yet would be paying only a (raction of the
tax.
Cook said a major reason the people he
represented oppose the new plan is that
they will have to disclose their earnings
to local officials. l..r
He charged that cily workers "have big
eyes and big ears and they have been
known to talk."
McDonald said the increase his store
wlll pay will have "no great e:ffect on our
profit,'' but, he 11ld, "it'1 a matter of
principle.''
He said the revenues paid by 11rge
retailers will be disproportionate to the
amount of services received from the cl·
ty.
A GOOD WORD PASSED AROUND ABOUT
A BUSINESS IS INVALUABLE. ,A BAD WORD CAN
BE UNFORTUNATE.
OUR GROWING SUCCESS IN THE PAST 13
YEARS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE "GOOD WORDS"
AND REFERRALS SENT TO US BY OUR CUSTOMERS.
NO A M 0 U NT OF ADVERTISING CAN
REPLACE A PERSONAL RECOMMENDATION .
WE ARE NOT INFALLIBLE, BUT WE ARE
WORKING TOWARDS THAT GOAL. BY GIVING
OUR C U ST 0 M E R S THE BEST SERVICE AND
QUALITY POSSIBLE.
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~!;:.~~, 1Jf;l·~~'~ lii11ll1 I
ALDEN'S
. I· .• ~ ~I ~I . -l .i '·•I • ... .__ I I '•'· ..... ;. -~ ,1 ~--... __ ·--~
l _ --.,.. -~-1-.· .
.. 1. "1 -f: ··-.~ ..
.--.. -N-,.-.N-.-. 0-.. -N.-I-, CARPETS • DRAPES
TUSTIN CaR •• ,
ALOIN'I 110 "'" c.11rm 1663 l'lacantla Ava.
11114 ~~::·:.::.'! c.i~. COSTA MESA
111.1144 646-4831
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T UESDAY, OCTO,ER 13, 1970
.. , ,, I , Today's-Pb• · .
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Seal . Beach Council Disinisses Palace cas~l
! • : ,.
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
~ .. Dl£I¥' l"lllt .....
'Jbe portals to the controversial Marina
Palace were flUng open once again Moo.
day night l>Y .Seal Beich city councilmen
who voted 3·2 to dismW all misconduct
chjlrges. against the dance haU's ~ge
meilf
William . L. Robertson, 71, appeared to
be salisfied with the decision, which
would allow him to continue with his
Saturday night teen $.Q:a!S, othe~s were
not.
Amid· ·loud groans about half or the--
persons picking the ISO.seat Seal Beach
council chambers left when it became ap-
parent how the vote was going to go.
· The motion to dismiss· t.be accusations
wu made by Mayor Morton A. Baum
and .ppbeld by Councilmen Thomas
Hogard and Conway Fuhrman. Coon·
cilmen Lloyd Gumm-ere and Harold
Holden 'opposed it.
At the same ~ime, however , the three
men charged City Attorney Jim Bent.son
with drawing up a new dance hall
ordinance which wolild raise the age limit
of patrons rrom its current 14.-20 age to
over 18.
"It is unbelievable that members or
this council could sit through six weeks o(
testimony and believe that the witnesses
were not telling the truth," fumed Gum-
mere as Baum announced his motion.
Robertson, a former gambling hall
ewner, bad been accused of lax
supervision which led to obscent conduct,
intoxicated behavior and narcotics traffic
among some of tbe-teen-aeen attending
his dances.
His attorney, Russell W. Bledsoe,
argued that the charges were contrived
and used to lay a "smokescreen" over
criticism of the Riverfront
Redevelopment Agency (RRA), which
reportedly planned a •100 million
beachfront development.
The defense alleged a conspiracy ez-
isted between fo,rmei"-Glty Manager Lee
Risner, Police i::ti.ief Lee Case and cur-
rent City Manager Dennis Courtemarche.
Bledsoe charged the three attempted to
hide the RRA project from public
scrutiny by exploiting the sensational
dance hall accusations.
Councllmim liog~ and ~'
along with Mayor Baum, formed a ~
way voting bloc last JUl)r '¥1 and fired Ci-
ty Manager Risner as their flra t order o{
business.
Risner, who was called to the witness
stand several times during the protracted
dance hall hearings, vehemently denied
entering any conspiracy with Case and
Courtemarche.
Both . Case and Courtemarche also
denied any lnvoJvement in a plot against
the dance ball.
During the 90-minute session. Monday
night Councilman Fuhrman reaffirmed
his belief In the conspiracy, however, and
charged that political payoffs have
already been made to pave the way· for
the redevelopment project. ---
Likewise, Mayor Morton Baum -aaid,
"The fonne~ city manager and the ad·
. ministration is guilty of abusing Its ..ad·.
minlstrative authority in handling the
case against the Marina Palace."
Councilman Gummere, who favored a
t~week suspension and a year of pro-
b3Uon for the Marina P a 1 a c e , aak!,
':Thete ha.s l>o<n_no., pU!<!l,Q(Jl)y_c<>n·
.splracy in any way, shape or form. We
have an honorable chief of police wilh 29
years of ezperience and I am aure he
didn't lie unqer oath."
He added that all tha talk about'b!ll>-:
rise developments w11 "moeUy • im-:
againation" and that be knew ol no· one :
who woold want IA> spend .$100 mWlan ""
!Uih a development in the dty o1 ·sell _
Beach. ·:
Chief Case, who had beendd1nl ~u ·
p~utor during the, hearings and Pf'9'-~
ductd severar undercover witneuu, •111d
the council decision wu "unbeJ.leviblt."' ·
Councilman Haro.Id Holden,' wbo:-\QI:
obviously mttled at !ht ltUM taken ·by:
three of his fellow councJ1men. added, 0 1:
thloi.Mr._Robertsi>ll _hal@!!let<~tio!_:
over three members of our council.:
Wh8teYer he Wanta, he gtu. 'The "hOle '.
hearing was i farce, we shouldn't have :
done it.
l(idnapers' Lawyer Freed
One-HurdlB-el-eured f-or -H-ostages in-eanan-n---
MONTREAL (UPI) -The lawyer for
two groups of separatist kidnapers was
released. from jail today, clearing one
obstacle in the negotiations with the
government to release two political
hostages.
Robert Lemieux told newsmen he
would meet government negotiator Robert
Demers later to::lay to continue lalks
_aime:d__at a;aining eedom for British
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SUPERVISING SUPERVISOR SUPERVISES CAROM LESSON
Scotty Butorec, 6, L:aurie Richardson ind 'Rip' Ribble
Huntington's Rip Ribble·
pirects 27-ring Circus
To thousands of young school kids, Jon
"'-ip" Ribble is the fun and games
J1l8sler of Huntington Beach.
\}te directs a 27-ring circus every day
when the school bells chime their last
message and the youngsters are free.
Rip is responsible for the 'll different
aiter school programs guided by the
city 's recreation department.
.... , just like to see chik!ren smile," is
the way Rip ezplains his entry irito the
recreation field. '
and an assistant to help the youngsters
enjoy themselves.
"We want to help every child who
comes on our playground to have a good
tim e," Rip said. "
Ribble 'is still getting his feet settled
in the Huntington Beach job, but even
though he just graduated from Cal State,
Fullerton last June, he's not short on
experience.
In 1965-66 he was a playground co-
ordinator in Costa Mesa while attend·
ing Orange Coast Coilege. The n e z t
year he shilled to Cal State. Fullerton
!See GAMES Pqe ZI
Canada Tells
Red China
Relations .Tie
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FrOa Wire Services
Canada today announced establishment
of diplomatic relations with Red China.
Soon after, Nationalist Qtina severed Ill
relations with Canada.
Jn announcing the diplomatic ties,
Canada acknowledged the Peking regtme
as "the sole legal government of China."
External Affiirs Minister Mitchell
Sharp announced the move in the House
of Commons and released a joint com·
munique, distributed simultaneously in
Peking and ottawa.
•·the government of Canada and the
government of the PeoPfe's Republic of
China, in accordance with the principles
of mutual respect for ~vereignty and
territorial Integrity, -nonb'lterference -in
each other's internal affairs and equality
and mutual benefit, have decided upon
mutual recognition and establishment of
diplomatic relations, effective October 13,
1970," the joint communique said.
"The Chinese government reaffirms
that Taiwan is an inaJienable part of the
territory of the People's Republic of
China. The Canadian government takes
note of this position of the Olinese
government.
"The Canadian government recognizes
the government of the People's Republic
of China as the sole legal government of
China.
"The Canadia:-. and C h i n e s e
governments have agreed to ezchange
ambassadors within six months, and to
provide all n~sary asaistance for the
establishment and the performance of the
functions of diplomatic mi;ssions in their
respecUve capitals, on the basis of
equality and mutual benefit and in ac·
cordance with international practice."
He said Taiwan had been a major con-
sideration in the negotiations i n
Stockholm, which began on Feb. 6, 1969.
"From the very beginning of our
discussions, the Chinese side made clear
to us their position that Taiwan was an
inalienable part of Chinese territory and
that this was a principle to which the
Chinese government attached the utmost
importance.
Trade Commissioner James R. Cross and
Quebec Labor and Immigration Minister
Pierre Laporte, hostages o( terrorist cells
of, the Front de Liberation du Quebec
(FLQ).
Lemieux said his Initial talks with
Demers, held into the ear!y mdrnlng
hours ln the city jail where Lemieux has
been .1;ie1d since Sunday, were "very
element.ar)'."
Lemieux enter~ no plea -formally
!isled in the records as a not guilty plea
-to charges of obstructing justice and
Interfering with the work of police by
statements made Oct. 9.
Judge Maurice Allard re I eased
Lemieux on his O\Vn recogniiance pen-
ding setting of a trial date Friday. .
11\e two commando cells have been
~greeiog on the ransom terms, with
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the celfholding Laporte sticking tOl!libtr
demands. ·
At opening talks between Lemieuz and
Demq-s Monday night, police ~ a
police shield three blocks deep lll'Ollild .!he
jail as the lawjten met. ·
In Ottawa, hetlcopter loadS ·of hoope:
arrived to ·help . the · Royal Calfaillon
Mounted Police on gu.atd:"dUty'...;;tlit first
such use of troops fn the Cinldiaft capital
!_II peacetime historY. '
HUNTINGTON BEACH FIREMEN· DOUSE BURNING ·CArf AFTER MONDAY NIGHT CW~~'
Motorists Contin ue to Run Into Each Other •t Cqrner of Heil ind Goth•rd · : ·
Officer Finds No-no
In Newspaper Garden
HILO, Hawaii (UPI) -Police officer
Patrick Cootey glanced at a planter boic
in front of the Hawaii Tribune·Herald
while walk.ink his beat and noticed
something usual. "One of Lhe plants look·
ed like a no-no as far as garden plants
are concerned," Cootey said Monday.
He summoned plant ezpert.s from the
vice squad, who identified the plant as
marijuana, "healthy and green, about
two monUis olii." The newspaper's
general manager, editor and gardener
said they didn't know bow the plant got
there.
Car Burs·ts Into Flames
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In Crasll{; Three Hurt
' Two cars collided and ode burst 'Into
flames Monday night at the intersection
of Heil Avenue and GothJrd Street in
Huntington Beach.
Three persons were Injured. One was
hos pitalized. .'
Police said the drivers 'of the two cars
In the 9:50 p.m. collisibn were Leona
Skiles, 36, Pasadena, anti Robert Fisher,
25, of 10201 Kalmu I.lne, Huntfngto'n
Beach.
to Gothard. The city has put.an 1ddltlonal
warning on the 1top aigM, alerting
drivers that Gothard Street traHlc does
not stop.
Oraage
He was hired by the cily last January
11 one' of the parks deparbnent's three
recreation supervisors. His domain in-
cludes the after school programs, teen
activities Christmas and Ea.Ster ex-
cursions,' summer excursions and Ulen
clooc<s. Unruh Hits Irvine Trade
Both Fisher and Mis! Skiles wtte
treated at Huntington Intercommunlty
Hospital for minor injuries and 'later
released. Charlene WeJemlron , 34, of
16152 Davis Lane, lllntington Beach, a
passenger in. the Ski.Its car, wai reported
In satisfactory condition this morning at
Weatlaer
Low overea1t and patchy foa ii
llie 'pre=lpUon !or w..tneadiy,
wealbenrile, with tem~turel
rtmaining In the niiddle 1o•s tlft ,
lhe coa.t and •round a ·de ......
furlber inland. ·
At rr, Rip is one of the y0W1ger
manbers of the park department'•
qterarchy. He comes in with fresh Ideas
which have already sparked a few pro-
gr11n changes. .
I th the past, the after school program
Was called just that -after school. This
year Rip listened to the way the kids pro-
nounce it. liked what they said and
renamed the program "Alla 's Cool," a
slighUy=more hip expression which is cat-
chlng on fast among the grade schoolers.
"Our main objective In this program,"
lllp uplained, "It to recruit tv<ry child
tn the area thet can beneUt from ec-
Uvity.'' .
'"'l'he 'kid who cen go home and toss a
lootball with his brother doesn't need us
nearly as much u the kld wbo goes home
and settles in front of lht boob tube ."
Rip'• programs lncludt active spori s,
tables games end guided activities. At
each school be ba.1 a recreation leader
Candidate's Campaign Bus Comes to Harbor Are.a
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Posed on the shoreline or Upper
Newport Bay, Democratic gube.matorlal
candidate J ess Unruh today alleged that
the Irvine Company Is engaged in a
•·swindle-swap" in the proposed Back
Bay tidelands exchange with Orange
Cf>unty government.
Unruh, in What he termed another of
his · special news events, brought 1
busload of ntw!Qlen and camp followera
to the Harbor Area for yet another of his
attacks against big business and the
Establishment.
Monday It was Standard OJI Company's
refinery in El Segundo that drew his at-
tention Jn 11n fl.llack on air pollution and
Incumbent GoY. l14nald ~an.
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Today, the Irvine Company drew the
focus of Unruh's wrath.
Unruh asserted that the proposed
Newport Bay land .uh>nge -.Id des\y
public access to prime S o u th e r n
C31ifomia beach land.
The Oem'o<:rallc gubernatorial can-
didate ,.Id If elected Nov. l h< -with
the aid Of o t b e r DemocraUc office
seekers -would repeal the land transac-
tion bet,...n the Irvine Company and
Orange County.
Unruh lslued the cha,.. In a low--page
statement prepared for delivery on-site
at Pack Bay.
He 1ald Orange C,Ounty teeks to tr4de
the Irvine Comp1111 1$7 ..... <I( prlmt .
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beach land · ln return for 450 acres of
mudflats, underwater islands and county-
controUed acre.age In what "ii probeb\y
· the .wont government real estate deal
since the Indians :were talked out of
Manhattan Island "for $24."
Unnih charged· !bat the stale Lands
Commission approved the exchange
shorUy after Gov. Reagan took office in
1967. He said this occurred less than 1
year after "precisely the aame plan" had
been rejected by the three-member com-
mlsalon ln 1966 during former governor
Edmund G. "Pat" Brown1s term.
Unruh charged that Irvine makes the
beachland private. ban public accw to
Ult< UNRUH, P11e I)
the hospital. J.
Police sAid SkUts' car erupted In
flames after the Impact, but all oc-
cupants escaped )efore it caught flre.
The fire wu doused by Hunllngton Beach
firemen:
The Heil-Goth lntmectlon hit ~·\'-. ed IOffie c:ontro rsy 1 In the J>;&at f.e w
months beca~ehicles on Hell Avenwe
m~ atop, but \fJose on-GotharWStreet 4o
not. UnUI recenQy ttelf did not go tluooeh
• Meeting Planned
Members oll'the Huntington Btach High
School booster club will mett at ·'7:30
p.m. Thunday in the teachen loungt at
the school. ..
The boolttr club Is composed of area
adult! who .,upport lhe high tchool'1 Ith·
leUc 1ctlvttles.
I
INSIDE TOD,\ Y
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J DAILY PILOt H
RJtss Deny
Having Sub
BaseinCuba
Mi;>scow (UPI} -The Soviet govern-
ment • omdally denied today It wa1
buUdlng a nuclear &ubmartne base in
Cuba .. and accused the N I x o n
Administration of deliberately or ir·
responsibly spreading "falllfications."
A government statement distributed by
Tass, the official Soviet news agency,
said the U.S. reports Ui Rusiians were
engaged in building naval installations In
Cuba "play into the hands only of .those
who are interested. in fanning the: war
psychosis and compllcaUn1 Uii situation
in that region of the world."
"Those wbo deliberately a r ir·
responslblY are taking up and spreading
such falsification Play into the bandl of
the foes ·of peace," ll aaid.
"The Soviet Union bas not built and ii
not building a military base on Cuba and.
is not -doing anythlna that would con·
tradicl the. understanding reach e ·d
between the governments qf the USSR
and the United States in 1!182," the state-
ment said ..
The year 1962 marted the CUban
missile crisis when President John F.
Kennedy ordered their removal In a tense
confrontation that appeared at the time
to be on the verge of breaking into direct
conflict.
The Ni.I.on Administration first raised
the 1ubmartne base issue Sept. 25 at a
regular Defen1e Department briefina, A
Pentagi>o spokesman sald activity bad
been detected at Cienfuegos, on CUba's 01o1Lv ,.,LOT s11tt , • ._
soutllern·coast, that could be the start of MRS. ANN MORELAND PACKS THE MAIL FOR CRUSADE 1---&1_JbOl11SseLtf~ nucteM Polaris-t~--~ In Hunti~ton BeaEh,~ef!als for _!..!'nited Effort submarines.
l
Later the same day a top White House
official abo expresred serious concern
about the base -ii that was what was
being built. The official, who did not
permit use of his name in accounts by
reporters, said the United Slates would
regard a bale for missile submarinu in
Cuba "with the utmost seriousness."
The Russian newspapers dLmtlssed the
allegationa within a fliw days, accusing
the United States of trying t0 toUZ. rela·
tions with Moscow.
ConUnued retqencea ap:iona: &0me U.S._
officials to the CUban activity, toa:ether
with U.S. charges of Russian complicity
in Egyptian violations of~ Middle East
cea»tire, 1ppattJ>Uy further irritated
Sovtet officials. · '· n-'"'"' llld to be partly the reuon why PmJiler Aleiel I. K .. ygln decided
not to attend the Unied Nations 25th an-
niversary meeting wblch ·~ Wed·
neaday, ~ ruled out 1 possible IUJll!Dll
colifvm:e 1'1th President Nixon.
Dlplom;tUc observers in Moscow · J.n.
~ted Waahlnglon's r e p e a t e d
retertnces:toAthi-alli!ged mlsaile bue 84
poa!bly being bued on broader pollcy
consldentlonl, Including the Middle Ela!
eris~. Throughout, the U.S. offlcials
acltnorrledged that only dubioUI and
dated information was available to in-
dicate missile sites might be being bulll
Suspect Held
On Rape Charge
A 27-year-old mlft waa tn Huntington
B<iCllCity Jail-UfdOY"CCUsed of kld-
napirig a 19-year-old Long Beach girl,
taplni her at knifepolnt and dwnping
her in a eecluded portion of the fash-
ionable· HunUngton Harbour area .
The alleged auallant, identified as
Gary M. )\,.ker, 1211 Molino St., Long
Beaeh, wu 1rrested by two Huntington
Beach detectives at hi! ...... home around
4 a.m. today.
Det. Sgt. Monty McKennon said t h e
wo.man _g~ve a description of the aw·
pect and his automoblle.
The. woman, according to deleellves,
had been waiting on a bus bench in
Long Beach Monday night when she ac·
ceptOO a ride. They said she was driven
to the comer of Saybrook Lane a n d
Humbold Drive where the assault as-
sertedly occurred at 10:45 p.m.
DAILY PILOT
OllAHGl COAST r u•Lls+11NO CCMl'AN'I'
Reiert H. w •••
l"nskl«il .,,.. ,,.."'*"
J1c~ R. Cu1l1y
Vitt 1'r111dtr1t •r.d Gt~.it•I Mtn1tir
lhom•• Ktt'ril
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Tho11111 A, Mur,hf/1•
M1,,.11M l!ai;or
Al•~ Dlrkl11
w .. 1 Or111tt etwi1r 1!:fllll"
AIDert W. l et••
"'*left IEtlllOf
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1717.S 1 •• ,h levltweP4
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C•i. Mcu: m w111 ••w '""' ~ .. IOI! !211 W..t k-..i tw!w_,.,..
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,
United Crusade Begins
Campaign in ~.untington
At least 25,000 letters were mailed out
by Huntington Beach United Crusade
Ca:mpalgn volunteers Monday as the
drive toward the city's goal of $154,000
got under way,
-'Jbe ma.iling ·was to all residences ln the
city. There will be subsequent drives
directed toward the buslness, pro.-
fessional and other groups in the city,
campaign chairman William Foster, ex·
plained.
Includi:d in the mailing was a brochure
up~ _the ftµlction of the crusade ' . .
with a list of the 31 agencies receiving
assistance, plus a pledge card.
1Jfrs. Ann Moreland, chairman of the
residential rnailihg, said volunteers from
the Campfire Girls, Girl Scouts, YMCA
and Boy Scouts have worked at ad·
dre~ing the envelopes and parceling
them Jor several months.
Mrs. Moreland pointed out that a
survey found that one out of three
families in Huntington Beach received
services from one of the agencies aided
by tlle United Cfusade.
Judge Denies Seal Beach
Apartment Zoning Plea
• \ plea for apartments on· a ·ru1p of
rallrbad land in Seal Beach failed to sway
a Superior Court judge Monday.
Judge Harmon G. Scoville told Modular
Ttehiiolol)' Inc. to seek other mear!Ji to
acltleve apartment ·zoning in Seal Beach.
Modular Technology, formerly Apollo
DevelOpmeril Co.;-had sought-a wrlt of-
mandate from Orange County Superior
Court to force the city of Seal Beach to
grant apartment zoning on a 100..!oot
wide strip of land through downtown SeaJ
From Page 1
GAMES ..•
and also became a playgroWld leader
in Garden Grove.
Rip was a physical education major
in college and planned to be a coach,
but decided that working with klds on
a wider,. recreational level would be
more rewarding.
"I fir st thought about CQIJChing while
ln the Marine 'Corps, befort CQ\!ege,"
Rip said. He served three years in the
Marines, all of them ttationed in Santa
Ana., During his free hours he worked
at Disneyland as a ride operator on the
jungle cruise and the submarines, a
rather natural beginning for a recrea·
lion man.
"?t1y thing is making people happy,"
Rip says.
According to news clippings and his
own experiencea, Rip was quite succe.ss-
fUI at that ln Garden Grove.
One Idea be sparked there was an ex·
hib!Uon of army models.
"A bunch of the kids wanted to build
models based on mllltary objects. We
started a model club, then 1 found this
man in Anaheim who had built 500
different army models."
R1p •nd his kids, plus . the Anah"elm
m•n, put all their models together In
a huse Indoor display set up in various
1eenes.
''We had t,MlO visitors in one week
to see It," Rip said.
Anther time he helped youngsters set
up a .spook house •' a school. Ht 11.ld
2,500 kids filed thzough to see t h e
ghosts in four days.
And another Gardt.n Grove project
wat the construction of a 24·foot Ind.Ian
tepee visible for three city blocks, "be-
cause the kids wanted to do il"
Such ideas will t00n be t11minl onto
the Huntington Beach ecene.
Rip's philosophy ts simple -it's com·
munlcaUon.
"That's the key word, communicate
with the kids. JJ people would stop Iden-
tifying ""Ith groups and just learn to
uae their own peraonalltles to commun·
kate, the world would be much hap-
pier."
Beach.
The land Is part Of the city's Rlverlront
Develo pment Agency formed two years
ago for urban renewal, Modular Wl.!1 de·
nled its zoning request March 18 on a :J..2
vote of the city planning commission.
The land in question Is part of the old
Pacific Electric ·right..of.way and is not
owned by Modular Technology.
Judge Scoville said he denied the writ
of mandate because the company has not
pursued all pos,,ible methods to solve the
dlspute with the city of Seal Beach on
the municipal level.
Local Talent
Set for Valley
Halloiveen Days
Local talent will brighten the day for
FQuntain Valley residents four days next
week at four different shopping centers in
preparation for the city's third annual
Halloween Parade and Barbecue.
Jack Nelson, bUled as the clown of the
keyboard , will perform at 5 p.m., Oct. 19,
in the Alpha Beta shopping center,
Magnolia Street and Warner Avenue.
Entertainment will also be provided by
the Fountain Valley School Di!trlct
Orchestra.
Jim and Joanie Seigfried will sing !or
the public at 5 p.m., Oct. 20, in the
Village shopping center, Magnolia Slreet
and Talbert Avenue. Charley Baker's
tumblers and Musako Henwo od 's
Japanese dancers will also perform.
Mrs. Bessie Kjellin wil l present her
Mexican dancers at 5 p.m .. Oct. 21, at
7..ody's shopping center, Harbor Boule-
vard and Edinger Avenue. Their act wilt
be joned by Martin Ramos on the guitar
and Sylvia Palamontes singing.
The last show of the four-day serie!
will be Jayme Boyd, current Miss Hun-
tington Beach, dancing under her stage
name "Makanani'' at the Gemco shop.
ping CC!nter, Brookhurst Street and
Warner Avenue, at 5 p.m .. Oct. 22. Miss
Boyd will be joined by the folk singing
duet of Mrs. Jackie Lindquist and her
daughter Sue 1nd the Fountain Valley
Square Dance Club.
All four shows •re warm-ups to the
main event. Oct. 24, the p11.rade and
barbecue spon.sored by lhe chamber of
commerce.
Center Model Shown
A model or the proposed 18.5 mtlUon
Huntington Beach Civic Center will be on
display through Oct . 20 on the ground
noor of the Broadway department 1tote
•L llunliJliton Ceoler.
,
lJ .S. Tightens Security
Bombing Outbreak Prompts Decisio~
By Uol°&ed Pm1 late.matlo1>1l
The govei'nmtnt IMOUnced today Jt
was tightening security al all federal
building_s because or the recent outbreak
of es:plosions and the threat of further vi-
olence by militants.
General Services Administrator Robert
L. Kunzlg , the overseer of all federal
buildings, said open access to most fed·
era! buildings has been restricted and
guard.!I placed on patrol.
Security patrols have been ordered
around the clock Instead of the customary
ti p.m, to 7 a.m.
The move came after a day of eight
bomb bla.!lts -five ln Rochester, N.Y .•
two in New York City and one In Orlando,
Fla.
The explosions, which injured three per·
sons, followed, coincidentally perhaps,
warnings by the revolutionary "Weather.
man" group that Jt would mount an of·
tensive ol terror.
The es:plosioJU in Roche.ner, all lbe re-
sult of dynamite detoaatklns:, were direc.
ted against a federal and a county office
building, two predomin.11ntly Negro
churches. and the home of a union official.
Cfu o!ficials were puuled by the a~
parently unrelated nature of the targets
aod the motives and culprit! Involved in
the blasts which erupted within a ten
minute span.
Rochester Police Commissioner John
Maatrella theorized three groups could
be involved in the es:plos.ion, one of which
"half destroyed" the five-story stone fed·
era! building.
The Monroe County office building ap.
peared hardest hit by the blasts which
smashed alriiost every window on ooe side
of the structure. Estimates for repairs to
the century-old building ranged to above
1100.000.
The home of Dick Clark, business man.
ager of Loca l 832, Operating Engineers
Union, was the first bombing target.
"We don 't have aoy idea who dla it or
why," Clark said.
Jn New York City, • 1unpowder pipe.
bomb exploded in a sidewalk planter out.
tide the NeW Yorlc HUton hotel In mlcf.
Manhattan, shattering windows and aw:U..
enlng guests.
In Brooklyn, a "low grade explosive"
ln a tin can blew up under a fence in
front of an old tenement. A polictrnan
said ,he believed "some kJd just wanted
to make a loud bang."
The Orlando explosion occurred at a
construction site while two Air Force men
were trying to dismantle a homemad e
bomb. The men were not believed-to be
seriously Injured. Police could offer' no
motive but police said Jt was the 1-bird
construcUon firm to be bit by bomb! ln
recent weeks.
Monday's bombings brought to IS the
number of bombings Jn the ptst week.
Others have occurred in California, IUJ.
nois atld Washington.
Apartment
Study Set
For Planners
Irvine Claims Unruh' s
Attack 'Cheap Politics'
Irvine Company officials today labeled
Fountain Valley PI an n in g Com· Jess Unrub's attack on the Upper
missioner! will study a request for 104 Newport Bay tidelands er.change "cheap
apartments near the northwest corner of polltical theatrics" and challenged him to
Brookhurst Street and Slater Avenue at put-up or shut-up if be really believes the
their regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. land swap ls illegal.
Wednesday. The statements came in reply to
Donald Harper iire(jUeSlffig higtiOensf. .Unruh~a -allegalions__thaLtbe P~
ty apartment zoning for 4.2 acres north of tidelands exchange between the ranch
Starfish Avenue, just off Brookhurst. company and Orange County government is, in his words, "a swindle-swap." The city planning staff ha s recom-
mended that the commission approve Gilbert W. Ferguson, Irvine's vice
apartment zoning for the area, but president of corporate communJcatlon,
withhold approval of the plans until commented., ''II Mr. Unruh in fact
Harper reduces the number 0 f believes that about the Upper Bay land
apartments ....,,uested. exchange. be should file appropriate • ~" charges." "His plans now call for 24.B apartments Then Ferguson added, "He won't, of per acre, we want 20 per acre," a course, because it .isn't. spokesman for the planning department said today "It is dlltre.!laing that be has become IO
Tb ar~a Js masterplanned f 0 r desperate ~~ he will e~gage in this kind - -i scneaui-of cheap poltlical theatrics," he u.l.d. apartmenlsr !he zo~e change s -. ·-• ''The Upper Bay exchange ill ilow beinf
ed for a pubh~ hearing Wednesday night. tried in the courts," Ferguson pointed.
, Planners will also open. a public hear· out, "A determination into lts Je1allty in~ on a proposed ordinance chang~ and its constitutionality ls yet to be reacb-
which wo~ld ~t a $25 fee for area var1· ed.
ance applications. "One ruling that has been made
There is currently no f~ charg~ f°[ however," he said, "is that there is n~ r~uests for an area vari~e. City 0 • evidence of fraud or misrepresentation in
flcials say such requests tie-up ~ any of the negotiations and deci!lons that
department heads and are excessive culminated in slate approval of the ex·
because of the lack of a fee. change
Planfler1 are expected ~ recommend "Or~e County superior Court Judge
the $25 fee to the city council. Claude M. Owens announced that finding:
last Aug. 18. We regret Mr. URnlhJs •Po
parent ignorance or this ruling, ti he said. 2 Gunmen Strike "Further," be said, "tlle 4!0 ICl'el of
In Huntington
The owner of a small Huntington Beach
market was told to "play it cool" by a
couple of customers Monday night, but
the game cost him $185.
James R. Sissier, manager of the Stop
and Go Market, 17490 Beach Blvd ., told
police officers the two men, both in their
JO's and bearded, shoved a blue steel
revolver in hi.!1 face and demanded cash.
"We want all youi money. be cool, be
cool," ()ne of them urged.
He was, and the cash register rang a
$185 pay out
Stamp Thief Licked
EXETER, England (UPI) -Peter
Blakely, 26, released from Dartmoor
Prison July 29, was convicted Monday of
stealing the prison doctor's slamp col·
lecUon while a convict and was sent back.
to Dartmoor to serve nine more months.
Husband Sought
In Wife's Death
A Garden Grove woman was appar·
ently strangled to death In her home
Monday night and police have a dragnet
out for her husband.
Mr!. Debbi O'Leary, 20, was found
in the bedroom closet by police who had
responded to an anonymous telephone
call that there was a dead body at the
home address , 11535 Stuart Drive.
Her husband, John Bruce O'Leary,
26, is being sought in a statewide drag-
net. He is described as male, w h i t e ,
5-foo4. eight inches tall about 145 pounds
with red hair and blue eyes.
Police this morning refused to re-
veal any motive they might SUJpect
for the murder.
land the county receives in the exchan1e
will provide public park sites tbat en·
Cilmpa.ss more than 200 acres and will Jn-
creaae the usable water area of the Up-
per Bay by aome 50 percent.
"Finally," Ferguson said, "Mr. Unruh
asserted that the Slate Lands Com-
mJuio,n__dWf_ Governor Brown's ad·
ministration bad deiiiea approvil w-tbe
exchange.
"This ls not true," he said. "The com-
mission in March 1967 withheld approval
with the e1.pllcit underslandlng that it
would q:ain consider the matter further
when more information was provided. u
Ferguaon said, "I might add that I
per.!IOnally consider Mr. Unruh's confused
oppoaiUon to the concept of joint develep-
ment of the Upper Bay both cynical and
irraponeible."
From Page 1
UNRUH .•.
It, and then sells .,$200,000 IUIW')' bomea
to the very rich."
"Developments like this should not be
built in a place or public beach when
there is such a shortage of recreation
areu in Southern California," the can-
didate said.
He added, "What the county gave
lrvlne and what Reagan's land com·
miuion nJJhed to bless wu a blatant fift
of valuable land in return for this tr uh.••
Unruh claimed the outcome of the swap
would be the slate stuck wlth virtually
useless land while the big development
reaps riches by building homes on prime
beachfront property .
"This shameful land grab is typical of
the way Reagan coddles the rich and
soaks it to the re1t," Unruh said in pre-
pared remarks.
He claims the Irvine Company doesn't
ye t have clear title to the beach but
"already is trying to ketp the publlc
out."
Without the campaign funds to match
Reagan 's television campaign -or to
even try -Unruh continues to use the
tactics of "surprise campaign visits"
designed to get as much free news
coverage as possible.
Some observers have come to call
them "field trips."
Republlcans call them gimmick!.
The Unruh campaign, continuing in the
underdog role, sWI bas trouble 1tinlng
up enthusiasm even among Democratic
groups. ,,....,.
A GOOD WORD PASSED AROUND ABOUT
A BUSINESS IS INVALUABLE. A BAD WORD CAN
BE UNFORTUNATE. -OUR GROWING SUCCESS IN THE PAST 13
Y~RS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE "GOOD WORDS"
AND REFERRALS SENT TO US BY OUR CUSTOMERS.
NO A M 0 U NT OF ADVERTISING CAN
REPLACE A PERSONAL RECOMMENDATION.
WE ARE NOT INFALLIBLE, BUT WE ARE
WORKING TOWA RDS THAT GOAL, BY GIVING
OUR CU ST 0 MER S THE BEST SERVICE AND
QUALITY POSSIBLE.
ALDEN'S
.--,.-.-,.-•• -•• -0-.. -•• -, -. CARPETS e DRAPES
TUSTIN Ctl.,.
ALDIN'S 1 l'la """"'•••rm 663 centla Ave.
11174 ~~';'!!,~ Ctllf. COSTA M!SA
IJ<-114• 646-4838
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INNOC ENT ABROAD-Thomasina (Tommie\ Mix,
at age three, arrives in England'in anns of 'ber act-
Cir father, with mother, Victoria Forde.\ and d~4·s
hQri::e Tcny. The occasion was the famuy•s ·arnval
at Southr::.mpton in 1925. A crowd of 25,000 ~as on
the dock to greet Mixl a turnout typical of recep-
tions given the silent movie cowboy hero. The fam-
ily ha.d to be loaded into a van on the dock to get
through tl)e_ mob.
TOMMIE GUNN GATHERS HER "ADOl'lED llROOD AROUND HER AT HER LAGUNA HOME
Gu ssy, 2, Gina, 3, J•son, 4 (Jrom left) Liv• Wlttr:Memories Gt Western Star · '
Pilot Promotes Pair
Nail, Krieg Win Advan cem ents at News paper
D.fltLY Pl\.OT lttff""""
NEWPORT CITY EDITOR NAMED TO NEW POST
Promotions of Richard P. Nall to as-
sistant managing editor and L. Peter
Krieg to Newport Beach city editor were
announced today by DAILY PILOT Edi-
tor f homas Ke.evil.
Nall, 41, formerly served on tht DAI·
LY PILOT staff as South Orange Coun-
ty Editor, making his headquarters in
Laguna Beach and ·San Clemente-San
Juan Capistrano. He now makes his
headquarters in Costa Mesi and joins
the newspaper's other as11istant manag-
ing editor, Cliarles H. Loos, in super-
visory duties.
Nall joined .the DAILY PILOT staff
in May of 1966 as Laguna clly edllOr.
He was prevk>wly Imperial Valley bur-
eau chie£ for lhe San Diego Union after
earlier stair stints on the Imperial VaJ..
Jey Prl!.$5. the South Bay Da1ty Brteze
and Uie Brawley News. He attended El
Camino Junior College, Oregon State Uni.
vef!ity aod the Univef!ity of M!ssouri.
He and his wife. Teresa, make tbeir
home in Laguna Beach and have one
son, Richard, 2.
L. Peter Kri911 Rlcherd-'P.•Nell ' ~~~~~~~----==---~~~~..,;,..~~~~~_;.---~~~
Krieg, 27. in becoming the DAILY
PILOT'S new Newoort Beach city editor,
actually broke intO the newspaper busl·
ness as a sports reporter for this newg.
paper in 1961 while attending 'Orange
Coast College. • ' : Tumor Blamed in Death
' • J PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -Dr. Joseph ! w. Spelman. medical examiner, revealed
1 Sunday that a fourth year medkal stu-
Uruguay Guerrillas
Set Off Fireho1nbs
MONTEVIDEO. Uruglll)'~AP) -f ive
men and a woman ide.nWied as
Tupamaro guerri\101 forced their way In-
to an agricultural equipment ftnn today ' . ind 11et it ablaze with firebombs. Damage
was considerable, but no injuries were
r<ported.
dent who took LSD in an appartnl ex·
periment before-be died suffered from a
tumor.
Spelman said 1'1art Prager, 24, auf·
fert'd from an adrenal tumll' ju5t. above
Ont kidney.
Prager, a sludent at Hahnemann
Medial Coll<ge, died Oct. 4 the cloy alter
he tool< an LSD tablet. An autopsy
revealed UM: youtb d1ed of "an adverit
reaction IO 1 W,,. <LSD)." •
The medical student, employed lasl
summer Jn an LSD retein:h project at
Baltimore, iold his wife he waoted to.ex·
perienct tbe aame senittlons b\1 p1Uents
did wllen they were given the drug.
Spelman said he doubted wbetber
Pra&er wu aware et the tumor.
Later, while attending the Univenity
or Bridgeport, he worked .oo newspapers
in Westport and Milford, Conn. Before
joining the DAILY PILOT staff u prin-
cipal Newport reporter last ~t,
Krieg was serving as chief of tbe Bridae-
port Post's five-man Milford bureau.
Krieg and his wife, ci.rot, have t w ti
children. Les. 5 and Jennifer, J. 'lhey
have a nefr home in Sandpointe.
American Prisoners
To Be Feted at Game
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The s.aai.
hu given unanimous approval to a
rtt0luUon asking Ule Armed services to
conduct a halfUme .-y at the Nov.
28 Army-Navy football game, tll honor
American war prlsontr1 in North Viet-
nam.
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Tommie· Mixes IJp Laguna
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' I.
SilenLS tar'1 .Daughte r Tell3 of ·Easy Child.hood ': •
...
By BARllAllA ltlU!DllCH ..............
To !es ol Laiime lleecJ> <;Uy Council meetlnl!o,,a ....i1,...,.~etlc bioode wllh
a· sharp tongue , and a lively sense of
bumor has l>ecome tnown in recent years
p~a champion of the underdog-and pro-
ponent of SO<tlled "llbfral"' CIUSell.
"You'd be SW'J)rtsed how many people
actually think I'm a Communist," says
Tommie GUM. "Isn't.that hilarious?"
Tommie Gunn, 48-year'i>ld mother of
geven and 1T1Ddm0Uler of1 five, .started
out in life a~ut u far from the political
&Cf:ne as one Could&d.
SPOILED GIRL
Daughter of slleot screeo star Tom ~Iii'.
and his glamol"006 actre&1 wife, ·Victoria
F'orde, Thomasina Mix was, she says
btuntly, "a very spoiled litUe girl."
Her parents were divorced when she
was nine, and she 'Spent much of her
childhood traveling in Europe with her
mother.
Summer1 she stayed with her famous
father 'Who, alter making his last silent
film in 1928 whe.n she was five, ~ot
••circus fever" and; with his horse Tony,
went on the road with Ringling Brothers
and dther t~rank: circuses.
IUDS DREAM
"We trave1ed In a private railway car
and the circus . people .spoiled m"!: ·even
more than my father did. It was a kid's
dream !" says Tommie.
After making half a dozen talkies in the
early 305, Mix even started a circus oi his
own, but It was fel1ed financially by the
depression.
Mama , meanwhile, had married an
Arcentine diplomat and bought a quain \.
summer . and weekend home a t
-Fisherman:&.. Cove in Laguna Be.ach. The
family spent a11 its spare time in Laguna
and Tommie attended Laguna High for a
while. ,
It was one of 13 elementary schools.
three high schools and three r:olleges
(plus as.sorted governesses and tutors)
that contributed to her formidable educ&·
tion. •
COLLEGE AT U .
Totally oUt of step with her peers in thf'
academic world, Tommie was graduated
from high school at lt and entered col·
lege al 15.
"ln those days," she says,-1'!.hey didn't
worry about things like social ad-
justment. They Just kept on promoting
you as fast as joo could take it. 1
wouldn't do that to one o( my kids."
The first college was lmmaculftte
Hearl ln Los Angeles. "Mama didn't
think I was old enough for a co-ed schot.l
-ind J guwi she .,.as right!"
. Tbis was followed by 1 stint at 1.iCLA,
then Stanfor~ where ahe wu married, at
17, to a fellow student, and proceeded to
have four children in five yean, picking
up a B.A. in rtench along the way.
"J was having my third baby the day l
was supposed to graduate, 80 the~ was a
slight delay," she recalls. The marriage ended in· divorce after
Hickel Reveals
Plan to Upgrade
Water in Sewer
Iii yean and Tommie .,,j heil"btood
moved ln with m1m1.
Her.IAthe~had died In lMO, im'lnc her
an Inheritance that helped put her
thro\lglndiaol and kept the 'family com-
fortable for quite a while.
NEVER WORXED
"It never-even occurred to me to go kL
v.·ork," she laughs. "Would you 'bellavt,
nobody I'd ever known had gone to work!
Then one day I went to lhe ·bank and
there wasn't 1ny more money, IO I
5tarted thinking about It."
The B.A. ·in French wasn't much help,
so she worked suceeuivelt_ ai: ·a phone
operator, dance and Piano te"icher "ind
secretary. "My shorthand wun't much
good, but I had an ei:cellent memory and
that saved me ,·• she recalls.
In 1953 she accompanied her mother,
now di'!orced from the Argentine
diplomat and married to an Air Force
general, to Japan. While the general flew
mission to Korea and toiled with the
peace delegation, Tommie worked for a
them fer the reel ol lhelr _ ..
She "' -by cbli.. tliat .. ACLU JI ~)lated. ''Good r'
Lord, Ito whole pollll)1 law a ad-" •
that's what It'• •boUt -equal )llllDI
unc!Or the conru-and the lllD "'
Rights."
In addition to ......... In her-· ....
••w•otndal1nonuJ11·ottM·bippiel.'' ~ ~
mie bu her matemal bmidl lull at -. with her -..1 Iamlly. Juoo, f\!, G .... •.
31! and Gussie. 2, Iii odopted.
She WaJ married lot the --In 1957 to Gordon Gunn, when botb ,... • -
working for the advertilinl firm or Bal-' :
ten, Barton. Duntin and <llbonle. - -
"Alter Gordon helped me Bet Dll' own , :
r~ up thrOug)l the teens," 11)'1 Tomo ,. :
mle. "and the )'OUfl(!"t bad left, It was _
just .. lerrlbly Jooely_ •• dec;i<f<d lo ! :
adopt a ·1itt1e boy. Then it cildn t Mlelll right to bring one up alone, 10 we adopW _
a girl to go wi.Ul him. 'nlat waa going to ..
be it, but we had a chance to get Guas~. · · .
so we took her too."
year wilh the Air Force in Japan. Btrn.T NEW HOME
"[ guess I became a pacifist around To accommodate the, new family, they
thi :i1 time.'' she says. "During World War tnpck:ed down the old Laguna summer
II I had beeH against Hitler and for t,lle co~tage Tommie had, inherited from bet :
war, like evU)'one ,else, bpt since KQrta mother and built a .spacious, t~ -:i .
I've been deflnit.el.y a pacifist." modern home on Cliff Drive, perched · .
ACLU MEMBER hio:h above Fisherman's Cove.
Her Introduction to the. American Civil Tommie and Gordon take care of the •
Liberties Unloll (ACLU) fof which stte big house and tbelr lively kklt without •
{)OW serves as Laguna ana. chainnan, outside help. "Gordon ~lei meetings,.. • •
began in college dl!ring world War tr. she says cheerily, "so when l go out he'd
"I was just so concerned lbout. .the much rather stay home with the kids.''
treatment of the California Japaneae who When Tommie ls home, the kids are
were being uprooted aod herded into usually climbing all over her and "1he
camps.'' she explai.nll, "and abaolulely no handles them wkh. a fmn but loving
one except the ACLU seemed to have the band.
I. h · ho .... "Thev're Y""' .... ._ than .ome of m1. s 1g test 1nte~"l w un;y were being z. ---.---. ,, _,._ te"-treated." grandchildren, you ~"· -wi JOU.
Working with the ACLU for eome 15 "But itbey all ge~ aloilg just woc~ftdly.
year-s,-Me haa-~arned-a-great deal-about-MY. own kids are_ from 25 to 30 now, ~ ~-
civil rights and the law and devotes a Jesuit brot&er:liiiif die iiUii!ii'i itt~
he,.,.u to trylnl! to help people _ ;.. rled, living In.Loi Angeles and San Diego. • ·
eluding hippies -who feel they have Everyone' comes to our house for famlll
been misused, to go through legal chan-occuions."
nels to secure their rights. Ponderil!g her role as what lbe ' laughingly calls "our t..ident Com-'
munbt," Tommi< giggles, "I wllh people '
could see my kids, Really, they're all IO
square -nlce, but square. They tblnk
I'm a little too broad-minded sometimes,
1 guess."
WOODLAND VISITOR
Recently, iri Laguna Beach, her efforts
have made her a frequent visitor to the
Woodland Drive area where residents felt
threatened by a proposed housing In-
spection and, on July 4, erupted inlo a
full-scale riot t ·h a \ brought acores of
police to the-11Ctoe. ·
Tommie prepared, and pruenied to the
city, affidavits -from five · people who
charged they had. bee.n mlatru.\ed. by
police on this occa~ion.
Her attitude toward the Woodlanders is
not all sweet patitlnce.
''They've learned a lot about the law
from me," she 15ays bluntly. "Including
the fact that they don't have many rlghta
to stand on lf tbey. get mixed up in a
felony. Thal'• '¢lat worries me about
some of these kids. 'Ibey doa't 1ttm to
rea.Jtze what a felony cOO~iction can do tll
NO COMMUNIST
For tbe reco:rd, Tommie sa,ys !he's.not
a 'Communial
"In my eoUege days and. later In New
York: when it_wu !ublooable, l waa in-
terested in Communism, among man1
other things," she says. "I went to IOme
of their meetings to see what it wu
abouL I didn't buy IL It just doeln't &<>
with my personal philolophy.
"Frankly. I. enjoy belnl!·rather rich end
living an idyllic •. life in thil l«leo\11
house. U people want to.P.1t"my name on
thelr,ilstl. they can go lhead. 'i'be!' CUl
hurt me."
Election Bet Pays Off
For Nixon, Say British
LONDON (UPI) -President Nixon told friends or another IJ!cldent JnvotriJ11
won $30 In a bet the ColWervaUves would Nixon and the ekction.
win Britain'1 general eled.loo earlier this . Alter bearing the nrst Oood of raulta on election night, Heath rtturned to bil
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Secretary year• sources close to Prime Minister apartment at 5 a.m. and give strict in-
of Interior Waller Hickel said today all Edward Heath said Monday. structkm to his housekeeper he was not
government sewers will be discharging The sourcts said Nixon told Heath how to be disturbed until noon.
1wlmmable water by the end of 1971. he won the m6ney when the President When Heath awOte at noon, be ubd 1f
The secretary, changing planes in San vi.sited Britain earlier this month. there hac:: been any calls. Francisco, was asked for bis comments "Only one," replied the houRbeper.
on reports that government agencies ~ Nixon had uked an aide what the odds "From ao American ge(ltlema.n -a· Mr.
among the worst of water p0mrt.ers. v.·ere againlt the Conservatives defeating Nixon."
He replied that Prttldent Nixon has Labor in the election. Told lhey wert six Heath asked what Nll:on said.
ordered all federal agencies, including to or'le, the President bet· his personal "Well, be seemed very anxloul to
the military, lo give secondary lreatment foreign affairs and national security ad· speak to you," the houaekeeper rtplied.
to a:J their discharges by the end of 1972. vlser Henry Kissinger $5 t he "But I told him you were sleeping and
"ThJs is not drinkable water but It is Conservatives would win. were not to be disturbed under any
swlmrnable.'' he said. "And it's a step When the Conservatives won, Nixon clrcumsiances. I asked him to ring back
toward tertiary treatment which will pr1>-collected '30 from Kissinger, the 'IOUl'Ces later and he said he would do that.'"
duce water you can drink." said. Ni.Ion finally reicbed. Heath after the
Hickel a1so· said there would be an oil While attending the Conservative party new prime minJster arrived at hll official
pipeline In Al1si.a . conference in Blackpool lut week, Heath residence, No. 10 Downing St.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..,..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilim
SPECIAL TELECAST
* * * Channel 8, Today & Thursday
7-10 P.M.
Council of the Communities . of· Irvine
General Meeting
Held Saturday, Oct. 10 at -UCI
Leatn About High School Bonds
& Incorporation ltudles
t
* * * Presented as a Public Service by
Community Cablevision
'
'
•
'If T"sd", -13, 1970
A 17-year-old youth 'vas arreSled
recently after be allegedly mailed
a nwnber of anti-establishment
bOmb threats to well-knPwn..organi·
ziitions. Police said Ricardo F.
Baker, who was booked at Juvenile
Hall on suspicion of making bomb
threats made only one mistake-observi~g an establishment cour·
lesy. Officers said that on the en·
velop on one of the letters, \vhlch
\vent io -such places as the police
department social security offices
and.Ji"edera'LBureau of _Jg_vestiga·
lion, the youth put his return ad·
dress. •
Reds Build !!J!
U !'S. Maps Plan-s
For-New Cutback
SAIGON (APl -The U.S. Command
began mapping plans ·today for a new
40,000.man troop cutback AMOUDCed by
President Nixon despite reports of a
North Vietnamese buildup in Laos.
'l'ht ~U-.S. Strategic Air Command 1en1
its entire active Pacific fieet of 85%
bombers over Laos for the fifth corue-
culive day In efforts to check a North
Vietnamese supply push dowh_the Ho
Chi Minh trail to cambodia and ~
Vielnam.
Nixon announced 1'1ooday in Hartford,
Conn.. that the authorized American
troop level in Vietnam v.·ould be reduced
lo 344,000 by Dec. 31. Under plans pre-
vious1y aMOunced, this is to drop an·
olher 60,000 men-to 284,~by next
May I.
.E:eak American strt'I!gtll i!' Vietn am
was 543,400 in April 1969, and the total
is now Jess than 384,000. Nixon's with·
drav.•al program began in June 1969.
Sources in Saigon said some Ameri·
can units are already positioned Io r
withdrawal from the battlefield. The
next units to leave Vietnam are ex·
peeled to include i.he lt th Armored Cav·
2 Blasts Hit
Train Track-s
In Ireland
,,..
airy Regiment. the 25th Infantry Divi-
sioq and the 1st and 5th Regimtnll of
the 1st Marine Divi.sion. 'Ille 7th Marine
Regiment of the t:st Division already has
been withdrawn. " ·
ln the war, about 30 ol the (iant B.52
bombers pounded the Ho Chi Minh
trail. There have been no B52 raids
flown in Soulh Vietnam since last Satur·
day and none.. in ~mbQdla sl~ 1 as t
Thursday.
U.S. Defense Secretary Melvin Laird
told a news conference in Waminiton
ftfonday that there is some evidence the
North Vietnamese are aUempting to
resupply their positions in the Laotian
border area .
Sou~s in Saigon have said Hanoi
has begun its yearly "dry-season" push
of war materials down the trail to fuel
~ronsives iri both Cambodia and-South
°'-f(etnam.
The U.S. Command reported that 38
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops
~·ere killed in two engagements in
Quang Ngai Province. in the coa stal
lowlands. U.S. casualties were three
killed and seven wounded.
A delayed report from South Viet-
namese headquarters said four civilians
were killed and one wounded in a Viet
Cong rocket attack on Da Nang air
base early Monday.
In Cambodia, the war slipped into one
_oLJts_periodic_ Julls~_bo<.lian_~om
munique repotred only one harassinc at·
tack during the past 24 hours.
BELFAST (UPI) -Two bomb ex·
plosions damaged tracks on the main
railway line between Belfast and Dublin
today, an army spokesman said.
, The U.S. EmbaSl!ly in Saigon an·
nounced that Ambassador Ellsworth
Bunker will return to Washlngton early
next week for consultations, touchlng
off speculation that he will be replaced
as ambassador by William H. Sullivan,
deputy assistant secretary of state for
the Far East and the Paci(ic and for·
mer ambassador · to Laos. ·Embassy
spokesmen indicated Bunker's trip was
in connection with the new American
peace proposals and that he would be
away "three or foul weeks."
HEAVILY ARMiD CAMBODIAN SOLDIER MOVES TO FRONT
With Chinese Rockets, Machine Gun, He Look1 For midable
lVit/1 Index f inger i1t her mouth,
BrijiH Marie Hubba rd, 2. of Algonac,
i\fich. contemplates wbicJt pUmpkin to
pick for Halloween at a roadside mar·
ket" near her hometown.
The spokesman said "five pounds of ex·
plosive appears to have been placed
under each of the two tracks'' to cause
the blasts about . one mile south of
I.organ, 20 miles from the border of the
Irish Republic.
One Seriously Hurt
• A railway spokesman said damage to
tracks had been slight and that trains
~·ere running normally.
The Saigon Post reported Vice Presi·
dent Nguyen Cao Ky would make a
two • week official visit to the United
States in November "at President Nix·
on·s invitation." The report said he
would meet prominent o£flcials a n d
private cilir;ens and would address the
National Press Club in Wuhington.
7 Yank Soldi~rs Mauled -
Two patrolmen franticall y told
police headquarters gunshots were
crackling in Chicago's Loop Sun-
day night. Twenty polic~men, . a
sniper team and two canine units
answered the call. They cro~ed
behind autos. trained spotlight up-
ward and scanned a skyscra er.
An investigation revealed tha a
\vater pipe had burst on the seven-
th floor of the building and water,
spraying out ol an open window,
Janded on the pavement with shot·
like sounds. .....,1
Britiah troops fired nausea gas at
crowds in Londonderry where about 60
demonstrators hurled Molotov cocktails
and rocks at soldiers and policemen Mon·
day night and early today.
At l{orean Truce Village
• lt "'as not lwnbago that gave
Mrs. Andre Bertin severe back-
aches-just a pair of five·inch·long
forceps left behind by a surgeon
who rcmqved her appendix seven
years ago. Doctors at Melun.
France Hospital removed the in-
strument. which had settled in her
back region.
tt
Doctors at Co,vglen Hospital in
Scotland have found record back·
ground music is more effective in
helping elderly patients get to sleep
than sedatives. • Ninety-one years ago Mary
Cragie moved to South\vold , Eng·
land, hoping the seaside air \\.'oufd
improve her health. Sunday she
'celebrated her 108th birthday.
•• •
Two directors of the Datasonic
Computer inn have been told they
are losing their jobs-to a comput-
er. The Nottingham. England firm
has decided that the machine can
do their \York fa ster and more
cheaply.
Army investigators checked an ex·
plosion Witnesses said they heard in the
Eastway Gardens areas of Londonderry
during the night.
Police and army spokesman said they
had no reports of damage in the blast.
Security sources speculated the explosion
may have been set off in the-open to at-
tract police and troops into a position in
""'hich they could be attacked.
111 God We Trust
Motto Wins Okay
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The 9th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals today rejected a
challenge to the constitutionality of the
national motto "In God We Trust" and ils
use on the nation's currency and coins.
The appellate court today up held a
ruling by U.S. District Court Judge Lloyd
Burke against Stefan Ray Aranow of
Woodland. Calif.. Sept. 30, 1968 .
The court ruled only on the C(ln·
stitutionality and did not consider the
question of Aranow's right to sue, a fac-
lor in Burke's decision .
•·Jt is qui te obvious that the national
motto and slogan. 'In God We Trust.' on
coinage and currency has nothing
"'hatsoever to do ~·ith the establishm!nl
of religion." said the court decision.
"113 use is of a patriotic or ceremonial
character and bears no true. resemblance
to a governmental sponsorship or a
religious exercise," tht decision con·
linued.
Other sources in Saigon said Ky would
attend the Paris peace talka on Oct.
29 and put forward a new South Viet·
namese peace plan, pDt&lbly a modifi·
cation or extension or President Nixon's
plan.
'Crash Proof'
Auto Studied --
By Volkswagen
WOLFESBURG, Germany (AP) -A
spokesman for Volkswagen, Inc., an·
nounced today the company plans to
develop a new car in which occupants can
survive a ~ mile-an-hour head-on col·
lision without serious injury ...
Development will be undertaken, said
the s~esman, in close conjunctio n with
U.S. and European authorities. The car
will weigh in the area of 2,000 pounds but
no other design details were announced.
The spokesman said that it was im·
possible to say when the new automobile
~·ould be ready, but commented that it
takes 80me four years to develop a con·
venti onal vehicle. The prototype safety
car will be used for experiments and will
liave safety features that wUJ be in·
corporated into other. models. He said
that the new car would no! replace any of
the current Volkswagen models.
Nation's Weather Stahle
Sno1v, Thuiiderstorms But Fronts Nearly Stationary
California
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d••. with cooltr temflf'r1!urt1 !" tr..
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llt:•llClll llORI lhe tOl•I WM~y.
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SEOUL (AP) -An American soldier
who wa1 badly beaten by North Koreans
at the Panmunjom truce village was
reported in fair condition today and is ex·
peeled to recover, a U.S. military
8pokesman said.
He is Pfc. Glen A. Vinderslev of
Chokio, Minn., and the Army said he suf·
fered a depressed skull fracture from
bl ows with shovels.
Six otber Americans 'A'r.rc injur ed. one
seriously, In -thn0.111inute melee. and a
Year's Strongest
Typhoon Roaring
Toward Manila
MANILA !UPI ) -Typhoon Joan
smashed across the coconut-growing
region of the central Philippines toda y
and roared toward Manila and ne ighbor·
ing population ce nters.
The Manila \\'eathcr Bureau raise d
typhoon signal No. 3 -the maximum -
over Manila and the central Luzon area
at 5 p.m. It said the city, ,.,.ith its 2.5
million population. would be right within
the typhoon's eye between 1 a.m. and 2
a.m. unless Joan changes its course.
The typhoon was plotted to be over
Catanduanes province 14~ miles east·
southeast or Mnnila late this afternoon .
Its peak winds diminished rrom 144 miles
to ti~ miles an hour after it hit land.
\\leathermen described the typhoon .
No. 18 this season, as the most powerful
to hit the Philippines this year.
A weather bureau spokesman said the
typhoon was so strong when it struck
land today that it stopped the radar in its
reporting station in Catandu anes after it
recorded gusty winds of 160 knots.
An earller typhoon. Georgia. struck the
Cisaguaran coastal region n( easlern
Luzon in September. k1IHni; n1ore than
150 persons.
Office Crisis:
Men Ogle Minis
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f\'E\Y YORK (UPI) - A Lou~\'ille.
;: Ky .. managt.menl consultant today went
on record as opposing lht mini·skirt
because It is "detrimental to office r.f·
.u licicncy. ·• " " " " " " ..
" , ·" "
To back up his char at . Robert r:.
Nolan. vlct prtsident of the Serge A. Birn
Company, ran a dislracllon·tlme value
study of orflce v.·orkers and round that
the average American male spend~ one ~
" • ..
" " "
..
" .. • " " " " • " n '' II ii
M •11 • " " " " "
• ..
" n
" ~
.. hour out of every work day ogling mini!>.
Nolan, marri~ and the rather or rh·e.
put distractions lnto lhree clesslflcaUons:
glance. double-hi ke and con I i n u o u s
obser\'atlon. A ~lance. he said. has a one
sr:cond Umc val ue. a double take four
~cconds. and conlinuous ob.~crvatic·11.
"!>uch a!I "alchln~ a Qtrl \1:llk 1ht full
ltngtb of tbt, orrlct, ·• ~·as 69 seconds.
Swiss lieutenant who rescued Vinderslev
received minor wounds. The identities of
the other Americans were withheld.
South Korean sources said a n
American guarding South Kore an
civilians ~·orit.ing in the armistice
negotiating room tried to stop a North
Korean security officer from taking pie·
tures of the workers. The North Korean
pulled the armband off the American,
and a fight started.
Because of the attack. Maj. Gen. Felix:
M. Rogers of the U.S. Air Force. the U.N.
Command member of the Korean
military armistice commission, cancelled
a meeting of the co1nmission scheduled
for today. He accused ljlc North Koreans
of an "unprovoked, violent attack."
The U.N. Command said more than 30
North Korean guards and civilian
v.·orkers set upon the American guards
with shovels. clubs and rocks. It said the
Koreans isolated the soldier most
seriously wounded and beat him on the
head with shovels as he lay on the
ground. Lt. Rene Joerg. a member of the
Swiss delegation to the Neutral Nations
Supervisory Commission, rescued the
American and suffered a minor cut and
bruises.
North Korea charged that "U.S. im·
perialist aggressor army rascals" were
responsible for ~the fight. The North
Korean news agency claimed that more
than 30 "army rasca ls carrying iron
bars" attacked North Korean security
personnel.
The Americans were guarding several
South Korean civilians working in the
armistice commission conference roozn.
Ult U.S. Army said. There had beer. three
minor altercations between North Korean
and U.S. guards at the truct villaie in
the previous six weeks.
Rock Mementos
Go on Auction
In 'Peace ' Drive
NE\V YORK (AP ) - A wri nkled gold·
lam e: ascot once worn by Fats Oomint
.. ·ent for a bargain price of $19.
But Paul ~1cCartney's Shetland 'A'OOI
sweater sold for $95. and ~liles Davis'
legendary blue trumpet fetched t260.
It was auction night at the Fillmore
r:ast. 11nd a curious <.'OlFection loosely
described as rock memorabilia was on
lhe block Monday evening bf:fore about
:1.COJ fans. The objrtt: to raise funds for
peace candidates in the. November tlcc·
!Ions .
For S20. son1rbody bought some dry
rose petals. lingi!ring mcmorles of 11 Roll·
ina Stont:s cooctrt .
For $2.50 more. anol.her gained
possci;sion of 11 bra once fl unc at Jtrry
Garcia by an adoring groupie.
The star t:xhibit was a 1966 Cadillac
lirnousine. whose upholstery had bctn
graced by such musicians as Cream. lhe
Jt:fferson Airplane and even. yes, the
Beatles. Aaron Russo, a 27-year-old rock
1nu11ic product:r and manangtr, ba&aed 11
for st,400.
The $15.000 or $0 raised will g1> lo
~lttamorphmii~. " group dedicated lo
supporting anuv.·ar candidates.
Informants
Say Nasser
eicked Heir
BEIRUT, Lebanon (Ae> -prealcjent
Gamal Abdel Nasser named hls suc-
cessor shortly before he died~ but his
nominee is under house arrest because he
ls unacceplable to the Soviet Union.
reliable diplomatic informanb reported
today.
The sOurces said Nasser's deathbed
choice to lead Egypt was Zakaria
Mottieddin a relatively llberal p r I m e
minister ~ho al times embarrassed hi:ii:
chief Dy opi;osing the growing Soviet
penetralion of Eaypt.
Nasser reportedly expressed his last
v>'i.sh to Information Minister Mohammed
Hassanein Heikal. one of his closesL
fr iends, who was at his be~ide when the
president died of heart fatlure Sept. _28.
The .tnformation reached the foreign
dlploiriats from some of H e i k a I ' 1
associates.
The Arab Socialist Union. Egypt's only
political party. nominated Vice President
Anwar Sadat to succeed Nasser, and he
v•lll be elected Thursday in a nationwide
referendum in which he is the only can·
didate. But I.here are indications a power
struggle is continuing behind the scenes,
wilh Heikal's own position threatened be·
cause he insisted that Nasser's prefer·
ence for Mohieddin be honored.
The diplomats said Soviet Premier
Alexei Kosygin. 'A'hen he came to Cairo
for Nasser's funeral, told the Egyptian
leaders the Soviet government would
have no confidence in a governmenl
headed by Mottieddi11. _
'·In effect," one senior Western
diplomat asserted, "Kosygin applied the
Brezhnev Doctrine to Egypt and made it
clear that he regards Mohieddin as
another Dubcek."
The ijussians are believed to favor Air
Marshal A1i Sabry. a prominent figure in
the reported power struggle and an old
rival or Mohieddin. They both served as
prime minister and also as vice presi·
dent-•
In keeping with his pr.efercnce for a
more liberal, open economy. Mohieddin
took a le'-IJ adamant al!proach to the con-
frontation with Israel than the more doc·
trin aire Sabry.
Mohieddln was in the inner circle or
Nasser's 1952 revolutiOn against King
Farouk. Nasser publicly designated him
to succeed to the presidency when he an-
nounced hls reaignation in the first hours
or defeat in June 1967. Nasser lat er
withdrew his resignation under popular
pressige, and Mohieddin faded into the
background.
Heikal, long-time editor of the semi-of·
ficial newspaper Al Ahram and Nasser·s
mouthpiece for many yeai:s tried to con-
vince the other Egyptian leaders to honor
Nasser's last wish despite the Soviet veto
or Mohieddin. the informants said.
Heikal reportedly ran into stiU flf'I·
position, notably Sabry and Sadat, who
pointed out that Egypt could not afford to
offend its only source for the huge
arsenal requiredlor _war with Israel.._
The sources said Heikal •·was not co n·
vinced and will never be convinced ...
although he does not seem to have any
personal ambition for leadership. •
Passengers Trapped
In New York Subway
f\'EW YORK (UPI \ -F'our hundred
passengers were trapped aboard 11
subway in a tunnel under the East River
~1onday night for an hour and a half un til
a "rescue" train pushed them to the next
station.
No one was reported injured in the in-
cident blamed on a power failure caused
by a safety cord being ripped from a
third rail resulting in the jarhming of a
contact shoe on the stalled train. The
"re1cue" by shoving was a departu re
from the usual technique of attempting tn
guide passengers along darkened tracks
to the nearest station.
l'ach1g l'at1e l
''
Dr. Elburt Franklin Osborn.
research vice-president at Penn
State, Is shown before the Sen·
ate Interior Committee during
questioning as to his accept-
a bility a s the new director o!
the Bureau or Mines. Osborne
Is expected lo be approved
artcr lose (j UCSt!on!ng a~out
mine disasters an~ conditions ..
The job pays $3-0,000 a )•ear.
' -
Fountain Valley
YOL. 63, NO. 245, 2 SECTLON$, 21 PAGES TUESDAY, OCTOIER 13,-1970 -.
' -~ ·-
Seal Beach Council Dismisses Palace C·ase
the sensational _By.RUDI NIEDZIEl.'!ll
Of lllt Dall~ Pli.t llaH
The portals to the cantr.oversial Marina
Palace were flung open once again Mon-
day~nigbt by Seal Beach city councilmen
ttho voted 3-2 to dismiss all misconduct
cbaries against the dance ball's manag~
ment.
.was made. by MayoLMorton .\ •• Ba.um
and upheld by Councilmen Thomas
Hogard and Conway Fuhnnan. Coun-
cilmen Lloyd Gummere and Harold
Hol<lon op!l.OS<d iJ,
supervision which led to obscene conduct,
intoxica ted behavior aDd naicotlcs traffic
among some of the teen-agers attending
his dahces.
scruJli!Lby ezploitlng
dance hall accusations. -.--
Councilmen Hogard and Fuhrman,
along with Mayor Baum, formed a three.
way voting bloc last JUiy 'lt and fired Ci·
ty Manager Risner as their first order of
business.
his belief in the conspiracy, however, and
charged that poli{Jcal payoffs ave
alre8.dy been made to pave the w1y fot
the redevelopment project.
He added that all the talk about hlcb-
rlae evelopments-was--"'moltly-J:m. --~
agaizu!Pon"' and that he knew ol,•·-
William L. Robertson, 71, appeared to
be satisfied with the decision, which
would allow him to continue with his
Saturday night teen dances, others were
not.
Amid loud groans. about half or the
persons packing the 150-seat Seal Beach
council chambers left when it became ap-
pan!Dl how the vote was going ta g12.
The motion to dismiss the accmation.s
At the same time, however, the three
men charged City Attorney Jim Bentson
with drawing . up . a new $nee ball
ordinance which would raise the age limit
of patrons from It& current 14-20 age to
over 18.
"It is unbelievable that members of
this council could sit through six weeks of
testimony and believe that the witnesses
were not telling the truth." fumed Gum·
mere.~ Baum announced his motion.
Robertson, a former gambling hall
owner, had been accused of lu:
His attorney, RusseU W. Bledsoe,
argued that the charges were contrived
and u.sed to lay a "smokescreen" over
criticism of the Riverfront
Redevelopment Ager.;::y (RRA), which
reportedly planned a $100 million
beachfront development.
The defense alleged. a coruipiracy t:r·
isted between former City Manager Lee
Risner, Police Chief Lee Case and cur·
rent City Man3ger Dennis Courtemarche.
Bledsoe charged the three attempted to
hide the RRA project from public
Risner, who was called to the witness
stand several times during the protracted
dance hall hearings, vehemently denied
entering any conspiracy with Case and
<;ourtemarche. ,
Both Case and Courtemarche abo
denied any involvement in a plot against
the dance hall.
During the 90-minute session, Monday
night Councilman Fuhrman reaffirmed
Likewise, Mayor Morton Baum said,
"The former city manager and the ad-
ministration is guilty of abusing ita ad-
ministrative authority in handling the
case against the Marina Palace."
Councilman Gummere, who favored a
two-week suspension and a year of pro-
bation for the Marina P a I a c e , said,
·'There has been no proof of any coo-
spiracy in any way, shape or form. We
_llave an honorable chief of PQlice with 29
years of experience and 1 am sure he
didn't Ile under oa th."
who wou1d want to a~ flOO ~ aa
such a .deveJopm~t ill U>e city of lea1
Beach. . - .
Chief c.se, who had been adln( ..
prosecutor during the bearings and' pro-
duced several undercover w~ .. lllcl.
th.e council decilion was ··~.~
Councilman Harold flolden. who WU
obviously mured at the action tal<a by
three of his fellow counci,lmen, added, "I
think Mr. Robertson bu complele control
over three members of our council.
Whatever he !!_anti _@_ge~:-Tbe whole
htari.ng was a farce, we !hOUian't hive
done it.
Kidnapers' Lawyer Freed
One Hurdle Cleared for Hosta es in Canada ·-
MONTREAL {UPI) -The lawyer for Trade Commissioner James R. Cross and Lemiew: entered .no plea -formally the cell holding Laporte stickiJll toiiiaber
two groups of separatist kidnapers w~ Quebec Labor and Immigration Minister Usted in the records as a not guilty plea demands. --..,.
released from jail today, clearing one Pierre Laporte, hostages of terrorist cells -to charges of obslructiitg justice and At opening talks between ~m,ieu' aDd
b ta I · th ti t· ·th th r th Fr t d Llbe ti d Qu bee 1n r1 th Demers Monday nlch~ police tlnw a. o s c e tn e nego a ions w1 e o e on e ra on u e le erlng wi the work o! police by police shield \hree blocks deep animd the
government to release two political (FLQ ). statements made Od. 9. jail 11 the lawyen mel .,. ,
hostages. Lemieux said his initial talks with Judge Maurice Allard r e I eased Jn Ottawa, helicopter ·loads ot lrOop.
Robert Lemieux told newsmen he Demers, held into the early morning Lemieux on his own recogniiance pen-arrived to help the Royal Canadian
would meet governmenl negoU~tor Robert hours in the ~ity jail where Lemieux has ding setting of a trial date Friday. Mounted Police on.guard duty-the first
~ · -n:emers· later-· ~ay-to -t:ODtmue t:a!ks · -· ·been·-heid-·-smce:-Sundar,-were·-"'vet:y-The::tJrtrcommando -cells--havt ··been-·-· suclrust'tlf troops-in tbe0Canadlln·apltt!----
aimed at gaining freedom for British elementary." disagreeing on the ransom terms, with in peacetime hls1ory. ·
Canada Tells
Red China
Relations Tie ..
From Wirt lenlcli ' -
Canada. today announced uta1iiiilmieqt
ol dtplomaUc rolatlonl With RM Odni.
Soon after. Notionali>t China ....,red all
relations With Canada.
In announcing the diplomatic ties,
Canada acknowledged the Peking regi.nle
as "the .sole legal government of China."
External Affairs Minister Mitchell
Sharp announced the move Jn the House
of Commons and released a joint com·
munique, ·distributed simuJtaneously-iR
Peking and Ottawa.
"The government of Canada and the
government of the PeoPfe's Republic of
China, in accordance with the principles
of mutual respect for sovere ignty and
territorial Integrity, noninterference in
each other's internal affairs and equality
and mutu al benefit, have decided upon
mutual recognition and establishment of
diplomatic relations, e!fective October 13,
1970." the }olnt communique said.
'.
Huntington's Rip Ribble
Directs 27-ring Circus
"The Chinese government reaffirms
that Taiwan is an inalienable part of the
territory or the People's Republic of
China. The Canadian government takes
note of this position of the Chinese
government.
"The Canadian government recognir.es
the government of the People'• Republic
of China as the sole legal government of
China.
"The Canadian and C h l n e s e
governments have agreed to exchange
ambassadors within six months, and to
provide all necessary assistance for the
establishment and the performance of the
functions of diplomatic m!Miorui in their
respective capitals, on the basis of
equality and mutual benefit and in ac·
cordance with international practice."
. ' •..-A.J.. ......... HUNTINGTON BEACH FIREMEN DOUSE BURNING CAR AFTER MONDAY NIGHT CRASH
Motorists Continue tO Run Into Each Other et Corner of Heil arid' Gothard
Officer Finds No-no
In Newspaper Garden
Car Bursts Into Flames
To thousands of young stj>ool kids, Jon
"Rip" Ribble is the fwt and games
master of Hunlington Beach.
He directs a 27-ring circus every day
when the school bells chime their Jul
message and the youngsters are free.
Rip is responsible !or the 'lt different
after school programs guided ·by the
city's recreation department.
-;,I just like to see children smile." is
the way Rip explains his entry into the
recreation field .
He was hired by the city last January
as one of the parks department's three
recreation supervisors. Hi! domain in·
eludes the after school programs, teen
activities, Christmas and Easter ex-
cursions, summer excursions and teen
dances. .
At 27 Rip Is one of the yowtger
membe:ri of the park department's
hierarchy. He comes in with fresh ideas
which have already sparked a few pro-
gram changes.
In the past, the arter school program
was called just that -after school. This
year Rip listened to the way the kids pro-
nowlC'e it, liked what they said and
renamed the program "Afta's Cool," a
slightly more hip expression which is cat·
chlng on fut among the grade schoolers.
••()Ur main objective in this program,"
Rip explained. "Ls to rectUit every child
1n the area that un benefit from ac-
tivity."
"The kid who can go borne and toss a
football with his brother doe&n't need us
nearly as much as the kid who goes home
and setUes ln front of the boob tube."
Rip's programs Include aCUve spons,
tables games and guided activities. At
each school bO has ~ teortatlon leader
and an assistant to help the youngsters
enjoy themselves.
"We want to help every child who
comes on our playground to have a good
time ," Rip said.
Ribble is still getting his feet settled
in the Huntington Beach job, but even
though he just graduated from Cal State.
Fullerton last June, he's not short on
experience.
In 1965-66 he was a playground co-
ordinator In Costa Mesa while attend-.
ing . Orange Coast College. The n e 1 t
year he shifted to Cal State, Fullerton
•Set GAMES Pace !)
He said Tai wan bad been a major con-
sideration in the negotiations i n
Stockholm, which began on Feb. 6, 1969.
"From the very beginning of our
discussions, the Chinese side made clear
to us their position that Taiwan was an
inalienable part o! Chinese territory and
that this was a principle to which the
Chinese government attached the utmost
importance.
IIlLO, Hawaii (UPI) -Police officer
Patrick Cooley glanced at a planter boi:
in front of the Hawaii Tribune-Herald
while walking his beat and notiCed
something usual. "One of the plants look·
ed like a no-no as Car as garden plants
are concerned," Cootey said ~1onday.
He summoned plant experts from the
vice squad, who identified the plant as
marijuana, "healthy and green, about
two months old." The newspaper 's
general manager, edltor and gardener
said they didn't know how the plant got
there.
Unruh Hits Irvine Trade
Candidate's Campaign Bus Comes to Harbor Area
Posed on the shoreline or Upper
Newport Bay, Democratic gubernatorial
candidate Jess Unruh today alleged that
the Irvine Company is engaged in a
"swindle-swap" in the proposed Back
Bay tidelands exchange with Orange
County government
Unruh. In what be termed another of
his special news events, brought a
busload of newsmen and camp followers
to the Harbor Att' for yet anoU.er or his
attacks agaJnst big business and the
Es:tablishment.
Monday It wu Standard Oil Company's
refinery in El Segundo that drew hll at-
tentton in an attack on air pollution and
lhcumWit Gov. Ronald ac.aan.
Today, tbe Irvine Company drew the
focus of Unruh'a wrath.
Unruh asserted that the proposed
Newport Bay land exchange would deny
public acces1 to prime s o u t b e r n
California beach land.
The Democratic gubernatorial can-
• didale llili!'ll eleded Nov. I he -with
the afd ol o t h .er llemocntlc of~
seekers -would repeal the Janel tromac·
!loo between the Irvine Compaey and
Orange county.
Unruh luued the Chargt In a four-page
statement pnpored !Or d<!Jvery on-1lle
1t Baok Baj!.
He said Oran11:e Co\lnty 1etka to trade
the Irvin• Company 117 acra ol prime
beach land In return for 450 attes of
mudflats, underwater Islands and county·
controlled acreage In what "ia probably
the worst government real estate deal
since the Indians were talked out of
Manhattan Island for $24."
Unruh charged th•t the State Lands
O>mmiulon approved the exchange
shortly after Gov. Reagan took office in
1167. He said this occurred less than a
year after "precisely the same plan" had
been rejected by the thrte-member com·
mission ln tlM during former governor
Edmund G. "Pat" Brown's t.enn.
Vnnih charged that rrvlne mak" the
btachland private. b1lr1 public access to
(See UNRUH, Pace I)
• ·' ..
In Crash; Three Hurt
Two cars collided and one burst Into
names Monday night at the intersection
of Heil Avenue and Gothard Street in
Huntington Beach.
Three persons were Injured. One was
hospitalized.
Police said the drivers or the two cars
in the 9:50 p.m. collision were Leona
Skiles, 36, Pasadena, and Robert Fisher,
25, of 10201 Kaimu Lane, Huntington
Beach.
Both Fisher and Miss Skiles were
treated at Huntington lntermmmunity
Hospital for minor lnjuries and later
released. Charlene Welemiron, 34, of
16152 Davis Lane, Huntington Beach , a
passenger in the Skiles car, was reported
In satisfactory condition this morning at
the hospital.
Police said Skiles' car erupted In
names alter the impact, but all oo-
cupants esca~ before It caught Ort.
The Ure wi! doused by !luntingtOn Beach
firemen .
The Heil-Gothard lntersecUon has rail-
ed some controversy ln the past f e w
months because vehicles on Hell Avenue
must stop1 but those oo Gothard Stree.t 00
not. Until recently Hen did not go through
Meeting Planned
Memberi of Ole Hunllngton Beach Hlgh
School booster club will meet at 7:)1)
p.m. Thunday in the teachers lounge at
the 1ehool.
The booster club Is composed ol area
adults who sqpport the hllh ocilool'a afh.
leUc activities.
•
to Gothard. The city bss put sn additlona1
warning on the stop signs, alertin&:
drivers that Gothard Street traffic doeil
oot stop.
Or••ie C.ut
11'e• ... er ··
Low overcast and patchy fog 11
the prescription ·for Wednesday,
weatherwlse, wi\b t.emper1twi1
remaining in the middle 70'1 OD
the coast and around a degree&
further lnlond.
11\'.S UJE TODA l'
Her name 1ounds like JOPM•
thlng ou& o/ a baa ioar movie,
but Laoaina Btac:h'1 Tommil
Gunn, doughier of Tom ~i%. it ,
lmount a.t a iupcr liberal. Su
Page .J.
• • • .....
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" "
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•
•
J DAILY PJLDT H
Russ Deny
Having Suh -
Ba~eiD.Cuha
MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet govern-
ment Ofndally denied today It was
bulldlng ' nuclear· aubm&rine base in
Cuba ·arid act'Qled the ¥NI x on
Adm.lnbtratlon of deliberately or ir-
respollllbly spiudlng "faiiU!catlons."
A gMW1meut statement diltributed br
Tais, the otoclal Soviet news agency,
said tht U.S. reports the Russians were
engaged-in building naval in.rtalla.Uons in
Cuba "play Into the hands •nil' of thole woo m--JDiUesfed in fanninc the wit
psycliosii and compUC1tln1 the situation
in than•iJon of the -Id."
'"'ftlo9e who deliberately o r lr--~bly are taking up and spreacflni
&Uch tar.ulcaUon play Into the hands Of
the ·m of peace," It said.
"Tbe Soviet Union has not built and is
not building a mWtary hue on CUba and
II .not dolnc aoythlng that would con-
tradict the undentandinJ r e 1 c h e d
between. the govemme.nll of the USSR
and the )Jnited Stales In 1911," the state-
ment aald.
The year 1982 marked .the Cuban
missile crtsls when President John F.
Kennedy ordered their removal in a tense
confrvntation that appeared at the time
1 to ~ on the verge of breaking into direct
conflict.
The N~n Administration first railed
the ~ bl.Se ilsue Sept. 25 at a
replar Defenae Department britfing. A
Pentagon spokesman said activity hid
beeri detected at C~nfuegos, on Cuba's
southern coast, that could be the start of
a base for serving nuclear Polaris-type
submarines. ,
Later. tbl ume dly a top White Hou1er
OAILY ,.!LOT Sl•lf 1'11119 MRS. ANN MORELAND PACKS THE MAIL FOR CRUSADE tn Huntington !•ach, Appeals for a United Effort ·
t~1ci:7~~r:::,.~~~-Vnited Crusade Begins
permit u,se of his name in accounts by ·
repqrten:, aaid the United States would
regard a bue for misaile submarines 1n
Cuba ''with the utmost seriousness."
The ~n newspapers dlsml~ the:
aDecatiom within '1 few days, accusing
the United States of trylng to sour rela·
Campaign in Huntington
tlona with Moscow. At least 25,000 letters were malled out
' ..
U.S.-Tightens ·Security
Bombing Outbreak Promp~-Decisio-,i_
ly u.u..t l'ltM llleruUolllf
'Ille aovcnment announced today fl
wu Ughtenlng ltCUllty at all federal
buildln~s because of the: recent outbreak
of exp!Ostons and the: ~at Of turther vl-
olenee by milltants-
General Servlce1 Administrator RObert
L. Kuntlg, the oversftr of aJI federal
buJkilngs, said open access to most fed-
eral buildlnga bu been rutrlcted. and
guards placed on patrol.
Security patrols have been ordered
around the cloc:k instead of the customary
6 p.m. to 7 a.m.
The move came after a day of eight
bomb blasts -five in Rochester, N.Y.,
two In New York City and one in Orlando, Fl11. _ __ _
The explosions, whicb injured thru per-
soru, followed , coincidentally perhaPI,
warrun,s by t1'e revoluUonary "Weather-man'' sroup thit it would mount an of-fensjve of terror.
Apartment
Study -Set
For Planners
The: explosion,, In Rochtattr, all the re-.
aitt of dynamite detonations, were direc. led q:alnst a federal and a county oflice
building. two pudomloanUy Ncaro .
churcbes,.and the home of a union oUlcial.
City Qffkla.I! were puzzled by the ap.
parently ..... unrelated nature-of the. tarae
and the motives and culprits involved In
the blastl which erupted wit.bin a ten
minute span.
Rochester Police Comm.lssioner John
Mastrella theorized. thrte groups could
be involved in the explosion, one or which
"hall destroyed" the five.story stone fed·
eral building.
The Monroe County ornee buildln& ap..
peared hardest hll by the bluta which
smashed almost every window on one side
of the structure.-Est.lmates for repaira to
the CMWry-old building ranied to above
1100,000.
1be home of Dick Clark, buaioeas maDo
ager of Local m, OperaUna Eniineers
Union, was the first bombln1 tar&eL
"We don't have ~ ldt1 who d1d Jt or
wbf," Clark sald.
•In New York City, I aunpawder pi,pe-
homb exJ>leded In a lklewalk plBlller <!"~
111ae ·the Ne"it York HJlton hotel Jn mid·
Manhattan, shattering wlndowa and aw•
entng_guest&-......---
Jn Brooklyn, a "low grade u:plotlvt''
In a tin can blew up under a fence In
front ol an old tenement A policemln
said he believed "some kid just wanted
ta make a loud ban.I."
Tbe Orlando exploaion occurred at 1
construction site while two Air Force men
were trying to_diamantle_a-hamemade
bomb. The men were not believed to be
seriously injured. Police could orrer no
motive but police said It was the third
construcliMI firm to be hi! br .hombt In
recent weeks.
Monday's homblll(.! brought to ll the
number of bombings in the past wen.
Others have occWTed in C.tltfornia, Illi·
nois and W uhington.
Irvine Claims Vnruh's
Attack 'Cheap Politics'
Irvine Company officials today labeled land the county receives in the exch1n1e
Fountain Valley p Janning Com· Jess Unrub's attack on the Upper will provide publle park sites that en·
missioner! will study a request for lM Newport Bay tidelands e1.chance 1'cbeap compass more than 200 acrea and will in·
apartments near the northwest corner of political theatrics" and cballena:ecl him to crease the usable water area of the Up--
Brook.burst Street and Slater Avenue at put·up or shut·up U he really believes the per Bay by some 50 percent.
their regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. land swap is illegal. "Finally," Ferguson said, "Mr. Unruh
Wednesday. 'Ibe ttatements came ln reply to auerted that the State Lands Com·
Donald Harper is requesting high densi· Unruh'e alle11Uons that the propoted mlulon during Governor Brown'a ad-
iY @Rartmeo.tz_onln& for._4.u_ms_n_ortb _of tidelands exchange between the ranch minlstration had_!lenied approval to the
ff kb company-Ind OrlOp C-Oun!110'ionunenl exchange Starfish Avenue, just o Broo urst. is, in bi.I words, "a awtndlHWap." "Thia i~ not true," he said. "The com-
The city planning staff has recom-Gilbert w. Feriuson, Jrvlrie's vice mln.ion in March IM? withheld approval mended that the c<1mmlsslon approve
apartment zoning for the ires, but president of corportte commwiJcatlon, with the explicit understanding that it
al r th 1 til commented, "U Mr. Unruh ln fact woWd qain consider the matter further withhold approv 0 e P ans un believes tbat about the Upper B1y land when more information was provided." Harper reduces the number o f apartments ......,uested. exchange, he abould file appropriate Ferguaon said, "J might add that I
·-• 1 artm ts charges." · · personally consider Mr. Unruh's confused "His plans now call or 24.B ap en Then Ferguson added, "He won't. ()f oprv-.JUon W the concept of joint develop--per acre, we want 20 per acre," a r-
---conttnued.·reterences·amonc aome-U±-'--by--Huntinpn--Bea·ch--United· 'Crusade·
officials to the Ctiban '_'."ICtlvUy, together Campaign volunteers Monday as the
with U.S. chpgea of Russian complicity dr:l~e toward the city's goal or $154,000
InEtYpliall-ol-lho.Mlddle Eaat aot W!der way. oiiif.&17 QP11'1DtQ' fUrtber irritated~ -The rilaillng was to all resldencee in the
&Met ottidall. -._.-· • city. There will be subsequent drives
From.Pagel
spokesman for the planning department course, becauae Jt Isn't. ment·of the Upper Bay both cynical and with a list of the 31 agencies receiving ld--tod ___ ·-~·--··------·---~:Ititdillreaalq_.that be.hu.becomt..so--ir-r.flpODl.ible,,""------asststance;plir!'"ll>tedgecar11.-··------~• ay;--------desperate that he will engage 1n this kind
Mrs. Ann Moreland, cliairman of the The area is muterplanned f 0 r of cheap political theatrics," be said. -(:(
residential mailing, said volunteers from apartments. The zone change is schedul· ''The.Upper Bay exchange ls now being
the· Campfire Girls, Girl Seouu, YMCA cd for a public hearing Wednesday night. tried in the courte," Fergll.l()n pointed
~"n.e wue llJd to be J*1ly the reuon ~ toward the business, pro-wbf Pmnter AJent ] .. KQSYgln cie¢.ded (essional and other groups In the city,
not to .1Uen4 tbe u~ _ filtiool 15th ~ campaign chairman William Foster, ex·
nI....ary meotinc wbJcj> 111t1a Wed-plained.
D191faJ nil ruled out 1 poaible iummit Included In tbe malling was i brochure
.......;,.. -P.mtdeot. Nlaon.. ezplainlng the funcUon of the cruaade
D'f' wti& ...,..., u,._~MOllP.O"i ·~ , , ~, .1, ,. ,, I , ,
UNRUH •.•
and Boy Scouts -have worked at ad· Planners will also open 1 public bear· out, "A determination into ite Je1ality
dressing the envelopes and parceling ing on a proposed ordinance change nd It ~•t U lit '· t t be -• them for several months. which would set a $25 fee for area var!· :d. 1 coni:ow u ona Y lll ye 0 reaUJ-
Mrs, Moreland pointed oUt that a ance applications. "One ruling that has been m1de,
survey found that one out of three There is currenUy no fee charged for however," be said, ".Is that -there is no it, and then 1el11 "$200,000 luxury homes
famlUes in Huntington Beach rectlved requests for an area variance. City of .• evidence of fraud ()r misrepresentation in to the very rich."
services from one of the agencies aJded ficials say such requests tie.up three any of the ne1otJaUona and detl.llom that "Devel9pments like this lhoukl not be
by the United Q-usade. department heads and Ire excessive culminated in state approval of the eJ:· built in a place of public beach when
because of the lack of a fee. chana:e. there is aucb a shortage of recreation twJNewd ~ Wubincton's repeated
re-Io tbe allqed mlaslle base 11
poafhly hiinc baled on broader, ooUcy
allllldenlloM, lncludlll( the Middle EU!
crilll. TllroqbOul, the U.S. ofllcl1ls
-ledpd that only dublouJ .and
dated Information -available to In;
dlcalAI -ldta mJChl be belll( bUJll.
Judge, Denies · Seal Beach ""-' ar•~ to recommend l'Or-c.anty f!uperfer-Comi Jud(<i areu 1n SauU>ern Calllornil," the can-the ~ ree to the city council. Claude M. Owens announced that flndln& dldate sa~. "· -,. 'i:l6"''4. '• 'lit•~,,. , J,a$AUS. !IJ,WI rqNt Mr l!onlllil op,. t .lit adi!M, "Whit 1be COUDty 1ave
"' ~ · parent lporance ol thil nzllftl:" hi'"llld. ImDe and what Reagan's land eotn· 2 Conmen Strike_ "Further," he said, "tbe 4IO ..... o1 m1a1on ""'""'to bl• ...... a blatant 1m
Suspec~-HeUl
'
On Rape Charge
' A 27-yur..old man was In Huntington
Beadt City Jaji today accuJ<d or kld-
naping 1 lt-)'ell'<>ld Lone Beach girl,
rapq· her at kntfepolnt and dumping
her In a aecluded portion of tho lash·
lonable H\Dllington Harbour art1.
The alleged aasallant, idenUfled as
Giry M. M..W, 121t Molino St, Loll(
Beach, ·•u amatld by two Huntington
Beach detecUvea at tdl home around
• a.m. today.
Det. Sgl MOnty McKennon said t h e
woman· gave a descr1ptlon of the sus-
pect and his automobile.
The 'woman, according to detectives,
bad been waiting <>n a bus bench in
Long Beach Monday night when she ac-
cepted a ride. They said she was driven
to the corner of Saybrook Lane and
Humbold Drive where the assault as--
sertedly occurred at · 10:4S p.m.
DAILY PILOT
OIU.NGI COAST ,.UILllHING COMP'AN't
l•"•rt N, W114
Prnkltnl •nd P1,1Dt1.W
J1tk R. Curit.,
VkA ,mkllnT 1rA11 O-•• MaMfW
Tlto1n11 Ket•il
EOUor
lhom11 A.. M11tp1"111
M•llNllll r4JM
Al111 Dlr•i11
WMI Ol'lntt Qurlty t:f!lw'
Al"•rt W, l1t1•
Mtki.t. ldll*'
Hmt .. tM ._. OHke
17175 leech le,Jw1'4
M1lll111 Alll11111 P.O. le11 7tO, 92641
°''"'-&,.,.. letcfl: _tn l"Ofwl ... ~
C•l9 M ... i m Wtd ••r •tnet ti""'" •n<111 n11 W•t l&llOt ""lewt11 hll c.nMlt: ~U ""111 11 c.m.. aMI
Apartment Zoning Plea
.\ plea for apartments on a strip of
railroad land in Seal Beach failed to sway
a Sui>erior Court judge Monday.
Judge Hannon G. Scoville told Modular
Technology Inc. to seek other means ta
adrleve apartment wnlng in Seal Beach.
Modular Technology, formerly Apollo
Development Co., had sought a writ of
mandate from Orange County Superior
Court to force the city of Seal Beach to
grant apartment zoning on a 100-foot
wide strip of land through downtown Seal
From Pagel
GAMES ...
and also became a playground leader
in Garden Grove.
Rip was a physical education major
in college and planned to be a coach,
but decided that working with kids on
a wider, recreational level would be
more rewarding.
"I first thought about coaching while
ln the Marine Corps, before college.''
Rip said. He served three years in the
Marines, all of them ttatloned Jn Santa
Ana. During his free hours he worked
at Disneyland as a ride operator on the
jungle cruise and the submarines. a
rather natural beginning for a recrea-
Uon man.
''My thing is making people happy.''
Rip says.
According to news clippings and his
own e<tperiences , Rip was quite success·
fuJ at that in Garden Grove.
One idea he sparked there was an ex·
hibilion of army models.
"A bunch o! the kids wanted to build
models based on mllltary objects. We
started a model club, then I found this
man in Anaheim who had built 500
different army models."
RJp and his klds, plus the Anaheim
man, put all thelr models together Jn
a huge indoor display set up in various .......
"We had 1,500 visitors ln one week
to see it," Rip said.
Anther Ume be helped youngsters set
up a spook house at a school. He said
1,500 kids filed lhroush to see I h e
ghosts In four days.
And another G1rden Grove project
wit tbe construcUon f)f • 24-foot Ind.Ian
tepee visible for three clly bl ock>, "be-
e11use the kids wanted to do It."
Such Ideas will eoon be coming onto
the Huntington Be1ch scene.
Rip'e philosophy ls simple -It's com·
munk:3tion.
"That·'s the key word, communlc1te
with the klds. lf people would stop Iden-
tifying with groups and just lcam to
use thei r own personalities to commun·
!caw, the world •·ould be much hap-
pier."
Beach.
The land Is part of the city's ruverfront
Development Agency formed two years
ago for urban renewal. Modular was de·
nled its zoning request March 18 on a 3-2
vote or the city planning commission.
The land in question is part or the old
Pacific Electric right-Of.way and ls not
owned by Modular Technology.
Judge Scoville said he denied the writ
of mandate because lhe company has not
pursued all possible methods to solve the
dispute with the city of Seal Beach on
the munlclpil level.
Local Talent
Set for Valley
Hallo -ween Days
Local talent will brighten the day for
Fountain Valley residents four days next
week at four different shopping centers in
preparation for the city's third annual
Halloween Parade and Barbecue.
Jack Nelson. billed as the clown of thl!I
keyboard, will perform at 5 p.m., Oct. 19,
in the Alpha Beta shopping center,
Magnolia Street and Warner Avenue.
Entertainment will also be provided by
the Fountain Valley School Dl!trict
Orchestra.
Jim and Joanie Seigfried will sing for
the public at 5 p.m., Oct. 20, in the
Village shopping center. Magnolia Street
and Talbert Avenue. Charley Baker's
tumblers and Musa ko Henwood ' a
Japanese dancers Y.'ili also perform.
r..1rs. Bessie Kjellin will present her
P.1exican dancers at 5 p.m., Oct. 21, at
Zody's shopping center, Harbor Boule.
vard and Edinger Avenue. Their act will
be joned by Martin Ramos on the guitar
and Sylvia Pa lamontes singing.
The last show or the four-<lay series
will be Jayme Boyd, current Mlss Hun-
tington Beach, dancing under her stage
name ''Makanani'' at the Gemco shop-
ping center, Brookhurst Street and
Warner Avenue, at 5 p.m .• Oct. 22. Mils
Boyd wlli be joined by the folk lln&lnc
duet of Mrs. Jackie Lindquist and her
daughter Sue and the Fountain Valley
Squ11re Danct Club.
All four shows are warm·ups to the
main event. Oct. 24, the parade and
barbecue sponsored by the chamber ot
commerce.
Center l\fodel Shown
A model or' the proposed $8.5 mllllon
Hunting1on Beach Clvlc Centtr wOl be on
display through Oct 20 on the sround
floor or the Broadway department store
at Huntington Center.
of vahlabl< land In return for thll truh."
Unruh claiml!d the outcome of the swap In Huntington__ Husband Sought would b<the •tale •tuck with vlrlually uselese land while the big development
reaps riches by building homes on prime The owner of a small Huntington Beach
market was told to "play it cool" by a
couple of customers Monday night, but
the game CQSt him $185.
James R. Sissier, manager of the Stop
and Go Market, 17490 Beach Blvd., told
police officers the two men, both in their
30's and bearded, shoved a blue steel
revolver in his !ace and demanded cash.
"We want all your money, be cool, be
cool," one of Lhem urged .
He was, and the cub register rang &·
$185 pay out.
Stamp Thief Licked
EXETER, England (UPI) -Peter
Blakely, 28, released from Dartmoor
Prison July 29, was C1lnvlcted Monday of
stealing the pri8on doctor's stamp col·
lectlon while a convict and waa sent back
to Dartmoor to eerve nlne more months,
I W"{ ' D th beachfront property. n I e 8 ea "Thia shameful 1anc1 grab 1s typical or
A Garden Grove woman wu appar·
enUy strangled to death in her home M~day night and police have a dragnet
Oub-for her h111band.
Mn. Debbi O'Leary, 20, WU found
in the bedroom cloaet by police who had
rC!ponded to an anonymous telephone
call that there was a dead body at the
home addreu, 11535 Stuart Drive.
Her husband, John Bruce O'Leary,
26. is being sought in a statewide drag·
net. He is described as male, w h i t e ,
S.foot e.ight inches lall about 145 pounds
with red hair and blue eyes.
Police this morning refused to re.
veal any motive they might suspect
for the murder.
the way Reagan coddles the rich and
soab it to the rest," Unruh said in pre-
pared remarka.
He clalme the Irvine Company doesn't
yet have clear tiUe to the beach but
"already is trying to keep the public
out."
Without the campaign funds to match
Reagan's televl!ion campaign -or to
even try -Unruh contlnuea to use the
tactlo of "surprise campalgn visits"
designed to get u much free news
roverage as possible.
Some observers have come to call
them "field trips."
Republicans call them gimmicks.
The Unruh campaign, contlnuin1 in the
underdog role, atlll has trouble stirring
up enthusiasm even among Democratic
groups. """""
---
A GOOD WORD PASSED AROUND ABOUT
A BUSINESS IS INVALUABLE. A BAD WORD CAN
BE UNFORTUNATE.
OUR GROWING SUCCESS IN ·THE PAST 13
YEARS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE "GOOD WORDS"
AND REFERRALS SENT TO US BY OUR CUSTOMERS.
NO A M 0 U N T OF ADVERTISING CAN
REPLACE A PERSONAL RECOMMENDATION.
WE ARE NOT INFALLIBLE, BUT WE ARE
WORKING TOWARDS THAT GOAL, BY GIVING
OUR C U S T 0 M E RS THE BEST SERVICE AND
QUALITY POSSIBLE.
ALDEN'S
-.. -.-,.-.-... -0-.. -•• -,.... CARPETS e 'DRAPES
TUSTIN C.11 • , ,
... ~'~~·~ .. m 1663 P'lac•ntla Ave.
& HAPllln COSTA MISA 1111• 1rYt ... """"· c .. rt. ........ 646-4131
•
I
I
I
II .,
" "
•
• . . . ... . . . . . .. . . . .. . . .,. . ..,.. -· ·-...
Ne ·rt Beaeh
EDITION
-.
VOL 63, NO. 245, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES I
I
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1970 TEN CENTS . • -. ~~~~~--=;.....~~r--~ . "
'
Businessmen Call Proposed .Fee
-· .
L. PETER KRIEG
Of Ille o.I" Pllll Jhlff
Newport Beach City cooncilmen Mon-
lay afternoon got-a taste of the formal
•ction to the J)ropoJed business license :ee increUe.
To ~ surprise of no one, they found
:he flavor coruistently bitter,
Formal consideration on the new
Jrdinance was delayed until a council
'study session" next Monday, but after
\earing an outline of the changes from
rt.aft_ membeNJ, the councilmen listened ·,-
to criticisms from several individuals
present
They' included former council member
Dee Cook, upresent.ing Corona de.I ~ar
merchacts; Cirter McDonal(!, manager
of Robinson's .~nt. St9re and
Hugh Mynatt, mar\ager of Richard's Lido
Market.
All three called the proposed series of
classifications, one of which would
establish a gross receipts tax, unfair to
the business community.
All agreed Some increase is fair, but
nru
'
all, repeating earlier pronouncements,
said the present $25 Oat fee should slmply
be raised t1 provide the additional
revenues.
Under the complex city proposal, in-
come from the tu would double from the
present $225,000. Doubling the flat fee
would aca>mpllsh the s~e thing, the
businessmen said.
City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt
ouUined the reasoning for the proposed
change, pointing out that the council last
year had proposed it because the fiat fee
assessment is inequitable.
ac
Candidate's
Bus Visits ,
Harbor Area
COOiDierilln( on the o Pl> n ·t"th n.,.--est>blishments that-deal ·directly-wlth·the
Hurlburt pointed out. "No group is goiq public.
to approve a raise in laxes." Other rums would be taxed ln various other ways, some of them on the number
He aald the current structure is or employ-es tbey have and olhen..m' ttie
unreasonably low. He called 1 t amount of their payrolls.
"ridiculous." Contractors would be charged •flit U.
He ·alse pointed out . that the con-oC $100, undf!r I separate classification,
trovtrslal gross receipts lax will only af· and this brought criticism from Mynatt,
feet about one-third of the businesses in who pointed out that some developtrs
the city.
It is intended to
stores and other
s
cover most rel.ail
commercial
make far more than retail merchaats,
yet would be paying.only 1 fraCUoa of the
lax.
Cook 58.id a major reason the people be
• rv1ne
ytpr .... w oppou..the new ,pl111.J• lblt ·
they wm have to dlocl ... their ..... :
to local officials. . .
He charged that city wori\m''haH lil :
eyes and big ears and Jbey bave been ~
known to talk." . .
McDonald said the lncreue his ""'9 .
will pay will have "no 1reat ef.tect Oil • ·
profit." but, be said, "it's a ·mat&lr ·el.·
principle." ~
He said the revenues paid by lltP
retailers will be disprOportionate Jo the :
amount of servicea rectived from·u:.e ci· ·
ty. J
wa-
. -
--·--··-----·-·-·--·-···--·--· -···-···--·
CANDIDATE UNRUH BRINGS HIS EASEL TO NEWPORT BEACH
.Painting Bro.cl Strokes of Blg~Pi.cture, or Theatrics for Newsmen?
I
$75,800 Charg.,?
Pacific Freeway Study
Costs Told in N ewpor-,_
The costs of consultant services in
preparing the Newport Beach traffic
study will be investigated prior to im·
plementation of the three-phased survey.
City Traffic Engineer Robert Jaffe
-estimated the fee could be as much or
more than $75,000 for the study to
determine, among other things, whether
Newport Beach needs the proposed
Pacific Coast Freeway.
SpecifiCat:;nS for the study, with some
changes, were lpproved by the city coun·
ell Monday nigtit; only after council
members insisted that a citizens' com·
mittee be involved in the preparation of.·
all three chapters of the report.
Jaffe said a consultant would be.
necessary to carry the work out simply
because the city staff is already
overloaded.
He was told to meet with consultants to
obtain price estimates.
Phase I of the study will involve "Iden-
tification of the problems," Phase. II wll
deal Wlth "determination of reasonable
alternatives" tnd Ptiase lll will provide
"recommended specific solutions."
Councilman Donald Mclnnis had cau-
ti oned about employing a citizens ' group
in the first phase because of the added
time that would be involved.
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers, a leading
opponent of the freeway, argued that
there should be "no sense of urgency ''
and said a good job·is far more vital than
a quick job.
At Rogers' suggestion, the council took
out any time limits for work performance
in the specifications and put back 'the re-
quirement for the citizens' advisory com-
mittee.
The citizens' panel wil: consist of one
persoO from each councilmanic district, a
member from the two local chambers of
commerce and two "advisory" members
of the council, itself.
A major consideration of the study, ac-
cording to the specifications, will be
''neighborhood impact."
"All factors associated with t.he ob-
jectives of harmonious community en·
vironment will be comidered, includin1
(See TRAFFIC, Page J)
Posed on the shoreline of Upper
..Newport Bay, De_mocratic g~rnatorial
candidate Jess Unnih today alleged that
the Irvine Company is engaged in a
"swindle-swap" in the proposed Back
Bay tidelands exchange with Orange
County government. ,
Unruh. in what he termed another of
his special news events, brought a
busload of newsmen and camp f~llowen
to the'llarbor M<a ftir ,et anollwt'ol lllt
attacks against big buainess and the
Eslablisbnwit.
Monday it was Standard Oil Company's
refinery in El Segundo that drew his at·
tention in an attack on air pollution and
incumbent Gov. Ronald Reagan .
'Today, the Irvine Company drew tbt
focus of Unruh's wrath.
Unruh asserted that the proposed
Newport Bay land exchange would deny
public access to prime S o u t h e r n
California beach land.
The Democratic gubernatorial can-
didate said if elected Nov. 3 he -with
(See lJNRUH, Paft J)
'Balboa Wharf'
Extension Set
By Irvine Firm
A glittering shopping plaza tabbed as
an extension of Balboa Island is planned
along the waterfront south of Bayside
Drive by the Irvine Company.
The project, to be called "Balboa
Wharf," will complement t.~'! Promontory
Bay housing and apartment development
already started between Bayside Drive
and the Pacific Coast Highway. -
Opposition to the multi -million dollar
plan is surfacing already, however, ac-
cording to a Balboa Island resident who
ast<ed the council to table any discussion
on the proposal Monday night.
An outline of the project had been
pre sented to Balboa Island groups two
weeks ago.
Irvine Company officials declined to
put a price tag on either of th" ;>rojects.
The Promontory Bay-Promontory Point
development involves the construction of
a man-made bay lO the north of Bayside
Drive, which itself will be ended to allow
a channel into the project.
The Newport Beach City Council has
already approved construction of the hay,
above which will be 65 single-family
homes and more than 600 apartment
units, according to the plan.
The Balboa Wharf development will be
built on 6.S acres of land where the Villa
Marina restaurant and the Ken Niles
apartments are now.
Both will be demolished to make way
ror some three new restaurants and an
(See POINT, Pase !)
Meeting Slated
By Sailor Band Birds Win Again
The Sailor Band Booster Club of
llelOpOI'! Harbor Higb Scllool will hold 113
flrtl ..,.Ung of lhe year al 7 p.m. Oct. 21
fll the ochool band room.
Mr. and Mn. JOlepb Quinn, band
t.ooster chairmen, will Introduce Richard
England, orchestra and baOO direct« to
the new pa~t.s. .
He will give 1 short talk to outline the
goals and acllvlU .. of tho inslrumental
music procram for 1170-71.
Pitcher McNally Swats Slam
BALTIMORE (AP) -Pikber Dave
McNa1ly climaxed a Jong ball barrage by
ripping a grand slam home run and the
Baltimore Oriolea buried the Cinc.Jnna U
Reds 9 to 3 Tuesday for a 3 to O lead
In the World Series.
McNally, who survived nint Cincinnati
hill to 10 the distance, beceme the first
pitcher In history to bJt a Serles alam
when he unloaded in the llJth Inning for
an a to 1 bulge.
Frank RoblnJOO and Doo Buford hit
eirller solo homers and Broob Robinson
doubled in the fjl'lt two n.1111 eaalnst Joaer
Tony Cloninger ln the fJrst Inning 11 tbe
Orioles won their lllh 1lratibt pme. ,
DAILY PILOT ........ ~ Rklllnll Kelli.
'IF YOU'RE GOING TO TALK ABOUT THE BAeK BAY, GET YOUR FACTS STRAIGHT'·
In Tennis T091, Mfa. T.W. Doan of Dover Shor11,' Takes a Few Swats at Candld1t1 Unruh
Irvine Hurls Chall.enge
Unruh Advised w Put Up or Shut Up on Exchange
Irvine Company officials today labeled
Jess Unruh's attack on the Upper
Newport Bay tidelands exchange "cheap
political theatrics" and challenged him to
put-up or shut-up if be really believes the
land swap is illegal.
The statements came in reply to
Unrub's allegations . that ~e proposed
All Beaches Set
Midnight Close
Except for Two
With the exception of Big and Little
Corona, all public beaches in the city
of Newport Beach will now close ·at
midnight.
The Newport Beach City Council ap-
proved the unifonn curfew Monday
night. although establishing a 10 p.m.
closing hour for the two Corona del Mar
beaches on a 12-month basis.
The previous closing hours for bay
beaches had been 11 p.m. Oceanfront
beachea have always had a midniaht
curfew. The 10 p.m. hour for the CdM
beaches ts the same as the summer cur·
few, but It is four hours later than the
winter cloe:ing time.
In adopting the new ~gulatlons. the
council followed a rtvlsed recommenda-
tion of the Parks, Beaches and R<cm·
Uon Commission. wblch originally bad
urged a nlidnight curfew on all beaches.
Tn the later recommendation, PBR
Chairman Jame1 L. Rllbel, Jr .. pointed ·
out that resident.I near the Corona bt•·
ch" had voked opposillon to I h • la·
tu bour.
,,
'
tidelands exchange between the ranch
company and Orange County government
is, in his words, ••a swindle·swap."
Gilbert W. Ferguson, Irvlne•s vice
pi·esldent of corporate ' communication,
commented, "If Mr .. Unruh in fact
believes that about the Upper Bay land
e1change, he should file appropriate
charges."
" 'then· Ferguson added, '11e won't,. of
course, because it isn't.
"It ls distressing that he bas become .so
desperate that he will engage in this kind
.of cheap political theatrics," he &aid.
"The Upper Bay exchange is nuw being
tried in the courts," Ferguson pointed
out, "A determination into itl legality
and its constJtulionality is Ytt to be rea~
ed.
"One ruUng that has been made,
however," he said, "Is that there iJ n·o
evidence of fraud or misreprestntaUon in
any of the negotiations and decisions that
culminated in state approval of the ex-
change.
''Orange Counly SUperlor Court Judge
Claude M. Owens announced that finding
last Aug. 11. We regret Mr. Unruh'a ap-
pareal Ignorance of this ruling," he said.
"Further/' be said, 11the 450 acres· of
land the county receive~ in the ex~hange
will provide public park lites that ..,.
compiSS more than ., acres and will in·
crease the 1111ble water area ol the Up-
per Bay by some 50 percent
"Finally," Ferl\L50ll said, "Mr. Un~
Gen. Puller DI
PORTSMOtml. Va. (AP) -The na·
lion's moat decorated Marine, Lt.Gen.
Lewis B. 11Cbe1ty" Puller, ii in
Portamouth Naval Hoepit.el's intensive
cart unit, 11very .eriowlly ill." Puller, 71,
was admllled 'lbunda)' aullttlnc lrom
pooslbl• heart dileue.
asserted that the State Lands Com·
mission during Governor .Brown's ad-
ministration had de.Died approv~ te the
exchange.
"This is not true," he Said. "The com-
mission in March 1967 withheJd approyaJ
with the explicit understanding that it
would again consider the mafter further
when more infonnatlon wu provided.''
Ferguson said, "I migbt add ·that I
personally consider Mr. Unruh's confused
opposition to the concept ot joint develOp.
ment of the Upper Bay both cynical abd
irresponsible." ·
Oraal(e
1feadler
Low overcast and patchy foe 11
the prescription for Wedntatay,
wealherwile, with temparatum
remaining in the middte '19's oni
lhe coast and around a .i..,....
lurther Inland.
INSIDE TOD.\\'
Her namt 101tnd8 like 1ome.1
thing ou' of o bad war mot.lit,
but Laguna Btach'• Tommie
Gunn, daughter of Tom Miz, ii
known 41 o 1uptr libtml. St•
Page 3.
•lrflll ' Celfftml• • o.a.i.. u. J
tltQitlM ""' -" .__. " DNWI "91tc• f ......... 1.iltNI .. _ •
llMll• :AMII lt
-" Mllflllf ...... 'l ...,.....,._ .. --' '""' ,.,... ,, """ , .. ,. • .......... 1•11 T....... If -" -. .. .._ 1•11 -.. ......... ..._.., ..._l).lt I --.. ' .__ ____ _..,
,,
'(
,
•
• •
z DAILY PIJ.OT N
Russ Deny ·
Ha'1ng Su~ . . .. Base in. Cuba
MOSCOW UIPll -~ Sovl•l eovem· me~--offlclally denied -today it ' w.as
bulld1n&: a nuclear submarine ~se in
Cuba -and aCc~ the N I x on
AdmlnlttraUon of deliberately or lr·
.. ,pon.<ib,JY lpn!adJni "lilslfluUollf."
A government statement distributed by
Tass, th_e. officllll SQyiet news J#ncr,
Aid lJw U .s. rtporU Lht: Russians were
"'Pged in building naval lnslallaU... in
CUba "play lnlo the hanc!s only ol !hose
who . are lntereded in fanning the war
psyehosis 'and complicating tbe 1ltuatjoo
in lhal ,..ion ol the wo•ld."
''Those who deliberately o r it·
responsibly are taking up and spreading
such !alslficalion play Into the hands or
the foes of peace," it 58..id.
''111e Soviet Union hu not built and is
not'buUdlng a military base on CUba and it not doing anything tbal would ~
tradict the understanding r e a c-h e d
between the governments of the USSR
and lhe United Stites in 1962," the state-
ment said.
The year 1962 marked .&be._ Cu.ban
miss Re cri!Js when President Jii1iii F.
Kennedy ordered their removal in a tense
confrontation that appeared at the time
to lie cin the verp of breaking lnlo diz<ct
~~~-=-~---------------------------~~~~ . " . . . '
Kidnap Lawyer Freed
Hurdle G-1.eared for Canada Hostages
MONTREAL (lJPl) -The Iiwyer for
lwo lfOUPI of aeparaUst kidnapers was
,..ieued lrom jail_ joday, clelllni one
obstacle in the, negotiations with the
governmen' to release two polltlcal
ho!:tages.
Robert Lemieux told newsmen he
would meet government negotiator Robert
Demers later today to continue talks
aimed at gaining freedom for British
Trade Commi.ssioner James R. Cros.!I and
Quebec Labor and Immigration Minister
Pierre IAporte, boltages of terrorist cells
F rona Pllfle l
POINT •..
unspecified number of specialty shops
i.loilg 850--feet of the waterfront west of
Marine Avenue.
' Qf the Froot de.. LlberaUon du Quebec. ding setting of Iii trl&l date Friday.
(FLQ). The lwo CO")maDilo coils have been
Lemieux said his lnltlal talk! with dlsa&!'eeing on the ransom terms, with Demer~. h<ld into lhe early morning !lie-cell bO!dlnji Liportt sticking I<> hliber
hours in the city jail where Lemlem has demands. :
been held since Sunday, were "very At opening talks between Lemieux and
elementary." • Demers Monday night, police threw a
Lemieux entered no plea -formally police shitld three blc'9ks deep around the
liSted in the records as a not gullty plea jail as the lawyers m~t.
-to charges of obatructlng justice and In Ottawa .. helicop~r loads of troops
interfering with the work of police by arrived to help the· Royal ~dJan
statementa made Oct. 9. Mounted Police oo guird duty-tbe first
Judge Maurice Allard r e I e a s e d such use of troops in tbe Canadian capital
Lemieux on his own recoaniz,.ance pen-in peacetime bi.story.·
~· Ignores Residents
Newport Council Okays
Eastbluff Boys Club James E. Taylor, general planning ad-
mini!tra~r for the Irvine Company, said
the project hopes lo capitalize on the
tourist market that patronizes Balboa
J9land, which actually will be "just around the corner." Eastbluff re1idents don't want it, they The PBR recommendation was subse-
"We expect the people will come to us, say they don't, need it, and they say their quently· changed when the Boys' Club
and to Balboa Island for the ~ypes of kids won't use it, but Eastbluff is going to board of directors changed its recom·
shops and environment we will offer," get the third branch of the Harbor Area .. ~endation. whic~ took place shortly after
Taylor said . Boys' Club. 1t learned of the availability of Eastblu!f
Taylor said the Shark Island Yacht Although facing formal appeals and park.
Club, in the path of the proposed new possible court action, the Newport Beach Willard Jordan, Costa Mesa city coun-
channel, will be relocated along the City Council last night approved the use cilman and a club director. told the coun-
conflict. ·
The Nixon Adminlstration first raised --ll"'""""..:ii.i..a;,ii,;:.;;_!~!.!!!!!1!~;;;<,!;;;::;;;;;!!ii,;,!~;; lht·submartne base lssije Sept. 25-.at a
regular Defense Departm~nt briefing, A
PentqOn apokeaman aald acllvity hid
boon'.·~ at_ Cl~ •. ~CUba'•
southirn coat, tlilt could be Ui itift of
a bile for oervilll nuolear Polaris.type
westerly end of the wharf. of a portion of EastbluU Park for the cil lhat the EastbluU site is preferred ~~~::";:!:J_-~ayloc _said...the...shopping plaza will be youth facility. because it would be le~ ... costlylhato b~~d a
designed to provide views of the water A spokesman for the residents of the building there : he poinl.C\I out t p mgs
1Ubmarinei. IAt.er the ume day a top Whlt.e Houae,
offi:l.al allo e:rpreued lf!rlous concern
about the bull -·tf that WU what WU beini' bul!L 'Ille official, ltbo did ool
permtt \lie ·of his name ID accounts by reiioifui,' aalcr the :United Stalaa would
,.pni a baaa lor mlaalle 111bmarinol·ln
caba-''wtth· tbe utmol& 1111oumt11. '' ·--.......
''l'l'Olll PGfe l
TRAFFIC •••
but nol Umlled in the followlne potential
!mpa<ll: •
"Noise, fumu and odora, traffic ac-
cident buard,_ property acqutsiUon, ex·
cess street widtbl, narrow aetbac.b, loss
of play areu .and clangers lo ael>ool
cbllhD,Qd1a&be:t,.pedestrians." '•" l
Otha" Ci'ltetlJ include, "dlsrupUon ol
tchool boundaries, property .. val ues.
estbetlcs, b1ocltina of. views, ecologlca1
marine dJJturbance, landscape: scarring,
'spllttina ol niipborboods' and close
auocia&lon of. unde:slrable land uses."
The: speclflc&Uona also include: a list of
30 1dcUUon1l 1'11>«ial considerations," in·
cludln&, 1moni other things, "the
feulbllif.y ol. tr1n1portation modes other
than the private automobile in the
Newport lie•<!> ...a.~ .
Special attention, according to the
apecificallons, abould also be given to
1'altemallve1 to a coastal freeway UI
Newport Beach" and the "advantages
and dludvantages" of the proposed
freeway. .
Other special conskler1tion1 to be in·
eluded in the report are "changes to
arterial street system necessary to meet
projected traffic demands w i t h o u t
freeways and "community and
neighborbood Jmp1cta · of any recorii·
mended changes 1n the arterial street
system -without freewa}'!. ·•
The study would similarly deal with the
Impact of the coastal freeway on both the
city street system traffic and on "com-
munity and neighborhood amenities."
It would deal with cost estimates on
street changes necessary, with and
without the lreeway and who would pay
those eo1ta.
It would inVOIWI research on the need
for a second bay crOSlllng and I.be cost.s of
Uull cnies1111.
DAILY PILOT
OltAHGI COAST l"UllllHING COMl"ANV
Aehri N. Wttd
Jt ck l . Cwrley
Viet l"r .. ldent Ind 0-rtl MIMJV
Tho11111 ic .... a
EOlf'Dr
Tho111tt A. Murph in1
MW~lftt Elltot
l. ,, .. ,. Kri•9
N....,, lfftft C!IV ld"°r
"....,.,. ..... Offlc.•
2211 W11t l1lbo1 loult v1rd
M1tllflt .M.!r111: P.O. lox 1171, t266l
°""' -Co.II M-! aa W.t .. ., Strwt
Ltflllll l•cll: m "'°""' ,.,,,._
141,11111,.i.. lltedli '"" lttdl ....,...,,.,. S..11 Cle!Y*lll: JllS Nortft al C.M~ 1\ .. 1
Sea King Queens
Leading the songs for Corona-de!'MaTil!gh--SChoo!-athlet!C'teams this
fall is this bevy of songstresses. In back row (from left) are Laurie
Bayless, Carol Caldwell and Lynn Sears. In the middle are (from
!elt) -Sue Kemble and Jill Cusler. In front i!Nailcy Smith.
f Bluffs communities said this morning he wou!CI be needed to erect a facility on the ;ive~otorists driving along Bayside is investigating appeals procedures and beach.
the groupa are considering taking the city Jordan said the club recogn1%ed the
He said there will-be....no more water to court to block.Jhe..club.-need-for~a facility to serve the peninsula,
view from the Coast Highway if the The council, acting under pressure Balboa Island and the West Newport
apartment project is approved. because of a threat by the Irvine Foun-area, and said at some time in tbe: future,
Taylor explained-.that the apartments, dation that It would withdraw an $80,000 a club wouJd be buUt there.
626 units in all, will be built in five major grant offered the club U a site was not He did not say when or where.
buildings ~Jong the top of the blyffs. determined by Monday, ignored op-Other re!!ident.s speaking at the
F. H d B 0
dd The single-family homes will be tiered position expressed by residents in ap-meeting said their areas we r e
t down the face of the bluffs to the edge of proving the location. nl sl d to th d Ire ea quar ers I er lhe new bay. The counc11 also ignored •n allunaliv• ~i~:. mou Y oppose e approve
Taylor aakl the project hope.fully will site, originally recommended by both the Mrs Edward Conn qf 466 Vis ta Roma
---.. ·-·---···-·-----·-·---· ------------· -·_g~!Jl~ imp~to~ _Q.f vlllas_!J~g.Jl>.~.-Boys' Clu~ ¥d the Park, Beach and in the North Bluff; development, the Mediterranean. 'itecreaUon Commisakm,--for-the-faclllty--· Clii'e!TfOUiif ·parrc-use1r.·u1a1ierenttte· Says He Can't Mee.t_T_erms or1i:e.~::ing projecl will cover a Iola! onri::1~i:=~~.8;..u1d have required ••)!Iii:~::. op;;:i:e:d~~P~\~ nol •
· _ --:-_ The council-Ustenectto-Taylor's pre.sen-a referend~m wlUun N.ewpo_rt _Beach-----women'i -lib 'type, but-what about the
tatlon only after a Balb6a lilind resident because it mvolved Udelands use, but ·m·ts'"
'd h f ll It ··-"d · d' u. · council endorsement would have &.. • .
The Newport Beach City Council Mon·
daY night delayed acUon awarding a con-
tract for construction of the new central
fire he'adquarters after the low bidder
said be could not meet the terms of the
pact.
; Spokelmen for the J. Ray Construct.Di
Company, tow bidder at $347.444, said
they could .not complete the project with·
in the specified 200 days required by the
city.
In its bid, the firm had Ignored the re-
qulrementand said It would take them
27~ days to complete the proj~ct.
This, City Attorney Tully Seymour told
the council, would have been sufficient to
c»nsider their bid 0 unrespanslve" and
designate the second low bidder as the
contract recipient.
However, William P. Ficker, project
architect, said the Costa Mesa contractor
had told him in writing. after the bids
were Opel\, they could ln fact do the work
in the alloted time.
Seymour said he wanted to review the
e.ntire matter before recommending ac.
tion to be taken by the council.
The second low bidder, the Alex Rob-
ert.son Company of Paramount, had sub-
Newport Coun sel
Hints Stalling
Over Courthouse
An indication that county admin1stra.
tors are stalling ln the preparation of a
formal lease agreement between lhe
county and Newport Beach for a court-
house site in Newport Center surfaced .al
a meeting of the Newport Beach City
Council Monday night.
The county Board of Supervi1ol'1 picked
the Newport site for the courthouse Jast
month and instructed a lease be prepared
within 90 days. The de<:lslon had been
opposed by certain members of the COU11ty
staff.
City Attorney Tully Seymour declined
to charge outright stalling tacllcs are be·
Ing employed by staff members worklng
on the lease agreement.
He said, however, he Is apparently
meeting "some resistance'' In trying to
preptre the contract.
·He said the only draft of the document
received so far was labeled "fourth draft"
and contained a number of highly unac-
ctptable provisions.
He said he Is scheduled to meet with
county officials today and lnd.ltated if
the climste or negOllallons does not lm·
prove, he will U-e the matter up with
Robert Thomas, county administrator.
Thoma1 had continually supported tht
Ntwpon Beach alte while officials under
him were apparently pushin& for a site at
the Costa Mesa fairgrounds .
"I will take the matter up with Thoma•
tr I feel w'e are beina delayed," Seymour
said.
He pointfd out that the curr,nt draft
!tipulates Lhe city must build the jail
facilities bv January, 1m. or tht t'O\lnty
will have the right to build thc.m at Nc.w.
port Beach's expense.
The city, as part of Its Inducement to
attach the fa "'llly to Newnort Beach, bad
made lho ofler ol provldlnc jolnl d1len-
1io1t 1re11s.
Seymour 1ugllea:ted thert m1y be 1 "etd
for a formal joint powera agree.me.nt be-
tween the two aovemmental bodies.
•
milted a base bid of $369,000, nearly
$22,000 above the J. Ray offer.
By subcontracting specified alternates,
however, the gap could be reductd to
112 ,000.
Seymour said lhe city probably could
hold J. Ray Construction to its bid, and
\1Se the letter to FiCker to require them lo pay' lhe $100.per.day penalty provided
in the specUicatlons for each day more
than 200 it tak~s U\em to do the work.
City Manager Harvey L. Hur)burt, re-
sponding to a council question, said, al-
though the need for the fire station at
Newport Center is great, and in fact, past
due, because Of budgeting schedules for
per.!lonnel a one or two-month delay in
construction would not l?e a major prob-
lem, In the event the council wanted te>
put the project out to bid a second time.
From Pllfle l
UNRUH ...
the aid of o t h e r Democratic office
seekers - would repeal the land transac-
tion between Ule Irvine Company and
Orange County.
Unruh issued the charge in a four·pa~e
statement prepared for delivery on.site
at Back Bay.
He said Orange County seeks to trade
the Irvine Company 157 acres of prime
beach land in return for 450 acres of
mudflats, underwater islands and county·
controlled acreage in what "is probably
the worst government real estate deal
since the Indians were talked out of
Manhattan Island for $24."
Unruh charged that the State Lands
Commission approved the exchange
shortly after Gov. Reagan took office in
1967. Re said thi.s occurred less than a
year after "precisely the same plan" had
been rejected by Ule three-member com-
mission in 1966 during former governor
Edmund G. "Pat" Brown's term.
Unruh charged that Irvine makes the
beachland private, bars public access to
it, and then sells "f200,000 luxury homes
to the very rich."
"Developments like this should not be
built in a place of public beach when
there is such a shortage of recreation
areas in Southern Galifornia,'' the can·
didate said .
He added, "What the county gave
Trvlne and what Reagan's land com·
mission rushed l.o bless was a blatant gift or valuable land in return for this trash."
Unruh claimed the outcome or the swap
would be the state stuck with virtually
useless land while the big development
reaps riches by bulldin& homes on prlme
beachlront property,
''This shameful land grab is typical or
the way Reagan coddles the rich and
soa ks it to the real ," Unruh said In pr~
pared remarks.
He claims the Irvine Company doean't
yet have clear UUe to the beach but
"alread.y Is trying to keep the public
oot."
Wilhoul lhe e>mpalen funda to malth
Reag3n's television campaign -or to
even try -Unruh continues to use tht
tacUe1 of "surprise campal~ vlsll.I"
designed to &et as much free news
coverage as possiblt.
Some observers have come to call
thf'm "fit.Id trips."
Republicans call them &lmmlckl.
The Unruh campaign, contlnutna In lhe
underdog role, sUll bu trouble 1llrrlng
up enth\ISlasm tvtn among Democratic
groups .
sa1 e e wvw pre1u ice 'f'eir ac-satisfied the foundation deadline. She 11.1.ggested a library or a general
tlon on the ~roje.ct. NevertheleSI, the council, fearing the t"Jmmunity center would be a better use
The councll will have to grant a use Bo , Cl b Id 1 lhr 1 1 'ls of the land, permit for the housing project and a zone ys u wou carry ou a ea . o I
change for three-fourths of the land in· own to accept an o.ffer by the ~1ty of
volved in the wharf project. Cos~ Mesa to build the facility· in
Harv p .,., Collins A Balboa TeWmkle Park, unanimously voted to put ey ease, oW'I ve., it in Eastbluff Ial~d, told the council they s.hould lable Michael M~ino of M2 Vista Grande
llll lrvb! Company preoeotalion becaUJe presented' ··a p<tlllon"'sllned by 'Ii
1t mlght influence their decision. residents oppming the site to the councll
, • .A.. , ·.A.> • ]... Monday ni&hl and cjJinild ii bl·bod llllJ•
H", ' W W time, "there would 00 1,000 more hanieli
B lb onlt " a oa Pro1' ect He' and olher resldenls ••Id lhere ... already more than enough youth ac-
T I lud Uvities available in the area. 0 llC e 3 Marino said this morning he Is check-
ing with city officia ls to determine the
proper appeals procedure.
New Restaurants
Balboa Island attracts some 1.5 million
tourists during the 90-day summer
season, according to a study Irvine Com-
pany officials said was made this year.
James E. Taylor, general planning ad·
minislrator for the land development
firm, used the figure in citing the think-
ing behind plans for the company's
..Balboa Wharf" project along the north
side of tbe North Balboa Island Channel.
The project, to feature t h r e e
restauranta and a number of specialty
shops, wlll be built along 850 feet of
waterfront east of Mar ine Avenue if It
wins approval of the Newport Beach City
Council.
Pointing to the number of tourists,
Taylor said, "We want a part of that
market.''
City Attorney Tully Seymour said the
only avenue of appeal would be a c:ourl
suit through Orange County Superior
Court.
Seymour said there are no automatic
appeals procedure!! established wlt.hln the
city charter governing this type: of COWi·
cil action.
Jn addressing the council Monday
nigtii,' Marino argued that the cl ub would
add to the growing traffic congestion in
the community.
~le also expressed his unhappiness with
the fact that the council did not give
Eastbluff residents more advance notice
of the plan.
The possibility or using the park site
there was publicly disclosed two weeks
ago at a meeting of the PBR commission
when it recommended the site as a secon·
dary alternative to the peninsula site
near Balboa Pier.
Hearing Slated
Qh Cable, Boost
':l> J. pubUc hearing on a "'1Ues! by
New.port Beach Clblevlsion to ln<:rease
Its llstallallon by 400 percent will be con·
dueled by the Newport Beach City Coun·
cil Nov. 9.
The local CA TV franchise is seeking to
raise its n1axlmum Installation fee from
111.95 to 175.
In addition, tht Pay-TV Company is
also asking the city to more than double
the length of its current franchise.
The council did not schedule any im-
mediate action on the second request
to extend the franchise from 11 to 25
Y,tars.
Officials of Cablevision said they need
the extension because thty can only
depreciate costs over the life of the
franchise and the financial burden of
doing so in the shorter period of time is
proving unbearable.
Council members insisted that any ex·
tension should be coupled with a revis ion
in the schedule of recs to the city that
would provide graduated increases as the
company begin!! to show a profit.
Cablevision officials Monday night
disclosed the firm is losing close to
$600,000 per year at this point, four years
after starting operation.
A GOOD WORD PASSED AROUND ABOUT
A BUSINESS IS INVALUABLE. A BAD WORD CAN
BE UN FORTUNATE.
OUR GROWING SUCCESS IN THE PAST l l
YEARS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE "GOOD WORDS''
AND REFERRALS SENT TO US BY OUR CUSTOMERS.
NO A M 0 U NT OF ADVERTISIN G CAN
REPLACE A PERSONAL RECOMMENDATION.
WE ARE NOT INFALLIBLE, BUT WE ARE
WORKING TOWARDS THAT GOAL, BY GIVING
OUR C U ST 0 M E RS THE BEST SERVICE AND
QUALITY POSSIBLE.
~------~ JANTA ANA. OU..N•I
TUSTIN C_...,,
ALDI M'J an HILL CA•HTI
& DU.l'lllD
11114 lrwf ... , ...... Caftf, ..... ,,44
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4131
r
I
, .. •
•
Cos1a .·Mesa
EQIIIOH
YOC.-63, NO. 245, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES TUESDAY, OOTOIER ·1 l, ·1970
I . .,. TEN cam
DAILY PILOT "'919 h' "•lrlcl O'Dtlllltll
Unruh ~J,laps SW:@.
Candidate Hits lrvi_ne Trail;e inVis~·i
Posed oil the abcweline o! Upper
Newport J3ay, Democratic gubemaf«ial ·
candidate Jess Unruh b>day alleged that
the I~ine Company i.!1 engaged ht a
"swindle-~ap" ·iit the proposed Back
Bay tidelands exchange with Orange
County government.
Unruh, in what he termed another or
his special news-events, brought a
busload of newsmen and camp followers
to the Harbor Area for yet another of his
attacks against big business and the
Establi.shn}.ent.
Monday It wa11 Standard Oil Company's
refinery in El Segundo that drew his at.
tentlon In an attack on air pollution and
incumbent Gov. Ronald Reagan.
Today, the IrVliie Company drew the
focus of Unruh's wrath.
Unruh aaerted that the proposed
Newport Bay land exchange would deny
public access to prime S o u t h e r n
California beach land.
•
OLD CAR DRAGGED FROM DRA INAGE DITCH FOLLOWING FATAL ACCIDENT MONDAY
Spectacular E1t1 nc l1 Drivt Crash May Ha ve Followed Heart Attack, or Stroke, Police Theorize
-~ mocratic ~gu=-. ~rn~atDriil Cin.
didate said if elected Nov. 3 he -with
the aid of o t h e r Democratic office
seeker.a -would repeal the land transac-
tion between the Irvine Company and
Orange County.
Unruh issued the charge in a lour-page
,statement prepared for delivery on-site
at Back Bay.
-Eiderly·Woman-··-·Bird-s-··-Win~A-gain'-·
-Dies in Crash
Near Estanc~a
Hwtlihg off -.. curve in her old sedan,
an elderly woman was killed instantly M..., wlleD Ille car ~ !GD yords
throagb a' Costa M-field, sbol up Ill
embankment , and ~ dived inte a
dratnqo ditch after 111).foot Oighl.
Mil. Ruth R. Abney, '70, of 153 Center
St., Olsta Mesa Wll pronounced dead in-
side the crump{ed wreckage, with nearly
every bone in her body-brcfren and multi-
ple internal injuries~
The· apectacular accident-on Estancia
:Avenue nelr Swan Drive may have been
caused by the woman 1ufferlng a heart
attack or stroke, but coroner's deputies
uid it was impossible to tell. due to
mas!live injwies.
Patrolman Bill Bechtel said b>day Mn.
Abney's death -.ill therefore be listed as
a traffic fatality. ·
Tbe accident shortly before 1 p.m. was
witnessed by three youths. Police said the
accident could have been worse hid it «-
curred just before or after clas!es at
nearby Estancia High School.
Nonnally, lhe narrow road is lined with
teenagen walking and riding bicycles at
those houn.
Officer Bechtel said the car left the
roadway at the top of 1 hilly curve 3!1<1
shot straight toward the county-main~
tamed drainage ditch with no apparent
effort to stop.
The 1951 sedan ripped out chain link
fencing as it sailed off the bank .at tbe
edge of·tbe culvert and smashed into the
opposite concrete wall. bouncing back to
the other side again.
"She was trapped between Ute steering
wheel and the seats," said Officer
Bechtel. Other officers said they have seen the
sedan bearing Texas license plates
around town in the past two months and
believed the victim was a recent arrival.
Funeral services were pending today at
Bell Broadway Mortuary in C.osta Mesa,
where _spokesmen said I.bey knew nothing
about the elderly lady.
0r .. ge
We11dte r
Low overcast and patchy fog 11
the prescripU.on for Wedllesday •. '
weatherwise, with temperaturu
remaining in the middle 70'1 on
the coast · and around C .c:legreea
lurther Inland.
INSmE TODAY
Her nomt 1ound.s like lomt•
tl).ing oui of a bad war movie,
bvt Laguna Beach 's Tommte
Gunn, daughter of Tom Mix, ii
kn91Dn as ~ super liberaL See
Page 3.
' ' ' ll•W " " ' ' • " 1•11 ..
"
·-.... --.. M'"-'4 .._ "' _._.. '
ll't'rll """"' ,,
'""' 1~1· , .... ~ 1•11 T........... It -" ·-. ...__.t ...... ,,.,, ...... """' ..,
P1tc her McNally Swats Slam
BALTIMORE {AP) -Pitcher Dave
McNally climaxed a long ball barrage by
ripping a grand slam hOme run and the
Baltimore Orioles buried the Cincinnati
Reds 9 to 3 Tuesday for a 3 to 0 lead
in the World Series. ~ Aktia!JJ. who surrivtd nine Cincinn1U
Dils to go the distance, became the first
pitcher In history to hit a Series alam
when be unloaded in the sixth inning for
an 8 to· 1 bulge.
Frank Robinson and Don Buford hit
earlier solo homers and Brooks Robin.Ion
doubled in the rim two runs apinlt loser
TOll1 Clanl!I...-ia 1llt !Im iIUiial la Ille
Orioles WOD their 1IUi 1trai&bi.1ame. •
Mesa Planners Appro ye
Coffeehouse· Zone Bid
Proposa1s for 1 restaurant--service 11ta·
lion project and a private membership
coffeehouse for folk music fans were
recommended for approval Monday night
Big Firec racker
Explodes; Y outh
Killed in B last
MODESTO (UPI) -An attempt to ex-
plode a giant firecracker ended in
tragedy Monday when a 23-year-0ld
Frazier Park man wa11 killed while trying
to light il
Sheriff'& deputies said they were told
Larry Bradley and Clifford Chiermeister,
23, both of Frazier Park and Ronald J,
Pedrioli, 21, of Ceres had been discussing
childhood experiences when they decided
to build a homemade giant firecracker.
They purchased a pound of gunpowder
from a sporting goods store and an eight-
inch length of pipe and went to a desolate
area near the Stanislaus County aim-
munity of Oakdale.
The men packed the pipe with powder 1 laid a trail of powder as a fuse and were
attempting to light a piece of paper at
the end of the powder trail but their
matches kept going oul.
ctiienneister and Pedrioli were at the
car getting more matches when they
heard an explosion. They ran back to
Bradley and found him dead -knocked
several feet tiy the force of the explosion.
Deputies said Bradley had probably
been trying to.light the powder trail when
tbe explosion eccurred.
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 t111i DallY ''"' Sitt!
Old Number Four, a pooped-out
punlper whose career has covered the
Western Hemisphere from Guam to
Fresno chugged oul o( Costa Mesa Mon·
day ~ not Jn a bWe ef 1lory -but 1
blast of oil smoke.
A ring-and-valve job woukt cost more
than she's werth. ·
The 1M5 Seagraves ~ truck made it
to Brea., however, •~re she will rest and
recuperate before rolling on to the Mei·
lean Border,
' "We just went 1ailing right along with
by the Costa Mesa Planning Commission.
'The r.one exception permits go next to
the city council for final action.
Harold T. Segentrom & Sons plan the
Blue 01 cafe and service !!talion at the
northeast corner of Baker Street and
Harbor Boulevard in a Cl aimmercial
rone.
Terry Morrissey's proposal for a cof-
feehouse operation at 2280 Newport Blvd.,
was also given a unanimous vote by com-
missioners who noted the ·structure i!:
now a closed beer bar.
Several other matters were held over
to future meetings, either at the ap-
plicant's own request or the suggestion of
planning technicians.
In other action, the commission:
-Approved a zone exception pennit
allowing Mobil Oil Company to erect a 60-
foot sign at a service station at 3195
Harbor Blvd., over the normal 35-foot
limit, to be visible from·the adjacent San
Diego Freeway,
-Denied a zone exception permit for
Photo Disc Corporation, Santa Ana, to in~
stall a drive-through film and sound tape ,
carousel at 17th Street and Santa Ana
Avenue.
Planners were warned the project
would complicate already difficult traffic
problems in the immediate area, in-
creasing the potential for accidents.
Gen. Puller Ill
PORTSMOUTif, Va. (AP) -The na·
· tion's most decorated Marine, Lt.Gen.
Lewis B. "Chesty" Puller, is in
Portsmouth Naval Hoopital's Intensive
care unit, "very seriously ill." Puller, 71,
wa11 admitted Thursday 1Yifering from
possible heart disease.
"
no problem, .. said Costa Mesa City C<Jun..
cilman Alvin L. Pidtley, riding shotgun
in the open cockpiL
Neither be nor <nmcilmu William L.
SI. Clair. who rode along, ...W.,.. the
wobbly npt ,_. dual• -M OI~
Number Foat.tollad·••ay fl.ol h !':lvli:
Center.
fire Oliel John Jlltlhall IOllDCled the
time-strained 11rt1t I ODal time In salute
to the cily that Cid llmnber ...., helped
protect since before it WM/ tven.i in-
corporated •
Bought as·World l/ar II 111rplui 1fter
being shipped bacl:.lrom duty ~Guam,
He said Orange County seeks to trade
th-e-irv1ne-eomp1ny1-57-a-cres-of·lJl'tme--····
beach land in return for (SO acres of
mudflats, underwater Wanris and county·
~trolled acreage in what ~is probably . .,,
the wont government rea1 est.ate deal
since the Indians were talked oqt ot
Manhattan Island-for $24."
Unruh charged that the State Lands
Commission approved the ~change
shortly after Gov. Reagan took office in
1967. He said thi!I occurred less than a
year after "preclaely the ~ plan" bad
-·njacted by U, lhrll;L! :!Mr_.
mluion in 19111 during former, 1ovemor
Edmund G. "Pat'' Brown's term. .
Unruh charred that Irvine ..U.. lhll
beachland private, bars public acceas to
it, and tbeD se:lls "$200,000 IUXUi'y homes
to the very rJch."
"DevelopmentJ like thi.! should not be
(See UNRlJH, Pace J)
Qinadians Free .
Jailed Law yer
For Terrorists
MONTREAL (UPI) -The lawyer for
two groups of separatist .kidnapers was
released from jail today, clearing one
obstacle in · Ule n'egotiations with the
government to release two political
hostages,
Robert Lemieux ·told newsmen he
would meet government negotiator Robert·
Demers later tOO.ay to continue talb
aimed at gaining freedom for Britbh'
Trade Commissioner.James R. Cross and
Quebec Labor and lJ!Ulllgratlon Mlnlater
Pierre Laporte, hostagea of terrorist cells
of the Front de Liberation du Quebec
(FLQ).
Lemieux uid his lnitlal talks with
Demers, held into Uie early morning
hours in the city jail · where Lemiem: has
been held since Sunday, were "vety
elementary."
Lemiewi: entered no plea -formally
listed in the rNJrds a!I a not guilty plea
-to charges o( obstructing justice and
interfering with the work of police by
atatementJ made Oct. t.
Judge Maurice Allard r e I e a 1 e d
Lemlewi: on his own recognizance perr
ding setting of a trial date Friday.
The two commando cell! have been
disagreeing on the ransom tenns, with
the cell holding Laporte·sticking to biiher
demands.
At ·opening talks between Lemieux and
Demer• Moncf4y night, police threw a
(See KIDNAP, p,.. I)
the vehlcle wu purchased at auction In
Freano for uae by the community'•
..-1glnal volunteer fire cleportmenl.
Her camr ha Included .. ery kind ol
a1lla from the trldlllanol ,.,.,done
1 potroaat to foar-olarni"bluel.
,A· litUe· naty now In ·opois olld ·•Ith
allver "'1Jtt recalling the ""1erlty o1 tlie,
war yeara -when chrorno -1 luriry the war effort eouldn1t11ccommodate -
Oki Number Four has yet i ..,. career
lbaad.· •
· She wu tumtd over to a ~•lion of
Brea dty offklals in ceremonltl . OrillnollY It! far 5 p.m., Ulen poatped
~
I '
I CANDIDATE UNRUH BRINGS HIS EASEL TO NEWPoRT-I EACH
P•Jntlng Bro.ct Stroke1 .of Ilg Picture, or The•t ric1 fo r New1men? . . \ . . . , " .. ,. ' • \ ' ' I ~
Irvine Clai~ ·Unruh ' s
Attack 'Cheap Politics'
Irvine Company officials today labeled
Je~s · Unruh's attack on the , Upper
Newport Bay tidelands ei:change ucheap
political t.btatrics" and.challenged him to
put.up or shu~up if he really believes· the
land swap is illetal.
The statements came in reply to
Unruh1s allegations that the proposed
tidelands exchange between the rarich
company and Orange County government
is, in his words , "a swindle-swap.". .
Gilbert W. Ferguson, Irvine'• vice
president of corporate communication,
commented, "If Mr. Unruh in flct
believes that aboot the Upper Bay land
exchanae, be 11hould · file appropriate
charges.", . ,
Then Ferguson .adde~. 1'He won't,, of
course, because It isn'L
"!tis distressing that.lie bU becOlnl IO
Eagle Bands'rnen
Tops in Parade
The Estancia Higll School Eagle
marching band took a .weepstakes prize
last Satuf~y ln the fusC.in "Tiller
Days" Parade.
The band, under the direcUon of Pe-
ter )".oumler and led by Orwn Major·
Carl Stevens Jr. was joined by the Eag•·
Jette Drill Team. They competed with
If other hfgh school bamb arid d r l 11
~ams. .
It Was the 'first time a Cosla' Mesa
group· wa's given tht sweepstakes a Ward.
Second Plice •fient to S8nta ·Ana • High·
Schaal •band.-.
dlghlly to accommaclale an aging lady'a . ' . pace . ...,
'J'lie'olil1rlic'k. now valued al J1ist ~;
will be donlted ·to · Bre1:1 •iatac d\y,
Lagae de -· 1.000 inllu IOUlll of ·the: ~-~l~h\~· ... ' .......,.llona·art·ciimhuy undtr,,ay
with lie Maican fO....nm<nt to~ Old
Numbtr Fo0r 1 lilt on the lul, lonC.ltl
of whit may well.be her llnll journey.
''They -t to ·poi her on 1.r1llroad
flotoar.''·sald Councilman Plnkley;a·two-
tl~ 1111)'0' ·who ,.ttled In. Colt& Mesa
(Boe ENGINE, Pal• l)
I
,
• desperate ~t he.wµI engage·tn ~s kind
of cheap political theatrics," ht II.id.
. "The Upper Bay excliange i1,oow' bebiC
tried in the courts," Fel'JUIOQ poif¥d
out, "A determinatl~ into its lf&alitt
and its constitutionality ii yet to be reach-
ed.
"One ruling that hu been mode, .
however,-'-' be uid,-1'is that there· ta no
e)'idence of fraud or milrepresent.atlon °'
any of the negotiations and decisions that
cµlmina~ in state approval of• tbe a·
change, I ,
· "Orange County Superior Court Judge
Claude M. Owell.!I announced tha~ findinc
last Aug .. 18, We regret Mr. Unruh'• •Po
parent ignoran~ of this ruling,~' be said.
·"Further,'' be said, "the 450 tcnil of
land tbe County receiVes in the excba.n&e
will· provide · public ·Pirk aJteS that tft·
compass more than ~ actes and will' in·
creaae tht Usable water area of the Up-
per .Bay by Some 50 percenL ·
·"Fi?UY..'' 'Ferpsori: said, "Mr. Unruh
...Orteil '.that ' the Slot< ·Lands COm·
mission during Governor Brown's: Mf.
ministration· bad denied approval ·to ·ttte
exchange.
"This is not true," he said. "The com-
mission in March 1967 withheld approval
with the explicit UDderstandlnl: tb.t\ it
would 'again consider the matter further
when more informatiOO was pr.ovided."
Ferguson sai$f, "I might add that t
personally consider Mi'.'Unn.ib.'1 confused
oppo11ition to the concept of joint dm!IOP.-
ment ol the Upper Bay botll cynical ul!
irreaponsible ...
~A ,To .Disclose . .
~,rge Dec~ion ·
In ; Salazar Case ·-.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -District A~
lorney Evelle J. Younger will am>OUDOe
Wedneaday wba\h<f ..-not ¢rimlnal
chrges will be liled In. the de<th· of M.,..
lean-American newsman ~ Sall!ar,
,Younger ICheduled a news conference
for ~0 :30 a.JD. to disclose bia dectft:in
based an a rtView o! testtmony SW-tad
to • coroner'• lnquat. ·
The 'lnq\Jftl' jury . rule4 ~I S."'""'
ditd "at the bands o< anotber" -a
sherifrs depu\y who fir<d • te.r 1u 111'1"
jectlle Into 1 bar In West Loi """~
during rioting Aug. lt. 1111 mlml11 -
Sal8111" in the head. '
The jury's fillllng wu aoly 1.trioooJ.
Younger hu said thlt U criminal -wu Instigated, tba chArl• woold be ll\-
voluntary manslaughler. 1
..
· .... -·:-.:··-'"'"'~· . ~
z DAllY Pll.01'. c
Senate Nixes
Porn~~~ane~
FUidings .
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senaie vot.d ·ovelfibelmlngly·toclay to denounce
the recent repo<t of the PnaldenUal
Commission on 0 b seen lt y and
POl'llOIJ'lllllY lllld to reject ill mojO< fin.
diJ>P.. Thi IO to & roll call veie on a reooluUon
a.,..,.....i d>ieOy-by-Seo.-Jobo I·
McClellon·(D-Ark.), followed ·• litter late
last week iD which M Repulllican
senatdl'I urged Presklmt NtJon to
disavow the report.
•
DAH, 'i PILOT II.it ,,_,.
The resolution does not have any legal
foroa 'but tlmplr piacu Ille.Senate oo
r~ Ill -1tioll--to • J'!POl'f ooe
senator u1d wu a 11revolilna" example
of "manlunaJlow-beaded'fMnklAC·"
11le · leeolutIGo apedllcally nJICied
commllilotf ftnc11nP that thera ii ne
evidence to "JCltft that UpiOIUre to IX•
pltctt iiiiiiiliilaterfi11111n?•uae crlmlDal behl9IOi' 'lB )'OUtha or adults « od-
vently allict moral .Wtlldaa tnord -
•
COSTA MllA CITY COUNCIL CONVENES FOR LAST RIDE ABOARD OLD NO. 4
In • Cloud of Olly Smike, Antique Pumper HHd1 for New Life a.1-tile lorder
-Fl'Olll P .. e I
or Nml}' conduet. ENGINE •.• And 11' decried Ille chief .......
mendotioll that ·-rot. lllie ind local Je~ttnc tha aala, mn11t!o0, · •ilht ywa helm Old Number Four wu
or ol aeXual maitertala to CGD-o even bullL
&entinc adults lhould be npealed " S!ttrdy deaplte her qe, Old NUlllber
''The ~ mJcb1 ·Just u well btM FOID' mtpt oUll handle the Mexican
San Diego Leaders Plead
Innocent in Bribery Case
askell the pornocrapllen to wrtte WI hiP~ in her dotqt.
riport,'' McClellu aald, "althotqb I But would you oend your lfandmother SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Eight public
doobt lhal -they WOitld have badlbe on a titke tbrOlllh Deatb Valley! officials, Including Mayor Frank Curran
iemerlly · Ud elfl'onlery to maka Ille Cll)' council memben::..C:thered with and Auemblyman Tom Hom, pleaded
. ' ' • .. • • _ _.._ ........ .: -• • ~ ........ •' I' •
•
Bwt Nixon •
'
Russi.ans n ·eny1
-~
Cuban Suh Base
MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet covern-
ment officlally denied today It wa!
bul.ldin& a nuclear aubmarine bue In
Cuba lllld accuaad· Ille NI J o n
AdmlnlltraUon of clellbtrate!Y or Ir·
reopollllblJ apreadlnc "!alll!lcatlonl."
A i<>Vommenl llatemtnt dlllr!butod by
-Tau,_tbl ofDcl1 J SOviet ntwa.....qeney,
aald the U.S. reporil the Ruulalll wera
•naqed Ill buildl!!I naval ltlltallaUont In
Cuba "pity Into the hllllda oniy of thoal
wbo .,. lnie!illad In fllllllnl the war
psychoail an~ compllcaUq the 1ltUtUon
ln that rqton of the world. 11
"'l'hOR who deliberately o r Ir-
responsibly are taking up ind tpreading
auch faillflcaUon flay into· !hi handl of
the foes of peace,' U aald.
"The Soviet Union h11 not bl.lilt ind Is
not buUdlna a military bue on Cuba and
11 not doina ll!IYlhlna that would con-
trtdlct the undentlndJn& r e ·a c h e d
between the aovemmentt of the USSR ,
and the United Stltel ln 1982," the 1tate-
ment said.
The year 1982 marked the Cuban
mlulle crl1!1 when President John F.
Kennedy ordered their removal In a tense
confror.tatlon that appeared at the time
to be on the verge of breaklng into direct
connlct .
...
reeard a base for missile submarinel In
Cuba "wiih the utm°'t seriousnus."
The RUUian newspaper• dlam'•Md the
alleg1Uo111 within a few day1, acCUltn&
tho Untied Slate• of lrytn1 to oour ret.
1!0111 with Moacow.
ConUnued reterencu amonc t0me U.S.
outc!Jlj ~ Cuban activlly, 3~r
with U,.S. ehargH of Rllllian complicity
In Eaptlan vlolallona of the Mlddlo Eat
ce-flre, apparenOy further lrrtlalad
Soviet oftlclala. ~
111eoe w.,. oald to be psrUy the reuon
why Primler Alexei I. Kooypn decided
not to attlnd the Unled Nat.Iona 2&th an-
niversary . meettn1 which 1tarta )Ved-
neaday. Thia ruled out a potllble wmmlt
confereiv=e With Pre1tdent Nixon.
E'rom r_,e I
• KIDNAP •.•
police shield three blocks deep around the
jall as the lawyen met. .
In Ottawa, helicopter loads of troopa:
arrlvid to h~p the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police on a:uard duty -the flnt
1uch use of troops In the Canadian capital
in peacetime history.
ridtculoua ~-~·-·~-"~ -Clly u •••• er -~ --• ~ ... ~U1-"'""9 ~~ ...... .._.... "'11N -.iau \.IWllC'1 innocent today to felony charges of .,.__....,ldoJIY · : · · " . Manhall .Monday J1!lh for the old Iii~ tha cimmlailCXI WU, 11 ·I . enctne'a final eJit ind mournlul alrllll brlbary ind conaplracy relallng to fare
''lt would be beat to a:et these mat·
ters dllposed or 11 aoon 11 possible,••
Nellaen uld, but he a1ao left open the
riaht to make a later motion.
Walsh.. was aranted a different trial
date because his attorney 11ld his cue
is unrelated to the others. Walsh and
Covell are charged only with not lJat.
ing Pratt or Yellow C<!b Company as
campaign contributors. Covell was cam.
paign treasurer for County Supervisor
Harry Scheldle.
The Nixon Administration flrtt ralaed
the aubmarlne bue issue sept. 25 at a
rtlJUlar Defenae Department brleflna. A
Pentagon spokuman 1ald activity had
been detected at Clenfueso1, on Cuba's
aouUiem cout.Jhat col,!ld be the ltlrt ot
a bue for aervlna nuclear Polarla-type
submarines.
Quebee Premier Robert Bourwa Mon-
day named Demers, a tough-m.lnded
lawyer and close confidante, to reprNtnt
the 1overnment In nesotlationa with the
FLQ.
Squad cars anct_JIM:t of uniformed of.
flcers rtnged the police headquli'liii ind
refused to allow anyone but oftlclall
within three blocks of the buUdlng.
II
••---_,......._ el t•· 1..-1..1 increases for Yellow Cab Inc., of San uu~· __ ,., w mem-p IWlllllORI.
chqed, "•lanled lllld blaled In favor of Tha chief took the whael of the bli nd Dle10.
Protectinl the bualnaa of obtcenlly ind truck -her paint a UWe lolled n0w and Superior Court Judge Leland C. Nell-
poraocras>bY which till commluton WM her hardware JOJDewbat corroded -let-sen set trial dat.s of Dec. 7 for seven
mandated bf eon.-to resuJaie." Wna Into the worn black W.thar aeat. 1brtt Dlinocrata ell two RepubUcanl "You tab Route 87 and tum left at the of the officials and Nov. 3 for the eilhth,
voted Qmt the ret0hrtJon. 'Ibey were: MUanlc Temple.'' be wu Jndnacild. County Supervisor Jack Walth. A ninth
Senl. alfford P. CUt (R-N.J,), jlCOb K. 111 llWl)'I had a lonctna to ride on the defendant, bu1ine1aman Robert Covell,
Later the same day 1 top White House
offk:lal also exprtued .erlous concern
about the base -if that was what was
being bllilt.. The official, who did not
permit use of his name In accounts by
reporters, aatd the United States would
The FLQ earlier suspended the death
deadlines hanging over the two hostages
-but threatened to kill them if the
government delays too long an ariswer to
thelr rlfl.90nl demands.
Javtta (R-N'.Y.), Georfe McOovem en. blck of ~. fire truck." Mid Councilman refU1ed. to. waive receipt. of a tr~lpt ·s.o.1;-'lfaltor--F;-11~ (0.lllm!c)0 ~lck-Bammett;·cllmbtni aboard ln·hll .. oLl!i~ .m\fjC!Jlle!!Land .w.!l!~ _m.:~~e<d --·---:----:----------~-Stnen YOWlll (DOh!o). . natty, plMlriptd. _,_ aun next Monday.
lu ·Beaches Set · --
Midnight Close
E~cept for Two
WltJi -~ •=ption of Big and Litlle
CoronJ,'' an .pl.hue Ilea~ In the cily
of NeWport' Beach wlll now cloee at
midnight.
The Newport Be1clz Clly Council ap.
proved the wrllonn curfew Maoday
night, although ¢abllabing a 10 p.m.
closing hour !or the two Corona de! Mar
beache.s on a lJ..montb. ba1ll.
The previolJ!I closing hours for bay
beaches hl!ld b;een 11 p.m. Ocea!J.f.ront
beache1 have always had a mldnl1ht
curfew. The 10 ·p.m. hour for the CdM
beaches la the ume u the summe.r cur-
few; llUt It ii lour houri later th1111 the
winier <loolng IJlne·
In adopllng the naw ,.gu1auon, the
council .follOwed a revised recornmloda·
tioli of. the Parb, Beaches and Recrta-
tlon · Commluion, which ori,lnally had uraed a midnight curlew on 111 be1che1.
In the· Jater tecommendltion, PBR
Chalrroan Jame1 L. Rubel, Jr., poln!ed
out that residents near the Corona bu.4
ch" had. volctd oppoolllon to 1 h e 11.
ter hour.
RU88· Leader Peparts
M.i.mw (UPI) -Sovie! Forel(n Mln;i;-Andrei A. Gromyko left today
lot New York to tab pal In certmOllltt
marking the 2&th annlYtru.ry of the
Uniled NaUw, the olllclal newa qency
Tatt reported. Gn>myko will head the .
Soviet dalopticG to the anmonJia.
I DAILY PILOT
I OAAMoa COAIT PU ....... CiC:lrMP.taY
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J11k .. Cwley .,.......,0..., .......
n .... K."11 ·-n..,,, A. M.,hin1
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tor a epln arOWMt ttie block. All were relea:Jed on their own re-
. 014 Number Four coqhed Ulla a coantzance.
do1nler .cleartni her -~ bttt you Nelilen • .,.. to .. t Hom's trial date
could bur her pulae, atudy lllld atrona. to 1 period prior to the Nov. I eleotlon,
PUHl'lby -•t her cacldJna crew, but hi! attorney stld he did not think
Which WU d1atlnctly out of antform . for he CO_uJd prepare in ttme. The ·Judie
the vital Job of !~elilhUna· ' said he would leave open the right to
"I don't know U that 11,000 mllll on the make a moUon for a speedier trial.
speedometer ls accurate," said Coun-Hom Monday complained that the
cllman Pinkley, nplalnine that between chlrges came Just before eltCUon time
ractna to uve lives and property, fire and he would not have a chance to de.
trucks do a lot of sitting still. fend bimaelf before then.
Old Number Four h .. been dolna a lot <lurru'a attoimy ulced that hl1 trial
more &iltin&: st:tll than her 1hlny, gold-be delayed becau5e of lack of tlmi! to
trimmed crandcblldren 1taUoned In four prepare. eo.te Mr .. Jocallo111. .
She has been what you might tactfully
call semi-retired, while they got the
honor of hard, ~nest jobs, pwnping more
water,. faster, than tfle did in her own
heyday.
Some of their heavy duty hose lines &rd
high-volume pump valves cost many
times more than the qin& 1H6
S:eacraves truck 1s even worth today.
But an old firthorse -or fire truck -
never loset the Itch and urge that comes
with the cillllalna alarm and the call to
duty.
Old Number Four iJ 1olna beck to work
ae:ain.
Culprits Make
Selves at Home
' . Somebody'• been umpllng John Elvis
Carter'• steak and beer, plus playtna oa
his pool table and 1t ian't GoldilocU or
MJn6esota Fats.
Mrs. Bonnie Carter, of 1210 Conway
Ave., Coata Mesa, called police Monday
to report another iO a 111'111 of brelk·lnl,
uaually whllt they are camping on
weekends.
She listed the loss at $50 total and told
Officer Bob Arnold her husband heard a
nolae Monday afternoon, raced out of thl
steamy shower and almost caught a like·
ly tetna1ed culprit.
Thi witneu ataled Ill be could aee Of
the suspect was a lar&e rear in Uivis.
Sweet· toothed
Burglar~ Strike
Buralan raldad the Colt. M ... Hilb
School vending machine canteen an d
~ ofJ with two CIMI of 11llld 1un.
flowtr lltda, plua q~UU.. of mau.d
milk balla, ii wu dlacovend Monday.
School spckesman Ad>le JOO-told
Officer Rudy Malik a case of Nestle's
Crunch Bars was recovered near t h e
_,. of the b-apparently drop.
ped durinl the 1ataway.
P'urtbtr ev1dtnct involftd in th• c-wu aloo found In the bo)'I' IYDI
locker room, II.Id Patrolman Malik.
San Diego C.oed
Slain in Home
. ,.
From Page I
UNRUH ••• ..,
built in a place of public beach when
there 11 such a 1hortl1e of recreation
areas in Southern C&llfomla," the can·
didate said.
He added, 11What the county 11ve
Irvine and what Reagan's land com~
mission rushed to bless was a blatant a:ift
of valuable land In return for this truh.''
Unruh claimed the outcome of the swap
would be the it.ate 1tuck with virtually
useless land while the blg development
reaps riches by building homes on prime
be&chfrant property.
"Thia ahameful JIM grab is typical of
the way Reagan coddles the rich and
soaks it to the rest,1' Unruh said in pre-
pared remarks.
He claims the Irvine Company doesn't
yet have clear title to the beach but
"a~oady ii trying to keep the public
out.''
Without the campaip funds to match
ftea1an'1 televlaion campa!Jn -or to
even try -Unruh continues to use the
tactics of ••aurpriae campaign visits"
dealgned to get u much free. newa
coverage as possible.
Some obte·rver; have come to can
them "field trips."
RepubllCaM Clll them &1mm1ckl.
The Unruh campallfl, continuing in the
underdo& role, still has trouble atirrlnl
up entbualum even amona Democr1tlc
groupa.
Pregnant Gals
Classes Slated
Pre-ntt&l exerclle claua to keep the
pregnant WOpll.O in aood phy1ic1t con-
dition c111rtna ·precnancy and 1011 ... 1n1
delivery will ba he~ every Tu11day and
Thursday from 9:30 a.in. to 10 1.m. at the
Orange Coast YMCA.
The class la conducted by Registered
Nurse Mley Jo Conaway and is open to
m.mben and nco-membtrs. Registration
requlrn perml•lon from attending J>hY·
slclan for participation tn the class.
For further information call the YMCA,
642-9990. Baby1HUn1 is available.
Burglar Steals TV
Part8 Worth Sl,300
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A blond& bllh A burclar pried the wlndwln1 of a
acboo1 air! wu found llaln In btr apart. mvlce truck parted behind 1 Coste
111111t w'1 today, apparanU, beaien to Meta television ahop and stole paril and
dealb, only how1 afttr her mother bad equipment ~ ll,300, the ownu
-tetr.n Ill to a lloapltal discovered Mond•y. · Herbert R. Rudow, of Mesa Verde TV,
Kathy Lewlt, 11, WU lut roportid oeen 2300 Harbor Blvd., told pollco the I011 ln·
alive wllfn 1 clwmatl left her alont Ill · clllded sit aoru of tubes, plus tube cadeys
the epartm<ot at 1:20 p.111. used to wheel thel!l on the Job.
DAii. Y ,ILOT l'IMi.t t)' Aldlel'll Klthler
'IF YOU'RE GOING TO TALk ABOUT THE BACK BAY, GIT YOUR FACTS STRAIGHT'
In Tennis Togs, Mrs. T.W. Doan vf Dover Shores, Takt• a Few Swat.1 •t Candidate Unruh
• A GOOO WORD PASSED AROUND ABOUT
A BUSINESS IS INVALUABLE. A BAD WORD CAN
BE UNFORTUNATE.
OUR GROWING SUCCESS IN THE PAST 13
YEARS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE "GOOD WORDS"
AND REFE11RALS SENT TO US BY OUR CUSTOMERS.
NO A M 0 U NT OF ADVERTISING CAN
REPLACE A PERSONA~ RECOMMENDATION.
WE ARE NOT INFALLIBLE, IUT WE ARE
WORKING TOWARDS THAT GOAL, BY GIVING
OUR CU ST 0 M E RS THE BEST' SERVICE AND
QUALITY POSSIBLE.
__ ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 l'lac•ntlo Ave.
UNTA AHA, OlANtl
TUSTIN C .. I , , •
ALDIN'S
llD HILL CAt,m aoumra 11174 ,,.._ , ..... c.nr.
I J .. 1144
' '
COSTA MISA
646-4838
I
I
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j
Lagu11a Beaeh
VO~. 63, NO. 245, 2 SECTION ~. 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY •. CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, oCTOBE~ I?, 1970
Laguna Studyin~ New
Downtown Parking Plan
'
•
'Relief EJ ed
For City's
Street Woe s
CHPA Sets
Aide Kidnapers' Hearings
Canada Busie -
Lawyer Released Tonight
By BARBARA KREIBICB
Of IM Deltr Plitt Iliff MONTREAL (UPI) -'Ille lawyer for
two groups of~separatiat-lddnapers was
A new downtown parking proposal that released from jail today, clearing one
would relieve the city of Laguna Beach of obstacle in the negotiations with the
some of its parking responsibilities and government to release two political
possibly increase parking revenue was hostages.
mu.lied by planning commissioners in a Robert Lemieux told newsmen he
study session Monday night. would meet government negotiator Robert
John Kramer of the Parking Corpora-Demers later today to continue talks
lion of America, who told commissioners aimed at gaining freedom for British
his firm operates more than 200 metered Trade Commissioner James R. Cross and
held . By JOHN VALTERZA Pemers, into ~ early morning Of "" o.1,,. ,,ttt si.H
hoora In the cily-jail-where-LenileuJ; ~ ---. --,....
been held since Sunday, wert "very South C<Jast Community Hospital -
elementary." which had remained officially mum on
' Lemieui: entered no plea -formally the bitter competition in San Clemente
listed in the records as a. not guilty pita between two private hospital developers -to charges of obstructing justice and _ . . Interfering with the work .0f police by -has 1omed the fray which ls erpected
statements made Oct. 9. to reach a climat in public hearings to-
Judge Maurice Allard r e I e a s e d night.
Lemieux on his own recognizance pen· A resolution asking the Comprehensive
N.Y. Steeb
.. -
' nN ·eENTS . -
• -:::.. t? $1!i $
parkino lots in .15 states, proposes Quebec Labor and Immigration Minister
---·-· --1iiiifding-·a -uu-ee.1eve pirlilng-st?Ucrure --PietrEf wpone·,-hOSta]es·ortei'fc>rtsr ee11J·
on the Glenneyre municipal lot at his ex-of the Front de LiberaUon du Quebec
~.J:.~=~~r:::~~!:ir;:~~-betn-.. _llealtb~.P.~1 .. Aa~iation .. oolJ.a . .c!>k~--
disagreelng on tbe ransom terms with sider addition of any more beds tn the
I
~
pense if the city will also permit him to (FLQ).
operate metered lots in four other Lem.ieui: said his initial talk! with
locatons.
In return, he said, the firm would pay
the city $34,500 a year as a flat payment,
plus a percentage of revenue above
mortgage payments after the plan is in
operation.
'lbe city, he said, would be relieved of
all maintenance, patroling and meter
repair, which would-be band.led by tpe
firm.
He 1etks a 26-year Jease on the parking
1tructurt and five-Year I e a s e 1 on the
other lots. ·
He would plan to charge 25 cents an
bour for parking, but would have a spe-
cial agreement with downtown employees
who would be charged a flat $15 a month
for a sticker that would permit them to
park in any ol the company's lots.
The lots requested by the parking firm
aie the 26-space facility on Broadway,
next to the Mobil gas station, the ~space
Pepper Tree lot on Ocean Avenue , the El
Paseo lot with 34 spaces and an ad·
ditional lot on the norUt end of Main
Beach where a 41).space pad could be
created by demolishing the Pepper Mill
building and the Recreation Department
Building, both city-owned.
Planning commlssioner R o b e r t
Hastings, who introduced Kramer to the
commission, noted that the city · now
would gross between $28,000 and $29,000,
less maintenance expenses, on 216
spact.s, the number involved in the pro-
posed transaction.
Hastings today emphasized that the
(Set PARKING, Poge I)
Forster Slates
All-out Attack
On Administrator
San Juan Capistrano Mayor Tony
Forster is waging an all oul attack on the
performance of city administrator<lerk
Ernest 'Ibompson.
Thompson said today that he has not
been made aware of any charges and will
defend his performance.
In letters to the members of the city
council, Forster ouUined s e v e r a I
grievances which he hopes will be aired
and resolved at tonight's 7 p.m. meeting
of the city council.
Unruh Charges
Irvine Swindle
In Bay Tra«t-e-
Posed on the shoreline of Upper
Newport Bay, Democratic gubernatorial
candidate Jess Unruh today alleged that
the Irvine Company is engaged in a
"swindle-swap" in the proposed Back
Bay tidelands eXchange with Orange
Couhty government.
Unruh, in what he termed another of
his special news events, brought a
busload of newsmen and camp followers
to the Harbor Arca for yet another of his
attacks against big business and the
Establishment.
Monday it was Standard Oil Company 's
refinery in El Segundo that drew hill at·
tention in an attack on air pollution and
incumbent Gov. Ronald Reagan.
Today, the Irvine Company drew the
focus of Unruh's wrath.
Unruh aMerted that the proposed
Newport Bay land exchange would deny
public access to prime S o u t h e r n
california beach land.
The Democratic gubernatorial can-
didate said if elected Nov. 3 he -with
the aid of o t h e r Democratic office
seekers -would repeal the land transac-
tion between the Irvine Company and
Orange County.
Unruh issued the charge in a four-page
statement prepared for delivery on-site
at Back Bay.
He said Orange County seeks to trade
the Irvine Company 157 acres of prime
beach land in return for 450 acres of
mudflats, underwater islands and county·
controlled acreage in what "is probably
the worst government real estate. deal
since the Indians were talked out of
Manhattan Island for $24."
Unruh charged thal th• Slate Lends
Commission approved the exchange
shortly after Gov. Reagan took. office in
1s .. VNRUH, P•r• II
the cell holding Laporte sticking to higher existing approved number of 514 will be
demands. _ . entered lnto the ~ord when the' c.HPA
At opening talks between Liriilem: and hold~-hearings -~1ght on --the pnvate
Demers Monday night, police threw 1 hos1p1tal hassle In San Clemente c I t y
police shield-three blocb -deep around the hal · . ,
jail as the lawyers met. 'lbe re~ubon, an official . of South
In ottawa helicopter loads of troops Coa.!t a tressed todl.Y. la general in na-
arrived ·to 'help tbe Royal r..u.tian ture and makes no reference to specific
Mounted Police on guard duty·-the flnt developen.
such use of troops in ~Canadian capital But the document apeclflcally dis<:Qs..
.lo ~'lolllt><Y•. • " . ~ .~. ~!'!! ;C04!t ''"~ l!:.'I .1114
Quebec Premier Robert ~ ,,:...,.,.· -· iddlni mbre J!eda would di): 1W111o1 • Demen, 1 . serve the "best In~'" Qf lite
lawyu 111\1 dole coolldablo. ID rt(lrllinl public; tlle CRPA •uld Iii l'l'fnCIPltt.
the government In Dellotfailons will> the The clo!:umeot IJ . "J)eded lo ldd new
FLQ. fu•I lo lht Issue which b°' roolS In 1
Squad can and lines fl, uniformtd of· request by Van Nuys developer c. T.
ficerS ringed the police beidquartera and DeClnces for CHPA renewal of endorse-
refused to allow anyone but offlctall ment bf-l>eeinces' Jong-delayed S a n
within three blocks of the bulldiiig. Clemente Medical Center.
Mission Viejo
Resident Killed
B y Runaway Car
A 23-year-old Mission Viejo man was
fatally crushed by a neighbor woman's
runaway car Monday u he tried to assist
by entering the moving auto to brine it
under control.
Frederick Brown of 24222 Salera Lane
died on the operating table at South Cout
Community Hospital at 1:49 p.m., 1bout
four hours after the accident.
Califoinia Highway Patrol officers aaid
Mrs. Carol Ann Norman, 'l1 of ·24111
Salero Lane had left the car running as
she got out to close the garage door. 'It
apparenUy slipped into reverse.
The car moved down the driveway and
began backin11: in circles in the street and
over curbs. The driver's door was open
on the 1969 Oldsmobile. Mrs. Norman
called for help,
In grabbing for the door and trying to
enter the backing car, an officer uid,
Brown apparently fell or was knocked to
the street. The car circled and pused
over his body ..
Brown was a self-employed hair
dresser at 30001 Crown Valley Parkway.
Survivors include his widow Connie.
Funeral arrangements are pending 1t
Blowu Mortuary in Santa Ana .
AJ!Other . P!ivate hospital, Cha pman
Geoeral' Hospital, however, has liunch·
ed it.a own drive to win CHP A endorse-
ment (hence, state llcensing) for 112·
bed San Clemente. General H05pltal.
Local champions of the Chapman Gen-
eral development •rt expected to cite
the . lmmedilte need for a bo:q>ttal in
San Clemente. Under preaent condfuons,
tile cloatat hospital which serves t b e
city and surrounding com.munitiet ill
SOuth . Coasl Communlly Hoopllal In
Sbu"th Lll(lllll.
OOicial comment on the implicaUona of
the South Coast involvement in the com-
petition were scant today.
One top-level official in San Clemente,
however, termed the rttolution submitted
to the CHPA staff early th.ii week as a
violation of. IOrt.s in what was termed a
"gentleman's 1greement" that South
Coast would remain out of the maneuver-
ing between the two private hospital
developers.
The pwage of the resolution, South
Coast spokesmen sa.id, occurred last
Thursday.
Chapman General Hospital spokesmen
said they would not comment at all on
the resolution, 1lreuin1 that the hospj..
tal'1 phHosopby in the competition has
been a Jaw-keyed effort to sell a hospital
plan to the CHPA and the public.
The new rnolutlon ap;ecifically cites the
state public health department oplnion
that the existing approvals oC 514 hospi-
tal beds for the South C.O.St are.1 Is suf·
ficient.
The asserted duplication of ho.spital
services among private ind community
hospitals in the area would result in
increased costs to consumers of t b e
eervk:es, 5outh Coast trustees said.
Heading the list is a controversy over
the top man's salary. At the present Ume
Thompson is receiving $18,000 a year, a
figure, which he claitm: was approved
when the c<1uncil passed Its budget in
August.
'Boarders' To Extend Stay
Forster contends that only $1$,000 a
year was authorized and that the other
$3.000 is still under negotiaUon.
"l will not sign future payroll cbecb
for Mr. Thompson at the $18,000 a year
aalary unless the city council approves
this Sum by a majority vote," said
Forster.
The mayor states that during budget
1tudy sessions the administrator-clerk
agreed to be a contract employe not sub-
ject to the personnel ordinance, making a
,.parate propo.W for his salary.
Thompson agreed that ht: is a contract
employe but said It had only been sug-
gested that he make a separate sllary
prOposal. he had never actually been
dimled ID do It.
The mayor further contends that
Thompson w11s asked to prepare a de-
acripdon or hit duties for the council,
something he failed to do.
"That was done regarding the cltrk's
pOlltion," Hid Thompson, "and they
(See COVNal., Pep I)
I
School Enrollm ent Tran sf er Seen iii December
Miss.ion Viejo High Scboot .~Y have ILi
''boarders" until mkl-December.
William Zogg, superintendent of the
Tustin U.nion High S<hool Dlllrlcl,
assured the boanl or trusteea Monday
that he expect.a University Hi&b School to
be completed by late November.
"But the move ltaelf will requ ire a
man-power shift and it might be Log1sti·
cally better to wait until Ouistmu v•ca·
lion." he said.
He referred to the fact that University
Park students ire being bused to double
ses,,iom at Mlslk>n Viejo blah until their
own school ls complete.
Zogg satd there had boon 10me dil·
ficulty with drah1 construction but had no
way to tell lf thl1 woukl cause a delay.
In a reporl prepared by Jack Pedenoo,
C011$lructlon inspector, trust.es -· In-formed thal all of the structure! work ti
now complete on classroom unlb B and
C. !hop unit D, homemaking unit E, 'the
girll' and bo)'I' "'°""' and locker rooma, and the remooms 111 of wlllch
are included in pbue one of the coo-
atrucllon.
One of the cla"'°""' unlll still licks
an acousticel ceillnC, II percent of Its
llYJ>IWl1 wall ~ and live permit
of Ill rougll plurnbiftl. I
'!be other c1 ........ unll llWI -~' percent of ito Mllptftded celllbg pid, IO·
petttnt of tis IJPIWll w1U., IO p<rttm of
lu IUIP'nded celling grid, IO·~ of
lu gypoum nu., !O ~of Ill "'"'° bing, 40 percent of Ju eledrtCl!.1-" 111d1
50 percent of the -lleb -k lld-
jacent lo the bulldlbl· I
the ahop unit tW1 needs several
1YP1UJD walls, a 1ttel aub, bUt most of
the tlectrlcll and plumbinl work bu
b<On compltltd.
Tho bomanlllln( unit still bu no
~ w~ll• and .oUU lac)<s 311 percent of
lu heetfns 11uc11, 70 percent of 1u plum-
bJnr and II percent of lu oleclrlcel -k.
Molt of the pluinblng -k ii DOW c:om-
pl•le In the .11r11· end boys' abower and
locker rooms but only hall ol lhl eltc>
lrical -k h• beec compleltd. ,,,. reporf ilJled that .... condltfoolng
equlp'ment still bu not yol mlved and
. Ula mull 1Ull bi placed on the ..or.. P-Ullnd !the boanl howev~r
thlt llmo1t -the 111< Wjlrk bu now
been c:onipltte( illcludln& ""1>I ' and '"'*" . '
'
LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION AT SHAW'S COVE IN LAGUNA
Jo.1nn• Shimkus, Rlch1rd Benjamin Play SC.en• From New Film
Follow the Sun
.FUmers : Finally Find -Lagu1ia".Rays ..
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of ,,,. CHllr , ... , ....,
Overcast skies greeted the cast and
crew or a new 20th Century Fo1 film in
Laguna Beach Monday, just when the
director was hoping for lots of bright
aunahine.
However, by mid-afternoon, the sun
began to peek through, and, wilh set
lights, the production crew was ,able to
get a start on the beach scenes of "The
Marriage of a Young Stockbroker," set
for .release next summer.
Scores of Art Colony residents were on
hand at Shaw's Cove to watch as direc-
ton, cameramen, technicians and actors
worked on the ,five beach Sa!ncs.
The film makers will be in the Art
Tustin School
Bond News Due
In Meeting
Officials of Tustin Union High School
district at 7:30 tooight will present in-
formation on the $25.8 million in bonds
voters will be asked to approve No. 3.
The meeting wUI be in Tustin High
School Little Theater, 1171 Laguna Road,
Tustln.
U approved the bonds would reguire a
tax rate boost of 14.9 cents per $100 of
assessed valuation during the 1971·72
fiscal year, Superlnteodent William .B.
Zogg said.
To be sold over 1 period of five years,
the hJghest tu needed to fund the issue
would come in the 1~76 fiscal year, re-
quiring 35 cerita per $100.
"Any increase in the bond retirement
wW be· offset by a reducUoo in the slate
loan retirement tax rate," Zogg noted.
Further.'"a substantial reduction In the
ta1 rate 1evled to fund the bonds is ex-
pected In 1980-81," he said.
That decrease would result from
revenues to the di.strict that currently are
being withheld becauSe lands have been
placed In agricultural preserves and will
not be developed for 10 years or less. ,
Tu rate estimates were baa:ed on sale
of the bonds at aeven percent Interest,
Zogg ,noted, "however,. most recently
bonds have been ll!:llinl ror • :1esser ~
tereat -rite.''
For the neit' rive 'years, TusUn UniOn
!Dgh School ·Dlalrlct . P)'"' .lddlOon bf
three neir hJ&h ldlooJI bosl<fot. the
Universlly High whkh II under con-
11.nlcUon. and due to open in November or
Doc.mber. • .
An educ.atlon center and conUnuaUon
high sdlool I! slaled for "!l"Plellon In
1m and 1ddltlon.s ID lour ,ellollng high
sdlooli bringing their capacities ID 2.500
studenu "fh aleo w'l"!d be doae that
ye1r. u the boo<ll ere approved, Tmtln
dl&lrict would hah ,.von hlgb ldlools
tach servlnl 21500 ,1tudents tn \'75 .
Erirollment JS eJ;pCcttd to jump trom
7,200 thb year 1/1 four ochools, ID IS,400 In
11115, butd on a poJiulatlon lncreue fn>m
91,000 to.111;001.-' • '
Colony -which baa Its share of
stockbrokers, young and otherwiae -for
the next three weeks. They will be film-
ing scenes on t::c beach, at a beach house
above Shaw's Cove and on local street!.
Other footage will be shot In San Juan
Capistrano.
The comedy film follows the life or a
young stockbroker, who has reached a
crisis point in his life. His manilge Is
we:ikening by the day and he '.f:: not happy
with his work.
In the hopes of reconciliation, he brings
his wife to Laguna ror a vae1Lion, biit the
marital problem's are only compounded.
"There's a partial reconciliation -you
might call it a happy ending,·· • ..! the con-
clusion of the :ilm according to 20th em.
· tury Fox publicist Harr:,· Kline. "But you
are still left with the feeling all l.s .not
right and that things with the Couple will
not last."
Other scenes will be filmed thrO\!ghout
Los Angeles and at the company atudlps.
The rum is based on a. book by Charle!:
Webb, author of the novel, .. The
Graduate." Lawrence Terman, who
directed "The Graduate," when it was
made into a movie, Is also directing and
producing "The Marriage of a Young
Stockbroker.''
Starring in the film are Canadian born
actress ·Joanna Shimkus and Richard
Benjamin, who was i .. "Catch-22."
.Photographic director Is L a 11 l o
Kovacs, who worked on "Easy Rider"
and a new release, "Five Easy Pieces."
11le crew .1111 be filming at Shaw;a
Cove and tbe beach house through thll
Z8th of the month, then moYe onto U.
Laguna· streets, and film a rain scedf: m
front of the Jolly. Roger Restaurant.
1£.•nature doesn't provide a. downpour,
20tl1'Cenlury promi!eS ID bring -wilh
the help of a rain machine.
Oruge
We•ther
, Low overcast and patchy roe J1
lhc prescript.loo for Wedneld,Y,
w.eatherwiae, with lemperaturet
remaining in .the mlddle 70's on
the coast and around 82 degrees
furl.her inland.
li'l!H UF. TODAY
Her namt rounds' Uke .~.
thing out of a bad war mo\li'1,
but Logu110 Btach's Tommi.
Gunn, dcughter of Tom ·MU:, ti
lcnown a.s a suptr libtrol Sec
Page 3.
' • ' • •• II II ' • • " 1•11 " u
IL
-------~
Z DAll.Y Pll:OT SC
Ru ss Deny
Having Su~
BasemCuha
M~W (UPI) -'I!"' Soviet govern-
ment officially denied today .Jt w11
buUdlng a nuclear submarine base in
CUba and accused the N i s o n
Admllllstratlon ol dellberotely or lr-
*POD:SlblJ apreadina "falsiflcaUona."
A tovmunent slat.eme.nt distributed by
Tiis-;--UiiOml!arSovtet ,,.,.. q...,.,
a.aid the U.S. ~ports the Russians were
•11(11«1 iii buJldln& navol inslsllatloos In
Cllba "ploy into the hands only ol lhooe
who are 1nt.ere1ted In fanning the war
psychoW and compllcatlng lhe situation
lo UW reglOn of the world."
'"!1lose who deliberalely or lr-
re>ponslbly ore taking up and spreading
1uch falsificaUon play into the bands of
the: foes of peace.~1 it said.
"The Soviet· Union bas not built and is
not balldlng • mWtory bue.on Cuba-&11\1
Is not doing anylhlng that would con-
tradict the undtrtt.an4fng: r e a ·ch e d
betwe:en the governmen·u of the USSR
and the United States: in 1962/' the atate.-
ment said.
The yeu. 1912 marted the Cuban
missile crisis when President John F.
K~ ordered their removal ln a tense
confrontaUoD that appeared at the time
to be on lhe vtrae ol br .. klng Into dir<d
conflict.
The Nl>O!r A:dmlnlltration first raised
the 1Ubmarloe bue Issue Sept. 25 at a
r<gulor Delense Deparlment briellng. A
:Pentopi spok-aa· Aid ac\Mly had
been detected at Clenluegoo, on Cuba'•
.IOUlhem coait, lhal could be the start ol
a base for aerving nuclear Pol.arls-type
,1ubmarinel.
Canada Collrts Peking
Nationa lis t Chines e Sev er R elation s
NEWPORT CITY EDITOR
L. Peter Kri 'I
OAIL V .. ILOT Sltltl' """"" NAM ED TO NEW POST
Rlchord P. Noll
Fnlm Wire SU.k:a
Canada today IMOWloed e3ta~nt
of diplomatic relatklM with Red auna.
Soon after, NaUonall.st Oilna severed all
rel.aUona with Canada.
In announdng the diploqlatic ties,
Canada acknowledged the Peking regime
as ''the sole legaJ government of China."
External Affairs Minister Mit.cbell
Sharp announced the move In the House
of Commons and releued a joint com.
muni.que, distributed almultaneously in
Peking and ottawa,
.. The government or Canada and the
government of the PeoPfe•s Republic of
China, in accordan1..-e with the principles
of mutual respect for sovereignty and
territorial Integrity, noninterference in
each other's internal affairs and equality
and m1,1tual benefit, have decided upon
mutual recognition and establl.shment of
diplomatic relatlona, e"Uective October 13,
1970," the joint communique said.
Daily Pilot An1iounc es
''The Chinese government reaffirms
that Taiwan is an inalienable part of the
territory of the People's Republic of
China. The Canadian government takes
note of this position of the Chinese
Nall, K,rwg Promo tions
government. ·
"The Canadian government recognizes
the government of th e People's Republic
of China as the sole legal government of
PromoUons of Richard P. Nall to as-
sistant managing editor and L. Peter
Krieg to Newport Beach city editor were
announced today by DAILY PIWT Edi·
tor Thomas Keevil.
NaJI, 41, formerly served on the DAI·
LY PlLOT slaff as South Orange Coun-.
ty Editor, making his headquarters in
_l..a~a Beach and San Clemente-San Juan eapWraM-:--He now mate!lils
headquarters in Costa Mesa and joins
).h~ newspaP.er's other assis~t manag·
Ing editor, Charles H. Loos, In super-
vtsory duties.
Nall joined the DAILY PILOT stall
In .May ol 1966 as Laguna cily editor.
F rom Page 1
COUNCIL .•.
He wa~ previously Imperial Valley bur-
eau chief for the San Diego Union after
earlier staff stints on the Imperial Val·
ley Press. the South Bay Daily Breeze
and the Brawley News; He attended El
Camino Junior College, Oregon State Uni~_ already know what the city ad·
versity and the University of Missouri. mlnlstrator's duties are. This is outlined
He and his wife, Teresa, make their in the resolution of my appointment in
home in Laguna Beach and have one ;~~~-,t;1e areas of my jurisdiction are
son, Richard, 2.
Krieg, '1:1, in becoming the DAILY Another grievance which the mayor
PILOT's new Newport Beach city editor, listed is that during the admlni·
actually broke into the newspaper busi· strator's recent vacation he failed to a~
ness as a sports reporter for this news-point anyone to be acting admini.strat.or
paper in 1961 while attending Orange in his absence. Coast College. ''I feel lhls situation reflects poor judg.
Later, while attending the University ment on .. Mr. Thompson'~ part," said
Odna.
"The Canadian· ad Ch In es e
governments: have qrled to exchange
ambassadors within six months , and to
provide all necessary assistance for the
establishment and·lht ~rformance of the
funcuont of diplomaUC: 'mJssiom In their
respective capitals, ,on the basis of
equality and mutual 1benefit and in ac--
cordance with lnt.e.rnaUonal practice."
He said Taiwan had been a major con-
alderatlon in the negotiations i n
Stockholm, which began on Feb. S, 1969.
"From the very beginning of our
discussions, the Chinese side made clear
to us .. their position that Taiwan was an
inalienable part of Chinese territory and
that this was a principle to which the
Chinese government attached the utmost
Importance.
"Our position, which I hive stated
publicly and wtuch ft made clear to the
Chinese from the start o( our negotla· ·
tions, is that the Canadian government
does not consider it appropriate either to
endorse or to challenge the Chinese
government's position on the status of
Taiwan.
''-This has been our position and lt cono
tinues to be our position.
"As the cominunique says, we have
taken note of the Chinese govemmenl's
st.atement about Taiwtp. We are aware
that this Is lhe Chine~ view and we know
th-= importance they attach to it, but we
hal/i no comment to make one way or Utt
other/' be told parUament. ·
Shortly . before the · f o r m a I 1n-
nouncement1 the Nationalist Chinese a.m-
bassador to Canada, Yu-Chi Hsueh said
he had trle<i unsuccessfully to persuade
Canada not 'to recognite Red China.
Nationalist China lhen severed rel1·
lions with Canada in the wake of the
Canadian recogniUon of Communist
China .
'11le government "decided lQ sever
diplomatic r_elations with the Canadian
governrrient as from today's date and to
close it.s embassy in Otta'q, as well u
it.s consulate-general in Vancouver," the
Foreign Ministry said.
It charged that Canada's recognition of
Red China ignored ''its friendshlp of Jong
standing with the government of the
Republic of China."
The statement said Communist China's
government "poses the greatest single
threat toward peace and security." It et•
pressed the "firm belief that the severan-
ce of. diplof!lalic relations between the
Republic of China and Canada will not af.
feet the existing friend.ship' between the
two peoples."
Ir vine Claims Unruh' s
Attack 'Cheap Politics'
Irvine Company officials today labeled
Jess Unruh's attack on the Upper
• Newport Bay tidelands exchange "cheap
political theatrics" and cbaUe111ed him to
From Pa!Je 1
put-up or shut.up lf be really believes the
land swap is illegal.
The statements came in reply to
Unruh's allegations that the proposed
tidelands exchange between the rarrch
company and Orange County government
is, in his words, "a swiod1e-swap."
~ Later the same day a top WhJte House
.offi:lal a1lo exprested serious concern
-'bout the,-bue -if that was what wu
l>elng builL The official, who did not
permit Use of hit name in accounu by
.. por1m,.id-tho-1Jn11ed-S1a1u wou1LSaddlehack OKs-re~ant a bue for mlu11e submarines m
of Bridgeport, he worked on newspapers For~ter. In both the public and private
in WestJKlrt and ·Milford, Conn. Before business sector I feel strong!~ that there
joining the-DAihV-·PJLOT· stafra.s-prin·---~h~.'!Jley_e~_!>e 8f_ly_q~~ti~n _ 1n re~ard .~
cipal Newport reporter last August, who IS !lie bOss ~ a~ partiallafum:e. UNRUH .• ·-
Gilbert W. Ferguson, Irvine's vtce
president of corporate communication,
coituneiited. "If -Mr. Urui.ih in fact
believes that about the Upper Bay land
exchange, he should file appropriate
charges."
•
• '
Cuba "with the utmOat seriousness."
1be R.u.asian newspapers dismissed the
allegationa within a few days, accusing
the Ui\ited States of trying to sour rel&-
tions with Moscow.
Continued references among some U.S.
officiab to the Cuban activity, together
with U.S. charges of Russian complicity
in Egyptian violations of the Middle East
cease-fire, apparently further irritated
;6ov~ei offi<:ifl.s.
; Tiwse were slid to be. pirtly the reason
why .Premier Aluei L Kosyjin decided
not to attend the Unied NaU6n~ 15th an.
11iversary meeting whicb:··starf§ Wed·
nesday. This ru.Jed out a possible lummlt
conference with President Niion.
Diplomatic observen in Moscow i.,.
te.rpreted Washington 's re p eated
references to the alleged ml.!Sile base as
pos:!!ibly being based on broader poll~
considerations, Including the M\ddle East
crisis. Throughout. the U.S. officials
acknowledged that only dubiout and
dated lnformaUon was available to in·
dicate missile altes !night be being builL
Girl Hitchhiker
Raped on Coast
· A young woman traveling downcoast
from Big Sur told police In San Clemente
Monday that a man gave her a ride in
Dana .Paint· then drove to a secluded area
along Ortega Highway where he rapt'd
bu.
The incident, which the 22-year-old vic-
Um said oceurrtd In broad daylight, start-
ed along Pacific Coast Highway shortly
'l.fter noon.
11le victim walked into police headquar-
ters in San C1emr.nte after being driven
to the area by the assailant, then dropped
off.
The case has been turned over to '!her-
tff's investigators because th! asserted
olfense took place ia county territory.
DAILY PILOT .............. ....... ,.., .. _
OltANCOK c.oAST ,Ulll$HINO COM'MY
RoMrt N. WoH
Pr•ldrlll ..-All l"Wllilllhr
Jock R. Curltv
Viet' l"rea~e1en1 n co-11 ~
lhD1911t K ..... 11
Editor
7holl'I•• A. Murph!"'
M-.1111 ldl)M
!Uch1r4 '· H1M lovlll OrtMe COU1111 IE.d!tor -C.tt M.-: UO Wnl 11'1' Sttwl ........, l•dl: m1 Wn1 ,, .... ,..,...,.,.. • "-'""' '"efl: m ,._, ""-t4""""'"'" 1 .. c11: 1711J 8..ell ht,lfevtl'C a.n OWNrl1t11 m Hot111 f.J Cfmll'lt lM&
\
I
Improved Driver
Training Course
Traffic violators wnose cases.come up
in South Orange County Munlclpal Court
soon may find themselves going back to
school.
Saddleback College trustees Monday
night apjJroved •a ·new. driver im·
provement course, to be conducted under
the1direct1on ot,Judge11Richard Hamilton
and· Frank Domenichini and taught by a
trio of Ca1ifornia Highway Patrol traffic
enforcement officers.
The course will be offered In four three-
hour seisions, one in the daytime on
Wednesdays, and two In the evenings on
Mondays and Wednesdays, beginning in
approximately 30 days, with exact dates
to be announced.
One of · the evening courses will be
taU&ht in Spanish by officer Albert
Mercado, for the benefit of Spanish-
speaking drivers. It will be the only
Spanish-speaking driver course offered in
Orange County, a board spokesman said.
Though set up principally for traffic
violators, the non-credit course will be
open lo all interested drivers, the
spokesman said. -..
Topics covered will include collision
problems and causes, remedial actions,
duties of drivers involved in aceldenb,
financial responsibilty laws, regulatory
signs and signals, registration and licens·
ing, passing and stopping techniques.
driver tzyes, good driver attributes, safe-
ty equipment and major violations.
The course will be coordinated by CHP
field supervisor Sgt. Frank Mahe. former
instructor at the Pol.ice Academy in
Sacramento. Third member of the
teaching team, with Mahe and Mercado,
wW be CHP officer Bill Holl
Krieg was serving as chief of the Bridge-Thompson said. ~t has not been
port Post's five-man Mlliord bureau. ~essary to do th1.s m the past an~ th~t
Krieg and his wife, Carol. have t w 0 hi.s secretary knew where to reach him tn
children, Les, 5 and Jennifer, 3. 'Dley an emergency. He further stated that the
have a new home in sandpointe other staff members were capable of car·
· rying out their duties without guidance
From Page 1
P ARKI NG •.•
~.
ri!aln Beach parking lols should be
regarded as !'temporary" nstallations ~ing .development ot an overall Mai~
Beach Park plan.
"The beach now Is costing the city
about $700 a day," said Hastings. "The
rents from some of the buildings don 't
even pay Wes, but we are tied up with a
couple of leases until the end of 1973. If
we can knock down some of the buildings
that are on 9!k:lay notice leases and at
least utilize the land for parking, it would
be of some help."
Commissioner Carl Johnson said he did
not like the idea of giving the parking
finn five-year leases on the beachfront
lots. Kramer said these could be
tenninated sooner if necessary, in ex·
change for like numbers of spaces in in·
land loU:.
Asked for comment. Bill Axelrod of the
Downtown Business Association said he
thought the 25-cent hourly rate seemed
high.
"The highest rate I've seen in this type
of operation," said Axelrod, "is 10 cents a
half hour."
Chainnan William Lambourne noted
that Palm Springs had used such a rate
for a time, then abandoned its meters.
Kramer said the 25-cent rate is "not
unusual'' especially for beach parking,
but added, "If it's too high, you can be
sure we'll lower it. But that's our pro-
blem. We'd pay you anyway."
for the two weeks he was gone.
Forster also conterx!s that Thompson
failed to request a vacation and failed to
tell the council and to properly brief his
subordinates on when he would be gone.
Thompson admib that his vacation has
alwio)'S botn determlnecl by bla office but·
that he dhfterr ln not advising the coun-~~ i:.i. 1,vi:: .. ~~6/.'.l~:~·t •d-
The mayor summarized his: comments
by saying that he felt Thompson wa1 not
an able and competent administrator. "Jn
my opi,uon I feel that he lacks the
quallties of teader.shlp to effectively run
the city on a full time ha.sis," said the
mayor.
"I request that each of you (coun·
cilmen) address yourselves to Mr.
Thompson's capability to effectively con·
tinue as the chief administrative officer
of the city of San Juan Capistrano during
the critical growth period we face in the
near and long term future."
Thompson said he would welcome an
tvaluation of his performance saying he
has in th~ past requested this done in
open session.
Russ Leader Dep arts
MOSCOW (UPI) -Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei A. Gromyko left today
for New York to take part In ceremonies
marking the 25th anniversary of the
United Nations, the official news agency
Tass reported. Gromyko will head the
Soviet delegation to the ceremonies.
1987. He said this oceurred less than a
year after "preclseJy the same plan" had
been rejected by the three-member com·
mission in 1966 during former governor
Edmund G. "Pat" Brown's term.
Unruh charged that Irvine makes the-
beachJand private, bars public access to
it, and then .sells "$200,000 luxury homes
to the very rich."
"Developments like this should not be
built in a place of public beach when,
th~e is .such .a sboctage oi ~ec;:ref:lion ,
areas in Southern Califomla," the 'tan-
didate said. -~ + 1 •
He added, •'What the c®nt1 'gavt'
Irvine and what Reagan's land com·
mission rushed to bless was a blatant gift
of valuable land in return for this truh."
Unruh claimed the outcome of the swap
would be the state stuck with virtually
useless land while the big development
reaps riches by building homes on prime
be.achfront property.
"This shameful lard grab is typical of
the way Reagan coddles the rich and
soaks it to the rest,'' Unruh said in pr~
pared ren'la1'1ts.
He claims .pie Irvine Company doesn't
yet have clear title to the beach but
"already is trying to keep the public
out."
Without the campaign funds to mstch
Reagan·s television campaign -or to
even try -Unruh continues to use the
tactics of ••surprise campaign visits"
designed to get as much free news
coverage as possible.
Some observers have come to call
them "field trips."
Republicans call them gimmicks.
The Unruh campaign, continuing in the
underdog role, still has trouble stirring
up enthusiasm even among Democratic
groups.
Then Ferguson added, "He won't, Gf
course, because it isn'L
"It is distressing that he has become se
desperate that he wlll engage in this kind
of cheap political theatrics," he said.
"The Upper Bay exchange is now being
~ied in the courts," Ferguson pointed
out1 "A detennlnation into its legality
aOQ its constitutionallq is yet lo be reach-
~d. •
'""'Qne ruling that bu been made,
however," be said, "ii that there Is no
evidence of fraud or misrepresentation in
any of the negotiatil)ns and decisions that
culminated in state approval of the ex·
change.
"Orange County Superior Court Judge
Cla ude M. Owens announced that finding
last Aug. 18. We regret Mr. Unruh's ap-
parent ignorance of this ruling ," he said.
1'Further," he said, "the 450 acres ef
land the county receives in the exchange
will provide public park sit.es that en·
compass more than 200 acres and will in·
crease the usable water area of the Up-
per Bay by some 50 percent.
"Finally," Ferguson said, 1'Mr. Unruh
asserted that the State Lands Com·
mission during G<lvernor Brown's ad·
ministration had denied approval lo the
exchange.
"This is not true," he said. "The com.
mission in March 1967 withheJd approval
with the eqilicit understanding lb.at it
would again consider the matter further
when more information was provided."
Ferguson said, "I might add that I
personally consider Mr. Unruh's confused
opposition to the concept of joint develop.
ment of the Upper Bay both cynica1 and
irrespon.!iible." ~ ....
Lagm1a Downtown Store s
Eye New Holiday Hours A GOOD WORD PASSED AROUND ABOUT
A BUSINESS IS INVALUABLE. A BAD WORD CAN
BE UNFORTU NATE. By PATRICK BOYLE
Of t1M Dlll'J "1191 Sl1ft
The Downtown Business Association of
Laguna Beach has taken Its first step
toward preparation for the Olristmas
Holidiys by deciding to keep all atores In
the downtown area open on certain even·
lnts in December.
The «-member group, meeting this
morning at the Hotel Llguna, scheduled
the traditional Hospitality Night for Dec.
4. Stores tn downtown Laguna Beach will
be open until t p.m. on that Frklay even-
Ins to attract shoppen to the art•.
Several contests will be o(fered by the
merchants and s o m e will provide free co«... .
The DBA also pressed !or keeping lhe
bwitnesst1 open until t p.m. on bee. 11 ,
11, 21, D and 23. BW Marriner, pmldent
of I.he aaeoclaUDn and owner of Mar-
rlner's Stationers and Booksellers, at
lint requested lhat Dec. ti be optional.
Mm1ntr noted lhal ho b preoenUy
r.modellng his storefront and plons Dec .
11 as IOC't of a grand opening. nie
members.. after dlscunln& the matter of
bavtnc the one evenln(l optional for late
basin,.. hours, decided to ketp all ol the
llloret open.
Marrinu told the group lhat the ~
gram bu not workfd too v.·ell In the past rtan because oot all lho mtrch&nll iii
tho downtown .,.. havt partldpatod.
uwe would advertise thal all the stores
would be open." Marriner said. "and the
people would come here. only to flnd lhat
just two or three st.ores were open on lhe
specified evenings.''
The association plans to launch an
advertising campaign or the lat.er
business hows on the six evening$ in
hope of drawing shoppers to Laguna
Beach from other communities.
In other action, the aS90Clalion
members decided lo help the Winter
Festival Committee in it! promotion
campaign of the cultural event by
purchasing small advertising brochures.
Elolst Fulmer, chairman of the Winter
FesUval Committee, told the members
th1t the brochurts now in use were very
papull'r and asked that each member
help to brihg people to Laguna Beach for
the fa:tiYal, slated for Feb. lt to March
7.
Marriner asked if it woukl be possible
to get a smaller brochure, one th.at would
fit Into a smill envelope, ~frs. Fulmer
uld that Jt would be done and several or
the nssoci11tlon member• ordered the
small brochures. They plan to send one of
the advertising brochures In each pt~ of
moll th.at their business senda out of
town.
~trs. Fulmer also announced Oct. 2S u
the dale for the Wlnttr Festival P1>t Luck
Picnic, to be held at 11e.isler Part at 2
p.m. Sile said the pUbUC WU iilvlted.
OUR GROWING SUCCESS IN THE PAST 13
YEARS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE "GOOD WORDS"
AND REFERRALS SENT TO US BY OUR CUSTOMERS.
NO A M 0 U NT OF ADVERTISING CAN
REPLACE A PERSONAL RECOMMENDATION.
WE ARE NOT INFALLIBLE, BUT WE ARE
WORKING TOWARDS THAT GOAL, BY GIVING
OUR C U ST 0 M ER S THE BEST SERVICE AND
c;>UALITY POSSIBLE.
!'lliiiii. ~ ~,, · r11 to:,~~· . IJ ~~~ •• ~HJ~I __ 1 1 1·!' "'·:.._ ·~ ,. l .... _~--......... -
---' ~-' --. --;--., ·.·
-·~ ..........
ALDEN'S
..--.. -.-,.-.-... -0-.. -•• -,--. CARPETS e DRAPES
TUnlN c:.n .• ,
ALDIN'S l'la 1n ""' c.umt 1663 centla Ave.
11:.14 tr!!':!.~ ur. COSTA MESA
.,...... 646-4838
'
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~'
I
l
1
INNOCENT ABROAD-Thomasina (Tommie) Mix,
at age three, arrives in England in arms of her act·
or father, with\lilother, Victoria Forde, and dad's
horse Tony. Th8 occasion was the family's atrival
at Southampton in 1925. A crowd of 25,000 was on
the dock to gteet Mix, ·a turnout typical of recep-
tions· given the silent movie,cowboy hero. The fam·
ily !t&d to be loaded into a van on the dock to get
th~gh the molt
T"'4.,, -1'. 1'10 L IWLYPUT 3
Tom111ie Mixes Up Laguna
Sflent Star' 1 Daughter . Tell.I of Easy Cll.ildhood
11J BAUAllA KREDllCH .... ..., .........
0 -otI.aaun&'Beoch Cily·Counclt
nieetinp1 • KDllli, energetic blonde wtth
a o!i!rJl fAllJiOe, and a ijveJ¥ "'1se of
humor hai become known ln recent years
as a champion of the underdog and pro-
ponent of ao.called-"llberal" C8\WIS.
·"You'd be ~ how many people
actuirilly thi~ ·1:m a' Communist," ~s
Tommie GUM. ••.1tn•t that hilarioua!''
Tommie Gunn, 4a-year-old mother of
seven and grandmother of five, started
out in life about u far from the political
scene as one could get ---SPOILED GIRL
Daughter oflilent ~reen star Tom ~li:r
and his glamorous actress wtfe, Victoria
Forde, .Thomasina Mi.J: was, she says
bluntly, "a very 1polled liWe girl."
Her parents were divorced when she
was nine, and she spent much of her
childhood traveling in Europe with her
mother.
Summf!rs she stayed with her famous
father who, alter making his last silent
film In 1928 when she was five, got
"clrcus fever" and. with his horse Ton.v,
went on the road wit h Ringling Brothers
and other lop,rank circuses.
otx yean ·lftd T1>mmJe lftd bot -thelll1"rtbonolof __ •
moved 1n ... 1th moma. She 11 ...,;... bJ _.,. tllll ..
Her fltbor hid dlod In IHI, JMvlnChor ACLU II ~ -
an lnberltanc:e that helped pol . her • _, lio wllolo pallll la In • • d .....
throUjh lcliOol and kepi the liliill1cori1-u;;.-:;,. mi ... --_.._,.....
lortable-for qutte a while. under the CmllltUlloa lllld Ibo 11111 GI
NEVER WORKED ar'~ to ......... bl her..;...,•
"ll never even occurred to me to go to t•.--ut-1 ... 1 -of tbe ..,,,,..., .. ,._..:
work," she ...... t. •• '.'Woo,ld yo.u bollnt, ~-._ -.... mlebuherllllllOnlllblndtr.Dol . :
nobody I'd ntr known hod gone to work! with her-.ci lamlly, .i-, tll, GIDI,.
Then •'l" day ' w...t to the blnk and all ~.., • ,._ •t I 311 and Guale, Z. ......-. un::re wu:n ~any more money, IO ·She was married for tbe lecand tlml II
started thinklng about lt. 11
1957 to Gorcb\ Gunn,' When bOdt wife
The B.A. ln F'ron<h wun\ much help, "••I« the advertllq 0nn el -so she worked auoceuJvely u a ~ wor .....
operator, dance and piano teacher and le?,• Barton, Dur1t1n and Olbame.
secretorr:-"My lhCJrthand WISll\ -much-After-Gordon belpod 'fM;,lfJlJDl OWQ_
good, but I had an excellent memory and four ~.P ~ the ~~·~111::
lhat SIVed me '' she recalls mie, and Ylll )'OUDI-UMI ..,,.,
In 1953 she 'occompanied · her mother juot "' terrlbly lonely "• deddod lo
now dlvoreed from the Argenunt •dopl-•-mlle 'boy, Tben 11 dkla'I -
diplomat and married to an Air Force right to brmg OM: up alone, ., we ~
general, to Japan. While the general Oew a girl to go with him. That wu ~
m.Wion to ICorea and toUed with lbe be it, but we bad a .~ to: get Gauie,
peace delegation, Tommie worked for 1 IO we too~ her. too.
year with the Air Force in Japan. BUILT NEW HOME
''I guess l became a paclfbt around To accommodlte the new flmlly, they
this tlme," she 11y1. "During Wor:_ld Wat knocked down the old Laguna summer
II I hid been against HIUer and for the cottage Tommie bad Inherlled ln>m her
war, like everyone elae, bu~ sioc.e Korea mother and built a IJ)adoul, tW04klry
I've been definitely a pacifist." modern home on Cliff Drive, perche\l
ACLU MEMBER hl!(b lbove F'JlhenniD't Qnre.
KIDS DREAM Her introduction to the American Civil Tommle and Gordon take care of the
"We traveled In a private railway car Liberties Union (ACLU) for which ihe big house a~. their lively kids ~
and the circus people spoiled m~ even now serves as Laguna acea' CbaJnnan outside help. Gorcjon bales meetinp,
more than my father did. It was a kid's began In college during World ?{pr II. ' she aays cheerily, "IO when I 10 out ~'d
jlream 1" says Tommie. "I was just 50 concerned about the much rather ~y borne wttb the lddl.
After making half a dozen talkies in the . treatment of the California Japanese who When Tomm.e ii home, the kldl are
early 30!, Mix even started a circus oi his were being uprooted and herded into usually climbing . all over her and llhe
own, but it was felled financially by the camp1," she explains, "and absolutely no handles them w1tb a flnn but loving
depression. one.except the ACLU seemed to have the band. Mama, meanwhile, had married an slightest interest in how lhey were being ''They're younger than IOl'De GI. 11\f Argentine diplomat and bought a quain;. treated.,, grandcblldren, JOU' kninr," lbe teDI you.
summer and weekend home a t Working: with the ACLU for 90IDf: 15 "But ~ all get alone jtllt wonderfully.
Fishennan's Cove ln Laguna Beach. The years ihe haa learned a great deal about My own kids are from 25 to JD mw, one ii
family spent all Its spare time in Laguna civil 'rights and the law and ~ a Jesuit brother and the otberl an _...
and Tommie attended Laguna High Ior a herself to trying to help people _ in-ried, Uyiog ln.L<'" Ancdel ml Son·Dlelo.
while. eluding hippies -who feel they have EveryOne comes to our boUle fer f.lmlly It was one of 13 elementary schools, been misused, to IO through· let:al cban-occaalons."
three high schools and three -:alleges nets to secure their rights. Pondering her role · u whit lbe (plus assorted governesses and tutors) laughingly calls "our ~ OJm:.
that contributed to her formidable educa-WOODLAND VISlTOR manlst," Tommie giggles, "I wllb people
lion. Recently, In Laguna Beach, her eflorll could see my klds. IUaIJy, they're all .,
COLLEGE AT l5 have made her a frequent visitor to the aquare -nice, but aquare. They think
Totally out of step w1Ut her peers in lbP Woodland Drive area where resldenta f~lt I'm a Ii~~ too broad-minded aomtttmes. --M1'<1Jm1i~_w_Q.rlc!L.'.f9mID.t~!~-~~~:.te1L__==a~~~:.Y_0~-J~fy~eru=~~to~~---1-IU~:_ _____ -..---
from high school at 14 and enl11;:1.::t! ~~ I II I rl t th t b ht I NO COMMUNIST
•,
DAILY PILOT lllff '°"'*
TOMMIE GUNN GAT11ERS HER ADOPTED BROOD· AROUND HER AT HER LAGl:INA HOME
· Gussy, 2, ~iM,. 3, Ja10n,:4 •(fr0m left) Liv. With M•m.ories of.We:•Nrn' Ster
Cuts Announced
For Head Start
In W est States
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Funding
for ·Head Start prograrns In Western
slates will be cut by $4 million Utis year,
a federal spokesman said today.
The 13 percent nationwide cut will af-
fect preschool enrichment programs in
California, Nevada, Arizona, Hawaii and
iMicronesia, said Samuel Miller, assistant
regional director for the Federal Office or
Child Development.
, Each organization receiving £ederal
,money for Head Start will have to decide
for itseU how i:o adjust to the cut, Miller
said.
"We're hoping the last thing changed is
the number of children involved," he
Uld.
Miller said he suggested the local pro-
grams· trim administrative costs, reduce
12 month programs to eight, nine or 10
'n-JODths and centralize a c c o u n t in g
departments and food services to save
~Y· The cuts are effective immediately, be
.uld.
:Medi cal St uden t
Kille d by LSD
' ~suffered Tumor .
. PIDLADELPffiA (UPI) -Dr. Jooepb 1w: Spelman, medical examiner. muled
Saodoy that • fOW1h year -....
!dent who took LSD ln an apparent ex-
periment before he died sulfer<d from a
tumor.
Spelman sakt Mart Prager, 2', suf·
fered from an adrenal tumor just. above
-kidney.
1 Prager, a student 1t H1lmem1nn
!.fedical College, d1td Oct. 4 the di.)' after
'he took an LSD tablet. An autopsy
revealed the youth died of "an adverse
reaction to 1 drug (LSD)."
1be medkal 1tudenl. employed lut
summer in an LSD research project at
Baltimore, told hls wife be wfnt.ed to ex·
perlence the same senaUons his patients
did when they were given the 'drug.
Spelman 1ald he doubted wbelhtr
_J>tgcr was awaro of the tumor.
Southland Tleup
Teamster Strike ·cJLrbs
Construction Projects
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Moot .
freeway, flood control and high rise pro-
jects h·ave been shut down by a strike by
the Teamsters union In a dispute over the
status of men who own and operate their
own trucks.
The Teamsters began picketing mo1t
constnictlon projects in So u t h e r n
California Monday in the dispute over a
contract clause cove.ring o w n e r •
Teacher Seeking
Laguna Students
For Eastern Trip
Popular Laguna Beach High School in-
structor Dr. Emanuel Calamaro is seek-
ing 15 kical students of high school or col-
lege age ~ accompany him to the Far
East thls summer.
Sponsored by the American Institute
for Foreign Studies (AIFS ), the six-week
study tour will include stops in Hong
Kong, Tokyo, Portuguese Macao, and
Taipei, Tai"'an.
During the three weeks In Tokyo,
students wlll study at the Unlvtnity Of
'Hong Kong Department of Extramural
Studies. The main topic of study will be
Ollnese pllliooophy.
Before moving cm to Tol<yo, student..
wUI visit Macao for a day, and spend two
days In Taipei, the capkaJ ctty of Na-
tlona!iJI Ollna .
Once ta Toi<)'•, studenll "Ill study
Japanese CUiture at the Bunkl Gaquin
Liberal Arts C.U.ge of Tokyo.
Cost of the atx week excurslon, worth
four unita of college credit, Is $1150 wbJcb
includes conuntrclal jet travel, ac-
commodllfonl, muls, and lncldenlll
cosll.
This will be Cllamaro's lourlb lrlp
directing • lfOllP or ltudents In foreign
lands. Previously, he his led three Euro-
pean summer tour1 under the A1FS p~ .,.....
operators. The lines y.·ere sanctloned by
the AFL-CIO con'struction trad~ eotm•
cil and most building trades Workers have
refused W cross.
Although the Teamsters' contract is not
due to expire for another year, the ques-
tion of owner-operators was postponed in
1968 until now because union and
maqagemeot negotiators failed to reach
agreement on it then.
A Teamster spokesman said the union
wants owner-operators put on employe
status by contractors so they are not
compelini; with d:-ivers on the payroll. He
said employers do oot pay the $2.~ Jn
fringe benefits for owner-operators which
"not only hurts the owner-operators but
undercuts regular union drivers."
Ralph Crago, head ol the As!oclated
Independent Owner-Operator1 Inc., which
claims to represent 1,500 men, accused
the Teamsters of "trying to use another
gimmick to cvllect. fringe benefits for
pension, health and welfare funds ev'?n
though the owner-operators never work
long enough on the on-jobs ever to collect
any benefits ."
An estimated 5,000 drivers are involved
in the dispute.
Measles Shots
Sla ted at Base
Health offictats at ·c.mp P-to-
day mnln<led parents of de~t mill·
tary childmt that vaccinations against
German meules are available free at
the bae Na•al Hoopttal.
The vacclna!Jon program la an attempt
to stem whit Malth offlcials fear will be
a German me... epidemic late thl!
year or early next. acoxding to Lt.
Cmdr. J. P. Hughes, the hospital'•
pedlalrlctan.
The hospital's clink will be open for
free Immunizations Moncl>y throo&h Fr~
day from! a.m. to I p.m. U Is klcated In
blllldJni ll·50 •
Jege at 15. u ,-sea e o a roug scores o
"In those days," she says, "they d.iOn't police to the scene. For the record, Tommie aay1 she'• not
bout things like social ad-Tommie prepared , and preaented to the a Communial j~en~ They just kept on prOmollng city, affidavits from five people who "Jn my oollege .daya and later ln-New.
you as fast as you could take iL 1 ch~rged they had been mistreated by York when it was fuhionable, l wu in-
wouldP't do that to one of my kids.'' pohce on _this occasion. . terested In Communism, among many
The first college was Immaculate Her attitude toward lhe Woodlanders 11 otbel" thlnp," lhe aaya. "I ftllt to IOlne
Heart . Los Angeles "Mama did.'l 't not all sweet patience. of their meetings to aee what It was
think 1 :as old enough -for a co-ed schotl "They'v.~ learned a _lot a~ the law about. I didn't buy IL It just doe:Ml't So
d 1 she was right"' from me, she saya l>IWlUy. Includtng with my personal pbilolophy.
-~ w!s~uowed by a stint at liCLA, the fact that they don't have many r~hta "Frapkly, I enjoy being rather rich and
then Stanford, where ahe waa married, at to stand on ,u · they 1et mixed up m a llvtng an idyUI~ Jlfe in'-this PiecJul
17, to a fellow student, and proceeded to felony. Thal s what worries me about house. Il people want to put my name on
have lour children in five years, j>ickin& som~ of thete k1dl. They donrt seem to burttbeir ~: tbey,can go ahead. Tbey·ean't
up a B.A. in French alone the way. realize what a felony convicUoa can do to me.
"I was having my thlrd baby the day I
was supposed to graduate, so there was a
slight delay," she recalls.
The marriage ended in divorce alter
Hickel Reveals
Plan to Upgrade
Water in Sewer
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Secretary
of Interior Walter Hickel said today all
government sewers will be discharglnl
1wimmable water by the end of 1972.
The secret.ary, changing planes in San
Francisco, was asked for his comments
on reports that government agencies are
among the worst of water polluters.
He replied that President Nixon ball ·
ordered all federal agencies, Including
the military, to give secondary treatment
lo a:I their discharges by the end or 1972.
"This Is not drinkable water but it is
swimmable,'' he said. "And it's a step
toward tertiary treatment which will pro-
duce water you can drink."
Hickel also said there would be an oil
_pipeline in Aluka.
Election Bet Pays Off
For Nixon, Say British
LONDON {UPI) -President Nixon
won $30 in a bet the .Conservatives would
win Britain'• general election earlier this
year, sources close to Prime Minister
Edward Heath said Monday.
The sources 1ald Nixon told Heath bow
he won the money when the Prealdent
visited Britain earlier thia month.
Nixon had asked an aide what the odds
were against the ConservaUves defeating
Labor in lhe election. Told they were 1ix
to one, the President bet Ilia personal
loreign affairs and national aecurlty ad·
viser Henry Kissinger $5 t h e
Conservatives would win. . .
When the Conservatives won, Nixon
collected '30 from Kissinger, the sour_ces
said. ·
While attending the Conservative party
conference in Blackpool last week, Heath
SPECIAL TELECAST
* * *
told friends of another lncldent Jnvolvinc
Mxoo and the election..
After hearing the .flnl Oood of -111
on electloo nlgbt; Heath returned to bil
apartment at 5 a.m. and pve strict •
•lructioos to bia housekoeper be .. u oOt
to t>e dJJturbed unUl noc:n
When Heath awoke at noon, be uked if
there hid been any calls.
"Only one," replied the bwlek!!':.
"Fr0m an American-genUeman - a •
Nixon."
Heath asked what Nixon uld.
"Well, he seemed very amJoal to
speak to you,•: the ~ ropllod.
"But I told·hbn you were oleepinc ll1d
...... not to be dlatlirbed under any
ctrcumstance.s. I liked hbn to ~ blck
later and he 11ld be -.Id do thal'
Nixon fmally reached Heath alter the
new prime mlnlsler arrived at bia .metal
residence, No. 10 IJoW11lng St.
Channel 8, Today & Thursday
7-10 P.M.
C9uncil of the Communities of Irvine
General Meeting
Held Saturday, Oct. 10 al UCI
Leam About High School Bondi
& lncorporat~on Studies
* * * Presented as a Public Service by
Community Cablevision
l '
I
I
'
. --
* T......,, Oct.bo• 13, 1~70 • •
Reds Build .!!J!
·U.S. Maps Plans
Informants
' •
' -----
Say~Nasser
Picked Heir
A 17-year-0Ja youth was arre~ted
recently after he allegedly mailed
a nUmber of a nti-establishment
bomb threats to well-known organi-
zations. Police said Ric•rdo F.
Beker, who was booked at Juvenile
Hall on suspicion of making bomb
threats made only one mi stake-
observi'ng an establishment cour·
tesy Officers said that on the en-
veloP on one of the letters, which
went to such places as the police
department social security oUices
an4 Federa't Bureau of Investiga-
tion. the .youth-put his return ad-
dress. •
lVith index finger in her mouth,
Brijin ~tarie Hubbard. 2. of Algonac,
i'fich. contempltites which pump1tin to
pick for Hallo1ueen at a roadside mar·
ktt ntar her hometown. • Two patrolmen frantically told
police headquarters gunshots were
crackling in Chicago's Loop Sun-
day night. Twenty polic~men .. a
sniper team and l'i''O canme units
answered the call. They crouched
behind autos. trained spo\ligbts up-
ward and scanned a skyscraper.·
An investigation revealed that a
\vater pipe had burst on the seven-
th !loor o! the building and water,
spraying out of an open window,
landed on the pavement with shol·
like sounds. • It \\'as not lwnbago that gave
Mr1. Andre Bertin severe back-
aches-just a pciir of five-inch-long
forceps left behind by a surgeon
\V.ho removed her appendix seven
years ago. Doctors at Melun,
France Hospital removed the in·
strument, which had settled in her
back region. • Doctors at Cowglen Hospital in
Scotland have found record back-
ground music is more effective in
helping elderly patients get to sleep
than sedatives. • Ninety-one years ago Mary
Cragi• moved to Southwold, Eng-
land. hoping the seaside air \\'ouJd
improve her health. Sunday she
celebrated her 108th birthday. • Two director s of the Datasonic
Computer irm have been told they
are losing their jobs-to a compul·
er. The Nottingham, England !inn
has decided that the machine can
do their '''ork faster and more
cheaply.
For New Cutback
SAIGON (AP) -Th< U.S. Command
began mapplng plam today for a new
40,000.man troop cutback announced by
President Nixon despite reports of a
North Vietnamese buildup in Laos.
Tbo-U.S. Strai.1~Air_Comman<Lselll
its entire active Pacific fleet of BSZ
bombers over Laos for the flflh conse-
cutive day in efforts to check a North
Vietnamese supply push down th'-Ho
Chi Minh trail to Cambodia and South
Vietnam.
Nixon announced Monday in Hartford,
Conn., that U:ie authorized American
troop level in Vietnam would be reduced
to 344,000 by Dec. 31. Under pl ans pre-
viously announced, this is to drop an·
other 60,000 men-to 284,000-by next
May 1.
Peak American slrength in Vietnam
wa!f'""543,400 in April 1969, "and. the total
is now less than 384.000. Nixon's with-
drawal program began in June 1969.
Sources in Saigon said some Am eri·
can unit.s are already positioned f o r
withdrawal from the battlefield. The
next units to leave Vietnam are ex-
pected to include the 11th Armored Cav·
2 Blasts Hit
Train Tracks
In Ireland
BELFAST (UPI) -Two bomb ex-
plosions damaged tracks on the main
railway line between Belfast and Dublin
today, an army spokesman said.
-·The·spokesman said '!five pounds of ex-
plosive appears to have been plactd.
under each of the two tracks" to cause
the blasts about one mile south of
Lorgan, 20 miles ffom the border of the
Irish Republic.
A railway spokesman said damage to
tracks had been slight and that trains
were running normally.
British troops fired nausea gas at
crowds in Londonderry where about 60
demonstrators hurled Molotov cocktails
and rocks at soldiers and policemen Mon-
day night and early today.
Army investigators checked a.~ ex·
oloslon witnesses said \hey heard 1n the
Eastway Garden.s areas of Londonderry
during the night. •
Police and army spokesman said they
had no reports of dam age in the blast.
Security sources speculated the explosion
may have been set off in the open to al·
tract police and troops into a position in
v»hich they could be attacked.
.In God We Trust
Motto Wins Okay
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The 9th U.S.
Circuit C.Ourt af Appeals today rejected a
challenge lo the constitutionality of the
national motto "In God We Trust" and its
use on the nation's currency and coins.
The appellate court today up held a
ruling by U.S. District C.Ourt Judge Lloyd
Burke against Stefan Ra y Aranow of
\Voodland, Calif .• Sept. 30, 1968 .
The court ruled only on the con·
sUtulionality and did not consider the
question of Aranow's right to sue. a fac·
tor in Burke's decision.
"fl is quite obvious that the national
mot to and slogan. 'In God We Trust,' on
coinage and currency has nothing
wh atsoever to do v:ith the establishment
of religion." said the court decision.
"Jts use is of a patriotic or ceremonial
chai-acter and bears no true resemblance
to a governmental sponsorship of a
rl'ligious exercise,'' the decision con-
tinued.
,. BEIRUT:-'uiitoonl APr'--President
airy Reglmeot, Lhe 25th Infantry Divl· Gamal Abdel Nasser : rwne<t his suc-
slon and the 1st and 5th Regimen.La of ceuor ahorllt. before he died, but llls
the 1st Marine Division. The 7th Marine nominee is uOOer house arrest because_ he
Reglment of lhe 1st Division already bas .is unacceptable to the Soviet Union.
been withdrawn. • reliable diplomatic infarmanbl reported
-.ln the_ war, ab®! 30 of the giant BS2 today.
bombers pounded the Ho Chi· Minh The sourcee · aa id-Na.uer's deathbed
trail. There have been no 852 raids choice to lead Egypt was Zakaria
rlown in South Vietnam since last Satur· Mohieddin, a relatively liberal pr i m _e
d~y and none in Cambodia since I 1 s t minister who at timts embarrassed hlS
Thursday . chief by oppo$lng the. growing Soviet
U.S. Defense Secretary Melvin Laird penetration of Egypt.
told a news conference in Washington Nasser reportedly expressed his last
t.1onday that there is some evidence the wish to Information Mlnl.!lter Mohammed
North Vietnamese are attempting to Has.sanein Helkal, one of his closest
resupply their positions in the Laotian friends who was at his bedside when the
border area. presid'iot died of heart failure Sept. 28.
Sources in Saigon have said Hanoi The Information reached the foreign
has begun Ila yearly "dry.season'' push diplomat.s from some of He i k a I' I
of war materials down the trail to fuel associates.
offensives in both Cambodia and Sautb The Arab Socialist Union. Egypt's only
Vietnam. • pciuucal party, nomfnated Vice President
The U.S. Command reported that 38 ~ Anwar Sadat to succeed Nasser. and he
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops will be elected Thur!day in a nationwide
were killed in two engagements in referendum in which he is the only can-
Quang Ngai Province, Jn the coastal didate. But there are indications a power
lowlands. U.S. casualties were three struggle is continuing behind the scenes.
killed and seven wowided. v.ith Heikal's own position threatened be· cause he insisted that Nasse r's prefer·
A delayed report from South Viel· ence for t.lohieddin be honored.
namese headquarters said four civilians The diplomats said Soviet Premier \Vere killed and one \\'ounded in a Viet Cong rocket attack on oa Nang air Alexei Kosygin, when he came to Ca iro
baSf: early A1onday. \ for Nasser's funeral, told the Egyptian leaders the Soviet government would In Cambodia, the war slipped into one have no confidence in a government
oU ts _periodi c lulls. A Cambodian com-headed by Mohieddin.
munique repotred only one harassing at-·"In effect," OJle senior Western tack during the past 24 hours. . The U.S. Embassy in Saigon an· diplomat asserted, "Kosygin applied the
nounced that Ambassador Ellsworth Brethnev Doctrine to Egypt and made it
Bunker will return to Washington early clear that be regards Mohieddin as another Dubcek." next week for consultations, touching u,.1 TtlffMI• The Russians are believed to favar Air off speculation that he will be replaced L . as ambassador by William H. Sullivan, HEAVILY ARMED CAMBODIAN SOLDIER MOVES TO FRONT Marshal Ali Sabry. a prominent figure in
deputy assistant secretary of state for With Ch inese Roc'ktts, Machine Gun, He Looks Formidable the reported power struggle and an old
the Far East and the Pacific and for· rival of Mohieddin. They both served as prime minister and also as vice pusi·
m"k· am~didortedtoB .. Lakos., _ E1m1 b.assy __ ·-· ----·-----·---·--------·-,--.d~nt .. ____ _
spo esmen Jn c~ un er s r p _was o-e Serio·11sl11 Hurt In keeping Wfth--his Preferince-ror a
In connection with the new American •• _· --more liberal, open economy, Mohiedd.in
peace proposals and that he would be too~ a less adamant approach to the con·
away ·''three or four weeks." 7 y k s Id• M ul d frnntaUon with Israel than the more doc· The Sai$"on Post reported Vice Presi· an 0 1ers a e trinaire Sabry.
dent Nguyen_ Gao Ky would make a _ Mohieddin was in the inner circle or
two • week official visit to the United NasStt's 1952 revolution against King
Slates in November "at President Nix· Farouk. Nasser publicly designated him
on's invitation." The report said he A }{ T v • 11 to succeed to the presidency when he an-
would meet prominent officials and t orean ruce I age nounced his resignation in the first hours private citizens and would address the or deleat in June 1967. Nasser later
Na tional Press Club in \Yashington. withdrew his resignation under popular
Other sources in Saigon said Ky )1-'0Uld pressure. and Mohieddin faded into the
attend the Paris peace talks on Oct. SEOUL .~P) -An American st1ldier Swiss lieutenant who rescued Vinderslev background .
29 and put forward a new South Viet· who was tildly beaten by Nortp Koi'eans received minor wounds. The identities of Heikal. long-time editor of the semi-of-
namese peace plan. possibly a modlfi· at the PanmW'ljom truce villqe was the other Americans were withheld. ficial newspaper Al Ahram and Naaser·s
cation· or e1ten1ion of President Nixon's reported In fair condition todaY and Is ex· South Korean sources said 1 n mouthpiece for many yea~s tried to co n·
plan. pected to recover, a U.S. military American guarding South Kore a n vince the other Egyptian leaders to honor
spokesman said. civi lians wort.Ing in the , armistice ~asser's last wish despite the Soviet veto
'Crasli Proof'
Auto Studied
By V olksicagen
WOLFESBURG, Germany (AP) -A
spokesman for Volkswagen, lnc., an-
nounced today the company plans to
develop a new car in which occupants can
survive a 50 mile-an-hour head-on col·
lision without serious injury.
De.velopmenl will be undertaken, said
the spdtesman, in close conjunction with
U.S. and European authorities. 'The car
will weigh in the area of 2,000 pOUnds but
no other dc1ign details were announced .
The spokesma1 said that it was im·
possible to say when the new automobile
would be ready, but commented that it
takes some four years to develop a con-
ventional vehicle. The prototype safety
car ~'iii be used lor experiments and will
have safety fealurts tbat will be in·
corporated into other models. He said
that the new car would not replace any of
the current Volkswagen models.
He is Pfc. Glen A. Vinderslev of negotiating room tried to stop a North of Mohieddin, the informants said.
Chok io, Minn., and the Anny said he suf· Korean security officer from taking pie· Heikal reportedly ran into stiff or-
fered a depressed skull fracture from lures of the workers. The North Korean position, notably Sabry and Sadat, who
bl ows with shovels. pulled the armband off the American, pointed out that Egypt cou1d not afford to
Six other Americans were injured. one and a fight started.1 offend its only source for the huge
se riously, in the HJ-minute melee , and a Because of the attack, l\faj. Gen . Felir. arsenal required for war with Jsra('I.
Year's Strongest
Typhoon Roaring
Toward Manila
~1AN ILA (UPI) -Typhoon Joan
smashed across the coconut.growing
region of the central Philippines today
and roared to\\•ard Manila and neighbor·
j.ng population centers.
The Manila Weather Bureau raised
typhoon signal No. 3 -the maximum -
over Manila and the central Luzon area
at 5 p.m. It said the cit y. with its 2.5
million population. would be right wilhin
the typhoon's eye between I a.m. and 2
a.m. unless Joan changes ils courlK'.
The typhoon was plotted to be ove r
Catanduanes province 145 miles east·
southeRst of Manila late this afternoon.
Its peak winds diminished from 144 miles
to t 15 miles an hour after it hit land.
Weathermen described the typhoon.
~1. Rogers of the U.S. Air Force, the U.N. The sources said Heikal ··was not con-
Command member of the Korean vinced and will never be convinced."
military armistice commission, cancelled although he does not seem to have any
a meeting of the commission scheduled personal ambition for leadership.
for today. He accused the North Koreans
or an "unprovoked, violent attack."
The U.N. Command said more than 30
North Korean guards and civilian
\\"orkers set upon the American guards
\\•ith shovels, clubs and rocks. It said the
Koreans isolated the soldier most
striously wounded and beat him on the
head with shovels as he lay on the
ground. Lt . Rene Joerg, a member of the
S\\'iss delegation to the Neutral Nations
Supervisory Commission. rescued the
American and suffered a minor cut and
bru ises.
North Korea charged that "U.S. im·
perialisl aggressor army rascals" were
responsible for the fight. The Nor th
Korean ne\\·s agency claimed that more
than 30 "army ra scals carrying iron
bars'' attacked North Korean security
personnel.
Passengers Trapped
In New York Subway
NEW YORK (UPI) -Four hundred
passengers were trapped aboard a
subway in a tunnel under the East River
Monday night for an hour and a half until
a "rescue" train pushed them to the next
station.
No one was reported injured in the in·
cident blamed on a power failure caused
by a safety cord being ripped from a
third rail resulting in the jamming of a
contact shoe on the stalled train. The
'·rescue" by shoving was a departure
from the usual technique of attempting to
guide passengers along darkened tracks
to the nearest station.
Nation's. Weather Stahle No. 18 this season. as the most powerful
to hit the Philippines this year.
A weather bureau spoke9man said the
typhoon was so strong when it slruck
land today that it stopped the radar in its
reporting station in Catanduanes after it
recorded gusty winds of 160 knots.
The Americans were guarding several
Sout h Korean civilians wqrking in the
armistice commission conference room,
the U.S. Army said. There'11ad beer. three
minor altercations between North Korean
and U.S. guards at the tru~ village in
the previous six weeks. .
Rock Mementos
Go on Auction
In 'Peace' Drive
Snow, Thunderstor1ns But Fronts Nearly Stationary An earli er typhoon, Georgia, struck the
Clsaguaran coastal region of eastern
Luzon in September. kllllng more than
ISO persons. California
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•• Office Crisis:
·" Me n Ogle .~i11 is
:: 1 Hour Per Day
NEW YORK (UPI) -A Louisville.
:: Ky,, management consullant loday W('nl
on reeord as opposing the mini-skirt
becaU!C It is "detrimental to office tf·
•11 flc\ency. ''
I.ti "'"'' loo Al\ffltl
Ml1ml
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N"' Yo<-
No<!ll "!1ttt 0~•1•..0
Olo.l1lloll'lt t llr
Otl'l.tlll
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"''"' s ... 1-1 ...14 ltoblt t
Pl'loCllhf
Pl!li.JKj!fl!
"••lltllCI lll••lt en~
lttd l tv•I
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Nolan. vlct president of the. Serge A. Birn
Company, ran • distraction-time value
study of office \\'Orkers and found that
the Jver1ge American male 1pends one
hour out of every work day ogling minis.
Nolin. married and the father of five.
put distractions Into three classificaUons :
glsnce, double-toke and cont In u o u s
observation. A glance. he u.ld. has a one
~cond limt. value. 11 double '"ke tour
!ICCOnds:. and continuous observati('I",
··!luch as "''atching a girl \\'11lk lhe full
lcnglh af I.be office," was 69 seconds.
NE\V YORK fAP ) -A wrinkled go ld·
lame ascot once worn by Fats Domine
went for a bargain price or $19.
But Paul ~1eCartncy's Shetland \\'OOI
$WCater sold for $95. and Miles Davis'
legendary blue trumpet fetched '260.
It was auction night at the Fillmore
East, and a curious coll«:tlon loosely
described as rock memorabilia was on
the block. Monday evening before alx>ut
3.000 f11ns. The object: to raise: funds for
peace candidates in the November elec-
tions.
For $20, somebody bought some dry
rose petals, !Inge.ring memaries of a Roll·
Ing Stoots concert.
For $2.~ more. 11nolher gained
• possession of 1 bra once fluna at Jerry
G.'.\rcla by An adoring &rouple.
The star exhibit was a 1968 Cadillac
limousl nt. whose upholstery had bttn
11rciccd by such musicians as Cream, lhe
JeUerson Airplane and even, yes, the
Beatles. Aaron Russo. a 21-year~td rock
rnuslc producer and mananger. bagged it
for St.400.
The SlS,000 or so raised Y:lll go to
~lctan10rph1»is, a group dtdieated to
liupporHng antiwar candidates,
Facing Pan~I
Dr. Elburt Franklin Osborn .
research vice--president at Penn
State, is shO\\'n before the Sen-
ate Interior Committee during
questioning as to his accept·
nbility as the ne\v director of
the Bureau or Mines. Osborne
is expected to be appro"ed
after close questioninJ: About
1nlnc disasters and condr llon s.
The job pays $36,000 a year,
l
!
1
Saddlebaek Today'• .fie ..
EDITION
YOL. 63, NO. 245, 2 SECTIONS, 21 PAGES -TUESDAY, OCTOBER H, ·1970,
•
South Coast Hospital-
. Joins Clemente Fight •
Relief Eyed
For City's
Street Woes
By BARBARA KREIBICU
Of lflt DllllT '11•1 Sllff
A new downtown parking proposal that
would rtlieve the city of Laguna Beach of
some of its parking responsibilities and
possibly incfease piikffii rtVenue wall
mulled by planning commissioners in a
1tudy session Monday night.
John Kramer of the Parking Corpora·
lion of America, who told commi!!ioners
his firm operates more than 200 metered
parking lots in 15 states, proposes
building a three-level parking structure
on the Glenneyre municipal lot at his ex·
~t~ffi~~¥'~µ~~rr-rrw}!!!~--·
locatons.
_ In return, he said, the firm would pay
the city $34,500 a-year-as a flat payment,
plus a percentage of revenue above
mortgage payments after the plan h in
operation.
The city, he said, would be relieved of
all maintenance, patrolinc and meter
repair, which would be handled by -the
firm.
He seeks a 20-year lease on the parld · g
11lructurt and five-year I ease s·on the
other lots.
HI w-OUld plan to charge 25 cents an
hour for parking, but would have a spe-
cial agl'eem~t with downtown employees
who would be charged a Oat $15 a month.
for a .sticker th' at would permit them · to
park in any of the oompany't lots.
The lots requested by the parking firm
are the %6--space facility on Broadway,
next to the Mobil gas station, the :J6..space
Pepper Tree lot on Ocean Avenue, the El
Piueo lot with 34 spaces and an ad·
dltional lot on the north end of Main
Beach where a 40-space pad could be
created by demolishing the Pepper Mill
building and the Recreation Department
Building, both city-<iwned.
Planning commissioner R o b e r t
Hastings, who introduced Kramer to the
commission, noted that the city now
would gross between $28,000 and $29,000,
Jess maintenance expenses, on 216
spaces. ·the number involved in the pro-
posed transaction.
Hastings today emphasized that the
(See PARKING, Pace Z)
Forster Slates
All-out Attack
On Administrator
San Juan Capistrano Mayor Tony
Forster is waging an all out attack on the
performance of city administrator-cleric
·Ernest Thompson .
Thompson said today that he has not
been made r.ware of any charges and will
dehmd his performance.
ln letters to the members of the ~ity
etu:icll, Forstl'r outlined s e v e r a I
grievance! which he hopes will be aired
1nd resolved at tonight's 7 p.m. meeting
or the city council.
l:le~ding the list is a controversy over
the top man's S21ary. At the present time
"nlom~n is receiving $18,000 a year, a
figure, which he claims was approved
when tbe council passed its budget in
August.
Forster contends that only $15,000 a
year was authorized and that the other
$3,000 is still under negotiaUon.
"I \Vil! not sien future payroll checks
for Mr. Thompson at the $18.000 a year
salary unless the city council approv~
this sum by a majority volt," said
Forster.
1be mayor states that during budget
11tudy sessions the administrator-clerk
agreed to be a contract employe not sub-
ject to the penoonel ordinance, making a
separate proposal for his salary.
Thompson agreed that ht is a contract
employe but aaid it had only betn tug-
. cested that be make a :sepuate aalary
proposal, he had never . actually been
clJrectedtodolL
The mayor furt.her contend! that
Thompson wu asked to prtpi1'1! & de-
ICfl:ptton or bis duUes for the: rounci11
M>tnclhlng be failed to do.
"Th111t wa.s done rcgardlni the c.lerk'I
pcsttJon," 1a.ld Thompeon, "&nd they
(Set COl1NCIL, hp I)
)
Canada Hassle CHPA Sets
Aide Kidnaper-s' Hearings
Lawyer Released Tonight
MONTREAL (UP I) -The lawyer for
two groups of separatist kidnapers was
released from jail today, clearing one
obstacle in the negoliatiolll!I wilh the
government to release two political
hostages.
Demers, held into the early morning
hours in the city jail where Lemleui: has
been held since Sunday, were "very
«lementary."
Lemieux entered nQ plea -formally
listed in the rtc0rd.1 u a not guilty plea
-to charge! or obstructin1 justice and
Interfering with the wort of police by
itatements made Oct. t ..
Judge Maurice Allard r e I t a s e d
Lemieu:a: on his own recogniulnce pen-
ding settin& of a trial date Friday.
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 1111 Dellr Pli.t S!tH
South C-Oast Community Hospital
which had remained officially mum on
the bitter CQmpeUtion In San"Ciemente
between two private hosplial dtVek>pers
-has joined the fray which ls expected
to reach a climax in public heatings to-
night.
Robert Lemieux told newsmen he
would meet government ntgotlator Robert
Demers later today to continue talks
aimed at gaining freedom for British
Trade C-Ommissioner James R. Cross and
Quebec Labor and Immigration Minister
Pierre Laporte, hostages of terrorist cell.!I
of the Front de Uberation du Quebec
(FLQ ).
The two commando cells have been
disagreeing .on the ransom terms, with
~ £<..!U!<ll!!!111J.«P.<ldt.J.!l~l!!!!&lq lt!11"'r oemands.
A resolution askln1 the Comprehensive
Health Plannln1 Association not to con·
sider addition ·of any more bed$. to the
existing approved number of 514 will be DAILY "'LOT Staff,.,... ·entertd"lnl•-•h<-r«mlwlii"nwCRP~---···u~TS,CAMERl,-ACT10N"Af SHAW'!n:ovE iN LAGUNA~----11 ·-·r;emieu:i · Wir liis·-rmuai-·iauu-wuh ··
At opening talks between Lemieux and
Demers Monday ntabt, police threw a
police shiel~ three blocb cle<p or..,...i lhe
jail as the Jawyen-met. •
bOldS he~rigs tonight on the private Jo1nn• Shimku1, Ric:hard Benj•min Play Scene From New Film hospital ~ssle in San Clemente c i t y
Unruh Charges
Irvine Swindle
In Bay Trade
Posed on the shoreline of Upper
Newport Bay, Democratic gubernatorial
candidate J ... Unruh today alleged that
the Irvine C.Ompany is engaged in a
"swindle-swap'' in the proposed Back
Bay tidelands exchange with Orange
County government.
Unruh, in what he termed another of
his special news events, brought a
busload of newsmen and camp followers
to the Harbor Area for yet another of hls
attack! against big business and the
~tablisliment.
Monday it was Standard Oil Company's
refinery in El Segundo that drew his at-
tention in an attack on air pollution and
incqmbent Gov. Ronald Reagan.
Today, the Irvine Company drew the
focus of Unruh's wrath.
Unruh asserted that the proposed
Newport Bay 'land exchange would deny
public access to prime S o u t h e r n
California beach land.
The Democratic gubernatorial can-
didate said if elected Nov. 3 he -with
the aid of o t h e r Democratic office
seekers -would reptal the land transac·
lion between the Irvine Company and
Orange County.
Unruh issued the charge in a four-page
statement prepared for delivery on-site
al Back Bay.
He said Orange County seeks to trade
the Irvine Company 157 acre! of prime
beach land in return for 450 acres of
mudflats, underwater islands and county~
controlled acreage in what "is probably
the wont government real estate deal
since the Indians were talked out of
Manhattan Island for $24." ,
Unruh charged that the State Lands
Commission approved the uchange
shortly after Gov. Reagan took office in
(See UNRUH, Pop I)
In Ottawa, helicopW loods ol troops
arrived to help tbe Royal -Canadian
Mounted Police on guard duty -the first s~uch use of ~ in the ·eanaltian capital
in peacetime. lliitory. · ·
Quebec Premier Robert Bour.,.. Mon-
day named . Dtmen, a · touch-minded l•wyer""" -~to,_ the per ..... t In ~Ucm'l..nti the FLQ. ~ ...;-.~ .. -•. .._ '
Squad ears· ud llneo <I. uniformed of.
!ic<ro rlnied the polict -.iuarten and
rtlulled to ollow -but OIDcloJs
within ~ blocb OI the llalldlnf.
Mi.ssion Viejo
Resident Killed
By Runaway Car
A 23-year-<ila Miuion Viejo man wu
fatally crushed by a neighbor woman's
runaway car Mond0iy as he tried to uslst
by entering the movll'l.I auto to. brln& it
under control.
Frederick Brown of 24%22 Salero Lane
died on the oper?t11g table at South Gout
Community Hospital at 1.:49 p.m., abOut
four hours after the accident.
California Highway Patrol officers _aald
Mrs. carol Ann Norman, 11 of 24111
Salen> Lane had left the car runnin1 as
she got out to cloee the 1ar1ge door •. It
apparenUy slipped into rtverte.
The car moved down the driveway and
began backing in circles in the street arid
over curbs. The driver's door "'' open
on the 1969 Old.tmoblle. Mr1. Norman
called for help.
In grabbing for the door and trying to
enter the backing car, an officer Aid,
Brown apparently fell or was knocked-to
the stretl The ('lf circled and puaed
over his body.
Brown wu a telf-employed hair
dresser at 30001 Crown VaJley ParlCway.
Survivors include his wklow Connie.
Funeral arrangements are pendin&: at
Blower Mortuary in Santa Ana.
ball. .
The re.ilution, an official of South
Coast stress~ today, is 1enera1 in na·
ture and makes no refereil<ie to specific
developers.
But ~ .document specifically discus-
ses the South Coast 1ervlce area and
conteftCb. · th~t addin1 more beds would
not. serve the ""but interest" of the 11'1.~1;Jl!,1~~1i,pi i~~· ...
'DI: GOCamwd.• ..apeded·:t0 .add'MW' 1..i;o.,111t __ ..... roots In' •
requeot ,by VOJ! Nuys. 4oo~loper 0. T.
DeelnCe1 for CMPA re1e1ral ot endorse--
men! •I Il_<\Cioca' too1-del•yed s • n
Clemente Medical Center.
~r private hospital, Chapm an
General Hospital, however, has launch-
ed its own di'IVe to win CHPA endorse--
ment "(Hence, State JM:enslng). for 112-
bej:I. San Clemente GentraJ Hospital.
LoCal thamplcma of the a..pman c;.,..
eral d~l~t are ex~ to cite
the lm1J1edlatlf: ~ for a holpita.1 in
.~.Clemente. Upder present conditions,
the cloiul hoaplt&I which Hrves l b e
city and sui'rounding communitiea i,
South · COu\ Cornmwtlty Uoopltol In
Soutb Loguno.
Official comment on the implications of
·the Soiith' C'out involvement In. the com·
J)!!tition were acant today. · . '
One ~le.vel olflclal in San Clemente,
ho•ever. termed the resolutl"on 1ubmHted
to the CHP A .wr early &his week as a
violation of IOrts in what was termed a
"gentleman's agreement" that South
Coe;st would nmain out of th~maneuver
in1 betwttn the tWo private. hospital
developers. ·
The pass11e ol the 'resoluUon, South
Coast spokennen aaid, occurred last
Thursday. . ·
Chapman General Hospital spokesmen
said they would not comment at all on
the resolution, atresalnc that the hospi-
tal'1 phUOJophy In the competition ha11
been a lo'W-keyed effort to lell a hospUal
plan to the CHPA and the public.
1be new ruolution 11pecifically cites the
state public health departmenl opinion
that Uie ext!Una 1pprovals of 514 hosp!.
tal beds for the South Coast area Is suf·
ficient.
The asserted duplication of hospital
iervices among private and commw\.ity
hospital,. ln the area would rtsult iri
increued coets to consumers of t b e
aemoe1, South Cout trulkes said.
'Boarders' To Extend ·stay
School Enrollment Transl er Seen in December
1.fission Viejo' High School may have Its
''boarders'' until mid·Decembet.
William Zogc, superintendent of the
Tustin Union High School Dlslrlct,
assured the board of trustees Monday
that be e1pecta University High Scllool to
be completed by lite November.
"But the move itself wiU require a
man-power shift and it might be loglsti·
cally beUt:r to wait until Christmu vaca-
tion," he Wd.
He referred to the foci that University
Park studtt\1' "" being bll9'd to double
sesslonl ot Mission Viejo blgb unW !heir
own school II complete.
Zogg aakt thtre had bttn .ome dif-
fitulty with drain mnstructiem but had no
way \0 ttll lf lhis would cauae a delay.
In • rtpOrl pnpartd bf Jack p-...,
1
consttucUon inapedor, trustees were In--
formed lhat all of the tlnlclurol -k Is
now complete on duarocm unHa B and c. lhop unit D, homemllln( unit E, the
girls' and bo)'I' showers and locker
rooms, &nd the restrooms all of which
are lnchlded in phue one of the con-
struction.
One of Iii< clasm>om uni!< llill l0<kl
an acousUcal ctilina, 20 percent ot U.1 ,
cpsum wall portlllonl ud five percent'
of ita ..raup plmnbinc. • I . I
TM Olber cliMluom UDlt-llill netdl 15l
ptttent of ltl oaopended ctlllll( IJ"l4, ••
pemnt<l.U.l1JIOll!llnllil,•-tol
ltl .... pmded 0011111( srld. • percent ol
ltl 1YJ>111J11 wolls, • peroont cl ti. plum-
bing. 40 perceot of ltl oleclrlco1 -k.ond
:io per<ent or lho -o1all -k acl-jaolat-to Uat br.iildl'll
Follow the Sun-
Filmers Finally Find Laguna Rays
1 I'-, •J' I '·1 r.e.l••I · "lji!PaEi\ERICll:'•SCJiOElilE'flt" ,.
, ~OftfM Dtlb: ,_.. .Sflllt ' .
Overast skies greeted t.l}e cast and
crttr of a nn 20th Centw-y Fox film in
Lquna Beach Monday, just when the
di{ector was hoping for Jots of bright
sunshine.
He>wever, by . mid·aft.ernoon, the sun
began · to peek through, and, with set
1ights, the production ci-ew was able to
aet a stJrt on the beach scenes Or "The
Marriage of a Young Stockbroker," set
ror release next summer.
Scores of Art Colony residents were on
hand at Shaw 's Cove to watch as direc-
tors, cs.meramen, technicians and actors
worked on the five beach scenes.
The film makers wW be in the Art
T.ustin School
Bond New s Due
In Meeting
Officials of Tustin Union High School
district at 7:30 tonight will present in·
formation on the $25.8' million in bonds
voters will be:asked to approve No. 3.
The meeting will be in Tustin High
School Little Theater, 1171 Laguna Road,
Tustin.
If approved the bonds would require a
tax rate boost of 14.9 cents per $100 6f
assessed valuation during the 1971·72
fi.scal year, Superintendent William B.
Zogg said.
To be ~old .over a perio.d of rive years,
the highest tax needed to fund th~ issUe
would come in the 197f..76 fiscal year, re-
quiring 30, cent:!· per $100.
"Any increase in the bond retirement
will be offset by a reduction in the stale
loan retirement tax rate," Zogg noted.
Further,· ''a substantial reduction in the
tax rate 1levied ·to fund the bond$ is ex·
pected in 1981Hl." be said:
That . decrease would result from
rtvenues to the district that' currently are
being withheld because lands tulve been
placed in agricuJturaJ preserves ·and will
not be developed for 10 yfars or less.
Tax rate estimates were based on 'sale
of the bonds at seveil percent interesJ ,
Zogg noted, '1holfever. most 'recently
bonds have been selllrig for a lesser in·
te.re1t rate."
For the next live years, Tustin Union
High School District plans addition of
three new. high scl1ools lieiiidet llje
University ·High whiCh Is under con.
struction and du' &ti Open in November or
December. i • •
• .l '•~ COiony -wblch .has l1s !hare ol
stockbrokers, young and otherwise -for
the nut three weeks. '!'bey wl1J be film·
ing scmes on the beach, at a beach house
above Shaw's Cove and on local streets.
Other footage will be shot in San Juan
Capistrano.
The comedy film follows the life of &
young stockbroker, who• has r~hed a
crisis poinl in his life. His marriage is
weakening by the day and he is not happy
with his work.
In the hopes of reconciliation, he brings
his wife to Laguna for a vacation, but the
marital problems are only compounded.
"There's a partial reconciliation -yoo
might call it' a happy ending,·· .. ~ µie con-
clusion of the :ilm according to 20th Ce&
tury Fox publicist Harr; Kline. "But you
are still "left With the feeling-all is .110t
right and that things with the couple•wW
not last:"·
Other scenes will be filmed throughout
Los Angeles and at the company studios.
The film is based on a book l;ly pwtes
-webb, author of the novel, '"The
Graduii.te. '' Lawrence Terman, wbO
directed ''The Graduate," when it Wu
made into a movie, is also directini and
'producing "The Marriage of a Youn&
Stockbr:olcer. ''
Starring in 'the film a~e Canadian born
actress . Joanna Shimkus and Rlcliard
Benjamin, who was ir-"Catch-22." 1 Photographic director is L a s z 1 o
KOvacs, who worked on "EasY Rider''
and a·ne--R release. "Five Ellsy Pitcai.'~
The crew 1ill be filmlng at Shaw'i
Cove and the beach house through the
28th ot the month, then move onto the
Lagun~ *eets1 and film a rain scene in
front of .the JollY, Roger Restaurant.
1! nature dc>esn't provide a downpour,
20th . Century pfomlses to bring one, with
the help of a rain machine.
Oruge
We•ther ·
Low overcast and· patchy ·fog J•
·the prescript.ion for Wedneadaf,
w.eatherwi~1 wl~h ~mper~ture•
remaining in .the middle 70 s on
the coast and around 12 degrees
furlher inland.
INSlUE TODAY
Her name sounds llkt. 1ome.
thing out of 4 bod war movie,
but .Laguna Beach'i Tommil
Gunn, daugh ter of Tom Mix, is
·known as 4 ruper libtrnl. Sat • An educauon center and . conttnuauon
hlgh ecb.ol +ii' clated1,fol'.J'COQtf)letl6n tn.
· 11!2 w ' iddidons :to 'lour< eilJtlng .bigh
IChools 'llrlngln) 1\ltlr cap<dtles lo 2.ieo • '
lludebtt'-.olso ·wouldd1e dme tbat
Poue-3. ·
f 1 W..... ,,/\!._ ,I ' .. , ............... ,., t ' ~ ........... rear .. ·• · · • · .
If: the boocls are 1pprond, Tustin
dlstrld would have ...,,. high ochools
each KrVlng 2,500 student! In 1175.
Enrollintnl ii exptdtd to jump Imm
7,200 this year in four athool1 . to 15,400 ln
1175, baled on a popullUon inause lrom
18,000 to•IA,llllO... . .
,, .. ~c-n ' II 1¥"1• ....,,_ ,_M II IS..n. .,.,Tl
t SMdr Mt1Wt 1•11 t T....,..._ It
• TllM1W\ II It '#MtMr 4
, .. " ._.. .... lS.11 '' """' ..... .. ..
f DAILY ~ILOT' SC
Russ Deny
Havmg Suh
BaseinCuha
I MOSCOW (UPI) -Tho Soviet govern-
ment officially denied today it was
bulldlq a nuclear submlrlnt bae in
Cuba and acaiaed the N I s o n
Admlnll1rau.n of delll>erately or U-.
teaponalbly spreading "falllllcaUooa."
A government otai.tnent distributed by
Tua:, the offtcill Soviet news 11eney,
-lald-thl U.S. nporta tho llllllillll w.•n
enr.,.a In building nav1l lllltallaU01U In
f;uba "play Into the hands only of lhoH
"ho .,. lnlemted In f&M!nr tho war
piychosis and Complicating the altuaUon
In that ngfoo of the world."
'"Ibo,. who deUheralely o r Ir·
ruponalhly .,. taking up and spreading
""'""· -u, 1110
NEWPORT CITY EDITOR
L. Ptt~r Krltg
CIAILY. PILOT Sid l"tltfM
NAMED TO NEW POST
Richard P. Nall
such falslflcatJon play lnto the bandl or
pie foe.I of peaco," II aald.
"The Soviet Union bu not built and lJ
not building a military baae on Cuba arul
u not doing onythlng lhlt would con:
tradict thO w\de:ntlnding r e a· c h e d
between tho govemmonll of Ille USSR
and lhe United St.itu In 1182," the •tato.
Daily Pilot Anriounces
Nall, l\rieg Promotions
tnent aa.ld.
The year 11152 marked the Cuban Promotions of Richard P. Nall to as.
missile crialJ' when Pretldtq_t John F, slstant managing editor and L. Peter
KeMedy ordered their removal in 1 tense Krleg to Newport Beach city editor were
confroQ,taUOn that appeared at the tJme announced today by DAILY PlLOT Edi·
. to be on the verae o~ breUJ.n& into dlrect tor Thomas Keevll.
con.met. Nall, 41, formerly served on the DAI·
The Nixon Admlnlatratton first nised LY PILOT sttff as South Orange Coun·
the submarine bue ilrue Sept 25 at a ty Editor, making bls headquarters in
1tllll&r Defense Department brteflng. A Laguna Beach and San .Clemente-San
Pentagon spokesman said 1cUvlty h~d Juan Capistrano. He now makes his ~ detected at cte~w. on Cuba • _Jie~dquarters in Costa Mesa and joins
southern cout, that COUid be the atart.M the ·newspaper's other assistant manag·
a bue for 1trvinC nuclear Polaris-type tng editor. Charles H. Loos, tn super-
111bmarlnea. • vllory duUe1
La!er the wne day • top While House Nall joined Ille DAILY PILOT staff ::~the a1Jo w!iprT~:e::.usw:r;~ in May of 1966 as Laguna city editor.
being bulll The officlal, who did not
Saddlebaek OKs , pennJ.t Ule <>f his name in accounts by
reporten, ntd the United States would
regard a bue for mtsalle aubmarlnu 1n
CtJbt~''wlth·the-utmost-aerloumeu.~" --
-The 11uii11n .ew1pap.rswsm1ssei1 th• ·fmproveaDriver , •llegatklns within a ltw days, accusing
9:---·the United Statu of trying to oour rela· ·1103!n~!~e:::::~s am ong some U.S. Trai11ing Com·se
officials to the Cuban -activity, together
with U.S. charges of Russian complicity
in Egyptian violations of the Middle East
cease-fire, apparently further irritated
Soviet officials.
These were said to be parUy the reason
why Premier Alexei I. Kogygln decided
.not to attend the Unled Nations 25th an-
,niversary .meeting which starts. Wed·
nesday. 'J'h1s ruled out a possible summlt
conference wilt! President Nixon.
Diplomatic 'otlservera . in. MOICOW ln-
terpre_ted Washington's rep ea· t e d
references to the alleged rrilsaUe hllse 11
possibly being based on broader polley
considerations, including the Middle E•st
crltlll. Throughout, the U.S. officials
acknowledgl!!d that only dubious and
dated lnfonnatlon was 1vallable to In-
dicate mlulle sltea might be being built.
Girl Hitchhiker
Raped on Coast
. A young woman traveling downcoast
from -Bil: Sur told police In San Clemente
. .Monday that a man gave her 1 ride in
.Dana Point then drove to 1 secluded area
:oloOi Ortep llifhway where he raped
ber.
The incident, which the 22-year-old vic-
,tlln aaid occurred in broad daylight, atart.
·ed along PacUlc Cout Highway ahorUy
&lier noon.
'Ihe victim walked into Police headquar-
ter1 in San Clemente alter being driven
to the area by the assailant, then dropped 'df.
Traffic violators wnose cases came up
in South Orange County Municipal Court
soon may find tbemsdves going back to
sc'hool.
Saddleback College trustees Monday
night approved a new driver im·
provement course, to be conducted under
the direction of Judge~ Richard Hamilton
and Frank Domenlchini and taught by a
trio of California Highway Patrol traffic
1enf"f'tJ?lent officers.
The course will be offered in four three.
hour. sessions, one In the daytime on
Wednesdays, and two In the evenings on
~fondays and Wednesdays, beginning In
approximately 30 days, with exact dates
to be announced.
One of the evening courses will be
taught in Spanish by officer Albert
Mercado, for the benefit of Spanllsh-
:speaking drivers~ It will be the only
SpanisJr.speaklng driver course offered in
Orange County, a board :spokesman sald.
Though set up principally for traffic
violetors, the non-credit rourse will be
open to all Interested drivers, the
spokesman said.
Topics rove.red will Include collision
problems and causes , remedial actions,
duties of drivers involved in accidents,
fin ancial responsibilty laws, regulatory
signs and signa1s, registration and licens-
ing, passing and stopping techniques,
driver t}'.Pes. good driver attributes, safe·
ty equip?nent and ma}or violations.
The course will be coordlnated by CHP
field supervisor Sgt. Frank Mahe, former
instructor at the Police Academy in
Sacramento. Third member of the
teaching team, with Mahe and Mercado,
will be CHP officer BUI Holt.
}fe was previously Imperial Valley bur·
eau chief for the San Diego Union after
earlier staff stints on the Imperial Val·
ley Press. the South Bay Daily Breeze
and the Brawley News. He attended El
Cam_ino Junior Coll~ge, Oregon State Uni.
ver:s1ty and the University of Missouri.
He and hls wife, Teresa, make their
home in Ll.aauna Beach and have one
:son, Richard, 2.
Krieg, 27, in becoming the DAILY
PILOT's new Newport Beach city editor.
actually broke into the newspaper b.usi·
ness as a sports reporter for trus news-
paper In 1961 whUe attending Orange
Coast College.
Later, whlle attending the University
~f Bridgeport, he worked on newspapers
lll Westport and Miliord, Conn. Before
joining the DAILY PILOT staff as prln·
clpal Newport reporter last August.
Krieg-was -terving·as-ehlef -of the-Bridge.-
port Post's flve-man Millord bureau.
-Krieg and hla wife, Carol , have two
children, J,.es, 5 and Jennifer, 3. 'Dley
have a new home in Sa ndpotnte.
Frona Page l
PARKING ...
Main Beach parking lots should be
regarded as "temporary" nstaJlations,
pending development of an overall Main
Beach Park plan.
"The beach now Is costing the city
about $700 • day,'' said Hastings. "The
rents from some of the buUdlngs don't
even pay taxes, but we are Ued up with a
couple of leases until the end of 1973. If
we can knock down some of the buildings
that are on 90-day notice leases and at
least utilize the land for parking, it would
be of some help."
Commissioner Carl Johnson said he did
not like the Idea of giving the parking
firm five-year leases on the beachfront
lots. Kramer said these could be
terminated sooner if necessary, ln ex·
change for like numbers of spaces in in-
la nd lots.
Asked for comment. Bill Axelrod of the
Downtown Business Association said he
thought the Zkent hourly rate seemed
high.
"The highest rate I've seeTJ ln this type
of operation," said Axelrod, "is 10 cents a
half hour."
Chairman William Lambourne noted
that Palm Springs had used such a rate
for a time, then abandoned ils meters.
Kramer said the 25-cent rate is "not
unusual" especially for beach parking,
but added, "If it's too high, you can be
sure we'll lower it. But that's our pro-
blem. We'd pay you anyway."
•
· Tbe cw hu been turned over to ,her-
1.ff's investigators becaUH the asserted .:otfen.e took place Jn county territory. . . -
DAILY PILOT
-. .. ..,. ..... " .. ..,._ .... .......... " .......... .., ' c.t.M... S.CI ...
Laguna Downtown Stores
Eye New Holiday Hours
. ' :~
..
..
.. ..
"
•
Otv.NGI CG4ST l"UllrstUNG COM'AH't 11.,,_,,, H. Wtt4
Pr.idt111 wltl ~flfW
Jtt.~ It C•rl•Y Vlc:I Pttslcltftl ltf'AI Gt!ltnl MIMI«°
lho1•11s .c,,,n .. ....
]ho"''' A, MVTl'hh1• M.,_..1111 lflltr
l lch1r4 P. Htl
tov111 o,..,,.. c.wrtr Id/IOI' -C .... M ... : "9 W•I ltT lfrMt ....,.,, ltoKIU n'll W•I ............... • ......., a..e11: m ,.,_, ,.......,.
............. elll t,.11 l..n '-ltw""
W C..,,_.1 -Hlrll1 11 C-"" ltMI
I
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of lt\1 P1Jtr Pl .. I 11•"
The Downtown Business Ass~iaUon of
Laguna Beach has taken its first step
toward preparaUon for the Christmas
Holidays by deciding to keep all stores In
the downtown area open on rertaln even·
in.gs in December.
The 44-mernber group, meeting this
mornln& at the Hotel Laguna, scheduled
the lrad!Oonal lloopltalily Nl&ht for Dee.
4. Store..'! In downtown Laguna Beach will
be open until 9 p.m. on that Frklay even-
ing to attract ahoppen: to the area .
Several contests will bt offered by the
merct\lnts: and 1 o m e wtll provide frtt
coffee.
'Ille DBA also pressed for keeping Ille
bWllnesset open Until 9 p.m. on Dec. 11.
18, 21, 22. and 23. Bill Marriner. president
of the association and owner of Mar·
rtner'a StaUonen and Booksellers, at
first requested that Dec. 11 be optional.
Mlltrlner noted that he ls -presenUy
remodellng hla atortfront and plana Dec.
11 as tort of a grand opening. The
member1 , titer discussing the matter of
having the one evening optlcnaJ for late
bW1lnes1 houn:, decided to keep all of the
atores optD.
Marrlnu told the group that the pro-
gram hu net "''orke::I too well In the pBll
years bmuse not all the merchant.. ln
the downtown area bav• parUdpated.
(
"We would advertise that all the stores
would be open," Marriner :said, "and tht
people would come here, only to find that
just two or three stores were open on lhe
specified evenings.''
The association plans to launch an
advertising campaign of the later
bu.slness hours on the six evenings in
hope of drawing shoppers to Ltguna
Beach from other communities.
In other action, the association
members decid ed to help the \\1inter
Festival Committee in its promotl~n
campaign of the cultural event by
, purchasing small advertising brochures.
Eloise Fulnier, chairman of tht Winter
Festival Committee, told the members
that the brochure! now in use were very
popular and asked that each member
help to bring people to l.Aguna Beach for
the fe.s tival, slated for F'tb. 19 to March
7.
?11arrlnet asked If It. would be possible
to get a 11maller brochure , one that woukl
flt Into a rmall envelope. Mrs. F'ulmer
1Jald that It would bt done and several of
the1 a150dt1tlon members ordued the
smnll brochures. They plan to send one or
the advertlJlng br~hures In each piece of
m"ll that th elr business sends out of
t.Q\'m,
P.trs. f\tlmer a15() announc ed Ocl. 2S Iii
the date for the Winter festival Pot Luck
Picnic. to be he.Id al Heisler Park 1t 2
p.m. She aald the public "·as invited.
•
~anada Cou:fts Peking
Nationalist Chinese Sever RelatiQns
Prim Wire Strvlce1
Canida today aonoun.ced establishment
of dtpklmattc relations with Red China.
Soon after, NaUonalist Qtina tevered all
relattona with Canada.
ln announcing the diplomatic tiet,
Canada acknowledged the Peking regime
as "the sole legal government o! C.bina."
External Affairs Mlnlster 'Mitchell
Sharp anDOWlced the mcNe in the House
of ComlllOll> and relwed a joint oom· munlque, dl8trtbuted stmultaneously 1n
Pekini and Ott.iwa.
"The government of canada and the
gO;Vernment of the PeoPfe's Republlc of
China, in accordance with the 11rinciples
of mutual respect for sovereignty and
territorial integrity, noninterference In
each other's internal affairs and equality
and mutuaJ benefit, have decided upon
mutual recognition and establishment o(
diplomatic relations, effective Oct.ober IS,
1970," the joint commwlique said.
"The Chinese government reaffirms
that Taiwan is an inalienable part of the
territory of the Peopll!!'s Republic of
China. The canadian government takes
note o! this position of the Chinese
government.
"The Canadian government recognizes
the govemment·of the People's Republic
of China as the sole legal govcrrunent of
From Pagel
COUNCIL ...
already know what the city ad-
ministrator's duties are. This Is outlined
in the resolution of my appointment In
which the areas of my jurisdiction are
stated."
Another grievance which the mayor
listed is that during the adminl·
:strator's recent vacation he failed to ap-
point anyone to be acting admlnl..strator
in his absence.
"I feel this situation reflecta poor judg·
ment on Mr. Thompson's part," said
Forster. "In both the public and private
business sector I feel strongly that there
should never be any question in regard to
who is the boss at any particular time."
Thompson said it has not been
nece·ssaey-to do· thfs-Itrt~ _past-11nd ~at
his Sttretary knew where to reach him In
an emergency. He further stated that the
other statt members·were capable of car·
rylng out their dlities \l.1thout guidance
for the two weeks he was gone.
Fanter also contends that Thompson
railed to request a vacation and failed to
tell the c;ouncll and to properly brief his
subordinates on when he would be gone.
Thompson admits that his vacation bu
always been determined by his office but
that be did err in not advi!ing the coun-
cil. He sf{d the claiml that be didn't ad-
vl!e hit lilall ·wao on •'untruth ".
The mayor summarized his comments
by sayiD& that-he felt Tbompaoo was not
an able and competent administrator. "In
my opinion I feel that he lacks the
qualitiea of leadership to effectively run
the city on a full time basis," said the
mayor.
"I request that each of you (coun·
cilmen) address yourselves to Mr.
Thompson's capability lo effectively con-
tinue as the chief administrative offieer
of the city of San Juan Capistrano during
the critical growth period ..... e face in the
near and long term future.''
Thompson said he would welcome an
evaluation of his performance saying he
has in the past requested this done in
open session.
Russ Leader Departs
MOSCOW (UPI) -So\iiet Foreign
Minister Andrei A. Gromyko left today
for New York to take part in ceremonies
marking the 25th anniversary of the
United Nations, the official news agency
Tass reported. Gromyko will head the
Soviet delegation to the ceremonies.
China.
"The Canadian and C b J n e s e
pvemmenta have 11reed to eichanae
ambassadors within .sb: monthl, and to
provide all necessary wi!tance for the
eatablilhment and the performance of the
functions of d.iplom.aUc missions in their
r~Qective capitals, on the basls of
equality and mutual benefit -anCI -m ac-
cordance with internaUonal pracUce."
He Wd Taiwan bad been a major con-
sideration 1n the negotiations i n
Stockholm, which beJan on Feb. I, 1969.
"From the very beginning of our
discussions, the Chinese side made clear
to us lheir-position-that Taiwan was an
inalienable part of Chinese territory a:nd
that this was a principle to which tbe
Chinese government attached the utrnoat
importance.
"Our po!ltlon, which I have stated
publicly and which we made clear to the
Chinese from the start of our negotia·
lions, is that the Canadian government
does not consider it appropriate either to
endorse or to· challenge the Chinese
government's position on the status of
'{aiwan.
'"Ibis has been our poa!Uop and it con-
tinues to be our position.
"Ai the COJlUDunique says, 't{e havl!!
taken note of the Chinese aovemment's
statement 11:bout Taiwan. We are aware
that this is the Chinese vltw and we know
the importance they attach to it, but we
have no comment to make one way or U..
other," he told1'parllamtnl
Shortly before thl. f o r-rn a 1 an-
nouncement, the Nationalist Chinese am·
baMador to Canada, Yu-Chi Hllueh utd
he had-tried unsucceuailly to Persuade
Canada nQt to recogni~ Red Ol.lna.
Nationalist Qlina then severed rela·
tlons with Clnada la the wake of the
Canad!An recoamUon of Communfat
China.
The govemment "decided to sever
diplomatic relations with the Canadian
government :es from today's date. and. t&
close its embassy in Ottawa, as well as
its consulate-general in Vancouver," the
Foreign Ministry uid.
It charged that canada's recognition or
Red China ignored "ita friendlhlp of long
:standing with the government of the
Republic of China."
The statement said Communist China's
government "poses the greatest single
threat toward peace and security.'' It U•
pressed the "firm belief that the severan·
ce or diplomatic relations between the
Republic of China and Canada will not af.
feet the existing friendship between the
two peoples."
Irvine Claims Unruh's
Attack 'Cheap Politics'
Irvine Company officials today labeled
Jess Unruh's attack on the Upper
Newport Bay tidelands exchange "Cheap
p__olitlcal theatrics" and challenged him te
From Paife l
UNRUH ••.
1987. He ea_id _thll_~ed leas than a
yea r after "precisely the same plan" Oad
been rejected by the three-member com-
mission in 1966 during former governor
Edmund G. "Pat" Brown's term.
Unruh chargl!!d that Irvine makes the
beachland private, ban public access to
it, and then sells "$200,000 luxuiy homes
to the very rich."
"Developments like this should not be
built in a place of public beach when
there is such a shortage of recreation
areas in Southern California," ihe can-
didate uid.
He added, "What the county gave
Irvine and what Reagan's land com-
mission ruahed to bless was a blatant gift
or valuable land in return for this trash."
Unruh claimed the outcome of the swap
would be the :sltte stuck with virtually
useless land while the big development
reaps riches by building homes on prime
beachfront property.
"This shameful Jarxi grab I.ls typical Df
the way Reagan coddles the rich and
soaks it to the rest," Unruh said in pre-
pared remarks.
He claims the Irvine Company doesn't
yet have clear title lo the beach but
"already is trying to keep the public
out."
Without the campaign funds to match
Reagan's television campaign -or to
even try -Unruh contlnuea to use. the
tactics of "surprlse campaign visits''
designed to get as much free news
coverage as possible.
Some observers have come to call
them ••field trips."
Republicans call them gimmicks.
The Unruh campaign, continuing in the
underdog role, atlll has trouble stirring
up enthusiasm even among Democratic
groups.
put-up or shut-up if be nally believes the
land swa9 Is Illegal.
The atatements came in rep11 to
Unrub's allegations that the proposed
tidelands uchange between tbe ranch
company and Orange County &ovemme.nt
Is, in his words, "a swindle-swap."
Gilbert W. Ferguson, Irvine's Ykt
presiden t of corporate communication,
commented, "If Mr. Unruh in fact
believes that about the Upper Bay land
eXChange, be stiOUld file approprtatt
charges."
'Iben Ferguson added, "He won't, of
course, because it isil't.
"It is dlstrusing that he bas become se
dl!!sperate that be will engage in this kind
of cheap political theatrics," h'e said.
"Tbe Upper Bay exchange Is now being
tried in the courts," Ferguson pointed
out, "A determination into its legality
and its constitutionality ls yet to be reach.
ed.
''Ont ruling that has been made,
however," be said, "Is that there is no
evidence of fraud or misrepresentation in
, any of the negotiations and decisions that
culminated in state approval tf the ex·
change.
"Orange County Superior Court Judie
Claude M. Owens announced that finding
last Aug. 18. We regret Mr. Unruh's ap-
parent ignorance of this ruling." be said.
"Further," be said, "the 450 acres ef
land the county receives in the exchange
will provide public park sites th at en·
compass more than 200 acres and will in·
crease the usable wate.r area of the Up-
per Bay by some 50 percent.
"Finally," Ferguson said, i•Mr. Unruh
asserted that the State Lands Com·
mission during Govemor Brown's ad·
ministration bad denied approval to the
exchange:
'"rlU1 is not true," he said. "The com-
mission in March 1967 withheld approval
with the explicit understanding that it
would again consider the matter further
when more information was provided."
Ferguson said, "I might add that t
personally consider Ptir. Unruh's confused
opposition to the concept of joint develop-
ment of the Upper Bay both cynical and
irresponsible." . -
A GOOD WORD PASSED AROUND ABOUT
A BUSINESS IS INVALUABLE. A BAD WORD CAN
BE UNFORTUNATE.
I
OUR GROWING SUCCESS IN THE PAST ll
YEARS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE "GOOD WORDS"
AND REFERRALS SENT TO US BY OUR CUSTOMERS.
NO A M 0 U NT OF ADVERTISING CAN
REPLACE A PERSONAL RECOMMENDATION.
WE ARE NOT INFALLIBLE, BUT WE ARE
WORKING TOWARDS THAT IPOAL, BY GIVIN~
OUR C U ST 0 M ER S THE BEST SERVICE AND
9UALITY POSSIBLE.
' '
ALDEN'S
.--.-•• -,.-•• -.. -0-.. -.,-,-. CARPETS e DRAPES
TUSTIN C•I •• ,
ALDIN'S ... ""' c.,,.,. 1663 Placentia An.
' DU.,1•111 COSTA MESA 11114 lrri-. , ...... c.nt.
........ 646-4838
I
I
/7
San Cleruenie
Capistrano EDITI ON
•
.N.~ • . .
VOL 63, NO . 245, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE CQUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1970 TEN CENTS
I
South Coast Hospital
Joins Clemente Fight
Reli_ef Eyed
For City's
Street Woes
Canada Hassle CHPA ·Sets
A -ide Kidnapers' Hearings
Lawyer Released Tonight
By BARBARA KREIBICB
01 tlM O.ltr P'llM ll•ff MONTREAL (UPI) -The. lawyer for
two groups of separatist k.idnapers was
A new downtown parking proposal that released from -jail today , clearing one
would relieve the city of Laguna Beach or obstacle in the negotiations With the
some of its parking responsibilities and government to release two political
possibly increase parking revenue was hostages.
mulled by planning commissioners in a Robert Lemieux told newsmen he
study session Monday.night. would meet government negotiator Robert
John Kramer of the Parking Corpora· Demers later today to continue talks
tion nf America, who told commissioners aimed at gaining freedom for British
his firm operates more than 200 metered Trade Commissioner James R. Cross and
parking lots in 15 states. proposes Quebec Labor and Immigration Minister
Demers, held into & ... early morning
hours In the city jail where Lemieu.r ·baa
been held since Sunday, were "very
elementiry."
Lemieux entered no plea -formally
listed in the records as a not guilty plea
-to ~es of obstructing jusUce and
interfering with the work -of police by
statements made Oct. 9.
Judge Maurice Allard r e I e a s e d
Lemieux on his own recognizance pen..
ding setting or a trial date Friday.
~y JOHN V ~L TERZA
OI ftle 0.llY l"I• 119"
South Coast Community Hospital
which had remaineromc1alij fnum on
the bitter competition in San Clemente
betw.een two private hospital de velopers
-has joined the fray which Is expected
to r~ach a climax In public hearings to-
night.
building a three-level park.Ing structure Pierre Laporte, hostages of terrorist cells
·--·-on-.lhe-Glenneyre -municipal.Jol.al his-ex.-.__oLthe~nt _de _Llberatlon du Quebec
pense if the city will also permit him to (FLQ).
The two commando cells have been
disagreeing on .Uie_r.ansom._terms._,with
the cell holding Laporto slicking I<> hi&ber
demands.
, A rescilutlon asking the Comprehensive
Health Planning \AJsociation not to con·
aider addition of any more beds to tbe
exbdng approved -numberor-s14-w111-be--
entered into the record when the CHPA
holds hearings tonight on the private
hospital haSl!e In San Clement< c i t y hall.
I
11
operate metered lots ~in four other Lemieux said bis Initial talks with
Al opening talks between Lemieu and
Demers Monday night. police threw a
police shield three blocks deep around the
jail as the lawyers mel
locatons.
In-return, he said,_ Ute firm would J:!&Y
the city $34,500 a. year as a flat payment,
plus a percentage of revenue above
mortgage payments after the plan is in
operation.
The city, he said, would be relieved of
all maintenance, patroling and meter
repair, which would be bandied by the
firm.
He seeks a 20-year lease on the parking
1trucfure and fiv~year I e a a t s ·on the
other lots. ~
He would plin to charge 25 cenb an
hour for parking, but would have a spe.
Cial agreement with downtown employees
wbo would be charged a flat $15 a month
for a sticker that would permit them to
park in any of the company's lots.
The lots requested by the parking firm
are the 26-1pace facility on Broadwa y,
next to the Mobil gas station, the 36-space
Pepper Tree lot on Ocean Avenue, the El
Paseo lot with 34 spaces and an ad·
dltional Jot on the north end of Main
Beach where a 40-space pad could be
created by demolishing the Pepper Mill
building and the Recreation Department
Building, both city-owned.
Planning commissioner R o b e r t
Ra.stings, who introduced Kramer to the
commission, noted that the city now
would gross between $28,000 and $29,000,
Jess maintenance expenses, on 216
spaces, the number involved in the pro-
posed transaction.
Hastings today emphasized that the
(See PARKING, Pa1e t)
Forster Slates
All-out Attack
On Administrator
San Juan Gapistrano Mayor Tony
Forster is waging an all out attack on the
performance or city administrator-clerk
Ernest Thompson.
Thompson said today that he has not
been made aware of any charges and will
'defend his performance.
In letters to the members of the city
council, Forster outlined s e v e r a I
grievances which he hopes will be aired
and resolved al tonight's 7 p.m. meetin&
of the city council.
Heading the list is a controversy over
the top man's salary. At the present time
Thompson Is receiving $18,000 a year. a
figure, 'Yhich he claims was approved
when the council passed Us budget In
August.
Forster contends that cnly $15,000 a
year was authorized and that the other
$3.000 is still under negoti ation.
"I will not sign future payroll checks
for Mr. Thompson at the $18,000 a year
salary unless · the city council approves
· this sum by a majority vote," said
Forster.
The mayor states that during budget
1tud.y sessions the administrator-clerk
igreed to be a contract employe not sub-
ject to the personnel ordlnance, making a
seplrato proposal for his salary.
Thompoon lflfted !hat he Is a <ootract
tmploye but said it had only been sug·
s ested that"he make a sepirate salary
proposal. he had never actually been
clireclcd I<> do ll.
The mayor further rontends that
Thoml)!on was asked to prepare a de-
iacrlptlon of his duties ror the council,
something he failed to do.
"That was done regarding the clerk's
,position," a.aid Thompson, "and they
(Bee COUNCIL, Pap I)
I
Unruh Charges
Irvine Swindle
In Bay Trade
Posed on the aborellne of Upper
Newport Bay, Democratic · gubernatorial
candidate Jess Unruh today alleged that
the Irvine Company b engaged in a
"swindle-swap" In the proposed Back
Bay tidelands exchange with Orange
County government •
Unruh , in what he termed another Of
his special news events, brought a
busload of newsmen and camp followers
to the Harbor Area for yet another of his
attacks against big busineg and the
Establishment.
Monday it was Standard Oil Company'•
refinery in El Segundo that drew his at-
tention in an attack on air pollution and
incumbent Gov. Ronald Reagan.
Today, the Irvine Company drew the
focus of Unruh's wrath.
Unruh asserted that the proposed
Newport Bay land exchange would deny
public access to prime S o u t h e r n
California beach land.
The Democratic gubernatorial can-
didate said if elected Nov. 3 he -with
the aid of o t h e r Democratic office
seekers -would repeal the land transac·
tion between the Irvine Company and
Orange County.
Unruh issued the charge in a four-page
statement prepared for delivery on-site
at Back Bay.
He said Orange County seeks to trade
the Irvine Company 157 acres of prime
beach land in rtturn for 450 acres of
mudflats, underwater islands and county-
controlled acreage in what "is probably
the worst government real estate deal
since the Indians were talked out of
Manhattan Island for $24."
Unruh charged that the St.ate Lands
Commission approved the exchange
shortly after G<lv. Reagan took office in
(See UNRUH, Pa1e Z)
In Ottawa; helicopter loads of troopo
arrived to help the Royal ean.d.ian
!o!OW11od Police oo guar<I cblty -tilt first
auch use of troops in the Canadian capital
in peacetime history.
Quebec Premier Rob<rt Bourwa Mol>-
day named ~ •. touA~ lair,.t.ad·-~.lo~
tbt g~ lo ~"di tha
FI.q. . ' ~ "~ , sq..., can ana lines of ,unHonnod, of·
ficeil rinled the poll<t ~ '"" refuaed I<> 1U6w -bat qlfldila
within three blocb of the bullclf!ll.
' Mission Viejo
Resident Killed
By Runaway Car
A 23-year-old M"'"ission Viejo man was
fatally crushed by • neighbor woman's
runaway car Monday as he tried to aSsisl
by entering the moving auto to bring it
under control.
Frederick Brown of 142%2 Salero Line
died on the operating table at South Coast
Com munity Hospllal at 1:49 p.m., about
four hours after the accident.
Califomla ,ffighway Patrol officers said
Mrs . Carol Ann Norman, 'Z1 of 24111
Salcro Lane had left the car running as
she got out to close the garage door. It
apparently slipped into reverse.
'Ille car moved down the driveway and
began backinit in cirtlea in the street and
over curbs. The driver's door was open
on the 1969 Oldsmobile. Mrs. Norman
called for help.
In grabbing for the door and trying to
enter the backing car, an officer uid,
Brown appart.ntJy fell or was knocked to
the :street. The car circled and puaed·
over his body.
Brown was a self-employed hair
dresser at 30001 Crown Valley Partway.
Survivors include his widow Connie.
Funeral anangemtnts are pending at
Blower Mortuary in Santa Ana.
The resolut¥>n; an official of South
Coast stressed ioday._is general in na·
ture and makes no reference to specific
developeri. ·
But tbt: -document specifically di!cul-
ses the South Coast servl« area and
COnttildl · that "a~ more" beds would
not serve ~the· "~ ~erat" ol tbe
'pal;lfe. .. ~11 .... Hii~les. ' 1'1o~~-=ii:.:~ .. II llJ ·9 "NflYo 14Pef,:C. T.
lleCi!Qt for CHPA rene.w11 ·&·-...
ment· -ot Deanca' Jonl.iayed S 1 n
Clememe Medidl c.nter;•
Another -prtvalo hootllloJ. i:liapmm
Gentrlt.Hoipltalj how<vV. hu launcll-
ed Jta Own drlw: to win CHP A endorse.
ment (hence, state Ucenslng) for 112-
bed Soi 'Oamt!me· Gentrll llo1pital.
Loeal dlamplons of the Oiapman Gen-
eral devt)opment are expected to clte
the \mmedlalo need for I hoopilal in
San itlemente. Under present condiUona
the clo.ttlt hospital wlUcb .1erves t b ~
city and aurroundlng communities is
South Ci>ut community . lfolplW In
South La...U.
Oftkial comment on the.tmpllcationa of
the South Coast Involvement in tbt corn--
petition were tcant today. ·
One to,.level official in San Clemente,
however, .termed the resolution submitted
I<> the CHPA ltafl ..,1y W. week ., 1
violation of IOl'll in what was termed a
"gent1eman'1 •ireement" that South
Coast would remain out of the maneuver.
ing ~tWeen the two private hoepital
developers.
The passage of the resolution, South
Coast spokermen Aid, occurred last
Thursday.
Chapman General Hospital spokesmen
said they would not comment at all on
the resolution, •tressing that the hospi·
ti.l's phlloaopliy in the competition his
been a low-keyed effort to 1eU a hospital
plan to the CHP A and the public.
The new reBGlution 1pecifically cites the
state public health department opinion
that I.he existing approvals of 514 hospi·
ta! beds for the South Coast area is suf-
ficient.
The asserted duplication of hospital
services 1mong private and community
hospitals in the area would result in
increaHd costs to consumen of t b e
aervk:et, South Cout trustees said.
'Boarders' To Exten4 Stay
School Enrollment Tran.sf er Seen in December
Mission Viejo High School may have its
"boarders" until mid·December.
William Zogg, superintendent of the
Tustin Union High School District,
assured the board of trustees Monday
that be expects University High School to
be completed by late November.
"But the move itself wtll ~uire a
man-power shift and it might be: k>gisti·
cally better to wait until Christmas vaca-
tion," he said,
He referred lo the. fact that Univeralty
Part students are being-bused to double
sessions at Mission Viejo high until their
own school is complete.
Zogg said there had been some dU·
ficulty with drain construction but h•d no
way to telt tf this woukt caUJe a delay.
In a repel'! prepared by Jock Pcdor10D,
construction inspector, trustees were in-
formed th.al all of the structmal work Is
now complete on clanroom units B and
c. shop unit D. hom<maklng unit E, the
girll' and boys' llhowen and locker
rooms, and the restrooms Ill of whlch
are included 1n phue one of the ·con-
structloo.
One of the cl....-un!la IUll lacb
an ac:ouatical oeWnc, a peroent of 111
l)'pSUm ...U porWona ml five J)eml'\
of Ila roop plumblnl.
1be other c1-unit lllD nMdl IS
pen:enl of Ill ~ ceUln1 srld, to
percent of tis 1YJ11W11 Willa, !O pereml of
ill auspeoded c:ellln( srld, to -• of Its l)'plUln walls, SI percent of its oh11n-
bln1, 40 percent of Ill t1oc1r1c1l work ad
IO percent of the concrete alab W<rk ad:
jacent I<> Ult bllJldlaC.
The shop unit ltill. needs aeveral
gypsum walls, • lteel Pali, but most or
. tho tleC)r~ and pbunblnl work bas
bet!• complelod. .
The boinemaking unit 1UU hu no
1YJ11W11 nlla and still llcU !O peroent of
Ill .... talr ~ la Jiercoot of lit .......
. blni and. ~of Ill -Wt.
. Mdat ill the·plumbbw -• --· it'., In Ille gfrlo' and boys' -and • . room. lllit ~ half of the .....
trlcal work"haa beet! cornplel<d.
The rtpor! lllalod that air CllOdltlonfnC
~ 11111 Ml not yet -and tilei m"'( llUI be placed on !hi roola,
,.._,_ -the board however
tluit •almooi an ·of the silo -k hu now
boe• c:oaiplelod, lncludlni curl>e and.
"*"'
LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION AT SHAW'S CO.VE IN LAGUNA
Joanna Sfoi lmkut, Richard Benjamin Play Scene From New Film
Follow tl•e Sun
Filmers Finally Find Laguna Rays
;.(.. -t· J1~l1 • ' ,. ~ ~
By FREDERICK SCHOEME)IL
f ..... ..., .........
Oftrclat lilies ir<ellJd the -cast ond
.crew of a ~ 20th Century Fox film in
,Laguna Beach Monday, just when the
d!rtctor W81 hoping £or Jots Of bright
aunahlne.
However, by mid-afternoon, the sun
began to peek through , and, with set
lights, the production crew was able to
get a start on the beach scenes of "The
Marriq:e·of a Young Stockbroker," set
for release next summer.
Scores of Art Colony residents were on
hand at Shaw's Cove to watch as direc-
tors, cameramen, technicians and actors
worked on the five beach scenes.
The film makers will be in the Art
Tustin School
Bond News Due
In Meeting
Officials of 'Tu.!Un Union H1gh School
district at 7:30 tonight will present in-
formation on the $25.8 million in bonds
voters will be asked to approve No. 3.
The meeting will be in Tustin High
School LittJe Theater, 1171 Laguna Road,
Tustin.
If approved the bonds would req uire a
tax rate boost of 14.9 cents per $100 of
asstlsed valuation during the 1971·72
fiscal year, Superintendent William B.
Zoga said.
To be aold over a period of five years.
the. highest t.u needed to fund tbe issue
would come in the 1975-76 fiscal year, re-
quiring 3$ cents per $100.
"Any increase in the bond retirement
will· be oUset by a reduction in the state
loan reilrement tax rate," 7.ogg noted.
Further, "a substantlal reductlon In the tax rate1 levied" to fund the bonds is ex·
pected In 1980-81," he said.
That decrease would result !rom
revenues to the district that currently are
belng withheld becatise · 1ands have been
placed tn agricultural p~eserves and will
not be developed for 10 years.or less.
Tax rate estimates were based on sale
or the bonds at seveil percent Interest,
Zogg noted, "however, most reeently
bonds haye been selling for a lesser in·
ierest. rate."
For the·next five yeart, Tustin Union
High. SChool District plana addltloQ or
three new hilh schools besida I/le
Unfvmlly · High -whJch is under eon.
1truclloo and due I<> open In Novtmber or I>ecembet: ' . • . . '
. An , edllcation center and conlill)ulUoo
!ilgh IChool ~1 ·1t1ted for completion ·In · t'72 ·and ~ddi\lons ·ro foor. <x1s11n1 high
1c:h0olo brlnjb>g lhtlr ciipaclUes I<> l .500
1tudmtl ~ alto would be done that
)'tlT.
If lhe bon_4s art approved. Tustin
dl1trlct' would have seve n high schools
each "rvlng 2,~ student,., In 1915.
Enrollment b exptded to )ump from 1,too thil year tn four 1ehools, to 15.400"\n
1971. ba9td on a' popuJatlon increase from
11,0I» ·lo 191,llOOJ
' "
Colony -which has its share of
&tock br:oken, young aod otherwiie -for
the ·next three weeks. They will be film-
ing scenes on the beach, at a beach house
above Shaw's Cove and on local streets.
Other footage will be shot in San Juan
Capistrano.
The comedy fi lm follows the life of a
young stockbroker, who . has reached a
crisis point in his life. His marriage is
weakening by the day and he is not bappy
with his work.
In the hopes of reconciliation, he brings
his wife to Laguna for a vacation, but the
marital problems are only compounded.
"There's a partial reconciliation -you
might call it a happy ending,·· .. ~ the con--
clualon of the :am according to 20th Cen·
tury Fox publicist Harry Kline. "But you
are still left with the feeling all is ' not
right and that things with the couple wW
not last."
Other scenes will be filmed throughout
Los Angeles and at the company studios.
The Ulm is based on a book .by. Charles
\Vebb, author of the novel, "The
Graduate." Lawrence Terman, who
directed "The Graduate," when It was
made into a movie, is also directing and
producing "The Marriage of a Young
Stockbroker."
Starring in the film are Canadian born
actress Joanna Shimkus and Richard
Benjamin, who was i" ''Catch-22. ''
. Photographic director is L a 1 :r l o
Kovacs , who worked on "Easy Rider"
and a new release, ''Five Easy Pieces."
The crew .1ill be filming at Shaw's
Cove and the beach house through the
28th of the month, then move onto the
Laguna streets, and film a rain scene in
fronl of lhe Jolly Roger Restaurant.
If nature doesn 't provide a downpour,
20tb Century promises to bring one wilh
the help of a rain machine.
Weather
Low 011ercast and patchy' foe . ts
the prescription for Wednesdly,
wealherwi se, with temperJtUre1
remaining in the middle 70'1 on
the coast and around 82 degrees '
rurlhcr inland .
t \: · u ::l TOD!\\'
Her nomt round! likt 1ome·
thing ou& of a. bad war mol1it,
but La.guno, Beach's Tommit
Gunn, dauglattr of Tom i\fl.r, tt
lrnown a.t a 1uper li~eral. S.e1
Paae 3. . .,,,,., t
Ctll!otml1 I
Clltek:r.t u, , t 'ltsil'M n.-t
, C..n<ct II ,,..~ .•• ,. u o, .:, Ntli<tt •
Cl>"'r<I' t r :···-·11 ,,.. •
t;~ ~,;~m~rl It
l"lrt"~ 1' I ttore:t:r• 11 Aft!! L;mltn 11
l
"''""' 1t Mlltt•• '"""' 11 N~:lrr.AI H.oW9 fof
On"tt C"•NlllY t ,,.,,., '.rttr 11
~111rtt 14-'l
• <t<k ~·t-tlt 1 .. 11
Tt:'f\I t!111 H
T:M "'' It 't. I !'•• I
I"',,..., .... , """ 1)-11 ' fl':• #t(WI 4-J
•
----------=====--~~~~----.J!I!~--~------------------------------~-2 DAil Y PILOT
Russ Deny I
Having Sub
BaseinCuba
M~W (UPI ) -The Soviet govern-
ment offtdaJly denied today it wq
building a nuclear submarlne base In
Oiba and accmed Che N I :a: o a
A.tnbiotralloll ol dellberatalf or lr-
lelpODlfbly apreadln1 "fallltlcatlou.11
A eovemm.at tllltmtnt dJMblrted by
TUI, the o!Qclal Soviet "'"' ... ncy,
II.Id the U.S. report. the Ruulana ·wtre
..,,.'I'd In balldini naval-lnatallallons·ln -
CUba "play Int<> the hanclo only of thola
who are interested 1n faMlnc the war
psycboll& and compUcating the altuaUon NEWPORT CITY EDITOR
L. Petar Krieg
DAILY '°11.0f tllft l'tlollM NAMED TO NEW POST
Richard P. Nill ln that tt&lon of the world."
•111ote who dellberattly o r tr·
reaponslbly are taking up and spread!Jli
1uch falaificaUon play lnto the handl of
the foes of puce," Jt 11ld.
'~ Soviet Union hu not butlt and la
not bulld!Jli a milil4J'y base on CUba and
IJ not do!ni anything that would con-
tradict the undemanding r 'a c h e d
between the 1ovemmenta or the USSR
and the United Statu in 1"21
11 the state-
ment aid.
The year 19'2 m1rked the Cuban
rntulle crlsia when President John F.
Kennedy ordered lhe.lr removal ln a tente
confrontation that appured at lhe tbne
to be on the ver1e of bnalllni Into dlrtcl
confik:t.
Tbe Nixon AdmlnlltraUon fint ralled
the tubmarine bue lllue Sept. SS at a
. reeutar Defense Department brtenni. A
Pentaron tp0kaman u1d activity had
been dettcted at ClenfuegOI, on Cuba'•
·aouthem cout, that could be the •tart of
a bue for aervtna nuclear Polarl1-type
•ubmarlnes.
L1tar the aame day a top White Ho1111
ortttat a1ao exprtNed serlout concern
about the bue -lf that wa1 what wu
bein« bulll Tbe ofllclal, who dtd not
permit uae of h1' name in account. b1
reporten, llld the United Statta w.Wd
regard a bue for mluile submarines In
CYba 11with the UlmOlt Mriouane:U ...
The Buillln-newtpapers disrri!SSea tlie
allegaUom within a few d1y1, ICCUJing
the United States of trying to aour rela-
tions with Moscow.
continued references among some U.S.
officials to the CUban activity, together
with U.S. charges or Russian complicity
in Egyptian violations or the Mlddle East
cease-fire, appwtnUy further irritated
Soviet officials.
These were said to be partly the reason
why Premier Alexei I. Kosygln decided
not to 4Uend the Unied Nations 2Sth an-
nivtrSary meeting •which starts · Wfld-
nesday. Thi• ritled out 1 poulble mummlt
conferem:e with President Nixon.
Diplomatic ObterYerl in MOICOW ln-
te.rpreted Wuhington'1 repeated
references to the 1Ue1ed missile bue as
possibly being baaed on broader policy
considerations, including the Middle Eut
crisis. 'nlrouahout, the U.S. officials
acknowledged that only dublout and
dated information wu available to In·
dtcate mlasU. lites mlibt be btinl buill
Girl Hitchhiker
Raped on Coast
A youn1 woman traveling downcoast
from Bil Sur told Police In San Clemente
Monday that a man gave her a ride In
Dana Point then drove to a secluded area
~on1 Orte&• Hlghway where be raped
her.
The incident, which the 22-year-old vic-
Um said occurred In broad daylllht, start-
ed along Pacific Coast Highway shortly
a!ter noon.
The vtctfm walked into police headquar-
ters in San Clemente after being driven
to the area by the assailant, then dropped
off.
Daily Pilot Announces
Nall, Krieg Promotions
PromoUons of Richard P. Nall to as-
sistant titanqln1 editor and L. Peter
Krieg to Newport Beach city editor were
announeed today by DAILY P!UlT EdJ.
tor Tbomu Keevll.
Nall, fl, formerly served on the DAI-
LY PILOT staff u South Orange Coun-
ty EclJtor, making h1s headquarters in
Lasuna Be1ch and> San Clemente-San
Juan Capistrano. He now makes his
headqutrten In Costa Masa and joins
the newspaper'• other 111lltant manag-lni edllor, Charles H. Loos, In tuper-
Visory duties.
Nall Joined the DAILY PILOT atalf
In May of Ill!& u LllWI• city editor.
Saddleback OKs
He was previously Imperial Valley bur-
eau chief for the San Diego Union after
earlier stafr stints on the Imperial Val·
ley Press, the South Bay Daily Breeze
and the Brawley News, He attended El
Camino Junior College, Oregon State Un i-
versity an d the University of Missouri.
He and bis wife. Teresa, make their
home in Laguna Beach and have one
son, Richard, 2.
Krieg, 27, in becoming the DAILY
PILOT's new Newport Beach city edihlr;
actually broke into the newspaper busi-
ness as a sports reporter for this news-
paper in 1961 wtiile attending Orange
Coast College.
Later, while attending the University
or Bridgeport, he worked on newspapers
in Westport and Milford, Conn. Before
joining the DAILY PILOT staff as prin-
cipal Newport reporter last Augu1t,
imltir-o-ved--Dr"'e-· -~rJag_w,,_,.n:1ng .• ._<l!l.,_.f Jb• Jlr!!l&1-. , · ·r .l 1' 1c:;;.1. port Post'• five-man Milford bureau.
, . Krieg and !Us wife, Carol, have t w o · 'T • • Co children, Les, 5 and Jennifer, 3. niey '';1cra·JDJllg llrSC have a new home In Sandpolnle.
''Traffic violators wtlose cases come up
in South Orange County Municipal Court
soon may find themaelves aolng back to
school.
Saddleback College trustees Monday
night approved a new driver Im·
provement course, to be conducted under
, ttie,.dlrection of,Judges Richard HamQton
and Frank Domenictiini and t.ught by a
trio of California Highway Patrol traffic
enfqrceD)ent officers.·
The cOµTse will be offered in four three-
hour se1slons, one in the diytlme on
Wednesday1, and two in the evening!: on
Mondays and Wednesdays, beglnnln1 In
•pprorlmately 30 days, with exact dates
to be announced.
One of the evening courses will be
taught in Spanish by officer Albert
Mercado, for· the benefit of Spanlah-
speaking drlvers. It will be the only
Spanlah-rpeaklng driver course offered in
Orange County, a board spokesman said.
Though set up principally for traffic
violators, the non-credit course will be
ope n to all Interested drivers, the
spokesman said.
TopiCl!I covered will include collision
problems and causes, remedial actions,
duties of drivers involved in accidents,
financial responsibilty laws, regulatory
signs and signals, reglslration and licens-
ing, paaslng and stopping techniques,
driver tY,Pes, good driver attributes, safe·
ty equipment and major violations.
The course will be coordinated by CHP
field supervisor Sgt. Frank Mahe, former
instructor at lhe Police Academy in
Sacramento. Third member of the
teaching team, with Mahe •nd Mercado,
will be CHP officer Bill Holl..
Fron1 Page 1
PARKING ...
Main Beach parking lots should be
regarded as ''temporary" mtallations
pending development or an overall Mau;
Beach Park plan.
''The· beach now is cost.inf the city
1bout $700 • day," said H&lltlngs. "The
rents from aome of the buildings don 't
even J1ly laxes, but we are tied up with a
couple of leases until the end of 1973. If
we can knock down wme of the buildings
that are on 90-day notice leases and at
least utilize the land for parking, it would
be of 80me help,"
Commllsioner Carl Johnson said he did
not like the idea of giving the parking
firm five-year leases on the beachfront
lots. Kramer said the1e could be
terminated sooner if nece1aary, in ex-
change for like numbers of spaces in in-
land lots.
AIJced for comment, BUI Axelrod of the
Downtown Business Association said he
thoua;ht the 25-cent . hourly rate seemed
high.
"The highest rate I've seen In this type
of operation," sa.id Axelrod, "is 10 cents a
half hour."
Chairman William Lambourne noted
that Palm Springs had used such a rate
for a time, then abandoned its meters.
Kramer said the 25-cent rate is "not
unusual" especially for beach parking,
bu t added, "If ifs too high, you can be
sure we'll lower it. But that's our pro-
blem. We'd pay you anyway.''
The case has been turned over to sher-
iff's invntlgators because the asserted
olfenae toot place In county territory. ' •,.-~~~~~~~--. • Laguna Downtown Sto1·es
Eye New Holiday Hours
• • '
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By PATRICK BOYLE
Of lflt 0.11'1' l'lltl lie"
The Downtown Business Association ot
Laguna Beach has taken ll!J first step
hlward preparation ior the Chris tmas
Jtolidays by deciding to keep all store1 In
the downtown area open on ttrlain even·
Inga In December.
The ff.member group, meeting this
morning at the Hotel Laguna, scheduled
the traditlooal llospltallty Night for Dec.
4. Stores in downtown Laguna Beach v.·ill
be open until 9 p.m. on that Friday even-
ing to attract shoppers to the are.a.
Several contests will be offered by the
merthanll and s o m e wUl provide free
coffee.
The OBA also pressed for keeping the
buslnes1e1 open untl1 9 p.m. on Dec. t t,
II, ti, 22 and 23. Bill Marriner, president
of the as.soclaUon and owner or Mar-
1 riner'1 Stationers and Booi:le.llm, at
first requested that Dee. l 1 be optional.
Marriner noted that he Is prestnUy
rtmodellnl his storefront and pl1n.s Dec.
11 aa IOft of a 1rand ()ptnlng. The
members, arter discussing the matter flf
having lhe one evenin1 optional for Isle
bualn•ss houn, decided to keep Ill of the
atores open.
Marriner told the aroup that the pro-
gram has not worked too well in the past
year1 because not all the merchantt In
the downtown area bJvt parUcipated.
}
"We would advertls~ that all the stores
would be open," Marriner said . "and the
people would come here. only to lind that
juit two or three store& were open on the
specified evenings."
The association plans to launch an
advertising campaign of the later
business hours on the sll evenings jn
hope of drawing shoppers to Laguna
Beach from other communities.
In other action. the associaUon
members decided to help the Winter
Festival Committee in its promoUOn
campaign of the cultural event by
purchasing small advertising brochures .
Eloise Fulmer, chairman of the Winter
Festival Committee , told the members
that the brochures now In use ~·ere very
popular and asked that each member
help to bring people to l.aguna Bench for
the fesUval, slated for Feb. 11 to March
1 .
M111rr1ner asked if It would be poulble
to get a smaller brochure, one that would
fit Into a small envelopt. Mn:. Fulmer
u ld Ulat Jt would be done and 91ver1l of
the associaUon mtmbera ordered tlle
smoll brochures. They plan to send one nf
the adverUstn1 brochuru ln each piece of
m!l.11 that their business aen<b out of
town.
Mrs. Fulmer also announced Oct. 25 as
the date for the Wlnter Fe1Uval Pot Luck
Picnic, to bfl held at Helslar P•rk at 2
p.m. She said t.be public was lnvUed.
I
I
Canada Courts Pel{ing
Nationalist Chine-se Sever Rela.tions
lfJoom Wire Se:nlces
Canada today IMOWloed establishment
of dtplomatic retaliON with Rod.China.
Soon after, NatlonaUst China seyered all
relatlons with CanadL
In 1MOuncing the diplomatic ties,
Canada acknowledged the Peking regime
as "the sole legal government of_Cblna.''
External Affairs M!nilter Mltehell
Sharp announced the move in the House
of Commons and released a jotat com·
munique, distributed slmultalll!Ously in
Pekin& and Ot.tawa.
"The government of Canada and the
government of the PeoPfe's Republic of
China, in_accordance. with the principles
of mutual respect for sovereignty and
tetTltorial integrity, noninterference in
each other's internal affairs and equality
and. mutual benefit, have decided upoi,
mutual recognition and establishment of
dlpl omaUc relations, effectlve October 13,
1970," the joint communique said.
"The Chinese government reaffirms
that Taiwan is an inalienable part of the
territory of the People's Republic o(
China. The Canadian government takes
note of this position of the Chinese
government.
''The Canadian government rerognizes
the government of the People's Republic
Clf China as the sole legal government of
China.
'"The C&nadlan ~d Ch I n e s e
·ao'ternmertts Mve ttreed to exchange arribassadors wllhln slx -month!, and to
provide aU necessary assistance for the
eJtibllshment a4d lhe performance of the
(Wlclions of dip1omatlc mlasiom ln their
respective c.apltals, on the basis of
equality and -mufual benefit and-it! ac·
cordance with international practice."
He 1ald Taiwan had been a major ron-
slderaUon in the nesotiationa i n
Stockholm, which bei•n on Feb. I, 1969.
"From the very beginning .of our
discussions, the Chinese side made clear
to ~ position that Taiwan was an
inalienable part Or Chlnese ter-illory and
that this was a principle to 'whtcg.11ae
Chinese government attached the utmost
impc;I~~·. .
"Our poslUon, which I Jiave stated
publicly and which we made clear to the
Chinese from I.he start or our negotia·
tions, is that the Canadian gt>vernment
does not consider it appropriate either to
endorse or to challenie the Chinese
government's position on the status of
Taiwan.
"ThiJ haJ been our .pooiUon and it .,,..
tinues to be our position.
"As the commWlique says_, we have
ti.ken note of the Chinese government's
statement about Taiw'1!· We are 1ware
that thl.!l Ls the Chine1t view and we know
the importance they attach to it, but we
have no comment to make one waf or Ult
other,"~· told plfliaJnen!. . Shortly bcf~ lhe f o r m a 1 an-
nouncement, the Nationali.1t Chinese am·
bassador to Canada, Vu.Chi Hsueh said
he bad tried unsucoess!ully to per1uade
Canada not to recogniU Red China.
Nationalist China then severed rela-
tions with Canad3 tn the wake of ~
Canadian recognlUoo of Commwdat
Chin.a.
The government "decided to sever
dipl omatic relations with the Canadian
government as from today's date.-and to
close its embassy in Ottawa , as well as
its consulate·general in Vancouver,'" the
Foreign Ministry said.
It charged that Canada'11recognilion of
Red China ignored ''ita friendship of long
standing with the government of the
Republic of China."
The statement said Communist China's
government "poses the greatest single
threat toward peace and security." It el·
pressed the "firm belief that the severan-
ce of diplomatic relations between the
Republic of China and canada will not af-
fect the ex.Isling friendsh1p between the
two peoples."
From Page 1 Irvine Claims Unruh' s COUNCIL .•.
already know what the city ad-
m.lnillrator's duUes are. Thls is outlined
in the resolution of my appointment in
v.'hich the areas of my jurisdiction are
itated."
Attack 'Cheap Politics'
Another grievance which the mayor
ll&ted Is 1.hat during the admlni·
stratoi:'s recent vacation he failed to ap-
point anyone to be acting adminilltrator
in bis absence.
"I feel this situation renecta poor judg·
ment on Mr. Thompaon's part," said
Forster. "In both the public and private
bwiness sector I feel strongly that there
ahould never be any question in regard to
who is the boss at any particular time."
lrvlne Company officials today labeled
Jess Unruh 's attack on the Upper
Newport Bay tidelands exchange "cheap.
political theatric•" and cballen1ed blm to
From Pllfle 1
UNRUH •••
Thompaon said It has not been •
neeena..ry·to-do-this-in-the-paat-and-that -1967.__~~id thil ~c~~ .. J~ ~~n-a
his secretary knew where to reach him in year after preclsely the same ji'lan liad
an emergency. He further stated that the be_en. rej7cted by th~ three-member com·
other ~ff member• Were capable of car-m1ss1on in 11~ ~.ur1ng f~rmer. governor
rying out their duties without guidance Edmund G. Pat Browns term.
for the two weeks he was gone. Unruh charged that Irvlne makes the
Forst~r also contends that Thompson beachland private, bars public access to
failed to request a vacation and fa iled to it, and then sells ''$200,000 luxury homes
tell the council and to properly brief his hi the very ri~."
subordinates on when he would be gone. "Developments like this should not be
Thompson admit! that his vacation has built in a place of public beach when
always been determined by hla office but there is such a shortage of recreation
that be did err in not advising the coun-areas in Southern California," the can-
di. ~li'ld LI; cl.\lml tha\bt didn 't od-didate JtJld... _ , .,
vbe_hli itaff was an "untruth". He added, ':What the coUnty gave
:t'.he .ff"yor ~~ hW1commenl8 Irvine and what Reagan's .land, con\4,
by NYilla th8*. be ftit 1'boJnpson was not mJsslon rushed to bless was a l>latahl gift
aa able and competent administrator. "In of valuable land. In return for this trash."
my flpinlon I feel that he l~cks the Unruh claimed the out.come of the awap
quallt.lea of leadership to etre~1hve~y run would be the state stuck with virtually
the city on a full time basis. said the useless land while the big development
mayor· reaps riches by building homes on prime
."l request that each or you (coun· beachfront property.
c1lmen) address: youraelvea: to Mr. "This shameful lal'lt grab is typical of
~hompson's ca~abi!lty ~ .effec!lvely ~n-the way Reagan coddles tht rich and
t1nue as the chie.f admm1strat1ve orf1cer soaks it to the rest " Unruh said Jn pre-
of the .c!ty of San Juan .capislrano ~uring pared remarks. '
the critical growth period we face m the He claims the Irvine Company doesn't
near and long term future.'' yet have clear title to the beach but
Thompson said he would welcome an "already is trying to keep the publlc
evaluation of his performance saying he out.''
has in th~ past requested this done in "Without the campaign funds to match
open session. Reagan'1 television campaign -flr to
Russ Leader Departs
MOSCOW (UPI) -Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei A. Gromyko left today
for New York to take part in ceremonies
marking the 25th anniversary of the
United Nalions, the official news agency
Tass reported. Gromyko will head the
Soviet delegation to the ceremorlles.
eyen try -Unruh continues to use the
tactics of "surprise campaign vis its"
designed to get as much free news
coverage as possible.
Some observers have come to call
them "field trips."
Republicans call them gimmicks.
-The Unruh campaign, continuing In the.
underdog role, 11tlll has trouble stirring
up enthusiasm even among Democratic
groups.
put·up or shut-up if be really believes the
land swap is illegal.
The ttat.ements came in reply to
Unruh'• allegations that the proposed
tidelands exchange between the ranch
company and Orange County government
is, in his words, "a swlodle-swap."
Gilbert W. Ferguson, Irvine's vice
president of corporate communication,
commented, ''If Mr. Unruh in fad
believes that about the Upper Bay land
exaiinge,-lieshOWd file-appropriate
charges.''
Tben Ferguson added, "He w<in't, cf
course, because it isn't.
"It is distressing that he has become so
desperate that he will engage In this kind
of cheap political theatrics," he said.
"The Up~ Bay exchange is now being
tried In tbe courts," Ferguson pointed
out, "A determination. into its legality
and its constltntionallty is yet to be reach-
ed.
/'One rulln1 that bas been made,
h,owever," he said. "is that thert l• no
eVidence afJraud or mlsrtpre.sentation in
any of the DegOtletloni' and declsloris that
culminated in state approval cf the ex-
change.
"Orange County Superior Court Judge
Claude M. Owens announctd that finding
last Aug. 18. We regret A!r. Unruh's ap-
parent ignorance of this ruling," he said.
"Further," he said, "the 450 acres ef
land the county receives in the exchange
will provide public park sit.es that en·
compass more than 200 acres and will in·
crease the usable water area of the Up-
per Bay by some 50 percent.
"Finally," Ferguson said, "Mr, Unruh
asserted that the State Lands Com-
mission during Governor Brown's ad-
ministration had denied approval to the
exchange.
"This is not true," he said. "The com-
mission in March 1967 withheld approval
with the explicit understanding that it
would again consider the matter further
when more information was provided."
Ferguson said, "I might add that 1
personally consider A!r. Unruh's confused
opposition to the concept of joint develop-
ment of the Upper Bay both cynical and
irresponsible." ~
A GOOD WORD PASSED AROUND ABOUT
A BU SINESS IS INVALUABLE. A BAO WORD CAN
BE UNFORTUNATE.
OUR GROWING SUCCESS IN TH E PAST 13
YEARS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE "GOOD WORDS"
ANO REFERRALS SENT TO US BY OUR CUSTOMERS.
NO A M 0 U NT OF ADVERTISING CAN
REPLACE A PERSONAL RECOMMENDATION.
WE ARE NOT INFALLIBLE, BUT WE ARE
WORKING roWAROS THAT GOAL, BY GIVING
OUR C U ST 0 M E R S THE BEST SERVICE ANO
QUALITY POSSIBLE.
ALDEN'S
.--... -.-,.-•• -•. -0-w.-.-, -. CARPETS e DRAPES
TUSTIN Celt •• ,
ALOIN'S
111 ""' c.urm 1663 Placentia A••·
t ORAPl•ln COSTA MES
11J74 1no1e.. '""•· Ctllf. A ........ 646-4138
• •
INNOCENT ABROAD-Thomasina (Tormhie) Mix
at age three. arrives in En~land in arms of her act~
or father, with mother. Victoria Forde, ·and dad's
horse TOny. The occasion was the family's arrival
at Southampton in 1925. A crowd of 25,000 was on
the dock to greet Mix, a turnout typical' of rece~
tions given the silent movi8 cowboy hero . The fam·
ily b3.d to be loaded into a van on the dock to get
through the mob. -
OAILY )ILOT llall l"Jltft
TOMMIE GµNN ()ATHERS HER ADOPTED BROOD AROUND HER AT HER· LAGUNA HOME
Gu1sy, 2, Gin•, 3, Jason, 4 (from left) Liv• With Memories of Western Star · --------
CHP A Hearing Tonight
Panel to Hear Developer's Hospital Rerie·waJ Plan
By JOHN VALTERZA
OI !'tit 0.HY l"Hfl St•ff
Faced with a recenlly lapsed building
pennit, mounting local opposition and a
competitor u·aiting in the \\1ings. a Van
Nuys developer tonight \viii <itlempt to
win renewal of his plans for a hospital in
San Clemente.
C. T. DeCinces, turned dov•n last week
by San Clemente city couocilmcn on his
$5.S.million bond idea, will atten1pt to win
renewal of his official sanction fro1n
Orange County's Comprehensive Health
Planning Association {CHPA ).
The l~member panel will meet at 7
p.m. In city hall lo hear a rt!port they re-
quired of DeCinces 90 days ago -in·
formation on his financing and building
plans.
Immediately arter the panel acts on the
DeCince:s request for endorse1nent f state
licensing is included in that action ) the
CHPA group will deal With requests for
endorsemenl by Chapman G e n e r a I
HospitaJ lo build a medical co1nplex near
the northern area of San Clemente.
CeCinces Indicated r~ntly he would
ask ·for another 90-day delny in the CHPA
action, but a spokesman for the planning
agency hinted Monday that the board
would frown on such a request.
John Traband, CHPA eltecu tive direc-
tor, said h'! believes the group would be
"reluctant to continue endorsement for a
facility that continues to slip schedules .• ,
Clemente Towering Sign
Issue Again on Agenda
The Issue over towering signs will loom
agaiii Wednesday in San Clemente alter a
summertime lull.
Plannirig commissioners will confront a
request by the Humble Oil Comptiny
Which seeks three variances and relief
from a pennll condition dealin1 wJlh tall
algns at 101 Avenida Calafia.
'Tbe towering sign issue Oared for
several weeks last spring and e.ven
became somewha\ ol a polltlcal issue
befort the. municipal elecUons. ,
Jn the latest matter. thcs,. speciric rf-
questJ will be made al the public hearing
bef\>re commissioners:
-That a permit condition limiting sign
llll'!I size at 200 !qUll'C feet be rfilieved.
One other request for relief deals with
the u:isting limit for a pole slfn at 24
llCJUlre feet anJ ZS feet In ehight.
-Variance from a city ordinance to
permit more total sign per lineal foot
U'.an allowed by code.
-Variance from exl.sttng code5 to
permit a pole ~lgn 57 fctl hl.,1• lns:el!.d of
the permllled 17 feet
-Variance to· permit the surface of
the polt algn to measure 418.24 1quar1
feet, instead of nearly 187 square feel.
In other matters on the commission's
agenda for the 7:30 p.m. meeeting, the
body wtU deliberate on a request fro1n
the South Coast Area Girl's Club to lease
land near the er.isling Boy's Club for a
clubhouse facility.
The land, which belongs to the city.
would be 1"9sed for $1 a year according
to {be request and would ~ the luwre
site of buildings similar to the Boy's
Club:
The club ltself would raise the funds for
building ~ •.
At ~t the Girl's Club has no
permanent home.
the matter w1.1s rererred Jut week to
pll.M.illl commluloners, plus the park!
and recreation commission aft.er a
formal requett ror the Jesse was made to
the city councll.
Tbe club tefvn 1irll in San Clemente,
Capistrano Be.acl;l. San Juan Capistrano,
Dan• Point and Llgtina Niguel.
A public hearing on city propOS&IJ lo
change the nam& of Avtnida Trtbuco to
Avenida Pico allO Is scheduled ror plail·
ning commlulonua Wedncaday.
Traband a1iuded to' delays involved in
the construction of the hospital, before
and after DeCinces look the developihenl
over less than t .... ·<:i years ago.
The delays were one reason cited by
several community .g r o u p s' 'for
...,.ilhholding their support of the hospital
-to be known as· San Clemente Medical
Center.
The area's physicians and chamber of
con1merce have endorsed the Chnpman
plan!i.
Adding t'o the problems of San
Clemente Medical Center is the l1.1psing of
·its building permit.
During other periods when the permit
time limit approached, developers for the
. proposed hospital across from city hall
performed wtirk on the site to keep the
permit alive.
But city officials termed the ~Cinces
permit dead on Sept. 28 because 120 days
had passed after a cOncre te pouring job
\vas completed last May.
An estimated JS members of the CHPA
are expected at the meeting and public
hearing tonight.
'nle group will con.sider renewal of the
original endorsement given late last year.
The renewal came up last July, but ac·
lion v.·as withheld pending the DeCinces
report.
Traband said no w r i l t e n com·
munications have CQme from the
DeClnces group. ''They said they WGuld
make their ttport orally at the meeting
Tuesday."
The CHPA staff alSG will have ita own
report on the renewal issue, Traband
said.
Electric Guiwr
Kills Player
The annual m:ognlllon dinner for the
El• Camino Reol llilltlcl of the Boy Scou,. ..W ~ held Oct. 21 at 7 p.m. at
Sl>oncllll Country Club ••
Reservation• deadline for the annual
event Is Tuesday evtning. ecout officials
1:-1'1, •
The. dlnner will recognjze outatandln1
l':' ,·k d"ne by the dlstrlct"s volunteers.
The Order of Merit award. training dta·
t~:-ll!I and special and den mother awards
will be 11ven. "
s DAILY PILOT I
To1nmie Mixes Up Laguua r
t
_· Silen.t S~r'{~'!_'!ghter Tells of Easy Childhµpd .
The rlrst. college WU Jmmeculilt;-"'lbey've ...,,... I Jol llalt tbe law
By BARBAR.\ KJIEJBJCH ..,. ...... ....,,.. .....
To r.,,. of Laguna Beach City Council
meet.Jngs, a sm1U, energetic bloode wllh
a sharP tongue and a lively sense of
humor has become known in recent years
a.ra ch·ampion of the underdog and pro-
ponent of so-called "liberal" causes.
_'.'You'd ~rprlsed how man~ple
actually thirik l'm a Communist, ' says
Tommie Gunn. "Isn't thlt hllarloos?'1
Tommie GUM, Q.year-old mother of
seven and grandmother of five, started
out in llfe about as far from the political
scene as one could get.
SPolLED GIRL
roauihter of silent screen star Torft~l\iix
and . his glamorous actress wife, 'Victoria
Forde, Thomasina Mix was, she says
bluntly, "a very spoiled little girl."
Her parents were divorced when she
was nine, and she spent much o( her
childhood traveling in Europe with l•er
mother.
Summers she stayed with her famous
father who, after making his last silent
film in 19i.a when she was five . ;ot
"circus fever" and, with his horse Tony,
went on the road with Ringling Brothers
and other top-rank circuses.
lleart ln Los Angeles. "Mama dldn't from me," lhe AJI bhmtlJ. "fKI .....
lhlnk 1 wu.old -~ lor 1 CO><d 11<\1od the lacl lblt they doo'I --rtPll
-and I B"t'I she was right!" to. ttud oa If they Ill mlud ,. la a \
Thia was lollowe(I ~ 1 stint at t;CLA fe\c:my. nat'a whit WOl'l1el 1ml .,..
then Stanford, whett Sbe"wu marrieil 1l some af "tbele kkll. 1beJ' dool llllD to
17, 10 a rellow student, and proceeded to realize what a fetoar conv1Ction can do &o
nave four children in five years, ricking tli'tm f«..tbe rest of their ll'ltl.'~
up a 8.A. in French along the way. She ia amuttd by c:hargts that tfiii
"I was having my third baby t~ dly I ACL'U la Conunun~· •'Good,
was supposed to graduite, so lhere wu a I.Ord, its' whole polnt la law Ind order,
slight delay," she recalls. that'• wfqit lt'1 about -equal julltc:e
The marriage ended in divorce after under the ConrtUutlon and the BW cl
six years and Tommie and her brood RJstbts." moved in with mama. · ln OOdition lo eervlng, in her words:, •S
Her father had died in IMO, leaving her "uDOfficial mommy of the hlppiee/' ,1"...m·
an inherit.a.nee that helped put her mle hu her rnatemal hands full at oo~
through school-and-kept-the family com-with her second lamlly, Jason, ftn, G~,
fortable for quite a while 3'ii"iJRI Gu.ule, 2, all adopted. . · She was marTled ror the second time 1n
NEVER WORKED 1957 to Cordon Gunn, when both werc:il
"It never even occurred to me to go lo worki,flg for the advertising firm of Bat·
\Vork, ·• she laughs. "Would you believe ten. Barton, Durstin and Olborne. -
nobody I'd ever known had gone to wtirki ;'Alte'r Gordon helpe'i me get my own
Then one day 1 went to the bank and lour up through the teens," says Tofn.,
there v.·a~n'l any more money, so I mie, "and the youngest had left, it was
started thinking about it." just so terribly lonely' we decided to
The B.A. in French wasn't much help adopt a lltUe boy. 1ben it dkin't .an
so she worked successively as a pOO~ right to bring one up alone, IO we adopted
operator, dance and piano teacher and a girl to go with him. That wu going to
secretary. "My shorthand wasn't much be it, but we had a chance to get Qussie.,
good, but I bad an excellent memory and so we took her too.''
·----~that saved"-me,A ahe--Tect!llls.-BUILT-NEW HOME
"We traveled In a private raihvay car In 1953 she aceompanied her mother
KIDS DREAM -
and the circus people spoiled me even now divor~ from the Argenti~
more than my father did. Jt was a kid 's diplomat and married lo an Air Force
dream !" says Tommie. general, to Japan. While the general new
After making half a dozen taJk.ies in the missio n to Korea and tolled .... 1th the
early 30s, 1'1ix even started a circus oi his peace delegation, Tommie worked for a
own, but it was felled financially by the year with the Air Force in Japan.
depression. "I guess I became a pacifist around
Mama, meanwhile, had married an this time ," she says, "During World War
Argentine diplomat and bought a quain~ 11 I had been against Hitler and for the
summer and weekend home at war, like everyone else, but since Korea
Fisherman's Cove in Laguna Beach. The I've been defini tely a pacifist."
family spent all its spare time in Laguna ACLU l\tEMBER
and Tommie attended Laguna High for a While. Her Introduction to the American Civil
It was one of 13 elementary schools. Liberties Union (ACLU) fo r which she
three high schools and three ~olleges now serves as Laguna area chairman
(plus assorted governesses and tutors) began in college during World War U.
1
that contributed to her formidable educa· "I was just so concerned about the
tion. trt!atment of the California Japanese who
\\'ere being uprooted and herded into
COLLEGE .\T 15 camps," she explains, "and absolutely no
Totally out of step wilh her peers in thf' one except the ACLU seemed lo have Ufe
academic wqrld, Tommie was graduated slightest interest in how they were being
from high school at 14. and entered col· treated."
Jege at 15~----· ·" ·-· -Working" Wllh the ACLU r.or -s0me 15
''In those days," she says, "they d1Un't • years, she has learned a great deal about
worry about things like social ad· civil rights and the law and devotes
justment. They just kept· on promoting herself to trying to belp~ple -; in-
you as fast as you could take it. 1 eluding hippies -who tee.I lhey ha\.·e
wouldn't do lhat to one o( my kids." been n\lsused, to go through legal chan·
nels to secure their rights.
Measles Shots
Slated at Base
Health officials at Camp Pendleton to-
day reminded parents o( dependent 'Jnili·
tary children that vaccinations against
German measles are avaiJable free at
the base Naval Hospital.
WOODLAND VISITOR
Recently, in Laguna Beach, her efforts
have made het a frequent visitor to the
Woodland Drive area where rt!Sidents felt
threalened by a ,proposed housing in·
spection and, on Ju1y 4, erupted into a
full-scale riot t h a t brought scores of
police to the scene.
Tommie prt!pared, and prt!sented to the
city, affidavits f.rom five people who
charged they had been mistreated by
police on this occasiori. ·
lier attitude toward the Woodlanders is
not all sweet patience. ·
To accommodate the new family, they
knocked down lhe old Laguna aumme.r
cottage Tommie had inherited from her
mother and built a spacious, two-story
modem home on out Drive, perched
hiczb above Fisherman's Cove.
Tommie and Gordon take care of the
big house and their Uvelr, kids without
outside help. "Gordon ha es meetings,11
she says cheerily, "so when I go out ~d
much rather stay home with the kids.
When Tomn}Je ls home, the kids are
usually climbing all over her and she
handles them with a firm but loving
hand.
"They 're younger than eome of my
grandchildren, you know," she teill you.
"But they an get olong JUJt wonderfully,
My own kids are from 25 to 30 now, ooe is
a Jesuit brother and the others are mar-
ried. living in Los Angele1 and San Diego.
Everyone comes to our houae for family
occasions."
Pondering her role as what !he
laughingly calls 11our relldent .. c.om--
munisl, ''Tommie glules, "I wish people
could see my kids. Really, they're all so
square -nice. but square. They think
I'm a liU!e too bn]ad.minded sometimes,
l guess."
NO COMMUNIST
For the record, Tommie says she's not
a Commun~l.
"In my college d8.ys and later in New
York when it was fashionable, I was in-
terested in Communism, among many
other lhings,''. she says. "J went to IODlO
of their meetings to see what Ji wu
about. I didn 't buy IL It ju.st doesn't (0
with my "°""nal phllolophy.
"FrankJy, I enjoy being rather rich and
living an idyllic J~e in this gcrgeous
house. If ~pie want to put my name on
their lists, they can,go ahead. They can't
hurt me."
The vaccination program is an attempt
to stem what health officials fear will be
a German measles epidemic late lhls
year or early next. according to LI.
Cmdr. J. P. Hughes, tile .hospital's
pcliatrician,
The hospital's clinic wlll be open for
free immunizations Monday ~ugh Fri-
day from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. It is located in
building H-50.
Arthritis Forum Slated
Capistrano Bay
Slating Badha111
Assemblyman Robert Badham, {R·
Newport Beach), wi ll speak to members
and guests of a woman's Republican
group in the Capistrano Bay area
\Vednesday morning.
The appearance by the Republican
leg islator from th"i! 7lst district will begin
at 9:45 a.m. at the VFW hall in San
Clemente.
The San Clemente area Republican
Women, Federated, are the sponsors of
the event which is open to the public. The
club's bridge section will begin activities
after the formal meeting.
At Mission Viejo Sclwol
A publlc "Arthritis Faclll Forum" will
be conducted by two physicians Oct. 20 at
7:30 p.m. in La Paz lntennedlate School
auditorium, 25151 Pradera, Mission Viejo.
The panel discussion will cover medical
management of rheumatoid arthritis, the
most chronic form which affects three
\\-'omen to one man; trt!atment of
osteoarthritis, the process known as
wear-and-tear of joints; and the control
of gout, a dlsease which affects men.
Proper diagnosis, new med lcatlons and
corrective surgical procedures will be ex-
plored.
SPECIAL TELECAST
* * *
Program speakers, specialiatl I n
arthritis, will be Dr. Sanford H. Amel,
aulstant clinical professor of ortbopediC
surgery at UCI and Chief of orthopedic
surgery at Orange County Medical
Center. Dr. Leon Katz, Santa Ana
· rheumatologist, will join him.
The new color rum, "One of Sixteen
Million" will be show n. Panel metiiben:
will answer questions· from the audience
following talks.
A ne'w boolUet, "Artl)ritls, the Basic
Facts" will be distributed free. The
public service event la presented by The
Arthritis Foundation.
Channel 8, Today & Thursday
7-10 P.M.'-
Council of the Communities of Irvine
General Meeting
Held Saturday, Oct. 10 at UCI
Learn About High School Bonds
& Incorporation Studies
* * * Presented as a Public Service by
Community Cablevision
'
•
I
I '
l\ 17-year·olo. youth was arre~ted
recently after he allegedly malled
a number o[ anti-e st_a_bllshment
bQmb threats to 'vell-known organi·
zations. Police said Ricardo F.
Baker, who wa s booked at Juvenile
Hall on suspicion of making bomb
threats .. made only ~ne mistake-
observ1ng an establishment cour-
tesy. Officers said that on the en· .
velop on one of the letters, whi ch
went to such places as the police
department. social security off~ces
and_ Federal Bureau of Invest1ga·
tion, the youth put his return ad·
dress. ••
Rem Build .'!!J!
U.S. Maps Plans
or New Cutback
SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Commlt!d
began mappin& plans today for a new
40,000-man troop cutback aMounced by
President Nixon despite reports of a
North Vietnamese buildup in Laos.
The U.S. Strate&lc Air Command sent
lts entire active Pacific neet or B52
bombers over Laos for the fifth eonse-
c:utlYe day ln~efforts-to check a North
Vietn amese supply push down the Ho
Chi ~finh lrail to Cambodia and South
Vietnam.
Nixon announced ~1onday in Hartford ,
Conn.. that the authorized American
troop level In Vietnam would be reduced
to 344,000 by Dec. 31. Under plans pre-
viously announce d, this is to drop an·
olher 60.000 men-to 284,000-by next
May I.
Peak American strength in Vietnam
v.·as 543,400 in April 1969, and the total
is now less than 384,00ll. Nixon's with·
dtawal pr.o&.l'~m beg!n in June 1969.
Sources in Saigon said some Ameri·
can units are already positioned f o r
withdrawal from the battlefield. The
next units to leave Vietnam are ex·
peeled to include the 11th Armored Cav·
2 Blasts Hit
Train Tracks
In Ireland
,,..
airy RealJnenI, t!Je 2Sih Infantry Dlvi·
sion and the 1st and~slh Regiments of
the lJt Marine Division. The 7tb Marine
Regiment or the lit Dlvlslon •!ready haS
been withdrawn.
Jn the war, about 30 of the giant B52
bombers pounded the Ho Chi Minh
trail. There ha ve been no 852 raids
....!lown_in South...Vietnam~since last..Satur-
day and none in Cambodia since I a s t
Thursday.
U.S. Defense Secretary Melvin Laird
told a news conference in Waahin&ton
~1onday that there is acme evidence the
North Vietnamese are attempting to
resupply their posi tions in the Laotian
border area.
Sourtts in Saigon have said Hanoi
has begun its yearly "dry-seiuon" push
of war materials down the lrail to fuel
offensives in both Cambodia and South
Vietnam.
. The U.S. "Command reported that 38
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops
were killed in two engagements in
Quang Ngai Province, in the coastal
lowlands. U.S. casualties were three
killed and seven wounded.
A delayed rtport from South Viet-
namese headquarters said four civilians
<M'ere killed and one wounded in a Viet
Cong rocket attack on Da Nang air
base early Monday.
In Cambodia, the war slipped into one
of its pel'lodic lulls. A Cambodian com-
munique repotred only one harauing at-
tack during the pas t 24 hours.
. The U.S. Embassy in Saigon an-
nounced that Ambassador Ellsworth
Bunker will return to Washingtoo early
next week for consultaUons, touching
Informants
Say Nasse1·
Picked Heir ,
BEIRUT, Lebanon '( IJ') -Pr.esident
Gamal Abdel Na.sser named hi.a sue-
-....., lhortly be!Ol'Lh ltd., ~·t ~· nominee it under house arrest beca.use e
ls unacctptable to the Sov iet Union.
reliable diplomatic inf9rmant.s reported
today.
The sources said Nwer's deathbed
choice to lead Egjpt wa.s Zakaria
'*"if--MO:hleddln, .P rela Uyel)'. Uberal p r I m e
minister who at times emDarrassed his
chief by opposing the growing Soviet
penelration of E1ypt.
Nasser reportedly expressed his last
wish to Informatfon""Mifilittr Mohammed
Hassanein Helkal, one of his closest
friends, who was at his bedside when the
president died of heart failure Sept. 28.
The information reached the foreign
diplomats from some of H e i k a l ' •
associates.
The Arab Socialist Union . Egypt's only
polltlcal party, nominated Vice President
Anwar Sadat to succeed Nasser , and he
wil l be elected Thursday in a natioowide
referendum in which he is the only can-
didate. But there are indications a power
struggle is continuing behind the scenes,
"'ilh Helkal'.s own position threatened be-
cause he insisted that Nasser's prefer-
ence for ~fohieddin be honored.
The diploma ts said Soviet Premier
Alexei Kosygin , when he ca me to Cairo
for Nasser's funeral, told the Egyptian
leaders the Soviet government would
have no confidence in a government
headed by Mohleddin.
"In effect," one senior Western
diplomat asserted, "Kosygin applied the
Brezhnev Doclrine lo Egypt and made it
clear that he regards Mohleddin as
another Dubcek."
BELFAST (UPI)· -Two bomb ex· off speculation that he will be replaced
plosions damaged tracks on the main as ambassador by William H. Sullivan,
railway llne between Bellast and Dublin deputy assistant secretary of state for
HEAVILY ARMED CAMBODIAN SOLDIER MOVES TO FRONT
With Chinese Rocketa, Machine Gun, He Look1 Pormitlaltle
The Ruaslans are believed to favo r Air
Marshal All Sabry. a prominent figure in
the rej)Orted power struggle and an old
rival of Mohieddin. They both served as
prime minister and also as vice presi·
dent.
tod8y, an army spokesm~n said. the Far East and the Pacific and for·
The spokesman said "hve pounds of ea-mer ambassador to Laos. Embassy
'v '} . d I · lier mouth plosive appears to have been pla ced spoke1men indicated Bunker's trip was
i 1 u1 ex 1nger 111 • h I Ih I ... ,_~,, t · · · h Ih A I
B 1-1 ~M · H bb Td ·-2-of-Algonac,.--Yn.!1~~ _e_a_~ ~ _e w~c"" o cause 1n connection wit . e new-mer can r 1 n ane -u a · · the blasts a&iut one mile SO'uth -ot--pe-ace-p-ro.,,...,·salr and"·that--he ·would-be-
One Seriousl11 Hurt
7 Yank Soldiers Mauled lifich. conteniplate s wllich pumpkin to h r""
Pick for Hallowt en at a roadside mo r· Lorgan , 20 01lles from the border of t e away "three or four weeks." Irish Republic. The Saigon Post rtported. Vice Presi-ke' nea r ~r hometown. -A railway spokesman said damage to dent Nguyen Cao Ky would make a
• tracks had been slight and that trains two -week official visi t to the Uniled
Two pat.rolmen rrantically told v.·ere runnlng normally. States in November "at President Nix-• At l{orean Truce Village police headquarters gun shots \Vere British troops fired nausea gas at on's invitation." The report said he
crackling in Chi cago's Loop Sun-crov.·ds in Londonderry where about 60 v.•ou\d meet prominent official s a n d
day night. Twenty-polic~men,. a demonstrators hurled Molotov cocktails private citizens and would address the
sniper team and two canine units and rocks at soldiers and policemen Mon-National .Press C1ub in Washington.
answered the call. They c rouched day night and early today. Other sources in Saigon said Ky would
behind autos. trained spoUights up-Army investigators checked an ex-attend the Paris peace talks on Oct.
ward and scanned a skyscraper. p\oslon witnesses said they heard in the 29 and put forward a new South Viel·
An investigation revealed that a E_.tway Gardens areas of Londonderry na~ese peace ~Jan, possibly a ~odif_i·
water pipe had burst on the seven·
1
during the night. . cation or extension of Pres ident Nixon s
lh floor of the building and \vater,.. Police and army spokes man said they. plan.
s raying out of an open windO\Y, had no reports of damage In the bl~st.
1:nded on the pavement with shot-Security sources speculated the explosion . may have been set off in the open to at·
like sounds. tract politt and troops into a poalUon in
• <M'hich they couJd be attacked.
It was not lun1bago that gave
Mrs. Andre Bertin severe back-
aches-just a pair of five-inch-long
forcep s left behlnd by a surgeon
who removed her appendix seven
yea rs ago. Doctors at ti.1elun .
France Hospital removed the in·
strument. which had settled in her
back region. • Doctors at Co\vglen 11ospit al in
Scotland have found record back-
ground music is more effective in
helping elderly patients get to sleep
than sedatives.· • Ninety..ane years ago M•ry
Cragi• moved to SouU1wold. Eng-
land. hoping the seaside air \\1ould
improve her health. Sunday she
celebrated her 108lh birthday. • Two directors of the Datasonic
Computer irm have been told they
are losing their jobs-to a comput-
er. The Nottingham. Engla nd firm
has decided that the machine can
do their \Vork fa ster and more
cheaply.
In God We T1·ust
Motto Wins Okay
!SAN FRA NClSCO (AP) -The 9th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals today rejected a
challenge to the constitutionality of the
national motlO "In God We Trust" and it s
use on tilt'.! nation·s currency and coins.
The appellate court today up held a
ruling by U.S. District Court Judg e Ll oyd
Burke against Stefan Ray Aranow of
\Voodland. Calif., Sept. 30, 1968 .
The court ruled only on the con -
stitutionality and did not consider the
question of Aranow's right to sue. a fac-
tor in Burke·s decision.
"It is quite obvious that the national
motto and slogan, ·1n God \Ve Trust.' on
coinage and currency has nothing
<M1hatsoever to do with the establishment
of religion." said the court decision .
··Its use is of a patriotic or· ceremonial
character and bears no true resemblantt
to a gov~rnment.al sponsorship of a
religious exercise,'' the decision con-
tinued. ·-'
'Crash Proof'
Auto Studied
By V olksivagen
WOLFESBURG. Germany (AP) -A
spokesman for Volkswagen, Inc.,~ an·
nounced today the company plans to
develop a new car in which occupants can
survive a 50 mile-an·hour head-on col-
lision vo'ithout serious injury.
Development will be undertaken. said
the s~esman, in clo.!e conjunction with
U.S. and European authorities. The car
will weigh in the area of 2.000 pounds but
no other design details were announced.
The spokesman sa id that it was im·
possible to say when the new automobile
would be ready, but commented that it
takes some four years to develop a con·
ventional vehicle. The prototype safety
car will be used for experiments and ·will
have safety features that will be in·
corporatcd into othtr models. He said
that the new car v .. ould not replace any of
the curren t Vol kswagen models.
Nation's Weather Stahle
Snoiv, Thunderstor1ns But Fronts f early Stationary
California nrv1rw OF "ou tuTIOMl WPTHE I HtvtCI 1:01 .LM. [sr 10-1•-lO Te•••peratures
.... V"ITl:D Pal:St INtf.•NATION.t.L
Sou•~m C1ll~rnl1 fl.cl low Clllullt
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lnltrlor 1/ICI 1 w11mln1 !tffld Out 10
Clevett>ll l lOl'lt 1ne CO.ii Wednn111~.
Mltll Low P'l'K.
a1,er1t111d
a11m1rc~
8oht
801!010
8rown1vlllt
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SEOUL CAP) -An American soldier
who was badly beaten by North Koreans
at. the Panmunjom truce village was
reported in fair condition today and is ex·
peeled to recover, a U.S. military
spokesman sald.
He is Pfc. Glen A. Vinderslev of
Chokio, Minn., and the Army said he suf·
fered a depressed skull fracture from
blows v.·lth shovels.
Six other Americans were in jured. one
seriously, in the lO·minute melee, and a
Year's Strongest
Typhoon Roaring
Toward Manila
~1ANILA <UPI ) -Typhoo n Joan
smashed across the coconut-grov.·ing
region of the cenlral Philippines today
and roared toward !litanlla and neighbor-
in~ population ttnters.
The ~tanila \\leather Burea u raised
typhoon signal No. 3 - the maxim um -
over Manila and the ct!ntral Luzon area
at 5 p.m. It sakl the city. V.:ith its 2:5
million population. would be right within
the typhoon1s eye between I a.m. and 2
a.m. unless Joan changes its course.
The typhoon was plotted lo be over
C1tanduanes province 145 mil es east·
southeast of ~1anila late this afternoon.
Its peak winds diminished lrom 144 miles
to \ t5 miles an hour after it hit land.
Weathermen described the typhoon,
No. 18 this season. as the most powerful
to hit the Philippines this year.
A weather bureau spokesman sai d Lhc
typhoon wa s so strong when il struck
land today that it stopped the radar in its
reporti ng stalion in C.<:itanduanes after it
recorded gusty winds of 160 knots.
An earlier typhoon. Georgia. struck the
Cisaguaran coastal region of e11 stcrn
Luzon in September . killing more than
150 persons .
Office Crisis:
Men Ogle Minis lo1 ,1,..,...11, 111<:1 motll~ •untll!ne In
~ 111,rnoon. w1!1' 1n 1_,>Kled 1'119~
o! 71 el Civic Ct n'11r O...ernltf>I Jew
... m tit "''' 60, wl•n 1ne eu••i<t911 hltfl
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o~ ~Vt!t !If .:io N "1· "r mill~
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10 .IS 11 D m. fli.tWfltrt .
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Del -Intl
Ollroit
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&t•cl'W• wer• ti-¥ In tilt mornln1.
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fin.ti stOtk\ In alt l'IOrnt !d1tl~.
Tltlt's 1 big dta l1 II Is In Orange
Co1t1n11. Tht DAI LY PI LOT Is tht
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NE\Y YORK t UPI I -A Louisville.
::~ Ky .. management consultant today wC!nt
on record 11.s opposing the mini-skirt
because it is "detrimental to office ef·
·11 ficiency."
1.11 To bock Op his· chrirgC'. Robert E.
Nolan. vice president of the Serge A. Birn
Compa ny, ran a dl!\raction-Ume valut
~tudy of office worke:rs and found that
the average American male spends one
hour out ol every work day ogling minis .
.O> Nolan. marrlt'd and lhe father of five,
put distractions Into three classlflcatlon.s :
glance, double-Ulkc and cont I nu o u ll
nb!crvation. A gl ance. he said. has 1 onr
second lime value:. I\ double take !our
seconds. and conlinuou.< obs('r\·a\f1•11 .
"'Suc•1 ti~ V.'Sl<"hing :t girl ,_.alk the fu ll
length of tbe office," wss 69 seC'Onds.
.
Swiss lieutenant who rescued Vlnderslev
received minor wounds . The identities of
the other Americans were withheld.
South. Korean sources said a n
Amer ican guardi ng South K o r e a n
civilians wo1king In the armistice
negotiating room tried to stop a North
K"orean security officer from taking pie·
lures of the workers. The North Korean
pulled the armband off the American,
and a fight started.
Because of the attack. Maj. Gen. Felix
~I. Rogers of the U.S. Air Force, the U.N .
Command 1nember of the Korean
military armistice commission. cancelled
a meeting of the commission scheduled
for today. He accused the North Koreans
of an "unprovoked, violent attack."
The U.N. Command said more than 30
Nort h Korean guards and civilian
workers set upon the American guards
\l'ilh shovels. clubs and rocks. It said the
Koreans isolated the soldier most
seriously wounded and beat him on the
head with shovels as he Jay on the
ground. LL Rene Joerg. a meniber of the
Swiss deleg ation to the Neutral Nations
Supervisory Commission, rescued the
American and suffered a minor cut and
bruises.
North Korea charged that "U.S. Im·
pcrialist aggressor ar1ny rascals" were
responsible for the fight. The No rth
Korean news agency claimed that more
than 30 "army rascals carrying iron
bars" attacked North Korean security
personnel.
The An1ericans were guarding several
South Korean civilians working in the
armistice commission conference room,
the U.S. Army said. There had beer. lhrec
minor altercations between North Korean
and U.S. guards at the truce village in
the previous six weeks.
Rock Mementos
Go on Anction
In 'Pence' Drive
NE'V YORK (AP) -A WTinkled gold·
lame ascot once v.·orn by Fats Dom in•
went for a bargain price of Sii.
But Paul McCartney's Shetland wool
s1veater sold for $95. and fltlles Davis'
legendary blue trumpet fetched $280.
It was auction night at the Fillmore
East , and a curious collection loosely
described a!l rock memorabilia wa.!I on
the block Monday evening before about
3.000 fans. The object : to raise funds for
peace candidat~s in lhe November elec-
tions.
F'or S20, somebody bought some dry
rose petals. lingering memories of a Roll·
ing Stones conttrt.
For $2.50 more. ano1her gained
possession or a bra once nuna at Jerry
G11rcla by an adoring groupie.
The star exhibit wa& a 1966 Cadll\11c
limou5ine. whose uphOl&til!ry had been
sraced by such muslclins as Cream, the
J~fferson Airplane and evll!n. yt s. th<'
Bt.all e5. Aaron Russo. a 27-yenr-old ror.:~
1nu5ic producer and mana.nger. ba;ged II
fot Sl,400.
The $15.000 or so raiStd will go to
lilrtan1orphosts. a group dedlcalcd lo
support.init antiwar candidates.
In keeping with his preference for a
more liberal, open economy. Mohieddin
too k-a leu·adamant-approach-to.the.con· -
frontation with Israel than the more doc-
trinaire Sabry.
-A1ohieddln. w-.s in the inner circle of
Nasser's 1952 revolution against King
Farouk. Nasser publicly designated him
to succeed to the presidency when he an -
nounced hia resignation in the fi rst hours
of defeat in June 1967. Nasser later
withdrew his resignation under popular
pressure. and Mohieddin faded into the
background.
Heikal, long-time edilOr of the semi-of-
ficial newspaper Al Abram and Nasser's
mouthpiece for many yea~s tried lO con-•
vlnce the other Egyptian leaders 'to honor
Nasser's last wish despite the Soviet veto
of Mohleddln. the informants said.
Helkal reportedly ran into slif[ op-
position, notably Sabry and Sadat. who
pointed out that Egypt could not afford to
offend its only source for the huge
arsenal required for war with Israel.
The sources said Heikal "was not con-
vinced and will never be convinced."'
although he does not seem to have any
personal ambi tion for leadership.
Passengers Trapped
In New York Subway
1''EW YORK (UPI) -Four hundred
passengers were trapped aboard a
sub\vay in a tunnel under the East River
l\fonday night for an hour and a half until
a '.'.rescue'' train pushed &hem to the next
sta'tion.
No one was reported injured in the in·
cident blamed on a power failure caused
by a safety cord being ripped fro m a
third rnil resulting in the ja mming of a
contact shoe on the stalled train . The
'·rescue'' by shoving was a departure
from t.he usua l technique of allemp!ing to
guidr passeng ers along darkened Lracks
to the nearest station.
Facl119 Pa11 cl
Dr. Elburt Franklin Osborn.
research vice-president at Penn
State, is sho,vn before the Sen·
ate Interior Committee d uring
questioning as to his accept-
ability as lhe new director of
the Burea u or ~fines. Osborne
is expected to be approved
after close questionin,11; about
mine disasters and con:llllon!.
The job pays $38,000 a year.
\
\
I
For Tl1e
Re-cord -
-Birtlas
ST. '0SE'H 1105,ITAL Stpl. tl M•. •nd Mrt. ErM•! G. Towl1r, 1134 Monl1n1 1>.ven11t, Cc•I• Me11, 9lri. S111. n Mr. •nd Mr1. J1ms• S. Jtnnlng1, 110 l>.gU•, 81llle• hland. Ile~. Gi>.ROE N '-'II.IC GINlll>.L HOS,ITil>L 5e11. 11
HEADS COMMITTEE
Ch1pm1n'• D1vl1
John Davis
Heads 1970
A·1vard Unit
ANAJIEIM -Dr. John L.
Davis, president of Chapman
College, will head the 1970
Disneyland C-o m mun it y
Service Awards Committee.
The awards <.'Ommlttee com-
posed of six prominent Orange
County citizens will select the
recipients of the 1970 awards.
Other members of the com-
miltee are }.frs. Leonard V.
Mr. and Mrl. Ht<r, Y. Whl!e Jr., ICl51 Ecrel LUlt, HUl\!11:"" B .. c1', clrl Mr. •~d Mr1. lt lcNr J. 1(1""'' 11i•1 ~~r1. Leendro l•M, untlnollHI ~Nell, s,,,•mhf u, 100 Bouas. Anaheim: ~trs. Peter Mr. Incl Mr1. WIUl•m "'-O•vll, ~ 01ouc111er o.ivt, Cot!1 Mel•· c1r1 Chunn . Fullerton ; Mr s.
Mr. Ind Mr1. Th«ldor1 RP'*l•Y, 10111 R Id D Spruct 1>.vt1W.1e .. s1nt1 1>.n!. air! ona B. ru m m o n d .
Mr. Ind Mr1. M••motl(I Yntr IJUl c . I Be h w·11 ci.m""' Str11t we1!m!nttt•. fiov apis rano ac ; t iam R. Mi1,f.~.':~; MR~J. a"Z"!~~~1i!iv 2110 ~1 ason. Newport Beach and
~ •• 1rnc'.....W.'N,~~i'i,.m1~,1 1736 Hito6hi Nitta of Santa Ana. Mr. •Ml M,.. r1....:thv Mcl(tnn•. 11UI II K1nvon Drlwe. ru,11n, bO"" It v.·i be the Committee·~
M',· ,•,nd Mr1. r•nc!1co Rlm, 2132 • • ci•\.CO$ta M"'· bo, . task to select the recipients of
Mr. •nd ""''' Str.1llen Grcvt 69J D•r· h r111 s1r1tt. tc11 M111. 01rl t e 25 cash awards to be Mr. 1nd Mr,, YIUQhn M1ltl4lw1. UtH ed J1111r1cn s ""· Mldw•v c11v. ,1r1 -present to Orange Countu s ... 11mbtr :U. lt1t J N'r. •nd Mr1. 1>.1btrt or•n••· ,10 w groups or organization s which
11th s1re11, •· cc11. M111, 1w1n have conducted the mnst G!rl1 Mr. •nd Mrs. Fr•nklln H•ymore1 1ns outstanding c 0 m mun it y
,...f,•":~·'M~~~v~~~~;1 Mit'~;,.~1r1i6 c service programs of the year. .. crth Pl•c1n111. Pl1cen111. boY • • Mr. tnd Mfl. Htrm•n Montcvt. 1t"6 This year Disneyland has in~
~-W•Uac:e...No .. 2,_(C1$J• M~•,t,_!l;oY __ . -sed the I I I M r. 1nd Mr1. J•m•• L. a-•r•· 11111 crea · o ·a--C'a5h awards-
Mawhinney
Re-elected
By Society
ORANGE John R .
Mawhinney of Fullerton has
been re.elected president of
the board of direetors of the
Easter Seal Society for Cri~
pied Children I and Adult! of
Or411ge County.
Other Officers elected to
serve with Mawhinney for the
coming year are :
Eugene F. Tutt of Tustin,
first vice president; KeMeth
Cory of Anaheim, SCCQnd vice
president; Calvin P. Schm idt
of Costa Mesa. secretary :
Fred Nyquist of Newport
Beach, treasurer. and Robert
A. Lineberger of Fullerton,
assistant secretary-treasurer,
Dlreetors or the Easler Seal
Society In addition to the new-
ly el ected officers include :
Mrs. L. J . Cella Jr .. Santa
Ana: George Hill . Laguna
Beach: Edward Just, Fountain
Valley; Or. Robert_.. Olander.
Newport Beach: J o s e p h
Sahagen . Corona del Mar :
Ernest W. Thompson, San
Juan Cai)islrano and Cecil
Wright, Orange.
Also. Rev. James Stewart,
lrvlne ; Mrs. Pat Tonner,
Laguna Niguel : Rich:i.rd Child,
Garden Grove : \\'illiam OJ90n,
Orange: Andy Veje. Santa
Ana : Phil Eastman, Newport
Beach, and Raymond L.
\Vatson, Irvine .
Supervisors
OKT'"o Bids
Profs Eye
Balloon
Ba1·raae " ORANGE -Faculty and
administrators, garbed I n
plastic bags, raincoats and
other water r e pc 11 en I
paraphernalia. vdll be the
targets or student "unrest'' al
11 a~.m. Thursday on the Chap-
man College campus, v.'hen
students \Vii i loss waterfilled
balloons along a .specified
route in the Shady Quad.
"It's a good way to take out
your frustrations." explained
Nancy Witte, presiden1 or
Thetas. the \VOmen's service·
social organization sponsorinc:
the event.
Prizes \\'ill go to facu!ly
members who complete the
course in the shortest and
longest limes.
Last yea r. 10 f aculty
members braved the "Balloon
\Valk.-'' -Students hope for
more participants this year,
said Miss Witte. n senior
physical education ma j o r .
There is no shortage of
students to throw the soggy
missiles, she observed .
TutsdaJ, Octoltr ll. iq7o DAILY PILOT 9 '.
Oceanography Fiiture 'Tremendqus'
Editor'r Note: Thb b ilie
secdnd ut !lif"tt stones-
dealing with tducaliori iii
tht /ftld o/ octcn1ography.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
01 flle D1ll'f 'flet lltfl
AVALON -The st.Us are
being hailed as one of the lat>!
gr ta t f r on tie r s an d
oceanograptly education is
becon1ing a standard ite1n in
more schools.
But \.\'hlf.l arc lhe facts of
life for an oceanography
graduate seeking work in the
field?
~1artin Brown. head of
Fullerton J u n ior College's
oceanography technician pro-
cran1. says the Immediate
outlook is not good. but future
job opportunities Y:ill be
tremendous.
"At the moment. the de-
ma nd for jobs has not caught
up V.:i lh the advanced billing.
But 1n a few years, when in-
dustry and government reall y
do n1ove in to the ocea ns. the
jo~ ..-.·Ill be in large supply,"
said Bro\~'n during a national
conference on marine scien~s
Hescue Classes
Slated al Po~t
WEST~11 NSTER -The
public is invited 10 a presen·
ta lion on rescue breat hing
lechniques to be' held al 7:30
o'clock tonight in the multi-
purpose 'room al Post Elemen-
tary Sch o o I, 14641 \Vard,
Westminster.
A member of the
\V est minster Fire OC'partment I
v.·lll conduct !he demonstra-
flon. Thi" entiie presentation
v.·ill last approximately 45
minu tes and y,•HI consist of
rescue breathing done on a I
dun1my, a movie entilled
"Breath of Life'' and a ques-
tion -and -answer period.
The presentation is co-
sponsored by Bowling Green
Hon1eowners' Association and
..PosL P-l'A. --------
conducted recently on C:Ualina
Island.
Bro..-.·n Yid there was a
s ub st ant i a l manpower
shortage during what he called
octanography's s p a w n I n g
years or tht early ·eo·s.
··nie race began when lt
was predicted the need for
o c e oi n ography techn icians
alonf' ~·ooid be at lee s! 1.000
by 1973." he noted.
Currently there are 20 pro-
grams in co1nmunity coll eges
nationwi dt wh ich will produce
150 technicians in marine
related fields including con-
struction, f I s h e r i es and
petroleum .
ln California al one there. are
technician progran1s offered
at the College of ~larin,
College of the Red'ol·oods
1Eureka). Fullerton Junior
College, Orange Coast College,
Santa Barbara City College
and San Diego City College .•
The courses offered at these
l'Olleges include scu b a div-
ing, hard hat diving. elec-
tronics, naviRation, equipment
operation and seamanship.
"But until more industries
ni ove into the ocean and
unless the federalgovernn1ent
increases !unds for research
projects. the sludents who
graduate from the ~~n
proara ma a.a well u thoae in
the scienet and enalneering
fleld.s, will 111.ve • tou&h ume
finding w o r k , ' ' Brown
predicted.
But he lsn't l enti rel y
pessimistic about the job
situa tio n.
~ "f'lrst of all. 1 thlnk It is a
good idea for educators to
ease up on their ~reerulU.ng
programs. I don't mean they
9hould di.scoorage students,
but at least let them know
what the job outlook is for the
Immediate future.
"Then we as educalOrs
shou ld take _adyantaJ:e ~{ the
slow ,down to scrutini:..e our
proa:rams. We've been on the
run ever since we started and
now ..-.·ould be a good ti me to
get our feet n1ore solidly on
the ground," he offered.
While channeling students
into related fields such as en-
vironmental le c b n o I o g y .
Brown said Instructors would
be able' to start getting some
~feedbad.< from their araduates
and employers.
"The change will come.
Maybe._ not this year or next
year. but certainly It v.·ill be
soon lhtreafter. ,•
"Jn the me1ntlme 1 .suaell
\Ye concentrate on the quaHIJ
ol U.. lralninC we're ollerlnc.
rather thin lbe quanUt j . ,
"The r~ lle1 In IM 1Wlds
ol lbe N Jllonal 0Ce1nt 11'11
Atmoephert· Admlnll\r1UOQ, l,t
will provldt the means to ac-
coropllsh me ny ~ends," he Yid.
Brown sakl ruture J 4t I>
demands will 1rite from
NOAA '1......m_eM?ar1ms ...... w~
will be undertaken It all
undetermined date in the
future. •
They are mapping 1tid
<'harting oceans and areat
lakes, fLsheries erpJ oration
and technolos:y. aquacult.ur.i,
geophysics of -the oeeari.
monitorin& the geophy1ical
phenomena that take place in
the oceans and broadentn1 the
c urrent m eteorological
service.
"The indications art for·an
increased f i n a n c i a l cOtn·
mittment in 1972 or ti'7t ~·
Brown said. 'That's the t:Ufie
to have a ready supply ~,;r
tecbnichnt'> for the needs of
the program."
Next: Jta1i-MiclLel Cous·
tea11 talks ab_out tl1e fJAj.urir
of oceanograph y.
/ our 'I
50 ~· ... CaliforniaColle9e
" ~OHG I Ei, of Co mm e rce :~~~",iS1';,::.~"~:·= '40 'w.. ··-t•11t l ff(h, Ctlif•r~i9 .oll J
CONTINUOUS ENROLLMENT
TELEPHONE: 436-9767 or 435-5367
"DAY 01 EYENING°"CLASSES"
I TWO-YEAR COUllll
Bu1in111 .l.dminitl••li•11
H19ht1 i\<cpunliRt
.l.ttOURlin1 -o ••• ,r91;111in.
E11tw!l•t S•utt1 ri1I
IHOIT-TIRM COURlll
5ttn19r1,hk
Cltt ic1I
ir:.,,~ .. ,~
I Y1iM11 M1chin11
knt1I .l.uitli"t
Mt4ic1I Trenuriphonill
fuH-Ch•r91 a..tk••'illt
lrw1h·u' Clt 1Nt
Shtr1h111tl ind lrJint (Grtt1 tr AIC Sh1 r1h1nd)
ONl-YIAI COUllll I
t .,11 S1u1t1ritl
MHit.J SKr-'trlel
Stc.111tMI
(Cif .. 1 If AIC Yl•rtlitn'I •
Jynitr Acctw•tlitt
MO!ttd• Strte!,_Hunllnqlon Be11t11. ~v to '"" 000 and rats· ed the lop y Ind Mr1. uennb caroen!1r, 21 l ...,.., ,1~rmou1h Lin•. ttun11ncr1on 111c. award to $7.500. In add ition .
Mr. lnc1 J~~~·t~~~k1•r"c""" 911 t.here-wilL--be-three $3 ,000 Mi.1~"::it ~r~.un~,~~1~';9~·1 ·~~'"°". aw ards. th ree $1 .500 award s. Mr0ri~~s·;',l~ •. "'"\·11~n Mltr1. 1,10 nine Sl.000. and ten $500
SANTA ANA -Two con-
tracts totaling almost $400,000
have been approved by the
Q1ang~ ~ounty Board uf
Supervisors.
Douglas Campbell Company
of Fullerton was the suc-
ces11ful bidder at $297 .333 to
construct an addition to the
c o 1.1 11 t y C o mmunications
Center on ~1anchester Avenue
in Orange . There were 13 bids.
The estim1ted cost \Y a s
$300.000.
~Cigarette,
Road Tax i--{iS 4-Ply Nylon Cord Ct'IUrCf'I Sh"ttl, CCISll Mttl bov a~'ardS PortionTold1
Mr •M M ... F .. dtrid• Stow, Ol•J'h W • 15tlh S!retol. LIYl',,.,.lt. boY . h. · Mr. •nd Mrs. Luis flenot111. tt•5 Port T IS JS the fourteenth year Setborn W•v, NitWPOrl 8t•c1', <1lrl f he d . Mr. 11111 Mrs. M1urtet 1o1cttm•n. t11 or I awar S program whic h s-ie. C01t1 Mt••· ofrl · . M•. •nd Mr•. Ttrrv s1 ... m1, Ml JOI"" was maugurated 1n 1957 to StrHt. c11111 Mn•. bClv 'd . .. 11m11tr u. H7t prOVJ e an incentive for local Mr. 1nd Mrs. Gtr•ld Ltnc11l!'r Hiil · 1· I Al•twim• ~tr"''· c. ttunt1""1on 911ch, organJz.a ions to deve op and <1lrl d k Mr. •nd Mr,. Thom•• w Mor•t. mt un erta e programs of com·
5. Mtcklock, St'l.I• !>. .... <11•1 'I be Mr. ,,,.., M•s. T•rr•nc• Rvan. 221• muru Y ttennent. Pomon•. (, Cost• M•••· bCIY M'l •"Cl Mrs. Mlc11•11 J. McC•Urtv. Any group organization or 1 •l lrv/ne Avtnut, NeWl>Qrt &t•cll, I b . • M~v ,,,.., Mrs. oirtn "'· Grotll, •)CIS C U In Orange C o .u n t y , 01~ .. R0&d. NewDOr1 se~c11. 01r1 regardless of .size which con-Mr. ''"' Mir. Oot11ld l. Tllemn..on. JU . ' . M1r1001d, Cq•ori• dtl Mllr. bov ducts community service ac· StPlllTl•tr ,,, Ult . . . I . Mr. •nd Mrs. Reber! S•nborn, 1011 tiv1ties JS e I g j b I e lo Whitt Si ii• Wtv. Coren• de! M•r. . . . M~v ind Mr\. B•uc• Red lck, 21112 Pa.rt 1~1pate. Organ1z.ations
Greenborc L1oe. Hununcfco 811c11, which intend to subm it ap-
M~vand Mr1. G111r<1t McCluP<tY: 191S pJi catiOnS this year Should 811>1> Street, Co110 MJ>I . boY , Mr •nd Mr1. Hcrec1 . F1v. 111. •OO contact th e D1sneuland Com-e. lht $trHI/ N•w1><1rt 8•~<11, bCV . . J s • ., emblr u. 1t10 mu n1ty Relations Offi ce as Mr •nd M•s. H1I Buchan•n. <02C . "••~Ion P1rl<. l>.vtnue, OtlnQf, boY SOOn as poSSlbJe. Mr. Ind Mfl. Frtdtrlck Stow, •l•JV. W. M111Tlf !>.venue. Senti 1>.,,.., bov Mr. 1nd Mrs. Mlch1t+ P'1rt1T11n, nn1 Mcl(lnn1v Clrclt. Huntln<1lon ,Btlch. r tlrl Mr. tnd M ... Cllrl•locher ICOU•Y, 10dl Slater. Fcunlt ln V1llev. clrl Ms1.:~ r:::.·llCl~\'7~~~h.H::~r· 21, JS'" Talk Slated
On Tru1isit
Al mo Electric Company Inc.
of Los Angeles v.·as the low
bidder at $100.277 for the con·
struction of a new electric
distribution system for the
Orange County M e d i c a I
Center. There were nine bids.
$93.000.
SA Attorney
Head11 Drive
SANTA ANA -Orange
County has received $935.768
of their portion of September
highway users tax and August
cigarette tax, it was an-
nounced by state controller
Houston l. Flournoy.
or the high v.·ay users tax,
$914.997 went to the county.
S54.732 to Costa Mesa. SI0,433
to Laguna Beach, $35,027 lo
Newport Beach. $12.751 to San
Clemenle. $17,913 to Seal
Beach. $21,987 to Fountain
Valley. $84 .732 to Hun tingto n
Beach and $3,007 to San .Jua n
Capistrano.
The count y's share of the
cig arette tax moneys I s
ORANGE-John B. Hurl but $19.n l. Tht city of Costa
J r., a Santa Ana attorney. has ~1esa teceived $27.149. Laguna
been appointed the 1970-71 Beach got $4,772, Newport
Stanford A n n u a I Fund Beach received $16,265, San
chairman for Orange County. Clemente was given $4.287,
HANSON
Vlvlfnne H1n1on, A<1t 51, of »S Jnd St ,
Hun!lnt!on 81ttll.. 01•t ot d11t~. Oc!ol)fr
10. S1rvlcr1. Tllurodar, I PM, Smlr111
cna~I. Smltnt Mcrtua,..,., Olrtc!ori.
Hurlbut , a resident 0 f Seal Beach got $4.951, Foun· ANA HEl~f _ ?\1rs. Mary-Orange. graduated from Stan-lain Valley received $6,533,
Evelyn Bryden, president of ford in 1961 and earned his law Huntington Beach was given
the Orange County Uague of degree there in 1964. He is a $28,415 and San Juan
I
McCLURE
l t o C Mc(l11t1. 193-P llond1 St v/111, Lt·
<111n1 Hl\ll. D1tr cl <1•1111. October 11.
Survlvltd bV wile. Pead: rwo d1uth!tr1,
8tl!v Stffber encl J1c<1u1llnt lhidnick:
stven gr1nckll•IOren 1na tour t retl·t•tnd·
children. S1-vlc11. Tfturiaav. 1 PM, Pi el· lie Vlrw Cn1Pcil. lntrrmtnt. P1cltic Vltw
Mem11tl1I Pt rk. Pacific View Mor1111ry,
Dlrocror1.
\Vomen Voters. will moderate member of S t an r 0 rd Capistrano got $1 ,318.
a program on formation of Associates and has been aclive;l;:=::::=========ll · · •• r h s f n1 11 ... 11"'.,. -•co ... • SLIM GYM an Orange County transit Jn proj tcw o l e Ian o
Vit.N (;llf.SEM
dislrict al the Wednesday Club of Orange County. "~ ~o&E1>.011£ .. a1zr
meeting or the co u n t y The Annual Fund seeks 1N 2 wrtio:a
chapters of the America n fin ancial support for the , PllE
Soc i e l y f o r Pu b I i c university from more than _. HOMEot.MON1r111.t.r•°"
Administration and the 15,000 alumni and parents liv· ... 11 -s '-TtLEl'HONE WAlT
American Institute of Plan-1 __::_in~g~i:n~So:::u~lh:•:r:n~C:•:l:ifo:r~n:i•:· _ _!_'=·='=''='='='='=f='='
4
=l=l=l=t=-='='='='=ll
ners.
Annt Ven G111en. lH 65 El Molino, Ca~l
t!••no B11cn. Date ol dtt!ll, October 10.
Survived by 1nn1, Donald, er CtPl!o!
l'ltach; John Van Gl111n. Ml. STerlln9,
1111nol11 rnrH 9r1ndcllilldr1n. Serv!cn,
W..:lnetd•v. Octol>tlr U, lG AM. ~heifer
La~un1 Beach (h•Ptl. $tr~lct1 wll• ell'>• <ludt In thap~I S~ftltr L•eun1 fllf(h
,Y.~u1ry, OlrK!c rs.
The meeting will be held at
noon at the Jolly Roger Inn,
Anaheim. --1 1-----i
ARBUC KLE &: SON
Westcliff J'l.tortuary
427 E. 17th St.. Costa l\.teaa
641><311 • BALTZ J'l.fORTUARlES
Corona del !\.far ... OR 3·M51
Costa l\fes1 . . ml 5-%4%-4 • BELL BROA OWA Y
l\IORTUARY
110 Broafl~·ay, Costa l\lesa
Lr' l-3tS3 • l\.1cCORl\11CK LAGUNA
BEACH l\.tORTU ARY
Ji95 Laguna Canyon Rod.
49(.9415 • PACIFIC VIEW
i\1EJ'l.f0RJAL PARK
Cemetery .l\lor1
Chapel
3500 Pat'lfic Vie"' Orl\•e
Ne•'porl Bt11cb, C1llfornl1
644·%700 • PEEK f'Al\tlL\'
COLONIAL F\JNERAL
HO~IE
7801 Bolu A\•e,
~·e1tmlntter ... b3-3S!S • SHEF.fER MORTUARY
Lacun a Be•ch ...... 494-1531
San Clemente ..... t9Z-Ol00 • SJ'l.l lTllS" l\tORTUARY
6!7 l\.htla St.
lluntln th>·1 Btacb
i:lf-6531
'
ILDERI
AMERICA'S
GREATEST
HARDWARE
STORES
1GRAND
'.OPENllG :oc1oa1a 22
EVERYTHING TO
BUI LO ANYTHING
l
25%0FF
OPEN SIOCK
3 Q,....t St.r1in1
Pattemsby
RMd&Berton
Now thrOt.lgh Oc.1obtor 31 -
IO'l'e 25'9 on thr•• gr•OI
tlerllng pattern• by Reed &
aortof'll Froncl1 I, Spanish
l orcqu• ond Eng lhh
l'rovlnclol. This 1peclo1 ofter
Incl~•• all pieces mode In
th••• potterns. flll In your
••,..I<• Of start your •tetllng
01 theM tre meMlo ui so•ll'lgli
use OIJlt SI LYEA CLUB P'LAN TO DIVIOE
VOUlll ~AYMENTS
C~1r" A«-1• 11\Vlltll. ....... 1c ... 'IJIPl'ftl ..nkAITltrk•rt .,., M111i.t Chlrt•· *·
SLAVICK'S
Jrtwelera ~Ince 1917
11 FASH ION IS LAND
NEWPORT BEACH-6~" 1380
Open Mondoy and Friday untll t ::JO
GENERAL-JET
Dual Tread Design • 4-Pty NylOfl COfd
• Ouragen• Rubbet Trea d
&.50-13 SIZE
$21 _, 7.r.i-l f
J;~ ••• 7.1!>-l !t
$24.00 • • • :~:~
$?5.15 • • • t.»-14
la~, -'tllew'n ,...1c .. ""' ... 71 lo S1.Sl r ... EJ.. T«
-Uri ... ~lllC tfl IU.1 ,its t lt ..... 11 en!•&-
FIBERGLASS-BELTED GTW
4 NYLON IELTS ANO 2 GLASS IELTS
8UY1
SAVE
The more you buys•uE
... the more you Ill
10%
5 2°0 0FF-
REGULAR PRICE 0
WHEEL ALIGNMENT
Wt coriecl c•s \et,
c1mbtt: tot·ln. tot·
outi plus inspect ind
1d1ust st terinr meeh1nism . C111
e11uipped with tor-
sion b1ri ind/or 1ir
condit ionin1 ertr.,
DISC BRAKE RELINE (Front on ly)
ANY AMERICAN CAR
Only •39s5 ~;..,_,
INCL UDlS. Ntt1 ·willl« Front 811~e Pads , • ,
!n5pet t C1Upe1s incl Ro!ors , , . llepect Jnnt r
,l,nd Duttr frcnt Whet I Be;win1i ,., Ne•
fronl Wheel St 1l1 ... ln1pecl l e•r Ai le
llt1~e I 1nin1s.
3-Ball GOLFER'S VALUE
J:;::::;;;;;iJATO Sl,JPEA 100
GOLF
BAUS
•• D • -
3 0Al~1 33
PACK ONLY
PLUS FREE 50¢
GOLFER'S GUIDE
Jtt.,.. Dur1!on culless DOY!f! J>ltw tl'ltrtil'td PB
ctr1 lt 11 ll1rh tension windln1 IOI m11dmum l lrhl'!
lt"'tl I ) t•ll '°""'" r..1-
3. WAYS TO BUY AT GENERAL /ml/ (·~'j ,~
BENEllAL
TlllE
Don Swldl•MI
COAST
GINIRAL
TIRE
515 W. 19th., C:esta Mew
540-5710 44'·5031
GENEf'Al. TIRC.S ...
AYEiY
GENERAL Tiii
SERVICE
16'4 I Inc' a..1 ... rd, H .. tlotloo -~
147·5850
i ACflOSS TOWN TO GET ----------
IL
•
0 DAIL~ PllOT SC Tuml3.~ Oeto~, 13 1~70
1'101aey's 1Vortla
O''ER THE COUNTER Complete-New Yorli Stock List • Peace W oulcl Boo st Mark-et ... ,_KYll 11119r-l•• -1•UM1 •I _........._ I o IL fir.-*"'IO ,.,lt•t .. HI 111411111 r1 .. ll w IMftlp. --~ or cce• .. tbt,
.. fllE• VOil!(. IA .. ! • l~I"• COlft•lti4o I* .... t>l•W Vota. 1100. laCl!tllte ... let• 1-.J M .... t.ew < .... Q(I. =· .._ Lets CllM ~ !lfl<lft I• 1.-:IN :>Mt ~ -i. Gtnln1" ,is 1 l•" >'''
Sy SYL\llA PoRTER
One of the. most evil
economic propaganda •capons
that we-couid handthe com·
munlsts would be a voluntary
admW&On t.ltal the U S needs
record a11d rising war spen-
.d1ng to SUPPorl our pro5pcth)
--:rhls-\J -ptof)Jganda t h..e
Russians hi.\ e been trum
pctlng since Lenin's day It as
not true Peace would be the
most electrifytng bu 111 sh
thing that could happei1 to us
One of the most explosl\ c
economic Yteapons that v.e
cotiJdliand America s destru c
five young r"dlcnls v.ould be
the argument that the U S
cannot cut v.ar spend1n1 rr d
still maintain rca"onably full
emplo\mcnt Th1s 1s an argu-
n1ent the > oung v. ho hate
America ad\ir1ce to pro\c our
soc1e1y IS not v.orth preser\
1ng It is utterly false By sh1f
ling our spending pr1orlues
1i1 e 'A ould create far more Jobs
and rar more worthwhile Job:s
than today
It is hard to believe lhat the
-Nlxon Adm1nlstrat1on \\Ould
rr.akc this dangerous ad
m1ssu11 or argument
'ct as the rollo"1ng 11\llc
anecdote "11l 11lustrate this IS
precse!y "hat h 1 g h ad
m1n1strallon officials.._ arc
doing '
A fe" days ago Secretar} of
Defense Melvin LaU'd 1n\ 1ted
A small cross scchon of in
d1viduals fo r luncheo,1 at the
Pentagon ShorUy after we sat
do\\n ("e were eight in ad
If y•• .,. Hf nh•t An••tl119
Senlce Y•11 •re •ot ,ntl•t cill
et Y••r ccill1
TELEPHONE
ANSWERING IURUU
835-7777
COMMODITY
FUTURES
TRADERS
S.rtd C•11po~ for-Info OR co'"
p11ter1 ed tl'"ed o~::ily1 s of the
101• lelly S1htr c~~ Soybe3,,
Mar~cts
)43'"'
Ad:i1tu
R. J. O'BRIEN
AND ,t.lliiSOC INC
1'4f Wtstcllff Dr
Nowport hffll
17141 642-8006 Wr It ltr Wtelcty N.W ltlttr
ST ARTS TONITE
8 FREE•
REAL ESTATE
INVESTMENT
SERIES
'" It 1 o fret ''"" of lee
'"''' obollt rtol "'•'• llfflt
lftt 011d rtlottd topie;1 .l11it
r•'illittr toll t it ot the fint 111 •
Mr ts ef fo•r lect11res I• Ito held
-c•nioc11tl•e T11e1dov •••nll1q1
"'IRIHftt ., 7 )0 • clock i• , ...
C•ll11t• C••l•t lldt at Golde!!
W"t C•H..-111 H~ntlntt,.11 ·-·
TONIGHT -
•ANflALL McCAtDLI
wlll ... i Cll
"TAILORING YOUR
INVESTMENT
" I •• w th
UCTURES TO FOLLOW
OCT 20-
New Tall: and Synd1
cation Laws by
How1rd W11nber9
OCT 27 -
Crettlvity tn Real
E1t1t1 EJCch1nge
by Jack Klatler
Incl 8ob StHle
NOV 3-
Rec.ogn111n9 1 Good
lnv.atment
by Don Ol aon
SERIES MODERATOR
Pit McV1y
CO.~N.0110 IT
IAILY PlLOf
HUNTINGTON IUCH
H>UNTAIN YALUT
IOAll OP IWTOU
01.AN•t COAST
JUNIOI COW61 DISTllC-T
NO "9ST
COWC' I C!MTI• ll-"f\
GOLDI N Vfli:OT coucca
,.....,. -7tJ .. fiJI,-.
dltton to Laird and the Deputy
Stcretary or Defense David
Paickard) Lturd Introduced
Ille conversation by sum
marlz~11g ho" much t h e
deftnse budget has been CUI
The figures by lhe 'A!<'l) ire
much (DOre hnpresslve 1han
)OU may..reaUie S?OC1flcal)
-Defense spending 1n l!1 s
fi!>Cnl year will be around $'it
billion down a fat $18 b1lhon
rro1n the 1!16& V1en1am 'A!ar
peak and onl about $4 2
b1l'on above the pre-escola
lton level of 1961
-The defense bud&el 1s
r.:i" around 1 percent of Ollr
Gross Nallonal Product dO\\tl
2 7 pe C'Cat fron1 the FB p:?ak
<t d "ell belov. the 19li4 le\ cl
100
Def~nse spending n:l1\
rc!'lre~en.s 3~ 6 percent of our
total federal budget, dow n a
hefty 8 6 percent from 68 and
Co~ n an eve 1 heftier 8 8 per
cent from the pre Vietnam
escalahon of 64
No small achievement this
-a.nd J suggest we give. Laird
the j!reat credit he dcser\cs
for doing II 1n the face of
enormous odds
But !hen Laird 11e1il on to
report that since m1d 69
employment In !he military
defense products and defense
related 1ndustr1ea has decrees
cd 8{0 000 as against an
o\erall nsc r.1 Joblessness of
I 3 m1lhon And he remarked
111th a rueful gracious smtle
This 1s whdt happens when
)OU move so rapidly from a
war to a peacetime economy '
The 1mphcat1on was un
m1stako.ble the defense cut!!
are a prime reason for the
recession and tr,,employment
And here 1s where I stand up
llfitt&yi: L:l'O .. ~ .. 1' *" + "9 1*1 Mllll JI •I 311'4. l'l'h
-
'I pU.-.4 i IM!i 1~\:o 15'\l. -.. UMllr. tJI Ii IQ SG,... ~' ~ ~ 111.IX!O 1 ~\1i .. "'"-~ GOllMOI J Uc 211 IU rt\& and &et couoCed. "*111 1~ 1 'l 'l' '[i-\\ Inv .-lilt 11 't"-1•~ -"' c; M01 ""',s 1~ nu "111
C' .. _ Aot!LM-110 4 J ·~"' +:~ ·~.,.,., H )11.\, 31 GMolfll:l.5 si .. n" ror 111~ fact Ill the recession t{IW VOii( !APl FM TM ll• lllPbotOfl ·m u ,.flr~'!!_~ )( JI' AC:l"-flid t " !!fl 41' \ C Str'll JOill I "-1\9 ,.. loo G.111-C.nt ,1111 XI '''-' 14
f -l"-•ollowlnt 1>141 ft!!!~ Ai; j P/Mrui 31,. ..... to 1\11 .., rn.cltYt 'f , fi._ t... ~ = "'C:ie(kl~ 1 . .0 " ff\to 31t. ~+ ~ GPutiui I to 1lf, "" " 0 1009-70 Is primarily the ri:... •lked lltcil!YO!• ,-r.;~r lokil 1 "' Ponr f'!I{ I 14 It ... 111111•1 '~ "" ~< #\Ill ,. 15 .ui;.o .ilil ~ • !"I'll Oii 40 ., •'-14 4\o -"'Gen 111.rl,KI 10 '"' 9'• rc1tllt of a Policy or brutally '"" N1tf!l!f.ll',.~ Fi.I Wol'ln 1~ it: ~r~o ~ U: i~ ~"! •• tl"' 4"'i 1.2~ 12 lli'l 1 ~ +"" 11...cn11 1 ML f \jj $1\• H1 -1~ G.,, ''° 1,. 20 r.11 L~
hi fliofl Of""'l«utUlri P:ttG llti \J 7\') Pr Min llO -I ... lM AG llLk .20 . 1 I -h lrl(ILJ1 t It J) l 11 32"' ~ -~ Gtn •111 pf 4 U ,_ ll\i tJg ffi 0 n e y deliberately DN!trs 1,,~ •t• Fit tttl 14 47\lo p ,,. Jq !ft ~M .oi; ~\'II =l~.rl.«t ~-I !t ...,._ flt llt IP~ Z1 -Gerl$llll\d '° JI ''""
adopted by the F ('de r a I :it.oc•~: .,~·n~.;. ~~~.. lJU 1~. ~~bl~rc lb1 IJ~ Ui~w '1~ Ji.. M111otLlf L t> J1 ~ J~ 4:!'?1 :: ~ =~:"-.i.'° 1t '1lv. ~~ 16M +1
1<4 rr.i~f'.Ji-1-1 m: l;.
R r S l """"letlvt 11\r.r f'orit 011 ,..., U we,,. 1\ol ' TanMnl ~"' r.' A~rr-. Co I t to •u + " !,." '"'I » ll"' '-1•1.ro -._ G 1 ... F r.1~ J1i 16\1 i.\1 eseve ysem lo preventtH,..Ptl~ ••olFw-lt ,,,4 PkAnel ,, ., .. ,,,,,,. ,,,,• ,..1""-n13!i!11 -1 NAl)jlol.ll \10., \'Jtt\l!~ur11p111 1l ,,,~,.
I •Hf'OMI fell' J '"'c; lni S U U,. T••M ls ~ -.w U • 11V.. 47l1 -1~ o..t $i GU I l\1 \. "4 .,., Yf'f' Tl•• 10 1JI bus nessmen from geul01g all • m 1t:: !11 rnr.t ~:r'om '"' 111! 11w ~0'1 c5' l. J:. ~ ~ 1 Air Id .o, " 1 ., u·~ 1•'• -\\ stSGll ,11 1t n •1 , "' 1 G->e:o 1 10 ~1 ,1 >• ~. ~~:,~:~ ::e!ur~DllJ!~;~ ~t1;;pw/:i!~:! iH~t~\Mf:; :!:!~!f[~i8~: ~:'m~~l1\~~\ ~~ tfi firr'!?~tt :~~i1l~ 1~ ~ ~: ~~~~;f~~:1~. ,ij ~t: J{:
flatlonary • pend Ing to _I... "'"'kt'""""" WW '., j llo!llU uw U\li jrllUlt .!..~, \fl\ A. "", u ~ Jr. 33'• _,.. I I I\...! 'I JI. IJ ~ IS . --U.rber IN 1 6 JI ~"' en-• 1111...,.11 1111 Cmt 3. l1t ll•ntll 1 20 ~ rftalt j"' j" 1111 ~ 11 t 1 h -u. c lnti.i ·ra 1• ~" '6', 3', ~ lo G.lfYO 1 ON 111 ol • postpone lnr!al!onary projects our "'" 11•1 Prlc•• ,, nk1 'JI• 111, Rive~ P n 94 l'' on 1 ,1 1 ~ "!ggAlll 1.tt 10l 1 tt 11~ t 11 011 111<11 1 •J 11\' 1~ ..... 11 + ~ '-".., ~u ;g.. J 1~ • :;1,
to lay ff k • ~ ,, ""' 1nc,1u11t •t 5,c 1 t 13,. 11 ,v,,.. ,,, " 1,v. t1N:oo 1 "' t• :u;:;,:t..T' J~ g Jill ttl? ~l +ii! ",', I', •,',•,.ts l t&h ~·• •A-'4 Gl•11•P , 7! ::;: 11,, 0 WOT ers •ti• mtr 11P Alrctl 1 1111 lltt;Oll E• IH~ If~ Tr~! I'• 30 J Al C• !Ge ~) llt I YI IYI -1.i 1111 l..Cll -'O l 111"1 U 1 li\') -\:. (;lor111 ~ i.,
Tight maiicy has been the :::r:.~n Of ton'I-~r-~ It; ~=,!..~C·~: n'lir.11ot~;i~ ~k~~lle9~:,~ 13 30 H\~ ttll.i-~'. Ml ~ f~t 1r· r,14 =1t8l:=h:W1~ ~~ ,;,, u t.
crucial factor behind the stock ~"f' c~~~ ~ ! r~ g~ •IE.i {t°! f~ :~ it: ij H i~'°f'it.: 2l~ }~~ Aliff 'j:'; l.?2 i/1 ~ ~~ !I ti ,~",rt:: 1~ 1:: U~ i~'" ~\1~ ..._ 11 81::-11~ 1 !! fr; ~: ket k h Al"AP1 s l• 1 Ii !I Giff 1.,, 1h Rob11 M :Kilt~\~ u11 ~Gn '" 1J ~l!li-:tf!\n 1 ~ scu "°'" ~J't I' -" o 1.7' 11 1Ji , 75 1 !I G en Aloen t6 no ,.,, mar craC Up { e wave Of AIO IM-I 1 ·~ ~t.i';n 7Ji :N\1 llO$tlOll 4\• 4U U! E'l"lti tt tl .,,,_ " '' l f"' ru' f6U om En I :tlO 24 4!i) 4' o ~ +I G~Al pfJ U 1 lil't 55"1 •. ,.1-. b krupt I AITS [!)<; ~;, 5 • IN w II lt lay c.,1 l\\ 7l• u s..... .., "'.. .... l 6 I 6 -I\ omlSOl'f A '" "~ ~2 I ;'2t~ -\ Gl ...... lcl DI J J Kl Kl
11t ....... an c1es--no ... ~~ 1110 ,... ,... IOtl •1111: 11 1.-...:. • .,., s1cw t~ ,.~ u~-·r.•L-lNi ,.~ ,',',",".,'•'•r ..! "°• " »1\ n n~ -~ .mJs~ "'H , ht1 1s • ir, _ 11 1eM1 111,,. s 1D 2• 1: 111, defense cuts A.Ml ot '" 1 Gold c~c 1..., u~, R~•n Ho 41"t ..,.,. u, "'"" »Iii 2111 ,,,.,,,··,,, 1:"'-jlll~ 50 ~ ~...-1 omwf!!d J -n ~ tt n--... i.IMl Ntar111 __.. Is ''"' AVM CP t'1o 9p Good LS 71.'i 1 Sedll.H 2'~ jl'I 01•11 SLd JU • ~ l 1 6U 6'• -\, E 11n 31 11111 ICJ> 109 1. t .,1otM1 un .«) Y 11, 11~'1 EYl'n 1n areas hit hardest by •,,·•.•,• ,", ' ,s,' Goo""' c l J 1 ~<•M11 E 7'• 1.0 u1 t •I'll "~ 36\t AUit Ch• m " u-. l!\• ,,\, + ' mwE 1111.At I 11 ,o , :0.1 , -1. GOO<l•k.11 1 n 11 1a... 17., 1 ... c;,•o~ c,, '. '',.\ ~"°" '" 't ,., V•I LO llo 7\:o AlllltPC -0. 1 )t 1 ,, -\lo Dll'IW 011 Ml 1r 1J 't tr•. /11 + \, !.iOOllJ~•' ·~ '~' v • 2llo the cutbacks this holds true_ :r. FA~,. :"" !-.! G•aJi• sc 1u n 1, 1 CP' n, 1 V•nc• $e 1$1 .. l6v. A.IDH I Ill " r:; ~ u 'J;I\ -U 1 Sc/ "1>5 n . 11 • u -1., Go<o l~A l• 7 "• 1•"'
f h d lh -~ r.1A. Mtu :JI! tl I hid l l lll Vlt!rOll 4 J ...,.,•ISUI Id I 74'4 11\lo ''\l 't"" i "'"' JCl tr ... •Ho ol.i , .4.J vou II M-I tJ 3> t 'l6olo or a e :um not been to Altllrn F l ~ 13 • Groe11 Ml l~ 161.o eo1 Sons u. ""' W•cil ._ 1 ,.,, 10., AMllAC •o •6 n 11 Ao 11"' -'""' Miiii 1 n 11 , u , u , + !~ ur1c11Co 1 o 6• ' • 11
l I fl l b A~ H 1 • 3 t:rnft RE \3 19 Ser IOOt H 1. t '' \ MISW P 11''> 11\'r Amtr E• I JO 14 1'"' 1t 11 -'r Con!IM.1\11 t.6e 7J 2 , 11 1 ,.. -V • ~y 1 1~ • Z..u 2• con ro In .n 10'1 y COmllell :i~ AIDtf" 6 '?l r.ro~• Pr ,.,? • I SC:r l'!O " I • ..... •Ill Id ''" KIV. Am Iii PO •o 1 )7\) )W, ~7''t -'~ onr p .40 lJ Is~. ,, IS -" !.irel!CIUn I.II II ll ltlt abus,ne sl d lh d l"1fol•c ••S r.rw1111n 11 ,St~•ieof 11.111.11 11;...,. >'•o•A.ml<:"""' U l,1 37 0 ~•1 ~11fdJ l l) t617l~'l' ~, .. rallt>.SI it, 1, SS 0\1 0\10 ea ::~~;:' lj , 11~r.uord Ch '' S '"" Cmp 9 t\~¥/trsll• 4>0 51~ Atlw.H lltlJ!I ,-. I< "'l fl •7'• o.i~dlt Pl 6 } 15•1 "• + y<lft lY!~ I 1J !""' 1,.
mmhlStrattonh CdOUld have~1~dG~ ! !!g~,~~nt :I~ :i.~~~11G~o m :t:::~ ~~ 1l1t 1:~::.1ti~\1: ~ 12 ~: ;;~ ;:\;~·~ :::e01J1l1611410 nh )~, l:,=1:0~:~1WPllJ~i lJ ,.., •S,.
cus 1oncd t e efense spen IAm•d 1 ~ 1 , "',•-•,' I! :io ~•11 V• 4~ 47 l'l•I Tr • • 1:r.:. ,11,.,s~k• e, • 1•, u u + \1 onr.oao 110 n :11•• J•, r. l' 11110 Jil " Am l vsn 11 1 11 • 'ven n I I '1 Sl>onclall ! l 'l"o Webb II• 1oc, lOl!o Air rotll ! ·~ 6l •' ••>,\ :!''• -\\ 0<1Fd pl~,50 1 ''~ f t•, -t 11,, Gt•vDro I l'O IJ 11 11 ri1ng reductions by 11011-dc!ense A e1 L•b ,,, S~\ Hu11t1 In lh ~ t)~ll's1M5 11, 1~, l'l•ldt'n j l• t Arn8"c• 1 10 •1 ~ '""' ,. onl'roklM 1 it J7'4 , , •1, -,, GI 11,11 1 :w 11 u, 711,
'pend'n. 'ne'ea••s '•~ ',,'~R 1,. '• "• H~!~''•"<•F 111 2'I ' 5, ~ .,.,.1 1~ • 1J w~u,,.. M I 1 11~ .am C•n ''° u '"• " ~ ,. 1 + \, ot1 LoailM )4 1 •... • , _ 1~ ulNortr 1 J 9 • !3$.o i:s:-1 ,,., .. , ,,, • 1, •, ',1~ ~QNE lei l '19 4 W"al I' 90,o 10\o A.Ca11 ~f 115 , ~t. 21 lo 7•co onN•IG I.ti 11 11 o 16" 7' 1 + ~. GIHol'lell 1 ..u 1 , ... "" ,
B l lh d II I>-A. c;r.,.I s , st.... doc l"t • S G$C ' 31\~ W,ift NA S1'o SV, A.m Cem 4't t t o i t + • <>n1 Powr ~ •51 lt•o I ~I • GI Wotl F nl 111 2 10 21 u e soun po c~ 0 A M~~k'll '~ ..... HlllhYI\ ... fl• ~w 0 1)~ 1•V. W!tn MIO •\· , ... A C"~!n 1.llD ' ',, ''\lo '~...... onlAlr 75P " 11 • ,, • 11., GIV!nUn• ~o 10 JI I D )CC(IVe was to curb 1nflalJOn Am Telv l!I. ISll ~4~-EP fl i'o, s:'.c~ve; ·:~ l~vt ~f~ ~ r• ·~~ ........ C¥•"1 1~~ 2'1 ~· ~ ,.,, :Ill + ' ant Call I 60 It 41,• ..i ' ll -tt GWU1' ~!I IS t 19 " Anllellt 8 1t 711'> .,o"""" ]6\0 ~\~ St&nd'(ft lV;, '°'"WIK PL 20 ,.,t., ""' D \!Ill l I llh ll'Jo 1r.• !Cont Ctlll .n. u l«i l-t •• -u. G•Wtthl~ o!t 1 •••• and so the defense cutbacks !~~11 12~ ~ l·~ ~:'1~er Re 10 11 Srd llto•t i1:i.. 19,,., Wrd!w i; ''•JI• ~~•m D " ~~1 ,",,,~•,,,."•,,,"• 11!~C~J so ~! iJ} 3/ ~ ~ • -• GrttnG n1 ~6 6 n 11 •
l ff '" "H O 0' •< > o lt&n fll>d 11~ 11 Wrl•M '' n<• ' A.D• •I pl I• • ooO '!' -> G•-o'n I 70 lll 21 26 • v;ere no 0 set A.rt'llfl M 711 1\9 owr ' tttlt Str 11 ' llmF• I H !11 ?~ 14"'1 1~'r-•• 4 lll~ I\, 1'14 I' v• • A,r<'tn pl :)'.I 31 "10¥"" 111 t<l Jll\1 11 Yrd~V I Tu ti\ A'"' 'El: lr>d •'O Ul• 1,. 1, t, l' 1""' 0 I I.ill 71'6 21 ,, 76"t 11 _ 1, Greyn,ulld I !ii 14 • 1t'o You may cr1!1c1ze 1970 s A•LMlll!' 14 "l'I ,",,.,~' •'•' ,1; ' ""••NI ~'A' ,..., '"'I po;o sri, ::-·~ ~.1 OJ,' ,111.R2 1 39>-. ,. • 31 _ 1 G•ollet 10 • 1s1..o1 ,~"'
II A,rr!)Y Ii o 33 7' ,. Ar. I -lot .. I -· • .,. UJ 23 , ;n;, 12 GtummnCP 1 !I 19 ' a 11 11n allon Policies as crude Arvldd , • 9, Hut GA,s 12 ') u • '""' "" ,., ' 4\I -"'corrtroi Dtta "' •U\ 4~ ~t.'-:tt Gllt.+Hro ,.111e .5-a :u. • ,•,'•, d I b A•<"C 81'1 71 o ;J•, Hur<! 9 • IG I •• -~ • ... :~.::i,1°11 :0 1~: :~ i ~~~ ~~~ : ·~ )~111~ ~ ilG so s~ so Gl!'-1.Cn 7 <~• 1 M > r an crue ut you cant A1110 .sci •. 1 Hv111 CP 7• 14 , ......,. 1 6IJ 1,1 , • ~·, , , + '•Cook u11u 30 J :1-11• J.c 1 :i.. G~H o 1 1 "° '' 1; • ;:'"
cr1t1c1ze lhe" a'm You con ,'!,",', " ,', ', ,', ~ ~~~ ln~ "' ' ' ""' Hoo<> '' '4 '1 ~ 11• ·•1° -ill CQOfltrln 1 '° lt ,. :If 0 2*'• -• Gull lleirt"' •t 10 • 0 s ! . ~\ MUTU L . .,,lr~l><I ., .i• I~\. ·~ •o -'c-r TR ' l'l l" ~ J1 w. -·~1 G~llll 1 ~t 0 l li. ,','' argue lhal Jobless es Id n~1 Pa~ s ~ ' • • ..,,~ v A .,."',. • '·~ ,, ,~. :t'"• ~' + c-·· ''' '' ia u i1 • u • -Gill•• ,,11" 7 u ' n S COLI 9~•111 p • 0 5 0 Ind Ga• 'A > 17 • .., ~Iota" I~ 1 10 • •c"""'" I li ,. 16 ~ 16., Gu 5 au 96 II 11 70'
be cushioned far more er ~~~;r! ~ ?:·~:~,,:dud ';. 2~ ~::,·,:;.~0 1 :; •1 :~: •• • ;:(: c=:~;: k2g i~ ls t is' l~ 0 ~'~ g~ ,~~1n~u ;8 1 1~ ~~, ~: ~ rec hely but you cannot use R~ nm ,, 1H.i •nt Cont , ~ Allt<Dv l!R 1!;_ ~· A ....... ~~ + C0p~1s11 120 1 '"t 14 1 u•, GIJll\I r!JIJ 1 ,,, 4"•
NASO Llall•gs for Monday, October 12, tm
J1 -~. ,.
'""' -. IJ'o t \• ~·. 21114 + •• 211\o -\~ n -\lo l'o -\o !1'1.1 -•
" "~ + ~. J~o -'• 19\t + \o ~~ =,l;
1f I -• . -. 1S -b '" JQV) -\ " . II• + ~ •?. + " . I I Ill~ ~ I In 1e • 1? • lnrr,.. In • Am ~~MlftP 1 100 111~ >"•" ,",\1 -, ~~Ill<"•'>);,• n,, ,;•1 • ,',, ' ,,', ', _, Gu Ion ll!CI l" t t t ' unempoyment as an excuse 111t" 1d 1 '1 1"1 BV•h s FUNDS "m~hn ,~., ', -G· ,,,,. HI l':er~H• t~ 4\ 1111 ~X21 II 1 A Sm~llll(I ,,,.,.,, •• .,.,~=·~~,:·,"·,A21 Jt71o2• 14•---(or m1htary spendr,1g I''" 1 Lab 4 " 1n1 Sv$ ,.. ,. 1 A.m~Af• "'.. • ,. , •• .,,.,, _., • • ' t•o 4 ~ + , "lac~v a1 io i >' l1 l1 -t, n1n~P• w • • t<o 1111 !'iv i>! 1s • n '" 7 .,-, Cox 8dc11 lll 11 11 • 10 , 1''• ~ , HallPrl 1 ~c.o I 1:1 , 1B '9, \Vhat I heard al Lairds 111,., Soo :n :i.. 1 .. 1,.1 1~.1~,, ~s~~'1 " ., "'• , .... "'+'•CPC1n1110 t.S 79l , 11<1, :it, Hdllt1urt1os 211 41 ll'• :lt1•-I • P.rc~t 2• J ~IQ~r1 16 11 ti lto V.o 341' ~rompi(n IO 4 u, J~ 1~ -•"lzm\'/•1 21 1 s. S"i J +•
polun11e1heond>SLprobabkly sh1e1vd :~ ~\ ';~~:11~,~U!J 2:1 1~1 , ~ ci::~ss~.~:4~; 1~ ~ ~! ;~ +•!c~~~~:1"fo,'r is~ 71~ l~: l~;!~~~~";,';,,';.~c101 ~~Ir:~ .• lit:-!
cs a n a1r1s nownas! 11011 a,, 9, ,,J ... u~c • 0 ,_,,, ,,, ,, ,,.,,., •• ! .. , • 31 Jlh lj • l11t •Crowe Pl110 1 11 i 11 1 11 ,+, "•-''•• ,, ,, ,,, "' .,,., __ 1
Ill 11 sk ll[ l 811'!!1\e c U 1~\'i J•m w" 4 f ... o •w ,. ,,.,. P 1• I • • • • ..-\ CrlWn C«k n ln~ 1 ,,, " "" .., ""~ I an Y I U pJlite1an l!OOJ AH 11•1~11 Jftmt• F l ' 3-1 Nf.W Y0111( !API Inv Guld 10? l .t!l ATl.T WT 11< l\.i 7"" 1'o -•~Cl'WnltU 160 64 > ~ + \,. lia""t CP 'ti II 1' o 15 !5'1o ..._ •
B h I h llD• C~o IJ'i 10 ~ l~m1bv 111 \ lll>t -Tne lollowln11 cwo-.!~ l~Jc 6 61 t 61 A.m l l. T 1 lO Ml 4.t • 411o U 1 CTS (orp A J ll • ll • JI ' -liMln•M t JG 11 t5 1 fl ti~ -c .. ut w at eal'.<f 1.1as rotten [!r~r.,., "'• 1~ • JI! Y F~• , , , • iauon. •ut>rue.:1 or. ln~ BP• io 11 1 11 A""NWK• ~ -. 1ot& 10•' 10 i +-•~ C\ldollr att ----.o J6 ' 16 11 • + • H"1'.t011rl h 11 31l, 11 11 -',
d II llrll\kt In ,._ A~ Jhn111 P<'I '' '' Int Nollon~ ASS« lnutstor s Gr-A.W Drtf I 1i i1to 141.;, 14, lt'-1 -\~ Cull~V Pl1 !S 11 "lr-1 14 'l -''Hurl• n ~ -io S'lt Sl 11 -... economics a n pote111la y Brka sr~ 1 .... ,.,,_ 11:11,~ s• ., ,, ' 111on 1 ~ur11i.1 10s ncH 1t4 '11 AW 4 111 1 0 11:00 ui. 1~ ~ 1~'• • • Cummln IOb 29 ~r , ~T ~ ~f . Horsco co l I• 16 • !6•. r6• -• perilous propagan<fa a nd nrwn A 1~ 11 I(~ s1 DI 11 ,, OHier• Inc ''" Mui 1to '""'"Zin<: Sf 11110 ·~ lA +\~CunnOr\lli A , 10, IO\ 10 .,_ ,~a.~,~,",•1 !£ 1! 11'o no ~1'~..._,,. o l\fU•l!Be 17"'!1~ K•lver -,.'+,.•l~eprltCS•lwn\Cll r'°".-l~•U !"'=tO 11'111 7n:,7tF1\ (111llnYlr.O ''lhol1 11, "l wlE lli la~,~~,~-~l., •• lherefo1 e it s too important to 11,u••,,,., •~• 1\.o ~aie G•n ''--l!..\ c~l~ h•v~ecur~,',5 s~~. : 74 ,, U A.MF' 1;;:'°;, 1JJ 11~ ,1:·~ '~' -""c,"'~--H '"° llXI n »•• n +1 H~•• ,,,. , -11 1&•.-lt'• i...,; -" ur~ p I 1 5 -.a••m l l • "' • l'•.._\> YI:""" lto S '1 75 7< "~Zell"• 4 remain my prival" anecdote I 11 rn p s ,, 1"'"• '(~•r r , 1 , • Miki Ibid! or l>Ou9nt , v .. , Pv '3' 6 91 ~~'," ~ •" • ,'", , n, ; _-, Cv1H111M 1 60 290-" , " sno + ,, .. ,. ,,, ,_ ,. 09" t • ',l,' _-• C:IC Le>t •, 8 0 K•I ell ? 0 ] 4•,~ed) Mor<'l.lv 11• •ill • 03 4AO ..,., Inc ~ JI'~ , ,.,...,. ,.,. • Uo
ThU! atlh<>r1skof b1tJn1tttJer .. 1 WSv 7 \~ll KtllVJd 21 ~~'~ ad AtklS!tl 110?\l~Amo•~C••e 7 \ 1•, 11 1 1•v,+1, -!-'ttl•Mn 11r 71 7 .. o 16'1 26U,-•• ~ rnno~~\ J! 11 "~•IC t 1~,Abe•On 18J10llvv 661667Al'l".5!edlol(I ID'1~l14 ~'11i+I Da"ruvr~p 36 1 , 8 1-!elntHJl 11~11!0JS ., hand that fed me l pass 1lon (•nn'A 11' ,. '<tYe r,, 11 ~is AdMrenv Fun1s J Hnc:ock 6'12 rs2,'me1 .n o 11; 11.4 ')-0 0.-n•CP 12s ",J , ,,, """-cvr1 • t •~•no
l (.n"'~" •o 31.\Ktvt (', I' 1• Gwt~ S~S5 6"Jall11!!11 11lll•1l M•ond -lftl l•J 7•1 7" ...-~•-\• Dartl11d Xlti ll 3") J) •Htltr ln! 60 Sl 2,1 lto 'lO + • 0 you • •P 1 ~e 11 , 11 r.••<t PC 1 , i '11CC"' J 60 l 9' l<ey.i,,... F11noh Anet! Hnc:k 1 JO 111,; " '' -1 O.•I 1rw1 p 7 1 3:1\~ 3 lie mt Pd1 1 6 151.< s ~ -lit ( ~ p<,oo~ ~ , I'• I( "" 1~1 J • 1 1ns..1 1 o.s 113 Anol1cl 1 03 111 ~MO~NC$v l ' Ulo !6 \ • I .i-, ~t• Ptocea 31 IJ I• • ~ ):!t mrhl' Cl) 'f IJ~ • •;,,? l~i! -r~p lnlA J• 4 ,.Y.l~RS El Jl 4 ~A.du 1rs 4/S Sit Cus 81 11.201900 ~c "H 10 1~\t 16 l~lo ..__ o Dll"CoCll 114 !J 16• 16 t 16 , :-!-,,,',,°', ,•,: ''' ", Caple~ 3, l'tKlr~ re < ' 'G1N F(I ... 91S Cus 82 11 2111t1sA."'Ct!Ol llh 19 311, :J,'.l:l; 3. -+I • O&~CD pU1S 1 0 65l, '" .., l6 16"'-"
Interest Rate Plunge
Unlikely for Future
,.,.,, o~~ I ' 11. l("a. Yot ,. ,, ,\lllll•ld • 61 715 Cu• B• 1 It 161 A,DL Coro I! 1'\i t•ti If.~ -lo O•yl"H"d '0 ? 1• • t • ,.., + ' Ht,,~l"d 110 • , •• , '~' 7S•• ...... r ••• Ill ·~· lll i(ft!lt 1·~ l\,Alolre 662 ''2 Cut 1(1 llt 11sfJ.,',',DICIOol ? 1~, 1' 6 OIY!"PL 16(1 2'•-\ li~ijb~ln IO 11 ,•,• '°" .vt~+~ (•rlrGP ,.,'2\4 U"MrGllt 5,~0 Al1 Am1' 6' 70 (ll'i(f 4'1l 4IO AYtJC6 1 1~10.'•lr•1 tr! 0PLp!B l1I l6til'tllo211<-,HowPr~ 0 •1 11 '7~-l\ f•sc NG 1n .11V.U\ 8knnt •'• 1•A!!stalt tS~10 ll Cul SI 11011150Arc~I~:!_ 10. t 1'\1 ~\), 1 i O •n o •7lo ,,,,,_.,.,Horh Yollroe 19 10~ 10\l 10\~ r~"1Cap '•l LMC O! 1•?t ,\phaFd•1510111 C111~l 911Jt8',\rc~ .... nl l13t •,.34 OPLlllCltO J."'fl~ JO~ +l HlllOfl"lo!tl l 44:)S,3~1 l~•>, rente~ 1~~'Jt L&llCt In ;~,;y 4 Arncap 531 SIC Cui r.3 651 111Arl1PSYc 1nt 110 11 ll'o 11,,_,.gnre Col !:It J1 l"t l'"-1\'H-•1110 I 11~1 :II'• 31!' +-•• ren VP~ 1~11'•L•nd ll,.. • t •jA"' But 79'J1l Cus 54 l144 1SA.rl•111DS20 Jn! t 1. •o -1 t!m1rl'lU 51 16'o Mt 16~0 Hoe rnW&l 10 10 ?io llo ll o f"•M Liii R -· Leioe \'I'd p., ,, ' Am Cw in I.Al Ul.lS PA;ll J Of' ).lt ArmcoSI 1 Ml 116 11 ~ J(I,., 21 -~ Ool Mnle 1 0 "4 ' ; 1~ t 7< , _ ~ Holl E ectrn ll ~ t I I + • f""1rn11 )lo 7'1o Llr~ 1 • '1 A.mor E•1>re•~ ~nlc:kb UNvlH ANl"CO Pit to -lJ _,,.,. __,,...,_ 11 .. -.!)~II• Air JO '4 lJ!..o_JQ • ....11\lo :f-U HolidYt11n tt 9t )4 3J 1 3!'.I. -'• ,.llo t 0 S 0 6, ltr""n IA 11, 11,,,, Cap I 7 SS 1 ll i(nkk GI un•vtll Armour 1 fO 5 t& • <!Oli t ~ -1.4 Oi!!le< lnl 1' 1 • l 0 '• H01'IYSv<I t;!O I II., lllo II o -c. f"ltm l~~ ~ • lrAdY L<'I I~ IQ lncme • ., flt Lt• G•lh 711 161 ... ,.,,,, "' I Jj ' 'I'> !~ P. 1 Diii"' ff ..aa '° 1' I l~. 1~'1. -~ ., '° 7 l ' • 2•1 ,,,, + • r~t' 1e<1 So ~loLthConl 1 2 Inv~•! 1~41 1'Lflll~Cl!ll0Ut1Arm•Ck.!~ 22'.l '1 44 l••= O•~nvR,1 O• 4tl 1? ~. '"\-,;Honevwl'JO 111 •4~, I\'' ',',i~::.: r -UI I 1J U Ltl r r. I , 111, Siot I 61 LlOl'ri. 5 3.l S 19 .O.tmRvb I ~~ l ll JM, 'l + Den ~VI"! l 3 1 '• 7 1 1 -Hocv II 1 0 11 1• • 1 ., l"ltl ~ti.I S6 ~ L.., ~BF 1?, 1' 0 ""' Eqty 43114ti lie SI~ 4i't S1llA.fO Coro 'IO 1 16 • 16'• HJ -n<!11ll:Gr 110 t 11 ~ 11 17 ° -,~ HOst 111! J~ > ll 3! I 31~ -\• cnr 1 5 1-0' 1~r 11,. 110 ,, l "1 "'"' Grth S-41$n Lle lKNV ~.h ~ Ar~!~ 1"'11 7 'tr. 1•1 '"~-~r..:o M'8 1, ,1 ~ ,1,,,-~~•'",, ~, ·~IC > 10 • 10 +to J'\E\V YORK I ~Pl
Bnn,.e1 s !_CrO~!__ the c~ntry
a r e expressing skept1c1s1n
about the poss1b1hly of a
substanttal drop 1n interest
rates Jn the near future
A sur' "'Y of large and small
b:1nks shows them to be al
odds "1th Secretar\ of Com
merce ~faurice Stnns "ho
predicted a sharp drop 1n 1n
lerest rates
'I think "e \\Ill see a & per
cent interest rate and perhaps
not rar off ' Stans said 1n a
radio lnterv1ev1 last week
Bank off1c1a!s c111ng the high
cost of money overhet!d and
continued high demand for
loans say they do not expect
the prim':! rate -the interest
charged to large customers -
to dechne sharp!}
The eHec t of a drop in the
pnme rale now at 8 percent
\\Ould be to make 1t easier for
large corporate borro~ \-s to
get loaN This would have the
effect of shmulallng the
fCOnomy and cutl1ng
uncmploym-"'nl througn the
creation of new Job s ,
econon11Sts say
'!\may look good
poh\Jcally but how can ,ou
lend money al 6 percent \1 hen
you r e b1.cy1ng 1t at 8'' s:i1d
George Scoll chairman of the
Fll'sl National City Banks
credit policy committee -the
group that sets the Ne\v Yorks
bank s prime rate
The big Ne\v York banks arc
a big factor in any movement
1n the interest rate and all
sav they have no plans nt the
moment ror a cut
~I an\ bankers surveyed snltl
that they usually follo1v the
trend set by the large Ntw
York bl'nks
We don I plan any cut 1n
rates \\e usut11ly follow the
East Coasl s lead stud u
spokesn1t1n for lhe Detroit
Bank &: trust Co
C1nc1nnal1 banks mo\e a!i
do the major b.ank5 LO other
C'1 its :such as Chicago 11nd
~e1' York sald an ofllc1nt of
the First National Bank Ctn
clnnall s largtsl
I 1h1nk there II be pressure
during 1he elecllon campali;n
to drop th" prime rate but I
12~5°/o YIELD
FIRST MORTGAGES
\VHEN PAJD TO !ltATURITV
1% 5 YEARS
DISCOUNTED 10%
MINIMUMS-
P« .,,~.tMwt con
INVESTORS PROPERTY
MANAGEMENT
l 1ff NEWPORT ILWDn
NEWPORT IUCH
CAUfORNIA fl,,t
PHONE 71 4 '11·tJOJ
Dr.Ohf.! S
don t sccho111\CC1nf1hL'n 1c1tr11111r <MIO" le"'o1 ,~, An t v 4 f1 4 t7Ll~N•I 19':t 115Asy01!1'0 S?J<,20.,,,, ... ':t•,,...lnc •e 11' r.1 •t u::.':',,,,-141 Hlo JJ,+• t> C"tde ~.1 1. oir~v !o !\A.m Mul 19016l Ln<I l6.5lff"''"llel7 4~ 1'1 SI JI\. ~l""ls 110 f~l ,,,,. nuw, .v \j)}; 37 •;\"' >
flal1on 111thout lcavin" 1trut 1.1.1~ 1n•,11 •lo, e1 ~ l•,Jf'~.O.mN Gin 1as JtoLon"' S vle> !"~0~•v 111 ~ ~·,·, ' ,•, + "rt E~rSlQ 1 1 7 1 , 1'l~ ~oui~o\;"g ,:1!t:1~~~l~~~t11: _ ., r.11lt UA 7'\l,1~.Lv,,,..11 c 1'•"-A.""n"' Grovn C1""d llMYlll .o~ .• , ',A Ill., •. ll ~ -1 .n.it s1ot1 l 1 1, 1, -ous ,.. ,, ,, ,0,, ,, -•• \\here It IS s:Hd Rich:ird li'IUt u II rn,:. I • t~ed OE• ,.,, l 1 C~ol• 1 II 1"' c ... u '"' '"-~ """" Oq ., 1 ~ .. JO Jl .,~ .. " 11 •1 ~ ll "l~I p 1-'0 !>ol • so • 'l ~ r11v1n Ml H , 15•> l./~1 "tv •, '' G~ 1n t.Ji9 10 51 I 11! U "'2 1J., 11.sdl ren t"p ,. 9 I 1 • 11 ~•Fl~•" ,, "l1 i '• 1J ><o..s t.:G • •1 \ \Vilde president of 1 he r l~'~ Mt ,, ,.,,, M~ kri •\ 69 111tm• , ., 1 .. Lu~ ftrn 10 n 11 11 "'1"1'"" lrd 56 1110 1 1~ , -• .., •ml• 1 110 • , !' , 11 H<lt/G~ "'' 0, M ~~ ~ Sf1 '1 <;/)1\·.::. ' r_ ~v10~ 1 ~ l ~ ~1 mt A.• l l • Fd l~v 116 1 •0111aana 1,, 1 t6 1 tJ !:1c1,•,",1 J• 15 70 1° • n -'., • .,, .,, .... 1 ,., 1 lJ, ~r , + .~ =~~~~i~ 1~'' f' 16 , 1 , 11, + '• American Nahonal Bank of lr1n1 11e• 1•,11 .. M.an•M 3,3 v.,1 ll4!410llM.>nMn •..c •t.1 n d7 "1 '~•5hl~I~ ""laSp1or·~ \1,1, , " 1 71n 1 A+
sail Lake city ~~~~c8° ,; : ,;:: ~::M~ ,! : ,!~. ~~~·Fd : I~ ? il1f:;'! ~~ 1g ii\! U ~1:?.~~~'~ ':~ ;; · ;;~; ll ~ ~ ·: ~ :~~l: ~1~ 1 f ~ ~. • ~:., _ ·~ ~t;~E :n ~ ~·l ~l~ U. :_
In Washington n1eanwh1le I~°',!!. c,•, ~ •• ",, •.,,•,·~,· 2'l Y A•~ Hooq~ "" "' e' 1 81 3 11 ,-:..• orp 11 ' • 7 7;, n1 ~q~"' •o •• ,, , 1 1<10 'B t 60 n 1? , 11 , 1111 '--,., ' ~ 11 tli Fun~ A. 491 S41J\•lllef1 1077110 ".,1nc: tit 61 f llo t\, + ,.,l~g ~I Bl ••) ill C~t I U ~ the cha1nnan of the Mouse r .. 11r• ~ 1, 1• ~ Mtver o 11 • ni,; Funcr 1 ~ ou •I N.crld Fd 11 11 u 15 .au "a Prrd 111 I o t 1 \ ..._ \~., 11"" c~ t.i ,~ ,, ,. ' ' '-1 • 111 cp~ pfJ 10 10 ,~ • 1' ~~ ! :. ~
B k C h II d ("olon ~,, lt -7~1 McOuv 11~7:' SIP<k S.JJ SllO MldA. Mii 417 SJ2 Aulornt,, Ind JS 5 , .5 1 s ... ,., ~v ~ 7•1 , • 1 '• Ull'<IWP !'0 • ;.·~·le +'•
an 1ng omm1ttec ascac ~~;~rir ,~~.~:Zl~(11~ ~ .. f•11a~~""cp :if:~~~=~~.c11 ~i'"iJn1~~~~~cr'h~e :~1·:~;.~~ .. .!.\:.·~··~:1 .,., , l; 1;:••.,:::,P~~.,·,,•,11'11 ~'''1'1>1'1•-i i oran 1mmed1.'.llcrcducllon 1n(o.,, ,.., 11 n 1•.M!'dtr" Jn,•,,B.:1vrc~ 1t1 ,.,2 11;,F l"d 1 ,,.-.•uPd "<'I ~· • •• , 10 1 ,v.,,., 6 1• '• 1~ 1A . ,_,-,,,. 1~ •1 1•16')-1
!Com t~1 71 21'• M•rl~ " 11 1 Be..c:o" n "4 n "4 • A.vna• •~ 'Op ~l I 'o 1 • .,lvt\19 1 • 1 ?• • ? ? .t. '" l < 11 o I" • 11 + \o the prune rate to 6 percent rom l'1tt1 '~i , \ MIO'd C• 1' t\1 lier• ""' 1.so 11 " MIF Gir. • n s 10 A.vO"Pd r o ,,1 1 1 ,: ~, , "lrP•~ •• ,, 1• , 1• IN' co 1 .ia 111 J • 1 '• 3• ,.oml'•~ 11 11 .,.,"ll~!•x ?•?lo'le•~C:I! !!•lt?MuU$G•10lt10J4AzlecDllll! 7'1' ,.,1 .+,.,,..,~111 ,0 •• ~ i ... ,0 ,:-,~, ..• •c.;.1 n 9, < 9,
R \' hl P l ID C'nmp A •• MOfJI' GT II 9 'll•lf Fd 60ll l~IA y()mG .. 11 sn .. • 11'>-~•.,,,,F"d ,,, ••• A. .. ' •. ' '· 9o ·-ep rig aman jr,..0 Cm 1'•1 Mn!t(:• 'J) >'o!ID"~t~ 5 9 611 Mu0ml" tUlOOT -D--"lor-el•v" ~I< 1 , '•-' ~1 1'1d~nliCI 11"1 IJ n , JJ l l+ T ex) urged Da v1d<"mP l1111 •l.i'•\\ls1VG1~.1~1,111oon~1111r,~~~j~~~:1f:;1~~BAbckW'Q ,,,20.10 ,,_11 z cc~ l •1• i ; .. ,'~:'.:.'"1:::;J0,,j~L,,',,D l''J 1:'l?1 + 1cmp Tee 1 11. ""° R '" \ 8t!'ll Fein ••110 .. NO:A Mui 910 •1' a.~rOlll .f.5 l't '" 0 r. 0 '3 ..L ' r VP 1 ~ I u . 18 19 Rockef~ller chairman or thc~~rr'>O;k ,1.'~1~\;~oi;!w~CIR 1)'15>o &o.!M 75tll11N11 lrwf 1t11•18111c;e In ,3: Io: lJlo u +1; .... , Cu JD l•! ,.,, •• '1:+ \l~~kd';..'!j ~: r..: n; ;!~-~.
Chase l\1anhall:in Bin" ofront~ l •I Moo!Co• 1l'1•~i~1~ks~11/'131 13 !.!Nat tnv11 •l4131:•1Gp•/B•o '' ,,'°'''°1 + ;:-"°~"'"'?JI! ,.., "' -•••n11ndSIJ "'''''' ·~-·~ r,,,.tr•n 1 , 1' 1 a~m f-• I p', 0 '' • ,~~'''' N ! !ec:ut S•r 0&r• n P c • 1>, ~r•v P •n YI lnmo~I '~ ~ t 0 , 0
N Y k h I d • u ~-Ba •n '" 10 64 ~r('I" Ill ' 1 2) 10 10 + \ ·•r••s 11a ' •• ,,..., ? • , , ew or tcna 1on <;l1Lr lc...,011 L 1~1~.Moo1•P ~·••C~ndn 1~~7os-8,,....i 4 71511 1~nral'p!I JI 11 ,1,~11 '"'-.,n·~ 11 , 3,,,,, ... ~;'~~i po;o1irn5•;s,,5,_,,
largect bank not Ill hold orr ~:~:;, 5vr :\; ~ Z,~tT~A li :; ~lul~ s 3'5 ~µ Olv ~ 3 11 4 ~•1 8k ol (•l1l4 11 Jl. :n•." ~ f>•ttr l'f&• • ,. M~ >OI ... I•~ c ~!/\!11 II~ l;.', Bil ::~""·! [•v!tll 141,,,..lqlrYI ,~.• •!W 9 JJ1 r-wrll I OJ l ll09an~o1 NY ? 11,. ,.-nr.., ... c.1 4"' l• ,.,_ ln~nrCn l.o 11 4 ,,1, 3 the prime rale reduction unlll jC"& ,.;."t 11 11* Mo1,n M s ' 51~ N..,. Vn• 11 '1 " 1~ 1>1 ~ k • ' • '' 8•~~ '' 1 •• ri •· • " , 62' -,' n,,~.,.., 1.t0 h '1 • 21 • '' -1n1~,,~ 1 10 1• J~' ~ : • • -1 '
the eve or 1he Noveinber elec ~~~:: ~; 1! ~ 3?'! ~~1~:-'b '1 ~ 1l :r J!.a~Fd1 i ;t i ~· ~~~\ f ;~ f ~~ ::~~ 0c1
11:
1 s;j ·~ ~1 ~ :i ! ~ : = ~. ri~8~,.f'~ ~~ l1 ~~ 0 ~~' ';'• :_ , f.'~1 k1"1 1 an 1; J~ • ,;: \ _: : }, C1utcn 1t ll 6V.MutRIE• 1 l ~(:G~{l 1 "'~'N•IGI~ ·~ 111Aa t 1~c" 111 .u .:1°-•r>o~1~"6'' •• '··~·ll'I •-!' !t C~~ '" hon r.vort1 ' • • • "1'' ., ,, , " CdD3mt ' 4 1 ~I Neuw (ti A •• Jn• ll"e~ ~ ,, ... I>. I -• avP0111 l 7'! I• 111 • 11••· 11~ ~ -I~ F ., UM~ I~ 11 tC ' 41 .. • ... CllP I In~ '·~ J ,, .. ,, ''' ' •• Jp, 11 -... •P<ln• OU ' 3 #I ,, ' + , ... --. I ~ oY.t I '+ 1'•n• L~• l\i 1 Ill c l11a ••• 'I r~~' ~~r ! ~J 6 II "''11.IW 1 !~ '1 ~ ,. ' ' pl I • II ll , 11, -duP~l'll ol• so I I • ~ I\ • l!"I /-'• 1 10 1< ', ,. • r I Patman ca lie~ 111,::h inlcresl Dn111v M 1 11 N~rr1Q ,. it•; li~, r•n1 ~'" lO.Jil 111 •v N~ 111<1 11 1 12 1• 8''" 1~~ ~· ,, o u 11 -• o. ~ LI 1 s ,, , ~ , ~ ' "" '• 11"1 1rd • sn:i 1< I• , 15 1'1111,.,...,, I~ 6 '4~C~r ll t !O C~•~nno Fllrl• !<! !O~ ll1~1'1'~'1hlft r!2<Q 13 3~<1 lJ , 31' 'Oq t l'110S >G 11 71 11' ~ lntlorlp!llO ~ ?~ 7<1 76 ralcS prOfl{ (rtk\llg' a11d01•Ge, l' Jl NC..,t>CO lo "• ll~lan !P 4'11 U "lkllS!tt ttS tt:1••~ ~Lb on 71 ~l IO , 41•:-:i'1 ,DYr.-olnd 11 1111' 1 > lntM1er l•I !J11••111 + n1r.alft I' 1 o '; II 1"0 t 11 lA fl'lm SI 1 411 l A> N~,~~•I l~vall • l•b 10 1t7 ? , ? II 0...11eAm 10n )1 l '1i J ' - ' !nl A ..,., J • , 14 p , I', blamed the high rate ol j n vi• Fd ,_ 11 t,:M G~O !Po 11" "" '" ••< ,o1 "c"'""" -0 1-.. "~r1·~· T t 10 ,,•-, E F + • 1,, n ~ta 1 • ,. , !)av M, I• Ill' ~Dl lb 11 , •• ~ In O"l 6•5 71• l'l"'e-·~, AA< "''\It Fdi 36 J"I JI I • ---lnl PA~ 1.SO 11 J ~ l•, l''i -1 Une1nplOy1Tlen( On ll ""'"' In t < 1 • N~n N•d 1~,11,1,~ .Sioecl I ~1 1 '1 ::;v ~~ 1; all~ lltt! F' 1) 10 1 )'1 70 µ\ :j:J\, E~QfP(h 10 ,',J • )J, ll , + 11 Intl P• I 1 0 ~ \ 9 ~ 4 l)A"ltl ..... J• Jl'li et P• "' ... c~ Gr t o• ...,,. llt'C~ ... Ar JO 11 ' • ,, " 1!11co (p to t !•l, • • Ill! T.!.l 05 3 I H ,, I •1 "'I'
Even the b:lnkers "ho reel ~i~~ ir., 5; ! .~ ~ ~:.: ~=~! ; ; : ~a.:::; ~ ~: t .~ 0 Nel~m! l~ n n ~i :::;~~~~ ,;: :t 11:? ~I~ ;:~ + :~11:5: ~; \~ ,t.! jr.. jt jt •• = :: lTT''" J,1 ~!~I :: :~ ·~ ~
that the prime 1nte1 est rat~ 1s "",,', <,•,•,T )J • ?! ~ ~·,•, s,.. ~ •IO •1\ Fr~t •• ~1 ,.. r1 o ....... ~ • ·~ 1 s1 """'~ P•! sn :'fll 2'1 1• 1• --, &11 u111 1 .., ,",• 11 , 11 , 11 , _ , n•T•T r , 1 8 ~ :?~ 141 .. = ,' ,., •"'~" I t l< ~hr~~ '''1D)1 0'>~ A.IM f3710''"'1rln"li 6rl) 11 I~~,~.,,.=! ei Kcd~k la 630 ., 6a lrlT&T pl. 'I \•, "' daC for a rcrlUCIOll fee] that1 ~~ .. ··, ',°',",'•"•',,,","G, ll 161-SDel 711 ~oOTC Sa< 941101llle l ... 01' loll :!.\ .141~ l" .11' -i;EatonY• 1.a iO 0 1?1, 7 nl t ~l<<n '" 1•, ~, llli +' .,..... 3lo 1'•r11~1 lJJ411JIP.ceFrw!1251•1°•111n1.,c,,., 1' 9 I'• r.:_,l!alQ~D!1 19 11!'o i l>•l'I'• 11nTTo!'l?S 'J.?~ !l ,6n•-l1
Stiin s prediction 1t too op-g1A~ •~~· 1~, 1;•1 ~1: ! ~ l~ • i, · cri:e t~ 3,. , R• ~:X:, ~~~ ~:; ~ ~~ ~~ ~ ~o"' 1 :~ ~~ ~ ;~'; ;• 1 =, ':\~~~~~d~· 21s1 ;: {f ; ~~ : 3~~ -•• 1~1 L,11 ~-a ,, ~,: ,1,1 ;~~ '!: •!
timlshc nN•rCM 3 • ti" e~ ;'•,3 • Fn1 ••IMhPdMUI '10 410:1'<"·1,co,•e " .. •J o 'I''-\!E~L°'o B Cl l 6. o 1•o JI nP. "a .... !~I\ ~l l.n1+>\
Dn?t tel, l 01 •~(.•"'o ~' ~ ••A iiil'Mla 1'651Jl6•"'" D 1 •11,11 l -1 ~1 10 1Cl 1 .. •• 14•-i•lntonPw 11 4 10, U tr feder.il PohCV keeps put ~~·~.,, ,, • ,,· "••" -,t 7. • • l""D"' 9 I\ 1r ti(! Pl e "' I l1 t Dt e11in Olt ~ 11 n •• '"., •• ..LJ ~ IMUI' Dtt I I • • • • ~1· JS' (0 ' • 6 ~ 16 , -• . ....,. "-· .. '' 11 > l P"I 4,1 '"°Pint Sr 100911~09 11""~'1 of4lll 1 11, 1 1' l + ·~ Mus In~ J • t • '• lj 1~ -l ting money into the S\s1en1 ~v,1~ ~~ 11 ~ N,•,, •,a~G, 1 • s • r~1 G ~ 1, ,,11,. Pio,, En• 6U 6Hl ~-1 u1 '. ~ ''• I lect A5oc t st s . ,,i .~!"it'\., 1! 25 "• ''. -d•
I I n ,..0~~ p~ ''' ll"PIM F"" 10Ul16Sll'"'el In "'•• o t EIMtmMG 216 I• llo 1 11 , 1»1 llh+••
Jlle rale \VIII eventually drop I Oun~I~ D 1 • 1111 Nuct ~ ' I ! r k '' ' " ' •• Pia~ Inv '41 10 1t .~·~tY ',~.. an ,• \ ! J ••• + '• "'•IM 1~11 Df l • IJ•t 13 • 1J • -OWAll•G I • ' " " 71 OJrlron l• 16~!lhn Ari ~ ~. -, C Pr ee l"ur>dt e m~r. on n ~ ' lotnNat lrd 11 6 1 \•-ov~011 1 II II 1 114 '1•-'• lr11nk a drop to 71 2 percent IS ~~111~•1;; li 1~ &';:\" 5~,·~ A 7, I~~: ..,, ~ !! ! :~ Grwin 71 XI 11 .10 ~i'~Ths11 I tn ltl ' • 11 ., 11 ; _ ,, ,1Pe;oNG 1 1•9 11 • 11 , 11 , -•~wansv 1 ~ 19 ~« 1~ lt _ • lke!y to 1nth2ne3r[uturcbut"'~11s11 1 ,1 ,omio.r 1;,'~'.'0"'"" Al~'" NE• '1111 '111 1111~,.-rp;'f. 1't~'!4!"4 1 ' (l i:~:c:i11~ :i\~~· ~~:':. :7e~im~0 ..o' ~~;~.~~,~,, r::ronLab,,,1,""111orT<>1117 1r,...,p11d''•••,N Hor:t'ln12n11 ,1rJ~~"'' •1• fs ~,1•-1 ..,,,E~~l ~lllO S >tO•·•··~cor~ 7111 7•1 -'•
l Id l ke a .'' lul bis ad l
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Justment to get 1t dOl\ n any!FtlM s •I 1n • '" PEC 1 r 1• ~ 13 , r.,..r')fd 10 a1 10 1 ~rovdnl '1' 4 u 1'101>111~ l!lr~• I! 11 , 11 11 _ Eml'ltrt 1 10 10 1 3< l' -J·K-1' d~ Bt 1 11,D1bil P.• ,, t > r...,,1 '" ~•• M J~t 9U10Mt "-c•ruCo •D 14 f\o 1•0 16 temcOhl 116 J ~. ', 16 , i~t~•n ~t 1t 1~ ! further lhan lh ii! said Dr F Niie ,, 1oPnc.o.u, 5 6•r""'""' A\A••Purlli t lO t1J•11bC8S 1!1> 1 ... 40~ •• -' f_~lhMI" '° l•l 1l o ?J ···-,JAckA llplj(I • 1' 11 -+ "'!Nvc Ull "~cf l ~(on!(:Tl!71"7~•P"nm fUl"01 .. Ordl"d'1 1•~1 01° E110Mlll•2 11'11H I ~ 10 6 &' 6~·-\\ 1\ham Zentz rxecullve vice Flc1cov 1i~ 1 Pa~co co •,, l O ,..o ~ Ld 11 • u 1• i:o n &'-' '•! """~""' 1 1 1 i•t,o 1• ! u ' -..., En11l 11111 1~ 6 n 1 , ~. 1 J~';,';~(~ 16~b • 1~1, I • 9 •
k I I F11t nm ~ P•nro1 ? r11 v r,., 10" JI 1 r.~o I 1' 6< 1313 Bord•n I;~ 1' "l • 211.4 1•:\: + 0 l;gv1h1s J 111 J JI ~ 3\ 11 ~ )~Q<•AFn ,.,,. 11 1• • l•~~ -pres1rit'nlor1heB:in o I le Fur""' s 1 .,1 P~r~•D• 1 110'1111n1v suJi•• Gr!~ ~~•twflnt-~\l •rl•s ''''''' 's ISB1n( o 7 'l• '•Jl1 ... h Jaoc11rn~<>e 7'10 9 • '•-
0 IFl(SV! •1 ?oP•rt:w H 11 >1 r•nWO•l':l'lt.., lll>m 1161SJ 11C<rrl•trl 11'•1'' '?"' squlro J(I •11 ll 11' •,telll'Pln!•Q ! I I I>
Commonwcallh of ctro1t ~\ p~~I •;i.;. ~: ol ::~~tr., p I; 1f" 7'!v~'! ~' ;•.!lp~•n t:'1v:;' 6~ ::; =~,~~lll~c'' ~ ; r,: i1'": = ·~ ,;r.1n~~1-~ 6l • '• ~: ~i. _ 1,.: 1~ae~n;~ I.~ ~ r •• r;,; r~: ~ .:
The current round or,,, ... ,01 1.'l ol•oP!'ttl M! 11',11~ n,.,~I 1n6tll•• Vo~~· 60l 6!1'""1fAlr ~ ••• 'I•~.~+<\ "'"I"' 30e 1~ 11 0 ll •1' •Jlmwa .(Q Jl ·~ ISJ, ·~ .. r,1,,.,,vc_ 11 :tt >P<'tr""T i8 l• llfl~f !l.t1•1 P•y~e ••~100t11r1o~s111r, s ',' ,. ~• _, tn~IC~ u 6l i , 1 , ,, ~J .5(1lT•1r, 3~111 -speculallon regarding t heF'.,...oPt "·' P1E,,.,111 "•1•~ D••• A4''"'l111n1e1 n?tn~ll rl 1 Mv110 ti 1 '•Ji' .... t~r1~1'.0 9131,'l • 11'-. '"wr11~ 3•13• ••oJt s:nn li 8 l 4 P• G'-W '~•l•l nrfel 11 111011 "~'""'~ 51? t 11 'ltl!l.'Y D!1 '1•1 • l" _,? urelnd <e J lo 11 n •-JO'lnM~n !l'D IH l '•• 3•~ JS<i-pnme lnlerS\ r3IC \li(l.S tr1~ 1 "nlw o ~ ; P~nn P•c I , l' "1...,v1 F~ •~Al 11 f11 ... '"' Fd i 76 S "1 llrlt P~I •'e l 'I 1 • 1 ' 11 + ~~n~P Otb 'J ,s I 3 O 3S , = ~; ~~~.'M0,,n -t_ I'~ '1 } •u, 51\1 • 1
II b k Fon (:op l 11 <>•0! W• 1 n!rff)rovt Lu 1!161719~ChU~• lll11461 fltPet fnlt t l'l:o !'4 '1o 'xCtlO !JI 1• C o 19>0 1l J ""' •u 31 )II 10 ?<I -I ger~ by three sma an S 111 i<a 11 011 ''"' 1• Ptlre"' 43 1 tS ff. ~~• Htr.v, ~ Sc <'der Fund1 "w• Ht e tn '~ J , '" , T ... abt•ve ,o 3ll ,. ~ 1 • 11,: J= ! ~,O!'!-,O'I.,'" ,f.!> ll Ji., s ~ SJ,
dl"'tlK • flt'>h0t~•l!O O) 8>11" 00jft'1 lllllnv 'N'V~U!UkWVGllllt 11?1 11' n t JiF~C!QrA6(b )39 31itll ~··~ "1<11 11\1>-ArkansaS \V1scons1n an Fii CKo ,. 1 1111.1 sv11 ,,,,,,. ,.,.,,., 1•-.11 •A ~Pr ,.:..,.JA"re•11 C• { 6 6 , Folrtr.C Kl '', , , ,.i;-11o~·n•~ lll 'n ,.,, 'fD·-l">Cr.,, '" o"' 11a1 11 • u •• -.w••~••J 111 " ~ •. "'I _ F~I• Hlll I t :is 10 o 11 n<1•n• ' ! 1 '• 7• , 'ii•o ... , f\1alne lo\\enng their prune snt;1 1 i • ,4 CQm s1 a 70 1 70 "W'l"S~ • r a ~ 3 1 , , • + , ~a1rmo~1 ,•, 1 ' 1a 13 • J'i" Min 1 "° ,., , , 4', u ,.. , \l.y~ , •t 11 .. Stur!1v FundJ llru~wk 10 l• 1J 11,_ F.i1rn11 !Op I ti 0 \ it •l•trA 1 U, 1, • ~ l~ ralelo7~"tpercenl "~e·1 1111 1 •,~ Eou1v 1 11 s 01 ~vo:vEr1~ 7 4 lt .,n 7•~+~F1mlfVFito 1 1&0 1 l) >it~ls<Aun •1• Mm '
II .-~,,., 11''1 " 1rw111 173 1 M ~'!'Id ro ,... J1 10 t • "'' , l"•nilttl •~c 11 l~ .. 10, 1• I(~• C~ •o J ,. , 7ll 1•, .._ : Pr1mera1ccu\S fttsnHI F' H. '"'•Sc '"•111 Ullt• Jtt •448YCJ•FM•o s j . St r•=\\FtrN•tF1" lDll•ll •,1:--~:.·r,,~.·. 1 19 •• ,. i 11')11 Jl'CS er~~• 11 • H !SIS. ec Am I •l '11 11, "'~'In '"" l• "• ' , , Fnr•hMf Ito ,I '! , l , 1 _ 111 .,,. P ";,j, I< •1 J1 , 3,, _ ; banks 81 e Ole3nlngJe::;~ lhev "nt~ f i 16 ~el ~llCS U '2 1417 lul!Ftr~ 110 t :).< :lt I l •1• -1;, l"A.5 ln11 lo! 'I f1>, 10\o 10,' ,, I• _, ' I 0 4 •' (t -1
bo "n1111v ,11 ~•1~!1\U Gttl '" •u lltl'laW Ml '' 1'1 1•1 1•,_,.,t:9'(!der1 ol(I 1'0 l'i o 3'' l' 2t • '"' 11 l ' J 1 "• dont ha\C prime rro1\ers "'<1u1r:"' ,9,1 111s.,.'"Fd ,,5 9 15 ~11nk lAmo 11• '• • ,,, ... ,F!'<il!••I\'° 10 ,., ~•+"'tt•nl'1E 10 1111'.,, -'•
R B h M "'~11! Pro l • J1jS11e4tr A• "1'111Mll 1>1'•'\ pt!<~ ) J•, JA , 3t'o l'edlAOI> IO 11 1'1 11 N ... ilC•llPyt I?~ l ': 1f 1'l -1 an) Way SD1d 0 be ft eac all "'"'' 11 rt ~~ °'"" 14 71 t• 11 llYrt lrod I IO .. 41 t «t, f'\l\ _ , F1dNMll ~ lJ> 1 , £1o l': .1. t "'•Iv •o! l• t 'r • ~ _ >,
\vh'lwam oresldenl nf tl>e "v• 1 .,, 119• 1••• ,.,, ~ •J , ,6 ,'" ,"' 1 1 t 'I :r, 1 , ,. , -l ",M,P~c eiee 111 1 , 1 , 1, .... ,re'"' t;d ~..., • , , •1 !r ~· ~ 41 r FAlrd *""'""""'Fu...: ... or1>'SJ JI 6 > 4 , ''•+·-1 ~C 9!1 :16 lt 1 ,~., 1 •':+~. ~'ltr ~ '1•, 1•• 1 -'~
N l B k f F~rm l!u I 81 '11 C_,•11 J 61 I '.\I. t~f'¥ 7" l• ·~~. ' ' !• \ -, FHP•pfld I • I!• I!~ 1''\ "•~ ~ !;lo !ill 1 l 1,',.', 7110 -+ " Ame.rtcftn allona an 0 Rud ) \Voorirurf has 101ncdF"<lr.•111 """" 1n....,1 in<11 11 n,;:urr•iu '° 16211' 116 o l1t"o -'1,,"~~P!1 J :•o Xio ?0•1 o" vf'"blu 1iri 11 'l t , ,,., ... , ~d d \V J Fifi (~o la dt 11 )J Tr1111 I 1 1 •! U>/\Vll¥ 961 I 10~ l~t 16't _ , F!'dSl!tnS C,O t ' lt 16 l(a .., '"" J.O I t •i. !'l(, _ mon s as1 lie !il:lff of L1ncsch & Rl'} .. Id FulCf HNUJ4 ~1111111 s ,,, 11 -C-~eoo~c'.s1r~ ~JI • 1i. T~ -.:.~~~0 1 ~ 1~ :"'•,., ~~ ....
Scott Hutchinson prts1dent nolds, Env1 ronmcntaJ Plan-~1~.,.~1~r ~:i,11 "~~i:,.•ni, ~~ J~~:bo~;; 10 P. :it .'=" .'It -·~~t1ifJ~r:i>/:O 1 i!' '4 • 1,,,1,:1 ~:~:,,1 ~~ '' ~ .. : ~!· Oii •-~
flh C aJN'lon•IBankOf 1 •--B h °"""" J.l'l '"'~ve lnv1't61J•4C•l•fl II -•,• I-•,,,''' "j,\ ll K ''''' ,1 )•\ '•-• o C an 1 o ntrs o 1..11ug eac it \108 ifldo"t l 4l JH'"'"""" s•s 6 .. ur .... ~~L ~o ... 1 11• 1,o_..,FlroF11t' l! l 2• .. , e11ncr •J 41• ·~· 40/o-1 ,
P 11 d M' e the fl,l d lf'KOfll !11J'll~F<mGI ..,...,Jll C•fl'IS 111 ,,,.. 1,,._, ... 1 .,.n "'>"" l lo l ol• +• -or an ,,f1 li <innOUJlCC Ver>! 3•' •·•~!tt SI ,,.,...v•" Cdn~•:w i n '1'' 1"'• 1~o+l•r1'l'('h~1,U 1,l •J j,,_; '~1 -'
b.nnk to lo"er tis prUT'lt' ra1c lu \\oodruff who p1c\1ously 1~~1~,. 'f,11, !~ 1~~ 'A~"'1';.d F3u;;is1 •• 'c'' •,ac 110 1 -i'" ,f: ,,,?_(I Fs ,•,1ae [io • 1' 1 n \;~\ +. •1 " ' I r ~ ' Fl s •o s~r•I ,, 1' ~ ,, I' ll\f '·" ll " • 611, 61 ' -,, 71n ~atri consulle-t!\\1lhL1nesch &Rey o:~, 1~s~ r t1 l{0 s1 ,:t11eilfot ~~~·111 ~-r11r~11 1.io • ... ) t,, t11 ,.,tN•tltr { 1 • ~,_ ll ,. Jf·"•t1•J,•n~t
\\cw'•enltry'n'loscto Id Ill l0t"11111r~1,..•1 111•,1•~•t~ J•l 11 111-'t •'chbdlt, !!",,r.1.-1 «~ , ., no s \¥ as~umeapos111 F,1 ,,, ,141 ,1 r•o<>1> ,1,,"lr•ro"Ll 1 •~ 4~1J ••1r 71 +~.i. \lltFd l e •• t:• 11' ,,,_
trend our deposit grov.lh as senior planner in the hnn ~·• s "' )lo•• :it 11 s1oc~ ,, tl t1 n i!i;1~~.' ~G. ,. 11 11\i ' • ~rn~1~5:1 .J' 1# l~ • jB1• 18 • -• F ~t r,,. 5 14 Su..,..•ltd '"v I ..,. ~ 'l 3.''h -1, F ""'".re J 1 • Jsi... ]ll 1 outstripped our forecasts and and \.\Ill be involved "&t Fftd soi r;,:ii • ! '"~·~9r,,~ "'' • 1'' '".i ''•+~,,."' l>f~•so 11•0 1e 1 .. ! ,~_,,,
I Fla Giii S "1 J 411 (vn'll •JI t 11 "' 0
• I ti ~ t:1 ' ll '' --l f. i C I 11 f 11 \Ii c had more mone~ to end 1n ne'v developments 1 n F"° G n t 11 • "' Tffh ••A 1 1• ,,,,,.,tr 1 10 ' 1 31 1 ' •t ll -.,. i. a• "J 1. • • fs',' t " 1"011n"'' 1 4J 111 ~me• Gt 1 '' 1 4 I CorD 74 111 I, • • 1 '(io l~ fa~ ~ t out • C<ihrornla Nev:'lda and "llll"•o •..., • u r1111 Ao 1n.., 11 1 cc1 Cp •!I •5 6 u 11 , 11 \ _ \ 1~0.:t_1 I • , ~~•1, '+ ~.
I Fr·•~I~ G•O"' Tuell.. 141 tl'ol ""•Ctr11 ... l ,~. ". V!o -... JI s·~· J • u.:, Banks art free to :1~1 I t' F lor1dn f"INTC 1 •5 f '• T«t111<1 in 4 01 '"'" .. !'C• 1 ,, ·~ 1 •• 1 S<\• .... 'I) floorCo 1 lit n •72\, »·~ 1 .: = ~ Tiit 1011ew1.,. 11 • •e' 10 o·mtioll "'""
Prune rate ill 1\hnlt\er le\el Fonnerly projCI'\ manager fl«t"1" ;;: ~;!l~i,e,r;~ ,':i;·~~(~ ~::;,0 .,~ ~ 1' • • ';• u, H f~"1'"'JIJ' 1 •l ti '' "'1"' 1tDCt '"~'~el,~ 1~-1 ., 0 ,1.,,. , n , • ''' " , , 0 ,' ' •• «, !''~. 'l", '•1'' +1h s~11, , ,,,_ ,_ ,-m'''' thcv \11 lsh 1n charge of producUon and F..e;.;,~· 1 .. 1 1 +r.¥ e': 1.1.1 , u rel' li1l1 , :, • 1 ~ "• '•• ', 7 ~~ M n.J 11 ~· .. '"" f <'l's,gn with R>c'·rd Il>glcr •· t=a 1r~111 ·~, '" ,..,.ipr Fd 11 ~ n.aJ c 1 '"'' '~ 11.,,• [,"° ,, ... 1 '~ .?,,, '° :, > ~t! '~.~. J?Jto _ 1, •-"'1• t11tr• 0• ,.,,.,._ ll-Anmi11 ••tt Thcprhnerat,r3nl>e:i 11<1 °"Fv..,111eorit .,.~G• 11ii11r:tn111P1110 .,,,,'1i l1't+••"oot.CAM 'O I 1 t _,,f!olul 110C1o cllvnt,,.<-Li.111a.t1111t oi.1o
reeled by gov~rn111ent at:t\011 A~!Oclat~s of Lagun11 Beach f..:'..1~ : ~ '1 l: ~c ,.(~ l :~ ~ ~ ~:~~i,.·wE/'l T• tl' .. ? ~1;• -t, 11'= ~J1110 ~ n' • «'l·i !/•:;:; '~ncl 4-D((itlred 0' HIO Ill 1,7' •kft
'u'h•• the lo"Cr\ng OI rat:~ \\oocfruf( \~ns project 1~~ Trd 1116'1 ... U111t,, 1 1ft ,,..,-en! \'11,Q n'l, ~l t 1 '\-~ or1Mo ji ,. ~·!-\\dee!\ Owldeno .-P~ld l•!t ,,1, 1-,_ ,,IQ! • t ·~•Un, •• I '" '"'c..., ~Y• 1'\ r; n o•' Orr.'tl(• 0 ,, ... i 11 >
d I I lh man .. ncr ror lhe planning of 0:""' Am '01 I •A u~1·.... Fun • ,..,,.l I • b 11 , "I : u ; -' ,Mc,·.~' ) :? l • I' • -,, P•••blt lft llot~ ""'' 11• '"" ttllrNolP.t charge on o:ins: roin c -r~r.wv 1 ,~ ,. A·•m , .. 1..,c-.,"fl lt:n ,., ~ ,.,_ ,,'" .n1'1 ,'? 11:~ r,1•,• i•t~-.c-~11•1iwont•<11lvl°"ncior"-41i,,r1tMiio Fedtrll Reser\ e System Thlii! many proJecl.s n~ ~t( • •1 • ,, t~(llffl 1' ,, 1 !' ?." l'ttd Ill ., 1 • n ~ n ~ -I\ ,.e:=ri. ct 0 t -,, II Pr~r lo lhol a••-loot•on ','!'.'~'rs~ I)' ••l v',,•,• •,•,•, '•'cF1'~,~·, J,11 h 1 • 1~\ 1' >,-11·:~".!1~,~l t J•' 5" jt' 1 °" d'ln. •-Ot<i.rta or Hkl • 1•r "ould mckc It cheaper for Rd,., ...,.,...,. GA;. F' ,., Jtt.Ul'd C•n 1•3 ''°ChM11r11 ;,c ts 't! 1;~ j• ., • ...., ..... Ioli ff J1: lt, :=1 l •~I• ,,., 11-orcl.lrte or 011d • .,.,
b-Onk• to PCt money lO lend u y \Voodruff .... as proJed flat I'd IM 171 "'•""' Lfftt Fd 0...mes ',, !l 7r, u ~ ' " -I -... ' fl Hl. 1s1 -'• ~IO(ll "vlOillo " IPllt v .. ~-0.Cllfff
Out and th•sc S8\ lngs could planner for the Rossmoor n~:;;'d 5l 1t!~ 1J ~ r~o!1" ~ ~t; s~:I~~~ ~ 1a 11:! 1;,: r,.; -.. ,'I '' 'so -G-er PtlG In. •ff• .,, KClll!IUll11¥t '"g'
be p:IS~ed 3Jong tO Jx>rro\\l'r:t Corporalion for their LelSU~ ~;~rod :; ~ u; v:.ls S~ t:; J ~ r~t~' ,o, ~~ t ~: l;' ~' .t I ~ CJ11PIJ lfJ fJ ' ~'t I! -J ~ ~~f1!• d:1':'t.,,l~r ·~~IO'!rvt-!;lld,-::
f I \\lorld pro1ttts in Chicago Q""""'" n s1 n JI"•""'"' J tJ •• §1~ ~~ ft 1 ,'!! •1 ., ~ • -~, A ru1J6 11:t11J111 101 Un -11 litrrto 111 no •r1"~ 'llll"' • list •tvNtM by means o a ower interest H_ ... non "-~ i.11 4~~ ...,, '"ft ' ' • '''" + ,_,, •m "'o •.• '4 ,.(\ l'f',~ " + (, meru ... •-CK11•N., "!ti lr't 1t7t ...
I!Hnols and Lagunn 1-hlls ~"' J •1 • " v~· 1""" '"' • ~ ..,,N..,. 1 " ' ~.. • P -1' •rns "" 1iO ~ Po M " rate 0111 •~ 111 v1•1,,. l:'i j "",..., '°"'. 11. r1 •1, Ji'l' ~u 1n~e11 M Jr.!'' »"" .._ (, ·~ o IO•r.~ 1-I"• .. 111 1troc11 fllrlnl' Ctthfornlt1 Ht \\3S forml!fl) M1r11o> ' ''' '" '"•"•t '" ' c~ "'1•'"• ,J, '' 1 "• +" ttdOHi -1:.-•o + 1. ••1'. •tlm11111t teal!"'"" on --l't"riwll l&A\l"''VI•~ M11 llfllll Cn"" Oh .-. 5" d~ tl llf'l r=t ~ ,~ ~\ .. -dlre<:tor of land planning for 1-11.r.1 l""' • ·~ '" w• 111~111 c-0.... r~,. ,·~·OVP ' t' • •1'1 n ~tt••v Inc • > '• J~ = ,, ., tJ..tlttrlM!011 Nit -stlfll 111 t1111.
.... Oar-•\ 8'' !"r,.lr 1•o!Olt1" 1t •1! Ill 10 l o 1 I -•~A 'i' lO I"\ 1+1!)(10-C&l~ • ··-1otO"S0,01LPAINTINGS tl hi GallO\\llY A!l.SOCll'llCS1<H1~~ • 1~1" l'tl! ,,.,..,,,,. ~IMll~•P 111~. 1·~ 1)•,•1, IN"" '1 '" -t• n -w,. f'-b.cfM>
WMO ISAU WAl£t. OUSI d VTN En I both f "9r1 •• • •• '' , ' • , ., • " ~IMI! ,,. "' ' 11 IA • 11 + ·~ '\~ '" ~ r \ ~ ~ 211, -'l ,.,., •Ml Min Ill flllL .... 1-r11-4lltlf)o an i gnttr4 0 .. 1 ,, 1• ,,., .,., ''' rp,..,,, 1'T •l 'l '1 :;,..., '' t• ,,... ... , • .,llofl.nt •• OPI .. TO'"' PUlllC 0 I • ,.. }< , ,_I t<I ... s"'or;rur 1'• • , ' '·. + ~ , .... ,, ....... ti l . ' ff"' -'I -~ , llW-WltllOut W•I"' rAng~ Counlv • 1 '"Ill • • r 1 , ••• ,, ~,,er 1a " 1 . , ·~l'anc: H 4 .. •, :,~ }' •ortt -w1111 .. rr.ntt. W-Wht!t l SS a;-d up A rt:Jlclcnlf)fOran:;,countvl~I ~'"I ~-~ :-.,..!: i: !1!';1~~1 .... ?"1 .~ ,l l: :;· 'Z';:.1:~.,i:i~~9 ;,, . r"I I l+t\dllll"llllJIH w•-~ IUUM, 1'111-H!!wl
ltltllOINOl!tU,.·••1'1• for1hcµ4<itlh1rltl'.'1 \e::rs he::::· :1 .... d •1·:.~';,.~1 •o,: 11: • ~•1;, :~,,.~.~~ !. I~ ~;: !~:_:1 ~'11t11w•vvl-!n 9'n1trwltYorr"'"'" PHONIUS<dOI r th h II d f " .. " ••• •• '"d r· .. -, I""'""< ., ti r , \,.. _, ·1~• or ....... -...,1m1...., tht 'IDIAl..l lSW•NTSO r('t C'I Il l •s y, CJIO -ur l ->! •••• -,, • ' • 1 I 1 "'~r " •• i~ 1 ;,..~ ~· ....... ,.,(, A(1 .. _.,Ip.,.,_.
duldreninHunlingtonBeach ,::,-:,~ '"" '' wkr I'd ',.: •,·.1•,,:..'•'•'••' '•' t . J.. •, -,,·:_:',•...,.1,,.•~ 1 "" .. i I! 1!::\l"°"'N1119 ~"-"'"...,. Mlou" •• "' 1 $1 I $1 '#Ot!h .., "" "" • )1 ..,, .. 11\1 I Ho 1,U. -'4 "'""" MWllU111911 -.
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Tutid.1f, lct.obtr lJ, 1'70
Tuesday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York S.tock Exchange List
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SC
•
DAILY PILOT JJ
Costa Mesan
Promoted
Al Eastwood of Costa Mesa,
has been promoted to mis
tent district manager retail
(or the Goodyear Tire & Rub-
ber Company s Los Angeles
d1str1ct according to Ray
mond L Grimm. western
region manager
Eastwood JOlned Goodyear
m 1964 as a crecht sales
manager at the hrm s store 111
San Bernardin o , after
graduating from V a 11 e J
College there ln 1966 he was
promoted to manage a .store in.
Sanr.a Paulo and two years
later was asslglled ta the
firms Westminster store Jn
1970 he was named manager
<1( the service store located .'It
Goodyear s Los Angeles plant
Soviet
Prowls
Vessel
Coast
SAN LUIS OBISPO !AP) -
The U S Coa11t Guard said
Wednesday the Ru ss I an
research vessel Seskar sighted
orr Morro Bay is on a fish
survey mission and h a s
author1ly to operate 1~lde l.he
121n.ile bmlt of Cahforn1a
A spckesman specula ted
that the 180-foot craft might
rem ain Jn California waters
unUI Decem~r
Wyo111i~P. Plaue
Crash Kills 2
EVANSTON Wyo !AP) -
The bodies of a I<o.;klln CAil!
couple wue fouod Wednesdey
In the wreckage of ttlelr hsht
plane about 20 mlles east of
this IOU.lhwestcrn Wyoming
tov;n
U!n,. County Shcrlll L&JTy
OVery ldenl lrted t.h& vld1ms a.s
Fred A Morgnn 5$, and hlJ
wire , Helen 52.
Overy n.Jd th! couple was
killed 1rt111ntly Tut.sday 1f
temoon 1n the crub of tbfjr
Beechcraft BonaD!a after 1t
j
I
JZ DAILY PILOT TutsdU, October 13, 1970
CHECKING Khrush~hev S(ormed IJ.N. IO Years Ago
•UP• UNITED NATIONS [1JP!) took ol! bis shoe, pointed it al ' on ringing. Death and deol<:u<>
-Hopes have faded for ·• Boland, made a motion as U to lion to colanfal se"itude!
summit meeting be l ween throw It and then pounded it Away with It! We must bury President Nixon and Soviet
.bl!Wry of the world parlia-
ment that such actlaa_ wu
taken-
Bibles in Prisons,
But Nol Schools
Premier Alexei N, Kosygin at on the table. Boland ruled th.at It! And the deeper the bet·
Su ul ng. rem •· e · ter!" Khrushchev shouted. the 25th anniversary session of m o s atM VI_ re m
the United Nations General order. A. U.S. delgate, Francis
Assembly b e g I n n i n g Wed-Khrushchev then rose from Wilcox. renewed the attack on
NOW IN HUNTINGTON BEACH
nesday. his seat. waddled up the aisle the Soviet bloc_, charging that
t · ht · t r d "there are a number of states With Kosygin's apparent oral.Se s own po1n o or er
I
decision not to attend also and told Boland: "'We live on in Eastern Europe which do
rth t b ,._ r God not have their independence.'" ended the possibility nf a ea no Y un:: grace o
11
~ne like one 10 fears ago to-nor, sir, by your grace, but by Mezincescu rushed back to
day at the U.N.'s 15th 61rthday the grace and intelligence of the podlwn. Boland banged his
De'Carl'a
!J l.SCOUNT P_LUMllNG
HEATING I Allt CONDITtONING
"Hom• 8a1• For
Qo-lt Yourselfers"
18423
BEACH BLVD.
847-9641
MARRIED MEN on the
average make more money
than widowers, w i d o w e r s
more than divorced, divoreed
more than separated and
separ~tea-more Ulan Single . ,
. AM ASKED TO N.UIE the
world's busiest road. That
would be the interchange at
the Harbor and Santa Monica
freeways in Los Angeles ...
NOTE A JUSTORIAN claims
St. Paul was misogynic. Had
to look up. Means "havin Jt
or showing a hatred and
distrust of women .''
Horseradish!
do we call an amateur radio when Kosygin's predecessor. the great people of the Soviet gavel. And then again. And
operator a ham? N_ikita S. Khrushchev, banged Union and of all the peoples again. The . head flew ofr and
his shoe on the table and which are fighting for in· narrowly missed h I t t i n g
THE ONLY FISH that can Assembly President Frederick dependence." Boland's skull.
• 24 'Hr. Emergency Service
• Ceiling • Wall • And Slabs Leaks Our Specialty
• Water Heaters • Drain & Sewer Cleaning blink. both eyes is the shark. . H. Boland pounded his gavel "You will not be able to The red-faced Irishman was
SURELY SOMEBODY can so hard that he bro!'e it. smother the voice of the furious and be thundered:
name the ooly word in English It-was the wildest day in the. peoples. the voice of truth "I am sure that the
that begins with "ud", .. IF history of the U.N. General _w_hi_-c_h_r_ln_;g:_s_a_lou_d_a_n_d_w_ill__:g:_o __ A_sse_m_b_Iy_w_il_l_r_ .. _I_lh_a_t,_in--'
YOU READ in bed, you 're a Assembly. .-
20% DISCOUNT ON ANY PURCHASE OR SERVICE WITH THIS AD
LOVE AND WAR -The
husban~ and wives in ap-
proximately three out or ever)'
20 couples gel along together
in a dandy manner. They
really like each other, maybe
love each other. Jn about
seven out of every 20 couples.
they don't exactly disli:e each
other, but the thing run s hot
and cold. They could trade in
their partners without giving
up much. Jn about 10 out of
every 20 couples. they just fl at
out-don'.& make-it, but _stick
together for practical reasons.
Such were the findings in a
government-sponsored study
nationwide. Sad, if true.
IIERE'S AN ODD one. The
ri.se and fall in the number or
building permits issued from
day to day in this country
roughly corresponds with Ole
rise and fall of aspirin sales.
Why is that? •.. MUSCLES in
a boy's hand just don't develop
-as early-as muscles in a gir-l's.
That's a physical fact. Might
explai n why a boy's pen·
manship is rarely as nifty as a
girl's.
OPEN QUESTION ~ Why
librocubilarist, remember that This session is expected to
, .. NO FLOWERS, no maller be much quieter,
what their colors. clash in Khrushchev 's shoe pounding
bouquets. I'm told ... THE made a shan1bles of U.N.
BORDER BOYS say its ' the decorum.
women, not the men, who The trouble started when a
smuggle the most. delegate from the Philippines
CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q.
"Do most youngsters now kiss
on the first date?" A. •
Evidently not. A survey of
6.000 college students indicates
42 percent of the boys claim to
do so, but only 32 pertent of
the girls say likewise ... Q .•
··Do whales sleep much?" A. ·
About five hours a night in
captivity. They dream, too.
but don't ask me v.tiat about
... Q. "What proportion of ~II
the new babies are born to un-
wed mothers?'' A. Seven out of
every 100 in this country.
-BIBLE -READING ---lbe-
lavl' in Tllinois makes it illegal
to read the Bible in public
schools. But t.he law there also
requires the state to provide a
Bi~le for every convict. ls that
not considerate? A young
fellow may not be able to dip
into the Scriptures in school,
but authorities there repeated·
ly point out he 'll be able to
catch up on them in jail.
Your questiuns and com·
ments -are welcomed and
will be used in CHECK ING
UP wherever possible.
Please _address your letters
to L. JI. Boyd. P.O. Boz
1875, Newport Beach, Calif.
-Sen. Lorenzo Sumulong -
called for a declaration
against colonialst under debate
to apply to the Soviet Union
who, he said, had "swallowed
up" the -peoples of-Eastern
Europe.
The delegate from Romania,
Eduard Mezincescu. demand·
ed that President Boland rule
Sumulong out of order, and he
ra~ up the aisle to plead his
point.
It was then that Khrushchev
Berkeley
Produces
Riot Film
BERKELEY (UPI)
Students and professors have
produced a "fantasy documen-
tary" movie about a chaotic
day in the life of a Berkeley
p_rofessor during a campus
riot.
. The movie. titled "Report,"
ts a film within a film showing
faculty members making the
movie while stu d en ls
repeatedly interrupt with
criticism of the action.
New Theory Cites
Virus Importance
Real riot footage from last
winter's Third World Student
strike is included in the 54
minute black and white film.
Here is how the film 's
creators, professors Norman
Jacobson and Jean·Bernard
Bucky and gradu:ote ~@.ent
Rober t Peyton, describe it: NEW YORK (UPll - A
theory newly presented to the
scientific world holds that all
higher vegetable and animal
life. and this. of course, in·
eludes us people, is what it is
because of viruses.
This theory that an apparent
evil masks an ultimate good is
going to startle a Jot of scien·
ti.!LS and the hot scientific
arguments will break out very
soon .
Without viruses, theorized
Dr. Norman G. Anderson. a
molecular scientist of the Oak
Ridge (TeM.) National
Laboratory , all of earth's
higher organisms would have
missed the evolutionary boat.
If they had missed it, they
would not now exist.
all life, Anderson argued in
support of his theory -it
varies from one variety of life
to another only in complexity
and in the arrangements of its
components.
"A long hi:;tory of evolu-
tionary changes obviously lies
behind the university of the
genetic code." Anderson said
in confronting science with his
theory in the international
sc ience journal, "Nature."
"Why is only one version (of
the code) left?'' he asked. "If
information from the entire
biome (the complete range of
animal-vegetable life ) was
read and is to be read by any
and all organisms, only one
code could and w o u 1 d
survive."
Viruses kept them on the His positive evidence that
" 'Report' evokes a painful
and chaotic experience : trying
to leach an experimental
course dealing with freedom
on the Berkeley campus. And
to raise questions a bout
teachers without a n s w e r s .
students without restrifint, and
freedom without un-
derstanding.
"Student disruptioos of the
story become increasingly ex-
~me. The students chase the
teacher acroSs the campus,
through an academic pro-
cession and a vi o l e n t
demonstration, finally cor-
nering him in a school
lavatory where a meeth1g of
the class takes place. The
ensuing chaos propels both
teacher and film makers off
the campus, while everyone
seeks to make sense out of the
boat over the aeons of evolu· viruses can be transmitting
tionary time, A,n de rs 0 n agents of protein patterns was
reasoned. by being transmit-derived from studies of the ex~rience.
ting agents among many lowest life forms, particularly .=='=========:;!
THE BEST varieties of evolving life -life bacteria. His neg a live
destined to evolve into people evidence boiled down to this
and life headed for insect simple statement: If viruses ll.11d1rd1ip poll1 prov• "P11·
status, for instance. are bad for life, then hoW nut1'" i1 on• of '"' world'1 111011
COme I t·o h a 't pop11l•r eomie 1trip1. ll.1•d it What they tra••mt'tted, L -evo u 1 n s n '" '~ 1· · d h I d1ily in tli1 DAILY PILOT.
theorired, were inheritable l_e~1mij1iioa~tiiei;t iie~miia~to~g~etiih~er~?-i;~:::~~~~~='I patterns f or evolutionary !
useful proteins. This visuses DANl5H FURNITUIE
did by j n corpora tin g IRIDAl llt;ISTIY
SWIOISH CRYSTAL
CHINA & STiil
fragments of the deox-
yribonucleic acid (DNA) of the
organiams they infected into
their own DNA which they
then added to the DNA of the ir
next hosts, which could have danrsh cd1e"e.
been organisms of entirely di(· gQTden
ferent orders. ..~ 2'~0 E.CouHl"'!l•r Corona del Mor
DNA makes o(fspring like Dolly-9:30 +oS:~ Te l: 673·21110
their parents and very slowly, Jwndoya 11. +oS SoFA -M•-'~•r Charge
by evolution, improves them.I.======================::;! It contains patterns for the
specific proteins which pro-
duce and operate any given
variety of life. Life evolved in·
to higher and higher forms
because the responsible pro-
tein patterns were evolving.
Science now knows this
"genetic code" is common to
lIT'S BE FRIEHDLY
11 you ha,•e new nclR hbon:
or krtOW o( •nyooo movlni:
to our area. please !{'II us '° that •·e tnaJ extend •
tr1mdty ""°"'come and ~11>
them lo brcomc •cqualntt!d
1n their new 1UJTOUndinp.
So. Coast rlSitDr ~ _,_
llDr Visitor
646-tf 74
,
I See by Today's
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e SHAPE UP! lfel't''s your
chance ~1th a Holiday
Health Spa membenhip
for 2.
• Enjoy 11\r ~llflt art ol
Ritl ~'Blthlng 81 YoU zip
around lhe 11.tf'a on lhh1
1-londa SL.350. Low mile. ....
• lf you are stereo hunting,
thic 6" hand tubbed walnut
finiah 1terro-consolfo cabi.
net h1 a steal at S7'.
e ~i~ VPn1e mother de1tr.
f!I babysiHer. WIU plc:k up
It lt1ke home.
•
ll you've got a combined check and charge card from Security Pacific Bank, you'll be lookinq et
more llian just fine print. On the back of our Master Charge, there's a Check Guarantee
Card that tells merchanls we'll stand behind any personalized ~
check you write up to $I 00. And a Ready
ReservAccount that lets you write checks for more money than you \
actually have in your account. Apply for ilie Master ( • •
Charge/Check Guarantee Card/Ready ReservAccount at any •
branch of Security Pacilio Bank. Alter all, when you've f I
got an ordinary credit card, that's all you've got ~,J,,.,.-/
•
SECURITY PACIFIC BANK s
'
.
'
INNOCENT ABROAD-Thomasina (Tommie) ML<,
at age three, arrives 1n England in arms of her act-
or father. with mother, Victqria Forde, and dad's
horse Tony. The occasion was the family's arrival
at Southampton in 1925. A cro"•d of 25,000 was on
the .dock to greet Mix , a turnout typical of receir
tions given the silent movie cowboy hero. The fam-
ily had to be loaded into a van on the dock to get
througil tile mob.
DAILY ,/LOT Sltff ""'9 •
TOMMIE GUNN GATHERS HER ADOPTED BROOD AROUND HER AT HER LAGUNA HOME
Gussy, 2, Gina, 3, J •son, 4 (from left ) Live With Me mories of Western Star ------· --..
CHP A Hearing To,night
Panel to Hear Develop er's flospital R eaewal Plan
By JOHN VAL TERZA
01 11141 01H1 ,.llol Stiff
Faced with a recently lapsed buildi ng
perniit, mounting local opposition and a
competitor "'aiting in the "·ings. a Van
Nuys developer ton ight \\'ill atte1npt to
"'in re.news! of his plans for a hospital in
San Clemente.
C. T. DeCinces, turned down last \Veek
by San . Clemente city courP:ilO\en on his
$5.f>.million bond idea, will attempt to win
renewal of his official sanction from
Orange County's Comprehensive Health
Planning Association (CHPA).
The 19-member panel will meet at 7
p.m. in city hall to hear a report they re-
quired of DeCinces 90 days ago -In·
fonnati<>n on his rinancing and building
plans. ·
Immediatclx afler I.he panel acls on the
DeCinces request for · enclorse1nenl 1st.ate
ltcensi ng is included in that act.ion) the
Ct1PA group will deal with reqUests for
endorsement by Chapman G c n er a I
Hospital to build a medical co1nplex near
the northern area of San Clemente.
CeCinces indicated racently he ~·ould
ask for another 90-day delay in the CHPA
action, but a s1>0kesman for the planning
agency hinted Monday that the board
would frown on such a request.
John Trabaod, CHPA executive direc~
tor. said he believes the group would be
"reluctant to continue endorsen1ent for a
facility tha t continues to slip schedules."
Clemente Towering Sig·n
' Issue Agairi on Agenda
The issue over towering signs will loom
again Wednesday In San Clemente after a
summertime lull.
Planning commissioners will confront a
request by the Humble Oil Company
which seeks three variances and relier
from 1 permit condition dealing with tall
atjns at 101 Avenida Calafia. The towering sign issue Oared for
several weeks last spring and even
became somewhat of a political issue
be.fore the municipal elections.
tn the latest matter, thes11: speciUc re-
quests will be made 1t the public hearing
btfore commissioners:
-That a permit condition limiting sign
area size at 200 square feet be relieved.
O,e other request for rtlief deals with
thit existing limit for a pole .sign at 24
aquare feet an,1 2.5 feet In ehighl.
-Variance from a city ordinance to
pumlt more total sign per llncal foot
U:an allowed by code.
-Variance from existing codes to
ptnnlLa pole sign 57 reel hia'-, inste;d o[
the permitted 27 feet.
-Variance to pernlll the surface of
the ·pol• l1gn to n'ltuure 418.24 square
,
feet, Instead of ~arly 187 square feel.
Jn other matters on the commission's
agenda for the 7:30 p.m. n1eeeting, the
body will deliberate on a re'quest from
the South Coast Area Girl's Club to lease
land near the existing Boy's Club for a
clubhouse facility .
The· land, which be.longs to the city,
'A'OUld be !.eased for $1 a year acrording
to the request and would be the future
site of buildings simller to the Boy's
CIUb.
The club itself would raise Ule funds for
building costs.
At present the Girl's Club has no
pennantnt home.
The matter was referred last week to
planning commissioners. plus the J»lrks
and recretltion commission erter a
formal request for the lease w11s made to
the city councll.
The club servts girls in San Clemente,
C:i plstr11no Beach, San Juan Capi5lrano,
Dana Point and Laguna J'tolguel.
A public ht:i.rtng on city proJ)Osats to
change the name of Avenida Tr11buco to
Avenida Pico also is scheduled for plan-
ning commlui<>Del"I Wedneadaf.
Trabarld alluded lo delays Involved in
the construction of the ,hosi:iltal, before
and after DeClnces took the development
o\·er less'thaJ! two years ago.
The delays \\'ere ooe reason cited by
several community groups for
withhold ing their su pporl or the hospital
-to be known as San Clemente Medical
Center.
The area·s physicians and chamber or
commerce have endorsed the Chapman
plan.s.
Adding to the proble1ns of San
Clemente Medical Center is the lapsing of
its building permit.
During other periods when the permit
time limit approached, developers for the
proposed hospital across from city hall
performed work on the site to keep the
permit alive.
But city officials termed \he Deeinces
pennlt dead on Sept. 1.8 because 120 days
had passed a(t~r a concrete pouring job
\\'as completed last May.
An estimated 15 members of the CHPA
are expected at the meeting and public
hearing tonight.
The group will consider renewal of the
original endorsement given late la.st year.
The renewal came up last July, but ac·
tion \\'as \\'ilhheld pending the DeCinces
report . •
Traband said no v.· r i t t e n com-
mun ications ha ve come from the
DeC\nces group. "They said they would
make their report orally at the meeting
Tuesday."
The CHPA starr also will have Its own
report on the renewal issue, Traband
said.
Ele ctric Guitar
Kills Player
The annual recognition dinner for the
F.1 Camino Real Diltrtct of the Boy
Scouts will be held Oct. 11 at 7 p.m. at
Shorecllff Country Cluh.
Reservations deadllne for the annuaJ
event 11 TueSday evening, 1COOt ofOclals
s:i l:!.
The dinner will recognise out&tandlng
w:rk done by the district'• volunteen.
The Order of Merit award, training clta·
tlons and special and den mother awards
wW be liven.
s
Ton1111ie Mixes .Up Laguqa
Silent Star's Daug hter Te14 of. Easy -Childhood _
...
By BARBA.RA IU\EIBICH
• Of ... ~,lllt lttff
Jo fans ol Laiwta Beach City Council
rrieetlnp., a small, ~ blonde with
...... sharp tongue and r 1 lively aense of
hfunor bu become know.n in r.ecent years
as a champion of the underdog ~nd pro-
porient of ao-ca11ed'''liberal" cauRs.
"You'd be aurpriled how many people
actually think JIJn. a Commwiist," ~·
TomMle Gunn. "Isn't that hilarious?"
Tommle Gwin, 43.year-old mother of
seven and grandmother .or five started
out in life about as far from the' polltical
sCene as-one could get. .
SPOILED GIRL--
Daughter of silent screen star Tom ?ifir
and his glamorous act.res! wife, Vlctorta
Forde, Thomasina Mli: was, she sa,.YS
bluntly, "a very spoiled little girl."
Her parents were divorced when she
\vas nine, and she spent much of her
childhood traveling in Europe with 11er
1nother.
Summers she stayed with her fam ous
father who, after making his last silent
film in 192.8 when she was five. got
"circus fever" and, with his horse Tony,
went on the road with Ringling Brothers
and other top-rank circuses.
KIDS DREAM
''\Ve traveled In a private railway car
end the circus people spoiled me even
more than my father did . It was a kid's
dream~" says Tommie.
After making half a dozen talkieS in the
early 30s, Mix even started a circus oi his
O\vn, but it was felled financially by the
depression.
Mama, meanwhile, had married an
Argentine diplomat and bought a quaill.
summer_ ..JI.fill_ weekend home a t
Fisherman's Cove in Laguna Bea"Cn.Tne
family spent all its spare time in Laguna
and Tommie attended Laguna High for a
while.
· It was one of 13 elementary schools.
three high schools and three r.olle ges
(plus assorted governesses and tutors)
that contributed to her formidable educa-
tion.
COLLEGE AT U
Totally out or step with her peers in tht>
academic world , Tommie was graduated
from high school at 14 and entered col·
lege at 15.
"In those days," she says, "they diOn't
worry about things like social ad·
justment. They just kept on promoting
you as fast as you could talce il. I
wouldn't do that to one o( my kids."
Measles Sl1ots
Slated at Base
Health officials at Camp Pendleton to-
day reminded parents of dependent mili·
tary children that vaccinations against
Ger1nan measles are available free at
the base Naval Hospital.
The vaccination program ts an attempt
to stem what health officials fear will be
a German measles epidemic la te this
year or early next, according to Lt.
Cmdt. J. P. Hughes, the hospital 's
pe:tiatrician.
The hospital's clinic will be. open for
free immuniiations ~1oT)day thro'Ugh Fri·
day from I a.m. to 4 p.m. It is located in
building H-50.
The flnt college was Immaculate
Heart in lM Angeles. "Mama didn't
think lwu ol~ "'°!'&h for a co:ed ocllo<•I
-and 1 gut.SI she WU right!11
niJa Wll:folloll'eil !>!' a ltlnl atJ;CLA.
then St.antordJ wbe:te she wu married. at
171 to a fellow student, and proceeded 1to
have r~ awaren in five rL~t J'}~in'
up a B."' In French along~ way.
"I was !"'ylng-my third baby the cloy l
"''~S suppo~ lo gradua~. ao tbert wu a
shght deJa.,r.. '' she recalls,
The marriye tnded' ln divorce after
six yeJrs and Tommie and her brood
moved in with mama.
lier father had died In 1940, leaving her
an ,-Lnberltance that he~ J>Ht her
througliSChool and kept the i'Mii y com-
fortabl~ for quite a while.
NEVER WORKED
"It never even occurred to me to go to
"'Ork," she laughs. "Would you believe
nobody I'd ever known had gone to worki
Then one day I v.·ent to the bank and
there 'A'&sn't any n1ore money so I
started thinking about it." '
The B.A. in French wasn 't much he.Ip.
so she worked successi vety as a phone
9perator, dance and piano teacher and
secretary. "My shorthand wasn't much
g(lo.d,J>_uli.had an_exceUenLmemor')'-and-
that saved me," she recalls.
Jn 1953 she accompanied her mothe r
_n?w divorced from the Argenti~
Chplomat and married to an Air Force
ge.ne~al, to Japan. While the general new
mission to Korea and toiled with the
peace delegation, Tommie wo rked for a
year \Vith the Air Force in Japan.
"I guess J became a pacifist around
this time,'' she says. "During World War
II I had been against Hitle r and for the
war, like everyone else, but since Korea
I've been aenilitely a ~clfist:-''
ACLU MEMBER
Her introduction to the American Civil
Liberties Un ion (ACLU) for which she
now serves as Laguna area ch'aifman
began in college during World War Jl. '
•·J was just so concerned about the
treatment of the California Japanese who
\\'ere being uprooted and herded Into
camps," she explal115, "and absolutely no
one except the ACLU seemed to have the
slightest interest in bow lhey were being
treated."
Working with the ACLU for soi:ne JS
years, she has learned a great deal about
civil rights and the law and devotes
herself to trying to help people -in·
eluding hippies -who feel they have
~n misused. to go through legal chan-
nels to secure their rights.
WOODLAND VISITOR
Recently, in Laguna Beach, her efforts
have made her a frequent visitor to the
Woodland Drive area where residents felt
threatened by a proposed housing ln-
specUon and, on July 4, erupted into a
full-scale riot th a t brougbt· sco'i.\s o(
police lo the scene.
Tommie prepared, aod presented to the
city, affidavits from five people' who
charged they had been mistreated by
police on this occasion.
Her attitude toward the Woodlanders ii
not all sweet patience.
"neJ've lelned a lat Moat. at law
rrom me," lhe'NYI ~. ••tncJudlll
the"fld that 111e1 doa'I -y rtpll
to ·llWx( oa K tllO)' ,a mlllad up Ill a ,
leloily. '1'1111'• - -me -·-some ol .--. TheJ.....,'t ,.... Iii
realbe what • felony COGYldlon can dD to 1
them ~ Ille-~"' -JiveL" She II amllMd bf char8" tbll the • ACLU~ )I co"""""1Mrlented. "Gol>ol :
Leri lii whole j>oint'l1 laW""'a n d ordlr; ·:
that•! what tr1 lbOOI -equal Julllc6 ,
under the Cootlltullon and the Bill er
Rij!bts."
tn OOditioo to 1ervtng, in her wordl, •~
"unoffk:ial mommy of the hf_ppia, '' 1°".irn-
mle bas her mat.ernal hands full at ftom9 •
with her .-uUamlly • .JllOD. •~. G~,~-f-
31>,arid Gussie. 2, all edopl<d.
She was rriarried for the aecond -lime In
1957 to Gordon Gunn, when both were
"-orktng for the advertlal.Dg firm ol Bat-
ten , Barton. Dunttn and Osborne.
. ., After Gordon helped me get my own
fol1r up through the teens," says T.om--
mle, "and the youngest had left. it wu. ·
just so terribly lonely we ~ to··
adopt a lillle boy. Then Jt didn't aoeui ·
right to bring one up alone, so we adopted
e girl to IQ with him. Th.at was 1oin& to
be It, but ,..e had a chance to get GuSsie. ·
so we took her too." · · :I. BUILT NEW HOME
To accommodate the new family, they ·
knocked down the old Laguna ......,.,. ·
cottage Tommie had lnheritt\J lrom her
mother and built a spacloull, two-ttory ·
modem home on Cliff Drive, perched .
hJJ?h above Flshennan's Cove.
Tommie and Gordon take cart of the .
big house and their lively kids without •
outside help. "Gordon hates meetings,"
she says cheerily, "IO when I RO out he'd :
.much rather stay_~ wttb_tbe k!ds-~-~
When Tommie ts home, tile lddll .,,, :
usually climbing all over her and she -
handles them whh-•-llrm but .loving
hand.'
"They're younger than tome of my ·
grandchildren, you know,'' she teJla you.
·•But they all get along just wonderfully.
My own klds: are from 25.to 30.now, ooe .ii .
a Jesnit brother and the others are mar-.
r ied, Jiving in Los Angeles and San Otego.,.
Everyone cornea lo our house for family
occasions.''
. Po~ing her role as what the
laughingly calls "our reiiderit Coifl-
munlat," Tommie giggles, "I wl!h people
could see my kids. Really, they're all so ·
square -nice, but square. They think
I'm a little too broad·mlnded aomelimes,
I guess."
NO COMMUNIST
For the record, Tommie says she's not
a Communist.
"In my college days and later bt New
York when it was fashionable, I was in-
teresled in Communism, among many
other things," she S&YJ. "I went lo eome
of their . meetings to see what It wu
aboul I didn't buy it. It just doesn't 10
with my personal philosophy.
"Frankly, I enjoy being rather rich and
living an idyllic life in this gorgeous
house. If pe~ple want to put my name on
their lists, they can 10 ahead. They can ·t
hurt me."
Arthritis Forum Slated
At Mis .sion Viejo Sclwol Capistrano Bay
Sla ting Badhan1 A public "Arthritis Facts Forum" will P-gram s-ake ·a1•~-I Assemblyman Robert BadHam (R· "' "" rs, spec1 1111-lt n Newport Beach), will speak to me~bers be conducted by two physicians Oct. 20 at arthritl!, will be Dr_ Sinford H. Anzel,
and guests of a woman·s Republican '1 :30 p.m. in La Pai Intermediate School assistant clinical professor of orthope;tic
group in the. Capistrano Bay area auditorium, 25151 Prader&, Mission Viejo. surgery at UCI and chief of orthopedic
Wednesday mom1"ng. Th Id. surgery at Orange County Medical e pane 1scussion will cover medical Center. Dr. Leon Katz, Santa Ana
The appearanct: by the Republican management of rheumatoid arthritis, the rheumatologist, w:llJ joln~him.
legislator from the 'list district will begin most chronic form which affects three The new color film , "One of Sixteen
al 9:45 a.m. at the VFW hall in San women lo one man; treatment of Million" will be shown. Panel membera
Clemente. osteoarthritis, the proceu known as will an1wer questlom from the audience
The San Clemente area Republican wear-and-tear of joints: and the control following talks.
\Vomen, Federated, are the sponsors of of gout, a disease which effects men. . A new booklet, "Arthritis, the Basic
the event which is open to the public. The Proper diagnosis. new medications and Facts" will be distrl buted free. The
club's bridge section will begin activities corrective surgical procedures will be ex-public service event 11 prtsent.ed by The
~afi10iriithilleii10irimi8ii1imieeiitinilgi".i"ilttiliili------~Pi10iireiidii.iiiiiiii-il-miliililili-liiiiiiiiiiiliiAi'rthri~-~·us Foundaililoniti. iiii
SPECIAL TELECAST
* * * Channel 8, Today & Thursday
7-10 P.M.
Council of · the Communities of Irvine
General Meeting
Held Saturday, Oct. 10 at UC~
Learn About High Sch.ool Boncls
& Incorporation Stuclles
* * * Presented as a Public Service by
Community Cablevision
•
I
DAILY PILOT
A 17-year-olQ youth was arrested
recently after he allegedly mailed
a number of anti-establishment
bomb threats to well-known-organi·
zations. Police said Ric•rdo f .
Beker, who was booked at Juvenile
Hall on suspicion of making bomb
threats, made only one mistake-
observing an establishment cour·
tesy. Officers said that on the en·
velop on one of the letter&.. \vhich
went to such places as the police
department social security offices
and Federa'1 Bureau of Investiga-
tion, the youth put his return ad·
dress. •
JJecfs .Build Vp
U.S. Maps Plans
For New Cutback
SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Command
began mapping plans today for a new
40,000.man troop cutback announced by
President Nixon despite report• of a
North Vietnamese bulldup in Laos.
The U.S. Strategic Air Command sent
its entire active Pacific fleet of B52
bombers over Laos for the fifth conse-
cutive day in efforts to check a North"
Vietnamese supply push down the Ho
Chi lt1inh trail to Cambodia and South
Vietnam.
Nixon announced ~1onday in Hartford ,
CoIUl., that the authorized American
troop level in Vietnam would be reduced
to 344,000 by Dec. 31. Under plans pre-
viously aMounced, this is to drop an-
other 60 ,000 men-to 284,000-by next
May I.
Peak American strength in Vietnam
was 543,400 in · April 1969, and the total
is now less than 384,000. Nixon's with-
drawal program began in J Unc 1969.
Sources in Saigon said some Ameri-
can units are already posiliooed I o r
y.-ithdrawal from the battlefield. The
next units to leave Vietnam are ex·
peeled to include the 11th. Armored C&v•
2 Blasts Hit
Train Tracks
In Ireland
.... ,,,.
11.lry Regiment~ the ~lh Infantry Divi-
sion and the 1st and Sth Regiments of
the 1st Marine Divlllon. The 7th Marine
Regiment of the 1st Division already has
been withdrawn.
In the war, about :W of the giant 852
bomber~ pounded the Ho Chi Minh
trail. There have been no 852 raids
flown ln ·South Vietnam since last Satur-
day and none in Cambodia sinct I a s I
Thursday.
U.S. Defense Secrelary Melvin Laird
told a news conference in \Vashington
~1onday that there is some tvidence the
North Vietnamese are attempting to
resupply their positions in the Laotian
border area.
Sources ln Saigon ha ve said Hanoi
has begun its yearly "dry-season" push
or v.·ar materials dov.·n the trall to fuel
offensives in both Cambodia and Sout6
Vietnam.
The U.S. Comfuana reported that 38
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops
were killed in two engagements in
Quang Ngai ProYince, in the coastal
lowlands. U.S. casualties were th r e e
killed and seven WOW"lded.
K"'"de layed report from South Viet-
namese headquar1ers said four civilians
v.·ere killed and one wounded in a Viet
Cong rocket attack on Da Nang air
base early Monday.
In Cambodia, the WAr slipped into one
Of its periodic ·lulis. A Cambodfan com-
munique repotrtd only one harassln1 at-
tack during the past 24 hours.
111£ ormants
Say N asse1·.'
Picked H;ek
BEIRUT, L<banon (AP~.-Prtaidenl
Gamal Abdel Nasser named bis suc-
C<S!Or -shortly-l>efore he -.died, bu,t Ills.
nominee is under house arrest because he
is unacceptable to the Soviet Union.
reliable diplomatic inlormnnls reported
today.
The sources said Nasser's deathbed
cb>ic:oe to lead Egypt was Zak.aria
Moh.ieddin, a-nlatively lib:eral p J i J'D .e
minister who at times embarrassed his
chief by opposing the growing Soviet
peoetration df Egypt.
Nasser reportedly expressed his last
wish to Information Minister Mohammed
Hassanein Heikal, one of his closest
rriendS, who was at his bedside when the
president died of heart ~ailure Sept. _28.
The information reached the foreign
diplomats from some of H e i k a l ' s
associates.
The Arab Socialist Union. Egyprs only
political par1y, nominated Vice President
A.n.w:~r S~at_ to ~.£.C~d ~, and he
will be elected TfiurS<lay 1n a naUonwidE(
referendum in which. he is the only can-
didate. But there are indications a power
struggle is continuing behind the scenes,
"'ith Heikal's own position threatened be·
cause he insisted th at Nasser's prefer-
ence fer Mohieddin be honored .
The diplomats said Soviet Premier
Alexei Kosygin, when he came to Cairo
ior Nasser's funeral, told the Egyptian
leaders the Soviet government would
have no confidence in a government
headed by f.1.ohieddin.
BELFAST (UPI) -Two bomb ex·
plosions damaged tracks on the ma!n
railway line between Belfast and Dubhn
today, an army spokesman said.
. The U.S. Embassy in-Saigon an-
nounced that Ambassador Ellsworth
Bunker will return to w.9.shington early
next week for consultations. touchint
off spec ulalion that he will be replaced•
as ambassador by William H. Sullivan,
deputy assistant secretary of state for
the Far East and the Pacific and for·
mer ambassador to Laos. Emba&sy
spokesmen indicated Bunker's trip was
h...cannection _.with. tbe _ n~w._~pi,~rjc~n
peac.e proposals and that he would be
away .. three or four weeks."
··rn effect," one senior Western
diplomat asserted, .. Kosygin applied the
Brezhnev Doctrine to Egypt and made -i~
clear that he regards Mohieddin as
another Dubcek."
""1 T• .. •1111• I The Russians are believed to f3vor Air
HEAVILY ARMED CAMBODIAN SOLDIER MOVES TO FRONT
With Ch inese Roc kets, M•chin• Gun, He Looks Formid•bla
One Seriously Hurt
?i-tarshal Ali Sabry, a prominent figure in
the repOrted power struggle and an old
riYal of Mohieddin. They both served as
prime minister and also as vice presi-
dent.
ln keeping with bis preference for a
rriqre lib_eJBl _o_pe~ econo~y. Mohieddin
tookaiess ~amant approaCllto the cOn-
__ \Yi.!ll........!iex finger i11 her mouth,
Brijin Marie Hubbard, 2. of A·lg0?14C,
ilftch. contemplate.s which pu111pkin to
pick for Halloween at a roadside mar·
ket o.near her hometow11. •
The spokesman said "five pounds of ex-
plosive appears to have been placed
under each of .. lhe.two.Jraclts" to c~
the blasts about one. mile south of
Lorgan, 20 miles from the border of the
Irish Republic.
A riilwa>'-spokesman said damage to
tracks had been slight and that trains
were running normally.
The Saigon PO!t reported Vice Presi-
dent Nguyen Cao Ky would make a
two • week official visit to the United
Stales in November ''at Prelldent Nix·
on·s invitation." The report~ said he
\vould meet prominent officials a n d
private citizens and would address the
National Press Club in Wash.ington .
7 Y anl{ Soldiers M ul d frontation with Israel than the more doc-a e trinaire Sabry.
· · · -Mohieddln was in the inner circle of
T\vo patrolmen frantically told
police headquarters gunshots \\'ere
crackling in Chicago's Loop Sun-
day night. Twenty polic~men , . a
sniper team and l\\'O canine units
answered the call. They crouched
behind autos. t rained spotlights up-
ward and scanned a skyscraper.
An investigation revealed that a
water pipe had burst on the seven--
lb floor of the building and water,
spraying out of a n opi;in window,
landed on the pavement with shot-
like sounds.
British troops fired nausea gas at
croY,.ds in Londonderry where about 60
demonstrators hurled · Molotov cocktails
and roCks at soldiers and policemen Mon-
day night and early today .
At l(orean Truce Village
• lt v>as not lumbago that gave
Mrs. Andre Bertin severe back-
aches-just a pair of five-inch-long
(orceps left behind by a surgeon
\vho removed her appendix seven
years ago. Doctors at Melun,
France Hospital removed the in·
slrument. \vhich had settled in her
back region. • Doctors at Co"'glen l-lospital in
Scotland have found record back-
ground music is more effective in
helping elderly patients get to sleep
than sedatives. • Ni nety-one years ago M•ry
Cragi• moved to Southwold. En ~
land. hoping the seaside air would
improve her health. Sunday she
celebrated her 108th birthday. • Two directors of the Datasonic
Computer irm have been told they
are losing their jobs-to a comput-
er. The Nottingham, England firm
has decided that the machine can
do their \Vork faster and more
cheaply.
Arm y investigators checked an ex-
plosion witnesses said they heard in the
Eastway Gardens areas of Londonderry
during the night.
Police and army spokesman said they
had no reports of damage in the blut.
Security sources speculated the explosion
ma y haYe beer.i set off in the open to at-
tract police and troops into a position in
v.·hich they could be attacked.
111 God We Trust
Motto Wins Okay
SAN FRANCISCO IAP) -The 9th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals today rejected a
challenge to the constitutionality of the
national molto ';In God We Trust" and its
use on the nation·s currency and coins.
The appellate court today up held a
ruling by U.S. District Court Judge Lloyd
Burke against Stefan Ray Aranow of
\Voodland. Calif.. Sept. 30. 1968 .
The court ruled only on the con-
stitutionality and did not consider the
question of Aranow's right to sue. a fac-
tor in Burke·s decision. •·u is qu ite ob\•ious that the national
motto and slogan. 'In God We Trust." on
coinage and currency has nolhing
\1:hatsoever to do with the establishment
of rel igion:' said the court decision.
"Its use is or a patriotic or ~remonial
characlcr and bears no true resemblance
to a governmenlAI sponsorship of a
religious exercise," the ciccision con-
tinued.
Other sources in Saigon said Ky would
attend the Paris peace talks on Oct.
29 and put forward a new South Viet"""
namese peace plan, possibly a modifi-
cation or extension of President Nixon 's
plan.
'Crrulh Proof'
Auto Studied
By Volkswagen
WOLFESBURG. Germany (AP) -A
spokesman for Volksv.•agen. lnc., an-
nounced today the company plans to
develop a new car in \Yhich occupants can
:surv ive a 50 mile·an·hour head-on col-
lision v.•ithout serious injury.
Development v.·ill be Wldertaken. said
the s~esman. in close conjunction with
U.S. and European authorities. The car
will v.·eigh in the area of 2,000 pounds but
no other design detail! were announced.
The spokesman said that it was im-
possible to say v.·hen the new automobile
v.·ould be ready. but commented that it
takes some four years to deYelop a con-
venlional vehicle. Th.e prototype safety
car will be used for experiments and will
have safety features that will be in-
corporated into other models. He said
that the new car v.'ould not replace any of
tlle current Volkswagen models. ·
Nation's Weather Stahle
Sno w, Thunderstorrns But Fronts Nearly Stationary
California
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SEOUL (AP) -An American soldier
who was badly beaten by North Koreans
al the Panmunjom tz:uce village was
reported in fair condition..today and Is ex-
pected to recover, a· U.S. military
spokesman said.
He is Pfc. Glen A. Vlnderslev of
Chokio, ltlinn., and the Army said he suf-
fered a depressed skull fracture from
blows with shovels.
Six other Americans were injured , one
seriously, in the JO.minute melee. and a
Year's Stronges t
T ypl1oon Roaring
To,var<l Manila
MANILA (UPI) -Typhoon Joa n
smashed across the coconut-gro\ving
region of the central Philippines today
and roared toward Manila and neighbor·
ing population centers.
The Manila \\'ealher Bure au raised
typhoon signal No. 3 -the maximum -
over ~1anila and the central Luzon arc:i
at 5 p.m. It sH E the cit~·. \\·ith its 2.f>
million population. would be ri ght within
the typhoon's eye between 1 a.m. and 2
a.m. unless Joan changes its course.
The typhoon was plotted to be over
Calenduanes province 145 miles casl·
southeast of Manila late this aftern oon.
Jts peak y,•lnds diminished from 144 miles
to 115 miles an hour after it hit land.
\Veathermen described the typhoon.
No. 18 this season. AS the most powerful
lo hit the Philippines this year.
A weather bureau spokesman said the
typhoon was so strong v.·h.en it struck
land today that it stopped the radar in its
reporting station in Cat11nduanes after it
recorded gusty winds of 160 knots.
An earlier typhoon, Georgia. struck the
Cisaguaran coastal region of east ern
Luwn in September. killing nlore than
l~O persons.
Office Crisi s:
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NE\Y ''ORK (UPll -A Louis,•itlc. .~J Ky .. management consultant today went • k on record as opposins lhc mini·s lrl
because it is "detrimental to office ef-
·11 ficien<"Y· ..
1,11
...
To back up his charge. Robert I~.
Nolan, vice president of the Serge A. Blrn
ontp!lny, ran a distraction-lime value
5ludy of office \\Orkers and round that
the a\•erage Amer ican male spend• one
hour out of every v.·ork day ogling minis.
Nolan. m11rried and lhe lather of flvt,
put distractions into thret classification!I :
glance, double-W kc end con tinu ous
ebserYation. A glance, he s:i.id. hAs 3 nne
RC?COnd time valu~. a double take four
!ltconds, And continuous observation,
.. such as v.·11tchlng a girl v.nlk lhc full
lenglh of the offlcti'' \''a! 69 seconds.
Swiss lieutenant who rescued Vinderslev
received minor wounds. The identities of
the other Americans were withheld.
South Korean sources said a n
American guarding South K o r e a n
civilians worting in the armistice
negoliating room tried to stop a North
Korean security officer from taking pic-
tures of the v.'orkers. The North Korean
pulled !he armband off the American,
<1nd a fight started.
Because of !he attack. !\1aj. Gen . Felix
~1. Rogers of the U.S. Air rorce. the U.N.
Command member of the Korean
military armistice commission, cancelled
a meeti ng of the commission scheduled
for today. He accused the North Koreans
<Jf An "unprovoked. violent attack."
The U.N. Command said more than 30
North Korean guArds and civilian
workers set upon lhe American gu;irdll
\\"ilh shovels. clubs and rocks. IL said the
Koreans isolated the soldier most
serious ly \\'Ounded and beat him on the
head \~·ith shovels as he la v on the
ground. Lt. Rene Joerg. a merriber of the
E11·iss del egation lo the l\'eutral Nations
Superviso ry Commission. rescued the
American and suffered a minor cut and
bru ises.
North Korea charged that "U .S. im·
pt-rialist aggresso r army rascals" were
respon sible for the fight. The North
Korean news agency claimed that more
than 30 "army ra scals carrying iron
bars "' attacked North Korean security
J)('rsonnel.
The Americans v.·ere guardiJig several
South Korean civilians working in th'e
armistice commission conference room.
the U.S. Army said. There had beer. three
minor altercations between North Korcitn
and U.S. guan:ls at the truce village in
the preYious six weeks.
Rock Mementos
Gu on Auction
In 'Peace' Drive
NE\Y YORK (AP) -A v.'l'inkled gold-
lam e ascot once worn by Fats Domino
v.·ent ror a bargain price or S19.
But Paul ~1cCartney's Shetland wool
s~·eater sold for $9S. and A-files DaYis'
legendary blue trumpet fetched $260.
ll was auction night at the Fillmore
East, and a curious collectlon loosely
described as rock memorabilia was on
the block ~1onday eYening before about
3.000 fans. The object: to raise funds for
~ace candidates In the November elec-
tions.
For $20. so1ncbody bought some dry
rost' petals, lingcring memories of a Roll-
ing. Slonci; concert.
For S2.50 more. another gained
f)Ossession of a bra onet flung al Jerry
Gnrcia by an adoring ;:roupie.
The star exhibit w11s a 1966 Cadillac
limousine. whose upholstery had been
graced by lluch musicians as Cream, the
J~fferson Airplane and even. yt.\, the
Bealles. Aaron Rul!so. 11 21·year-old rock
ntuslc produter and m11n11nger. bigged 11
for 1.400.
' · . ., 1:15 000 or S{\ raised will go 10
~.. l rhosl~, a i;:roup dedicated le
suppurtin& antiv.'ar candidates.
Nasse r's 1952 revolution against King
Farouk. Nasser publicly designated him
·to succeed to the presidency when he an-
nounced his resignation in the first hours
of de feat in June 1967. Nasser later
withdrew his resignation under popul ar
pressure. and Mohiedd.in faded into the
background.
c.
Heikal. long-time editor of the semi-of-
ficial newspape:r Al Ahram and Nasser's
mouthpiece for many yea~s tried to con·
vince the other Egyptian leaders to honor
Nasser's last wish despite the Soviet veto
of Mohieddin, the informants said.
Heikal reportedly ran into stiff op-
position, notably Sabry and Sadat. \vho
pointed out that Egyp~uld not afford to
offend its onl y source fo r the huge
arsenal required for war with Israel.
The sources said Heikal .. was not con-
vinced and will never be convinced.""
although he does not seem In ha ve any
personal an1bition for leadership.
Russia F ires 37l st
Cos1uos Spaccc ra ft
NE\V YORK IUPI) -Four hundred
passengers \vere lra pp<>d aboard a
sub\vay in a tunnel under the East River
~1onJay night for an hour and a half un til
a ·•rescue'' train pushed them to the next
station.
No one \V as repor!ed injured in the in-
cident blamed on a power failure caused
by a safel y cord being ripped from a
third rail resulting in the jamming of a
c:ontact shoe on the stalled train. The
•·rescue'' by shoving-\Vas a departure
from the usual technique of attempting to
guide passengers along darkened tracks
to the nearest station.
U .. ITt ........
F'af'htg Panel
Dr. Elburl 1'"ranklin O.:.lJorn ,
research vice-president at Penn
State. is shov.•n before the Sen-
a te Interior Commjttce during
questioning as to his accept-
ability a5 the new director of
the Bureau of Mines. Osborne
is expected to be a pproved
after close questioning about
mine d isaster~ and conrl ltions.
The job pays $36,000 a year,
-· T11tsdq, OcLOIMr ll, 1970 DAILY l'ILDT 5
Buckley Lauded lfrges Support
Wes ty to Boost
B ut Nixon Withliolds Enaorse ment
Hope Ebb s
For Auto
.i\gr ee111ent
DETROIT (UPI) -The
United Auto \Vorke.rs' slrike
against General t.1otors drifted
into its fifth week today with
little chance the two sides
"'ould agree on a new three.
year contract in the near fu .
lure.
Al the end of Monday's ne·
gotiations, E;irl Bramblett.
Gt.rs chief negotiator, said
the company and union hed
tentatively sclllcd one-quarter
of the 400 outstanding national
issues. But none of the items
agreed to included lhc wage,
pension and cust--0f-living lm-
provcn1enls •,•:hich make up
!he guts of the union 's de-
mands.
On the local level, the bar-
gaining pace was equa!Jy slow.
with on ly-31 of the union's lflS
bargaining units in the United
States so far tentatively set-
tling all lheir differences with
the C<lmpany.
If they are left unresolved,
local disputes could delay a
return to production even af-
ter the national contract is
settled.
The UAW and GM bav_e._
been discussing local issues
almost daily slnce the 343 ,000
union members struck the
company_ at midniaht, Sept
14 when their contract ex-
pired. Another 60,000 UAW
and other union members
have been laid off as a re-
sult of the strike.
~1ain table negotiations on
nalional issues resumed Fri-
d11y at the point where the
two sides left them when
UAW President Leonard Wood-
cock called the strike.
Much of the attention Mon-
day was turned on UAW lo-
cal 160 in suburbah Warren
\\'here the members shouted
down the company's and the
union ruling body's request
lhat they allow 306 members
10 return to the GM technical
center to work on pollution
control devices.
I~ing Bluestone. codirector
of the union's GM department,
told the membership the UAW
International Executive Board
wanted the 306 to 'retur:n to
y,·ork because it was "a mat-
ter of tactics and strategy in
relatkln to the UAW image."
Lonsdale,
Top Soviet
Sp y, Dies
~10SCO\V (AP) -Gordon
Lonsdale. lhe Soviet master
spy released by the Brillsh. (or
one of their own agents in
196~. is dead. Russian in-
formants reported today.
They said he died Friday or
a heart attack wt!.lle picking
mu.11hrooms near Moscow. In
1161 he was caught by British
lrileUigence agents and sen-
tenced to 25 years ln pri!Kln as
frlead or a spy ring rilchlng
~ets from the Portland sub-
marine base in Britain.
Lonsdale was handed over to
~viel authorities afler serv-
~1% less than four years of his
1s'.entence in exchangt tor
'British · tiuslnessman Greville
Wynne. whom tht Ru~ia.ns
were holding as 11n accomplice
Cf Oleg Penkovsky, a Russian
accused of spying against the
So\.iet Union.
WASHINGTON (AP)
P~ident Nixon_,, headJn& back
to the campaign trail in
earnest, has joined Vlct Prest·
dent Spiro T. Agnew ln voicing
kind word s ror the
Conservalive who hopes to
unseat New York's Republican
Sen. Charles E. Goodell.
Nixon, however. etopped
short of endorsing t h e
Conservative party candidate,
James L. Buckley.
When greeted by nearly
1.000 Budtley partisans during--
a brier stop late Monday at
the Westchester County, N.Y.,
Airport, Nixon was asked,
"'Are you for ~1r. Buckley'!"
"I appreciate the fact he's
for me," Nixon replied.
Pressed to elaborate; the
President said, "I'll leave it at
that right now."
In Washiniton. mean1\•hile,
lhe Senate's top Republican
leaders turned out at a fund·
raisln.ir cocktail bash for
Goodell.
Goodell. y,•hom Agnew has
called a "radical-liberal" and
a party renegade. puffed hap-
pily at his pipe as he greeted
GOP Senate Leader Hugh
Scolt of Penns y Iv an i a ,
Hepublican Senale Whip
Robert P. Griffin of Michigan.
Senale Party Policy Chairman
Gordon Allott of Colorado, six
liberal GOP senators and
se'ieral oth~.r w.e!J-lt'.ishers..
The affair was at New York
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's
* * * Rock e feller
Fo e Fires
2 Hecklers
NEW YORK (AP)
Democratic gubernatorial can·
did ate Arthur J. Goldberg l'las I
personally apologized to New
York Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller for the rote of two
Goldberg campaign aides In a
heckling incident. He also
fired the aides.
hfecling Rockefeller on the
reviewing stand for a Colum-
bus Day parade several hours
after the heckling Monday,
Goldberg told-his ' Republica n
opponent the heckling was
''disgraceful and intolerable."
Later Goldberg sent
Rockefeller a telegram in
which he said: "1 knew
nothing about this until after
the event. I do not condone it
and I apo logizf' for it."
The heckling took place
when Rockefeller visited a
predominantly Puerto Rican
section on the Lower East Side
to an nounce a "clean streets
program" of state aid for
trash disposal
An egg was thrown at the
governor as he was climbing
down from the car. Tl missed
and struck a radio newsman.
The two Goldberg aides who
took part in the heckling were
identified as Arnold Segarra. a
Spanish speaking community
adviser_ and Peter Smith, a
former Robert F. Kennedy
campaign aide.
Segarra said later that he
had participated in the heckl-
ing but added, ''I did not
1hrow any eggs al Gov.
Rockefeller and no one with
me did. and I condemn any
such behavior no malter who
did it."
Rockefeller told newsmen :
"I respect Mr. Goldberg's
decisive 11ction. We have
buried the hatchet."
Na1ned Father
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -
Frank Sinatra Jr. has been
named as the father of a 6-
month-old boy in a paternity
suit flied by a Las Vega&
woman in U.S. District Court.
Carol Sue Edmondeton
claimed in the suit Sinatra
was the father of her son, Vic·
tor, born in Olicago ln April.
BIBLE THO UGHTS
H•w to It. MTH! ltttd the l iblt: rt1d
Mett+.tw, ..-ir\;, l11~• end Joh11 t• Qt ift
FAITH lh1liefl, Heb.11 :6, tl:o'". 10:11, J.
20 rJO-JI , "''"· 1116-11, I Ctr. 4:11. Reid
l11k1 ll:l 111d Ach l :ll to 1t• the 1111d
fo r rtEPENTANCE. Th111 rttd Ach l ;J7-
l l . 1:)6-lt, 22:16 lo''' th1I 1 pt11it1nt
b1U1••• mull bt IAPT!Zf.0 i11t1 Chrht.
No ,,.,, ;, 1•••d <1111hicl1 ef Cltr11t. lhe1t "b1pt11•d :nto Chritt"
,,. i111id1 Chrilt 111d 111 11••'· 611. J:J7. Ht•• yo11 "p11I on"'
Chritl i11 fl1pll11n? If 1101, yo1> 1ho11ld do 10 11 011cf. No tflt hit
the p•offtltt of 111other de., of life. TOOAY lt the ity of ,,1,1.
tiofl : NOW 11 the l(Ctpled tlfft t, 2 Cor. 6:J, "It it 1pp1h1ted
11.,,0 "''" o11c1 lo die, b11t, tfttr thl1 !ht J1149!ftt11I," H1b, t :T, Z
Cor. 5:10.
After '"'' :1 b1,li1•d l11t1 Chri1I, ht it .-Chrhlltn, 1 child of
God, 111 "llei1 o GM 1114 ioi11I heir with Chtitl," l':olft. 1111. Ht
h,1 the pr1111lt1 of '"'"''io111 o•t r there, for Je11r1 1•id, "I t• t1
prep••• , p11c1 lot .,._I will COll'l t 19•:11 •nd rtctivt .,,., 1r11t•
ffty1tlf, th1t white I efft, lhtll .,. m1., be •110," J11. 1412-), O•
you wt11I to be with Wod, Chrht •!Id the •nttlf ifl tft•t 9r••f
Htevenly ho'"'· •bov1, 11 tll1 ce11•l•11 •9•• of elt rflity co"''
1114 907 We feel th•• .,o., do •n4 "''' y.:111 t1 •••• 1cl1011 HOW
to 11111re thit. VISIT 111, Ch11rc.lt ,f Chti•t. 2t7 W, Wl11on St ..
Co.1t1 Mt11, Ct. t.1t 111 hit,"'" ,.,,\t th:t 4tdrt 1 111 lity t111i1y,
to .. TV, Clil...-1 f , S..-,. 7:JO A.M.
. ·' '
opulent WaJ1hington home .
Rockefeller, wbo bu said be
will do all he can to help
Goodell's light a g_a i o st
Democratic Rep. Richard L.
Ottinger and Buckley, did nol
attend.
"I think Charlie's a great
Republlcan." said S e n .
Edward W. Brooke of
~1as.uchusetts. "We're going
to do everything we can for
bim."
Others at lhe affair were
Sens. Mark Hatfield o f
Oregon, Jacob K. Javits ot
New York, William B. Saxbe
of Ohio, Ted Stevens of Al~a
and P..1arlow W. Cook of Ken-
tucky, and Undersecretary o!
Health, Education and Welfare
John G. Venenlan.
Volm1tee~ Army
* * * * * Rocky Backs Goodell,
WASHINGTON !AP) --P_,.. -hloled
General Will iam C. Iba! Army 1-. lorl& "I!"
Westmoreland, who has been poood 14 endinl the draft, ·hid
cool 14 the N I • o n •d· bo'1l nud&iii Into lint, lbal ·
m1nislraUon's plan for an all· Anny 1enerals had finally
volunteer Army, today pied&· confronted what one def'!ftll
ed to expend every effort tu official callfd 111.he reaUtkil."
achieve such a force. .Jn a prepared speech for an
But the Army chief of staff A,rmy A1a o clatlon.
warned the-American peop1r w'Htmore1.1nd outlined • ntlfl'I•
that ''even money will not do ber rl steps alreldy ta-tn to
the job" of switching from a make Army life more at.
drafl-based Anny lo an all-tractive to Youns men. U..
voluntetr force unless the eluding orders aimed a t
country rallies in fUll support elimillating 0 mU:e w o r k ' •
and critics stop downgradin& practices Jn tralnlng.
Levels Bl as t at Agn~'v Neiv P 1•ofessor
WASHINGTON <UPI) -
Gov. Nelson Rockefeller ha s
strengthened his demand that
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew
slay out or New Y o r k
Republican politics by a11ain
boosling the re-election bid of
Sen:-"Charles E. GOOOeJl--
The Senate GOP leadership
pitched in too.
Goodell. who has been label-
ed a "radical liberal" by the
vice president in an effort to
purge him from the party.
circulated smil ing among the
$25-a-head crowd M o n d a y
night, showing off his Agnew
wrist watch.
The cock tail party raised
$10,000 to help Goodell. who is
running third behind
Conservative party candidate
James Buck l ey and
Dcmocrati<; Rep. Richard L.
Ottinger in the polis. The fund-
raising event was held al
Rocf{efeller's 37-acre
Washington estate.
Last week Rockefeller asked
President Nixon to cool down
Agnew's rhetoric and to keep
him out of New York politics.
Rockefeller could not attend
~-londay night's f u n c t i o n .
Agnew was campalgrtlng in
Te:tas.
Former Secretary of State Dean Rusk is shown at
his desk at the University of Georgia in Athens. Ga .,
\\•here he has assumed duties as a professor of inter-
national lav.1•
Among the 300 guests wert ---------------------
Senate Republican Le ad er
liugh Scott of Pennsylvania
and assistant leader Robert P.
Grrffin of Michigan. -
Agne\v attacked Goodell two
weeks ago on a campaign tour
through North Dakota and
Utah and last week called him
"the Christine Jorgensen of
the Republican party" for sup-
porting liberal causes in op-
posiLion to the ad1ninistration
line.
Speaking i n Pittsburgh,
Agnew criticized Scott's sup-
port of Goodell saying the
Senate minority leader was
like a "mother hen" that
didn't realize the egg it was
trying to hatch was bad.
Scott embraced Goodell on
greeting him at the party, and
later said the affair was plan·
ned before Agnew's flltacks.
But Scott said the size of the
gathering was due I o
Republicans wanting to sup-
port other Republicans.
Hero '"Res~ued"
Ruined Car Saving Others
(;RAND RAPIDS, Mich .
(UP I) -For awhile , Mike
Alnen was a hero and a loser
al the same time. Now he's
just a hero again.
Alf\en , a 23-year-old ex·
~1arine. used his car as a bat-
tering ram -Oct l lo free
another car v"hich had crashed
into a service station here and'
became tightly we d g J d
between two roof supports.
The-seCond car had caught
Hie and police said the thrtt
persol\.!I inside may have burn-
ed to death if it hadn't been
for Alflen's action.
The daring feat. hoy,·rver.
left the une mployed, nearly
penniless Alflen without a car.
The 1961 model he had bought
weeks earlier for $125 was
beyond repair.
By last Friday, Alflen had
received $28 in donations from
persons Y.'ho had read about
the rescue. He still didn 't have
enoogh money for a new car.
But since then. AH!en has
received :
-A 1964 model car from the
Greater Grand Rapids New
and Used Automobile Associa·
ti on.
-Cheek! totaling $100 from
lhe Grand Rapid,, Firemen's
Association.
-Checks totaliag $25 from
readers of the Detroit free
Press.
the Anny. ".W,e are reviewing . all our
"We cannot attract the kind policies and admin1stratlve
of soldier we need into an prOCfldufes. Nothing is cOn-
organiiation denigrated by sidered ~ e x c e p t
some. directly attacked by where military order and
others. and hall-heartedly sup-dlscipllne· .... att.jlOpardlzitd.
ported by many,'' Inthla,wecanDotandwillnet
Westmoreland said. yield." _
"This country cannot have it However, UW: fonner U.S.
both ways." commander in Vietnam
Th! Army's top general aclmO'Wledfed that yaung men
chose the convention of the who are or will becmne
Association of the United soldiers and junior officers
States Army to voice his com· have attltudte differing from
mltment to an ''all-out effort older officers and non-<Om·
in working toward a zero draft mlseloned officers.
- a volunteer force ." '"lbelr valuee and attitudes
This "all-out" phr11se was need not necessarily be en.
used Monday by Secretary of dorsed by Army leadership,
Defense Melvin R. Laird in yet we mud. rt\coinize that
discloslnj"liehad ordered the ltiey do exist:" -
Armed Services to take im· The Anny chief ~eued
mediate steps In preparation lh4t_ "we are still flahtinc a
for ending reliance on the war" and ttiat i!fm-the M:4f
draft by mid-1973. future we will continue to de-.
Only last spring, pendon thedraft fer most of
Westmoreland testified before our~reptacementi.
the .House and Senate Armed. "And •• .__ex.en_~ wt
Services Committte that the reach a zero draft, Mlective
change to an all-volunteer service legislation should re--
force "may be impractical for main in ford as national ln-
some time to (()me ." suranet.••
cu I • n
We'd be sorry to hear that your
conversation was interrupted. And
fortunately, it seldom happens.
But, here's what to do if this ever
happens to you: just hang up and dial
Operator. She'll reconnect you right
away. Then she'll make sure that you're
charged only for the time you talked.
We're here to help.
@Pacific 181ephone
•
• DAR Y PiLOT EDITORIAL P AGE
YES on Proposi.tion A
Orange County bas many things to crqw about, but
J)18SS transportation, ii not one of Jhe)1'1 . \Vhat lhere is ls
iragmenied and poorly· related ·to -neect: In !act, -.some--
25· percent of rtbe county's residents do not have ade-
quate public transportation. And we tack a countywide
transit district that could improve tbe situation.
Apart from failing to meet the growing ne~ for
service, Orange County has been tardy about recogniz ..
_ing lhaLi1 .couldJ>e-include<Lwithout consent i.o P-la!_!!_
organized from neighboring counties-Los Angeles es·
pecially. If Orange ~ounty has no transit. district of it~
o"'n, it cannot influence regional decisions. These cou!d
adversely affect Orange County, simply by our default.
Perhaps the single most compelling argument for
establishing such a district without fur1ber delay con·
cems environmental protection. Failure to establi!"h
a lternatives to the. motor car wilLcontinue to increase
highway congestion: ait ·pollution and accident rates.
As a result of some two yeara of Work by the rep-
resentative citizens apf)ointed to the Orange .County
'rransit Committee by the Board of Supervisors, county
voters· will have a ·cbanCe to 3uth0rize creation of an
Orange-Cou,nt,y Trahs it--Dist-riet.---
Proposition .A on the Nov. 2 ballot \viii. lf adopted,
establish the district.
Passage will mean that. at long last, the co~nty
will have an independent agency under the Leg1sla·
ture's 1965 enablin~ act.
The agency will be eligible lo cooperate \\'ith fed,.
eral. state, local and private organizations in planning
and developing public transportation. It will be a legal
,receptacle for r.eceiving funds from all these sourc;es.
-as well as intracounty pJanning and development "'ill
be assured, instead of independent and J>osslbly ha1 in·
MM!iQnj)y o e ciiuntie
No arguments against Proposition A t·::.ve cor'ne
(rom any source, to the best of our knowledge. On the
contrary, endorsements have been made by business,
labor ·and civic groups.
In Orange County's best-short-and long-Lerm in·
teresls, vote YES on Proposition A Nov . 2.
Hippies : Bad fo r Business
It's not surprising news for residents or ci ties along
the Orange Coast, but hippies no"'· rank as a serious
California business problem.
\Vould-be customers sin1ply avoid visiting com·
munities where they face the shaggy haired, bewhiSker·
ed, unkempt. often Un\\1ashed young men and \vomen.
One California city is at least suffering Je ss. Carmel
distributed a booklet warning the hippies of its mu -
nicipal la\\'S. About half of the hippy po1,>ulation report-
edly departed7 -
Long plagued San Francisco is even taking it on
the chin competitively. The Omaha Economic Develoo·
ment Council , as one example. is running magazine ads
showing.San Francisco's hippies. saying Omaha doesn't
have San Francisco's sophistication .. "and that's
not the only good thing about it."
-.
•
MA.4;.,;i;:>o .....
And it means intercounty (regional) cooperation
The pr~blem is frustrating for police. \vhqse actions
are proscribed_ by constitutional prot ections. One ob-
server said. '"The best hope is that the fad will pass."
And that's about right. 'If WAS DdibNE~ A5 A FLA~, 8.VPVY-NOT A1S A Bi 1iJD f o1-1:> • .v 1
-Armor ~leaming, Banners Flying •••
Sir. Ron-ald Char!!ed Off
(
-.... Well, children-: as you remember, Sir . ~
------Squire;--Sancho-Reinecke;-had-plunged-!:------------'-
deep into The Tangled Thicket In quest of • Art Hoppe
that fruminous creature ')'ho dwelt ~.;.
somewhere In the murky gloom -The
Dread Unruh!
For four Jong years lhe noble knight
hacked and whacked
his way through the
t ortuous path!.
5earching for h i s
quarry. And though
he constantly came
across the foul
beast's spoor. though
he often fell into the
wi cked creature's
painful traps_ nary a
fang or claw of The 'u
Unruh could Sir Ronald ever descry.
"Alas !" Sir Ronald woukl cry in
frustration. "If only this treacherous
villain wouJd sally forth to meet me in
combat. eyeball to eyeball. f would shoul
my famed battle cry , 'For Decency! For
Purity! And for Just Plain Goodness!'
And .• .''
"AND YOU '\\'OULD lop off his head,
ifaster. with your Swinging Sword,
snickety-snack ! '' said Sancho, dancing
for joy.
"And thereby save The Beloved People
or my Golden State from his wicked
awfulness," concluded Sit Ronald with a
proud aOO happy smile. "Ah, 'T\\·ouJd be
the answer to my prayers."
Suddenly, a blood.curdling g r o w I
reverberated throu~h The Thicket . strik-
ing dead birds on the wing.
"I think. t.fasler." said Sancho. his
knees quaking. ··that your prayers have
been answered."
"ZOUNDS!" cried Sir Ronald. '"Tell
me, hath 'unruh at last been goaded into
battle?"
"Aye. Sire. He challenges you to mortal
combat before the truest test of
knighthood. The J\,fagic Tube. As thou
knowest, It tests a knight's highest
qualities -perfectness of features, win·
ningness of smile, and ability lo speak
sincerely into a glass eye ."
"The fool, Sancho! He challenges me
\l!ith the very \\·eapon in \\'hich I am most
skilled and proficienl."
"Sire," agreed Sancho confidently,
''lhou'll murder.lhe bum."
SO SIR RONALD girded himself for
battle -hair dye, Man Tan, tooth caps -
and . hoping for good auguries, visited the
1reatest of oracles, a Poll.
··Poll , Poll, upon lhe \\'all." he askccl,
··\\'ho. ls.the..belo.vedesLknighlo! all?_ .. _
"Thou, Sir Rona ld, are wa y ahead,'' the
Poll replied, ..'.'if thou dos t not blow it,
thou'll knook 'em dead."
Sancho \\'as~jubilanl. ··VictOry is ours:
Come. Master , forward ! No, n'lt that
\\'ay. Sire. Th~ Unruh is this \\·ay.""
"11ush. Varlet." said Sir Ronald. ''I
shall battle The UnrL•h over here \\'hile he
batlles me over Htt!re. Then \\'hen he
charges over here to battl e me. I'll hie
myself over there to battle him."
Sa ncho scralChed his het.d. '"But,
verily, Sire, )le .bs way behind and S<'eks
tn fight you with your favori te weapon.
You must face him. After all. you can·t
\\"in without a fight."
At this , Sir Ronald .smiled. "Dost lhcu."
he said. "wanna bet ?"
SO SIR RONALD charged off inlo 1'he
Thicket, armor gleaming, banners flying,
shouting, "Death to The Dread Unruh,
wher;ever he may be?"
And after him angrily galumphed his
mortal roe. hurling poisonous insult s. But
it didn 't loo k as though he'd ever catch
up.
Sancho watched the strange contesl for
a few moments, yawned and curled up
with a book. "I sure \1·ouldn"t ~·ant to be
in that poor Unruh 's shoes:· he said,
shakiniJ his head. "if he ever gets
ahead."
Psychology of Women's Lib
There"s this woman I know who says
this is the lime for heroes, and that the
lhing to do is to take a member of
Women's Lib to lunch once in a while.
"This," she says confidentl y, •·would
break the back of the move ment."
I a gr ee d with
I h i s contention,
!->ince it often ap.
pears that attention
is the name of the
game. Ladies who
11'ho have been liv-
ing under a rock,
and far from the
&unshine of mate t
attention, lend to
be revi\·ed greatly,
and exercised im-
mense ly. when some male ~·ho is not a
leper listens to their current catalogue
rif grievances over a chee.sebur1er and a
bo.tle of Fresca, or more costly viands
and bubbly.
One of the more high-domed of the
Libs, Kate Millett, recently published
Sexual Politics, a 365-page catalogue of
1nan·s historic frightfulness to women.
TI IE BOOK TURNED out a form of
t atharsis. t.1 lllet says. !She will not
an!Wer to the name of Miss or Mrs., likP
-----
Tuesday, October 13, 1970
The editorial pagir of the Doil11
Pilot 1efb to Inform. and 1tim·
uklff readt'rl b11 pre1t11tft1g th l.s
MW.spoptr'I opinfona and com.
tMntary on topic• of intere.st
and s;gni/icanct, bJI provldfno a
forum for tlt.e tzprtuio11 of
our rfatUr1' opinions, and b!I
prtatntfno tht' diver•~ vit~
point! of infor?Md ob.scrotrs ••d rpolcermt• °" "'1>1<• of ''"' ""¥-
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
"
Charles McCabe
.k.
most hard core Llbs.) She told an in·
terviewer :
"I really feel that I like men a lot more
lately."
If it 1is true that you can love people
that you do not like, then it seems that
one should at all costs try to understand
\li"haljs bugging the Libs.
"A<ldressing one's self to this formidable
task is going to mean taking • lot or
garbage about your sexuality. You will
almost surely discover everything you
say which does not meet with the current
Lib line Is a result of your doubts about
your own, masculinity.
This kind of palaver js not intended to
beguile you and It does not. Nor does talk
about the male "oppression" involved In
"''caring bras, when . you know damned
\\"ell that the bra ~·as invented by a
charming social bntttffly. Ca re s s e
Crosby.
WHEN WOt.1F..N IN Allanllc City burn·
ed their bras to protest the Image of
American womanhood ctlebrated In the
t.tiss America contest. they were prc>-
testlng an image of their own creation.
They figured men liked women lo look a
cert•in way, and they were largely right ,
and built themselves In that image, for
~ purpose of gettirc • man.
The amount of self·hatrtd evident In
the Lib movement Is re vealing. and
should call for com!)8sslon more than
conde5CenSion. It I! not very complex
psychologlcat lore thal when \\"C hsite
somelhlng or someone bitterly and
without logic, tlie objttt of our wrath is
usually the person in.side our clothes.
What Women'i'I Lib people hilt In men.
and in the "Aunt Toms'' who do nnt
a,ree with them . are often things they
hate In thm.w:lv~s. Deeply IMidt, they
reel they hav& failed as women because
some1hlng has gone .. awry In their n111urt
which makes cookina the bacon that Dad·
dy brings hon1e repulsive, and raising
children le ss a fulfillmen t tha n an al·
tempt lo keep them dO\\'n.
HATRED 01'' TllE mothrr role is in1-
plicit in the Lib mythology. t\\'O of !he
1novement"s chief demands, as of now.
are free 24-hour child care centers. end
free abortion on demand. It is a curious
th ing that. as abortion has become in-
creasingly unnecessary in lhe Pill Era,
the demand for its legaliza!ion has
becon1e more st rident. Another one of
lhose symbols.
The \\'omen·s Lib movement is a pro-
duct of the restlrssness aod roollessness
of our lime. When American "'·omen got
the vote, the ir sexual roles ~·ere sorely
disoriented.
But they ha\·e the vote. and that's that.
J\,1any women are casua ltirs or the
disaster. Instead of lobbying for passage
of the Equal Right s amendme nt. these
dislurbed souls should be lobbyi ng for the
repeal of the 19th amendn1ent That is
wherP the mischief starlrd.
L1kc the Black PanthPrs, \\'i1h whom
they Identify. and lhe s I u d r n t
deinonstrators, the Libs rould no! exisl
without the media. and P~pecially
telPvlsion. When you come right down 10
it. attention or the lack of il, IS !he nan1e
of the game, A seance O\'er scone~ with.
lh e Lib"or your cho ice nlight still do
something to restore so me ancient
familial pieties to our lives.
Deu r
G loo1uy
Gus:
Hear about the new r.111rtha
f\titchell "''atch~ It TEW you the
tJme -out loud.
-.\I. R. K.
T111t l•lhl~ r.flW'1 '11•••n' .+••'-flel
llffeOl ri!t lltMJ t'f ''" IMW .. -•. I""
''"' Ml ~ • OllPMIJ ·~ .. Clilf •li.t.
Alaska's -
Tundra Tinies ' ' Ne eds Help
A \~ise old Indian nan1ed Howard Rock
publis hes an obscure \veekly newspaper
that has become th e voice of Alaska"s
neglec ted nalives.
Jrs called the Tundra Times, and it's in
trouble. Financial trouble.
You see. mosl Eskimos. Indians and
t\leuts can 't afford
the S8 sub9Cription _.
price. Jn most vil-
lages, they p o o I
their resources and
buy one subscrip-
tion for all the fam-
ilies. Each copy is
patsed around until
it is soiled and stain-
ed and tall ered.
The Tundra Times contains eloquent
appeals to the nalivr:s to stand up for
their r~ghts. These are written invariably
by Rock. who fumbles for word s when he
speaks but expresses himself wilh clarity
in print. He has a fierce belief in the
dignity or all men.
THE TUNDRA TL'1F.S also contains
:timple. stark ne~·s summaries from such
corresp0nden:s ~s r.uv Okakck. whn
1\Tites from the far northern outpost of
Barrov.•:
"Arctic Jee here in Barrow coast still
pushine: in shore. 'Ye sure ha ve high tides
even when Jee comes in ... Strong wind
from southwest arises afli smashed one buildin~· nf native here. Strong wind was
;:i lmo st like the one we h;i\'e in 19&.1 \l'hen
few buildings that yea r been \Yashed in
and some coll apsed.
•·\Vc're pretty sure it \\'OUld do the
sa me to buildings if lee \Yasn't around .
Reason was I s;:iy !hanks is. I was one or
them that ,·car 196.l that do lost 1ny
building or lodging ...
"ABOUT A WEEK AGO, one tourist
h~s ;:in cameras equipment of somr sorts.
One of nath•e here saw him doing thi s
and Iha!. couldn "l understand \\'hat he
"·as dning They do not kno1v \\'hat he
1\•as. 11r why he \\'<IS up here \\'llh
caml'ras. Ft'\Y days lat er. he left again.
"Sf-Rson for fishes is herr aga in and
i;:e1•era\ nath•rs 1\·ent up rivers 1'o fi£h.
Some 11·rnt up with their Skiddos and
rome back home with load. On their \\'ay
up. they even get caribous bet\\'een here
and J\,1eade Ri ver ...
'"Good Luck. Folks!"
I NE\"ER ll EARO of Howard Rock un·
til. ou1 of nO\\'hPre. hP asked me to come
lo Alaska nnd help l!J \"C his nativ e
ni•\\"spapcr. There "'HS something com-
rellin~ about his rcqurst. so I found
1nysclf flying to Fa irbanks.
TI1e Tundr ;i Ti1nes is "'Orth sa\'ing.
l~ike all newspa pers, it needs subscribers
and ::idvcrtising. Americans living belo1Y
the SOth parallel may not care \\'hethcr
lhe ice Is pushing in or the \Yind is strong
or the fish are biting at Barrow. And
advertlslers may 001 "'ant to lesl
v.·hether they cnn 51!11 refrige rators to the
E!'iklmos.
But a deserving old Ind ian, at Boii: 1287,
Fairbanks. Alaska . \\'ill be grateful loc
their support.
Quotes
Edward Brown. Jr., L.A. -"tr the
roltl':ge crttps had l(I pay their own way ,
If lh.t ~'indow ~mas.ht.rs ha d to ~·ork at
dsy lnbor to pay for the \\'indows, and the
flag bw·ntrs ware run through boot
canlp, our revolution would disappear."
Spacemen, i'f Any,
Wouldn't Want Us
•
I have been browsing throi:Jgh the nrw
revised edition of \\railer Su\livan's book
'·\Ve Are Not Alone;• ln.L w_hich the
science editor of the~New York Tfmes ex-
amines "lhe search for inlC Uigent life on
other worlds. At the same time, I heard
another man on a television interview
di scu:i;s the "flying saucers" that have
been reportC'd around ~ coontry for
111an.v years. He, too, is writsng a book to
:focu1nenl t h e s e
cases. ~1osl specufa-
lion and science fie.
Uon on the sulSJc;e!
is based on ihe
hcory that highly
Intelligent creatures,
are e i ther tr y-
ingtocommuni -
caLe with us. or are
aclually iovesligat·
in g life on earth,
~~ •. ~·
\(···
wilh a view to\vard attacking or conquer-
ing us. ·
I CANNOT BELIEVE this. If there are
creatures intelligent enough to spy on us
through vast galactic distances, then they
must also be intelligent enough to let us
alone after they learn what we are like.
For the human race on earth, it seems
pl11in 10 me. must rank quite low in the
order of conscious intelligence. We seem
to have just enough brains to make· trou-
ble for ourselvPS, and not enough to learn
how lo live together amicably. Just
enough bra ins lo create a huge
technology that could turn the earth into
an Eden. and not enough to prevent us
from using this technology to blo w
ourselves up.
CREATURES FROM another planet, if
they have observed us for an y length of
lime. are more likely to be perplexed and
disgusted wi th our irrational behavior
than tempted to conquer us. \Yhat could
they get from us but grier? They may
study us, but only as "''e study bacteria.
Civilization after civiliz.ation has toppl-
ed in the l~ears..1.f. bip.QrY· Wars
between ~ip· have becOme more
'ferocious 8.nd fa tal as the art of
\\'eaponry has developed: and the future
holds grim proinise ot chemlcal and
bacteriological warfare even more
sinister than the threat of the hydrogen
bomb.
,\VE HAVE ri1ADE tremendous ad·
vances in living conditions -but they
have been more than matched by our
ominous advances in dying cond itions,
Prejud ice and passion, hate and rivalry.
y,re more intense today than In the
pastoral environment of Biblical times.
People may be no worse. but \\"e have in-
creased by a mill ionfold our capacity to
do \\'Orse.
Any lruly intelligent beings from
another gala xy would not touch us with a
ten light-yea r pole. \Ve are quite capable
or attacking and destroying ourselves
\\'i1hout their help. And not because v.·e
arc "bad"' in any grand and classic sense
or the \\'ord -but because "''e are weak
and petty and more concerned with our
immediate advantages !delusive as they
are) than 1\•ith pledging our allegiance to
the survival of the human race.
Rep ea l the Miilford Act
On ri1arch 31. an est imated 2.000
drmonstrators protesting <A proposed
police helicopter p11trol forced ad·
journmen! or a public hearing in Berkeley
bein g held by thp city Council.
As 11 consequence, In a fit of non·
\\·isdon1. the state Legtsla lure p,ssed a
law "'rillen by Asse mblyma , Don
Mulford of Oakland.
This la\\' permits the prPsiding offtcer
and a majority of a city council br other
pi.:blic body to go Into closed session \\1hen
ccnJronted with unrulv demonstrsilions.
This is in conl.radiction In California's
Rro\111 Act. wh ich decl11rc5 th11l public
bu"incss must be C()nducled in public.
Thus. the l\1ulford bill could play into
thr h11nds of milllll:nts \\'ho are out to
\\'re ek democratic government. They
CQuld tnke away the public's righ~ just
b,1• raising a rumpus.
The ne\\· law attempL'i to place some
rcstriction!'i on t h e city councils, but
rrP11tes some conru.sing situations in
dt)in.g so. II says. for exa mple. that a
meelinJ: h1dl should be cleared only if
order cannot be: restored by remo \'ing
demnnstraton.
But. if police force isn't sufficient In
remove dtmonstralors, then ho~· can tht
hall be cleared. since the demnnstrators
presumably would continue to resJst?
AIM, tht law says that "Duly ac-
credited reprcstnta1lvt1 of the press or
Qther ne"'·s mcdl;1. except those
parlicinal ing In the dlslurbance. shall be
allo\\·ed lo attend tinv session held
pu,.suant to this section.:.
Unfortunately. this does not derine
\\h'll quitlifics a rel(lrter as participating
in 3 dis tu· bsince, 11te'lrcUcn lly. l)11b1Jc cf·
'
,. -• I -... f ~u~st ~itorial . ~ .
I
present with pencil and paper . camera or
microphone L'Onstituled disturbance.
It is all so unnete6.Sary. A· public body
faced with disruption can summon
whatever police force is needed to put it
down. Or the meeting ca n simply be ad·
journed until such time as proper pro-
tection for the conducting Of public
business is ava ilable.
The onlv thing accomp lished bv lhc
Mulford bill is to give councilmen,
supervisors or others sin opportunil y to
stretch the law and exclude the publlc.
1r they do so. the reaction will be swi ft.
Officers of Sigma Delta Chi. national
~iety of newsmen. say they will take
1mmedlale legal action If local agencies
"cal)ri ciously exclude newsmen from
pubflc meetings.·•
The best thing Yt'OU!d bt ror the
Le1i:isla1 ure to remove the ill-advised law
from the books at its next 11ession.
San Bernardlnn TeleP'am
Bu Georg., ---,
(Do nagging llltle worrlC!:s puzzle
you? Take • practica l atep -write
to Geor,e. Then he'll puWe, you.)
CONFIDENTIAL TO TH 1':
~ECRET SE.~\'IC~: \Vt can·l keep
meeting like this.
ficials could n1le 1hat rnere!y being -~+---------
'
.
'
.
'
. -
TuesdilY, Octobff 13, 1970 DAILY "LOf f
-i
T
Total ·Discounts-
PRICES lfflCTIYI WIQlllSDAY THROUGH TUESDAY
O(TOBER lT.i).16,17~18, 19 & 2ir-. .
STORE HOURS
·DAILY 10:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m ..
SATURDAY & SUNDAY 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.
/' . . I
EVERYDA¥!~
lEAN • DEPENOABlE QUAllTY
GROUND BEEf
USDA CHOICE • LARGE EYE e OVEN TENDER
Standing Rib Roast _
USDA CHOICE e LEAN ANO MEATY
BEEF SHORT RIBS
USDA CHOIC E • CENTER CUT
--sEVEN-BONE STEAK
491b .
691b.
USDA CHOICE • BONE IN
RUMP ROAST 85 11,.
ivi 0;0 Gio'uNli ROAST 11~
--
-Poiii<loisT 47,1,. . 27 e~. \._
FARMER JOHN SKINLESS e 8-0Z. PACKAGE
-llNK SAUSAGE
FAMILY PACK CHOPS e EASTERN QUALITY
-SLICED-20RltlOIN
OSCAR MAYER • 12-0Z. PACKAGE
SMOKIE LINKS -
FI RST QUALIT,Y • 1-LB. PACKAGE
Jones link Sausage
OSCAR MAYER • I-LB. PACKAGE
LtntE FRIERS
. .
\
~ q;p.i ·ti ~~~~~.s;,~~:N:;oo CAN c # o;RAMNGE Jij1(i '" 4 7 c
Cranberry Sau~e 2 0 .. oz. CAN • All vA•""'' • FROZEN l O
l>REEN GIANT . 303 CAN Ti T J • D • k c •'°" "lC"'" sucrn 23 c 1p op u1ce r1n s
USDA CHOICE e BONE IN
· ... ll ',ROUND
STEAK
HORI DA WHITE w GREEN BEANS ·'~ MORTON .' lB afROZEN 199
... • ""N' "·~'·•om• 47c -_. Chicken in Basket · . w KEG 0 KETCHUP .• ~ SPllTTOP . I l/2lB.lOAF 33 GRAPEFRUIT
HOUSEHOLD
TOWELS
GIANT
ROLL e PRINT
COLOR S
,4ii\ ·•-0 zcAN •VEGHAOlE 39c 'Q:p Fad White Bread c ·• v.a JUICE SllCEDO• FO••SPllT . ,.G.OF• 29 OSCAR MAYER . ALL MEAT OR BEEF F d E 1· h M tt• c --~ 8-0:. PACKAGE 47c a ng IS u ins
·-Shced Bologna fl •ox°',,. REGUlA•. '"'"· • • VEEfORM 5 6( •-~ ClEA•"".o . 1-l• .• suc•o 79 c · · MODESS ,.· w American Cheese -~ , •. l •• cu••o•M tx 110 · "
00
Iii.
c ·ti LUNCH MEAt's' "·35c ·• Friskiesi>og Food, ~ .::· ·~~ ·:;.. ·
ti &~;fT~;~le 2oc. i<~l:i(;~00°~;n;;~ 21 c ==--DE-LIC-10-US_H_O_T 0-, C-0-LD __ _
ARTICli-0,KES
. r. ,!;:
I .. ' ••• t, .........
':fl " ..... . .... ... ..
13 -0Z. SPRAY CAN • REGULAR SALAD Oil • 2.f-OUNCE BOTTLE
:::ot;;:~ ,a CRISCO
45c •iPPil CIDIR
Electric PopC0<n ~3=~ • f iClif 'f ISSUE
9u .
SOLID HEAD
CABBAGE POUND
TOPS IN VITAMIN A
CARROTS 1 POUND BAG
BROWN
ONIONS POUND
" ••
•
I"
!
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---
8 DAILY PILOT T"""· Oct°"' 13, 1970
A n tiwar
Mar hes
-Slat
WASHINGTO (APJ
'
Ant.iwar demonstrations . are
being planned for 31 cities
three..daya .btfore the Nov, 3_
gener1l elections, much to the
dismay of some candldat.11
"'ho fear adverse reactions at
Lhe polls.
Included are (.{)s Angeles
and San Francisco.
The National Peace Action
_Coalitio lolLa news con-
ference Monday its rallies and
marches will be peaceful and
confrontations will be forbid-
den.
Going ahead with plans for
Oct. 31 demonstrations. the
coa lition is ignorin~ pleas
from dovish senators that pr<>-
tests against the war be held
'Not Nece•sary'
• I
Murpl1y 'Tickled,'
Nixon~WilIHelp
ITOCKToN (UPI) ~ fll,
.... Georp MllrPh1 ll~J II<'•
'1t1t*led to dealh"'' i t Uii pro:
1pec( of Prtsldebl NIJOll Clbl•
p•il~ for him In C1Ufornl1. "1"'t d bl lhe Uvln' end,"
MW'Jily told a party fund-
raising dinner Monday night.
But the Republican senator
also observed to newsmen that
although Nixon's campaigning ~
would "be very helpful, I don 't
really think it's needed. I think
we're In good shape in the
campaign."
down. 4'A group of us have v oted you the girl we'd most
The recentlv rormed coiili· like to slalom with ... "
Nixon told UPI In Hartford,
Conn.. Pttonday that h e
''definitely" will campaign in
California berore the Nov. 3
election. an appearance for Nixon,
"'hose legal voling residence 1s
at San Clemente. tion also is aCting against the ----------------------advice of some of its new
Murphy -in a light race
with Democratic Rep. John V.
Tunney -already has receiv-
ed major campaigning ht!lp
from the ·N·ixo11-
Administration. The
Presidenl's daughter. Tricia,
Vice President Spiro T .
Agnew. t\.ltorney General John
N. Mitchell. and Presidential
Counselor Robert H. Finch all
A spokesman for Murphy
said it has nol been decided
howthe President would can1•
paign for lhe senator.
Murphy's headquarters issued
a statement quoting th c
senator as saying:
Fiiling II er (Ip _ -•
Th• first water fro1n Oroville Dam to be used at ~ake Perris gr~u~dbre~.king i_s
poured tlllo c•nteen held by Miss California, Karin Morrell. W1ll 1am G1anel~1 .
director of Calif. Dept. of \Yater Resources. fill s. th~ canteen. Gov. Reag~n w1J!
empty the canteen into Lake Perris dry bed to s1gn1fy start of construction.
.tion.
'People's Park' Riot
; Shooting Described
Medi-Cal
Crac kdowi1
Impe11din g :: SAN FRANCI8CQ !UPI) -
: · A former sheriff'• deputy con-~ tends It would not have been
:· practical to arre1l • man he
: shot during Berkele y's "Pe<>-
::_Prison er's
Tes tin1on y
Challenged
plet' P1rk'1 riot.
L.awre"ce Rlch1, nQw a
truck driver. testllltd Monday
thll A!lon F"nok'.t :16, had
1 rook in hl• bl!fd OllrUig the
SAN DIEGO (APl
California's chief medical of-
ficer £or health care services
rioting and ''! wa~ leery of promises a tougher crackdown
him ... l thouBhl he had on persons abusing the Medi-
plans to throw the rock ." Cal program which provides
It would not have been prac-for indigents of all ages. ~~:in~°eif~~~.:;e :~!t'·w~: ''We are responding to an
··no place to put him in cus-alarmi ng expenditure for
tody." Medi-cal -$4 million a da y -
"So, you shot him," prose-with the rew controls afforded
cutor Jerry Cimmet asked. us by federal and st.ate law,"
"Yes , sir." 1 S ( I) Dr. Earl W. Brian, director o LOS ANGELE UP ''You could have walked le>-the Department of Health
The defense in tile Tate-ward tiifn and moved him Cart Service.a. said Mondav.
recruits from the labor unions
j n S.!:!heduli~ pre-election
demonstrations .
The coalition scorned the
Senate doves as having caved
in to the criticism from Vice
President Agnew and said in
supporting President Nixon 's
peace proposal. which sets no
timetable for leaving Vietnam,
the senators betrayed their
antiwar constituents.
The marches and rallies will
get along without the politi-
cians. said Jerry Gordon ,
roalition co-chairman from
Cleveland.
"This is a people's move-
mtnt. not one that relies on
bi it names." said Gordon.
Gordon said the Oct. 31 d11te
was not chosen solely for its
proximity to the elections but
also to be sure colle~e
students would be back in
school and organized I o
participate in the rallies.
Some labor gro up s .•
especially in Detroit. Gordon
said . \Vere concerned about
the date and are neg-otiating to
delay the.ir ant i war ex-
pressions until after I-he elec-
tions to insulate Michigan
peace candidRle!'I lrom any
potential backlash.
LaBianca murder trial was down the 1troel," C\mmet as-~-I -· H9 told l111J annua meet1n~ e1pected toda y lo renew its serted. of the California Hospit:1l B tl S t
attempt lo quash the "That was oot a good idea ," Association that hi s depart-oyco C
testimony of Vlr11tn\1 Gr1h1m Lhe onetime AJameda County ment has investigated more
Castro, a fonner OOlmate or deputy repUed. than 700 o1ses of illegall.v B Off•
defendant 8u11n Alkins. "ft wu a better idea lo cla imed funds during the past Y I CeI'S
· Mrs. Cutro, 37, testified shoot him," Cimmet asked. year.
lalt week Miii Atkll\I, • "Yes , sir." "Wronsdoers r epresent OAKLAND r UP I l
member of the Man s on Riche allO 1aid he fired every type of provider ." Brian Alameda County 0 e put y
"family" 11ceused in the when It became "obvious" said. "from !hose who pad Sheriffs have voted lo boycott
August. 1969 Slayings of seven F'rancke was not going lo claims to those "'ho outriaht the United Bay Area Crusade
persons, confided lo her about leave the scene where !he de-coi•ntrrfcit claims.'' thJ1 yesr on grounds that
the killings. puty was protecting another Of the case~ investigated. he severa l of its agencies engage
The trial was recessed Mon-deputy who ~ad been struck said, 12 resulted in jail terms Jn acUvltje1 contrary to "the
dav for Columbus Day. by rocks whjle operating a or tines while another 21 are aoala of law enforcement." On F'ridav defense attorn~ys "pepper-fogger" gas-spewing await ing prosecution. Such tQUvitl• include filing
souJilhl to ·ban Mrs. Cas tro's machine. "Thirty-one others h Ive Jew · 1ults a1alnst police, ad-
testimony on grounds it was "l aimed low, at his but-"been suspended from the pre>-vising angry tenants, con·
an unsubstantiated account of lock area," Ri che said. "He gra m and 60 are in the proce~ frgntin& public officials and
a '·iailhouse" conversation. ,,.grabbed his butlPcks and of suspension ~earings," Bri1n tol,ratln, meets of "radicals,"
They also cited her long ran." said. "\Ve are stepping up our a le!ter rom the president of
crlmlnal record. Francke was also hit on a prosecution of those who seek the 3S01nember De p u t y
However, Superior Court band j,ftd two rntn in 018 area to l!ougc the program." Sheriffs A s s o c i a t i o n or
Judge Charlea Older permilted were wounded by the firina:. NoUng tha t lwo million Alameda County asserts.
it lo go before the jury but 11\eJ aN Clarlince Edson, 44. California ns are currently in Jn .a letter from Robert J.
restrict!'d it to only Miss 1 palnlihg cottttaclor, and the proa:ralT'. Brian said Oonovan dated Oct. 2. agen-
Atkins' alleged part In the Richard threnberger, 35, an lflu~her e I i 8 i bi 1 it Y re-cies specifically attacked in-
crime. archittct. quirement,~ •1r• nc,cdeld 10 g~~~ elude the lega l aid societies.of
Mrs. Castro 1ald ri1 i s 1 Riche I• on trial in federal even par 18 con ro on •...: Alameda and San Francisco
Atkins admitted the kllled ac-court, charged with violating skyrocketing costs o( runnin g counties. the Alameda Welrarc
f he h Medi-Cal. nd th lr&JI Sharon Tate and then the civil rights o t men e Among a number of abuses Rights Organiiation a c
"fell at peace v.•ilh herself.'' fired on. cited by Brian: University of California YM-
The v.·itness also said Miss Arnie Bingham. the deputy -A patient "who was ad· CA. Also critic ized is the
Alkins told her she put her who operated the "pepper-fog-vised to gel awa y from it all. Berkeley Neighborhood Legal
hand to her mouth and tasted ger," said he had been hit by and did, all the \\•ay 10 Miarni Services, a group which has ~1iss Tate's blood saying, two or three miss iles. for the winter . She v.·as irate never received Crus11de funds
"Tasting death and st"i ll Aiving The ''Peoples' Park" r i o t when we refused to pay her but has currently applied for a
life _ 1vow. what a trip.'' started when the University or air fare there and back." grant.
Charles ri·lanson, accused Cali(ornia tried to bar street I f,=~======~~~~-~~~~~-~ mastermind of the killings. people from a volunteer pa rk1~
Miss Alkins. and tile two other thev had built on a school-
you ng v.·omen codefendnnts. owried vacant lot.
ILlllll
DENTAL
PLATES
Leslie Van Houten a n d
Patricia Krenwlnkel. have not
been in court •Ince 111t Mon-
day . On that day toe hippie
cult leader /umped at Older
wllh 1 penci • making threats
on the Juda•'• llfe while Uie
thrH women rhanted. They'
were ordered from t h e
courtroorn until thl)' prnmlled
to behlvt and lll'lrned to the
proceedings In 11 room out of
court ·via loudspeaker.
AMERICA'S
Gf'EATEST
HAAOWA"E
STORES
CREDIT TERMS TO YOUR NEEDS
Bu ilding Bu rns
SAN FRANCISCO !UPI ) -
A rour-alarm fire quickly gut·
ted an unoc'Cupied lhree-stor)'
office building in downtown
San F'ranclsco Monday night
that was hit by a general-
alacm blaze a monlh ago.
"Ifs arson . allright:• said GRAND Fire Chief William Murray as
ht stood in front of lhe burn-~lric~!ld~~re~~ i:iSsi~ OPENllG
Slr«I. OCTOBER 22
EVERYTHING TO
BUILD ANYTHING
----
All Credit Handled By My Own Office!
No Bank Or Finance Co. To Deal With
ON APPl'.OVEO CllEOIT
VERY LOW PRICES
ON
All Branches Dentistry
DINTAL PU.TIS e l lUDGIWOll( e X·lAYS ~ INU.YS
lllLLINGS e ClOWNS e UTU.CTIONS e PAlTIAl.S
Sodium Pentothal Given
QU ICK PU. TE REl'A IU WHILE YOU WAIT
NO Al'l'OINTMINT NICllSAIY
U•I• Mtmbtn & Stftlor Cltl1ens Welc•m•
DR. WAn
267 IAST 17th ST., COIT.A MIS.A
PHONE 848·112
l •"kAmerlc1r4 M11Nr Chartt
''" IJ1rkl111 • Air CMflltl•* e .,_M ,,..,
Gigantic Offshore
Airport Propose d
LAKEWOOD tAP) -A Green csti1naled the landfill have slumped for the in· "I would be tickled 1o de111h
if he would come ouL Arler
all. he Is my No. I ronstituent. l would cost SI billion i£ done by cumbent. Canoga Park firm Pans lo un-No date was announced for
veil here Friday a proposal fo r conventional means. However,;==========">
building a gigantic airport he said this amount could be
outside the Long Beach and reduced by one-th.ird using
"He knows I support him on
his Vietnam policies ... as "'cit
as his major anticrimc pro·
posals. And he knows my op·
ponerit his opposed hi,m on
thalt program•. So I would
think-M would hive a natural
interest in my re-e lection."
Who Cares?
d No othtr now1popor in tho Los Angeles harbors. novel technique1 u n 1 r •frltl c•r•1 ,.,,11t vour co111111u.
The presentation to the development by his firm. He 11tty ll~t_y•ur 4trii1r111nity 4•ily
-C d'"nol elaborate on "·'·i'· ol-''i·c"".~''' · ''!!t lt'1 tko DA U.!.. state's Joint Legislati ve om-KV _ .. ,.. p OT
mittee envisions the con-~lhe:;;~"'::;w~p;roced;;;""'~-~---';;=;;;;;
struction of a 10,00()..acre[lr
island about three miles off
San Pedro's Point Fermin.
The. man-made island would l
be connec ted lo the mainland
hy two highways and a '
cause.way . I
Donald W. Grecn ;-prcsldent
of Macro Synetic Systems
which has spent $250,000 in
prelim inary· e ngine e ring
studies, said the airport could
be in operation within four
y'!ars.
"The only question i s
v.·hether the project is
politically feasible at this
time," he added. I
SPIRAL ILICID
WHOLI OR HALP:
-HAMS
" • . . So Good It Will
H•~!lt_J•11_ 'Til lt'a Gone"
lnAIL STOllS
3700 l 11t Coost Hltllwoy, CoroN 4al M1r-61J-f000
1222 s. l roo khur•t, ~n.holm •l S·24•1
(Funds invested by October 15th earn from October 1st)
with quarterly inletwt action
No long-term requirements. $5.000 fall.Plid
I nwstment Certificates eam 8% per year. paid by
check at the end of each calendar quarter on cerllfi.
catea held to end ot quaiW.
with daily int81'8Sl 8Cllan
Paid on any amounl PasabOok Thrift Accou111s
of any amount-.n 5141% per,_11om day invested
to day wlthdmm. lnlelell cnicllted end~
quartefty.
Plus 54 Years al Sound Mlnagem&r1t
A half century of proven management experience, a
perfect record of regular inMast payments, assets in
excess of $150 minion. and the protectM llquldlly of
shorMenn loa~ combine to Mleguanf your fUnds.
•
Morris Plan Ma llwe,. met on d••'td •c•IJ request
for withd,_.L Your tunda 1re lnlnMlcllat8ly .. 111ble.
Morris Plan
For Interest with aotion, phone or l'i~n your Morr;. PiM office:
New,•rl huh -1100 Plew',orl 11,4, -671-3700
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For The
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.Diss.olutions
~t ltlarrif!ge.
Birtlas
ST. JOSl!"K HOSPITAL Stot. 11
Mr. end M". Ernest G. To ... +tr. 32:$.1 Mon1tnt "•en...e, co111 Me~. 9Jrl. s..,1. n Mr, •nd Mr1. J1me1 S. Jenn\ng1. llf
.t.11o11e, 811DOI 1111,,.,, bov.
GAROEN l'Allllt Ol!!ltElliliL K0$1"1T.l.L s...,1. 11
HEADS COMM ITTEE
Chapman's D~vJs
Jolin Davis
Heads 1970
A 1vard Unit
ANAHEIM -Dr. John L.
Da vis, president of Chapman
College, will head the 1970
"Disneyland Co mm u n -it y
Service Aw<i.rds Committee.
The awards committee com·
posed of six prominent Orange
County citizens will select the
recipients of the 1970 awards.
Other members of the com·
mittee are f\trs. Leonard V.
Mr. 111<1 Mr>. Hlrrv V, Wlllle Jr .. le6SI Eo•e! Ltne, Hunllnotot0 Blltll. olrl Mr. I nd Mro. ltltlltrd J. I( nneY. 11h1 ~~.'1. Leandro L•~· Huntlnaton lltlCI"\, s"''"""' 13, .,,. Bouas. Anaheim: f\1rs. Peter
l\.V. Ind MrJ. Wllll•m .... D1vll. ~ Gloucesltr Drive. Coit• Mt••· o!rl Churm. Fullerton : M r S .
Mr. •mf Mri. ThtOdOre ltowlrT JOU! R fd B Soruce ..... enll<I!. S•nl• ... n •. alrl' on-a . D r u m m 0 n d ' Mr. •nd Mrt. ll.1Ymond CYn.r UUI C ' t Be h W'JI" Clemson St1et•. Wtt1mln!"'· Do... ap1s rano ac ; I 1am R.
Mr;. •ncl• Mr•. Rlclllrct w 1111mi. :r:na Maso" Ne•~rt Beach and •lltl -· N-DO<t hKh. boY , • •rv Mr. •fKI MrJ. Anthony Mo1JQ 113' ' H"l h" N"ll r s ta An Mlrlln WIV, Ntwl)Qrl 8tK¥1, 01r1 I OS I l a_ 0 an a. Mr. Ind Mrs. Tlll'IOTIW Mcl(1nn1, 11111 I · l(,envqn Drive, e, Tu•tln, Dov I Will be lhe Committee·~
Mr. •I'd Mr•. r1ncl.ca Rios, 21» k · · ·
M
11.1111qh, Coi.t• M111, bov . las to select lhe recipients of r. Ind Mrs, srr,·hen Grave 191 Der· h re11 S!reei. cos • ~·· alrl t e 25 cash awards lo be Mr. Ind Mro. VtVQhll M.rhtws, Ut~! ted Jetterion s1r.,.1: Mlclw•• c11v, o!rl • presen to Orange County s ... 11m1Mr 1l, 1'71 · • . Mr. '"" Mrs. A11>err or1nte. ,10 w. groups or orga ruzauons which
1111> Street. A, CatT1 Mes., Twin have COfldUCLed the most Glrll ' . . Mr. tnQ Mri. Frtnl.lln l-!1vmare lllS Outstanding C 0 mm ll 0 It Y Canadian Drive. CClTa Mtlt alrf Sf 'c f lh Mr. end Mr•. Mlch1e1 '"'''"'' 211 c rv1 e programs o e year. Ncr!I> Plactntlt, Plllttnllt, b<:lv • • Mr. 1nd Mr,. Herm•n Man1a1•, n.u This yejl:r Dl~neyland has 1n-w11tace fotQ. ,, (0511 Mew. tloY --- - -Mr. ind' Mrt. J1mu L. ao .... ,,. 111n creased the tolal cash awards Gltedl Strfft. Hunll"1'°" llt1c1>. bow lo "5 000 nd · ed the t Mr. 1nt1 Mrt. 0enn11 1r11111t1r, 112t1 "" , a rats op ~i~fmou'" Line, HunHnaron B•tch. award to $7 ,500. In addition,
Mr. 1r>e1 .J.frl~~~kn:ech~r. 911 there will be three $3,000 · M~.a~~ 'l.i,..untiJ::I r.,1r.~·~i•o~11,...... a\\'ards, three $1.500 awards,
Orlve. S1nl• 11111. boY · $1 000 d I $500 Mr and Mro. ~•even Mltrs, 1910 n1ne , , an en M~"~~"J:~~ele.-'.re~i~kMS~~'w.~~3~, w. av»ard s. 1S91h Slreel. L1wnd1ll boY h" . Mr 1nd Mrs. Lu•t 11 ... d..,u. fl'~ Port T IS lS the fourteenlh year Selbo!"n WIY. N-1 B1K¥1. ftlrl f th d , Mr. ana Mr• Maurice Hcrtm•;;1'. tt1 or e av"ar s program which
-Seottr. Costa Mt••· alrl · ed · Mr. and Mrs. T•nY s1 ... m1. '4J Jotnn was 1nauguralv in 1957 to Slrttl. Cg1t~ M .. a, bov 'd . 1. f Jo s1011mbtr u , un prov1 e an 1nce n 1ve or cal Mr Incl Mrs. Gtr•kl L1nc111., BOl · t' d I nd .a.1abam• srr~1. c. Hun1ina!on 8e1en. organ1z.a ions to eve op a
""1 d tak Mr. and Mr<. T110m11 w. M0<H. "" un er e programs of com· S. M•d<IQCk, S1nlf Ana olrl "l bell Mr. Ind Mro. Ttrr1ncf Rytn, 111• mum Y erment.
Pomcn•. C. Co111 Mt••· boy Mr. 111(1 Mrs. Mlchatl J . McC tllrev. ?l•I ltvlne AYtnut, Ntwocrl lle1ch, .,,
Mr. and M,., Caren A. Groin, •IOS Dant Ra.ad. Ntwoort lletch. olrl M•. and Msr. Donald L Tl\OITl01on, )1 ' M1rl0<1ld'St<i."~'iiiCt~e~l~l~'ft b<:IY
Mr, and Mro. Robl!rt S1n11<:1rn, lDtl ~Ill S1il1 Way, Caron• Qel Mir,
M r 1nd "'"· eruct Reddick, n 111 GreenDofo Lane, Hu110na10n ll11c1>, .,, Mr. ~nd Mrs. Gtcroe McC\uskPv, ?tlS 9•1>!1 s1,ee1. COit• M•••· bov Mr ancl Mrs. H1J•Cf' T. l'"t v, Ill. 400
E. 7111 51'5':~1.m'&:fD{~, '•rt"· b<:IY Mr a~d M... Hal Buc1>1n1n, 'DIC "••Mor> Park Av•nuf, Or1net, b<:IY Mr. enCI Mro. Frfclfrlck SIO'l'll, ifUl'" W, M111rle Avenvt, Sanl• An.. bOY Mr. 1nd Mrs. Ml<htel Pe1rl m1n, 111'1 Mcl(,Jnne~ Circle, NYntln<r!O!I a11ch,
111r1 MS1.1~. ~~ .. ,~1:rv:ri~ a~:'t"r¥. 1041!
M5,,:~ :f:!·~\"f!~~~~::~r· 721 lS!~
Any group. organization or
club in Orange C()unty,
regardless of size, which con·
ducts communitY service ac-
tivities is eligible to
p a r t icipate. Organizations
v.•hich intend to submit ap-
plications this year should
contact the Disneyland Com·
munily Re lations Ofrice as
soon as possible.
Talk Slated
Mawhinney
-Re-elected
By Society
ORANGE; J91\" R .
Mawhinney of Fullerton has
• been re-elected president of
the board of dlrt<?tcrs of the
Easter Seal Society for Crip-
pled Chlldren and Adults -of
Orange County.
Other officers elected to
serve with Mawhinney for the
coming year are:
Eugene F. Tull of Tustin,
first vice. president: Kenneth
Cory of Anaheim, second vice
president ; Calvin P. Schmid t
of Costa Mesa. secretary:
Fred Nyquist of Newport
Beach. lreasurer, aod Robert
A. Li neberger of Fullerton,
assistant secretary-treasurer.
Directors of the Easter Seal
Society in addition to the new·
ly elected officers include :
Mrs. L. J. Cella Jr., Santa
Ana; George Hill, Laguna
Beach; Edward Just, Fountain
Valley ; Dr'. Robert Olander;
Newport Beach; Jo s eph
Sahagen, Corona de! 11ar:
Ernest W. Thompson, San
Juan Capislrano and Cecil
Wright, Orange.
Also. Rev. Jamts Stewart,
Irvine ; ~trs. Pat Tonner,
Laguna Niguel: Richard Child,
Garden Grove : \Vitliam Olson,
Orange; Andy Veje. Santa
Ana; Phil Eastman. Newport
Beach, and Raymond L.
Watson, Ir vine.
Supervisors
OK Two Bids
SANTA ANA -Two con·
tracts totaling almost $400,000
ha ve been · approved by the
Orange County Board-of
Supervisors.
Douglas Campbell Company
of Fullerton was the suc-
cessful bidder at $!97,333 to
construct an addition to the
c o u n t y C o mmunications
Center on f\1.anchester Avenue
in Orange . There were 13 bids.
The estimated cost w a s_
$300.000.
Al1no Electric Company Ind.
of Los Angeles was the low
bidder at $100,277 for the con-
struction of a new electric
distribution system for the
Orange County Me. d i ca 1
Center. There were nine blds.
$93.000.
SA Attorney
H eads Drive
Profs Eye
Balloon
Barrage
ORANGE -Faculty and
administrators, garbed I n
plastic bags. raincc. .. ts and
other \vater .rep elle nt
paraphernalia, y,•i!l be the
targets or student "unr,est'' at
11 a.m. Thursday on the Chap-
man College campus. when
sludenli _will toss waterfilled
balloons along a specified
ro ute in the Shady Quad.
"It's a good y,•ay to take out
your fr ustrations." explained
Nancy Witte. president of
Thetas , the Y.'Omen's se rvice-
social organization sponsori ng
the eve nt.
Prizes y,•ilJ go !o faculty
members who complete the
course in the shortest and
longest limes.
Last year. JO facul t y
members braved the "Balloon
\Valk." Students hope for
more participants this year,
said Miss Witte, a senior
physical education ma j o r .
There is oo shortage of
students to throw the soggy
missiles, she observed.
Cigarette,
Road Tax
PortionTold j
SANTA ANA -Orange
County has received $935,768
or their portion of September
highway users lax and August
cigarette tax. it was an ·
nounced by state controller
Houston 1. Flournoy.
Of the highway users tax,
$914 ,997 went to the county,
SS-4.,732 to Costa Mesa , $10,433
lo Laguna Beach. $35.027 to
Newport Beach, $12,751 to San
Clemente. $17,913 to Seal
Beach. $21.987 to Fountain
Vall ey, $84.732 to Huntington
Beach and $3,007 to San Juan
Capistrano.
The county 's share of the
cigarette tax moneys I s
ORANGE-John B. Hurlbut $19,771. The cily of Costa
Jr., a Santa Ana attorney. hes Mesa received $27,149. Laguna
been appointed the 1970.71 Beach got $4.772, Newport.
Stanford A n n u a I Fund Beach received $16,265. San
De al/1 No tices On Transit chairman for Orange. County. Clemente was given $4.287,
""NsoN Hurlbut . a reSident 0 r Seal Beach got $4.951. f'oun·
v1v;1nne "'""'"" A•t se. or J1s ?nd s1. ANAHElt<.f _ 1\-lrs. 'lary· Orange, graduated from Stan· lain Valley received $6.533, Huntino!cn ll11cll. Dale or dttln. Oclobl!r " r rd . 96 and H "ling! Be h . 10. servictt. Thurl<l.lv. , PM. sm1111s Evelyn Bryden. president or o in I I earned his law u., on ac was given
1
Tue~aJ, Octobtr 1.3, 1470 DAILY PILOT 9
Oceano graph y Futur e 'Tremendous' ..
Editor's Note: Tiils Is !11t
second of thrtt stone~
dealing with educatlun i'11
tlu: fttW of ocea11ograplly.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Qi Tiit 01llv 1'1111 lltH
AVALON -The seas are
being balled as one 'of the 13st
ereat fr ontier s an d
oceanography education is
becon1ing a standard lte111 in
more schools.
But what are the facts of
life for an oceanography
graduate seeking work ln the
field'.'
l\lartin Brown. hea d of
r~ullerton J u n i or College's
oceanograe_hy technician pro-
gram, says the immediate
outlook is not good, but future ·
job opportunities 'A'ill be
tremendous.
COJl"ductcd reccn!ly on Catalina
Island.
Bro>A'Tl said there was a
s ub11lant l 1:1l manpower
shortage during what he called
oceanography's s p a w n I n g
years oi the_ear\y ·eo·s.
"The race. began when lt
y,·as predicted the need ror
o c e a n ography technicians
Alone would be at least 1,000
by 1973," he noled.
(,'urrently there are 20 pro-
grams in community colleges
na tionwide which will produce
41)(1 technicians in marine
related fields including con·
struction. f i s h t r I e s and
petroleum.
In Californ ia alone there arc
technician programs offered
at the College or l\larin,
College of the Reclw~
tEureka). Fullerton Junior
College, Orange Coast Coll ege.
Santa Barbara City College
and San Diego City College .
The courses offered al these
colleges include s c u b a di\'·
ing, hard hat diving. elec-
tronics. navigation, equipment
operation and seatnanship.
"Al the moment. the de-
mand for jobs has n()t caught
up 'vith the ad vanced bill ing.
But in a few years. when in·
dust ry and governn1ent really
do niove Int o the oceans, the
jo~s will be in ~arge suppl y."
said Brov.•n during a national
.conference on marine sc iences
Hescue Classes
Sia led a I Post
"But until more industri<'~
n1ove into the ocean and
-unless· the federal govern·mcnt
inc reases. funds for research
\VESTf.11NSTER -The
public is Invited lo a presen-
tation on re scue breathing
techniques to be held at 7:30
o'clock ton ight in the multi-
purpose roorn at Post Elen1en·
/ Olll ' so ;· ...
" \(ONG"''}
projects. the students who
graduate from the technician
program! as well as UlOM In
the science and engineering
fields, will tiave a tough Ume
findin& w o r k , ' ' Brown
predicted.
'But he. l.sn't en t I re l"Y
pessimistic about the job
situation.
.. ~~il"llt ()f all. 1 think ll is a
Rood idea ror educators · to
ease up on their recruiting
programs. I don 't mean they
should discouraae students.
but at least let them know
what the job outlook is for the
imn1ediate future.
"Then v.·e as educators
should take-advantage of
slow down to scrutinize our
programs. We've been on the
run eve r since. we started and
now would be a good time to
get our feet more solidly on
the ground." he offered.
While channeling 9tudepts
Into related fields such as en-
vironmental le c h no Io g y,
Brown said instructors would
be able to start getting some
feedbac!< from their graduates
and employers.
"The change will come.
"Maybe nol tliis year 01'1'iext ~
year, but certainly it will be
soon thereaf\er. ...
"In the meantime I suaest
we concentra~ on tht quality
of the t.rafnlng we're olterinc,
rather Ulan Jbe quanUIJ.
'"The lulure lies In the bands
of the National oceans ind
Atmosphere Aamlniltr1Uoa .. lt
will provide lhfl means to ~
eompUsh many end.I.'' he ~·
Browo said future J • b
demands will arise rrom
NOAA's six programs .WblCJl
will be undertaken at an
undetermined date in the
future .
They are mapping and
charting oceans and great
Jakes, fisheries exploration
and technology, aquaculture,
geOjiliysics of-th~f oceau.
monit()rinc the geophyaiCfl
phenomena that take place in
the oceans and broadening the
current met eorological
service.
"The. indications are for ;an
increased f i n a n c i a I com-
mittment in 1m or 1973.''
Brown said. 'That's the time
to have a ready supply o'
technicians for. the needs of
the program.·•
Next: Jean·Mic11el Cous·
'i!tltt"laltrabourthcjutur~
of oceanography.
~~v:~~-o I, 14641 Ward,
A memb e r of the
\Vestminstcr Fire Depart1nent
will conduct the demonstra·
tion. The entire prese ntation
will last approximately 4~
minutes and will consist of
rescue breath ing done on a
du m1ny, a niovie entilled
·:ercath of Life " and a ques-
llon·a nd·a nswcr period.
CONTINUOUS ENROLLME~T
TELEPHONE: 436-9767 or 435·5367
The presentation is co-
sponsored by Bow lin.I'( Green
Hon1e()wners' Association and
Post PTA.
.
"DAY 01 EYENINGCLASSES"
TWO.YEA R COUISES
l u1tfttll lol,.,ini1lr1titft
Htt~" .lcc1unl1n9
.lc<o~ntint -D•t• '••<t11in9
l••<vli•• Surtllfial
SHOIJ.IERM COURSES 0 E· YEAR COUISIS
S11n11911~hk
Clirical -
K.,.,vftth
lv1in111 M1d1iftll
Otftl•I .l ui1ti"t
Mt4ictl Trt ft1uiltlitRi11
fvll.Ch1r91 IH~~.., ....
l rv1h·vp Cltnts
Shtrt~1M 1n4 fypillf
(Gr .. 1 '' .llC Sh1rtli.i~~)
l .. el Secl'tteritl
'Mt4ic.J S.cret•ritl
S.c111triltl
(Grttt 1< AK SllertheM),
Jvftitr .lcctv•tltit
4-Ply Nylon Card
•
GENERAL-JET
Dual Tread Design• 4-P1y Nylon COfd
• Ouragen• Aubbef Tread
6.5().D SIZE'
~1 'tC 1.n-1• ......... .,, • • 7.75-15
1.25-14
• • I.ZS.IS $24.00
$25.15 •••
cna1>11. Smirht :~,~~':E 01r.c1or•. the Orange County League of degree there in 1964. He is a $28,41 5 and San Ju a n
Lea c. McCIY••. 1tl·" ~end• sev1111, L•· Women Voters, will moderate member of St an ford Capistrano got $1 ,318.
oun1 Hlli.. O•le ot do11n. Ocrobtr n. a prOm-am O" formati"on of Associates and has been aclivel;:::::::::::::=========ll Survived DY wUt, Pearl! two cl1u1M••s. I'>' " • • " r th St ford llVt:~Y ·•oov· SLIM GYM 81Hv S!•et>er and Jacauellne Rud~!c•; an Orange County transit in pro]ec O e an
c111dr1n. s1rv1c ... lhursd••· 1 PM. Pici· 1.!ilricl al the Wednesday 0 an e Oun Y. ~'.'J. L08€AOl!llSS1Z£
Ile View ChtP,I. 1n!frrnenr. P1clll< View meeting of the c 0 u n t y The Annual Fund seeks IN J WlEU
"l'n or•ndchlldren 1ne1 1our 1r••t·1r11••· d' · Club r Or g c t '~
Mtmorl•I P1r•. Pacific View MOrlu1ry, Dlr&i;tors. cha pters ()f the American financial support for the fllf
v11N orESEN S oc i e t y for Pub J i c university from more lhan ~E DlMONtu11o,nON Anrnr Van Gleun. 34•65 El Molino, C~a!· d · ' • TE ••r•"" B1~c~. cate 01 de•1h, oc1011e' 10. A ministration and l he 15,000 alumni and parents liv· NII s · LEPHONE WALT
Svrvlved by Sii"'· °""''~· ot (1PITal American Institute of Plan· 1...'.'.i"~g:..'.'.i"~S<>~u~thern~:'.'.~c::a~l~il~orn~i~a:. -~=·=·='='"='='"=='='='·='='=·=·=·='='='='::II l'l••~h: John Van Glnen , Ml. Sl•rl!nv, llllnoi•; !hre• erandehllldrtn. Servke•. nerS.
W~ne1cl1y. OctaW' u. 10 ..,M, S1>1!1•r Th · L11un1 lletch (hli>tL Sorvlttl will '11"· e meeting wj\l be held at
(IUM in .~'"''· Shetler L1tun1 B11ch noon ~t the Jolly R()ger Inn, Mortuary, Clrtdo~.
1
Anaheim.
c~'--~~=-~~~~~--=i~~~~~~~~~L::.-1'
... AHBUCKLE & SON
\\lestcllff l\tortoary
4!7 E. 17th St., Costa !Hesa
646-'188 • BALTZ l\tORTUARIES
Corona de.I l\lar .... OR 3-NSO
Co&ta J\lesa . . . . .. ml 5-U24 • DELL BROAl>WAY
l\10RTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa l\1csa
LI 3-3·il3 • l\lcCORl\11CK LAGUNA
BEACH l\tORTUARV
li9S Laguna Cunyon Rod .
4M-9.fl5 • PA CIFIC VIEW
l\IEl\10R IAL PARK
Cemetery .l\lort
Chaptl
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach, Callforaia
~4·!700' • Pf~EK f'.\~llLY
COLONIAi. FUNERAL
HO~IE
iSOI Bolsa
\\'e.slmlnste.r •
Ave.
113-m>
SHEFFER MORTUARY
Lagw111 Beach 4t4·15JS
San Clemente ..•. ftt-Glto • SMITtlS' J\fORTUARY
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TIRE
515 W. 1'1fi., Costa M,..
540·571 0 '46-SOll
------------GE.HERAi. 14RL~ ..
AVERY
GENIRAL Tiii
SERVICE
161 41 l each ... ,_, H ......... -.i
847·5150
ACAOSS TOWN TO GET
·.
•
0 DAILY PILOT Tutsday Octobtr ll 1970
_l'_o_..,. __ ltl_o_n-'e'-'y"'"'..;cs_Worth "'ontplete-Ne'v York Stocli List OVER THE COUNTER
Peace Would Boost Mru1ket NEW VOllJt IA"l" Mondt~'! e°"""ltle ..... ··-· N.Wo_ Vorlo. Skl(lo. •d'Nl"8t ,.,1a1 --l _,, 'f!M f'IJlll •llll M .. ) .. , w..,M ...,. ~ ..
ti lllt4 Jtlf Wir' l ~:: tlftl I~ "' t•1 t~, -l•
IMI I Mlt' llw CMM Clll i~~ fl.it IDl irJ 1~ 1r" = ! C.... 1,.,.t »I 16s"• 11 1 II 11 -\II o.r.m.u ~ tt 161\ i1 , u ' 1.cfr 111 J ~! ~i. l:i.t -• -NASO Ll1hn91 for Mond•y, O ctobor 12, 1'10
By SY),YlA PORTER
One 0( lbe most evil
econom1c propa,ganda weapons
-A-N •• .., ... >" •••• ,,... '4•• ... !.o M'~lc2 d: ""• fl\1 72h ~ =I and l't counted ffilw 1.1 11 is n II "" llWi 11111 u t •• • • ~ "° • -11• ~ wi s 1J n l
__ thlt~ could hand tM oom·
mi.mists wou ld be a vo1unllry
admu.s100 that the U S needs
d1Uon to L&Jrd and the Deputy
Sttrelary of Oefense David
Jlnckard) !Aird Introduced
1he conversation by sum
marizlng bow mUeh t h c
derense bodget has been cut
•or th f I ,, th 1 'ii: ~-K !A,.1 P'tO T• Jl:1 4i :1:1.':r. .... 10 ~··· '' '!. ,, ·c~· "'1' ~ ~ .. ~~ ~ =1Vo Cllwl ISl 1.JI u ,L"' r.™' 1z:11 ; ~ G Mill p!) }J .? i1 51 P.(•, -•• r e ac i.' e recess on _ r 1,, ••-,,, '(:'''-" l ,, . ,, " ~~~ '°" !Jli-1 anol! Dtt10 i10 ... 1 ,, 0,.~. n ui .., 2 ... u .. f M<'I ... .... • ~ 6 ~,\. Jl1.\ IN(: f y ' tU AC l Yt 1"'1 14'' -~ Clnn Mii 1 411 ' )1 , 37 -Gl>uO r 1 60 '' Nooll 20 ~ + ....
0 1~70 IS primarily thet~ .. -t~t~UUCll:;~~:;f ''f"1 ~POl'lr >IK 1 \r.llU. uedtl F t~ "1A(~'" '••'I 'l!)\1 o CITFln l.IO )01 ollllo >t ~ 2'1 1-,\\Gtft J!r4Ct t ·tla to '"'-lo
r'5ull of • pol'· f b I II 1111! N .. lotltl A -~ F t W .. lf'! i.: j\ t~· .. "'"tr.: a ·~ llllO '" "' l\'j Mm 114f 1 1) I \lo 1~ \..:. \ ClflnSV< t 7CI 1U "'' ""-'611 -, ' .... ·~ I 7CI ' j.a\, it M\o + "
I h ~Y ~o ru a y !:';' ol SK~lr1n P!tG tl:e$ I ,.-.. lmPll us \~ ... "' • .ff l!ii !jll tl\1 tus elU!Cld ' ,,.,. tJ 1 .. ~ .. "' s pl ' I fl • ' tS\~ + \Ii I " t money e"'· I l , ., ••• , .. L t.'.1"' 1.a lii:.: '•"' M!lrtM ·~ ~-1 ""u.. st '~nu. u\ 11 _.,, Ind 411 10 1211 • 1t1o:o-"' ., l.Lucra f y It<~ Inc .,. 11 .i 1~t\ u .. ,.~$' ~ I , w t.OVi l'I-M"'lr.i J ' t -.. CllYllPI "'Bt ., ,,,.. Jil:A )I -... ti Et I S1 211 ,l, t6\l 2'\tr-\li
adopted by the Fe d e r a I :=,..-et=: .~~.,.~ ~'1-,. Jt. ~ ,ublJhr 100. 1 i.. ' M.t ~ ~ At•1111tM 1 " u .mo 41 o ~ cuv 51,. 10oo • no ,._ ' • .,. 14. T11E1 "'1 511 10 " ,, " -1.-
Reservt System to prevent :"1!~, !':'~ ~:~11°11 1~lt 1! ~u'r-i 1~ J:. "'f = j;" if~ !ftW,,lf~ 2 J ~ ~1~ J~,_ =:: c::;::E6'11.: :: ll°, ~!1: f~ ~ t1~t1 TYJ:1 1~ 1Jn /f: ~~ J:t ij
•
record and r1s°" war sptn-The hgu~s by the way are
ding to aupport our prospen ty much more tmpreslive than businessmen from geU1og a\I :':'""°1;"!~1lh I~• J ~:t.:mGrnl 'l~ N~ ~'.:': 14 If -"' f 'f111 "et~~D ~ a\:; ~ ~ ~ ~=~111 ,J.16 ;: i? \ ff': r~; -g=~~ i,,.~ lf 2~ 1 ' 2: +
Tbll 1s propagand a t he you may realu.e S~iflcany
Russians have beeo fiWn. --Defense spending In :lus
peting si.J>Ct Lenin s day lt is fisca l year Wlll be 1round $71
not true Peaee "ould be the billion do\\'Tl a fnt $11 billion
the money °"•y •on'-' to [:••~rit11s t~~.· ,","" .. 1,<,P S~, t• ~r•r :\\ lOVt ~, .::i"'o int 1!= ~J, '3_-.J11rn' $ ti 11.,... 1fi ~ l~'f: -I CIW11" .. " IM 711• ti l1h -~ G•P1c pll U _? 1' U 16 -1• .... ~ ""~ ·~ IHlll .... 10 ... 1 14 I' CM 'I ., ll/:ly n ' Jt; "nnruair 2, ~ ~ ' Cl\lttt~ r 1 Ht " " •••• -1!,o. Glfbt I 211 ... """ " 3'1• -1• force lh~nl lo curb their In 1: •Md !••k.c!J .. FulYRW I~ U\ Srtt l l•n p it• ·~ IN; I ""' CHA Fiii 50 1'1 1i .. " ,,.,,. iG•l!•O 1 OM 11 ,.,. • ., ., -~. Mlkf (1110> n11r fQW rrw l:o'f ,., Jiff 0l'tl \-'\\ I l'I •K :& 2t\ .. G ' I • ft ff~ l•U IJ -• CIU. .,, Al 10 JS n • 1 '• ' • -~ G1r • ~II '° 6 l~o 1• • '"· -\(o flatlonary s p e n d I n g to ~.. -~ ... 'iu• ttJW ' 1 s 11e11111 c 1•14 "" !rl'lellf 1t ? ,,I'< ... =·~111.,, t1 h. 11~ n + 11 COMt s1 ~1 ~ ,.... ''. •1i,., -1o c.i.111Pc ..oe ' 11 10 • 1&•1 -'o
I rl II er.&~ .... , ... g I (mp )loo ):\ ltll\tll Et 'l!O 10\;o ••l\Ult ,,. )Ill A .211 i U -"1-• JS~ -h Q:ISG• .rl 1t 1 .S , ~· '5 -1 Glbr•ll F 1 '•>' 1:) 11t,, ···~ =1·~ po! pone 1n a onary projects out t • 'rk• •• 11k1 1111 1111 1tewe11 c1 n N jr' 011 lN 'i" A th/II .-1 11i1 1J• 1,,, cw11co.1 1,..r• ,, 1P 1J'• •' Gld<:!Uw • ,, , .. ..
I I Oii ""' llKIUOI ., Svc Uft .,., ••v"' (• u n, , MOii I .... "' AIC•llAJu 1.10 n 11~ l no -~' t'.«18111 1.:n , ... Ch u Cl""' t 1 .:r 11 ... .... most el@Cl1'1fytng bu 11 l s h from the 1968 Vietnam war to 3, 0 ( WOrkers r1111t .... ,."" I "lrcll l 21.., ll~°' El 1'1' l•U .. r1~, " :ht 10 •1ceS1tnf ,. J1 71> :ill 1J ~ f'.9!t ,ti l ::0 ll 11~ 17 0 • + • GlmMI Br I 11 )I ' )0 )l + lo
T h I ""''•"°'"" or ,...,.. l(l,,.11C 2 , :t'l1 II.et C•"".1 ll ll •'let' r \ 111 A unor' f t :Ji 1"' _ n Co!ll<w "r• 1 14 2t' 1 I' • >too + '•1C\1100 •nc l 11\1 U t1V. -l~o thing that could tiappen to us peak and only about $4 2
One of the most explosive bdlon above the pre-escala
economu~ weapons that we lion level of 1964
Lg t mu.iey ias been the "'IHloll t _t.t I~' , I ' "'1~· p~ uu 1416 Tfflllc• ~. All" (p °" I) ); •'• f.O ""'R )1'1 ,, l~I . J ' • -\'I Giii' A Gtn $S n, 1 • n.. -I•
I f I "·hldth k .. A .. Enl ,~,. ~£ .. 7 ~•~Jt levSIO :1 i!..l nO!'I Fd flhlU14Atul.uit t,j ll. 'it:\-14COon!tt l .. o l~l o 3'o~ fCenA<IO!) jJ2\1 ll S1"1+~
-could band Amer.iCa • .!I destruc-
11 Ve young radicals would be
the argument that the U S
cannot cut war spending and
stlll maintain reasonably full
employment This 1s an argu
ment the )loung who hate
America a dvance to prove our
SOCiety ts not worth preser \
1ng It is utterly false By sb1f
ting our spending prwr1bes
v;e would create far more 1obs
and far more v;orthwhile Jobs
than today
It is hard to believe that the
Nixon Adm1n1slral1on would
make this dangerous ad
miss10.1 or argument
Yet as tht folloWlng httle
anecdote will illustrate thss lS
precsely wha t h 1 g h a d-
m1n1strat1on officials a re
d oing
A fe11 days ago Secretarv of
Defense 1'1eh 1n Laird 1nv1ted
a small c ross section or in
d111duals for lunchecr1 at !he
P entagon Shortly afte r we sat
dol\ n (We were eTghl m ad
lfye• ............. __...
Serric• y •• -"' """" ell of, ... , ......
TlLlrHDNl
ANSWlllNG IUIU.U
935.7777
COMMODITY
FUTURES
TRADERS
I
-~defense budgtl 1s
now around '1 percent of our
Gro.ss National Product do\\ n
2 7 percent from the 68 peak
and we ll below the 1964 level
too
Delense spending now
represents 34 6 percent of our
tota l federal budget down a
h efty 8 6 percent from '68 and
down a n evevi h eftier 8 8 per
cent from the pre-Vietnam
escalation or 64
c ruc1a ac or~ n e stoc AAI cot 1 ' 51~ ~otel 1," ,'", '•"'•• '•It u" v11 U1um 11 ,,..., Alleoi..i.oct Df 1 11~ 31 _ ~ cp111rw1 , 1• 1~1\ h 1V1' ~ •• GloD•I M<J n 1 u1, 14, u1, !I market crackup ••· wave or ~',,"P':... 1,•J, '•' ,1 .~',~,,,, Ob lO•'i v11 McG1t s\~ I"" A11eu Pw 1.. 2'1~ IYI'< !01 tn .. 4.JJ 1 ,, •6J~ tr .. 'IG100. \/tl '° ' 11 • 11 1 11 1tt + UIC" .. ·~ .. ls llV. llllilloll '~ ~a us f 11v11 tt , A111.oc11 1 '° UI• "" ,, ~ ,,_ -"' Oii ... ~1 60 1 i• II 1 II-lo 1 GOO<l•kll l 11 JI ,, • H11i u .. -\, business bankruplce 1 A•TS nc 'o j' llolMI w 11 n Jtov C•st 'v. 2 u! ""'' 111 •1'11 A !llMlln"t;.io 1 2,.~ n1 21~ _ ~.~,. •,a n 31 311. • i . • Geo<t,.•• r..s x;2 2 • 7T in• I s -no "t& ll'ld 1 • • IOb Rull ,... 11..:. Jtu. so~ JJU 11\6 u TrltL ~ :M\ot AlidMUI , " • 7J'4 ""' + 0 BS 0 I '1 If • -... GO<dJly,I, 11 1 \6'1 1"-lo I~ + v. dl!fense cuts !~M Pl,, .," .,J .,.'" <,•,( 1!' 1 1 ~1 1t1 ·~ "' 'ill ~ ,._,,p 2"I n1~ Aln,o ,., " ''"' im lii1~ -~ oiu>Gn ,...,, 215 Pfi !"' ! i. -t.~inc... 1..io • JO'.o :i.:i lCI ~l.· Good ""' • ""llu JV. u •II SUI ~ "" Al!ledSlf I * tt 2J:i. u 'm CojuP cl ,,., 1 1 " •l'o • -·1G•1tt.CO 1 50 lb mo .,, '1t~l 1' t. Even In are3S hit hardeSl by Abll"la lft S J~> (koclwp C :I l ~ ~C!Nn E IO ~ UUI ll'ld H\<o 1'1'1 •HF~ .S -I JlO 511\lo JOV. ~ sol!anli l II 7l t5 .o t• o lJ ~ Gr1n11p 1 £0 10 U 1 71 2• -l Ac:"'• El I ' I"° lreph (ft •>.:. ~ Scllclll In • o 11.'I V•I t.0 W 1 ~ Alllcr,..J' \Sil 511 7\o 6t\ ' -1\ onitii:"ft I :JO 11'!1 f • ¥1 ' 4' -~' G•andUn 10 It 1• ' 11 ~ ~ -"' thecutbacks th1sholdslrue-"!' si. •0 '' •11>11 Sc n-.n,Sc cot• ,,, 2 vine• s11 1~11v.Am• c111vn && is;, 1J\O ill!\'-.c-1Sov 111 :io r.. n1 n11+ IGr•n!ecsu 11 ni.. 111. lt'> ..
lor ''ad the a'm not been lo !1:,:,1\d~ l;.,. 1;1! , ... ,_., .. , Jin, to kl Ind )l\ 31,0 v '''°" '"' AIP11tPC "'°' 1 l;J,4, U\\ l \ + \ 1E ·1i:d ? XI u ., • l2"o ...... I ~·en tolll 1 l ' H. u . 16•\ + \\ •.. ~ 16'~ 16~~ Scol $(>!11. "'"' tt1' W•t11 llll 10 10Vi Alcoe 1 IO 1.1t, s.t!'I s:n, -1 nE Pl7 u 1 101> 107' 1~ '• ~nl v Jo ~ ll ~ ·~, ~"" -l
I I fl I ,1, !>et H 2>., ] • Gr11/I RE ll~i lt !er DPt...H 18 ~ ltV. How " 11.,., 111', Ame!Sut •' ~ 'l 1~'-lj\\ -~' mwE !Jll I? ' 1 ~· 2 "~vOrq 1 10 ~ ?I • 1) 1 11 -lo con ro 1n al 0:1 by comoelhng AlblOS • t ~ G•PVI Pr 3.., •11 (( oto A •l: ~I Wol" Bd I''' 70"4 AM• .. c ·1 1 1 >lo l? + I• CQIYIW 011 1111 1is 11 • 1~· 17 • Gt A .. P -0 18 1i • 2&l\ 16 ~ -\.•
a bus'ness .lo.do". lh• ad :11f.?,",~ 1!. ,, ,'I"·"• ,'", 1 ,,,., St••lt,._!I 17\ '"~ R; .. clt , .. 'lii Am•• E1 20 Ifill IV. 11 '-1 CO'! pu! Stl l , 1 ..... 1 1 ~ ,', +' IG Nor ' 11 9 1 1J1• 111, I]. .,,, "" '"' ..., •1 J ~C l ...,.,p 9 ,;~W••Jhw •<.I J14AmHcu l2r IS S74. 1''o;i j1~ Com:.t! 91 .0 'I ' -•,NoNe!< lt.o 1 U\i 11 111';-10 m1n1strat1on COl•ld ha •. e ~1lr..iti', ~. j i't ·.~."Int 1 . Ito S«l~lr" •• , 'i' •!11 NG ·~ 1rn Am&H pU » 10 tl\• t i !~. + 1. Ct.lie Miiii I 11 Ht. 1110 11 -.. INN "B '° l 'I'' 12•0 :r.!'t; -J• • ...... 1•. ~o ~ Gro SU '~ W•»i RE f\, t i AAlrFlllr IO SJ J7• $J\I "'' -'• ~OMM~ ... 2 11 11 :n -'• C.• 'N tll Fll'I nt ? I 2~ 1 7 • + • cushioned the def•n•· spe" l :~~ac°ff : ~ ~ 1 ~•.",'!' ,,s ", .. M0 , ~.~~-~P 46 •1 W1'i Tr II• 1 Am Alrlill r, '" 11 • 2C~o ?&ot -\ o ;r-< • Ml ~ 11" 1 ~ 1 -• ~iw"u~ 1 91 c.a 2 '" 10, l:Ko -t • -><: -.. -, "''" 5 1 5\Wtl>blll 10\1~1 AmBPt O e 1C 4 131.oij;•-•~onEltillll ~JJl>.;,1J~l 11 > ~WUnptH lit 1•.19 , dlngreduct1onsby11on-defense:f:1s~~~ 1!~1j~.~~~11,!;,1f ~;,f~ ~hs~Ms ~~ 11•1 ~:~~,·"M 1f1~1:1~~~la:li3 1~~ f.\oo ~~ u \-lo.c::i .. ~e0,,,J 1~ ~ '' ~Ji 1,•_ Gr~,•,:B~~ .~ ~ ~· ,'\1 J +: spendln!I! increases !::i ~~~~ 11111 Htr t co 2 1 J1, sr, w~1 1:v,, 1 W•tc1 P t•. 1011 #om C•n 110 1c! u •<~ •j , -~ f en Lr~•lr" 1 6 ~ • -1 G 1-l!nSn 1 o 1 11 2•1, 11 + ~ H doc !n1 Jl:• e , •oNE lftl 31 l' ~ W•tn NA S o .S \ ACt~ Df l/i 15~1 2J~ 7 W CO<lN,.G 1.11 U 11\o ,.1, 1~l, -•4 Grcv~o .. ma 1 l l U 1 j'' 1•~• -o1 Bu\ the ~Und policy ol>-~ ,G,.,•~:. ~I": ft~~ Hl llvn f"1 t , Sw GiC• 1)t;I I\~ W1!n Mt, .11, 6\0 A"' Ctm 4 P 11 I~ I\\ ti, t 1 On> Powr l •I ' • 31 l • -• Gto !rr ~0 I 1~ 5 , ?6 + •
Ject1ve was to curb 1nfl11tion Am Te v ~S\o 1 ~'"' Holo!lm 10, 111l..; SP•ctrv •, •\Wint w11 5 sv, ACnSut '° l 14 . 1•'• u ~ -• ent C1n lJO • 1 •1 • • • GllL!Hld JCf 10 71 , 21, 1t _ •
d AnMui I 1 7 I"'"""" l6. l6h s ~ndvn l ... l ?O 'WIK PL 70 2011 ArnCY•n l.Jj ti 2 "" :If\' ~ -0 Ct C•n pll •t rlJO JI 57 5 -1 511MOh ? It• r 01 60 ts + •
'" 1, Ho"' £P ll Jt ~w EISvc 11 • IS !Wun Pull ts0 lOW. "Chtlll 1.611 4 1• • t6\1 761'1 T , c.otllAlr '.SO s., II o 11 • t • -•1Grun\m<1(p I ,-; t f 9 , -0
No small achlevemenl this were •ot olf••I Ara"' M no ~ HPWrd GI n. ro ~" HPt1 !,...,. n w11ah1 w 11 ' 11 AObtTltt »e J,!j 2m 25 is•• .,.. 1 , con1 CP 2 ..., :m, 11 • !"• -1 Gull ~e r(~ 61 10 , 9>, 10 1 -11 an so the defense cutbacks ~:" 1.:,; ~ f' Hor: R• 1a1. 11 j'• R..,1, 1p 1t11 w a1w e ~. l l' Am o 11m 1 s 11 .. lFt 111o -1, corn coci e J ' • 1 o J' ·1Guu ou l_j(I , , 79 , 2> • ,,,. _ ,
'' "" Ardlll pl lCI Ji How"' n JO JO , ltr1• Sir I • It YrdnY E J<., .... Am OullVttt t r. 0 700 1 0 -, Cl C~ ~tlo.2 511 > :i.t l I Gull II ti pt 10 1 I< • 11 U>i
-a 001 suggest weg1\eL_jHrd You may crillc>ze 1970 , .,, MoP 11 ''YI ~~~,•,' J~' AOu•• ot111 s Hl'll 11~, Hh t ~~Of'ltMye n J! 1~1• 1"• 1 • Jillll f•ol l.JD 1 1T•1 n ':i 11 1 +,
the great credit hi! deset\r.~ A row H-n " ..._ ff ... ~ .. 1 ~iw;: 'nr 3H-tW-f~~ ~'~ -'l, c~! ~· I SCI 2 f-~· l • ~ = i1~~!~~f~J it 1'i H-i n~ ~ii =l" a l tl 1nflauon policies as crude "•vltto it. '"' ~~.1 c.i• , 10 ... AG1n1ns ..so 1.1.1 15 Uh 1"' ~on T(I 111 '' n ni. • 1. (julrtl pt 1! 1 5 " J " sai; 5 for doing 1t 1n the face of and cniel but you cant ~~f~ ~~' '~ ~ ~,,. H••" CP 1,, ,, , "'' • • M ' • ...,....., •G11111 otl 1t1 11 2•v. 2e o 2t;o .i:or1rot o"~ 19• • ,, • •1 • -h ~v11N r1J ~ 1 1 11 _5
e··nnoos ••• , g•!rd Al ll~ J ~ HVI" Int ..:, • •,. An\HOlll 10 21 ll 10h 1Dlli -\o ,~!'..~, ~. "" '•" •'•' ~ ' Gu. y O!J $1 l 4110 11'0 ll\o -1 '"' vuu crit1c1ze the1r aom You can ok~ 1r~11 H01ae","' ~ AHDn'11 160 M6l~•z o •l -l ...,...,n, 1 11 1 -"Gu11cmtra 6 1J tt. t i.-., • maee • ' 1 MUTUAL '"'Hop 21 IJ7 1""' ~o 34~ + ,canoerln 1 «> 1 J ~· 11 , HI But t hen Laird Wel'lt on to argue that joblessness could ::~1:•pnt ~h t:: Ind Gii 1t 1 n :-m.·.r•J ,,• ·.~~. •,,'", ',l ·.='~·1c!E~~r r!.~1l lO ~),~a~ HackNal 710 - -~ lh I d 69 be h d I f leumrt ll 34 ll'ld Nt1Ct U '21 • "' ..-w· v· 1 0 0 -••' 0 ' ' 1, ll ll lJ f rep<><• a since mi cus 1one ar more e Aivien 1-11 1n1•1•d J , 1, AMetCf• IM 5• 11 , J1 , J1~ + ·1-•n "' , 1 -"'~ 111o r i DI s1 ',. 11 '"• -1.
I I I b t !l""'Cl•m ?I 1,, ln1 Con! I , I AfActCI• pf • 1 '°; 'l(l\~ tQ 1 -1 Oll9o Kb !> • • lS -1HamW1t 7~1 10 >.;, S ~ I , -, employment 1n the m1htar, er. 1ve y u }OU cannot use Bet 1,1, 1n, u•. •nrr"' 1., J. 1 .-.m IA~lor• JOl , \ •'• 1 o + , Ccpwrsn 110 ' "• 1• 1111 ... o l-l•m"' P~p ,,' ,',, • ~
I 'aw ~ ~ s AN1 G• 110 ~ •i 40•1 ~. 1.,CorlnhEI a 1~ ?• -' Haminrnl 7tl ~1 !Co-, de e nse products and defcn~e unemployment as an excuse ~~';' H~ ~ .~ '> 1~1 M~ro11 •f ' FUNDS Am Photo 12 "9 io~• 1o 10,~ = , corG11 ? s A 1 1 • i i -H~nc "'" 11 11 1 \o l 1 • l _ ,,
related ··•11slr••s has decreas ror ••••l•lary spe··· •g s~u LIO •l 41 II'! Sys ~ ,. I AReso. 1 • u• 61 ~ ~ t1 -• ~.;rent f n '· • i;. '/~ I -l' IH nd Hr n 1 1~~. M > ,•, ,'-=-.:.1 /IU nu R II Pl w •• "' In 5• pl u I I ... ,., ~411119 1 ' 11 .. 11 11 l owe ""' ~ • • • -• H1ne1 C1> JO ,, 1l I IS -u ed 810000 as against an \\hat I heard at L~ird sll•OSon,,,.. •nert 1a1.~, AmSnlP60b 1 11~11.111=1'f~~~~c1 '1 l': •;3 ,1 ~;·~1 ._ ~e~M \30 1,.i ~s ••·-1 ~ l\r•~· ?0 1\IMk • ,.,, ASmellt'O?Or ...... 21 .21.+1cAM l 60b H t l , ,/ci"'",1 J•,31 ,111 -!) 01 Crall rlsf' I'll JOb]eSsne~ Of \uncht'On lS probahl) shrev.cl I! a•~ fl 'II • 1" le ~UI ! 1" 1" ""!.-,., AmSoAfr 10 llD 41' I.I IS~ -1 C I( •o )1 I + 1" t nt I 1' S ' )\ ' S ' -> 1\1'0 ..... F.I ? • )t', J&to"S F ', s I IAmSAfr tn70 1 .r;i i ~ 421'> c~::"'!H".,., 1 5 21 o 21 : •l~••sco [p' 11 17 . lt . in.+ •
I 3 mlihon And he remarked pol1!cs and Lai r Is knO\.I n as a I Ila 1 B~ ~\ t ~AQU nwc • • O<la.H• 11 l~v CoA 11 -1, ..... 1m.,~d 0•,, '' ", ~ • :u • !!"', -+ • C•owc~t 1 011 1 t 1 , 1 1 'l1o1:~~5"l'~ 1 !:'.! u 1' ' "'• 11>.\ -'•
h Boi>heCUlJl1••mll66'• ,v,,.,,~ •• ,.-~ .. >CrnwCPl1 10t~'I-l S ,,,11~•11 11t "1t a rueful grac1oussmtle brllhaf\llyskillfulp:'.llltc1an 11ooiAH 11.111>Ja"'"F ll :J.O I N...E0•,',,oRK IA"l ln: G•·'" •"•'• ,oo,•0 AmSt•rl A t 711~ 211~ 10>0 ->CrllWnCok 11 11 , '' 11 :; ~'"' E in 1 1...,11,,. 11\4+
Th b h f1osC1p 9 10.J•mibv 10 ~JO ,-•f00W"9QUO.n '"'c A$Uflrtc.G 4
0
6 3\:! Olo3\o +....,CrwnZtll11iO l?Jl\;~\ll;+\~ ',','o'o~IDI 1111 14!117 _,, JS IS W at appens llilerr--But 'o\ hat I heard was rotten sr .. ~ftn 9 i-1tl4\ Jll-., "a' • 1 ~'t 1.-11on'-'UllPllM ov 0tnwts...8os 010.11 11 111 A&u1 "'"! 6J ...,..., ,,.., ••"1-+l C•n z 1>1• 10 tl~ ' 69 •<· ,, .. , ,,, 11 ' o 9 1 tt.1 -I•
di f l\r Ilks 111 111. :>o\ Jhns11 Pd nv, 7~ ~ lht N•llonal Auocf nveitors rouP Amsu11 pf 61 ' l'< 1, 1, + "J c • 00 ~, te " ,, I f'• 4 i m -'I you m ove so ra p1 Y rom a economics and potent1al/y 11,k, sea ,..,,10~"•1.e• s1 •1 u 111on f SKur 1111 1os rw11 l •• ,11..,r .. T wt 31.1 1 , 1 • 1 ' '"cu.,.,:'P111 ~' 1~! ,~l p ~ ~11Mn 11r 1011 . 160 11.<o-\1 I I • I d d &•vn Ar JD 11 ICalsStPI 11 ti Oeaers Inc •r• Mui lfll9.61AmTIT110 1uu,.411~u ~-•\UdhWDf?S S ltlllt ll.ii ~ Htl'•HJ I llS>35\o llllo-o 'o\8r Oa peace1meecOnOm} pt!rlOIJS prllpagan a a n Bu1.h Bt ll >ll KelYar 21 19,ll>t' Ptlces •I wll~ Pro. l82 l llA"'WWki 5t ti 10 f'< IO +\, ultleio 11 ? 1-j•o u, 14\o-t 1 ~:~;1 ~u.:o 11 9 1 lo 9"'--0
The 1mphcallon was un therefore 1tstoo1mporlantto =~ .... CP :·~ ~'~:~,,,G·" f" ~~= ,..~ur~ ... i!.f~, 'i ~~1·~~f1Cto l~ 2;'~ ~'re +~ un..O~ .. -: }. fft~ ro~: f~~-\'He1meG111 1 1; l~ i:· lr".:!:i':
mistakable the defense cuts remain ml pr1vale anecdote ~rcnuL",.~ 2:t: lf.: ~:'~nT ~.: ; • n~~,"'k:a~nt ln~''11..':~ tM : :Ii ~,Jnc &O!° fl M: l~~: l11~-:;: lt l~~11-l,I';'' A1 1; ~! ~ 11 ;, • -0 ~:~~:: C~D B ~1: 1~4 '; •• = ~
are a prime reason for the Thus atth11 r1<:kofb111ngthec,''•"•'•' ~, ",', •,•,,,•,•, ',',",.'',A11ran t~d,",~~1~1:1 1:1J 1:'ff""'"'•Ccrp 10 11 , 11 11~,, cu1i..r w 111 4Q ''•' '1 1o1om 1nc i.se 1 ,~."•~•-lo
d I C .. " ""'fat IO ' 3JYJ :is 31 -~~ C1clop' 1 ft\ ] 11 1• ; ?< -r-'> Herc re I~ ?• 31 36 , l!V. -~. receSSLOn an U l"lllJJ Oyn1enf h~nd that fed me ] pass Jl~On ~~~;';~ S 11 1~1, ~r: f ~ :; ) JI \ "'h"'r!..:hl~ f~jf16 11 j0ht;,~f~k 1j ;J 1I n ,1,MP l"c .!I 11 52 SO~i 5H i + 1 CYPru1M 1"0 ' SJ.., "~' » ) -\• ersnFo I ID II U , 2S ) lSh + o
And here is "here I stand up lo you _-._ ..-,.0 1 ,e 11 I u K•Y•I PC 1, 1 •ntmn 1111 Jn Keni""e Fund• ~1f J •o n .n 31\i J1~, -""' -D-~~bt!~~ 6~ !6 ;i1: ~; ~i: + .: ("I R..<.t-1'1 f, I ; l(lnt 1111 l l 1 ln•ur 1 05 113 APOiio I OJ 111 A e ..0 ••' u'l• 1 ~ ,1•0 -•ig~nR vr 1"D IS , 1 ~ I Hk>h Vol ege lt.I 11 10, 10"1 _
C10 1"1" ' • IC nQI El :n I ' A<tv 'l'I • '5 I lt CUt Bl 11.20 1' 00 ... ~0 H< i,, <' H"" it' -'1 -Cn 11S •• ?:r-. ?" 11"• H~ionHoltl l 9J Jt 31 ll--41. ("1otc ] J , l(lr~ CD < I, A~na Fd IM t 25 [\/$ Sl 18 :IO lt.85 A IJt t ii fl\\ -VI 0~11 IM "b J1 J 0 l Hoblr! 1 70 1 JI, l!\) _ , r arr °"v 1u.110K1'3U Vol 2• ,,,,Afllltrd 661 JU Cu• St '" • ., ... ~orrl',yvl,:i I~ l!l\ 1 ~-:lo o1rr rd 1>17 1\ )!1 y, l -•,Hac11w1r " l ,, rr.: 23'0-10
I R Pl ,.,,1 s1 no J>,; Krt J • 1" l /"Fu! f tn 61J Cu1 ICl 11t 115 A~mcp ~$ 11 lf\• ,..: H _ ,1 n0~M.:roc0r1 11 H 1 , 5 ... , Hell Ei..:11 " 1 Jo 10 _ 0 nte e t t C~•t• (;D 1fl ' tt •Un' C>l l 5 > I All ,l,m F ~' Cut IC? 4-IO l lO AocoOll 1 J1 64 l l , »'• -1 •Ye ..... ~ to 11 I o 1 I' -Holdylnn n ~5 JJ 0 ll 3, _ ~' I• s a e Ull~fJC C11c NG '"·ll ~VS llknol ,, J J AIS1~1e 1591011 c .... Sl 1•0ll1SCIAPL Corp n n ~. u<.-~O•eo ~"25 rl& ~5 I'. 65 -1 ~Holld 110b 1 51 1 51• 5g,_. CaslCaP ,.,l I.MC Oat 1 0 1 0 APMFd t15 10~ Cuss' tOltl6 APLJ)f8.11: 4 U •U 1 ,+~.n..vtnHlld 'O ,~ •• ,.,_, HollvSugl:IO II
"'"''" ?I ~ tt Lt11<e In )6 l 11 , Amc~p J 31 J ID Cus Sl 'SI 7 11 ARA ~vt 11 1 6t • 1~ 1 _1 ~ Ri,v,tn,t.l_ ,'J,• ,~' 11 71 1 ,, Homeslkt ,, , ; 111. 11 • -•
C:e" VPS 17~•1,~l L•nd lies ''•,,Am Bus l'9 l1l Cus SI l14 •11 Arc,t1N o. o"s ~,,•mW 10,_ ........ ,, .. ,,, '•• 49, '°' ,",•+l~Ho~•w •-''' •'•'>. ',',~.· 1•\io -: [•nt LID f • 1 Lll'f Wd So 6 0 Am Ov II 9 41 10 ]5 Pg If l Dt J :J9 Arch 0111 1 (, .,. ],j _ .... ~. O '' 11•, )] -, 1-1~'; !II l "° t > .,. llt1 -~.
Urilik I f F rh••n1~ 2'• ,..,, L••-l>o ,,,.. Alnfr E>Ul~t>l' Klllckll.. un1\ltJI ArllP$vt LG1 '' it 1 \ 1n~ _._ \ ,...., m1 1? "• 1' > 1~~· .._ ~ '"' 1'l' l"o -11
e Y 01• Utul.e [lll•I O 5>0 6V. L1rwn fA 11 ~ 11 ) CaPll 7,U I 15 ll:ilKk -Gt -VI I Arltnt 0$ .,G '7 ff~ " Ir 4 1Sl;Mrn"f.....,_,i:r---"f1 v:" ...,.S"':r ,gc.-.....c st OSI Intl :ll---ll llla .Jll1 lJ~) Chm Lt• i i L~.0-.Ld l~olt lncme 1(7fNLelGr!ll 7.11111Armco$1 1611 M 2H jl\;j1'4 , lt1Ar3!) ~~Jl•l>Y >-HOUdlrnllQ t0l0 o1G ;l~o-~o cnes ..n 5 • ~0 1..+. Coal 7 • 1~1 lnve•t • o.ir I '19 l.e~ ll:U:11 IJ O 1' ti Armco orJ JO fl 17~ 11, 1•1 + ,,; lltc Int n 1 1"1 ? , _ \\ Houv Miii IC " 16\, IS 11-'lo -l o C"es UI 1 lJ 1( Lo!ts t (': 11 11 I 59tc:I Ill L!bf'rty 5 XI S 1t krnc.ur 1611 t '7\o ..,._ f6i;O -\ ,,.n111.'ta 611 • J• o lt lt ., Houoel'" I XI 10 l '1 lo" lP.1 -t..
Sett4 Ce11,et1 for lefe •• com
puterbe:I tlM•d a11oly111 of Iha j JE\V --l'.ORK
Perk lelly SllW'e!' 011d S1yb•:a11
c~e)
Bankers a ro~s the couniry
_are ~pres.sing skepl1~1~n1
about the poss1b1lil} of a
subslant1al drop 1n 1ntcresl
rates 1n the near fu ture
cn1 11r~l s.1 51 LPWh lF n.n ,AmEQt1 131 .. 11ll.J1tS1t; ~"57JA•mrpf •15 151,.. 5~ +•i DfnnYll1111o1 4 51~ '•j~ +\~Hou1r~I010 11 15 11s llS -3 Clo 11 5 I°' 107 L•e Mt~ 1 > ]:!~A"' Grl~ 541 S'1 Llte ll(NV >'I> ArmtlC.11. 10 215 a>i 7~• 28 o 'len IW•lnl 1 11 '• 11!1 ' HouiF p)SO t 4:0. H u, •on I sec ho11 " c can l••hl ,,, n,,1 l pl 90 101 Lcb ~ v a "I J Am Inv 4,.01 ',, Llnc ... Ntt I n '1J Arm Ml.I~ ~ ' lHk lllh lGb = .~ Dt1111c;, 1 10 ' 17 ,. • 11 -'~IHouiF 0,, J1 ? ~I • 53 ~ sett + 'i " " .. (~Itel • 7 ,L111l (~~ l o H,Am Mui !')(I llJL!ftf l 6S 199 Aril'1 l 11 J4'"' ~11.'I t•~o+l~ "'CO.al !! 7' •11 '! lfGu1ILP 1:i0 1'1 ~ll• ~. ll'i.., ,-fl"'llOn \\ 1thout lc:11 ln" Jl c1 I M!t II\ l 1 • LOP Elrn 1• U"I Amt Gii> 05 2 '°\LGOml~ S&yle ~· ,'",o,• ,' •,. tl s ' 11\~ 241, -11 i:l:fi1,..0~n~ .~o .~ ' ' to '~ • ~ h Hou~ NGi to 0 10.. JG ~-+ •
M111'•h
"'" R. J. O'BRIEN
ANO ASSOC IHC
1'-419 Wntcllff Dr.,
N-pen 9"cll
(7141 642-8006
Wrll• l•r Wfftll)' NIWSllfltr
STARTS TONITE
•FREE•
REAL ESTATE
INVESTMENT
SERIES
It I I ffff 11rln If JM
hrtn eb111t '"' n tot1 ''""""
h19 -.id rolotlHI topic• Just
rotl•~ te11l9llt et t-flrst Ill •
Mrtft ef fl•r lec.hrn to ff held
•• c•-111fM T110Ml•'f oYHhllJI
a...111•Ult et 7 30 • clec:li h1 tM
c .11.,. C••t•, l ldt et Golde11
Wn t c.ti.,. I• H1111tl1t11fftll ·-·
TONIGHT
a .-Nl>All McC.-~Oll
... 111 ~··Ii; ..
"T A llORIPjG YOUR
INVESTMENT
• blu1pr nl fer '" •
•••l"'u1t you cen I ~• w tll
LECTURES TO FOLLOW
OCT 20 -
N•w T111: and Synd1
cation Laws by
Howard W11nborg
OCT 27 -
Creativlty 1n Real
Est•t• Exchange
by J•ck Kt.tier
and Bob St"le
NOV J -
Rtc09nl1tn9 a Good
ln'lftt"*1t
by Don~
SERIES MODERAT OR
bl McV•Y
CO.S~OttSO••O .,.
DAILT PtLOT
MUm•TOM llACH
POUllTAIN •ALUY
IOAI• Of llALTOU
OU.M•l CD.All
.IUMIOI cow •• DISTllCT
NO COST
COll.ffl cum• I L.ff
M>LllM WIST COUMI
,....,.. -JJ.J .. t t)t , ... -
A survey of large and s1nal1
banks ~ho"s them lo be al
odds "11.h Secreta rv of Com
merce ~laurice Stans 11 ho
p redicted a sha rp drop 1n 1n
!crest rates
I think \l e v.1\1 see a 6 per
cent interest rate and perhaps
not fa r off ' Stans said 1n a
radio 1nterv1ew last "eek
Bank off1c1als e11!ng lhe high
cost or money overhelld a nd
continued high demand for
loans say they do not expect
the prirm r a te -the 1nterl.'St
charged to lu rge customers -
to decline sharply
1'he effect of a <lrop 1n 1hc
pnme rate now at 8 percent
would be to make 1l l!as1t-r for
la rge corporate borro\ \ s lo
get loans This would have lhe
e ffect or 5t1mulallng the
econo1ny and c u I I 1 n g
u nemploy1n °nt through the
creation of new Job S
economists say
It m ay look g o o d
pohl\cally, but how can }QU
lend money at 6 percent \I nen
yoo re buying 1t at 8" ' said
George Soot! chafrman of the
First National Cil3 Ban k s
credit policy comm1tlee -the
g rou p that seL<; the Ne1Y York s
bank s prime rate
The big New York banks are
a blg factor 1n anv movement
1n the interest rate and all
say they ha\ e no plans at the
mo1nent for a cut
~ienv bankers sur1e}erl sn1d
that l~y usuallv ~llo\1 the
trend set by the large f\e111
York banks
• We don l p!ttn 11nv cut 111
r:ttes We usually follo\11 the
F.ost Coast s lead ~aid :i
spokesmnn for th! Detro1\
Bank &: trust Co
C1nc1nnat1 banks mo1e as
do t11e ma1or banks 111 other
c11!es such all Chicago and
Ne"' Yor k said :'ln ofllc1:il of
the First National Bank C1n
c1nnell s large.~\
I think there ll ht pressure
during the election camp:ugn
to drop th::! prime rate bul I
12~5°/o TllLD
FIRST MORTGAGES
\VHEN PAID TO l\IATURm
1% S YEARS
DISCOUNTED 10'/o
MINIMUM $3000
INVESTORS PROPERTY
MANAGEMENT
J7H "IWPOIT ILYI
NIWl'OIT WCH
CA.lllSOl~IA tJMI
PHO NI 714r 67Wlll
BROKERS
" C !Ii u A '~ 14, LWY"I> c 1• 111-o Anchor C>rc n Can~d un1val1 Asl 17 lS i )I )I; -lt n,,1 E'1 5 I•' l • H<>uG• gll SO I S~, J,01; s I ii herc rt IS said R ICHlrl lr:n1 ue ,..,.,~,.MN C:Et n l cw11 111 71"' ecol tM 10 one 1n11 J 111 111i u -1 "i;t sr~~ 511 • :, ', ~HowJoin :11 l! JI • 11. 11 ,_ 0 I { Cll~I" /~I HW l'i11 h'<.111 "',. Gf\ ·~ t..!it 10 $1 I ul 11 0" n '1 AU( •E1 1 :M 18 19 .. 1~ ~ lf" -\\ n..x1•1 "'' I~ ,, • +. He~ 1 j c • 16<o 1617 -•
Cl,ylPll 1 ~1>:oA"""IA• 1 11/\ Fd ll'Y 7761 '11 h ~g;~tnll61HA•,.ltyEpf 4 111oOS6•S.o SLo.;.1V.ni,..lr•lllO , 3 '' .1 Mu,Lav 1 0 6 f o21oi7'o , \ride prcs dent or ther er~ Ml l"' 20>4Mellk.•t 6, •• 1rw:""' 1:i. ,,.Lu•~ Bo 10111111A~ETrs•1 11121~ 11~ 12 .-~-.r.1r in,, , 11 11t'•11 .,...._d 1,1,.e u n :10>0" t~
American N:it1ona! Bank ofl<.t!nt ,,..~, 1~ 11 M""" M 10 11 V•nt 11 •1 11 M 11~n111~ ··~ •MAit 111cnt1a t z:o &11 1,;, s,;,_ "'a-.snem, 10• 1• 1 0 1 _1 1~~~rc~~ ..i, 4 ],• •'"•' 1~0 -• Clnon 0 1 , 51, l.~noo C ! I l.t.J>OIO Fd /16 lt'11A~S5 Fd 9H!Oll AflRCfl pfJJS 1...-..0 !1 Sil SO o -~tn!~ ..... ol fl t ?I ? 10,._, .~ ' II -• Salt Lake Cl\) Clow Co " I~ M~r Mt• 1•• 1" A~-· ll\ i ll MJ' r." 1G6•11U ,l,URJ~ ot l 1J ''. tl'llo ,,~ -·~ 'll•S r>IO 7ft •• I~~ I . H. I «O"'t:', ro 11 ~. " ,. • - ' CO'!µfD 'l~,\tr111C:rl•t A ro~ •H I J4 11.1a sTr ll:!l UjAAl!Rthpf710 41,~ 5S 1 "-\\'1C•'Jl'>oll•I .i 1 I 1,, ... , Ctnll• •Jll o ~l••IMI In \\ash1ngton inean\hile l'oQo•Cn S• s• MBroWr lt 7T 11A HoOQlll~~ 111•• lsti1"''•~C~em1 4'12'.:1 23"\lJ", 1.,·~01 •!" •• •1 • + itc~~or so 1~41 ,,\,~1:=~:
!ht' chn1nnan of the Mou:s" ~~ ·:;-, s; ; • ~ ~ ~~~~. L~ l;t; n,, ~~~g : : ;~ 5 ~:i~~.h: id ,\0JJ1l1fs !~6 10~0·~. ~~ l: ~·· ;'• -\, ~ "1~~i.; ~~ 1° 1 l ' J.', -~ :11"ii':'0 l~ l"'I !~ ~ .M I 3r· "!.,'· Co on Sir 14 2 1~<0\IY J l 1i• Sotk 5J15 !0llA dA t~u 117532Au101Prco &•l o t l o -'•~'"",~IA1 ,, • Y' 1 t11 Pw olll '!ill 11 21 1 Ct1nk1ng Committee has caJIC'd r~mtf 1 • i v. II.lied c ~ • t•~ Sc:I CP • °" • • M"""v CP 11 St 111 Au"rr:1n Ira •1 s s , 5 , _ '• o~ ~ "' ' .1 • 111 p,.. Pll 10 1 ~ 11 ,' 11 1 ,, 1 :: : r1m C• •"•••Meo Mg 11'. l •~il!O" ~ll llljMCodY > llSGUS"/ivcuCa it I• 17 12 ll o 1~•~5:~~Jl'1,,1 l'l I' I_! -L 0 1mo Co A"' SS 11 0 lD o Imo-0 lar an 1mn1ed1nte reduct1on 1n rom r. •• 11~• u 1 Med!•n J"-• •1.1e Y•c~ 1.i ~ J• t11F Fd 1 • 1.3f "~'o ~11 l 11 3, n 11 , _ • -.;v _,,. , ,. "" ·;_ - , INA Co 1 •O 6.1 12 ~ 12 11 Cl>"' Tfl 1> 21>1 Mt•ld I" 11 I' IBN«>ll 110.0 1104 MIF Glh •I' ! IG Ate V PG 211 10 Jl 1 J •-• '> •• ,. ~, I~• •-I \ ln{ome C~~lt 7 t 0 o the prime rate lo 6 percent 1r-l'I " ~1. "\Midi!! C• • s;.
1
11e • Knt 'J• II "' Mvus c;v 10 1110 l• A.,,...e1 1" l'Go 11 '"' 1 • i"' = i.. ~~ "~!!~) '1,; ' tt • '!! -» 1rccvm tt--, 9 ! 9 ; ,~: + .: r.o """'V 11 11V.Mdl... ,, '~I•~ GI\ !AO •n11 UOmG f.71 s11 .. ~r~1ofl 1 16 , 6-1 16 1-' ,,~,,, , -:i I I.; 1 ·-,lno'tnHd In ,•, ll' ll:. 21~-. Rep \\right P atin an ( D Cerna ,1, ' ' Mldw GT 11 9 !II• r Fd • ~' I !I Mv 0"'1n t 74 1001 AVOtlPd 1 D '• 1~ , ,, , ,. _1 , ~·mFr• 0 , ,: '• 0 -, n'1!rl•PL 1" • ., "'' _ ~ srno Cm 11 0 13 1 915 G•5 lO 7'' So~~!~ S5t 611 Mui Sh" 13 ltll .. Ail(C01 7Jt 10 ll 11~1 13'1'1 \ .,,. II 1, ~ '' t-•1.,onRand 1 " o10 391, l'l>o -T e x ) u 1 gcd D 1v i rl c"'o 1n1 '•! MIHYG 1u 1111osonS! 1111,,.MutT.,1 1t1191 e, -·~~~·;v 1 •10 1 1 i•~-•1r>i>Rao12i.1 •j••l4'1J111+\1 I mp Tee I 7 •Mo fl en 7 0 3 o 80$! Fd 9 9 10 I NEA Mui t lO I.,. --.. ,.! c,.. "...e ll l l• 1 :~ '< ll'l•nd SI 2 N S 1 11 1 '"'
ltockef0 ller chairn1cin of the f:~·~~~ ,! ; 3~ m::w~' :'I' 11 • u • e0~0M0 st 1; ,~,,•'!';:Na,• ,"d 1 '', t 11 ~=~~k ,• 01S11 10 l~o 2e , 1• o -, "'cv , c~ 70 s. • 1 •• :_1 ~ 1n"lo,1 ,.2 1 ,', •,,.... 1 ' 9 -+ ~o 'h M••'C •w ..,Nalvl16 1 717 11 :Z.:.o l)o1,_1,1"1cr1r•.,.,7NJ!•tli••lj "'-n1co.., ~ll ll •+• Cna.sc 1•lanallan Bank 0J<nn1na •'•"•""' 01 1 ... 11i.1 1o~ca1,1n wNMSt!c:ur~ 1•11GE 1.t1 JJa2&o 76o1' +0 .,..1.,,,,01 •• ,,.. •n.., 1,",~·'•jo1...!'1z~ 1,11 11 11 J'onr•n I > t""'°"'" P~ 11 I\ Bullet !11!1'1 UO'I Sila ,141061 1IG ini'Ul4 i1l.:I 11 10 601. t'I:• 1,.., 1~ 61 -. o,; ---<5 4 I .I.lo -I l\e\\ 'rork lhe nations 1h1rd C00Ht' L 11 1e>..Moore P '• t > CMld" 11,,,211•• R~na" 1 11 •••!•HGpJC• l D Sl si ' 51 ., ' • .~ 7"o -'I ~'"' 110 !O j' ii.) 36 't -to CorP s • J 'Aoo P S 1~, ~ Olvld l n l 11 or 1 1 n 0 arr;Pnt u~ 17 I \ 1 > 1 , ••• ' ttll •o 5 YI ' ]'I 1 -• In• kl~c I IO 6 "• f~. l• , J;irgest bank nol 10 ho[d Qf( [~m Yr • '> ' • Mlg• Tr~ 17 17•o N~t\11 S ' l1 G 72 r.~f" I CJ : ~ l"""p pf 1 J 19 l 19 1 19,1 ~~~":ui ~la!I~ ): ;~ ~ • ~ 0 = :. :~:-"en' !Nut r ' n• 'lf I 1911~ -l t
I I Cwtra 1• l'"'""' rrwt •1 • NVV"lll-'151• Pl s~ ,,.,., •naP o!lll 1 "' u II \ Ov'<tP lift 3, ''' '~ ,, I 5 ~" IC " l 1epr11ne rate re uction unl1 Crta MQ! 11 11• Motn M s J-l•e 1o1,.,.1 l S. Jn lrn:om l f.3 50,aoarca ll• 'n, 13 , 13 ,= .,ur•i>"',,,61J 1 !l" ,, ,,•-+ 'i~IFH•,'. 0 ~b •• i.o Vi• llO~-•
r N I CtO! Mii '' ~1.1.01 C!UI> I ,11 El •M Fd ~l 69" ''. ·-,_aen-ot~Y l 5 1;. ll ~ •) 0 ' • ... " ,',' ,•,1.1 -\1 CfUtC~ It S• •"-MUIJll c;\ ~ }., CtP~mr J ~ 7•1 •o < StrbOll I Si 21 J) 'i J1 !JI\= I' Ou~tn ~ I ~· 0 '?'a '° • Int ln~u•I l ' 15 • U, Ji• -1 lhC C\eO the 011en1bereecCro"Co 34 3 Mutler 1 •1 CG Fd 1"'16 1 11f1 ~,111 1 0,1J Bonktr1 11 1 •2,~61~, •-• unraO•?q ,q ,,..~, ''•-•1nlMod1 1 1J •
hon 'f,WP•t•C ,,,MYf•LE~ •• ,""c1pltlnv1 ••J•1 ~"""'F~1:ri1~~El•dCll;'S 1 11',11 ... 11. t'\tDl'l )1J 1n1•.1 • II ln1 1"Df11Q 11~ 15' ?6,
P:itm:in c:il c;I h11:h int"re~t g:~· :! 1~: 1f~ a:~~~""ii ·~1: :~t: ~~r .. ~~:r ~s~;:ll~~ ~~p~lkl B~~l~ ~ i:~~ ~¥i,~ ii \~·: ii'· l!1:.: ·: 2~~ :~1~! ·'c~ '~ ~~ i ~.,!· -1:~: &r"{ 1'1~ ,1:: i~,. !} ~ ii1: ~, !
rates profil taking ' and na" Gtn n 3J NCm~ CP , • ""> B~•~n 1~•111 u ~"~ 5'' •ts ''1~ El•" lr.<r ls 11 • u o.; u ~ = .: 'l,,•,,•,."" I\ 11 • 1 1~/1 P 1,'3 JS 3' 1 3J 1 Ol!~ln I> 1 • 1 1 " F.~ I II 11 co,.. 51 1 01 16, oreau '"""' llf!Mn ~II ~ 1 11,i, ;a, 31 ~P '• 61o _ • • • • 1 = 1• bJritllt"d the hi IJ rale OI Oavh Fd •I l o N~! Gl.0 16•17 C::-wn 1 • ,.,g,...o11 -.~ ~.~.Su•t~LD tl lJ •I .ie;0 00:=1,I ~ ~ ~"11,rtT,•OS, •! 1~' IJ ~1 1-l b 01•Mlr1'l\1 "1!Lll!1 1•~1n....,6'~7'"'faa •·S•xlLJDGl15 2•o2 1 --1 1 1'1 •J -4 unen1plovn1enl on 1t oe~or 111 ~, '• NA11 MMI 1.1, l\ SPA~I 1 1 1 11 ',~, ',', "• '' 11, :·, Se1u~CIQ sa , Q 9 , ; • -"oo ePe~ 10 1 11 r> ,, • TT Pll 'so s '' 4 IJb 8~ • -''
Even the ba nkers 11 ho feel
Iha\ the prime 1nlc1es t rat" IS
due for a reducll!ln feel lhat
S! Rn s pred1ct1on 1t loo op-
t1m1shc
If feder:tl pohc\ keeps put
llng n1onev into the s1sten1
!he rate will eventu:illy drop I
fle~lb AQ Jl ll<. !nl Pe• • ~ l , '" A G e " 5' SH• ~gs 1 , 'll 30\.'I JO'~ -~ l:e;co Cp •o tn 1° 1 •~ "!T' T r • ~ A I • ~• • + • f'lll~l ll'I •-t'l f11"1ltcR 9 "" '',' 0' 11 ('1eWmS1•1llJ1BellFdt1 31311 3 •;-I •«ott.llrln 1••1 ll Alt-OT&T~ll(' ?697 ;111111-l• 01vx , .. s• 1 51 1 Nat '>OW 1 7 ~~~d t~~ ~~,O Ne l ":U11 !3 B•~•FG1 DI • 1 II •• ~~ i11• + I cest c;.-.,, ,. J :i -1 '1"lT r!N ,,5 l' 5 • 5•, S\\.; -> Ott [•Ill "' !1 \ ~" s vr •11 !\1 F•M 60 0111 07 §iPIH!fth I t4 J JI Stdi~ll so JO 1e . 21V. 2~. -1, ~·'If UI I I 411 s 11 • ,, •• l• 0 -/~1 ~1. A Cl 19 ]1 • 31 31 • -1\
°"I IB 10 21'1 ~ En GE 11 o 1J <•rhd O•~lO,I D AIM t J7 10 7• Itel Ole~ :JD "' 37 lJ~ 36 -l 1 a K,.,.A_ la 3'7 •• ~ r.t 0 lnlf ~ce ! U r ll ll., -"< ~:"'e 1 ~ 1f : ~Jcll~n"~ ~ < ~f.• c,,St':'t\ ,; 3 1J.fi ~.ie ~~ J ~1 1'~ ttcc:~~I 1~ ~ :~; l~': 1~ :j: ~ i:~\'l'nv~t 1 ~ , h, 1 r ' r.' -'!l~r'B~~na"' J ~ ,t, *10 *'' = ~ g11"'Cr U \6 0 Nt1 A 3A 37 C<'~"al P1ul ll.ew 7701'3Se o)fn16l 111 \ll \2l\o Ec~eraJ71 '7Jo• ~Po-n•rsP 14 1! !K ine )\l Ne 9 Jj)]I\ FGu• l l~J••"tnnSQ 11t J ltStd"IJN4'1lb l 1'116'r~l·~·+·"'d!~cnll•M 1 II'",, lnttrs!S Ill 11.1 ~ ··~"'" .... Ol\lt•C/.A J'\i,1 ~A ·~~Tc Jlil1• Fu"" •n1n1~P~Mul t !O •lCSfl ow •o s134;,3, l'•-il"'C:&GIO a11 ,1-u ,_,0wl"tt! 17\1 1 ,~n:,'56\1+~
Dor el 1 1 > Ct I G < • 11 r,., ~ '?6 , •< P~lla 1165 ll 16 Se I ln11 tOG l 9 t•• t + '" Muo ( ~ J• ' , • 0 ' 1 OW~'° L 1 JO 7 p 1 IJ f l1 0 -O"ln•nl "'"''lt/ErOI 1 lo"'"~"' t11nMPl 1 m l l7 ,09 S•m J C01 1110 1~.10 Etec111S\"<: ~ !• '• ~•-'i owrlG l)t 1011 1 ~IN1 J8&;i ~ ~(...ANG~i1,,1, ltM 1•1 1<nP ntSI IG09l\Q Qf Sencflxl60 llU,,25 15'it F.O.•"'h~~ 3 1'1 1 0 1• +1,tow~Pl1160 ll1•2''~~ :1: o.:.: NL l 1 • NIY P1 SY I ! 19 i ~:;:.,~ ~~ 1~ .: ,l;: ~1:: !~ 1~ !l 1~ ~ g:~xc:' 1 ~ ll :~ : :i. :s : = . ~ ~~~";', r..~ .~ 1. '· : 1;•: ' l~~:=~~D 1 ~ 1• ~:lo j; : '~ • -'• Oul\kl~D 1•il >?:!!'tJ ll.sc I 11.,..~.,.,.11ro1 .. Pl•11lnv 1411011s-n p1450 1ms1 $0 •.50~-> E!Pes~NGI Q117 111.1r , llEtn•tO 7~?»1 lJ.. '• Ou•lrot1 A 16\o...-o Ar <o l e e O• c ,., 0 ,.Pflt t Fvnd• 11-11 ..,4..,.. ) •> -"''1r•C' o-'' >• > O 0 < >
think a drop to 71~ percent IS ~!~1t•:\ 1f 1;:r.:. g:~ s~1:~ ;, ~I }~ rr:...Q '°'l 1°M t 1• ~~~. 1~ = t~ :l ~;,:;, ;p.1"50 110 " , 1f ~ ~~ -I E"'~' El"< 'i 1Pl s• : 5• , ~: , _ tf orD -1.K'.:.. l2 ' -+ lo
hkely !Otnth!nearfU!Ure but ~·" ~h~ ;1 ;~grr-onr,, l•1t•~:::::eJI~ :'t ::: ti Hor 2'ntlt7ac~i lft II; !'0 ~!~I:-~::::~.:,1 :: 7j ~1: ~ s~.->I JM~nAll 71 1• t>, lo!>\ 1t"ould takeana"ful bigad l~f~~.~~~ 1~·:1;.,g~£~1NA 11 •1f>(~:::,~Fd ~:i :;~~~~~~t~ :~~.!.~:!i.:",Pc':11 1~ J~ J: ''~-~~:01~1 11~1 ~ f. ~l ~;.:;:1 ,1!'~~;1 ~'° 1~ ;;-t1: 1•.._ 0
IUS!mcnt to net \\ dO\\ n any El~ Sv<I 1~\t tn "EC 1,,1 11 ' ll ~ ~Oll'(o•d 10 t2 10 °1° ~~d';'11 t ~I~~ 8•'•"• Sii 110 lit 12 11 "I 11'" _ EnolhM n •O 1 • 1l ?? o 7J Janl1!n .OCD < IC•~ I' '> 1• , -l• b Eidt• Elt 1 1 p1~,, ar i<, ,.,. o~ o1 11 n8vn p 1 10 hr"' 60 11 'f > ,,\> '1 ~ _1 E~nl1 Elu! Jl t 1) n 11 JAG nF~ c~~ 7q 10•0 t\I 10 a furl her lh"n th:i.I I satd Dr f:I N '• ,~ J • Pac Au!c ,1, I • t"onl) I I ••• ~ .. p UJ .. '::ii Fu~d• '" SIOU; Dk u 511 so • so • SCP EWIG•• '70 ' )1 > l l Ja .... d In (If,~ ,1 9 • ••• e•. t,:1 NU"C 11 11 P•c Fa" ... l con1 c;t~ 71' •0 ,S!1lrJo11n • 13 1611, lt itO.:= ~e:ss 1nc Ml 110 "' ?1 n 1 + ,J~rtnP ot !O '1• ?It 11• .._, Wilham Zentz eice<"ullve vice Fl co~ 11'\ 1 Pike• co 1 :r.~o P ," ',!;!',1'~ F.:"1~ 1f!~,~~1 Sll•~ L•uo 1 4 1'11 • JO l.l E1<w•t lO l 3 1, 1 .. 11er~n•A so 1!> ,,.. 11 ~ n ~-,
I
F If""' Ptnc~I 1 nlw •D G I~ I I( tM Bled< HR :U 30 60 St 0 59 ,;:-0 Euexlnl 110 $' , ~ J 1& -Jf~f~C01 I~ 5 ' • •S • tS1
president or the Bcink of the Fllro... j "··~r Or 1 j ''• r111 wn1w • j j 5 ,. 1~.... 711 '1.1 81ut Sell 11'11 Jl IS'~ .... u -1 El erlll't 'Ot J• !l I lC ' 10 • -IJ ml a 11 i~ 6}~ J~ • Jt • i '•
I De I El c ~.1 ' ' • p. kw H 11 l ,, t"r• WO~I I ,. • ... I ' ':io '~ ll~bble lr-1 11 u } u 1' i -~ El"'yJ c~ M ,,, 11 1'11 ll' -\1 Joro~M'~" 1 JO .. JI -= '• Commonwealth o I rot Fl "'~ ~ ,, "' P~ 1~, P ~~ 1:r... ~ .... ~ M .11 •1 JI tJ .;~: 15 ,..,, e~ "9 co •o tu 161,1, u 111 _ 1~ E111v1 P!l 10 lo J' ; :.:i , :.l .,. • '""n ,. , , J? 36 • l5•1 l5 -11 E Morfv l'• ' P~v~1r.e 2 11 01 • >re (: o " 8t)lsC•s 1'11 •14 51 ~ • ••· , EvfOlllCI ?it ' 10 , '' • '' ,,,., ., 1a S' 0 ! 11• -• T he current round o flF,.. .. 101 11 . • Ptll!rl Ml IH 2• oor~1 1n6'1 1.-R;'~vei :gi 13~r~na l\d '' 11 o~· .,' ,~:-oEv•nJP ~Ob u 3'o l '> 3~·=, jg::~lJc•tP,8{' 11 J'" ''0 XI -• fn11,vC 1 1"~PP'e1•1T 1! 1~> g•vr 11 1<1 "Rlvl :l lJ ,.ll'lllft:*M1h l ?I li 19:.0 lt '' ~h fXCt110 125 ll JOo 70 1 7~~+ I JOllLll!I~" 80 ~ !3 ; r;, 6
speculation regarding l hr.Fn•1• l!t ;•\' :a~J0W' 1'• 1 ,., •1r 1~~~.~~:R,,';t11111 s 11 61\aora~ 11o .w 11 n. n•.-\F~l:ler""" 1to i11, I•• 1•• JaneLeu J•p J• 11 , 1,, ~'+1!,..
Prime. 1nterst rate \\as Ing f ~~r .... i.,1 & ' ' , ..:~~ p~ 'j 11' n,:;e ~a 1ft •1 11 J• :·~'."t I'd ,•, ,", ,s ~ 8g1~1~ 1J5 JI ff: '} , n , : 1~ ~=~1i:.t f;b , ',• ..!; • ,~ , •,,,, _ ~~~,,',",'" •1 10 • n • n 1 Fon [or• ' P,"r""I W1 7,nr"vt t u ll''ll" c,.,..,, •-I OI EGll 2'4 J 1'\. l'~' ,.., • •v• 'l H I> 'l•• 21> gel'tdbythree smallbank.stnFQ, n11 n., P•lrom •l •O E•••1,,. ~ S<0:;11 .. , """ ,,•ourf(S lrw: 10 1 •1 , 1 +~FarHll ne • s1B, 10 1 10•-3•Jo• "*'I~ 1.00 61" '2' 'l •-" II •ec o .,,, .,.,~(" ol <l! 61 !131.\1 .,, "" '" nv 11n1v1 lrtn!!Alr 511 5 ' 1 ' ll • -~I Farmonl I 11 11 o 11 11 1(•1...-"I 1 ll' JI 1 ll , J!•o _ '• Ark:insas \\1:scons1n an d 1i:11 C1co )J,) P~ll ~vtr 11'•11 • G w ~ \DHJ\'6 ~.~.· ",,','•"••~ tl1usr J '6A l .J • J• J • l'll'll•lf lOll 21 , 1 ,,._.I( .. , .... u1s 1 70 70 70 -1 tnc0.,., , ... ~ I ~·Bd•IM,\11) S.1$6 ' \' ' FftmllvFl lO 11 11 ,1,_,l(ft •7Jo!?l611COJS\,J$~U )-'-\ l\1aine lo\\enng their prime ~"'' '1 ~·· c:im s1 170 1101rlitMv Dll • 56 0 ~~-''F•"•1tt1 '"" 10 1~. 1a o ~.1e1 1 cem 110 1 '10 1'11 10 _, ~"""~ 1•'•'J.,.Securl!v funds !l•llP~I •le 1J f1 ' 1r•\ tt~,t •F1rwe1Fn •.11 11\o 111 1 1(1l1C Diil' 1 10 19 1•~ rateto71-e perct>nl .-b~t 11111,.,. Eq111v 111Jo•ll,Peitn1:;. •iu ,10 ~1~ •F•••h.M'totr 1 1,156 1 6 > l(•llCPwLt? J0 1 JO•l!l1< "o ~ 11••1" l~I 7,l 7f(l 8W1H1(~ to ;,1 lO~ 30 'JO +~FAS In '61 71 10 9o O .i. ,ICC 5'1 fld? , li'> l~• JI -1 •
Prime rat{' cuts a\ snl ill F1'1·111 If1' res .. m 0 Sc; '"' , " u lr1 5 •• 'M 6rk..., GI ll 1. ll • 11•. 21',· Feddtrt ~ lrl 1 I n .11i1 -' KA" GE 1 "° 6 ni. ?? 0 ')) • -... , c,,. 9\1 11 11 IJ t., ec Al"'I IAJ t 12 ll•l111UG I 12 13 lJ l 2J 7l > 7 t FICJ9t•I 1 ~ 1 7l l' • ?I, _ IC•nPwL 116 ° 71 1 2210 ?'l t + 1 bank! are mean1ngles;; t""v c","$• JI• ~11 SP':'CS11 •11111B•Q•n co 1 ,. , , _ FedMot 110 11 1•1 11 2' .. ~,Ind 1s m 1n1 1a . ~ o "" IY 1>1 ... ~Ml Gii\ 1• 1118wn$111ro 10 I 10 10 10 + :FedNMlt fl C' .!lo 5'1\ 51 +v.1(1u!lrG ?O •! l'l Jl l'•t 0 don! hin;e prime borro11 i:1:1 ... 1 r.h 1•1 1 ms~1"' Fii •1s 1s8wmonoe 1~ J .......,, J<J•o ~-1 Ft!IPPc e1ec s 11 1 11 11 l t t:. .. • Kii X'~ ~1 U•o 111, '~' •, B I M l'e ' Pro l ., l ,S Sri.•• .. , ,, lllfll ti llruru.w~ )0 IJ~ II 111.1 I '• -• Fl!dP•PBd I l 1111 lllo II ' + 11!••se•llO Ill 10 2• > f]. r. _, ' any\\ay. said Ro berl eac l 811 l'J U UM Sii °"'~ 11 111111!lucvEr Ito "1•, 2J, •-\i~eGSt"S &O I 1,l I• 1• _, io:t~blt• 1JO u SI» s1 . 51 ~+.
f I r vert tn llto17 •'5'de 16l tM 8..Cd Co JO •> l tl~ IC Fl'O•lls Inc , , 5 , , ... '(t ~Ind SCI 6 111 11 II -.. \\h1t111am president 0 llC Ft •d II• •U Sll'ml F\H\d• su.w, Pl60 s • l\ ' ... 01Fl<IOtrtS1r I u 111, 31o•t 3t•-1 I(,"'""'.~ • l'O U>t '10 +•·
N I B k f Fl m 1111 11 11 C~"'I 7 •S ~ J6 BUOQI In •IP 7• 1~o JV. I\_ \~ Fod Otv Co 1 r, I'~ 1, _ 0 t i•v ..., 11 ?• 1~ 1 21 ~ -\ An1er1can at1ooa an 0 Rudy \Voodruff has JOi nedF.a Grin 111,11f2 lllV!!JI lOOIHt128u1tFor1 110 •' J.;.io JS O JS\o !FH•oC• 70 1 It'\ ll"o 1r1-•.~•M•ll '°-10 Jnlo ,.~~ J0•1 +.11
Ed d \ll h Fld !'"&n IBt'\11)1 Tr\1'1 II l 9J SUl°"tW to 10~ it" 19 o-:io il'ltlrt!>r0 10 131 11 ~ ,1\1 1~•--...ionm" j"'' 1 n 1" n -1 1non S1 ,as the staff of Llnesch & Rey Fld Fund u 01 u~• s,,,11~ 11 1..:i1 • ., 1un1< 11.,,,0 110 '• , • , 1 •'fflclctlll 1 ,0 ,5 31 ..., 11 1 ,1 , 1r""'cn11 '°'° 1~2 "~ 41 ~ 11 _ \
I Fld Tflld "'11 IS U It Sw•t Jnv I•( I q Ullltll "l.lO 11 34 , " ..... ,, + ' tvFl'1' k 0 ,, 1•11 I~ 11 •• Scott Hutchinson pres11le'lt ncl<ls Env1ronmcnl:ll Pnn F11<1,.,.11 Pr"' swhw Gt JSJ l" •,u•tt~o 1411 2il 41~ 40~""' • 11"0' ,,. ~ 1•' 11 • 'l'•-'l(v u lt '"" 11 ''' ,q. u..,=
ID ,, [ h 0yn,.. l111 40ISoWflnv11 .. 1U llr1Nor 117o ''l o JO (l -t,;,f.,Fl1tr•ln ftl••" l•o ->.:.ICerrMcl.SO lt\0.)105~106 -h o[ the Canal Nahona an~ o ncrs of Lon" Bcac , 1t "as 1n.,1.nt 3 •t l t1 s,...-•a J •s 1.5) a ..... 1Nor pt.5$ " 1, , ' "'• • -''l"lr~'1"" 1 10 ~ ·~ 0 41 4 ' -'• • '' o' GO '' th.H'llOI' .70 ,• • -• Fs1 Chrl 1 rr 1n 4 , ,. , J _, • Portland ~1 a1ne tic !t t :innoun~ed jp,':,'" ~~1 't m ~::nsurroh5 to 1' 11• 1'-1e•-t1-=5111 11110 in , 21 . ,.,, J .I 1 Ji I"" St F 151 111•i. 111 • 114,,. -1 l"i1 icn, 2" ._ •Ito ~ 1, ,,1 • .. b:tnk lolo\\er\lsp11n1er~lelo \\rwdruff "ho pre~1ously~1,1'" ~1 :!:1~il 1~~,,,1~~ ,v~f',_'" -C.-F ~tN~tMr ,, 1 -, l.., 3
I I I & R F11 r: h M •,..r• FMuc J 1s 1 JO S•OOI C1> 1 o It 40 , l¢, M 0 _ 1 "11t'ltCll to 1 ' • :to • 1 , 7 sa1ll corsultcd111l1 1nesc1 cy "" 1,.-s~ ,,. l.j<1S1•n Rot ~0, ~'I F!!\otnl '' o .. 1,,, _ !l~'llrl'd 1~1 11 u 11 ... 11
\\ c 1 C'ren I 1r11ng to set :l nclt!s "111 assume a pos111on ~~: '1'!:111 l ~ ~ ;f ~:~ o. 1~ 1~ ~ l~ c!n ~p~~L "'~ 1J; Ji:: iI t .:i l .,: • • :~1~ .,01 1: :~·: ~~ ~~ _ ,
Ire-• our d"~'" gro1rlh as ••n-r plan""r 1n the firm ",',!. •,·,•,• 16 , ,, ,. s1ack n n 11 t1 1•mP5o 1.10 u11 :11, '' ~ , + 1 "'~11 to• , •• 1 , '\ • '' • -llU '"J'V ~ ... "" ~· J 1' S-rwk41 Inv Clll 8rew '° l ,., Jlo • • "'t:.tt of I 0 11•0 71 ' " 71 -1 ~ I n d d II be I I' d Flt F'Od SQl Gtll\ tu t 11 liftP-c:1.10 1 u1 •1·, •-cu '"'' E c.,., 1 ,,, n 11,.,. outstr1p1 ..... our ore":is s an WI n10 I! FeGt~ JOJJ.50 5v,..11 •••t.1•1111111d1 10 111 1t••ish -i.."'t1<'•..sa lo,11 ,1 •)u ~-0 we had rnorc 1nonei lo lend 1n new oe• elopments 1 n F1111 G h • u ~ ,~ Tect1 1 •1 1~\ •Pb c Bc10 1 11 1 ,. ,, -~. Fl• ,o ... l.&O • ~ , ,. -"' ~ ... ll"oullds 74.l I 'l¥ncr Gt 111 I'll errv11 .511 21 oi •N• 4~' t l'•l"frvt..tl '1 Ir"!"!~·-~ out Caltfurnla, Nevada and Fourso •••'"Mil A1 1on11 1 .~di1,', '•'• 1 1, 1~· t:J> -h .. ~1~ s1111 1 ' • ~,,, ,
I
F•.,. 11 Gr~n TMc~•I 10 111 Ii n 211• 21 1 n•o + 11(1 uorCo 1 Jiii 11 2 l lo ti Th ... 11 0 • -• Oanksniefrecto s~ttht' l\('lr1da n1lc '"ll~l.c:hnc1 1n t at:•~Tt~1~ 111,:b .1.s>. ,l"110•t>1I! ,.l ~•1 ,, _ r.w owno 1 •1~101 Utllf
Pr'm' rate at \11ha1e~er 11?1cl Formerly proj~t m:ina0ner [111th ~tt !6~~:'!:' f:.11. .~~·,:J ·~~~.l.iot '~ ;~: J:i. J:~ "titirMl~ !1' ,;.· ~ .' ,'} ,7{\l.:'.:l: 1n 1~' 1100:• ... ,~ .. tH>11r1' I _ .. "''""' ,,. JtT .. ,CIP '" ll"I ....... 1) 1~1. u 15 ,_ \li'lll(DfJ.J s :J.O .l1' ll'•-S..IHll•urh••U11Ctflcl11 tM\ \\tsh 1n charge of produclon 3nu!Fttl!'n1 1" 1 •tr•• E~ 1'1 tn ast~• ""' 1. 1J , 1l • 1, 'l"eo11F~J, tr1 n 'l ' 1•. ~,... 1-.-.111'•"•0tnl•111-o.-A,..,ui1,. ..
Rlbrd Bll o.Flllr/IU' t Ol t"Tudlr Ftt11'•11•, J.IJ~<''lO Jl'"~u •• ""::io fwtlCftM 11 > n., l o -\ The prime rnlr c 1n be ar des1i;i:n "1th c a g er Of l=vnn 1"' c; 11 rwne ci 1 IJ I I' ~ '"'' • Si\ ''" , _ 1~ .._ Mln l ~· 11~ 1tu rt1u1 Jlodc o v otM t-Llot.llU11"' 11r.1o
A I f La Be.ch '"''( 1-. t 11 TwnC Inc J •1 ' Cp Pll H ' II If t.I +It l'ootir ~.'° l 1 • ,~" ... , lllll'ld 11-Dtl:l,lo•l'll or Ptld '" 1m ... ~ fec1ed b} go1crnmt>.nl action sso"111 l!S n guna 1m101t 65, 1 11 u1111 Mui '" , •• euu..~ 'f 1 11 11 Fi!l!"llMDI 1C1 21 n !lit 1 -•• ..,w, I f \\oodruff wns p roiect •~~ T,a 1~"'1 11 to ut11M '""••~:~-flt.St 1t0 s.ru 5'\o 55•\ .. ,,~io,:~'i'° 1°' "t111~ '' 1 •1«11 01~11t"fl "-"••,.,,Ye¥ such :1.3 lhe o"er1ng o r:ies P101 -" l*'Uft c'nt1 ~27 'o' ,~ ~''' "'J'' 1.1o c to ' tl:.t 1 -'"•~llb e 1n 11oe• ov•l'lf u10. ntl"'''"
charged on 101105 ftonl 1hc mllO.'.l ger for tile planning Of ~~!:......""':;~ ,,uj_~~FU~IM 611t =·F~ lll 'i 'i )~~ '1 _1,ft: o(., )II !~ lf'4 r.:+ "t~nvlutOfl ~•-ll•ltk"llPl'tlt-41"1'1~
S Th many pro)"+ a n'"' St< f,<IJ t •I IMPftl U I• 0"' tll nud IA 11 J\jo !I 11 -~ COt(~••o J0o f" 11 I• -'4 tiOll dl!t• , •• ,. • fdtral Restrve } stem ts "' niw11ir •,. •.is 5~111 ''° l n "' jllt 1 u 111 11 ' ,.., l''i ,,,. •" · ..-• f"• P• 1••, -.. •-~ .. " .,. Hid " ,,,
"OUid mok• >t chea""r for Pnor to that sssoc1ahon o.._ ~ v-'" .111:::i1ls tf, Jt 1n. 1..,. !'•-h{~~1.10 11 n:i''" Jl"' ~1 +-.. "'' ,,.r n-~11'" II" ••Id .ntt ., I"""' ..... ~ F 61' , .... UFd C•n 1 :~J ,,to RllM~ 1) fll\ 211' f 1'1 :='1'~ ~ $1 ' o -4 •!Kii flwio.nci pr NII' uo. t -0.Clllr ...
banks lo •" money to l<'M Rudy \Voodruff wa$ project 11:.r .. d , rn ._,, v11ut 11n1 ,d ...... sw \ 11 ti •t\t ~to -u. FllllW ~ ...,. • 1"" 1 -"" o~ he R [Ot'f\ St 11 6' lj 11 v11 L n J 11 • l1 "''' '° ' 4 111 '2 -\.II -G-or ••Id 1111• w1., If\ ectymu1111w , ....
I ··• lh••• !o"\n•s could planntr for t ossmoor r;r!hl'd A f .S 1t 1ncom ... • 'l c~,."'•.,1 " n,,1 , ~~ "'o -i:. G'i ,, ,,. ,.. n• I', , *un afv ~ in •r!'t'•l'l-n-Nnt -
ou <UIU .,.. • " Cornnratlon for their t.e.1surer.•1~ '""' i ot 17 11t 5P1 511 'I' J•~;m'Y.-, H ''" l~ 1:r'+'0 0~ ~tPA 11 1111 1 11J -1 ~ -P•kl 111 ' ~,,, ovkk!rt ""'1ttte. ("-he passed a!ong to borro"crs ·""' l)tverw. 1>..n u~ vnc:1s ..,, • ' • Ctrt·1ffil ao y l!~ 2 \4 1 1' -(" 1 '° 1 1r . 11'11 n _ 11 .,,~ • "'O .,,~ t~k"' • 19Jt dMllff.d b~ mt ans or II \O'o\tr 1ntr:rtsl \\ orld proJcet..s Ill Chicago ~.:~~ n SJ ti SI ~:::ibf l ;: ~ ~ ,,, llCJ Pl.. I IS : riu ~ -" "' ~· 1'.1r "° .,. ... n r.,; :: \ "'"'""" r.i ( ••ee Ot ••Id ... .,.,. •Ill-I
I llhnois and Laguna Hiils ""' ,_!! • ,. V•r ltlllP ')0 '·t! r: ,""' :~ ~ s-. Ulli -tto ~ ~.r I ~ ""' t! + 1, 1111!'.11 tr ~ .... t-~· 0 HI ....... ""'"
rate Callfom1a He 'o\aS formerlyH~~ I ;,, :-ll~~;s: tn l'i11s:M =S,ri~ n'l ·~o tl ~ ,fl f ' ·z-~ ,,. I~ ~u~\~ n:: u ·=~. 1'70 fl ........... ~w•lutt111t1t<dlwllfeold H~•IWH 10 14 10 '' Wt•~ Mu 11 Ill I 02 > M 1 .., «I > ''°'' ~ ' ' f"_, f; 1 Of t.o+il•ltrut'•-oo• ..... ~ ' director of land planning for H .. ,. ltv t • -'w.111 .... t~ Or11111 ~Af~ 1~ 1~ 11 '''• "'• -• 1~ ... , IN t 1 .' 1: ' -• ...., •--lutL
I OOO'S DP OIL ,,.,, .. TINGS 1 R M Galloway Associates =:::~ GPf ; 0i 1~ ~ r:'':I' l~n :: !: :::C,.11.!! M,,• "• ",r: R,t: Jt~r: =11; ~~ftCr''tf 1' U1? 11 . 1}' -1 • c~ ceoro t•-"'•"111•.att11 •-EHIYlo ,. U d VT" , bob I Hl'l'I" It" '1' 111r1 1 ~ f 1t 1ltl 1 t I , I t-l "'11~1" ~ tf y' ~ I •+ •11.,e •~(I wi... In lulL •dll-b-Gl1tr" WHO ES.ALI WA llHD Sl tin ,, Engineers I 0 .. M11111 " ..... u • t!'~Y 1 H <-II=~ 2"1111 ,l .,, ·~· '•' -•1 .... "¥ I 11 " " I~ -t, 111/llQ!\ .. ,_,, rtg!ll <IW-'ll'llM!lt -f' OPIMTD THI PUILIC Q ,.,.., H""""' 1•1 J•• Tl'1.IJI '"'!"' •• ' )-.. Al'llOM A~ 1 4 o o '' 1•'1 -Wlfll rang! """'nty ry. t 1111 •61 '" ~•'11 1•~1 ·• ..,.."'Ol,11~ :f J, n:0 J Tra~ 1. 21 ,. ... "" --.. ,,,.,,,,, tftl-Wf!tfl $5 a~ up A rtSldtnt of Oran"e County ::1 ?r"' I~ :~ = 1~" .t~ ~tbl'Ollt"l JI .., : 0. 'J =,~ .. -... 1J ~: ; 'I +: IJLilrtllutN ... i ... wn'11 hMllO ..,._..,d
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1970
Mo11day's Oosing Prices.--Complete New York Stock Exchange List
DAILY PILOT
Cycle Not
Too Well
NEW YORK f AP) -During
lhe boom yeara of the mid·
1960s It became popular to
braa about the Lam.Ins of the
business cycle. that process of
exp1ntlon and contr1ctlon Uu1t
JJeemr es Inherent t o
economies es bre.atl'una to
human1.
They were heady days,
despite the war, wl'ltn dreams
became realities In 1 OaSli.
Nothing was lmportlble, it
teemed. Not only was man
pltnnlr\IJ to tend hl1 species to
outer •PICC, he WU eh!~V•tlng
millions of people into a
stratosphere or m a t e 'r I a l
wealth and comfort.
It w11 en exciting, euphoric
world, if only in 1n economic
sense, and it i& ea1y to un·
deratand why some people
UloUfht that buaJ.net1 was
headed up, up and away-that
advance need no~ bt followed
by decllnC!, u lberelolon>
beJieved.
Now we know dlfferenUy, of
count.. Expansions seem to
generate thelr own dlseues,
somtWMI llkt bilh living Is
&aid to produce lhe gout or
hl1h blood P""""" or lulnw or wtu dll<ltpllno.
I
I
,_
I
•
I
(
\
I
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I
CHECKING Khrnsh~hev Stormed U.N. 10 Years Ago
•UP•
Bibles m Prisons,
But Not Schools
' UNITED NATIONS \UP!) took off hi$ shoe, pointed It at on ringing. Death and destruc-
-Hopes have faded for • Boland, made a motion 1s If to lion to colonto.I servitude!
summit meeting b e t w e e n th and President Nixon and Soviet row it then pounded it Away with It! We must bury
Premier Alexei N. Kosygin at oo the table. Boland ruled that It! And the deeper the bet·
the !5th anniversary session of Sumulong's remarks were ln ter!'' Khn4hcbev shouted.
the United Natiom General order. A. U.S. delgate, Francis
Assembly b e g I n n I n g Wed· Khrushchev then rose from Wilcox, renewed the attack on
nesday. ' his seat, waddled up the aisle the SOviet bloc, charging that
With Kosygin's apparent to raise his own point of order "thtre are • number of states ~ision not to attend also and told Boland : "We live on In Eastern Europe which do
ended the possibility or a earth not by the grace of God not have their independence."
scene like one 10 years ago to-nor, sir, by your grace, but by Mezlncescu rushed back to
day at the U.N.'s ISth birthday Ille grace and Intelligence of the podium. Boland banged his
when Kosygin's predecessor, the great people of the Soviet gavel. And ·u.en . again. And
view of the scene we hive just
witnessed, the appropriate
step i! that the .....,,bly
"""1!d be adjourned al one<,
and It is be~by ~"
It was the only Ume in the
history ol the world por11a.
ment that. such don wu
taken. ..,.
NOW IN HUNTINGTON BEACH
2'11e"ar11B
.. USCOUNT PLUMllNG
HEATING & .CIR CONDITIONING
"Home Bise For
Do.It Your1elfer1"
18423
BEACH BLVD •
847-9641
MARRlEO MEN on the
average make more money
than widowers. w i d o w e r s
more than divorced, divorced
more than separated and
separated more than single ..
. AM ASKED TO NAME the
~·arld's busiest road. That
would be the interchange at
the Harbor and Santa Monica
freeways in Los Angeles ...
NOTE A HISTORIAN claims
SL Paul was misogynic. Had
to look up. ~1eans "havin~
or showing a hatred and
distrust of women .''
Horseradish!
do we call an ama'teur radio
operator a ham?
THE ONLY FISB that can
blink both eyes is the shark ..
Nikita s. Khrushchev. banged Union and of all the peoples again . The head flew off and • 24 Hr. Emergency Service ~:se=y~s:ntt~~~~e~~ :~~de'::."fighting tor in· :,~:ri:,1:sk~f1~ bitting •Ceiling . Wall -And Slobs leaks Our Specialty
H. Boland pounded bis gavel "You will not be able to The red-faced Irishman was • Water Heaters • Drain & Sewer Cleaning
SURELY SOAtEBODV can
name the only word in English
that begins with "ud" • -;-, IF
YOU READ in bed, you're a
librocubilarisl, remember that
... NO FWWERS, no matter
what their colors, clash in
bouquets, I'm told ... THE
BORDER BOYS say its' the
women. not the men, who
smuggle the most.
so hard that he bro!<e it. smother the voice of the furious and he thundered:
It was the wildest day in the peoples. the voice or truth "I am sure that the 20% DISCOUNT ON ANY PURCHASE OR SERVICE WITH THIS AD
history of the u .N. Gener.ii _'w~h~ith~· ~ring~•i::-•~l~ou<Jld~·_":••11<d'....".w~il~l ·.~go".__~A~•:":,.:'.m~b~ly~w~il~· l~f ee~l _t~h~at~, _i'.in~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!!!
Assembly. .-
LOVE ANO WAR -The
husbands and wives in ap-
proximately three out of every
20 couples get along together
in a dandy manner. 11ley
really like each other, maybe
love each other. In about
seven out or every 20 couples.
they don't exacUy dislil:<e each
othe r. but the thing runs bot
and cold. They could trade in
their partner! without giving
up much. In about 10 out of
every 20 couples. they just nat
out don 't make it, but stick
·rogetber for practical-reasons~
Such were the findings in a
govemment-sponsored study
nationwide. Sad, if true.
HERE'S AN ODO one. The
rise aod fall in the number of
building permits issued from
day to day in this coontry
roughly corresponds with the
rise and fall of aspirin sales.
Why is that? ... MUSCLES in
a boy's hand just don't develop
_ ~ e.~rly as ~~l~s !!! ~ gir!'s.
That s a !ihyslcal raa. Ml.gf'lf
explain why a boy's pen·
manship is rarely as nifty as a
girl's.
OPEN QUESTION -Why
CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q.
"Do most youngsters now kiss
on the first date?" A. •
Evidently not. A survey of
6.000 collfSe students indicates
42 percen Ol1fi'ilxiys claim to
do so, but only 32 percent of
the girls say likewise . ." . Q. •
"Do whales sleep much ?" A ..
About five hours a night in
captivity. They dream, too,
but don 't ask me what about
... Q. "What proportion of all
the new babies are born to un·
wed mothers?" A. Seven out of
every 100 in this country.
BIBLE READlNG -The
13Wliftllinois makes it-illegal
to read the Bible in public
schools. B.ut the law there also
requires the state to provide a
Bible for every convict. Is that
not considerate? A young
fellow may not be able to dip
This session is expected to
be much quieter,
Khrushchev 's shoe pounding
made a shambles or U.N.
decorum.
The trouble started when a
delegate from the Philippi.Res
-Sen. Lorenzo Sumulong -
ca lled for a declaration
against colonialst under debate
to apply to the Soviet Union
vr'ho, he said, had "swallowed
up~' the-peoples -ot-Eastem
Europe.
The delegate from Romania,
Eduard Mezincescu, demand·
ed that. President Boland rule
Sumulong out of order. and he
ran Up the aisle to plead his
point.
It was then that Khrushchev
Berkeley
Produces
Riot Film
into the Script~es in sc~I~ BERKELEY (UPI)
but authorities there repeate<I· Stu<linfs" and professors have
ly point out he'll be able lo produced a "fantasy documen·
catch up on them in jail. tary" movie about a chaotic
Your questlans and com· day in the lif~ of a Berkeley
me:nts._ate __ wel.c.o..med __ an.<l ~ ~~fe~~ -d~1ng a ~ampus
wilt be "sed in CHECKING . UP wherever possible. The movie. titled "Report,"
Please address uour Letters is a film within a film showing t L M 8 • .A p faculty members making the 0 • · OJfu. .O. Box movM! while s t'u dent s
1875, Newport Beach, Calif. repeatedly interrupt with
criticism of the action.
New Theory Cites
Virus Importance
Real riot foota Re from last
winter's Third World Student
strike is included in the S4
minute black and white film.
Here is how the film's
creators, professors Nonnan
Jacobson and Jean-Bernard
Bucky and graduate student
Robert Peyton, describe it : · NEW YORK (UPI) -A
theory newly presented to the
scientific world holds that all
higher vegetable and animal
life, and this, of course, in·
eludes us people, is what it is
because of viruses.
This theory that an apparent
evil masks an ultimate good is
going to startle a lot of scien·
tisls and the hot scientific
arguments will break out very
soon.
Without viruses, theorized
Dr. Norman G. Anderson. a
molecular sc ientist of the Oak
Ridge (Tenn.) Na tional
Laboratory. all of earth's
higher organisms would have
missed the evolutionary boat.
If they had missed it, they
would not now exist.
all life, Anderson argued in
support of his theory -it
varies from one variety of life
to another only in complexity
and in the arrangements of its
components.
"A long history of evolu·
tionary changes obviou sly lies
behind the universi ty of the
genetic code," Anderson said
in confronting science with his
theory in the international
science journal, "Nature."
"Why is only one version (of
the code ) left?" he asked. "If
information from the entire
biome (the complete range of
animal-vegetable life ) was
read and is to be read by any
and all organisms, only one
code could and w o u I d
survive."
Viruses kept them on the His positive evidence that
" 'Report' evokes a~in ful
and chaotic experience: trying
to leach an experimental
course dealing with freedo m
on the Berkeley campus. And
to raise questions a bout
teachers wilhout a n s we rs ,
students without restraint, and
freedom w i thout un-
de rstanding.
boat over the aeons of evolu· viruses can be transmitting
tionary time, Anders 0 n agents of protein patterns was
reasoned, by being transmit· derived from studies of the experience.
ting agents among many lowest life forms, particularly ;=='==========;!
"Student disruptions of the
story become increasingly ex·
treme. The students chase the
teac her across the campus,
through an academic pro-
cession and a vi olenl
demonst ration. finally cor·
nering him in a school
lavatory wtiere a meeting of
the class takes place. The
ensuing chaos propels both
teacher and film makers off
the campus, while everyone
seeks to make sense out of the
THE BEST varieties of evo lving life -life bacteria. His neg at t v e
destined to ev.o lve into people evidence boiled down to this
and llfe headed for insect simple statement: If viruses R11cl1nhip poll1 p10¥1 "Pia.
status, for instance. are bad for life, then how 11uh" ;, on1 of tha world'1 "'01t
Come e Olul '.on h as n • t popular colftic 1trip1. R1ad it What they transmi"tted. he v I. · tcd h Ito th ? daily in th1 DAILY PILOT.
theorized, were inheritable l __:e~•~mftnj'iiiii.it ~e~miia~g~e~er~--~~~~~~~~-:'.='I patterns for evolutionaryl
useful proteins. This visuses DA.NISH FUINITURI SWEDISH CITSTA.L
did by inc 0 r p 0 rating lllDAL IE!;ISTRT CHINA. ... STEIL
fragment.s of the deox-1'\ yribonucleic acid (DNA) of the Ah• a
organiaml!I they Infected into "'UA' a11U1.
their own DNA which they _J...-~':':"".'~·r then added to the DNA of their
next hosts, which could have d0ntth CJ:Jffee.
been organisms of entirely dif· gOTden
ferent orders. ...,, 2'~0 E.Coo.slHll>J., Cofono clol Mar
DNA makes offspring like Doi/1:1 9 :30 +o S:}I Tel: 613-2.1110
their parents and very slowly, ""'*"' 11+.S &elA-MtU•rChorg•
by evolution, improves thcm.1-::===;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;====;;:;;=;I
It contains patterns for the li
specific proteins which pre>
duce and operate any given
variety of life. Life evol ved in-
to higher and higher rorms
becduse the responsible pro-
tein patterns were evolving.
Science now knows this
"geneUc code" ls common to
L£T'S BE FRIENlll Y
l[ )'OU h•ve new nclg;hbnrs
or )tnow ot anyone movin1t
to our art•, pl<'SM 1('11 us
50 U..t "'e may extend a
trl<.'ndly wt:lcome and btlp
theta to become acqualnt~
ill tbdr NW IUrTOUndinp.
SL emt rm ......,., -nil
llDr YISitlr
I See by Tod ay's
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• En}C'Jy the r.cn!le an of
girl \\'&1ching as you 11p
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• If you are ate~ hun1ln1t.
th!~ 6' hand rublx-d walnut
finish 11e~nsolt!' cabi·
-'net la a st~al at $75.
• l\ltSA Vtrde mOt~r deg\r .
H babyalller. \''111 pick up
A take hOme .
,.
•
U you've got a combined check and charge card from Security Pacific Bank you'll he looking at
more than just fi ne print. On the back of our Master Charge there's a Check Gua;antee
Card that tells merchants we'll stand behind any person;lized "'
check you writeup to$100. And a Ready r•
ReservAccount fuat lets you write checks for more money than you l
actually have in your account. Apply for the Master(-.. )~
Charge/Check Guarantee Card/Ready ReservAccount at any • • \
branch of Security Pacific Bank. After all, when you've I
got an ordinary credit card, that's all you've got. {
SECURITY PACIFIC BANK
I
..
..... 174 0 •• ,, ''Cll"" ~lllC llol1IOllM."'" ~ ~~IL~~~~~J1--======-~~---C~~~~~~~----=--=--
•
Tu1s41r. OC1o"r U, lt1' ,. .. , lJ
A tlertcf flowery maxi skirt is
worn by Off Ann Snider (left)
with a whit• lace bodice and
Mexican shawl. At right (left
to right} Gabriell• Edalatpour
and Diane Barrett select •
royal blue and gold print mini
·.a wlth a dirndl skirt and a nau-
tical costume of wide-leggec(
shorts and T-shirt.
•
~-· ... ..
•.
••
•
Dress Codes · Relaxed -
-------::==---
Everything Qe ~s
"The length Is up ~to you" ls a cam-
paign slogan advertlsen coined when the
midi failed to capture the common
market.
Such a theme of individuality is
evidenced at area hJgb schools which
prettded the current advertising cam-
paign by relaxing dresa code regulations
In the fall of 1969.
When the districtwide furor .subSided,
It was decided the only regulations wou1d
be "clean, neat, decent and safe." "We
are more than pleased with our minimum
dress codes," commented Mrs. Jack
Newman, assislant principal at Costa
Mesa High School. "The responsibility
rests primarily on the student and bis
parents and it has been very successfuJ."
' "Students have to use their own Rood
judgment," added Mrs. Ed Breeding,
assistant principal of student personnel
serviei!s at Newport Harbor High School.
' "We have decided to handle inappro.J!.i-
ate Clfi!SS on an iodlvlilual, rereffal-
basis rather than resort to any blanket
rules. It is very eUeetive,"
The success of the code ls illustrated by
the wide array of colors, fabrics, style
and fashion that covers the campuses. An
eye cast across the school yard finds the
traditional skirt, sweater and blouse
highlighted by a wide range of mini,
maxJ, midi and jeans. The modem high
schooler Is no longer restricted by the ad-
ministration or his peers. "The best Urlng
about the new code is I can-we
whatever I feel like when I get up in the
morning. I can express myself," said
Jana Thagard, a Newport Harbor junior.
The International aura that prevails
emphasizes the exciting new way of
dressing. Peasant dresses, Persian caf-
tans, original designs from Indian mad-
ras and Mexican shirts all dot the con-
temporary campus. "It's part of the
ethnic trend," explained a senior, wear-
ing a bright Africa n print. "In our own
'"i'~..t:f way, we're trying to say 'Look at all the :i -beauty ln-itiewCiflif:' ,,.-----· --
Typical of the ne wly
liberated students ore
freshman Morla Robinson
in a blue shirt and
o poisely p rint maxi.
The era of individuality brings a relax-
ed acceptanei! of any dress and lends a
persooal touch_to teenage fashion. Itis no ~
longer a junior imitation of the · adult
scene. Youth is content to be itself
decorated in a variety of colorful'
personal offerings. ' THRIVES ON HIGH SCHOOL SCENE
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS
by JACKIE COMBS
Senior "Mallory Morquet
rai lroads her own brand
of fashio n, complet e
with a yardman's c op ,
Designers Won't Dress Her
In 'Ma.squerade Costumes'
•
By MARIAN CHRISTY
NEW YORK -Fiery 54-year-0ld
BeUy Furness, still a goodlooking
size.1 clotheshorse, can blow as hol
as a sizzling furnace , But when
angered, the sparks turn to an icy
blast that is below zero.
New York's Governor Ne I s on
Rockefeller, a Republi can, has
always been in awe of the
Democratic Furness fire-and-ice
personality.
Besides, Nelson was impressed
with the job she did as LBJ's con-
sumer assistant, the fact her name
is a household word, that she onei!
commanded an enviable $100,000
annual salary for delivering the
famous Westinghouse TV com-
mercials that made her famous and
rich.
The governor, rising above party
politics, recently telephoned Betty
and offered her the role of big boss
of New York's newly-created
C.Onsumer Protection Board. Yes,
yes, she answered.
Lately she'd been embroiled in
lectures, guest appearances on na-
tional TV talk shows, writing a col-
umn for McCall 's magazine. Not
nearly enough of a challenge to
keep racy Betty moving.
Now she's got a $31.000 salary,
chauffeur-driven limousine at her
dl!pOsal. a staff of 20 professionals
to give her tender, loving support,
perhaps even a long-range chance
to run for elective office U she
establishes a female Ralph Nader
image.
STILL ANGRY
Sbt'1 still awfully mad at
Westinghouse for not letting her ex-
pand her televbion horizons from
commercials to a full-fledged
woman'• show.
"I did a great job for them. One
day Ted Colt, the producer, told me
I WIS fired, through, llnished,
"Whet I'll never id over is that
Cott never told me why I was fired,
who wu reaponsi ble, for what '
reason . I find that unforgivable."
The famous Betty Furness was
..
MI DIS NONS ENSE
Fiery Betty Fuma11
jobless but not spiritless.
' '
. I
After having done Westinghouse
commercials from six political con-
ventJ2!1s, she was mesmerized by
the government machine and fell
down about show business. She
worked for LBJ 's campaign, got
close to Lady Bird by doing Vista
spot announcements for nothing.
There was a charming payoff. On
Feb. 15, 1967, the then-President
Johnson phoned her to come to
Washington for a job.
Tongue clackers tee.heed. Win-
dow dressing, lhey said. Nader was
among her bitterest critics. But she
performed well and gained respect.
Betty Is Mrs. Leslie Midgley,
wife of a TV producer, owner of a
Cape Cod saltbox house that is
practically all red Inside and was
decorated by two top maMequlns,
ClaJre Morrow, a former Norman
Norell model , and Barbara Brown,
Leslle, a widower, i5 &tty's third
husband. They married just before
she took the Washington job and
lived together only oo weekends.
But there were no Sunday night
tears at the work-week parting.
•·Being mature adults, we told each
ether there would always be the
next weekend."
CLOTHESHORSE
She was and is a fashion paceset-
ter.
When on the Job she wears $1 ,000-
and-up Galano~ or Norell clothes.
In private she dons Rud I
Gernreich's animal prints with
coordinated tights. '•J have been a
cheetah, peacock and giraffe," she
says with a Cheshire cat grin.
But she's explosive on the subject
of midis and maxis:
''I'm going to wear what I've got
until J'm embarrassed in my
clothes. And let me tell you that
won't happen soon. I have been the
midi route. So what's the thrill?
And those damn designers aren't
going to put me in masquerade CjS-
tumes.
"I don't want to be a gaucho, I
dan't want to be a Tyrolean maid, I
dan't want to be a gypsy. I am a
smart American woman -not a
nitwit who'll fall for all this fa shion
nonsense.''
What started the tirade is that
Betty wore a white midi by Jax to
a dinner party given by the
Richard Rodgers. Before dessert,
honest Leslie took electric Betty
aside and told her she looked 10
years older. That almost did it.
Next day she tipped Into her
favorite Fl fl h Avenue store,
Bon wit Teller, to lr)' on more midis
before making final judgment. She
grimaced at her midi refiectlon In
the mercUw three-way mirror and
a salesgirl kept on saylng1 "You'll
get used to It."
She tried on other midis, got
more depressed , said so and the
salesgirl leveled with her. "h's
about lime designers got what's
coming to them."
't .
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--
Experience Best Teacher?
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Do you know
what happens whtn two virgins marry?
Well, I can tell you from experience.
No1blng.
I was brought up in a very 1trict,
highly rellgioys at_m.o.sphere. 1 wu aure
my parents had adopled me becauu 1ex
between THEM didn't seem pois.Ible. I
was taught to suppre+u all seiual urge•
because they wue "the devil's work.''
When I had normal feelings of desire I
became so ashamed of myself I would
get physically ill.
Naturally I married a young man
whoso family was friendly with my Jami-
, ly -a perfect 11entleman, impeccable
morals, every mother's dream. Of course
he had as much 6ex experience 11 I ~
that is to say, none. Our honeymoon waa
a nightmare of fru1Lration, disap-
pointment and tears, There should be a
law agaln1t two dumbells like us getting
rnarrled.
Now, eight years and one ch lid later, I
feel absolutely nothin11. My husband s im·
potent half the time and when be isn't,
J'm fri11id. So much for our story. I hope
from now on you won't put such a high
priority on virginity. If at least one of us
had had some experience, we wouldn't be
IO messed up today. -PULSE ZERO
DEAR ZERO: Sexual experlen~
be:ore marriage would not have helped
"')'OU OR ~r hu sband. It's not wbal-you
two did not KNOW 1bout sex that lou1ed
you up, but how you felt about It.
Your description of parental Influence,
Horoscope
Cancer:
TUESDAY
OCTOBER ll
ANN LANDERS ~
the feelln11 of jullt and shame -
everytblns adds up to con.Oleta that would
'mike a Maltby ai1u1l relatloulllp Im·
po11lble. Wha chlldren are brouabt up to
believe Ulal tel 11 1tntul aDd dirty, a few
words by a cteroma11 wUI not maalcally
tralllform t.be ume act lnto aometbln&
beautiful.
You and your bu1band 1bould have
1ou1bt co¥n1ellnC BEFORE your mar·
rla1e. You bot.b koew whal you dJdn 'I
)Utt'!. ~nd It would bave m!-de a e-eal
deal of 1en1e to learn toge lb er. I a11ume
from your letter lh11t you and your hu1°
band are In your early SOI. Tbll 11 cer·
talnly not too late t.o discover joy and.
fulfillment of pby1lc1l love In marriage.
my preananc:le1 hive made lt lmpoulble
for me to work thue put three years."
And then her final whimper, 0 W• can't
make tt on one paycheck." If they can't
make It -whit are they doln1 with three
kid• in three year1?
We hear a lot or talk: about pollutlon
theae days. Evel')'one 11 1ereamln1 at
General Motora a n d Commonwealth
Edison. But lhe principal polluters are
PEOPLE. We must keep Uk 1\ie of
families down or we all are doomed. How
come you didn 't think of this when you
ansy,•ere<t her'? It wa1 1uch a beautiful
opportunity to strike a blow for Z.P.G.
I Zero Population Growth ). Shame on you
for thll monumental 1oot. -ABER-
DEEN, S.D.
DEAR AB: I cu afford to toof OC•
ca1loully becaa1e tbarp-fyed readers
like you see thlna:a. I don't aee, 1ud they
let me know. Thank you l'ery mucb.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm furiou1
with that nitwit who wrole, "l have two
children under two years of age and am
e1tpectlng a third any minute." It's peo-
ple Hke her who are making this earth "The Bride'• Guide," Ann Landers'
uninhabitable for people like you and me. booklet, answers aome of the most fre·
She goes on to complain because her hu.. quently asked questions about weddings.
band d0e&n't help her with the housework To receive your copy of this com-
and she can't afford t_g RJY an)'.one" to _ . prehen1ive guide, write to Ann Landers,
come in . --rn care or the DAIL-Y-PJLOT, enclosing-a
The plot thickens as she drops this little long, self-addressed, Jtamped envelope
gem ; "l used to hold a part-time job but 111d as centa 1n coin.
Full Moon Influences
cordlngly.
-GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
I
KAREN BLACKBURN
To Marry
Betrothal
Revealed
Mr. and f\fr1. Joteph B.
Blackburn of Huntington
Beach have aMOunced the
engagement of their daughter,
Karen Lynn Blackbum to
Robert L. Woodward of Tait.
-A -March 20--wedding In
Wayfarers' Chapel,
Portuguese Bend ii being
plaMed .
Miss Blackburn Is a
graduate of f\1arlna Hl&b.
School and is a senlor ma·
jorlng in social science at Cal
Poly, San Luis Obispo. Cur-
rently she ls on the president's
scholastic list and Is a biltle
Sister for Delta Upsilon.
B!NE"T BALL GLITTERS -Dancing amid the surroundings of stylized
diamonds and greenery are Mr. and Mrs. Gavin Herbert of Newport Beach.
who attended the Diamond Horse Sboe Bali in the Beverly Wilshire Hotel to
benefit City of Hope.
By SYDNEY OMARR
Mercury, the 1malle1t and
fa1te1t-movln1 planet in the
1ol1r 1y1tem, I• a1aoclated by
a1troloeer1 with wrltin(, other
fonns of communication. The
1lgn1 related to Mercury are
Gemini and Vlr10. These
per1ona cu. beJo.und Jn fl_eld!I
of communication: wrlter1,
teachers, radio and television
-they are al&o ln ne~·•
because many are I I D e
reporters , able to by-pass the
superflclal and eet to heart of
a story.
doorstep. What you feel ls
!lnlshed, may merely be get-
ting a second wind. Applies to
1pecial relationship.
TAURUS (Aprlt 20-May 2'!):
What was restricted becomes
available. Key-ls not to ask for
more than you can handle. Be
moderate -and practical.
Some rules, il adhered to,
result In sold gain. Act ac·
Accent on emotions -Which
seem now to rul)_ the gamut.
Nothing halfway -all I.he way
or nothing. Thi.t's what may
be occurring during thil cycle.
Hold on -you will emerge
with property settlements, ac·
qulsltlons of needed me.terlal.
Home and career may con-
flict. Finish a project which
haa been draining y o u r
energy.
.LJ!O ( Juyt 23.Aug. 22):
Her flance I& a RJ'aduate of
Taft High School and Taft
Junior College , An
aeronautical engineering ma·
jor, he also is a senior al Cal
Poly and ls a member of Delta
Upsilon. His parents are Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Woodward, also
of Taft. A Jewel of a Ball vi~1~~~it (June 21-Jul§ 22):
Full moon position coincides
Diamonds Sh.immering
'
Women Face Question
Of Improvement's Value
Establish significant conte.cts,
but avoid unnecessary
journey. Means express will·
Jngness to cooperate in future
promotion. But don't make
yourself too av a-11 ab I e :-
Menage will be clarified.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22):
Financial aspect.I point to
need for caution. Study Leo
message . Avoid being
overanxious. You get what you
want if you heed inner voice.
Means utilize intuitive intellect
for best results.
'Debate'
Debated
..
Colorful, elegant and In·
Umate was the atmosphere
surrounding the D I a m o n d
Horse Shoe Ball w h i c h
preoo:led the opening of the
International Horse Show in
The Forum benefiting the City
d. Hope.
Stylized diamond horse
lhoe• and greenery were ln
abundance at the formal
dance In the Beverly
Wilshire Hotel, and many or
lhe men sported pink tail
coats, symbolic of achieve-
ment ·In the hunt .ce:ti!iOf'Y of
equestrian life.
Among them were J .
Edward r,tartin. head of
California EquesU'ians, · pro-
Friendship Served
At Potluck Dinner
.
' • ' •
After a busy h1•0-week open·
ing schedule, parents 0 r
Hilltop Nursery School wlll
take tlme to relax and get ac·
quainted during a potluck din-
ner Friday, Oct. 16.
Greellng all parents in the
school's church location, 1259
Victoria St, will be ~1rs. Mike
New Ideas
Fly High
''Plane 'n Fancy" ideas for
their fashion show will be
£ · discussed when the Newport ! • Beach Kiwi Club meets at 8
: p.m. Thursday, Oct. 15 , in the
}-.. Mls1ion Viejo home of Mrs.
~ Howard Jenkln1. Mrs. William $ Watson will assist as co-
~ hostess. !-Also discussed will be the
:-chapler·s dulies during the
• Grey Eagle•' national con·
: ventlon In the Newporter Inn
: t allO beg.Inning Thuraday and j' continuing through Saturday,
.. Oct. 17. Gray Eagles are
' ~ :
i
1
'
retired American A l r I i n e 1
pilot1.
Any former American
Airlines stewardess is eligible
for membership In the Kiwi
Club, and additional in-
formation may be obtained by
cont.acting Mr1. Lee f\1cyners.
membership chairman, at M4-
664S.
Prison
Toured
California Institute r or
Women at Frontera, near
Chino, will be the destination
for Lawyer•' Wives ot Orange
County.
'111e llfOUP wUI board bu8'1
at 1;30 a.m. 'Mlurllday, OCt. 16,
at the Alpha Beta market
loc1tcd 1t fu1Un Avenue ind
17th Stretl for the two-hour
tour,
The luncheon served lo the
vi5ltors will be the 111me meal
strved to the inmates that
d•¥·
Andreotti, president. and rtlrs.
William Wallace. director.
The cooperative nursery
iichool accepts children from
2-years 9-months, to kin·
dergarten age In classes con-
ducted Monday through Fri·
day from 9 to 11 :30 a.m.
Parents .also participate to
create a total learnln; picture
from the children.
Cooperative nur1ery 1chools
are nonprofit, nonsectarian
organizations admlnlstered
and operated by parents under
the direction of qualified
teachers.
Programs Include sharlnA"
lime, to develop self-worth
and verbalization; craf!JI to
encourage 1elf·e1tpresslon:
table toys, to lncreaae manual
dexterity, and free play to en·
courage 1oclallzatlon.
Interested mother1 attend
the monthly meetings and
complete course geared to the
deve,lopment of p r e s c h o o I
children.
Additional Information may
be obtained by calling Mr1 .
P1ul M111umoto, H2.8048, nr
Mr1. Norman Vaughn. 833·
2187.
Oktoberfest
Sports Flag
Of Germany
J{ostes1e1 dreased in old
world costumes wlll y,·elcom~
patrons or El Camino Real
Junior Woman's CI u b ' 1
Oktoberfest on S1turd11y. Oct
17, at 8 p.m. In Dana Point
Community House.
The clubhouse will take on
an international atmosphere
for the event under e rolor
acherne baaed on the flllf! or
YleJt Germany -red, yellow
and black .
Wines from four comp11nle•
'Ni.II be served with a variety
of chec1e1 during lhe affair
lrrAng'<I by f\1r11. 0 On
O'Jleam, ways ilnd rnea111
chainnan.
Assistlna the che fnnan with
plens ire f\tn. E d w n r d
Ru~ll 11nd Robert Cmt!11k.
Those lntt.l'f-•ted In ln-
fonnatlon may t111l ~1rs.
Patrick Hll.)'es, 496-1601.
duce rs of the show, and -1f.
Buchannn Blakiston, noted in
social and equestrian circles.
!l.1rs. Blakiston. chairman of
the women 's steering com-
mittee, was responsible tor the
staging of the ball, promoting
adYertlsements in the program
and memberships in Diamond
Horse Shoe and the Forurn
Club. with all fund s going to
the non-sectarian pilot medical
center.
ARIES (r..tarch 21·April 19):
You come full circle : a situa-
tion which had been aban.
doned ends back on your
Committee
Tunes In
A flute and violin musical
program i1 in store for
members of Alla Bahia Com·
mittee. Orange County
Philharmonic Society, who at-
tend the IO a.m. coffee Thurs-
day, Oct. IS, in the Newport
Beach home of ~lrs. Paul
"Does she or doesn't she?"
ls th.e question posed in
advertisements, but members
of the South Coast Chapter or
the Association for Women's
Acti ve Return to Education
will go one step further in ask-
ing. ''Should she or shouldn't
she ?"
Plastic surgery and its
psychologica l effects will be
discussed by Dr. Joan Mem-
bur. senior resident in plastic
surgery at Harbor General
Hospital. and Dr. Ru th
Barnard, clinical professor of
psychiatry at USC School or
~ledicine. during a meeting
lomorrow night at 7:30 in San-
ta Monica Public Library.
The doctors ~·ill examine
the pros and cons of plastic
surgery and its af!er effects
'~·ith a question and answer
period following .
Hostesses for a coffee period
after the program will be the
Mmes. Sanford Bloom of
Pacific Palisades. Robert
Dyer of Long Beach, \Vi!lia1n
Roley of Laguna Beach and
Eugene Streich of Malibu.
Orange County re sidents or
members of AWAHE In·
terested in transportation may
call P.1rs. Raymond Ste"•art.
president. at S45-3'7ffi or P.1rs.
\Villiam Roley , 494-9651.
LlBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Events occur ,quickly. Be
ready for the unexpected. You
do this by having alternatives
at hand. Avoid being caught
off balance. Check legal pro-
cedures.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21 ):
Obtain hint from Taurus
message. Follow rules -learn
them before attempting to
break them. Red tape e1lsts.
But delay, at this time, can
actually work In your favor.
Debate : what it is, how it
works and how it is judged
will be topic of a workshop
when Las Olas Toastmistress
Club of Huntington Beach
meets at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow
at Mercury Savings .
lntroduc1d by Mrs. Clarence
Double, Toastmi stress, will be
Mrs. Barbara Bolton who will
present the workshop.
Amoog those attending were
f\1r. and Mrs. ~f. Keith Gaede
of Laguna Beach, Gaede was
chaim1an of the Diamond
Horse Shoe, a grou p of •1000
donors. Included on their guest
list '"'ere 11.faj. Gen. Henry
Tise. commanding general of
the ~1arine Co rps Air Station,
El Toro, and Mrs. Hise and
the h1essrs. and Mmes. Ernest
Bryant, Richard Dodd, Buzz
Clayton, Russell Holloway, Tad
Devine, f\1ichae l r-.1cFadden.
Cllnt •loose, \Villiam White,
and Maria Primavera with
Judge Lester Olsen and Mr1.
Myford Irv ine.
Queyrel. •
Assisting Mrs. Queyrel at
the first meeting of the new
season will be Mrs. Charles E.
Kelley and Mrs. G e or g e
Oschner. Mrs. Raymond C.
Dosta. program chairman ,
'"'ill introduce the musicians.
Area Groups Invited
To Join Celebration
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21 ): Get to heart of mat·
ters. Avoid pretense. Act in
direct, forthright manner.
Creative pursuits are em-
phasized. But there are some
necessary changes which de·
mand attenllon.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
19): Obtain hint from C1ncer
message. Practical matters
relating to home and security
are emphasized . Deal gingerly
with one in position of authori·
ty . Make intelligent con·
cession.
With the Anaheim Union
Hlgh School District, Mrs.
Bolton has been a debate
coach and Instructor for the
past five years. For four
years, her debate team has
~n undefeated, taking top
honors in Orange County
tournaments. She has won
more than 200 trophies and
certificates of excellence.
The meeting is open to the
public and Mrs. Clarence Hen--
drlckson 1l 897-8023 or 631·7380
or Mrs. Douglas Woodburn,
847·9596, can provide ad-
ditional Information.
Other ball guests included
fl.1essrs. and h1mes. Anthony
Mo!80, Ralph Graham, Ken-
ne1h Carl!;on. f\1ichael Jones,
Andy De vine, Frank
Mlche~na. Will!am Lu!k, Har·
ry Rinker. John Cur c I,
Edward Sharp and Mrs. Waldo
Avery and !l.1rs. Gaede Foster.
Also prcsC'nt from the
Orange Coast area were Mr.
and Alrs. Richard Houseman
and ~tr. and Mrs. Cavin
Herbert Jr .. Newport Beach,
"'ho were guests of ~1r. and
Mrs. \\'llliam P. Hadley of
Santa Ana . ,.
Taking place in the FO"t-um.
the horie show was attended
by Governor Ronald Reagan
who presented the Govemor 's
Trophy.
Fashions
To Travel
Guests are invited lo attend
the committee meetings taking
place the third Thursday of
each month . Additional in·
formation may b:! obtained by
calling r>.1rs. John W ,
Donaldson. chairman, al s~g.
0036 . or A1rs. Robert L. \\'olf,
publicity chairman, at S~8-
5i43.
Busing
Explained
To bus or not lo bus will be
the topic ror discussion when
Two neighboring chapters
have been Invited lo attend a
luncheon in honor of Zeta Tau
Alpha Founder's Day Thurs·
day , Oct. 15.
Members of the North
Orange County and Long
Beach chapters will b c
hl'lnored guests when the South
Orange Coast group gathers In
the Alrporter Jnn . A Is o
honored will be Mrs. Bruce
Colleges
Inspected
the lnter-roclal Group meets The Academic Society will/
Thursday, ()('t . 15. in the home be scrutinized by Dr. R.
o( Mrs. Richard Regosin, Dudley Boyce, president of
lrv\ne. Golden West College, when the In addition to monthly meetings. the group Is in-Wcstmlnater-Fountain Valley
volved with the Adopt a School Branch of the American
program, which Includes help. Association of University
Ing serve hot lunches to \Vomen meet Thurtday, Ck!.
children In Jerome Center 16, at 7:4$ p.m. .
between 11 a.m. and noon each The meetlna, taking place In
d11y : workina at f\1ontc Vista the community $er vice center
School between J and 4 p.n1.. on the campus, Is open to all
"ln" fashions for fall will be and tutoring in the e\•ening. women eraduate1 of ac-! di~played when Hale<:re.•t Club Aren women Interested in credited co I J e g (! • and
present' Its annual ihowlng lhe aroup . which formed last unlver1itle1.
Th sd Oct I~ 1'1arch, are invited to cnU Mrs. Additional Information ml)! ur ay, . "· 1.-The the me. Around th'! Victor Bellcruc. 833-2117. or oc: obtained by callln& Mr1.
World In Fashion, will be cur.,_M_r_•_· _E_rt_c_H_a_na_u_e_r._54_0._17oc0Sc-.-c--P-:-•rry __ ~_l c_Le_tte_n_,_89_•_·3_1_00_._
ried out with displays and A•htr1l••1r1t~t
flaas of other ntitlcns. Follow-
ing an 11 a.m. aocial hour, a
catered buffet will b6-served
at noon. Tickets, at $3.$0 each,
may btr obtained by calling
Mra. Phil Ros~. M9·1813: f\lr1 .
Fred I\()e, $49-1866, or Mrs.
Tom Derry, 54H.141.
Now ..• Plastic Cream
Invention For Artificial Teeth
Artlllclal T eelh Never Felt So Nalllral lelOl'I
For the lint lime. K ic-l'l(t olfm
1 pi••Uc crtam that hold& dcn-1um 1s they'vt newr lxUI held bllore-forma an elastic mtm·
lw'1nt thlt /ti/Jn "°'' ''Oltf ,,,,..
""'' 10 llu '"""'•/ tlmi11 •!pr MOU/ii. It'• 1 revoh1tm ary diKOvtry
called t'lltOOIN,.. for daily homt
111e. (U.S. Patent 13,003.968)
Pl XODIHT holdll dtntum tlrmtr
... •JUI MMI tMt4/0tl4W,, ''OU may
bite hlrdtr, chew bttttt, tat more naturally .
F1XODCNT luts let houra. Rt·
1!1t1 moi•hire. Otntum that lit
ITI r..entlal IO h«ilth. SH )'OW'
dtntlat l'flUl•rly. Get UIY·to-
UMI fJXOOkNT Denture Adhesive Crtam al all drut eou.t1tu1.
A m o n g those modeling
fas hions from Gene's both
th rough the clubhouae anti
poolside \Yili be tht Mmes.
Robfrt Haves Kenn~t h Ho.ten
David Meihvfn. E:dwln Chaon,
lvln Str&)'t r. lon11 Souncfl! 1ndl
\Villla m Raymer. 0 th c r
modcls still are to be stlcct~. --------------------
h1cEntire of West Covina,
District 15 president.
Welcoming guests will be
f\1rs. P a t r i c k ~facDonald,
Orange Coast Chapter presl·
dent, assisted by the Mmes.
Jerry Nash, \Vinton Warner.
Franklin Hurd. Kathrine Crum
and Burton Grant.
All Zeta Tau Alphas residing
in Orange County or Long
Beach are invited to attend
and Immediate restrvations
must be made by calling Mrs.
Nash, 962·9508, or M r s •
\Varner. 846-6437.
Lagun1 Hills residents may
make reservations by calllng
Mra. Louis Helms, 644-1057.
't:ltM>HNfL Cllr. Tr"" 1nt
Wo.-1~!0 G!. 111!11•1 w/Oolcl (lllp
(0"1Dl"Y· Tral" !" In,, fl nltl. ll•ff•
l llO IM jOll$, C•ll M11v Lilyd.
'lllOSATf St:Clllt:tAlllV . .. WOO
t11•v IXCltlftO olllc• "''"'' M!!l!ul
tK•li•rv to l'l1nd11 11.-tn ori
""'rr o-. "" .i11 ''" 16tJ, c.n
ll:ullt Gor.:lo".
,. , UGll
II Yl\I l\fvl t•ll. W/llt!t ""•<Ill"'
Ohle IN I Clll Clllk kl !;ft,., Oi:l•I
Slfllllll. ""· Cfll An" llvu•H.
lt:C:lll!T-!llV , in•
Wtl! nlVl'lllf Mm1. ' tit 01 .,,.,.,..
"''"'· JOI Vl•IJIV 11 m• •Diet ol
lift! '"· ti!! 1111'11 lllote,..,
lll'l!C:!llTtOttiST • . . , ... ldl
,,..., llflcl -t!ltft lier 1tHdy,
•ltll!Pt•ton .... 1111 tO .... 110111 lloolo.·
kKO!nt, l'u, Clll ~tlil Tu~•.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Ideas need added
de velopment. 0 v e r c o m e
temptation to act on Impulse.
Take special care with what
you put in writing. Key is to
put Into place various puzzle
pieces.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
You may be called upon to
back up assertions with , col·
lateral. Strive for since re' ap-
proach. Then you will not be
accused of e1tploiting talents
of another. Hold tight to cash.
l'IX P'NM Olllc1 ...... 137S UP
Liit tv111119, 1om1 t•pe•lt11c1 prf/,
LOI• " v1t1t1v. Wiii le•cll 11111 ,,
th1 rlflll Ptfteft, FM. (lit a111!
WllllM~.
ICtYP'UHCH ........... ,.,., tJOO t
Nuts 'n Nibbles
Attendlne meetings every
Friday st 10 1.m. are the
women of Fountain Valley
Nuts to Nibbles TOPS Club.
Members have aelected the
Recreation Center In Hun-
tington Beach for the meeting
place.
ILDIR!I
AMERICA'S
GREATEST
HARDWARE
STORES
ltK ... I 1~11. ltl'I 02' I. OJf MtCll, Clft
ltrl~f CI Ptblt Pl1'M I ftrlfht 11.1-
IUfl Wlllftlll!k. fl"OWll! Cl. l'rff,
Alto IH IMlll. Cfll Htnc;~ CtrlMll.
CHHEI' TELLElt . ,. ,. J4'CI
(1m1 tvt If rl11•M>Mll t•por,
~-Ctft lllPI .. IOjl doll1r. ldffl IK1tlcM. Of. tlnlt•. Afvt-
"""''· 1St1. C•ll J01n Curtt1.
••LI CLllUC .... .. ... , l!'U
H-It -"""" lo flirt ,,_ r.,....,,..1 ttr .. r, Liii II MvllOC",
fl! (0, l'rtt, 1111 IH !OCK. Clll
t11!1 Wfl!tn11.
1GRAND
10PENIMG jocto••• 22
EVERYTHING TO
BUILD ANYTHING
'CONVENIENT CREDIT
HC•-'11:00• 0'111.t.TOlt •• ..S
Jib wl1ll'lftll MVr• ••lllllf, hlr llldl¥1dllll W/11'1\D'l!io<I & tt l!!ty.
ll:Kl~t '"'· prtftlftd, Ftl, (fll Htnt'I' Ct•IWI,
2323 N. IROAOWAY SANTA ANA IJS-3111
IW•lll JI•"' ltnk 1199.I
. \
•
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"
DICK TIACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
HUSIANP HUll'TER'S HAHPllOOK ~
lo !tis interest in}'>U cooling, ~;
Future Bride?Maybe )'OO're too •
re-served.! Most men like girls ---
who know haw to have a good tim•I
Rekindle his flatru>' BB A GOOD , SPORT! LET YOUR HA!R ])()~IN!
HOW
SU~TcEI
/l).f !J
Mun AND JEFF
I
IN "T>lE INTEREST
OF ECOL.OGY we
.ly Chester Gould
'\JNOE~ DICC'.111!:5
ANO OOlLS GO l'OCZTMER
LET's 5e:E."'
ly Tom K. Ryan
ly Al Smith
MAN 15 POLLUTING
TI-IE AIR., 'THE WATER,
T.+-IE SOIL.' +.IE 16
DESTROYING THE
COUNT RY.' ~-----
MU5T i=1 ,~0 THE p;'-...._
ANSWER TO
~ GOSH! xr.,;i.
''\.:)
JUDGE PARKER
YOU 5Lli;?E I
U.N'T MA.KE
VOU AN OM.-
ELET, SAM ?
·PLAIN JANE
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C"LL
ME
'LIZ."!
THIS M ESS'
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I 'J.I. NOT CA.LUNG 'iOIJ ,1.NVTHlNG
UNTIL VCXI TELL ~E YOUR NAME!
t T°'KE IT TMAT 'LIZ' 15 A.
• C.ONTR.t.C.TION OF ELl1A5ETH!
WMA.T'S. TME REST OF IT ?
PERKINS
By Horold-te Doux
i -0 _ .. ;.~ ; IJ /Y-0.,..; . " r-:. ~r;
,--: .'I
ly Frank Baginski
I DAILY CROSSWORD .•• by '-A. POWER I
ACROSS
1 sailiny
~rssc
& "Yes, ·----"
10 Pit • -·< 2 ~lords
14 Thomas··-·< us Hall of
Fame member
15 Other lhan
the things
impl ied
lb Do an office
chore
17 Sic k pers o11
18 Water
tonveyor
19 F .D.
Roosevelt's ,,,
20 Cutting too l
22 Cocktails
24 Meat dish
2b Ha1bor
str uc ttlre
2 words
27 R•mov ed
clothes
JI Machine part
32 City of
Fram:e
33 Of ii city
or !own
35 Batlle of
Britain
heroes:
Abbr.
38 "As il bug 111 • ---":
2 words
43 Italian
pot!
44 Foot
45 Cures
47 "Bring111y
In the -··-·· "
51 Numer1tal
prl'fl~
52 Transfo1m,
54 Mexic;in
Indians
of old
58 lmpo!ile
59 Topping
on glass
of beer
bl River of
Scotland
bZ Dollt"
additl :
Informa l
b3 Force along
04 t,\akes a 1eco1dli1g
05 H0Sp1lal
lea \11res
bb Thin
b7 Odor left
in 11<1ss111g
DOWN
1 Vlateling
plates
2 Layman
J Unctuous
4 •• ----·alter
another:
2 words
5 Maybe
ft OoctOf:
Slang
Yesterday's Puzzle Solved:
."P l\l 5 ~Pll.
P .1 C L (£ C Il l
1 R t (
' N C l\l\l l N ~l
·, RE T E •T E q P •f 1•1 R T S L [~~ ~l l
10/13170
'7 Pert. to )7 Charg~s
poe tic )9 r.ligl1!y
meas111e 40 Frenc h
IO !.laintai11 ;idminislr;:,tor
as true 111 Amer icil
11 lnstrtin:tnl 42 Hold for ust
lZ Pooped · 43 Ex \r~cls
2 words flavor by
13 Pr ovoke boiling
by pelly 44 Highway
annoyances Dept.
21 Extrasensory emp loyees
perceplio11: 4h Got togelhel
Abbr. ~7 Do a 23 Dutk cle<11111'1g
2S Actress job
Twelvetrees 48 -····of 27 Smelter Commons
Jlf Oduc:t 49 All 28 Golf pto's wrapp.?d up
new customer SO Business
]IJ Bad defeat estab lish·
JD Blood··--· ment
)4 Wils conc.e11ltd S3 Stord
JS Ra1~'s la dy hiln ed dow JIJ ····-code
'40 V/~lk1ng 7 Metal : Abbr , 30 One's share SS Variety
st ick 8 Compose1~'
41 Rece!vrd ''lmion",
of the Sb Parad h e
qroup's S7 Girdle
.4 2 0 1stinction Abbr. expense' &0 Crew
' ' 3 • ' il • 7 • ' " " " "
" .. " "
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MISS PEACH
-::;..--
·----
STEVE ROPER
PEANUTS
WOOOSlOO< llA5 OCCIDEO
10 FL'I" SQ/TH
FCR M
WINTER ..
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'·
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'
'
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Ll'L AINIR
GORDO
T11esd.1.7, Oc.tobt1 1) .. 1970
COOL IT!!-ou~ I.EADER. ABe>1ic
MCJl:F'Wl-T, WILL~ TELL. US MOW
TO CRUSH THE SHMINFANT MENACIO-!.l'. .
MOON MULLINS
CH~l'<OS AHYrJllNG!
CHAl<G/f, Cf!Ai«.;lf
CHAFl<Olf·!
By John Miles
J. (Y),h,i,
...... "'• a..i-'~"' .. , -· .,.ii! ••
.... , _..._
.. -
THE STIANGI WOllO
MR.MUM
' DAILY PILOT J5
By Gus Arriola
By Roget' Bollen
ALL Rl&f-IT ,I
~Tla.4E
I 1LL BRINfa
~A DR'.'
ROA5TeD/
--•• " i>
?j
!• " j
By Saund•n and Overgord DENNIS THE MENACE
Kff P '4:>llR SPH D
UP.' R•Lll<E I AM-
T~AT'S 'THE GIL Y
WA."/ 70··•
I
By Charles M. Schulz
Tu.'O IWJ A MAl.F i:ec:r SOOTM ..
; • I
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' &
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---~---
•
J 8 DAILY PILOT
'
Tutsd•y, October U, 1970
Pack Is Back;-Old PJ!Os ·Spark Win Over SD
SAN DIEGO -The Creen Bay Pick.
era atlll mutt 10 with the old pros Jn their
bid tor mu.rgtncr into National Football
League pn:mlnerv::e.
As !bey won ll>clr lhlrd stral&bt at lh~
e1pen11 of a pluclcy but winless san Diego
Charger club Monday night, 22·2tl. the
Packers ·coold thank JS.year-old Willie
Wood and 36-year-old Bart Starr.
'1The way I feel now, J could play an·
()ther 20 yea"," declared Wood after In·
terceptirq: a pass from young Marty Dom-
reS at Ute Chargers' 24 and running it
bae!k to the 13.
•
Thtt deft' nsive gem aet up a 14-yard
field C~I y Dile l.Jvlngston, his thlrd
thret·pOlnter or the nlght, aM Lhe one
lhlt Pfl)Vidtd the victory.
After a M flrat half that saw four field
goals, the P1cker1 surged baclt In the
third quarter) 1COrin1 on Starr puses of
four yard.! to Jack Clancy and two y1rd1
to John Hilton.
With a lH lead, coach Phi\ Benetson
took Starr out, explaining later, 1'Hi1
shoulder wa1 bothering him."
Don Horn took over at quarterback
only to run into quick trouble. Pete
Barnea 1nttrcepted hl1 Piii •t thi Chara-er 2Z Ind returned ·to the 36_
With Oomre1, the .aecond-year pro from
Columbi1, taklnft over •t quarterb.lci
from starter Johrt Hadl, the Charaers
(:tlarged~Domres ahOt a iHOtt, 1w1ng pass
lo rook.1,e Dave Smlt.h on a play galnina:,
42 to Uie Packer 21. .Jeff Queen lost two
and then Domres pitched out to tight end
Willie fra:r.ier on 1 reverse. Frazier
raced for the touchdown, Virtually the
same play nad set up an earlier Ueld
soal.
··we knew from the film1 that they
It's Been a Hard Climb,
But Here I Am, Says As hf or.d
Flyitig Upside Do1v11
Red Dysinger's racing car flips upside dO\vn during the tri-state 150-
Jap race at Reading, Pa. Dysinger \\1a sn't hurt but his car "'as badly
damaged. Driving by in the foreground is Bud Cryster.
Ali Warms f 01· Quarry:
He Ain't Gom1a Catcl1 Me
}.11AM1 BEACH (AP) -~tuhammad
All snarled and declared his boxing com•
back "aln't gonna be spoiled by no
Great White Hope."'
Alf was ·wrapping up Miami Beach
training for his Oct. 26 bout with Jerry
Quarry. At 215. he ~·eighs !he same as
when he last boxed against Zora Folley in
1967.
"It's almost impossible for a man like
Quarry to catch me \\'hen I'm moving
like I am now," he said. rubbing his nat
belly. "Don 't {orget, he ain't never fought
the fast~st heavyweight In history."
All finished in ~1iami Beach today. His
codlingenl will shift to Atlanta on
W'1nesday for final tuneups after iiX
w$ki of rugged gym work and predawn
ruaning on a Miami Beach go]( course.
;.oak at the scales. man , it's 215 and a
halt," said the deposed chan1plon .
"Remcn1ber when I sh.owed up here
•i'ghing 230? I lost the only 15 pounds
t didn't count."
l kept mumbling the name of Jack
J naon, the early 20th C e n t u r y
vywelght king.
contender from California is fairly ob-
vious, but Ali comment ed on il anyway.
"I guess it'd be heavyweight champ Joe
Frazier. That's ~·hat the promoters
want. T):lat's what the people want."
Trainer Angelo Dundee said , he \\'as
worried when the non-tiUe fight 1o1•as
scheduled for 15 rounds. "I can go 20 if
Quarry wants to,'' said AIL "I'm ready.
I'm flt."
Ali said he feels Quarry will ha\'e to
"take his time and feel me out. He'll
have to find out how many punches are
coming at him ... and how fast they're
coming."
Dundee won 't agree with Ali that lhe
fighter's speed is up to its 1967 par.
Drew "Bundlni" Brown , the assistant
trainer, must think so. His tee-shirt car·
rled the traditional Ali slogan, "Float like
a butterfly, sting like a bee."
Ali has taken some hard jolts during
his Miami Beach work 11 Fifth Street
Gym. Ali was belted in the ribs and losl
his breath. latllng to the canvas.
"They tell me if my breathing is okay,
that the rib ain't damaged," Ali said
later. "I'm breathing."
LA Product
Began Umpiring
• 20 Years Ago
BALTIMORE (AP ) -"The Lord takes
ca~ ot babie1 and fools ," umpire Em·
melt Ashford said Monday, "and lhey
tell me I "am both.
"!l's been a long, hard climb, but here
I am. I've made It. This is lhe epitome of
..my life."
When the Baltimore Orioles and the
Cincinnati Reds square off in the fourth
game of the World Series here -Wed·
nesday, the man In blue at second base •
will be Ashford, a chubby, bouncy, flam·
boyant ahowboat -the first black man
ever to umpi re In the major leagues and
the first to umpire a World Series.
"My friends back in the post office at
Los Angeles must really be surprised,"
Ashford said. "When l quit my job as
~st effice clerk 20 years ago to slart
umpiring, !hey said, 'Effimett's goflo be
crazy to -gamble his job for a bunch of
baseballs in the desert.'
"I knew I had to do it. There's loo
much ll(tle bOy in me ."
He broke into organized baseball as an
umpire in the Arizona-Texas League
after working the sandlots and high
school diamonds around Los Angeles. He
moved Into the Pacific Coast League and
then. five yea rs ago, into the American
League.
There were reservations. ~le was black.
There never had been a Negro umpire in
the majors. He was a renowned
showman, making his calls with booming
voi ce and exaggerated gestures.
He was inclined to steal the spotlight
from the players. "A lot of dramatics,
but they just came natural to me,''
Ashford explained over a plate of sausage
and eggs at his Balllmore headquarters.
''I'd boom every call. Sometimes I'd fly
through the air to gel on the play. I call-
E"d balls and strikes with round-houk
gestures.
"I've toned my routine dov.'n some in
the majors but I still do what comes
naturally. T proved that. v.•ith all my an·
tics I also was a capable umpire. lt".s ' . like being a diver with a comedy routine.
You have to be a better di ver or you 'll
fall on your neck."
The Negro umpire, now 55. works well
\\•ilh his AL tea n1 m a t cs and has
remarkable rapport both \\'ith the Jans
and the players.
"I get hundreds of letters every
season" Ashford said. ''1'here've been on-
ly two that were critical.
"One was scraw led on toilet tissue
from a small town in Louisiana and it
said 'They should throw people like you
and the NAAC P in the river.' I v.·as sure
it came from a deranged person.
"The other was from a young girl here
in Baltin1ore. obviously an Oriole fan . It
said. 'Mr. Ashford, you al~'ay5 hB\'C been
my fa vorite umpire. But arter the call
you made yesterday 1 don't like you any
more .'
"I didn't remember what the call was.
But the letter hurt me.''
Ashford said when he first took the
field for the opening World Series game,
several Cincinnati players rose from the
bench and yelled, ''Go get ·em, Em-
mett.''
"They were boys I knew on the West
Coast," he said. "In fact. I umpired
about 30 years ago for Dorsey High
School In Los Angeles ~·hen Sparky
Anderson rthe Cincinnall manager) ~·as
playing th ird base. He v.'as a real
firebrand, a huthead. Later , his temper
gave him problems as a niajor league
player."
had lhat tight end reverte, but It dldn't.
loo• Uke we had ever seen lt," Bengtson
commented.
Two mlnute1 and 15 seconds liter,
Queen scored from the one lollowln& •
Horn fu1nble-at~w 10.
About that lime Bengt.son wa1 i sking
Starr If he eo;uld. Vtrow.
"When he said tie could, I put him
back in," explained the coach.
Controversy had centered o"n the Char-
ger quarterback situation before the
game, With Had! in General ~1anager
Sid G!lhnan'! doghouse, It wasn't de-
clded Ul\111 late wh<ther he or Domrea
¥.'OUld stJ.rt'. John worked three q\larters vi<l ~r
COIJlmef)ttd on reporta he might be ped-
dled to another .NFL club. "I don't know
U this trade talk bad a..ny efJeet oa_jhe
~am. 1t's not as eaJy to concentrate
with this hang In& over your htld."
Livii'tgston's otber fie1d goals Jt'tte
from 16 and 27 y1rds in the fli"ll half
th111 ended M as Mike Mercer wu IC·
curate from 11 and 29.
What provided the Chargers' t h e l r
short-lived one-point advantage was a
PAC KER CARROLL DALE SNAGS PASS; BOB HOWARD DEFENDS
Sports in Brief
Coniglia1·0 Over . Shock,
Calls Angels Good Club
BO ST ON -Tony Conig liaro \\•as
shocked al being traded and surprised
th at the Boston Red Sox <lidn't get more
for him. but the young outfielder also sa1v
son1e ad\'anlages to playi ng in Cali fornia,
his father said 1'1onday.
Sal Conigliaro "'as the one v.·ho told hi s
son the ne\\'S when he picked Tony up at
the airport Sunday night as he returned
from a speaking engagement in Con·
necticut.
"As soon as he looked at me he knew
there ~·as something 11.'rong." Sal said. "I
told him he'd been traded and he said.
·You're kidding -it's im!X>SSible.'"
\Vhcn he learned the particulars of the
six-player deal in 1\•hic h he. catcher Ger-
ry Moses find pitcher Ray Jarvis went to
thl' Angels for relief ace Ken Tatum. out·
fielder Jarvis Tatum and infielder Doug
Griffin. Tony was again incredulous.
Sal sa id . however. that Tony i;:ot over
lhe shock after av.•hilc and •·started talk·
ing about the good 1X1ints of playing for
the Angels.
"He said hc liked 1he idca of playing in
the warm weather instead of thc chilly
·weather In the early part of the season.
And he called the Angels a good club and
said that he thought he v.·ould be playing
in an easier division."
•
ST. LOUIS -Gary Sabourin's furious
lhird·period play f\1onday night propelled
the St. Louis Blues to a 4· 1 National
Hockey League victory over the Van·
COU\'er Canucks.
Sabourin scored at 6:49 and 16:37 of the
final period.
Newcomer Christian Borde I e au
assisted on Red Bercnson's opening goal
at 1~:54 of !he first period and on both of
Snbourin"s shots. Ab McDonald also was
credited with assists on the Sabourin
goals.
Dunc \Vilson. making only his seoond
NHL start. had made 31 saves when the
puck glanced upward off his stick and
struck him on the side of the head, dazing
hint momentarily. He went back to the
ice 31 seoonds later and finished the
game. •
HOUSTON A $45.000 pro tennis
tournament 11•ill be held here next year in
connection vt'\th the World Tennis Tour,
promoter Hugh Swe aney said Monday.
The tournament. known as the Houslon
International Tenni s Championships, will
be held Nov. 8-14 in 1971 at the University
of Houston's 11 ,000 seat Hofheinz
Pavilion, usually used for basketball.
Sweeney said 32 of the world's top men
tennis players. all members of Lamar
Hunt's tennis tour, will compete In the
tournament which will pay $10.000 to the
\\'inner with a total of $38,000 in singles
pr lies and $7 ,000 in doubles .
•
~ ' .' .... '
Livingston polnt·•lter-touchdown it y
blocked by -Wiiiiama.
Defensive end lJanel Aldrldle added to
Hadl's woea. Ht sacked, tb9 qu~tbael
four of the six 0mea ·tie w1s thrown be-
hind lhe line. I
And Aldridge said, "Our ~ack.llr!a:
wasn't good. I th~k we had a le~vt'D
from last week'• pme " a 13-18 vtc«wy
ovet Minneaota . "My st'atl!tlca look pret·
ty good,'' but that's because Ult rest
of the line WU forcing the quarterback
my way," Aldrld&t said.
Trojans ra11
To 11th Spot
In Grid Poll .
By the A1soclated Pres& .
Thanks to record scorlog sp~s
against long-time·rivals, Texas and Notre
Dame are closing in on Ohio State in th&
latest Associated Press college footbttll
·pon announced today. -
'I'he top-ranked Buckeyes, who le4 a
week ago by 103 points, received 20 r~s~
place votes aod 731 points from a panel of
40 s p o r t s writers and broadcasters
following a 29-0 victory over 'Michigan
State. ·
But Texas pul'ed down 13 first-place
votes and 712 points in the wake of a 41-t
rout of Oklahoma and Notre Dame
received four No. I votes -Its fir1t of
the season -af~r bat~rin1 Army 61-10 •
The 41 and 51 points were the most evei:
scored by Texas and Notre Dame in the
respective series.
While the Buckeyes, Longhorns_ and
Irish held on to their-1-2-3 spots, there
was a shake-up elsewhere In the Top: Ten.
Southern California -dropped from
fourth to !Ith after losing to Stanfor:d 24--
14 and the Trojans---were replaced by
Mi.s.slsfilp2!.~hich beat Georgia 31-21 and
Climbed One ~illon. .
Nebraska and Michiga n each moved up
one spot to fifth and sixth, respectivelY.
the Corbhuskers defeating )'!Wouri 21·7
and the Wolverines blanking Purdue 29--0.
Ole Miss, Nebraska and Michigan each
received one first-place vote.
Rounding put the TQp Ten were Air
Force and Auburn, ea~h up one spot;
~tanford,, l!P from 12th_!_ and Arkansas,
10th for the second-Week in i. row.
Trailing Southern Cal in the Second Ten
were Ariwna Sta~. up two; Colorado, up
four: Tennessee, up six; l.Auisiana State,
up four; Georgia Tech. down three; Tex-
as Tech; Missouri, down two, with
Houston and UCLA, down five, tied for
19th. Texas Tecl:i _a~, H.ou!ijtOn replaced
\\'est Virginia and North-Carolina in the
Second Ten.
TNm •+I I'll. TH"I W-1·1 ""· 1. Ohio sr. !Xll 3.0 131 11. use J.1-1 "' l. l t•t• (U! 4-0 111 U. Atliont St, •.O 1?2
l . N. O.mt l•l 4-0 6U U. CelOrtdo J.-.i Ill
•.Miu. (1) •.O l'2 . l•. TftlllfU f t l-1 fO
!. Nel>rt•k• !ll •·n-1 dl U. l.vl1l1n1 51. 3-1 " •. M!chl91n (lJ ""° lll If. G_,,. TKh .. 1 1t
1. Alt Feret S.0 ».I II. Tt••• TKh ._1 17
•. Auburn ._O 37' 11. Mluourl l-l K
f. Si.nlord •·I 321 lf. (!lt J t-1cu~1011 2·1 l•
10. Ar•1n111 •·1 11• IJCLA l-1 If
01"''" rK•lvlnit votff li1ltd 1lpl'o•Nllc1!1V':
Al•IMIN, fi.ri.11. K•111•1, M1M tMlll, Norll'lwt11tcn.
Stn Olf90 Stitt, Soul" C1rofit11, Toledo, Twl1n1, Wnr \l lf91nla.
Vikes Tabbed ' .
Over Newport
By 3 Points
Football biggies are on tap on two
fronts this week involving Oran1t CoUt
area high school teams. :
Surprisingly, Marina'.$ Vikings · arp
picked to derail the. Newport Har~r ex-
press by 3 poinl3 in selections by tqe
DAILY PILOT sports staff. .~
Bishop Amat Hi.gh is labbed by S over
Mater Dei in an Angelus League openei-al
ML San Antonio Collcge Friday nighl. ·
Closest game on the high school 1Jafe
finds Mission Viejo picked over Tustin by
one. '
On the junior college front, Saddleback
Is a three point pick over hos:t Palomar;
Fullerton"s Hornets are picked by 1~ over
Orange Coast while Golden West is tlf>.
bed by 7 over Santa Barbara.
Other game.s find the Rams picked by
four over Green Biy and tkt UctA
Bruins by 3 over California. USC Is fa'b-
bed by II over Washington . '
In four weeks or selections, the staFf1s
picking at a .720 average. For the 1eUon,
the composite aeon: is 7J victories, 'ta
defeats and one tie.
can 't do like Jack Johru;on,'' he said,
Ing up against the Great Y.'hile
and losing. That just can ·1 happen.
ong as l can dance, Quarry ain't
a catch me.
Quarry can't dance for long. Long as 1
dance, ain't nobody gonna Cl'ltch
rqt,"
l(nicks Begin Title Defense
LOS ANGELES -As Is ti_, custom
a,round the counl ry . chapters of the Foot-
ball \Vrilers of America honor a Player
of the Week for the professional and col·
lege teams.
There was none here this week for the
Los Angeles Rams.
Cha pter president Hugh Baker 1dvised
the 1o1'1'iters:
~cerning Johnson, All w3s probi1bly
rf~lng to the 1915 title bout the Nta:ro
tiJl:er lost to while boxer Jess Wiiiard.
The fight In Havana finally went to
Wiilard on the 26th-round knockout.
•"I'm looking forward to fa clnR those
newspaper guys Ule morning after," Ali
l\;d. "You knowJ the experts .•• the oncs
Wtio ui a man can't come hick arttr
~years."
• 'Afi'a waistline hd shrunk by two ln--
QQ. Hls pan~ were htld up by a ntckU.
li&lled through Uie belt loops. ~?·Tttars my tie snd gotta use It as •
"'t," be said, smiling.
Asked ii he would quit if Quarry won,
~ti uld, .. rm not quilt.in ' because J'm
ftOt JOiin.' ..
The next atcp lf he defuts the No. I
'
By the Associated P~•s
Can the New York Knlck1 do it again!
Duplicate their standout play of last se•·
son and win the championship of the Na-
tional Basketball Association for the sec-
ond straight year?
A clue to tht aMwer m•y be fonhcom-
ilil toni&ht when Lile 1971 pro cage season
opens with the Knick.s and the formar
champs. the Boston Celtics, battlin& be-
fore an expected 18,000 al Madlton
Square Garden.
There i! another NBA opener listed,
San Diego at Chicago, but the Celuc ...
Knicks tussle is the main 1Ulrac1ion. The
rival American Basketball Associ;11tlon
opens lts season on Y.'ednesday with Dtn.
vtr at Utah.
Coach Red Holzman of the Knlcks has
/I
-----
back the same players who ripped off a
23-1 fast 1et1w1y last season -Including
a record JI-game winning streak -en
route to hangln1 up New York's first NBA
Litle. They compiled a 60-22 regular-sea-
son rl.'COrd before beating Baltimore, ~1il
waukee and Los Angeles in the playoffs.
Some doobt that Dave DeBusschere.
Bill Bradley, Willis Reed, Walt Frazier,
Dick Barnett. Mike Riordan, Dave Stall-
worth and Cau.ie Russell cta n put it all·
together again.
These doubters point out that the New
York .Jets and the New York Mets. the
surprise football Super Bowl champions
and Dase:ba.ll's World St.rles chimps In
1969. each failed 10 do it a1aln Ole follow.
ing !ea.ton.
Veter1n John ){avUce k and rookie Dave
Cowtn.s of Florida Suite lead the Celtics
~·ho beat the Knicks four tlmts in th<oir
stven games last season.
Before the game. ~·hich niarks the
start of the NBA 's 25th anniver8ary sea·
son, the Knick.$ will be feted In an awards
ceremony at which Commissionrr \\'alter
Kennedy will preside.
Two NBA t.eami make several cuts in
1ettlng down to the player limit ~tonday .
The Chicago Bulls cut John Oa\'ls. Ala-
bama Slate, Lennie Kluttz, of North Car-
olina A&T ind Y.'illJf! Griffin, Southern
Illinois.
The Cleveland Cavaliers:. one of 1he
ncw NBA clubs who ope_n 111 BuffRlo \Ved-
nesday. asked wai\ers on Al llalrston.
Al Jac~son. Glenn Vidnocic and Loy
Peterson.
"Coach George Allen sent word none of
the Rams deserved to be honored."
The Rams bowed to the San Francisco
.i9ers Sunday. 20-6.
•
SALT LAKE CITY -Seven national
collegiste sports organtutlons, includlnR
lhc NCAA. have orgeniied a lwlCI pro-
gram to help bolster the faltering Wichita
State University athletic program.
The ectk>n came Monday tn Con·
junction with 1 mce.U"i ot the N1Uon1l
Association or Collegiate Oirector1 of
Athletics at Salt Lake City.
Thlrtetn Wichita State footb311 players.
th~ head 00;1ch and athletic director were
among 30 killed Oct. 2 in 1 plane crash In
the Colorado Rockies.
'
Blue Flame Idle,
' ' WENDOVER, Utah -The IS00,000
Blue Fl1me racer, thWlrted '1 t!)
mechanical difficulties for ne•W. Jt 1
month, was Idle ln an all-dty ptf ~
Monday after being towed from 1 rii:rY
bog at the Bonneville SaJt Flats. ":t"'
The next run -the tMh since &!t>t· 't7
-at Crai1 Breedlove's land speed 111irk
of 600.llOI milu per boor could «int
todl)' al lht earliest. ·'
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Kendricks
Gets Bruin
Starting Joh
LOO ANGELES -Marv Kendricks,
UCLA's junior running back, has moved
lnto the No. 1 halfback slot for the Bruins
after a flne performance lut weekend.
KtndrlckJ, a S.:foot·l l, 196-pound junior
traNfer from Riverside City College,
bolted for lS& yards in 13 carries Satur-
day as UCLA lost a 41-40 sbocter to
Oregon.
Kendricks supplanb Art Sims.
Jlon Carver •~a uteran aate._ty, \\'llS ryJ_-
ed ready to. start Saturday p.galnst
California. Carver had a shoulder injury
that kept him out of two games but he
played in last Saturday's 41--40 loss to
Ortgon.
s ... ,..,,.,. c.1
LOS ANGELES -The University of
Southern California football " team get!
back to workouta in pads today after •
day of light drills to get the kinks out
after the Trojans' first 1oss of the year.
Coach John McKay's team ran through
75 Jllb:lutes of cal~theni~ 1"1ond&J'...
recuperating from a 2~14 .loss lo Stan·
ford, and the coach ~id John Grant; a
10phomore, and Tody Smith, a senior.
would be back at defensiv~ tackle this
Saturday when Trc)y metts Washington in
another Pacific-I game.
St•11fortl
STANFORD -The Stanford football
team held a skeleton workout session
).fonday, With all squad membf'n who
played Wt Satw-day-ei:cused.
Coach John Ralston said his team came
out of the 24-14 upset, victory over
SOOthem cailfanda with.no·new injuries.~
Jack Lasater, the split end who missed
the game wJth an ankle injury. will be
able to play this weekend at \Vashington
State, Ralston said.
01"e90H
EUGENE, Ort. -The University of
Oregon took ll easy in practice Monday
following a come-from-behind 4 I -4 O
Pa~-footbatl triUJTipb-over~ucLA.
.Oregon's late _game comeback im-
proved the Ducks' conference record to 3-
J.
Idaho is Oregon's ·nezt opponent. The
Vandal! are winless going into Saturday's
nonconference-game-in ~gene.
Jn a brief workout M o n d a y ,
quarterback Dan Fouts and split end
Steve Balle y took turns punting. Tom
Blanchard, the team's punter, suffered a
severe shoulder sprain against UCLA and
vdll be sidelined for at l~ lhree weeks.
Cllllfo,.,.fa
BERKELEY -Coach Ray Willsey of
California saya his team is glad to be
playing a home game next weekend after
being on the road four weeks out of nve.
"But there are a lot of folks we'd
rather be entertaining than UCLA," he
adds.
"They'll be tough, especially after their
disappointing loss," Willsey said fo.1onday,
referring to UCLA's last-mlnu~ 41-40 loss
to Oregon. The Bears and UCLA meet
here Saturday.
Bug In Time;
Sky Kiter Hurt
A regular schedule of hand.leap
elimination races will be scheduled Satur·
day at Orange County International
Ra~ay.
. Races begin at 2:30 p.m. with elimina-
Uon contestJ slated to go at I.
"Bug Jn V, which pits Volkswagens
85alnst one another in head-to-head com·
getition. will be held at OCIR on S~day.
A successful venture in four previous
Outings, the Bug In gets wEer way at 9
.a.m.
. Thirteen-thousand spectators watched
Fort Worth's Gene. Snow break both ends
Qf OCIR"s track record Saturday nJghl in
·Champk>nshlps.
Snow's 6.17 see-217.91 mph clocking is
the fas test ever recorded officially by a
funny car. ~Chicago's Don Schumacher bested
Snow In the finals with Bill Bagshaw {Los
Angeles) caplurlng the pro stock finale.
Sky-kite acrobat Bob Kennedy was
eeriously injured in a bizarre accident
which took place during 'l special OClR
e1hlbition Saturday.
The Hermosa Beach daredevil was just
beginning his ascent when the ~ to his
two vthicles broke and be plummeted 75
feet to the ground.
He is listed in fair condition in the in-
tensive care ward of Santa Ana Com·
munity Hospital.
\
ESTANCIA'S JIM SCHULTZ (221 CARRIES FOR GAIN BEHIND JOHN _DIXON (34), CRAIG DENNIS.
•
uAILY l'ILOT J1. ~
FJC-Pirates {
P1·oduce
Unexpect~d ;:::
By CRAIG SHEFF ot-. ._..,,_..Ste# ...,_I•
If Saturday night's Orange Coest
College-Fullerton Soulh Cout Coari1•.
terence football titanic la anvthlnl llk .. j •
the past two games between the OrMBtl·~ •
County rivals, the unexpected is likely ~ ._.,
occur.
Although Fullerton comes into ':be
game with a 13-7-2 edge in the xna _
(dating back lo 1948), the last two 4
tests have been as tight as can be. . ~
Orange-Coast dealt the Hornrtll ~~
only regular season loss last year, •It.
In that one, Fullerton held a 19-7 lead
going into the fourth quarter. But ~.
gained the advantage wilh a pair of 'J'DSf!
OCC TICKETS ::t
Ti'Cket.s for Orange' Coast College•it-
football game with Fullerton JC Satur·
day night are now on sale at the. OCC'
bookstore.
Ducats are priced at $1 .50 for adults
and $1 for children 12 years old and
Wider. The bookstore hours are 7:30-4:~*
Monday through Friday and 1-1 p.nt ~
Monday ~4'hul'9Ciay,~. ----+---<H11
The Hornets intercepted a pass at mi~.;
field witb a minute to go and a subseS;
quent field goal try from the 30 faited"·
with seconds left.
Two seasons ago OCC had a 17-7 ~· ..
\•antage with si1 minutes to go, but-twO
TDs gave FJC a 20-17 victory. The flnat..;
touchdown came with 10 seconds re-.
maining. '
Fullerton comes into the game with ~
unblemished record. In four outings ~ ....
Hornets have polished off Long ~
(32-181, Pierce (ll).10), El Camino (31-1),
and San Diego Mesa (35-ID. ~
Las:t week's victory over Mesa wu t~
conference opener and matched the No:-•
(Mesa) ~ No. 3 (F JC) teams in Jlie'
atate.
__ .;:OCC (1-2) drew a bye last weeJi;. t~
Pri0r"10llle1969""jame, FUUUto~
beaten OCC five straight times with Ui&..~
Hornets scoring 190 points (3t.7 ·average)~
in the five tilts. ~
Easiest Win
Aroilnd ' {;orner
For Edison
By PHIL ROSS
Ot fll• Deity l'llet Steff
If the first fo ur games of the 1970
season give any indication of the outcome
of Thursday nighrs Irvine League foot-
ball battle between heavily-favored
Edison and winless Santa Ana Valley at
Santa Ana Bowl, then the undefeated
Chargers may have their easiest win of
the campaign y.·aiting just around ~
corner.
Falrons head coach Dick Hill, who
returned to the Valley helm this season
after a three-year absence, might be
wishing he was back on his ad-
ministrative sabbatical aft.er his team 's
poor showing thus far.
The Falcons have yet to reach the vie·
tory column in four tries and they 've onty
gotten to the end zone on three occasions
in losses to Foothill (20-6), El Modena
(27-0), Corona del Mar {27~) and Los
Alamitos (29~)-The latter pair of set·
backs were accrued in Irvine League bat-
tles.
Hill thinks it's hard lo pinpoint any one
thing his Falcons have been doing wrong.
"Actually we've been lacking in every
facet of the game.
"Fumbling and not being able to read
the keys on defense have really hurt us
plenty." Hill adds.
What about Edison?
"\Veil," Hill says, shaking hi s head,
"they have a honed ball club.
"They have a good running attack and
can thro\v the ball anyUme they feel the
need to.
"Edison is also tough on defense, for
sure. They have to be tough on defense to
have already won four games," adds the
veteran mentor.
Hill will stay with junior fl.1artln Vander
Roest al quarterback unless ... he messes
up. Then I'll Insert Tom Fields."
Fields, a 6-0, 175-pound speedster, w~ll
be lining up at the flanker sp<>t 1n
Valley's starting alignment but will also
be available, as staled above, for backup
signal-ealling duties.
"The team speed we have is a good
thing but you have to be in a position to
utiliu it in order to make it work for
you," says. Hill.
Most of the , speed generated in the
Falcon backfield emanates from junior
fullback Joe Gellespie, who resembles a
small chunk of voltage compared to the
Edison power plant.
Redlands Refuses Win Costa Mesan
M ar-ina:__(;.-r-id-Upsur ge-Wins -l!iek-eroo
'
Definitely Not Dream (;rid Contest
---~ Two entrants picked 17-eorrect winner&-
TI1c ovemigbt lransilion from a peren-
nial also ran to a solid contender lQ lhe
Sunsel League football championship at
l\tarina High School can be traced to U1e
initial source ralher easily.
It 's new coach Leon \Vheeler, who"s
taken over at fo.·larina fo\loy.·ink successful
years at Santa Fe and Morningside high
schoob.
Wheeler has installed several new
---·
ROGER
CARLSON -----
Items In the Viking production and it goes
a lot deeper than simply new uniforms.
His light blue~lad Vikes ripped Santa
Ana Saturday by an eye-opening 38-0
score and among his innovations was
kicking c!f deliberately out of bounds.
Wheeler says not too many teams
return that kind of kick back for a
touchdown and figur~s if he kic;ks
straight down field the opposition is liable
to run it back near the 40 anyway.
\\'heeler also seems ,to run his best
defensive players (who are also manning
vital offensive positions) in to the gan1c
only when it appears necessary to stop a
drive -thus saving wear and tear on his
thin squad.
Hi! team, incidentally, is on a three
game win streak (a school record) and
has a pair of shutouts for its efforts in
Sunset League play.
Perhaps indicative of lhe new Marina
look and attitude was the sight of
Wheeler bellyaching and fuming over
"·hat he thought was a yard too much
credited to a Saint runner who was
knocked out of bounds directly in front or
the diminutive Viking mentor.
At the lime \Vheeler was bending the
orficial's ear his team already had its
unbelievable 38-point margin over Santa
Ana.
* * * Ne\\•bury Park High recently allowed 48
points to rival Thousand Oaks in a wild
48--48 tie.
We asked coach Chris Pagliaro how he
felt about his team's defense in tH'at one
and he replied, "The defense wasn't that
bad. It \\'as just a case of a great offens-
ive effort by a lol of people ."
Despite a 2·1 -1 mark and what appears
to be a porous defense, the Panthers
"'"ere recognized \Yith two points in this
Y.'eek·s AAA poll.
* * * Recent ronversation with CIF officials
Indicated Anaheim High was guilty of us-
ing an ineligible player in its 29-8 non-
league victory over RedJands -thus
forfeiting the decision.
Not so. Redlands principal fo.fartin
1\-lunz says, "We're not claiming any vie·
tory. As far as we're concerned they v:on
the game. There's no point in claiming a
win."
There seems little doubt -the
Colonists of Anaheim live right.
Fuga Gives
Chargers Lift
The presence or Sam Fu ga at the
Edison High football games this season
has had to give the Charger gridders a
big lift.
Fuga. y.·ho suffered a broken neck in
one of the Chargers' games last season,
has been on the sidelines during each of
Edison's four victori~, v.·earing his old
number (36). ,
Fuga was released from Dov.·ney's
Rancho Los Amigos Hospital in lo.lay. He
began classes at Edison in September.
''He goes to every practice and every
game and also eats with the team on Fri-
day nights," says Mrs. William De Huff of
the Edison Boosters Club.
"He also lifted weights with some ot
the other boys during the summer. He's
taking an active role in school, Including
going to dances," says Mrs. DeHuff.
Fuga is currently on crutches, but ac·
cording to Mrs. DeHulf, can walk the ,
length of a room or l\\'O without the aid of
crutches. "His progresa has been just
beautiful," she says.
~lrs. DeHuff adds that the Edison
senior has a personal invitation from
Rams coach George Allen to sit on the
bench during any and all future _.games.
The Edison Booster Club raised over
$3,000 to he lp defray the cost of hospital
expenses for Fuga.
In the fourth ·week of competition in the
DAILY PILOT Pigskin Pickeroo with
Dave Tackman of Costa fi.1esa edging out
fellow fl.1esan, Jim Joyce for top honors
by usage of the Tie Breaker system.
Tackman was 147 points off the correct
total or 800 scored, with Joyce 150 away.
Sixteen people had 16 proper guesses
"'Ith half of those being eliminated with
lhe Tle Breaker.
The lucky eight who filled out the re-
maining spots in the top ten were :
Chuck Shepardson (Newport Beach)
\\'ith five o[f the proper total, Glen Ciolli
!Costa Mesa ) 24. Rich Buchoi (Costa
J\Iesa ) 35, June Hays (Costa Mesa) 100,
Gary Vogt (Santa Ana) 106, Bob Stipes
tCosta fl.fesa l 110. Joyce Sexton (South
Laguna) 112 and Don Bryan (Huntington
Beach) 119.
Concerning this season's Fullerton" ac~~
gregaUon,OCC coach-Dick-Tucker-aays,-
"They have a fantastic offense and -a
great defense . They probably have as
much balance as they've ever bad.
Against San Diego Mesa they pilytd •
flawless game."
Tucker reports thaj CKX'B leading
rusher Ken Eppelheimer may be able to
play against the Hornets. Eppelheimer,
who has rushed for 106 yards in ZS car·
Ties t4.2 average), injured a rib in the LA
Harbor game and did not see action in
cxx;·a ~ victory over Cypress the
fu llowing week.
Definitely out of Saturday night's en.
counter is defensive end Bill Durk.in, who
broke a hand 1n the Harbor till.
Tickets on Sale
Tickets for lhe Angelus Uague crucial
Friday night at Ml. San Antonio College
between Mater Dei and Bishop Amat
High School will be on sale at the Mat.er
Dei athletic office every day unW 3 p.m,
Friday.
Reserved seats are priced at f?.50
while general admission for adults ii
$1.50 and children are 75c.
'·
l
I
I
Bishop Amat Tabbed 0
Ill Angelus
By ROGER CAllL'ION
ot -. Otillr ,, .. lttft
Bishop Amat High of La Puente and
Maler Dei will meet Friday night in the
openini round or Angelus League football
~ction •nd il the DAIL y PILOT'S p.-.dlc-
tions ire corrtet. it's the champion.ship
pme.
Bishop Amat is given lhe nOd by a
111.&ht margin over the undefeated
Mooarthl while St. Paul Is third and
Servile fourth in tbt ultra rugged set\1p.
,; >1ere'1 1 brief rundown on each of the
t lrcult'a six elevens:
Bishop Amat-TI1e Lancers are ranked
No. 1 in the ClF AAAA and ha ve the best
aerial combination In the history of the
CIF in qaurterback Pat Haden and end
John fl.1cKa y. The CIF rt1Mersup also
have an exccUent running back bul lack
the overall runn ing ability of last year.
Maler Del-Another undefeated squad
that has beaten four formidable non.
league foes . Coach Bob Woods' crew has
a score to settle wilh Amat arter the lat-
ter won 28-7 last year. A more balanced
n1nning attack makci fo.111.ter Dei strong'r
Inst year along wilh 1 much Unproved
I.
defensive line. The only question Ill can
the ~1onarch defense put enough pressure
on Amat \nd St. Paul passers.
St Paul-The Swordsmen differ
somewhat from past juggernauts in that
they go to the air behind the brllllaiit juD-
lor quarterback Jamie Quirk. St. Paul still
haa a bone crushing fullback but lhey a~
pear to rely heavily on the aerial game -
a facet much more unpredictable than the
usual punishing St. Paul ground game.
Senilte-Tht spoiler. The Friars are
capable of beating any team ln the league
(they nipped Amal last yeaf, 1·5. in the
mud) but don't appear to have lhe con.
sistency to win week In and week out
against the Big Tnree.
Plus X-The \Varrlors are in the same
boat as past seasons -they're In too
deep. The loss of quarterback Pete
Tereschuk {sophomore ) to Lakewood via
transfer further hamper. any hopea for a
winnlng season in Angelus League 1c--
tivity.
St. Aatbony-The same as Pius X; wtlh
quarterback Jerry Summerfell mol/lng
on to greener 1>3stures at Long Beach
Wll~on. No hope (or either Plus X or St.
Anthony.
OAILY ,II.OT,..,. lllf' ,_ ....... . •
EDISON 'S SAM FUGA WATCHES TEAM'S PROGRESS " I
I
1·
JI DAil Y PILOT
Prep,
RICK DAY
S•ddleb•ck
RICHIE SIMONS
Newport Harbor
-ROBIN-SEN II<.._
Costa Mesa
1
Saddlehack
Given Nod
For Crown
Unbeaten Saddleback Hign
Is the odds on choice to con·
tinue its winning ways in the
Orange League and is the
overwhelming choice lo nab
the title according to picks by
DAILY PILOT sports writers.
Only Sonora is given a good
shot at the Hoadrunners along
with dark horses Brea and El
Dorado.
Here's how the DAILY
PILOT sees it:
S.ddleback -Coach Ben
""Haley has put together the
best.ever outfit at Saddleback
and there appears to be little
in the league to block the
Roa~ners· chances for a li·
tle and a berth in the Cl F AA
playoffs , The most impressive
win is a 38-7 rout of seventh
ranked La Mirada CAA ).
Sonora -The Raiders a r e
picked second off their strong
showings against Alta Loma
(21-6) wi n and a 27-22 loss lo ;:a
tough ~eff unit.
Brea -This could be t h"
Wildcats' best team in four
years with a solid nucleu s ~f
; retumin& lettermen . Team 1s
, sound fundamentally.
! El Dorado -The Golden
! lla'Aks own 'A'ins o v e r
: Magnolia and Artesia and lost
; a 19-12 verdict to Gahr. Could
• nnish as high as second.
: Valencia -The Tigers won
: a pair of victories over
! Rubidoux and Artesia after a
: strong showing against Neff
! ((>.4) and Rancho Alamitos
: (7-20). Could be highly un-
: dtrrated.
: Lipa• Beach -The Artists
~ are winless in four non-league
~ tussles a n d are woefully
: thin in depth. coach llal Akins
: will have to pull some rabbits
: out of the bag for more lhan
•
• • • • . •
two wins in league play.
Vike Booster
Event Friday
• 111arina Hi&h's quarterback
club lt hoslln& an edult in·
: formll dence and buffet Fri·
: dlY night al C.rpenler"t Hall
from I p.rn. until I a.m.
~ Admlulon ls $2.511 p c r
: peraon. Carpenter'• Hall ii
: located et 8302 Atl1:nta Blvd.
~ In Huntington Beach.
The Vik111i QB club holds its
\reekly mettlnp in the faculty
cafeteria every Tuesday at
7:30 p.m.
Tutsday, Octobtr U , iqiO
JC Grid Players of Week
AUNDRE HOLMES
Mission Viejo
BART 'FRANKl'IOUSE-
We1tmin1ter
•
-Mater Dei Ranked No. 2,
. Newport 6th in CIF Poll
~Mater Del Rlah'• Monarehs
have reachtd tht No. 2 plateau
In U.. CJF AAAA rankl~ -
makllig coach Bob WOods'
?.fonarchs' confrontation with ft1arina H\tb:S Vikings,, o1f
No. 1 Bllhop .\mat the mid· last week '1 38.0 romper over
sea.son dream aanie Friday Santa Ana. picked up one 101.h
night at Ml. San Antonio 11lace vole.
Colleae. Five Orange County teams
,.,,,.,, Bishop Amat's L a n c e r s are rJnked-in the CJF's AAA
'"~" picked uf. 17 of the 18 firlit classification witb 0 r a n g e
l: ~:~ ~'rl+''"01 1:1 place voes whUe ?t1atcr Del Coast area power Edison in · J1 Ir= iVI • grabbed the other one, edging seventh pl•ce flanked by Sun· t ~~1i11.11 (>-
1n 1 ~ rd I I ng Hil'· and Rancho Alamllo• l " .. '.' ! thi pace E Rancho by two !!Ii : k1~1rl'if,~" •r 4 1 1·r1h and sixth ) 8nd Garden • -*h1¥:11"°" c1.u . ., points.
• 116111 ,,, •1·• n Mater Dei beat Lon• Beach Grove and Orange {eighlh and ''oRlllll'\t', I • i!o ,.,r::= fi,'f, ~r·~= 1h.?~"~~ Wilson (now eighth) last week. 10th ). i~c::r:-11 ~J-2l ~l!llUfl \i~~ 1 , lt-15. No. 3 El Rancho geLs this
Marl,,. 1:J<ii .. J• sT,rrt 1+e1 • ort Newport Harbor. mean-v.·eekend's schedule of crucials
Ut.t11K• JH.l.h •u·----hll d L • r d 1 Th da ,. l""1" 1,.11 j" w e, u n· ere a led tn our off an runn ng un y
~. • r 1 1l.i1 AAAA poll ahead of fellow Lakewood in a ftioore League S, un11'11lllo !•OI
•
'
1: i~I r1J~f4.tl ntt games, jg rated Sixth in the night When the Dons battle
!: 1rnri.!~m11os !•.ti n Sunset League team Anaheim encounter at Veter an s I: ~r~; 1A~1°i'• ta.II ~1 (ninlh). S_la_d_iu_m. ____ ~-
,,. r1nae !io.11 n,. ......... iii&iiiiiiiii""""""""""'"'""'"'"""""'..,iii""iii9i1 0 t : 1111110...... !.i-11 1~ WTI' i~Jr.~r:i~:r::t:~::1i:·rfll =~ Pi· lot P1·gsk1· n IMM'I' t ·ll • •tc~. eofi• Gr•ndt ft , OOI \lt~IOi U-ll Ind Newbury
Irk (J·l·I\ , I Kh. l l t~o•
MOl'lloomt<Y 2.f) la
lsWPrt\!lt" m _/'i~.~~'£1100 S. C1ntr•I !4-0I 11).1 6. Hemtl !oMl 1'
1. • ! 1a.n · .. }l -t 'i'~~ "' 10. lUor' I v j ·O.\> ol
TIM DUVALL
S•n Clement•
BART TABOR
L•guna Beach
ROCKY SIMPSON
Mater Dei
RICK POWER
Fountain Valley
o .,,, h!Cll.1~ 1. ,. "°"~ fM lJ.I 1~ ~ L~!!r 1 •t.1 ]1• ':.:• ~' 1l:,V l.~ M1r1ne(1.2.t1 1ricl ~""ffif Tn ().lf 2 .. c~. 'Ila Vtr•t 1-/· klu!h P61uen. (2, I •M Gle"" J. I tit~. I
Monarchs
Head P?ll
Three Orange Coast area
prep football tea ms dominate
the (lffi clal Top 10 listing of
Orange Coun ty schools as 1
selected by DAILY PILOT I
staff members. 1
Mater Dei~ un~efeated Mo~-)
archs, seconO-rated tea·m 1n
the CJF AAAA, remain in first
place following their 19-15 vic-
tory over Long Beach Wilson.
Newport HB rbor stoc k rose
with its win over Westminster
and the Tan are only a half
point behind Pt1ate r Dei.
KARLJ:ILLEFER
Coron• -dilMff TONY CIARELLI DAVE RILLING CAL SHORES
Estancia
Marina completes the 1-2-3
setup afte r blasting Santa
Ana. 38-Q, for its second
straight shulout in Sunset Huntington Beach Marina League play . • ----------------------
Vike Ace Holds Stats Lead
Edison High's undefeated
Chargers are tied wit hi
Anaheim ,-for fifth rollowlng
their 21-13 decision of Corona
de! ft1ar .
Something is due to give in
regards to the Top 10 this
\\'eek with Mater De i slated to
meet Bishop Amal Friday
night at ?i.tt. San Antonio
College and Ne~port and
Marina colliding f o r un-
disputed first place in the
Sunset League at the former's
field Saturday night.
Marina High School 's Joe
Ventimiglia continues to lead
Orange Coast area rushing in
the DAILY PILOT'S weekl y
listing or area rootball rushing,
passing and scoring statistics.
Huntington Beach's Garth
Wise is second in total
rushing yardage with 385
yards and is also second in
scoring wilh six touchdowns.
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AMERICA'S
GREATEST
HARD\\IAR E
STORES
McKtnrlt
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'MVfl\1NOffH l lACH ll·:J "'~"'~~..,...,,",CONVENIENT CREDIT
PIHlflt
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'AN CLeMtNTE ll·l )
O~llPO C."-mohn
C•t•o Rlt hl
l!or<lrn
Orl11>ars
Amat is No. I in ClF AAAA
rankings.
South Coast 'Plaza
FOOTBALL PLAYER OF THE MONTH
FOR SEPTEMBER
WI NN ~RS BllOW VOTED I Y POPULAR ACCLAIM
OF THE STUDENT IODY AND FACULTY
TOI' lf
K. Kln t ftr . .. ...... Coron• d1I M•r High Sch ool
K. Wolf ... . ........... Cost• Me,• High School
J. Hinojosa ..................... Edison High Schoo l
R. kaiser .......................... Est•nci• High School
R. Walker ........................ Fount•in V•lley High Sch ool
G. Wise ............................ Hun tington Be•ch High School
G. Irvin ............................ L•gun• Be•ch Hi9h School
J. V.ntlml91ia .................. M~rin • Hi gh Scho ol
D. Roy . .. . .................... Mt ter Oei High School
W. Whitford .................... Newport Ho1rbor High School
I . Myroclt ....................... S•ddl1b1ck Senior High School
R. McNamora .................. So1n Clo1m 1nte High School
D. Nest.cl ....................... Valley Senior High Schoo l
M. Po4bury ...................... Tustin High School
J. Hollartd ........................ Westmin1ter High School
N. lrncatllo .................... Viii• P•rk High School
K. lyers . .. .. ................ S•nf• An• High School
I
BALLOT IOXES NIXT TO THE HC•LATOR
VOTE NOW!
IN THE CAROUSEL COURT
lllllllfOI. AT fHI SAN Dll:GO l'ltllWAY
COSTA MllA
•I
Co • Sponsored by
Voit
And The
DAILY PILOT
BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT
In Cosh For Each Week's
First Place Winner 1 0 . Voit Footballs each week
B• • pigskin proph et. Play the DAILY PI LOT Pickeroo
game for weekly prix•s. Winn er e•ch Week receiv •s
$10 ca,h and a Voit Coll•giat• ff)otba ll lsu 991sted
retail price, $9.95 1. Nine runn er-up Picke roo pickers
aho each get t!I Voit Colle9i1te foo tb1ll.
Watch for this pl11 yer's form each week in the DAILY
PILOT Sports Section. Circle the teams you t hin k will
win in t he list of 20 teams a nd send in the pl•y•r's
form or re esono1 ble facsimile . Then watch the DAI LY
PILOT sports pages for et!lch week0's list of J 0 winne rs.
RULES
I. S11bl'l!1! rn 11 en!ry bt~nk "' 1 re11fl'l•bl1 1~c11m11e hi enttr t~t con t"'· 1 Stl'HI 10: PILOT PIGS KIN PICttEllOO C.ONTEST, SP<lrtl Dt~r!menl.
P. o. eox 15'0, c.0111 Me11, Ce. '2026.
3. On1v one tnl•V per otr~on tlCfl we'°'.
4. Entrle1 m1r11 be dtlivtrlld !by m.ill or In 0tr10l'I! IO OAIL Y fll.OT oHa by 5 p,m. Tllu'ld~y.
), AMF VOii •nd o ... 1L y PILOT em~lflV•I •l'ld lllt lf immWi•I• t•mHitl net ellgiblt «:o en11r. .
t . TIE 8REAKEll mvst De filled In 01 entry l1 vtiMI.
I, '" CI JI ol lie tor li•1! pl•ct, duPlklH "'"ch1nci1t prlu 1 will be
1w•rdt<1 1n<I wl1>nt" will tqu111y 1h1rt In 1he sio tl~h pri1t.
I . Wln<111•1 Wl\o place '" rlle IOJ! 10 rncrt 1h1n ar>et du•lng !ht contt•f htvt
tllr OPtion, •1t1r the first win, o! txchar>Gif19 !ht Voll 10011>311 for 1nc!her
qu11Uy VOii pl'Oduc:t of tQu•vtlene y•lut.
!••·············· • • ENTRY Bl,4.1\'K •••• •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
Cin:I• feoms y•u ffllnk wlll wht this wHlt'1 fll'l'lll
lhome tffm ls secoitd •ne list.di
Rams vs Green Bay
Char9ers vs Bears
Geor9la Tech vs Auburn
UCLA vs Cal
Purdue vs Iowa
l(entucky vs LSU
Mlchi9an State vs Michi9an
Notre Dame vs Missouri
Minnesota vs Ohio State
West Vir9inia vs Pitt
Alabama vs Tennessee
Washin9ton vs USC
Huntln9ton Beach vs Santa Ana
Marina vs Newport Harbor
Valencia vs La9una Beach
San Clemente vs Foothill
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Fountain Valley vs Corona del Mar • • • Mater Dei vs Bishop Amat • • • •
Fullerton vs Oran9e Coast
Saddleback vs Palomar JC
• flE' 81tEAKf'JI -My °""" en !flt
• • • • • • • • IOllf n-If f'l)ifo'1 t(Oftd lfo i ll
20 t1mu lbled t lMv• ft ... .. ............................... ., • •
• NA.Ml •
• ADDllSS • • ~~'"'----------£ZIL . -----
• • • • • • • • P!;tONI Sii • •................... ,
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TU F\O A Y
OCTOIElt 13
1:00 II Iii JI• (C) (60) .lerrt Dun,hy.
Ttntlti¥tlJ 11thtd11ltd 1utm
SMi!t MteRI • Marty lnttb;-
Trazitl' 1/ld witch S)'bll lttk.
m Tt Jtn tk Trvtll (C) '.30)
G Full ,,.,._, lvihlt .....
(30)
Ill U Ctladt litfl Cr!Nt (C) {301
1:os CD RitMllndll <5Sl
l:lOIJQtCilH• Htw (C)
Mtrty Robbins ind Connie
IU~.
'W elhy' Retains Top Ratings;
New Sl1ows Start Out Poorly
, _\ By RICK DU BROW
_ 1101.L YWOOO I UPI)
"Marcu1 Welby, M.0.," the
ABC· TV medical fiction series
that climbed to the top of the
rali ngs last season. continues
to be televis ion 's most popular
show despite the r e c e n t
onslaught of new programs.
of "Gunsn\oke." Luelle Ball . New variety shows by NSC.
"~fayberry RFD." Doris Da y TV"s Don Knotts and CBS-
find Carol Burnett. They all 'rY's Tim Conway al!O got O(f
did well. to stow ratings at.arts. And
On tile other hand. NBC returning hill with mediocre-
TV's strong Monday schedule lo·poor audience statistics in·
of Red Skelton, "Laugh·ln " eluded the Dean Mart in. Tom
and a weekly movie fared con· Jones and Andy Williams .,
•
Manrecn Done
D MIC ~ (C) (60)
0 Tiit Alltn S• (C) (90) Ttntt·
live!y sthedultd 1111111 111 Boll
C11ne, Tony Mtrtln, ChtlHt Bro"",
Rich Uttlt tnd Dr. Thom11 S.rrt·
btr1. Announe.r: Micl11et Br1nn1n
0 m Ji&lit (C) (JO) ·11nk''
"411h1." J1i1li1 btcomu 1 on•nlthl
nial!.!elub sinpr. 1'i•fJ' Crosby tnd
Robert Aidt are featured.
With Robert Young portray·
ing the title role of Welby, the
series is the across-the-board
winner in the new stason's
petition for both the major
markets and the national au·
dience. The period covered
y,·as fron1 Sept. 21 ·27.
siderably Jess weJI against the series. "The B e v e r l y
football game and CBS·TV's H 111 bi 11 i es , ' ' ' ' 8 e -
potent shows. "Laugh· In." \Yitched,'' "Julia," "Family
which almost always ranks Affair." "Creen Acres" and
amoog the top three or four "Hogan 's Heroes." HOLLYWOOD !UPI) -:
U COLOR! HENRY FONDA * llaJTin-"SPENCER'S
MOUNTAIN" Part I 1
programs. finished in a three· The top lO programs na·
way lie for 18th plare in the national ratings. tionaU~ were : "~1ar..c\ls
Skelton. meanwhile, can1e in \Velby. P.1.D.," C8S' Thursday movie r·The Dirty Dozen "), 40th the also used to be among Lucille Ball. "Bonanza," Flip the top few shows). apd the W .. P.1onday movie ranked below Uson, "P.1edical Center. Skelton. Doris Day, "Mayberry RFD.,"
M11ureen Stapleton completed :
Jler _$0:::Sij!rrin& • role with
Walter Matthau in "Plaza
Suite " at paramount and
departed the first sepent .in .
time for Barbara Harris to ;
D Sir Oia.ct Mowit: (Cl "Spin·
ut'.J Mot11t1ll" P1rt I (dt1m1) '6l
-Htnry Fond1, M1ur1tn Offar1,
J•mts MtcMhur, Don1ld Crisp,
Willy Cu, Mlmiy firmer. TM: s111
of Wyomlna quarry 111101ktr, Clay
Spencer.
0 ®11HiDAIC_-o o "'
Wttt: (C) "OW MM WM CriN
Wolf" (dr1m1) '69 -[dllltrd G.
Robin11111, Mtrtin Btlu m, Oi11M1
Baket, Percy Rod1if111S, 111/tti Ro-
m1n, Sim 11He. All old min is
unable to COl'lwinct anyone that 111
1111 witnustd 1 ~ri.rltl mwdf:r.
Flip \Vilson's new NBCTV
variety series, meanwhile,
was the onl)' freiihman entry
to crack the top 10 shows in
the ralings that usually carry
the most weight : the national
Nle\sens. He ranked fifth .
"GunsmDke" and "Tbt FBI." be"in the second segment. The football game. it should.------------..:"'------'----be added, did rather well for m Datid fro.t ~· (CJ ('°) .lost
0 BU S1111rt IC) (30)
m Tiit fli11btl1111 (C) (l0)
ID It Ttkts 1 Tllltf (C) (liO)
(i}l (])Stir Trek (C) (60)
Hutat Begitas Felicitno tnd Mtlwin Belli 1imt. Th
fD Chin .. Miiiie It ttlt lrvndl11 e
(C) (30) A concert of tnci&nl Chi-Jim Speirs (left) li stens as Pizarro (Micbae) Owen s)
explains his duties as page in a sc_e ne from "The
Royal Hunt of the Sun," resuming tonight and con-
--tinuini:r through;ts closJn-g performance-Saturday at
the Laguna Moulton Playhouse.
Curiously, despite being an
urban-oriented b I a c k com-
edlart, he finished lower In the
major city ratings tl4th) than
he did in the national rank-
ings... whic.h gjve mo.re weight
to the provinces, What this
1ncans, obviously , is that he is
a very popular guy all over.
ABC·TV... AllJ:!Wgh $owing
live at different times across
the nation, it achieved 30th
place in the national ratings
that list all programs.
flD twppffp Ltdrt (C) (30)
"Vines."
tjj (JJ CIS Ntt11 (C) (30)
n1se music pl1Ytd IMI tilt Pipa ind
!ht Ch'in bJ 1tholtr-muski1n, Lui
lsun-Yutn.
G) Allltt F111ilf
mu eonllilalciol (30)
aJ Otltl'Ndl/M11$1Qle (C) (JO)
@II Notldn l4 (t) (60)
!;001!19@ it! NIC TutsMJ MDVlt:
CC) 1'lii!lt Of lht foUowint DI("
Cwsptnff) '69 -M1rlon Br1ndo,
Rill Morino, Rid111d Boone. Four
criminals kidnap • )'Cluna: a:irl tor
1 hu11 ransom, hut the 5Ch1m•
begins lo aill11'$e '"'"' intern1I
m lllancla In the Slln (Cl (30)
all Tut,. .ie 111 [strell11 (30)
(iD News In tht llo~nd (t) (}0)
Miki Rollens, Glori1 Greer, P11!1
Beebe.
1:20 ~@ Wllttler (C) M1r£e• Sliles.
1:3Q ca '-Adld c..m 1JOJ
dJ Tlll FIJ"'I NMn (Cl (30)
QJ (I) RIC Ntw1 (C) (JO)
f1) INKMI' flJhlt (C) (JO) ''The
Bird... V11iou1 tlyin£ tenn1 ind
m•n•w•rs 1r1 discuwd.
puuurt. ..,
8 Tiit fqitMI (C) (&0)
m felony Sqllld (t) (30)
aJ Tiit Adwecltll (C) (60) "Should
Feder1I Gowmmenl Subsidiz• All
t11Uan1I Eleclionsr·
El OlltnldlJri1. CC) (30}
EE l11tr111 (JO)
ail lllttcN (60)
QI (j) Mr fnorit1 M1rtlan (30) 9:30 ID 9 (j) Tt hM Willl I.Mt (C)
(30) Penny lriu lo lflCOllf1(1 her
'
@ID Pttttrn h r Li'rin1 (30) r1thtr to adopt • homeleu 1t1t11n
fm TM Daert Report (t) (30) bOJ named P1ul0::..1 miitl-littl1
lhief lrom the slreeb of Rome. C> futttlwo1 dtl Alllll' (30) Ch1udio Martinll pl1ys P1ulo.
m AIC Ewrnlnt ""' (C) (30) I D "-n IC) (30) Baxter W~rd.
7:001J CIS (r111tn1 Nns (C) (30) a,) hnJ. M1~ (60) ,
fE Music.lle/hstlr's Dul (CJ (JO) W1 lt&r Cronkite. ' -•
1
0 mm Nitfitly Ne•s (C) (30) EE M•liA ' EJtrtlll1 (C) (30)
Olvid Brinkley, Frink McGee, John 10 00 -~Cl) IO . C Ch u : -"°' M1nu .. 1 ( l (60) ance or. Dr. Henry Klstin£~, Assistant to
0 What's MJ Li111? (C) (30) lht f'ruident tor 1lalion1I Securit1
m ~ nn AH airs, is pr»filed. Ml-e W1ll1ce
l.1LI"""' I ln1 luCJ (30) tePorts. "Will Au1ers' U.S.A." i' also m lilt tlll Clod (C) (30) featured.
0 (!) Rt111n I RtlnHt Politiu'
(~ (
GI ll11l11, Frt~ t Olti1 (C) (30) (11),
'1he G1e1t Columbus D1y P1re1 nt."
IS (j) Trwtli tr CClnMqut11cn (C)
CI\) C..rilt tilt LMn1 Wtnl (C) (30)
Ill hurio (301
0 m Nrws (C) (60)
0 @ (]) aJ M1rtu1 W1lb7, M.D.
(C) (60) "Epld!ITlit." Drs. Wtlby
and l<iley's tfforts to battle 111 in·
fluerui tpidemic 1r1 eomplic1!1d
by a rich )'Oun1 hyPoCOndrilc..
{:)The Stint (C) (60)
m T-!In FrintiKI Mil (C) (60)
·'fi1ayin1" in the title of l~e see-m Si.ipll111111t1 Mlril (~) ond show in 1 series b1sed on 26
fl) T111t Cir! (CJ (30J lluman 1ctivitia common to m•n.
17:05 ill @ TllOlday Morie: (C) "blind al Ml M1ntro (30)
ef tht 11111: Dolphins" (d1am1) '64\ a!) f1stlv1I Mt1kl11t (60)
I -Ctli~ K1y1, Ann Danie!, L1rry 10:30 m 8111 Jolln1 "ews (C) (30)
Dom1sm. &E Ho1 (30)
7:3011 IB (j)i IJIClll IN1tion1I llO· ll:OO &!II .-Cl).., N (C
v•phiul Sotir!J (C) (60) "Zoos ' tD1 181 u.;i ns l
ol 1he Wof!d.~ E.tploted is th• uni D @00 m""' {C)
Yt1ul institution !ht! 1ttr1cll more
tllan JOO million visitorJ eltll yeu
ind is ts PoPUlar in T1nz1ni1 as
in M1nh1tt1n. \
0 Ctn TM TOfl Tilll? (C) (30) om..., IC)
U TM1tre 9: "lllir1d1 II U.1
B•H•" (dr1m1) '46 -Alid1 vim.
fred M1eMurray, Lee J. Cobb, Fnft~
Sin1t11.
m Yo1 Don't S.., (CJ
•
Huge Cast Revealed
For.t>CC's 'lndia11s '
Of interesl, also. was the
fact lhat ABC-TV 's new hlon-
day night, prim' time pro
football games had litlle or no
ratings impact on CBS-TV"s
powe rhouse Ctlmpeting lineup
After \Yilson. the most
popular new series, nationally ,
was MaryTyler Moore's CBS.
TV situation comedy , which
finished 23rd, Then came Dan-
ny Thomas' "Make Room for
Granddaddy" on ABC -TV
t28th), then the pro footbal
night game, then CBS·TV's
'"Arnie." a comedy about a
blue collar worker promoted
to executive status (33rd).
1'hen Andy Griffith "s new CBS.
TV s how . •·Headmaster"
Veteran Orange Co a s t
College actor Michael Brown
has been cast In the coveted
role of Buffalo Bill for the
OCC production of Arthur
Kopit's "Indians," which gives
its West Coast premiere in the
coll ege auditorium this month.
Brown has appeared in a
6uccession of plays at OCC,
his biggest roles being Don
Carrasco in "Man of La
Mancha" and Pickering in
"My Fair Lady." He took the
leadin g role of Cocky for the
Laguna Play house's '·The
Roar of the Greasepalnl. the
Pilot Critic
Slates Talk
Smell of the Crowd ." Lido Isle \38th), then Skelton. John Ferzacca, form e r Outside of "Make Room for
artistic director of the Laguna Granddaddy" and the night
Moulton Playhouse. has joined Lists <.:a.st football game, ABC-TV's large
the drama staff of OCC and lineup of new series did poorly
will direct "Indians ." The pro-in the national ratings. These
duction win play r our F Co d include "The Odd Couple." performances, Oct 21·24. OJ• me y "Barefoot in the Park," "The
0th er major roles in the. Young Lawyers," "The Young
sprawling historical drama The Lido Isle Players have Rebels ," "Matt Lincoln" (with
wilt be pl~yM!__hy Alex Cifil_sp,n announced the cast for their Vince EdW"ards ), • • o an
as Sitting Bull and Kevin fall production, the comedy· August.'' "The Immortal" and
Doremus, Rick Golson and niystery "Catch Me If You "The Silent Force.·• Consider·
Nancy Korn as a trio of Can," with two cast members ing that this was ABC-TV 's
senators~ -played recently at 1he Long premiere week, the 19.c"k Cf
Also in the huge cast are Beach.Community Playhouse. viewer interest in even sampl-
Ken falsetto, Rea Shaefer, Stanley Bell , president of ing the new series must be
Dan McWest, Barbara Bein· the players. lakes the leading discouraging to the network.
dorf. Tom Arnold. Phil Oertly , role of a husband whose wlfe.F=;;~~;~~~~·~~ll Paul Doremus, Christy Dwyer. has disappeared, with Barbara II
Larry Cohen. Margu~rite Crooker and Bernard Simon
P.1arsaudon, Mike Len non , re-enacting their Long Beach
Richard Rowland . D i et e r roles as the hogus wife and the
\V allon. Tom Neukom , Caesnr Cats kills police detective.
Flores. Scan·carbone and Sam Others in the Lido Isle cast
Clauder. are Larry Perron . J a y
Toin Titus. entcrtainn1ent Minor roles "•ill be played ~lcCormick, Jim Somers and
editor and drama critic of the by Pain Hall . Pally O'Leno, Mavis Sutton. llandy Keene is
DAILY PILOT, will be the Gary Steinbacher, Jan directing the production.
u '"°'" · ••. ,~., '"' •.,.oua.am INDS TONIGHT
guest speaker at tonight's \.aydon. Jo A n n Campbell. "Catch Me If You Can '' will
general n1eeting of Anaheim 's Connie Douglass. L orri open a rive·nighl run on Tues·
Ana·Modjeska Players. one of Beasley, Laura HaFlnahan. day. Nov. 17, at lhe Lido Isle
Orange County·s 1newest com· William Schmidt and Danny Clubhouse, 701 Via Lido Saud,
n1unity theater groups. Schoolcraft. New port Beach.
Titus, who reviews between";=====================:;::,ll
75 and 100 little theater pro·
ductlons each year. w i 11
discuss e.mateur d r a ma
criticism and the growth of
community lhealer in Orange
County al the 7:30 p.m.
meeting in the Anah eim
Public Library, Harbor
Bouleva rd and Broadway .
The DAILY PILOT critic.
\\'ho also doubles as an actor
and director. ha s staged fi ve
shows in local community
theater. ·
~n ' eoAIT .....,., • tnl n. Short S11bjects 7:ll
"WOODSTOCK" 7:51 1111lr
i:m;:imiiW"'· Jiilil j ALL SEATS -$1.SO
I
RolNrt Redt11rd
"TELL THEM WILLIE
BOY IS HERE"
Shirley Mocl•i-
"TWO MULES FOR
SISTER SARA"
--.~,~A.TS WEDNESDAY
IMA\O..NT Pl'.:IUU"""'* ~INT
VOURWAGON
~~ noom.c.-
AN.IJO..MrauE •-
e m Don Knotts 1c1 (60) 0on
Knolls holds 1 prus confer1nee to
inlroduce 1uest stirs lren• Ry1n
Bobby Sherman, J1ck Weston 1nd
The T1pestry 1ln1in1 llOUP in lhe1·
lirsl television 1ppe1r1nce.
m Motil: "INW!11d1 ,, Mtrrtan1•
twe.stern) '57--Ru hl»n, l1¥erlf
Garland, Keith L1rsen. •============.II J wodleigh-moucice, lid. produclioo
lechnicolof& from warner bros. * HEY KIDS I BIG PAL SHOW, SAT., 1:30 * @@ l'VTJ M•• 11 "'"° ltl 1301 m Rtlllllll (Cl (R) 'The Triumph Q (1?l@ m Mod Squid (C) (60) of Christy Brown."
"'A' Is for Annie." Th1 squid In· te11i11te1 when an 1lament1ry 11:30 119 (()Mirr l riftiR (C) I
1ctioo1 t••th•r b&a:1me1 th• 11ra:e1 O ID 00 m 1o1tnn1 t1r1011 1c1I . . Guests Include Alldy Willi1m1, Ann· of 'Mlenca btc1u1e al her liberal Mirg"I, Marty Brin i nd line
tltssroom 1ppro1ch In stJ educ.i Howard,
BALBOA
673-4048
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY
lndOOJ Theatre Eli1a2ement
diary
otamad
hou-wHe
............ .i~ ...... ~-• fr•nk perry fllm 1~c1>n<o101 •
SriffY Giiiu,y -. °'""" r:n..1,..
tioli. O Mftie: "frt111td" (mystery) '(7 PETER KATHARINE CJ Miiiion S Morie: (C) *Mr. -Glenn ford, B11ry Su!liv1 n. OTOOLE HEPBURN OPlN
6:45
e NOW SHOWING e
HARBOR AREA
EXCLUSIVE
ROADSHOW
ENGAGEMENT
PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT
MOMS" (1dv1nlu1e) '65 -Robert 0 fi) Oict en.ti (C) C1pt.
Mitchum, C1rroll Battr. An Arneri-1 J1cqu1s·Yvts Cousteau, Joyce Gren·
ctn U·tireus min becomes in·I fell, Trevor How1rd.
volwd with 1n African tribl whose m Movit: "tiptlin's PlradlM'"
Christi1n Chill be!1evt1 he his {comedy) '53 -Alec Guinneu,
bun sent by the Lord to !eid them Y¥onne DtCarlo, Celi1 .lohn.!IDn.
to 1 new location . 1Z:OO@ f])ld tMtt (C)
QI Trwlll ti' C.n11q11111c.u (t) (lOI
QI Dnill IMH (C) (60)
1:00 IJ Mnil: "'Hltld Wll1" (conMdJl f ·~oplind Rustll1, Briln Ahtm1.
,WJ:TJN POtl
~-
lrnE LION IN WINTER!
'" "START THE
REVOLUTION
WITHOUT ME " fl!I flllfM'I (C) (£0) (R) "Rllmort
E1st.~
00-~) I m All·Ritlll Sffw: "T.. Ltd,"
"lallld ....... .. Ill Ma f..t1 1111 11 AM« (30)
i:S.a;i_.. ..........
"11·231 .... tlle Wltdl Diet«,• lftd 1[~;;;;;;;;;;111
1:1s a eo-••ltr 1tt1•• lllf1I tC>
l ;tll D Vlrtlflll lrtMlll SlllW (C) {60) Z:JO fJ """''"' Us Ttlia D11 (C)
•
I t :lO D "TIM Lnt Milt" (dr1mt) '!>$-
I Mii:key lloollt)', Don 811ry. W£0~.I E:S0A ' l m "h•, P'IJch' b11" tdr1rn1) j '66--G1ry Mtrrill, £111 And1raon. 1 • 10:00 8 "fallen ldtr' ld1111111) ••9 -ll1lph Ridi.lrdlOl'I, Bobbf Henery.
I ' OAYTIME MOVIES 1:00 m !Ci """'<I.,""'"" <x<· fl} '6l-tl1ud1 lta1M. Biii C.rtitr. "°' -(CJ "hmll or WI-sn.t" Z:OO B "llttlt .., ~ (clf1rN) '53 --lln1 CmbJ, Nicole M1urtJ. (dr1rn1) 'S7-Jtftft1111 Jann. .lohn1 •:JO e "'CMftld" (41111'11) '45-llum·
• Girllvd. BIA TrlVlf'I. phrey 1ot1rt. NIXit Sll'lith.
FOR ADVERTISING IN THE
WEEKENDER
PHONE 642-4321
~do
INIWPOIT •IAClt •• •I 1i... •~l••
t• l•ll•l•v• , ••• +,lo .• o• , .• ,~o
111111 T..iltllt
"2001: A SPACE
ODYSSEY "
A1101011r 9•11111
"THE SECRET OF
SANTA VITTORIA"
STA•TS WIDNISDAY
THE
STRAWBERRY A
STATEMENT.:
Let it be
TH E BEATL ES
'/· ,, ~ ' • . w ·-~.,· '"" _ ...
""'" '~· ' I ti.a •
---------··---=-... . -, . == --... :!I..&
nt I . l•IMI a.1~ hnl"tul•
e Also e Ad~•nlur• ind i11hi9u• lilm•d 11t1id !ht lu1~ b1ck9roun11h of Morocco i11 1cop• i nd color--
• G•n• 81rry e Cyd Ch1rin• e Elt1 M1 rlin•lli e
"MA RO C 7" • A Paramount Picture
673-6260
EXCLUSIVE
AREA SHOWING
Progr1m Rited "R"
LARR\' llRAMER .. MARllN ~
• .., KEN RUS&l.l S "' • D. H. LAWRENCEi
"WOMEN
If LOVE"o
00
ALSO PU.TING
AIUMOF
ANNIE GJJW\OOT CLAUDt lWlUCH
'love ls a Fwioy Thing·
~O ClllllUYOOlllt' --
"""'°'"' ~. c.os•" "'""' -u .. 1101 ---·---.. ---· CALL 546-3102
LEE 11&av111
..MOllTI WA.LIB ..
Alie -Joa11111 M., ...
Jock P11l1tK•
I
" PLU S -Rod T •¥lor •nd 5u1v Kend11l ;,, "DA ~Mll TNAN AMiii" R1t1d "R"
Elliott
Gould
Don ald
Sutherlard
... ..... ' ill1\Sll ..
•• •e:ACH •i.: . AT •LL•• •• ALSO OIT, co••T HW.. A ... " o .. •o .--. ••7·.-0• •HUNTINGTON ••ACM
JAC9UELINI,,,.
111sn
IN TME WISTMINSTI• CliNTIJI
STAHi
FalOAY
• ••
fUTU•E
l•rt L•11e•tor e hMI Mortit11 .
J-'""" • Jft~HllM 11-t
HELD
OVER
POllTIYILY INDS THUUDAY, OCT. 11
~ISrmliRG
PAINT~WJOH
Cli"t E11lwo.4 in "llLLrl HllOD"' "G"
"A I R P 0 RT"
CALL 892-4493 Georg• C. Scott -Kart t.\llffn
t"J H:t -'•ul N•w1t1•11 111 "Wl"f'llN... "6 "
I
I I
•
I
r
r
I
?flflfli#Q i f$ 1 ¥ 9 1 !¥iiii5 •............................ .,. .. ,,. ....................... ..,,,,_':"" __ ..,"'"'.''""''"'',., .... ,.., ......... ..,,,.. •• -.................... :-r.~·-·.-.-·~··~·~·7'·~~·,.,,...,.,.,.,':".~'"-~ .. -"TT'" ••• ...-.... _,......,,.....--. ......... _.~"' ,...,..---.~-••••• ~
ff Dl!LY PILOT
·'
·campus
says.
It says Yippie leader Jerry
Rubin, aJso one of the five
convkted Chicago S e v e n
members, was paid $2,024 for
speeches at four campuses
Very Feiv
Long Eras
Of Peace
I •
...
•
LEGAL NOTICE
I
I
--.I "
..
'.
'
2629 HARBOR
BOULEVARD
54&.8640
Open Evenings
till 1:30
Eastside
3 Bedrm. 2 Bath
$23,000
·located -I n excellent
Costa Mesa areA, this 3
bedrQOnJ channer l<i
"'alklng distance tn
Catholic church and
school -sec it to believe
it • double gal'agc. forc-
ed air heal, 2 good size baths, largl'.' lot • O\\'nPr
says ··sC'll]" Asking
$:.!3 .000. HURRY.
546-~6<10.
Newport Heights
Seller Pays All
Costs
" ' AY·RES-:IUllT-HOMES
ls_l~ct 19"1
. l~VINE AREA
<YOU OWN THE LAND> ,..
THE R·ANCH--UNIT 4
* FLASH!!!!··
NEW-lOWER
INTEREST RA TES
AVAllABLf NOW!!
22 HOMES SOLD-flRST 4 WEEKS
4-lo.I BEDRO.OMS ~-2-to...4-BATHS __
incl\,ldes all builtins, car,,.tlng, formal
dining rooms, f•mily rooms; fireplaces,
underground utilities aftd .marty .other
quality features. . ·
PRICES START AT $30,440
Select Your 'New Ayres Bu ilt Home
During Th• Customizing Stage
HOUSE~ F.OR SALE . HOUSES FOR SALE
1000 Genirel .11* a. .. rel 1000 Genottl 1000 1 .;;..==-~-...;,;;;:: l•r•hore• 1111 Huntlnelon leech 1•
-*~'* *"
· -TAll-UR
-* *
• WE LIKE LOOKERS t $45,150
Come: and look at our 3 & FR· ho'me. Low
mainl. rear yatd. H&F pool. Central loc.
• · IRVINE-TERRACE·-.VIEW II
Sparkling J>OOI SUrrounded ·by huge patio + a 2nd patio Off glamorous mstr ste. 2.
bdrms w/;vt bath + 4th bdrm &. bath.
$77,500.
·.SUPER HOUSE••· ·CLEARANCE SALE
CHECK THESE \\If!; ,Pust clear out the Ja.<it
of the~ new duplf'xes • the
FEATURES p,;o;_..,, 1orm• .,,. "" cri.
./ Roomy , terla. Buildf'r i!'I open on
' 1900 I((, ft, prlct with IO'k down 1he ./ l Bedrooms. 3 BATiiS i Large SEPARATE Fam-ba.lance can be financed at
·Uy Room 11\.1% intereit to a quallfled
./ rormaJ Dining buyt>r. One unit has 3 bd.
./ Ex ira large, v.·ell · laod: rms, 2 bath. large Living
scaped rear yard with toro Rm, two Firepla~. Din.
CharmlDJ , .... 14.' u.inc rm, IEACH ' LOVERS
\
f_rplc. Pvt br.iches. 6 Y..
""·""· "H
005 61. LOAN LOW DOWN
Dov1r Shorn 1227
vv PANORAMIC
VIEW
Perfect f o r entertaining,
Spanish contemp, Court I
atrium, 5 BR, S ba, 50()() sq
ft, hi ceiling, 4-car pr,
$169.000. ~8-1249 · of concre.le Rm .. BIN Kil &'. lme ram,
./ Soft v.•ater, coppt'r pipes, Rm. The other unit Is an
hea'-"' shake mot at!ractlve One bedrm, apt. I 37
·J y,•ith BIN's & fireplace. Each J ;U;;;n;i•;;•;";;';tv;P;•;;"';;;;;;;;2;;
ShOrt on cash! Don't ""4
mueh to own thiJi tantulk:.
3 bedroom With large Jivtna
room, cozy-brick Jlreplece,
l % batlls. AlJ electric cau~
try kitchen. Prime att•,
minutes to beach. No qU&J~
ifyirii;, U$ falie over:-Own-
er anxious. Fast ~· Only 2 yrs. old. Take ad-
vanta1e dla1 1n4) 96l-55il5 I Near rlew lush avocado ii;ha& carpel unit hllll eparate yds and
I Low traffic pride of ov.·n-garages v.·lth utility rms. 4 BEDROOMS
"Our 25th Y••r" erShip street Landscapl!ri·incl. sprinklers. 21~ Baths. 2 f"rp!C's. Abun-
W£5l;EY N. TAYLOR CO., ltaltors • An up, up, and a"'ay val-The Bargain you hav~ bffn dance , of storage lipace & Inc. ReaJtors
FOREST l O~
waiting· for. ACT NO\\r! ! closets, C h o I cf! location. __,____ 21-11-San_JOaquln Hills Road ue a.I a.low low $32,500, ~·ith M M L B rd Rll !'rf _.... __ .. I 19131 Brookhunt Aw.
N only 10% Down. •• • • 0 e, r. ce •~"'u"-n. 10 0 n Y Huntinrton Beach NEWPORT .CE TER . 644-4910 T I ~l°"'' -~"' 1'..'vf!s: 642-7438 $34,950 INCLUDING WE ' ~~_.,:.:..c,;:.c,,~~~-1 0 "P'cl -'" _,;JCI '"' I '
l
;*:.:;;;;;iii'"* .......... * .... · ....... *....,iii ... * ...... .,* .. +·~====;:;::;:=;"'=~l-'~1400 ~, _· ~~~~~1 ;;>.':'.:i'."~~~,; Ranch In The City ,~---... & Is in absolutely spotless G
General 1000 General. 1000 oondmon·lhrllOOI . Home ~us uest -
---~-----
• IMAGINATION -earga1n -Open Dai~
328 Aliso
"I i1·l1.l 1l'lld
· efinJa J3£i
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
52 liride l1le Or.
Cust 6 BR .. stud)'., 5 bath home w/3 frplcs.,
. circular stair\i.'ay, decorator selected carp.
& drapes. Shown, by appt. $210,000
Newport Heights
corner ol Beacon
l short block from
Cliff Dr.
A home lor the. Imaginative?
A -fran1(' beamed ceiling,
· sltimp stonf! fireplace dom·
inates 1 wall and the other
·-- -I \l'11llur
lat Wf!Stern &nk Bldi:t.
Univenily Park
Day 833.0101 Nighll
· wall 1!11 sliding gll181i doors
opening onto "''aUccl-in front
yard. 4 Bedrms + lart:f!
~tudy. This home is In excel· -FIREPLACE
IN MASTER BR
SE.E· ···MOD£. LS AJ Excellent terms & loans.now available
. CALL : BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
SANTA ANA FREEWAY & JEFFREY ROAD ·1 ~83~3· Po~. ~···~D~r -~S!!'!uil~·T-3' !!!!'N·~'·~· !'!'!. ~M2~""6~2!1!!0
Choice of all Models and Exteriors-
Se_!ect. Y~ur Lot Location Now
lent condition now and could
be decorated to be fanla~
tic. Vacan"t and listed at
$46.!<>0.
is only Oflf! o( thf! lipecial
• lelltures of this loVf!ly 3 BR
townhouse in Village Ill, the
Stanford a.1odel, the location
is pat; Owner has been
transferf'f!d. fp $38,500,
Completely modernized I ln
great shaPf!. Country 1lyt_,e
kitchen with built-ins. plush
carpets o v e :· hardwood
floor1, oozy brick fireplace,
antiquf! de co r. Separate
guest 1acllity that'• oozy A
unique. Huge grounds with
room to roam. Ideal loca·
tion. Don't hf!sltate to call
n4. -962-S585
FOREST l OLSON ')llcs.f\ <ro< ':ilrnth• '
Sales offil:e open from ·10 am to 7 pm daily Genei'al · 1000 G•nerat 1==='-----'= 1000 546-5990
838-5136 838-5120
II yo""'' • vol , "' thi• • Tr11e Calif. FOR THE 0111;', no money do\vn and the seller \viii pay _ Luxury In.
By Owner $36.500
Spacious 3 bedroom 2 l:iath,
living room with ti.replace,
large dining area overlook-
ing lovely &ecluded lanai,
carpeting:, driapes, built-In
electric kitchen . .(iarage oil
alley "'ifh electric eye open.
er. Ni<.-ely landscaped cor-
l'lf'r lot. ·
646--4@2 MS.1444
SPANISH
Style home in choice Penln-
·sula Point location, 4 Bd-
r m&., 2 balhs plus l11mily
rm. Lots of storage,
•red hill
Inc,-Re'1tors
19131 Brookhunrt A~
~untington Beach
SparldillCJ C.lean
fi·~·~0t,,.~t';:~2g:\;; Generel .1ooo j.General 1000 Newport Beach · OISCRl'11NATING
custom built horne In 11 ,;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;:.r~;;;::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';J · Styled Jor comfortable fan\lly Here's A Challen""•[
Newport Hei~ht"' and I •
. • REALTY GI NO DOWN
Univ. Park Center, Jrvinf! Sharp 4 bf!drm, l "--ba. elf!C
Call Anytime 833-0820 kit., lovely erpta A: drps,
ready tn be JivE'd in so 6 A RARE FIND Hvinge11joymenL F'our·large Executive quality ln a neigh. \Vhal v.·ould "you" do with
don't ":ait it \11on't last 5 X ~COSS bedl'OOms, family room With borhood o( slr!klng beauly. lhis un\L~ual Door plan? Take
546:s640. · • -_II_ --but w .. _tlid ii. A _home v.·lih beam'ed-ccillngs and_wood Sple.ndld _C4binetry Jn·bltns a look . l~l us koo-1". We ,
can: 673·3663 548-5942 F..Ws. "'l!:~~~~~~~~ I lge corner lot. Submit any =; terms.
847-8501 Eves. 968-1178 associated 1250
$22,950
Costa Mesa
Doll House
$1 51.00 mo. P•Y• •II
This 3 bcdrn1. hu1ne is
neat as a pin v•ith nC\V
\1·all lo "'all CBl'llf'rin;:-
lhroughout completely redeco1·a tt>d 1Mlde. Take
over l'Xisling VA 6* <;;., annual ,....., Tate loan ·
call no\-\· lx'forc it's
gone. 546-8640.
2100 sq. ft.
$146.00 total pmt.
just assumf' the JO\\'
~ 70 annual ~;., r81f' loin, and you J::<'l :'I
lai·s:e Wroom!'I 2 full baths. tremt>ndous 15 x
4Q family room, formal
dining rooih p\US Sl>RC•
ious eatinJ:: area in kit-
chen. \Vhat a buy al
only :S28. 750. Sec this
one.
$25,995???
Huge Lot Plus
A 4 Bedrm. Home
2 FULL BATI-IS, LAHGF.
FAJ\ollLY room, paradisr
in land~caplng, l;OVPrrd patio, fi·rshly painted,
room for boat or trailC'r.
No do1vn to vrt!'I, o"•ner
anxious. M6-8&:10.
Bingo, Bango,
Bongo
$23.500 In Coat• Mn• A rPal G;em .• 1 Jar.i:e ·bf'd.
rooms, !llp1·a"·llns: lot.
ratio nr\.\•ly pa.intt'd in-side and out. this horn,.
has rvl'rylhin5:. No do\1·n
10 vrt!'I tnw 10"' do\1·n
to •n_ybody. Call today.
54S-8640.
3 bedrm POOL
College Park
This home Is ahsolut<'1Y
tx-au1Jful. It has a ii;or·
,lfeoW> hcatrd and filtl'r· f'd pool with drP!'lsin ..
J'()Om 11nd beth 11lus 2
exlstin.11: 51' S9 annual •;,
nllf! IOAn. Ownf'r \-1111
help. Now is the tlmf! to buy~-pool home, 1tt il.
546-8640.
2629 HARBOR
BOULEVARD
54&.8640
JO Sf>parA!c homes on large Iorn:at tllning &~II & la,rgc paneled "'alls. Large country everywhere, A homr notable need :,oor ldea.s. 2500 sq, ft.
BROKERS-REALTORS
2025 W Bolboa 67J-l66J
Eastsidc Jot 120 x 300. Eilch ra ~ily r.111 1.1nder $34.000. kitchrn wi1h breakfast arf'a .. especially in douhlc size mas. In the 1\1E'M -Verde-gO\f -
uni! has a garage & exlr.-1 Jius o~c 1~ 8 JCWCl. df'COrat-Built-ins plus dishwa11her. !er &Uile &. ma1·"'"loui1 gar-course area. It. could be just
parkini;. No vacancv here-a 1 l cd v.·ith . custo~l ~1111 ~-·s BcauliJul sunken li.vin~m. _aj:e v.'Orlis.hop. Park like-~1-::•·YQut tUP or 1ea." · 1;;;;;;;;;=";;'== I
$160. nio. f'3ch. Abig 6.6'i~ lhruo~t, ~~~l~d~ q~ahty v.·ilh raised· hearth flreplacc. mospllE're jn bolh tron1 &r S B&droom Fixer-Upper Costa Meu 1100
loan transferable at this in. eai'JX" .~. 1 0"'11 Absen1ep o\\'ru•r may CQn-rear garden11. 3 Bedrooms, Back Bay Mea 25&5 sq It I -;;;;;~;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
leresl rate 10 you for a $25. you can 9s.stunc :11~\ 6'#. ~idrr l!!ftse-oplklft .. -.Lefs &-rlining f'.'00~1 clof;e to all Nl.'t'!<ts paint, 'yard ~rk.I '
frc. Call I'll)\\' • THIS ONE ~oar~ ~~·ablr. $241.~ per mo. talk. tern1s. • .olfered a1 ~. hools & Ga. rden Grove some rep·•r. This O""' could ·Paceselt.er /Republ'IC
IS A U'JNNER. 29~t Oo"TI • 1nc_lud111g pr1nc., Jn1., taxes $:')'1,9j(I; t ree"':'a.Y. Fruit trees· and use. som;' imagina;i~n· too.
IDEAi; LOCATION •J'.lfl
CLOSE TO u};f;Si'f.1•
BEACH -----
45 FOOT LOT Jo9 ta leach!
NEW 3 to 'I Btdrooma S~cious, well deron.ted 3
Bf!droom home, with lai:ge from $2'1,440
panelled family room with R•ncho L• Cuest•
full pri('e . & IJIS. Col'esworthy' magnthet'nt sh a .d I! ll~S "Asking., price $34,7:'JO. $125,000 fu11hr~ enhRncr the (!I OP,Cr· s LESP ·o LE NEE ED
PAU(.•WBfl'E ty. Prtcttl at $77.950. A E P D
Newporl CARNAHAN ~ CO.A. TS ~ 146 ·1!!0
Homes an> gn>al . A large 3 &. Broolthunt &r. AU..nta fireplace . Seclusion and pri-family for $34,950 i.\ fanta~ 968-1338 • Hunttncton Beach vacy are !he y,.'Ords lor the lie. Pa!io front and rear for Ot>'n 10 AJ\f to 'I PM enclosed patio PLUS ofl-lot11 of play room. Drlighllul, . k , BY TRANSF. o"~~
af·. •B J.LTY co. & Co.. fntartiMmflllealrtl
lO!l.1 BakcJ", C.i\l. 5'16-a-MO R~ALTOR ' WALtACE 1kk~~~~C.:,
slttet par Ing lor •cars and ""~ ea~ to maintain landACaJ:r a low malntenancr. ·yard. BEAUT. 4 br/3 ba. 2200 11q
inz; charn1ing, "'Pll deeorat-Phone 67J.8550 ft, Fashion Shotts home,
F11ir:view Nr"""'rt Beach Office "' REALTORS
1>46-8811 POOiliOM~ lll28 'B•y>id• Dri'O ' -5""4141-. 67:H930 -
(anytime) $27;500 (Open Evenln91)
I! spa1·kles rron1 lhc new r~r
fllld fln i_nl job l'o the pool..
Can't afford II pool -Try
. !hi~ nn for sl1.e ... 3 B('(f •
l'\Y!lllS, (."OY('l'f'tl fl<1lir>, $oii:1 r
86c
. . sq. foot FIXER·UP-$29,000
\Valk lo Corona beach LitU<'
\\'Ork for a beach ~rea.' J
bedroo1n.~. Country kilchen.
ChN!ry-fireplace-. Enjoy
hacky;ird BBQ + pa.lio.
hraled ponl. All in IOfl con. 11 Acl'e Corner, 7.01~ 1'1-1.
di1ion -Phone 6'l6-717l. \\'ii,\~!\ part' pr P,Rrcel. Lo-
cliei:! Norlh"M·esl corner Sun-
flower & Fair.iew. Call for.
. Jurlher inlor!llation,
Slorr. boot in back )'i\fd. Al· I •iiOi--iili..;.iOiiiiii'-ml
'"Y aece~s. A be•t b~y. Bel· House Hu nting Golfers
f('r hurry. Don't 111b•!\ sff"int: ;1-iis lovely ' DIAL 645·03Q3 large 1·u!'.IOn1 house along th;
Newport
M6-8811 FOREST E OLSON IJ!h fa11'\1;i,v of 1\lt>sa Verde . • I Cou nlry Club. Ahout 3000 i;q. ( I REALTORS :J.1, of real q_uality & rharn1. anytime !
2299 Harbor, <;.l\f. lr!Pal for a liute family, 1:::::::;~=====:
REALLY FOR SALE! SALESPEOPLE NEEDF:D BA Y'"VIEW
14"5110 IRVINE TERRACE (Mlftlnfmll \helt!t} 1 · . $21.!XX) \Viii buy a sharp 3 LLEGE REALTY 2 BR . & lien, 3~ ba_rh hou~f'!
bed rm Pacific Sand.~ hon1c. 500 Mims 11 Harbcll',CM on , .~per!acular view lot.
l\1any cireum:;lanccs forcing Nreds some lix--np lo make
1h1!1 ~ale. Opportunity he1-e.
4
B$ID9,,RlOOOOM .' .......... 1! _srnsiitioilal! $86,7:,0,
Call ror drtaifa. Ii
COATS S1 11·111und<'d by "·hitc pickei .
& f{'!l('{', 1111~ c~rJX'tS. drapes, Coldwell Banker
WALLACE rnodcrt1 hu1!1 -111s and l\IORE ' ·
BEACH DUPLEic-
oN1-: LOT FR0,.1 ocEAN· &r.
"'ith view. 2 BR & 3 BR \Yi1h (am ·rm. PLUS 1 BR i. Ba
~ue11( uni!." Xl nt ,co.n<tl11on.
Top 11rea for living or rent-
ing, $51,500.' ..
5 HOUSES
On 60x305 lot, Co!'lta 1\tesa.
No Vllcancy. Good money
make&'!, $810 mo lDCome.
Asking only $69.!IOJ.
C..\0LL · 0 , •••·1414 . A.;4U#c. .
71•t ALTV .
Nt•r Ne.,.p:D rt Po i t orrltt
$22~500
Everyon• Qualifies
3-Be>drm, huge trees, W." side
yards. Room for im.-or
trlr. Quiet cul-de-Mc Hlrttt.
Nichols Real Estate .
S46-9521
ed in1t"rior. Full bltn kitchen o\·erlooking park, N r ;
& llt'rvice area. Very high Giesler Jr Hi. Al kine
existing loan can be 11asun1-$39,500 w/Gf 61' Avail. "I 001 BRICKS''-
And more in lhe beautfful f'd. F'or dclalls on this new 962-7406 aft 5 pm.·
u~ed brick planter.~ of this listing call 540-1151 Heritage -7.c=='='""~o== ASSUM 5 , ~ G •·• flpollf.~s home. Big rAMl(Y Rcallors. HARBOR VIEW.. E 1.4711 I. TolAl I ~~~ ... ""."~~~~~ I" BR. 2~ ·b Wal t led · pmnt $140. 3 br, den, bltrui, ROOi\1 and spacious bed-I ' ---·---• 11· nu pane frplc. Sef! at 5142 Sparrow roon1~. 2 baths, deluxe kif<ih. CUTE AND COZY fam. rm.; din. rm., frp!c. Dr. S 2 5, 2 50 . Phone
l'n, The v11lut> here will Easlside rustic 2· bedroom J'!,nxious out of town oy,ner? Bakerslield all 6 pm. (805)
amjil1.e you at $29,000. Seller and dPn plu~ family room $65,500 872--0824.
will Pll.Y points for your neiv home on a blg corner lot MAL'l'eJll -M~U~ST~-SE-LL--TH~IS_WE_EK_
VA 0~ 1'1tA loan. You'lrJike wilh room for lhat boat or Cofta1N-M~...nNp 4 BR/3 Ba. Owner Anxious?
.tfiis one! trailer. Lots of wood paflt'I· ~==~~~:':•:11~·1:11:•~~~~ Agt: M:>-1070, 962-7524 (see Wa lker &-Lee 1ng, large birch flrepliu .. -e, • .\_o .H. Directory) •
over 11ize double car gantge. JRV' I.NE TERRACE Ii"'========
2043 Wer;tclilf Dr.
ti46-77ll
Ope~ 't~l. 9:00 Pf\·!
No Down to Vets
Lartf! 3 beodroom + 20X'20
nimpus room. Newly p11inted
inside &r out, block wailtd
re"r yard, hard,"'OOd Doors.
HUIT)' on this one! FHA
tetm!, a.lso VA appraised at
. $24,600
EAL TY COMPANY
642,lnl Anytime
Thf're's much n1ore. Please Garden Grove 1475
call for showing 54&231J. l Open Dally 2 to 5
\.Q'THEREAL
\'."._ ESTATERS '-' '• '•:" ,. ..
5~6 ';0 ASSUi\tABLE Ranch
style charmer with 3 lge
bedrms. fa m i 1 y rm.,
oversizl'd living rm, n1odrrn
blrm, 2 sparkling baths.
Prime re!iiden!ial areil •
y,.·alk lo 11hopp\ng &-r;chools.
Prlced for immediat~ kale
af $31,500 • $167 Includes
taxes. Call ~l:r842·1, Sduth
Coas1 ReaHors.
HOUSES FOR SALE e OPEN DAILY 1·5 e
1721 G•latea
4 BEt>Rt\1: • VIE\V
lmmf!diale Occupancy
PETE BARRm
REAL TY 642-S200
-GREAT VIEW-I -
Or harbor£.:: oc.-ean. Attr. split
level home on R-3 5100 sq.
It lot. !dear for 4 apt, uni'"·
$200.000, 2501 Ocean Blvd.,
CdM. By app't. only,
' call: 642-4620
Biii , Grundy, Rtaftor
IT'S GROOVYll
Some lucky GI an move in
absolutely CO!ll frtt, Seller
will pay all buyers closing
costs. Immaculate 3 bed.
room, 1 % baths in a.n excel-
lent area close to schoola.
Extra l•rg-e cul-de-sac lot,
perfecUy manicured. Childs
playground & equipment and
extra room for a boat or
trailer. You mu.st lee thia
today • please call
Larwln Realty, Inc.
For appt. 962-6988 anytime
Balboa Peninsula 1300 Santa Ana 1620 ·--Below VA Apprals•I • ...........___ ..... ~ COlllMll':~ REAL TORS ~re 10 hel1evl'! ---........
Walker & Lee s3i-0100 -2430
1• l K tolrHO!S
open Evenings
• 962·4414 •·
-PICTUltES9UE •
..,....,.......,.......,~1 CHINA COVE l!!!'!!!!!!!!i"'""'""'""'""'""" HARBOR-HI~ Smog""' h<at got you,.,..,;.
'Til aold t Assume 6~1/'.· VA W. Bay Waterfront
loan. $148 Per mo. Redecor. BeautlfUI, newly redec. 4 BR
3 Br. W/W cpts, drps, lm. + bol'IUS room. Palio-deck-
med. possessk>n! Only $22,· beach-pier & •liP .. $175,<XXl •
950. 1984 Federal Ave. Call: Patrick Wood, s.s.2.100. Bill Grundy, Realtor
4 br home:, lots of (00dle1.
$29,00CI by owner. 545--0800
Laguna Beach 1705 Hl.'aHOrs ·
1-REPAIR-&S AVE-
HC'rl''s an opportunity lor a
handy n1an to a!'.o;un1e a Ire.
~~ ~. FllA LOAN \VJTI1
LO\\' 1\1 0 NT It L 'I' PAY-
l\lENTS .ai\cf enjoy this spar.·
lous 'I11rec Bdrm. 1~ blllh
ho1nr y,•ilh cleet.. BIN's and
'DIST. RICT ' Reltt&t and enjoy lhe serene
w•l•rll'O"l 1"• i" "Th<
1682 .E<Jingee ·LEASE OPTION
~·124 1:(1 510-51~0 This s.paciou~ family home on
e Bill Haven, Realtor 8ll Dover Dr., N.B. 6424~ GLASS WALLS
2ll1 E. Coa.~t. CdM 673-321f OCEAN Front Duplex, 3-2 custom home built in a semi-
• 1 YR OLD 4 br. 2 ba, elec BR. $59,500. circle y,•ith glau walls to
kitchen. frplc, lge clo&elll. M"=an=·=hall=:R,:•al;:l:;y=="'"""'=::;; permit a fantastic ocean
11 l!U'J{r beiiu!ifully landscap-3 Big Bedroom!. 2 balh!ii. din. c " l •·• 2 •· •· O\·e. , ......_.room.!!, '"''"·"· ing spa~ In kitchen -Hard-2 firep]aCPs, tropical patio, Macnab· Irvine 1'.'d pool ~ize lo:. Ha~ four
large bedrooms wirh lots of l\'OOd floors -all sn nell\" lQ hoat davit and Up!'!tairs 11Un
shopping in \\'cstclifl and deck and exciting cha.nlll'I
school.!! near by. $33,5Qo ·-view. Sl28,00'.1: Jo'ee land. C.ll
Phone M6-1i7l 11' Inspect.
$29,!M. By owner, 6~ % Joan. ;;;; view fmm all rooms. C'lrcu-
Really Company
LEASE OPTION?
dining room . Large Dbl. Gar. ~phis1ic<11erl & carefrct'. 3
11~,.. frn('('(] yard. Llstro al Bf!drooms,.2 haths & po"'tler
$:!'•.000 1111d OPf'n 10 offcni. · •rootn. Ek>g11n1 decor 8-· a
SUR:'>11T LO\V DOWN PAY· "i.:ivr a;way" price of $35,800.
l\1F.;N·r. flexible tf'rmii. 642-82l S 675-3210
· rloset · !'.P&C'e. 2~11 bathJ, huge
Spanish fift'plact", 11'& .... a.
cant and ov.·ner wa~ ac·
lion -pti(.-e S51,llOO, CaU
for shOwing 546-2313,
\o THEREAL ~ESTATE.~
10 THF.REAL
\"'-ESTATERS '-.. H •, ,, [ • •,•'
Ea1tbl11ff M. M. La Borde, Rltr.
!616--0.i~~; 1>;vei<: &1~~79
COLLEGE PARK
4 Bedrn1 + drJt. p.;11p, hrwd
floor11,. all A·l t<ond , Quiet
slree l, cl~ 111 shoppg & all
~chooli:, S.'!.."1,000,
W•lls-McC•rdle. Rltrs.
1810 NeY.-poM Bl\-'d1, C.i\l.
141-nl'I
QUIET ELEGANCE OPEN D.t.ILY 1-S ~L. PATIO ""' '"'""';' DIVORCE. ·$ALE . 26U Bamboo, N.B.
Vlh\V ~.! the palle:r~ tor eJe. Spacioui1 4 bedrm j, r8.mily, You'll be happy when y<>u ,,ee ~ant living; rxclusrvf' Dov. 3 1 th ho I !hill 5 bedrm·, 3 bath ho1ne.
l'r Shotc~. brand 11(\w f\'ll n "'CN: me on ge <'O~ Redecorated in le out. Best
\Veils 4 BR, 3 Ba + pl'.-'dl' lol. m<eti1 say iw;u NO • of f.inaneing available, Fa.st
'
. 1 1 .. ' Submit orrcrs. asking, , • e•-w•. vacanlt rn1.. orma 11n1ng, 'JlllC. $42.,tSO ... .,
1am11y rm, 11·et bar. stos.ooo. PERRON . 642_1771 ~chenmyar Rlty
Roy J, \Vard,· RJtr, 646.15:i01..,,!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!',;,,.,. ... ~ CALL 646-3928 or ~5-34.\l
o.,..n Dolly. 1= "60/o LOA'N--
i; .... oc .. _"'E"'A'"N"'FR"'o .. N"'T"""'"'1 $23,950 4 Bdr. + Family Rm. ~75~3000--
LOT 4 Bdr + Famity Rm. Br11uuru1 :10me, Auumc 6~fi NEWPORT HEIGHTS
Balboa ·Pen1nsu11 Ele{ant PlUoiil Verdel 51.one apr. }Dan. 4 Bedmoms, huge 10-/• DOWN
$4S,000 , , llreplace In huge: IMng nn., f11mlly rm. firepltlCl', buUI· Only $.1,lS() clo1lng costs mov.
Georg• Williamson 4 Bcdmis, Family rm., din-In BBQ. Sprin kler gystem. f!!I )'OU Into this Jmmac, 3
REALTOR . Ing rm .• Enlry hAJI, bu~t· '~000: M0.1731 BR. homt'.!, clOle to AU
673-4350 64~1564 Eves. Ina. ~o cj()wn C.I. !>40-17Jl Tarbell 2955 Harbor ~hools It thnpplfti
REPOSSESSIONS Tarbell 29S5 Harbor Bey & Buch Riiy ., Inc.
6'J:l.8500.
\R THEREAU \. ESTATERS
' • ,1
211 E. 21st St ., 642--0581 Lido Isle 1351 tar tamilyll'OOm has ca.thed-
wknds or alter 4 pm ...;;,:;.;.,.;.;.;.:_ ___ ...;.;:;.; I'll.I ceiling .l ~place. 4
TOWNHOUSE 3 BR, 2 BA, lg REDUCED Bedrooms, 2 baths & many
Jiv rm. din rm 11rea, bar & Immac, 5 BR., family rm. 45 luxury features. $79,500.
y,•/storage. clubhouse. Jf!tT)' app't. only. o/a-kitch, patio, . 2~ar pr f'..1 lot. atrfft to strftt. By .AO -
Hall S38-6603 Bkr. $93.i;i(I . IC' e GOOD BUYS e LIDO REAL TY INC. REAL ESTATE
3 B•. 2 s,, E••l•id•·, $l651J B'i OWNER, E-ald-e, 3 BR. 2 " ba $26 ~ 3,ln Vi• Lido 673-7300 11111) GI s Down 1'1-lA, · ·"""· enneyr~ I.
Triplex, N'pt. Hghts. Ex· I ===•='4S-=:•;:8'7;o•::·*===--'---------494S473 549-0316
chanie'for more units. Newport Beach 1200 Huntington Beech 1400 OCEAN VIEW ,
2 Houses on R-.1 Jot. 2-2 BR. · $ll,SOO 6 BEORM, 4 bath + vecant ·
'# f\tlle to beach. Low down. By owner •. F'1'rn 2 BR Joi, walk to ,bt:acb. abopp'&
FORTIN CO. R11r11, 642-5000 garage: apt on beach. AMunie existing FHA 6% & church. .--------•I For Appt call 213/378-0891 loan, everyon;e qualifies. 2 OPEN DAIL y 1-4.
LIDO WATERFRONT
APTS.-320 LIDO NORD
NOW REDUCED TO
$1",00G-Xlnt Term1
6 Be:autif'Ul units. 6 'CM
gatQff It utility room With
80 fl. fronting on excellent
l'Wlrruning beach. Unit1 &rt'
ne:wb' rumtsl'led. •
Biii Gruricfy, Realtor
833 Dover .Dr., N.B. M~
~10811.E HOME • W/F\l.U Bedroom 2 bath, e:lectrk 1~ Temple Terr.ere
Caba.nil. i.wcury p • r k • bltn ran~ A oven, prbage South Coast Realton Bl\yfront Penln. Ad I la. dlsposaJ, FA beat, ti.replac@, Call Glnny 5(5.1424 aep&rale etrvlCf! pore!\, car-673-8100, 67>8321. pelt ' drlpea, Land.~ped. FABULOUS Octan vi."
Immediate occupancy. parct.I, 10'lxlOO w/ utl.I • paving lJJ'!Mr way. $27,500:
I' $5.000 dn w/ r:ood tenns on
Larg• Family Home bl.lance. Bkr. 494-1100 or
3 BR. a: ramlly rm. Ne11t 9'2..f471 ( :J 146-1101 _4_91_·_l02l~•~·~"-·~----•
com mun. elubhou!e. Need& C , B • $1 ,000 DOWN llOmC painting: & 80me: clean-an f eaf' ThtS P.tagnlll~t Octan View lot,
Ina. Submit your nUtr on Only $25,950111 amlill but levtl. SS.950. Bkr.
a!lkina-prtre of 12'.~. Low lnt•rest GI Loan! I 4!17·1210 or 4M.ti632 '""'·
Newport Shore• 1220
Spa•klin• d•ao "°"""· oom• Westbay Income Homes BACK BAY AREA I :;;;;;;;~':75-:3000~;;;;;;;;;;;;:j ltel\'ly palnlcd&cftl'Jltfed,2. TRIPLEX . S!'i7.~ l• Move In Tomorrow!
3. 4 &: 5 bdrm$, Some \\'Ith Btst Ells!s1<lt Cosla rttcsa lo-Spacious 4 be!dm\11, formal $EE YOUR RtALTOR Pa; rent unlit escrow closes,
MORGAN REAL TY 3 Wrm, ·2 bath, crptd, fncd, • The Hktreawa,y Houa *
67J.6642 67s.6459 won·1 1"~1!! SlS,500, 1 BR, sunroom, p.r.
pool~. FHA-VA conv, terms, <'!'lion. "Homes with an In-dlnln1, family rm, priced FOR YOUR BIG ,..REE 3000 ACI. •ll, home, l'!Cllf Hunt.
fr.>m S-1'.000 to $40,000. come". '20li 1'uatin fcor. undtr·mJ'irktt. r·nr tlP:Pl. , N~VOOMERS KIT inrton $late lJeach, \Vlll sell
HAFFDAL REALTY "'"' -ld ,., --b. you ad In the' cla.ulfled • ~.. . "'""'""""
SECTION? Someone ta 1 ~---'14_,.2:.,-44,;,,;,;_0:.5 ___ nrE Futett dnw tn the
C.OIHn.\ A \Vatti lnc. \\'oodland Place). Buildtr Jefi'n .. Smith, Realtor VA or FHA. Owntr dci;per. """"'""""'""'""'""'""'""j 8843 Adams Ave. 962-5523 ~2-4905. • 4t0. &. lith, C.l\l, M&-3255 Pilot Oa.Mi1fled. 54~ •It!" t'all -~ .•
Open Evening•
1111 1:30 watch!nc for It. Dial For u Id to sell BJ"INltrd West •. .a D.ttly Piiot
64i.M11 lo!IYI th. clock, dlal &<M61I. cta..iliod Ad. MWm
I • /,
I
-----~·-~~
,.. ... ~.·.·."".-....... -•• ~.~ ..... ·.~.--~ .. ~~-.... ·.-.... -.-,·."."':--~.~.~.-.---..... --,-·, ... ,~-.-.:-:::-,~.:-.-.~-.~.~.:-..-.~.:--.~~~.'."".."'.".'"'.',~.,.,.,-,-,-.·-,--.:-,-c:-·~-:-:---.---.-.-.-.--:.-1"';""'-;r-::."";;'"':'-::--:---;--;-7·;1-;-o-~. :·:-.....
-
II DAILY PILOT Tu..r.1, 0cto1o .. u. 1910
IHOUSES F OR $ALE RENTALS I RINTALI •ENTALl • R E NTALS RENTALS Houso• Furnished .._ .. Unlurnlllhod HoUNo U•lurnoshtd Apts. Purnl•hed Apia. Pumlshod -M'lwt...,. may plau thlHr ••• •Y felephene
MIHion Vlelo 17DI • -•· • -·--• --------------LoguNO llHch 2705 10....nl 3000 Newport looch 3200 Hunllnpton llMdt -Hunllp INch -~u~ ~ :'..,;.,! ::!: 1 L;. .. /S.le Fumit/...i .-2-LE'iEL *-EXECUTIVE HOME
Phones Are Open 1:00 a.m. • S:3 0 p.m.
NM:. w lot,_ 30fiO sq ft lot Lovely S.1ch eon.lo LARGE l BR. 2•BA. atove, Beaut decorated 4 br, 3 !>fa, cfc o· J.I.
$30,$45. nlA Of VA lenns. Avail Now for lta&e t.htU _.._., t.-~ .... A POOL 3«r pr. Lease ~ Lat/op. a U:nta ermo'~ 9 to Noon Soturdoy -C losed Su~doy
Bia S3MTIT. June or lon(tt. 2 BR,.2 BA, ':'Rte 'HALL' Tri:EN AC. don $360. &u-3m. • . """
--1.1ppto:r with llvlna, dlnUC ERS wELcoME.. $200 2 Br 2~ Ba Condo, frpl, pool, Casual estate living·. Enter La Quinta Her•
SM Ju.in kitchen a.re~ main floor ov· Hof1'MlooF lnc:ler• '4S.2'51 \\'lhr/dey, dishwttr, rttri,:, mosa's lush green atmosphere & stroll tree·
Ctpl1tr1no __..!!.~ ulooldn;: beautifUJ po o I, FOR RENT! 1 (;p~, drpt:, WeatclUt area. lined wa.lk..-\\•&ys lo your apl
1------··-I 4rse 2 car pon plWI •tor· S235. Si3-0l22. ALL UTILITllS INCLUDl!O
DIAL DIRECT .•. 642 -5678
WESTMINSTER le NORTH COUN'fY DIAL FREE 540-1220
t ACRE estate land or hone IZ" &t co1nplete l11undr)' fa-4• 3 ~ 2 BR Ht>mh In Or-3 BR/2 BA, ram/Rm Din'1 1 BR. Unf. $150 -Furn. $180 -nndt, nl~ view, adj~olber i cllltJCs. ,\JI beautlfU.lly & ·•D&e Counc,y. Rc.ntall -&tut. area, Gar. W, NP t .
parcels. S48.l'OO: $15,000 dn completely furnl11ohed, Uncni1, log at $123.SO. f'ur~ or 1JD-$2'1Slmo. J..se, To Family. 2 BR. Unf. $175 -Furn. $210
lleoch: 4M-94'6 Huntington a..ch: 540-1220
Sfln Clemente;
\\·UI rele.ue clear bid. site china elc if dttlrtd. Only tum. A&k tor BONNI. 557_9359 3 . Seac. flr. plans, ~ecor. furnishings: live
tor 100% fln.a.nc.in&-Bkr. ' 100 s\epi1 ·10 private beach. ai2.7aoo w1th1n romantic s~ttin g w/fun or pr!vacy.
497-1210 or 49.1-1706 eve!. Tennis couri & 2nd pool al-* Gracious Livinn Newport Ht1~h 3210 Terraced pool , pr1. sunken gas BBQ s 'WI
Hours-Regulations-Daadline1
1730 50 on properly with gorg-. ~ . seculded seating compl. w/Ramada & Foun· ~O~•~n~•-P_o_;n_t__ __ l!Olll! l&Jldscaping thru-out. WVE IT UP 1n this lar;e 2 1 BR OO~e, no chUdren ~r lain. * BY OCEAN : f1urnly Prk F.uy acctu 10 super mkt, II Br w/ fenced yard, crpts, pets: $l&5/mo. Nt ahop 1· * Color c:o-ord. ltit w/ indir•ct lighting.
w/pool. 12x62 Ex p a 11 do shopping, etc, ~ nwnth, Hdrps, pFl~ndfir@pli ~:..!1~51 ~ilBe 111~1:;:48• $26 * D•luxe r•ng• l ovens * Plush 1h•9 crptg.
IRROll: MwwtlMrt "'"" ct.ck their H1 ••lly •nd report l1111119'l1tely ,,,..,..
•r MIKIA ... lflutl9M. THI DAILY 'ILOT lllUn'IH ll•l•llity fM".,.,..,. enly t•
the extent ., "''ll1hhtf tti. ffy"11Hment corNctly •• time.
1'1obUe Home. Lg, comer ~1nler bui1 \\'ill con!lder om• 1 er• -ma. · * Bonus stor•g• sp•c t * Cov. cerpert
Jot, w/dog run. By Dana lease • purchase or oulr1ght ! st '1-5 UnJversJty P•rk __ 3231 * Sculptured m!r~le pull"1•n l t ile b •thi.
DEADLINE FOi COPY AND kl LU: 5:31 P.M. the ••Y Hf.,. 1Mi1~llc1tlen, ••npt
forMonday 1•1tlen wh• llNdlln• 11 Saturd1y, 12 11oan.
Po!nf '.\ratlne. Job Transf-:-sale. AdtilL' only. RefS". ·r-* El•gent rec:reation room.
1'lust ~ll! ~2381 * 499-2152 A~I or 831-0791 any.: 2 Bedroom Duplex. Garage. DON'T DELAY I FURNISHED .MOOiLS OPEN DAILY,
I YOU MUIJ.JtA\ll...KILL NUMllll Whtn kllllnt an •d bec1uM of 111ick rHulh,
• M 1un t"i m1kl • r'Ktnl-Of thi kill numl:itr tlYen-fOU IJy yeur-H taker•• I verlflcatlon ef yklr c1IL
tin1'· • I Patio 1:_ new palntr CALL US TODAY I Blk Crom Huntington Center, San Diego
"-lverside County 1800 UPPER 3 ARCJI BAY-1 br, 3 BR 2~ baths ........ $300 Frwy ... Goldenwest ColleJ!'.e. Ivery •ff.rt ll MMI• t• klll .r cerNCt • new •d th1t ht1 bffn •rd1red. ~ut we Cl,..
l 11ot 1Y1rantee to '' M untll th• H ha1 appotred In the ,.,.,. ~m ~1~'!~~~~~ TELE·TREND 832·7800 Lea~/oplK>n 3 BR •..••• S.125 San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. Od
By On11i·er • Norco at ~~2'2.18 or 499-3403 3 BR, 2 BA. all bltna, close 3 BR. 2 Ba. tnhousc ••.• $340 Beacll 3 blks. to Holt; W. on Holt to · • · DIMl·,t...LINI Ml IN 1trlctly c1sh In advanco ~y mall or 1t any ""' of our efflc ...
NO phone ... en.
3 BR. fireplace bll iM, new """ent. lo schools & shoppg. Immed 2 BR. 1 ha. houi;e •••••• S280 la"uinta Hermosa 714: 847-5441 ihac carpet new paint in & -S220 C&ll H ·1 "t'
out, If acre, alJ 6' c & L F 2975 ~~-tors 54~il5t en age • red h·111 fenced, Ja.rge corrals tor 5 Duplexes urn. --
Tho DAILY PILOT,...,....,, tht rl1ht to cl1111fy. edit, censor er refu1• 1nr, adv.,..
tl1emont, •ncl to chl"fl Its ,,.,.& ind ... 1ul1tlon1 without ,rler Mt CL
........ ~ SIO""'""e shed. Good • * Privacy Plus Gener•I 4000 Newport h•ch 4100 M•li A1hl'"9: lo• 1175, New)tOrt 1 .. ch. C1llfornla
'""'"' '"" AIDES -lor convalescence,
term& $24.800 734--0774 elderly ca.re or family catt. PLEASANT LIVING In lhlr. REALTY' Just for Single Adultl OCEANFRONT, Ulil. paid. 3 1
onclo • 1 1950 Homemakers, 547-6681. 2 trg BR. home, lrplc, fncd Univ. Park Center, Irvine SOUTH BAY CLUB Br. $WO Mo., yearly. CVISlrllD COUNTERS ere loc1tM a1 followt:
C min um RENTALS yard. Garage. $130. VA-Call Anytime 833-0820 APARTMENTS Abbey Realty 642-3830~-
-IB'"'RON"" 'J'ownhouee6 1--. -CAW'·M9VETODAY! l==~~======i N ewport 9,1ch LARGE 1 Bdrm. N ear • ' .;, . · AoultS Unfurni1hid Hom•Fo·nder• .r..i1: -s1 ..... ~,,. Sit" -YEARL . Sign up no\\• far choice re-'""""7 -880 lr.'ine Ave. ........-.:-w ,.,..,...
COSTA MESA
330 W . llAY
NEWPORT llEACH
2211 W . BALBOA
sales. Assume aov'1 loans, Gentril 3000 St35 • BEACH area. 2 BR Corona dtl Mar 3250 <Irvine and 16th) Students ok, 613-8088
no qualifying. Duplex, yard, patio & gar. 4 BR. 3 BA tri-level--(7 14 ) 645-0550 * FURN 2 BR cara,e apt, -" .mm Family OK. Broker 534-6980 l\t e d i terr a n ea n decor, * BY THE SEA On Beach, S2l0.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
17875 BEACH BLVD.
LAGUNA BEACH
221 FOREST AVE.
LAZY LIVING • coveted " ? * 213/318-0891 Ir
bedrm, 2 bath, 2 story con-* Can't Be Done redecorated. S375 l~e. S400 PLUS A HEATED SWIM-1 ---'l.a'll'=="-1 'o8~~~.---
dominium. <:arelree living RENTAL FINDERS BUT IT IS Cozy l BR w/ mo 10 mo. Avail now. r..UNG POOL! I BR all util. Near Beach!
among Jov:ely people a~ ~ * Homtl patio & garage. Utll. pd. 646-00ll G42-l771. pd. $120. 54~2944 eves & wknds.
SAN CLEMENTE -305 N . EL CAMINO REAL
Da ily Pilot Classified
"""Is, ten'"Y thl5 jacuz.z1 f--MOVE TODAY, $120. EASTBLUFf Nr. Cdl\'I HI Home-Finders ~S.2951 •~ µ e-* Ap1rtments · $103 Very ni1.-e OCEAN-therapy pool), complele out. ~ Hom•F inders ~5-2951 Sc.h], Pool, trplc., charming HOLIDAY PLAZA FRON T BAClfELOR APT. CLASSIFIED INDEX
door recreation facilities. ~li!SI. * Roomm1tts LANDLORDS I I 4 ~r. 2 Ba. S315 Lea~e. Call: DELUXE Spacious I BR 642-126j or 613-~
Best buy at$23,0Cil. {Assume CALL 645-0111 Vacancy Problems Ended ~~iss l\~we~13~~~~26 or rum apt $135. 2 BR + den 1 -.~oc=E7AN~r=R~O~NT~71~B~Rc--HOUSES FOR SALE RENTALS
6% g0v't Joan). FREE supply of qUB.l.lfi@d rs. Y · ;i • S165. Heated pool. Ample GINllllAL 1• Apts. Furnished
Larwin Rt•lty, Inc. for inform•tion on these tenants at no cost 10 you. 3 Br. 2 ba beaut, nearly new parking, No children-no YEARLY SlfO/mo. cosTA MllA 11• 011N•llA1. ...
For appt. 962-6988 anytime a vail•ble RENTALS ... •-•· !or LEE or OLA hse. Lie 2-c:ir pr. 4. blks lo pets. 1965 Pomona. CM. l =Co=ll=6=7=""=m=·'=':::t•=6:;:'m=. = IM1sA DEL MAI 11• ';":l,_A :.~•:. :::
1110 2 BR ~ C'! ood J ~ ~h • .,..., .,.,.., """' Ml!SA YllOll: HU NIWl"OltT •lllCN ~-•L$ • , ""· " • g oc. 132a660o ""' . .,,...,,, ,,.....,,,.,, * UNBELIEVABLE coLL1ae: l'Alltk "" Nawl>DllT M11GHt1 uu RENT"' w/in your buc.1i:et. " 2 BDRM 2 b th · 1 blk Coron• del Mar •150 NIWl'OIT 11..CM 1H11 NIWNlllT sMn1tts 4,"
Houus Furnished 115'1 -2 BR bungolo, Npt Hts, $125 -UTIL pd, 2 BR Apt.. from .:..,ch~. ,lv,•,e~., m 0 . BUT TRUE. 1 Br. even utU· -. NIWl"OlllT HllOMTI n1t WISTCLll'~ dst
I ""'" " FOR Lease Lovely furn apt IALIOA COVIi Ull UNl\lllllSITY •AllllC .,,, ·• · 2005 fncd yd, child/pets welcon1e. patio, range & oven. Ava1 Realtor 675-2443 itles paid • only Sl05? ~tOVE · • Ntw•o1tT SN01t1s 1nt IACK IAY ~+I
Rent1ls to Sh•r• -· Sill • 2 BR E. CM, child ok now. Broker ~ . IN NO\V J 1 Br + lrg ~epr. rm.&: ba IATClttsr 1m EAST ILUl'I' •141 3 BR. 2 ba, 2-car gar. frplc. H F·. d ,.5•2951 below. Bayview. $27:> mo. IATSH0111s 1m coaoNA o•L MA• •UI
YOUNG ma.n..-23. ha5 apl, xlnt nci8:ttbor~,_ * BEACH LOV-ERS new crpl, s!ove. $325/.mo. 9m• 1n trs "" A!!:ail. Nov ls!. 673-5224 _ oov111 s11011ts 1n1 •ALICIA .... Long Bch. will move lo H.B. $1.M • ON the beach, 2 BR yri 1 67• 2672 -WISlCL•l'I' lut 1av-ttuN0t ••
Or .u_ .. ~,·n.,. area. 213: h~. kids. ""'IS ok, HIDE. A. \VAY COTIAGE y se. ~ . Cost• Mesa 4100 R00t.1S SlOO mo. Apts $125 HAAIOlll MIGMLANOJ ltU L;JOO-llll -.US\ ,,.,.....,. .,. ,~ 1 B d 1200 CROWN OF TllE SEA UNIYellllfY •A•• IUJ IALIOJI ISLAND UU 'J"Ml CALL 894•7577 fucked amongst tre:e9, r . 2 Br. newly crpte mo. mo. lltVtNI! 1111 ' ~· rnJ f C ll O•C" ••• lt<lt HUNTINGTON ISACH 4M crpls, drps, frplc, park·like no pets. 432 Fl! l!A . a * MOTEL·APTS, * Mo1eJ, 2600Co.sr Hwy, CdM. .. 11ouNr.1.1N VALLI T .. 1• SHARE 2 BR apt across L f213\ 761-4767 ""~885I 675-4927 •,•, •,•01~u11' 11',~! l&AL allACM .. ,. from bch, CdM ~/Jen1ale. for information on tn•s• yard. S150. . S:iG-$40 \\'k & up. Kits, hrd .,,,,.. ' . . 11v1N'i Tl1tllACI! nU LON• llACN ., ..
Prh•ll. 675--8174 aft 6 pm. • availAble RENTALS ... Hom•FJoders 645-2951 --pool, aii::,cond. Queen beds, __
4300
~o1tONA Ol!L~..} 1:: :::::: ~~~~~T ;::
• BACHELOR \Yul •har@ $200 . DECORATOR'S dream, . Balboa lsltnd 3355 ph serv. Daily&. Wkly rates. BilliN T5u,','o'•' ,•,o,c.,,,·.·,·~·""""'~• *ISTM tNSTl!lt .. ,,
3 + f beaut lndscpd pvt' c M 3100 21.s L -MIOW-"Y c1rT "" his 2-Slory Apt. Pool. (Np!. am. R a).1-. ost• es• 2 BR, 2 BA &: den. ·rr lse, 2080 Newport Blvd, •t t YEARLY-Yum 1. 2. 3 BR ~r:ii:N,:LAl'Y ~: SANTA ANA .. ,.
F"'""' at McFaddenJ 8l>-$JZ7 $100 -1 B , apt, cp ....... s. I b 2 •· I f • 11.fiddle "'' cpl 12.lli/mo 64Z..2611 apts. No studenl'I. ''' otLAHDt uM SANTA ANA HllCOMrl •ut
"J ill eJec, pool. r. ....,, &-•m rm "' 138 To fi7" n..::.., · B·Americard P.1astf'r Charge LIDO 1sLI IJ!! TUSTIN ..,,.. f'E'MALE want@d to shue 4 $115 • NR oce1n, furn 1 BR kitch. Spac !iv rm w/fli>l.c & pa.Z. ~ Call 673-6880 aALIOA IS LANO 11" CO~ST,9.&, ., ..
BR home with 2. Costa apt, bltns. child ok. din areea. Xtra plB.,Y rm \Y / Acapulco Apts, attractive, NUHT1NC1TON ll!ACH , ... t:::~:: :1~Aucl!"&. ::
llofeta. $00. M:>--5935 LANDLORDS FREEi bl.I-in bar Lg swim, pool w/ Huntington Beach 3400 Pool. Util paid, Garden Balboa f1land 4355 =~~~~ ... ~~0:_.~t::ou• l!: MISSION v11Jo ::::
NEED 1 or 2 male room· brick B-B·Q & out11idee bar. liv!n·g. Adufts, no pets. SE,J.L llACM ,.,. :::"i~::Ec'l~~1Tl':ANO •11~
mates, 4 BR, 2 BA hse, 11.8. -Crplo; thruout, 548-34'16 or 2 BR duplex-Crpt&, drps, pvt l BR • $145 & $150 1 BAYFRONT • winier or 1uNtlT l l ACM uu CA••STllANO llAcH ~1>0
Be,oiut. turn. Cail 962-7-109. * Can't Be Done? -t.94.6364 gar. Close to town & beach. 1800 Wal!att A\'e, c .. \. yearly. l br. 2 ba & 4 br, 2 ~::~"."iA~:ovE 11:;: o:N.~::1i;.r !!:
BUT tT IS. Cozy 1 BR, w/ 3 $110/nio Located 3 14 • NASSAU Palml'l 2 Br ba. Cal! eves 613-;,299 LAKl!WOOO UM T I 'N ';.. ffM NICELY L 0 CAT '' 0 • SO oo••OO <OU''' .... CONOOMI IU
1, b th hO " 'th ChiCAiO· Arlul1s O\'er . no apt >'um & U•I Pool pl•g.' On the Boy w 'oth O--k LS .,,s Cost• Mtll 2100 palio & garage. Uti! pd. bednn , a me ~'\ 536-0200 • "· • " -o uT oF COUNTl' uts MOTE •·· · ........ · , .. .
:;.:.:;c:C'--""C....-----J\tOVE TODAY. $120. dbl• ····ogo • lge lence-d pets. Call aft 6 pm. • pong, BBQ, shady l_av.'fls. j room ape. 3 br. 2 ba. S3:Q OUT OF STATE 1ut RENTALS . l ... .... 22 d St 642 364 STANTON 1111 A u I . h d LARGE one room n1cey Homt-Findtrs 645-2951 yard. Besl for the n10ney at 3 BRl_2'• BA Condo: 2 171 E. n • -a yearly_ 673-7228 W•ITMINSTllll 1111 pts. n u rn1s e
fUmished quiet cottage \Vith Sl!IO RF;NT or lease 4 bedrin, $185 per mo . Families only. Olymptc-Sz Pools. Clo~e lo $125/mo mob hm w/scrnd ~~~:"..:~TY ::: ~=:TEA•~~SA !:
utilities &. laundry facil\tics. blg yard &. ll"CC& _ quiet Call agent 546-4141 Ocean. 1ffi. Ph: &1'2-3'173 or porch, cnmpl tum. Hid pool. Huritlngton Be•ch 4400 IANT.1. ANA 11tots. 1,,. MESA vE•ol! J111
Quiet & privatl'. We.nl single cA<> At79/ Ask Mrs aark dll 4 o. • ooANOI 1'11 NIWl'ORT •e.•CN sH• adult. S65 mo. Finl & last street. pel5 nK. 540--9521 4 BR. + fam. rm. 2 lull .....,.., . -A S, no pets. .;JCal'JOn I! tUSTIN lt+I NEWl"OllT Ml!10MTI UH
d 580 ALSO haths. Cpl~. drps. bltn.s . 3 BR. 2 BA, den, clean. ?.tob Est. 2359 NwPI. 548-6332 ON BEACH' NoRrN TUSTIN 1641 MIWl'OllT SHOllll sne month r equi r e • ' l200 J bdrm hool $300 c t d & 1-·--' ANANl!IM 1.st WISTCLlllF ~.a Hamilton Sl. Cl\1 aft 4 renl • near Cov. patio. Nr. 5C s. arpe • rapes ~~ J"<UU· }''um Bachelor & 1 BR. • SILVIRAOO CANYON UIS UNIVlll:llTT •AlllC IU) i==========-Harbor shopJ>I: center, veey i'IO owner 645--0128. Immed. J>OllS. $225. i\lo. Exceptiooa.Jly nice! MA\IAJU LAICf. 101 1111v1NE ~1•
d I M 2250 neat condition. 54&-9521 J BR, I" ••• -t•. drp•. 2 842-3172 or 536-7110 P,a\O\V rental value? 2 BR unf. from $22:) LAGUNA MILLS ,, .. ~CIC .,,. ,,.. Corona e ar ,z .,.. "'" .,... e 2 BR Furn. From s285 LAGUNA 1111AcH 1m EAST 1Lu"'" su2 ;;,;.""..;.. _______ ALSO arr gar, patio. Mesa Ve:rde. VER'i n~ clean 4 BR. fam. 2110 Newport Blvd., G t LAGUNA N10Ulll. 11tl CORONA OEL MAR ''"
1 BLOCK to btoach. 2 BR. 2 3 Bdrm w/huge game rm dl I d Carpets-drapes-dishwasher MISSION Vll!JO 110I IALIOA SJ .. . • S210. 3111 Sumatra Pl. rm. n ng rm, rape!, BACllELOR apt.frplc & 1ml heated pool-u.una-tenni! 1.1.M (I l'MfN TE 1111 IAY ISLANOS UJI
:Baths. $275 ;.tonlh w/pool . table, $236 mo. 545-6328 carpeting, a\1 hH-lns. S29;i. ard Sl30-ulil pc!. SAN JU AN CAl'ISTltANO 1ns LIDO ISLI! US1
Delancy Realty 673-3710 Resp. students OK. 546-9321 OwTIE'r . 1805) 965-9697 y . <.AO ;750 rec room-ocean vie~·s CAl'ISTllANO IEA(M 1rJt HUNTINGTON IE&CI< S4N '==~======="" Adults, 1 Bed., Court ..... o-~ patlos-am(lle parking. OAMa l'OINT 11611 FOUNTAIN VALLll' SUI 1• * Privacy Plus S!IO. 2038 Wallace. No. s I~!i\i ACULATE 2 br duplex 1 BR. Sl25 Pool. Spoc. Security ..,,AJ"di:;. ocaAMS•ot. uh ••iLIOA tSLANO ,,u Lido Isle 2351 ----·--·-\VINTER Rentals. 2 BR, 2
bath. trplc. FA heat. 4 BR
&o <lf'n. 312 BA. 673-2559,
213: lSa-285.1
3 BR. 3 Ba.. Off·Wate.r hoine
Furnished -$450 mo.
BUI Gni.ndy Rltr. 642--4620
Balbo• Island 235S
C d hJ ( &Y SAN OIEOQ lnS SIAL •EACH UM PLEASANT LIVING in this 548-3934 • 962-3418 rpl. rps, Ins, pa IO, Adults Ideal for Bachelor. HUNTINGTON 11 1v111s10E COUNTY uoe LONl'O IEACM SHI
REDECORATED, BR. ,1 ••. lovely fenced. grounds. gar. 199.J Ch. u-•. Cl\1. 548-9633. HOUSIS TO IE MOVIO ,,.. OJI.ANGE COUNTl' '"' 2 lrg BR. home, frp!c, fncd : -·""• $160. l\1amed cpl. 842-3276. ''-'' PACIFIC coNOOMINIUM u11 GAIDl!N o11ov1 u1• yard. Garage. S130. VA-nr Fa.1rgmds. for me.rrie $2S Ptr Week It Up oul'L1x11 l'Oll SALE 1'11 w1sTM1MSTl!:1t u11
CANT. r..tOVE TODAY' cpl, 1 infant ok. 646-8226 DU~LEX 2 BR .+ garage. Bachelor & 1 br, TV&. maid ru OCEAN AVE .. H.B. A•AllTNINTS l'lllt IALI u .. ~~;t~NC~TT :~
Home-Finders 64S.2951 3 BR, 2 ba, crpt~. relri~. $135/mo New paint. Adulls. "] 450 v· t la {714) 536-1487 RENTAL.. SANTA AMA M&IGMl\ "" no ""1S Refs 968-6549 serv. avaL . IC or . Ot• •-n IO am-6 pm D•ily "' TUSTIN WO stove. Fenced yarrl. ,,.. · · · ' C.l\1. .... .-Houses Furnished COASTAL s11111 $275
j Bedroom with POOL! fire.
platt. Rural.
646-8780 or 646-2236 1~-===,...,,,,.,,,... • .,...;;:-Managed by U.OUNA &IACM SH!
Fountain V•lley 3410 • BEAUT. Bach & 1 Br. 'VlLLlAM WALTERS co. *' LAGUNA NtGUEI. si11 3 Bd. -lam. rm .• c:rp. drps. ~ Ap1. $29.50 wkly le up. OIMlltAL MISSIO N VIEJO 57'1 · t • BR 2 BA f I bit I""'" lllNTALS TO IHAltl 2'H S•ll CLEMllNll! 5'11 elect blt-1ns, trp, cov. pa ·.> . • rp c, ns. '"" !''urn .• inc util. 5-16-04:'>1 1 BR $135. 2 BR $150 co1TA MESA ::: SAN JUAN cAl'1sT•ANO sm
go ol occ 635-6750. mo, 1st & It.SI I BR, p·•to'·"y , .. -. Wlr pd. MI SA OIL MAit '''' CAl'!STllANO ll!ACN 51>1 Call 592-5625 .... ..... ....... Furn l 1 he d • overlooking MltA \111101 lilt OANA •OINT 57 ..
1010 SO. Baytront; 4 Br. 311 TE LE-TREND 832-7800 4 br, 2 ba, fenceKI yd, crpts. No pets, Adult.! on 1 y. ~aut. 11:arden patK> & htd COLLI OI! l'AllK noo T••l'LIX. _.c. ,_
bs . watertront home & 2 br. * B Th f ' 'd drP!'. dble gar. \V.side. A\'ail D pltxes Unfurn. 3975 SIOO/mo. 54~954. pool. Adul!!, 1035 12th St. ::::g:~ :::s~N 1110 ;~~~~~~N~~:Tl!O :!
1 ba. i8-rare apt. Dock. y e 1res1 e 1L1;1, $215. 548-0408 u 1 BR FURN $150/mo incl \across from Lake Park) Hl!Wl'ORT JMOlllS tnt llOOMS FOii ltl!l\lf SftS
Bill Grundy Rl1r . 642-4620 o c N FORGET TIIE CLEAN 53" A90tl IAYJMOllll nu 1100M 1 •OAlllD m• y u A 2 BR. new crplll. drps, fncd LOOKING lnr a . u!\I . Pool. gar, d isposal, .,...., . OOVElt St'OltES m1 MOTELS. TllAILlll cou•TI '"l c O!it PLETELY furnished CARES or ntE DAY. Nl'RI yd. I child ok. no pelo;.$16S. QUIET 2 BR duplex ~·ith Adulls, no pets. 642-2383 I N=E\=v=L7Y~.~.-"'-,.,.-, .. ~~I ~.~R. WIJSTCLIFF UH GUEST HOMIS '"'
Litt) I I -• 4 BR 2 BA J B SI •· ,....,, .,,..,... ~~I f' A do "IS-I'"" / t d hit ;~ UNtVlllSITY l'Alllt !?_~ Ml><. I EMTALt "" e s lnu. • · r. o\·r. crp.,., ,,..,. ... J•U· ""· voca · a-.. ..., \\' iv carpe s, rape~. ·u• $12Zi-2 BR 1)-ailer. I or 2 Util. pd. Sl.25 mo. lJit & las1 1111\llNI ,..,. * 673-2191 * Kiddies ok. $195. 3 Ar. 2 ba, b\tns Incl dSh\l"shr oven ,.nd rangl', ~rbage adults onlv, no pets. Util + drposil. 528 • 11th SI. •ACll: •A" ""
Hom•Finders 645-2951 SZll/mo. lmmed a v a i I . di15posal? We ~re looking tor incl. 642-l.175. s.31Hl41·1 ~~~.~LUl'I' r::.
Huntington Beach 2400 OK 1105 5-IO-IISl or $-i7_7&l8. .. niature n111rried C'O u PI c 1-..;.c~==co--,--c~""" 1av1NI! Tl!ltllACI 114) 1 Bedrm furn toUpet • 1 ,.:_;:,,=~~,;_.,~~~-\\•ilhout t•hildrrn & pC'IS! • Sl20 1"URN/11n1. Ulil paid. 2 BR. Pool. "Adu Its . COltONA OIL ~II 12••
l BR fumi!hed house, 2 blk~ 2 B<!dnn11 private home $110 3 BR. 2 BA. Conclo. 2 car Refl!ren~!. Sl50 mo. Isl Adul1s. 1662 Newport Blvd. Bea.ul/Quie! ! Util 1 11 c J IA.LIO.I. 1:10t
from ocean. $1:ill/mo. +-S5D 2 Bednns kids/pets OK $125 g11r. pa!\o: pool & clubhse Md lru;t plup; ~ e c. u r i 1 y 6'2-6194. S:llll/mo. 17676 Cameron. ~~o"o 1:;:;Ds ~:
M:'C. dep. 536-1674 2 Bn furn Costa r.1esa Sl50 avall. S22J mo. 54-0-0339. rlepoRil . Availablt' n 0 w . IB~E~A~UT=.~l~B~r-. ~u""",..,-,-. -olcc.l 842-6121 IALIOA isuMo 1111 !==='"'====== 13 Bedrnu on Ttxas lot •• $135 ---~ ~·---·--· -Drive by 753 SL'Ott Pl. C:'•I bltns + dishwash<'r. Adultz, 1 '0CEAN==~F~RNT=~~v~;,-.-Su~nd~k. ~g~~~~~:o:A~~lA;M !!:
S•nt• An1 Heights ~ 4 Bedrm nr octan •• • ••••• $180 Mesa V erde _ 3110 1hcn call 548-3036 a.ft 5 for no pets. Call 642-4044 aft 6. Ne"-er spac. dlx 2 Br. llAL 1ucN tut
1 BEDROO:\T STAR*LET n6-73lO COUNTRY Club VUla Condo. app't to see. ATIRAC. Furn. Studio. $115/ Elegant tum .• blln!, paJio, ~~:=G1E1~~~Hn ::
$300 2 RENTALS lndry. Nr !hops & pier. $193. 111.NTA AHA ~·,. AU util paid $150/mo. :i Br. 21 l Ba, lmlc, car nlO .• Adults only, no pets. WESTMINSTER ,.,, * Call 5-lS-7645 * ga.r. pool . Adj. r.te*B Verde Apts. Furnished l~2~1>~5~E~.l~rlo~o~,~So~·~"~"~· A~Pl~·:':' I s;Aud5"1iil•~·~')j"',-'-;"twO_Kii. ;;53&-r;;2;;1~3-l MIOWAY c•T" uu ... ··•· Cl b 12 9 0 / -~ --BACHE! "R A t Ul'I pd SAHfA ANA NEIGMTS 2'H
2705-3 Bedroon1 plus fe.n1 ily room. 1 "U11•l':V u m 0 ' G I 4000 Furn 1 Br & B1chelor AJ P · 1 · cOAiTAL ti .. 1_L_•_g~u_n_o_B_e_o_c_h____ furnished w/ POOL! 54!h1&68 entr• 2110 Newport Blvd, CM LIND:;:GR CO~EANsk.2579 t::~;: =~:~:L ::
3200 RENT FURNITURE I BR. cle11n. ~uirt. ~'llr&le. 1':~11~~~,Z~=~~ ::r,
' Adul!R. Sl:zj, 2039 W11.llace. L•gune Be1ch 4705 u• JUAN CAl'!STllANO 2?U TELE-TREND &ll-7800 Newport Beach
REAL ESTATE,
Gener1I
INCOME l'lllO•IRT'f IUSI Nllt l'ltOl'llltT'f
T••.ILl"lt l'AltlC S IUStNlSS ltl NTAL OFFICE ltENTAL 1NOUITll l,loL l'llOl'lillT'f
COMMlltCIAL INOUSTltlAL ltlftTAL
LOTS lllANt MIS CITlllUS OllOVIS ACltl!AGI LA.Kil ILS~NOlll: ltl!SOIT l'ltO•Elll"I' o•ANOI CO. l'llOl'EITT OUT 01' ITATI l'llQI'. MOUNTAIN & Dlllll' SUIOIVlllON LANO lll"AL l!ITATt ll!ltYICI II.I.. •llCNANQI
It. I.. WAJlfEO
... ••• '"' ....
""
•m 4110
.;111
11n
"" ...
CAlll'EMTli lllNe .,...
~ltMINl, C1111:rm fflMI :HILO CA& •• Lkfll.... 6410
COMJaACTOllS ""' ___ ,,,.,. rt"'•""Na uni
CAltPl!T LAYING & 1111'.lll UH
""""1:.ollfi ... ,. OEMOLIT!Ol\I .. l: ODIE"l'ING SlllYICe M~
OllYWALL .. lt
1:.Lt.~1lhtAL M••
EOUIPMINT lllNfALI ''}.
FENCINO "'" llLOOllS ...... , llUllMACll llll'AIOS, l!f(. .. ,, FU1tNITU•l 1tl!Stoa1N•
& lll!FINISKJNS .. n GAltOIN IMO •61t GINlllAL SI R'llCl!S ,,,.
OltAOING. OISCING IU! GLAJS llff • OllllN fNUMI U H OUN IMO!' Ill~, MIJALTN CLUSS 17~' NAULIMI IUf '" HOUSl!CLl!Al\llN• 111J INTl;llJOll OllCOllATIN• I UI INCOME TAX 17 .. llOH, Onui,_I&\, l lt. t lS• lltOHIMCJ lfJJ INSl1LATrNe I ii• INSUllANCE 1'1C
INYl!ITl~Tll\IG, 0"-11.,. '"' IAN!TOltlAL l ltl I
lllWELllv 11111'a11t. 11" u et [ LANOSC&PIN!I 1'11 lOCICSM11'H UI•
MAID SlillVICI , ............. ,",,','I MASONRY. 1"!1CK MOVING &-STOl':AOI' lllf I l'AINTINO. l'ID•rfl..,1lft• Ill" l'All\ITING. s... W l I l'ATIOS U lt
l'MOTOOllA l'Nl' 6111' I l'LA1fllt'NG. l'tlrll. llllHlr •If
l'LUM•l,.G •tti I
l'IT oaOOMINO "" l'OO L SEllVICf H!C j l'OWll SWll!l'INS tflJ, l'UMI' JlltVlCI 1no
ltOOF/NO •HI I •AOIO, lltMln. ere. ltll ! lll!MOOfL INO I ltl'l'Alll 114' ltllAOOl!LINO, ICITCNllll ltO• SCllHA Siii.,... tt$J SEWING II" I SEWING MACNJNI llfl'AllltS ,, •.
Sl!!l'TIC T•.NKS, St--., lie. 4-W! TAILOltlNO •t1C flltMITI CONflOL 1t;1 TILE. Cenmk ,,,.I
TILi!, LIRt lt""' I 11\1,,.. ,•,•,•,>, TRl!E SlllVICI rlLIYISION, 11-111, lie. 1n· Ul'HOLITlll'I' lttt
WI LO ING '"J WINDOW CLl!ANINO -..,, '"l '
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
JO• WANTED, Miii! JOI WANfEO, W-• Joi w".Nr10. -,,,.
MIN I WOMIN 1tlt SCHOOL$ & INSTltUCTION 1'~ JOI "11&,.AltATION 11to TNEAflllCAL 1'19
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE ANO TRADE
l'UllNITUllE ... OFFICE l'UlNITUltl "11 OFFICI SOUll'MIMT Mil STOlll •GUl,.MllNT HO CAl'll, lltl:ITAUllA.Nf IOI• J,loll EQUll'MlNT 'la MOUllHOL O GO(.oDS tT." GAltAOll IALI t.07•, FUllN ITUll AU'CTION •tt~ Al'l'LIANCll lltll
•H TIOUllS lllf SIWIMO MACNINIS tne MUSICAL INSTltUMINT tllJ l'IAMOI I OllGANS tilt· llADIO ltOC ftLIVlllON .,t: '41·1'1 a ITl!ltlO 111t
tAl'll ltlCOltDllll 1211• CAMEll AI I. l:OUll'MI NT Uat NOlll' SUl'•LIES Mte Sl'OltTING GOOOS lsto 11NOCULAltS, SCOl'l!I t.ss~
MISC ILLAl\l•ous "" MISC. WANTtf> ltll MACNINlllY, II'-f/Cf
~UMll!ll 1111 STQllAOI! 1'11 I UILOINO MATl lt lALI 1'1' IWAllS .,_
,ETS ond LIV&STOCK
OCEANFRONT, 2 br. deck.
St!!~ do~'TI to lxach. Lux·
uriously furn. Lease S3j().
Call Lornlne 1.l 4~2238 or
499--3403 a~nt.
$l!t"1 • 2 BR. fnc:d yd, lr.'r.
new w/w & drps. Family
OK. Broker 534-6980
1 BR \\'/Stovio & rclr\g.
Older couple preren'Cd. No
pets, Nr Hoeg. 548-14.21
* DTRECT TO TENANT 548-Jggj eve & wkends. ~~~~T::::i~ ll.t.C" i::
" 11 1. I f'URN ISHED RENTALS aive•llOI couMTY , ..
l'ETS. lll\llllAlo. BUSINES~ and cAts -•••
2000Gener1I 2000 Gtntrtl 2000
S@ll~lJ.-ltr-trs·
The Pun/e with the Bui/I-In Chuckle
O lt110rronoe !en.rs of th1 ·~· ,I
• • • ...
• •
I'· r I' I' I'' I' I' I' I
I I I I I I I I I
SCRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 7000
'
::4-. r. De ivery B h 4200 l brinn. lpt. Al \\'oods Cove. VACATION RINTA\.I .... 1007, Purchase Option Newport ••c 1 Jo I'" d coNooM1M1uM 1's• FINANCIAL ~g::,,
IUSINftJ WANTlll '* LIVl'l"TOCIC "" "" -C I BR ----------..ge. p&t : "" y s. to OU,.LEXll l'UlllN. .,. omp"'le 1 Apt i s A New W•y To live beach , Comp letely
Low as S22/mo. In Newport Bt•ch turl'llshcd. * ~~::£ ~~~~ OAKWOOD GARDEN Sl23 i\10. LEASE
CUSTOM FURNITURE APARTMENTS 2 bdnn~.. II.replace. exc oeea.n view. a few sll!Pfi to
RENTAL On ~6th Street btwn the u.nd at Victoria Beach.
,iJ7 'V. l91h St .• Ci\f, 548-ltSJ ll"Ylnt and "Do'-'tr Dr. S~ MO. LEASE 1--=----:':'~~--·1~__11!_7~1411_1~64-:_2~-1!_!:170 MISSION RLTY. Pb 494--0131 ""from $35 Wk. BAYCLIFF MOTEL 985 So. coo" Hwy .. L&.:uno
RENTALS
INYllTMINT 0,.1'"°"ffl<n 6J11
IUSINi!!SJ OP•OllfUN!llll .,. CALIFORNIA ll\"I NG INVISTMIMT WANTIO tJO NVllSSl llll 1'1t
MONIT TO LOllH IJH SWIMMINI •OOLl .... l'a•IOM,loL LOAN$ tns l'ATtOS t9U JIWILllY LOANS 4Jlf AWNIHOS Im COLLATlllAI. l.OANS •JJS VU:ATICM'I IHI
ellNlltAL ,... =~~o':;:s~1T~A'::.,.. :~: TRANSPORTATION COSTA MllA 11• MONET WANTIO ltN IOATS a l"ACNTS ""' MIU. OI L MAI Jlll O S MISA v111101 1111 ANNOUNCEMENTS ~~!Z:11A~ll uts1:11:s1 ::;:
coLi.101 l'A111e 1111 ind NOTICES s•E10-sic. 10ATs ",.
HIW•Ollt l lACN :::: l"OUNO ll'1" A••I t4" ~OAT TltA ttlllS •fl!!
LuxurySins:le.Apts.Com.plelf' * LO\V WEEKLY RATES . Dan• Point 4740 ::==~:; :wooT:., im LOST .... IO~T MAINTINANCI ~! , ·• .... -----------ml l'lllSOMALS I*' 10,,T U.UNCNIM• ,...,. mcud !terv1~. llU\ISe~·11.rcs Kitchen, TV's, m11ld 1ervl~. IATtHOllll AMMOUNCl:MINTS t411 MJJll!NI IGUll', HU llrrn~. 11.ll uHI, he1ted pool, lieated Pool. SINGLE. TV, heated pool, 2 oovll.11. IHOll li :'~ &lllfHI Mii •o•t ll•~. j,,jll01t1Ne tilt brrrl .~ k blk fro bch m •k 1135 WeSTCLtlll' l'UNllllAL.1 •11' 10 ... T ltlltYICll tm iuut;, reat11.unint, coc. &IS.326,; . m ....... ~ . • . UNIYl lllT'I' ,.All• nu • •• •GAT ltllMTALI ..,. ii.ii D ?.1 I I 34lll llt\llNS mt •AIO O&ITUA T M IOAT CNAltTl'll la . GE INN OCF.ANFRO:-..'T Apt. I Br. 11\0, ana 1r na. nn, eAcW. IAT n• FuNlaaL o11111cT011.s •41• l'llNINO •o.•Tl =
VI LLA ldt'al location, S130/IM utU Coast Hwy,. Dani. Pt. 1UT '"'"'' nn ~LO • .,,., ''15 IOAT MOYINO ..u
1 ·-•n n. h 494 94l6 II Tl,. D44 CAlllO O• THA,.ICI MU IOAT ITOIAel ._. .... a ....:;11.C • pd. Prtf. ~'Ork't ml.If: NEW 2 BR Duple.x S215. lllYIMI TlltltACI n• IM MIMOlllAM MU n -
BALBOA INN ,.~, \ I I HSt Cl!MlTlaT LOTS 11U 1011 WAMT'WO ,_ harhelor. ''rly or seuorlll. ~ A caur, nqu tt nex! co1tOfolA OIL MAit co•ETtltT Clltlf•Tt u lt AlltCltAl'T t llf
B3lhoa 675-8740 1-21M~ door or call BTQ.-042.4 l!W"S. IALIOA :: Clltl""'TOltllt '"' Ill.TING l.llSONS '"'
I RENTALS ~Ao"o 1:-t.NOJ JUI MIMOR IAL •••ll"S 441\ /o,\O~lll NOMI.I ,,. OCEANFRONT· 2 BR . , •U<••o•l ..-MOTOlt NOMtl ttll REMARKABLY • IALIOA !SU.NO JDt llCYCl.t•
U"B"LIEVABL)" Duple.x. very attractive. Apts. UnfuMithed_ NIWl"Oll.T •HT "" AY1AT1'0N ll"llYtcl lllJ lll.llC11tlC Ulll ~':: .~ Co 1187/mo Adults. ( 2 13 I HUl\ITtNOTON 11.A(l\I ,... TltAVIL ... MINI l llCIS flU
EXTRAORDINARILY ..... _....,t8' General ~ HUNTINIT'Oft t'IA11101111 ,... •111 TRAMSl"Ollt•110" .... i.10.o•c rcLas ·-nit "'~~ ..,,.,.,., lT4'"' llALLll' .)111 A\IT'O TltllNll'OllTAflOI" IUJ •''T"l'CNIT"•' BEAUTJFtn.. . .. 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ltAL l l A(N >Ot Lft:Al NOSICll ,... AUTO SllltVICEI I PA11rs =
V.I O'lsere Gordtn •pt• 1 hr turn •Pt. Pool. No chll ... 11 .. ,0,, t1tovi Mn Tu10111Na utt Auro ,00,,, •••, ,.,
"' 2405 1 h VENDOME SERVICE Dl ltECTORY lllAILf ll, f1Av1• 1 · f"ulllng ffttn Yo'aterf11.U &. rt'f'n or pets. ~, Sl St., ~':.~1~~~ .. ,T :: ACCOUNTING "" 11141Lfll.S. Vlllll\'.. ::
&IJ'e•m flowe~ l!ver)'Whert, NB, 6464664 Ji)lMACULATE APT$! SANT& ANA ltll ANSWlltlNO lt•Ytt• ··~ lltUCICI , ... • s' -' .• -. -m, bWlard1, l BR. & Rllchelor. nr bay & ADULT anti WllTfOl,llflTlll M.U APPLl-"H'• ..... ,.,, .. ..,.. "1• •1!11'1 :!." l"'V' ~ '"" MIOWAT CITY Ml& Al',IAlllMt •H CAM•llll ~~
BBQ'it, S1.u111, rum.-unfUrn, bch. 1%16 \V. Balboa B!"~· FAMlLY Section IAlllT& aMA MllGHTl )Ut All'H.t.Lf, 01t1 .,i, CAMl'llt lllllTAU ""
1 • 2 Br 1115o Si .... '~ from 4!M-2250 eYtt &i am, 61>1816 Cl 1 ~I p k cDA1T" *'" A11tetoT1cru11AL s1av1c1 'ns ouflt •uoo1tt 'IU • • .. ~ 01• 0 s ng, •r L.AOllNA l lACN 11'1 .... ro lll'll !l't Ult •Ml'O:t tlO '-"''°' ....
Sl.35, See U! 2000 PIJ'SOn.• OCEANF'RONT t, 2, 3 ' 4 ~ s-ck>u11 3 '11 2 bra UOUINA NtGUf\ J .. , AUTO. S..I llltl. T-l:lc. ... tl'OllT CAlt'S .. It ~· .. " -. Bet }f r-BR' WI I Re I 1 .... . HllSJIOM Y\1'4) :1111 , ..... NC. .... AllTIOUl.S. C\..AS,1(1 .. ,,
l'\Q., '""""°"' ' ween • •• n rr n. s. I . S\\tim PoQI pul/rr"ten , .... Cl.,,.,,.,,, Jlll •OAT MAll\IT&ll•Joltt .. ,. 'A.Cl CAltS. 11001 .. ,.. bor' Ne-A'JX)rt • 2 Olk N. 19th Call 6T3·808S .. ~1. lndl~/lntt-ft1.c'ls IAN 'UAll CA,lSTllllNO ins CllClt. MASC.Mltlf, tie. •W' -UTO IVINtl NH
I
~'I' •J (A, l~lltllHO •lA'" ,,,. IUSINl11 lllYICll .,., I AUt01 *AMTl!O "" DlAL dlrlict 642"'"i671. Charr IOC. Front dupltli.. "''nl r. 1145 Anaheim Ave. ~ANA l'OIHT .,.. .,.,Lo""~ '"' "'l!w c.1.111 ,.... ~ur 116. ftlen 1111 back" and rates, 2 BR. ~dHa, no pet11, CO."iTA •• FSA 6'2-2824 ..... ooM1NtUM "• CATEltt10 ................ -un •u10 t••11MG tflt
li11ten to'""' phont rinr! "l'ICI g-&r. &4~2. """"'""'""'""'""''""""'""'""' I Ul'LIXlt u1411u•11t. "" ~ ...... ~ AKll•O .,. \ltlO CA•• "" ~ ·-------------------··
HouMs Unfurni1hed
•
•
JOIN THE
-_ ...
-
'SELLERS CIRCLE'
WE'RE
SAvlNG
SPACE
EOR
YOU • • •
~ c-s:;-;
~
~
If you sell a service and don't advertis e in
the DAILY PILOT Service Dire'clo r y, you're
doing busin e ss the ha rd w ay· The S ervice
D ;rectory I classifications osoo -1000 in the
clauifi ed ad ucti on daily) gives you an
advantage you g et through no o the r adver-
•
tisi ng m e dium. It reaches cust omers w h o a r e
r e ady l o buy. Be there whe n you r pros p ects
come into the market looki ng for the services
you have to sell. If your s erv i ce isn't liste d,
w e 'll start a c a t e gory j u s t for you.
Pick up the phone r ig ht now and r e serve
your space in the "Sellers C ircle"
Your Direct Line to
Directory Results
642-5678
. DAILY PILOT . . .
CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT
• • •
"1..itldaY, Octobfr lJ, 1970 GAILY PILOT .13
RINTALS RE NTAlS
Apia. Unfurnished Apia. Unlurnl"'td
Gtnor•I 5000 Nowporl BHch 5200
FOR REN Tt I 1 PARK N~\VPORT'<11n: ffff
1, 2 &: S PR A~wc.nts thru· ~ llvg overlkg !he water. 7
out Crance County. Ran1lr11 pool&, i tennis cl& $T:il,Oll
from $69.50 to SlSS.50. !-'um Spe.. Jo'ron1 $175 lo $450.
or U~. Ask tor JODI. Bach. 1 or 2 Br. A150 2 1ty
· IJ2.7to0 Townhouse•. EleC'. kt. prt
pat, or beJ $.lbtrn 11r1<c, pot
C I "-5100 m&ld ser cpt1, drps. Ju1t
-°'--•---'-'-----·I N. uf Foshlon Isl at Jam·
boree .~ San Jori.qu!n 11\11!1
Rd. Slt-1900 for hnu1il1,g h1o
to. ORLEANS APTS.
R!'NTAl9 RENTALS
Apia. Unlurnlshtd Aph. Unlu rnl"'td
Coron• del Ma r 52.SO Laguna Beach 5705
PLUSlf modem ifU'dton f.Pt.
N. tnd, 2-stoty, 2 BR, I\!
BA. patiO, sundeck. 1 blk
shoppifll I beach. Adult1.
Ref11. lAe $2"3 mo. 494-9982
ON TEN ACRES DELUXE 2 BA., 2 BA. N.
1 A 2 BR. Furn 4 Unlurn tnd, nice view, $250. Also 1
f'll'eplat~• I prfv. patk;s ' single. 4.97-10{i6, 49-l-5810.
Pool&. Tennis . Cont',1t'l Bk!!f.
900 Sta..1~. QJl.1 644-~~i. Da na Point 5740
tMacArtbur nr Coiiat Hwyl -DELUXE 2 BR, 2 BA, n1any 0.ADUL.TS Q~~;i
2 & l BR. Avail. Private pa.
th1, pool ~lndlv. !aundry tac.
(Nr, Otanre Co. Airport: Tus.
tin at 17th St; nr. WcstclifD.
2 BR. Unlltrn. Crpt1, drp:i1, CORONA DEL MAR cxt.ra featul'\!s. \\'iU lease.
patio, pool, bltns. $l60. NI-..\'/ 3 Br. 3 Ba, lo1ver dU·t~'9'1=~=79='=======1 Seacl!ll Manor Apl s, 1:>25 1. Placenlia. 548-2682 a s k plcx. Clo:;e.1 pa,tio. Cov gat'·
1141 Tustin, Costa l\lesa
i\lgr, Airs, :'.:arson. 6124641
about our Cllsrount plsn. nge, Beautifully l&nd1;c
0
aped. Rentals Wtint•4 ~!90
2 BR, l ~ii BA. spl!~ Con1pletc blt-i11s. \"car lease \VORKING couple deRire 1
$210/1110. Adults only, no at $325 IX'r nio. Contact br. furn apt or dupb< Jn
1c * 1c
""" ~ddyo_\'lon!LWh1ddya Got?
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS ____ S2'£1•.LR•••
..
S .Lfna1 -5 time• -SDuck1
lflULll -AO MUST INC LUOI!
t-Wlltl .,.u l'ltVI .. tr•. ~Wlltt Y°' .. n, '" 1rect1. 1-YOUlfl ,...... 111Cf/H , .. ,.... ~ llMI llf M'1"11tltti•
l-fllOTfllNO 1Ql I ALI -TllAOIS OHi.Yi pets. 1128 Bedford Ln. &75-6050 o N.B. or Hun!. Bch aren.. :>tS-1533 2
' $150 l\lax. Rel's. Ca 11
• NOW RENTING e llllll l'"'"•ITU .. & Collect (11~1 4)4....1987 To Plec• Your Trader's P a r.1d lse Ad
Me.a Venlo A"" NEW Du· * BAYFRONT * PROFESSIONAL PHONE '42-5671
Plt>xes 2 & 3 BR N1"r •"'I LUX URY Apts. St•rf· SPACIOUS 2 Br apt nr FAMI L ' • "''. beacli. $2:xJT mo flt>fs Ol\'Ol'Ce &ettleAMnt-forcea -
gar, patios, ~·shr I dryer ing •t 1365. * 642·1202 l'""•'d. 61~S.IJ. ' · 2 adltfi. 1 girl, dsi:s to l!c db liquidation, 7 trust deeds at
hookup_ Also lrg 2 & 3 BR -., apt dplx hse 1 Cdi\T La-
l '
DEL.XE 3 BR & 2 BR, 2 BA 3 BR ')1 • or n ' • dlACOUnl r~R eqtllty In 4 in 4-p exes. 54&.10: ·I four pl•x 'P"· Bit-•. D/\I', , -i BA t1u plex, bltns, -guna, NC\\'JlOl'l. Require min. BR OOme or ANYTHING.
VILLA MESA APTS. " crpld, drps. ent'I gar. conv. or study or den for research, * 548-5068 •
2 BR, Priv patio, Hid pool. nr Hoag Hosp. fron1 $110 I ~'~oc-•~"=·='·-•_7_3-_2_<0_2. ---2 BR, 2 ba, 2 car i:::ar or
2 car cncl'd gar. Children ,m.,,.•-· _&1_2-4_38_7_•_1>-_17_7_1. __ UNIQUE IN'<'. levC'l a11t. 2 Br, port. Long tenn lse w/sccur-Delux 4-ple_x w/pool & l'!C
\\"clron1e, no pets plcasc! 2 Bclrnt nr ~ri\n, gai·ai:t' n1· bct1 \I'/ pool. $2'25. PartiaJ-ity dep Ins Exch refs By mt In Tustin, S00,000 eq, &
$165 mo. 719 \V. \Vilson. $180 yrly. Bhns, l'l'friJ:. ly furn. 5·19-0010 Jan. t5." 675-482·1. · · 100 A Oregon land_, $20,000 Ct I N A '11111 . ~.want !Mgel' unll!I, com-64G-l2j\. p S, ( i·ps. 0 pclS. VUI •I BR. 2·~ BA. Stucllo apt. DArLY PILOT rtportt't and mereial or ,ubinlt !!".
311 36th St. t2\3)2m.-1921 Cl • 71' G Id d ·1 BRANDnewdlx 2BR triplex ean ... o en ro . w1e \\'ant to rtnl or lease i73-3101 Bkr
apts, Prlv pativ;,, shag 2 BR, crpt'd, drp'd, bl1ns, $315/nio. yr lse. 54()...1j73. sinaU [urnished or unfurn-1.-'CC:~::..;~·-----
crpts, drps, bltns, gat·. Xlnt t'lec gar dr. On the BcaC'h! Near O<.-ean .~ Shop'g ished house in Laguna Can-S40,000 Equity in Baycreat
E-slde loc. $115, Adults. 353 Yearly Sl50 1110, SU-3918 Brand new 2 BR, 2 BA yon or other O.C. canYon 001ne for Vacant R·l or Va.
Wooclland Pl cnr Tustin & eves & \Vknds 320 i\1arguerite. 5-IS-19S3 area by December. 54&-6380 ~ant R-3 or Units.
20th). 64M905------""NE-ARLY IX'\\' Oceanfront 2 BR apt, Cd~f. '$l6S, 00 pets-dsy_s, 536-1195 ~s, -~:2~~1Bk_;,
EL COROOVA e Apls P'nlnsula PL luxury apt. 4 or childn'n. \VANT YEARLY LSE: Sm.J:-~~~~~-~~-
Spaclous 1 & 2 Br luxury BR. 4 BA. Frplcs & decks. 613-4171 a!lri· 4 pni uni hse-S, or p!,r, Balboa Balboa Is Bayfron~ duplex.
apts. Dwhr, pool, rec rm. $600/mo. * 54S-8Q71 I =======""----==cl Peninsula. i\1aturc-rdlable good inromc or horn~. sandy
Adults only, no pets. NEW ·2 Br. 1 Bn . $22j, Lido Is le 5351 l·pl. No chldrn or pets. beach, xlnt view for TD's,
2011 Charle St. 642-1.\70 Yearly: 3 Br. 2 Ba. $2fU, 6~2-6301. comn1ercial or induslrlal or
e THE SEVILLE yearly. Crpts, dtps, frplc, UPPF.:R 2 81·, 2 ba, lrplc, \VANT YEARLY LSE. Sm.? can eves 673-5299,
2 BR, 11,; ba "'"' gar. 301 32nd St. 548--0212 refrig, Bay V1~11·; Adulls ~n-unfurn hse·So. of pier, Have 2nd T.D.'s plus equit-
Adultll-Cp\s. drps, fncd yrd 3 BR, 2 BA unf. Crpts, drp~. ly, no pets. $2j() nio Yr. Balboa Peninsula :\Tatutt-ies. \Vant bulldable lots tbc-
1 •-· pd "'"120 lrase 6i3-382l . · • \I' pahu. \\ 1r . ...,.,.... . blk to ocean. Ycal'ly $260 · · · reliable cpl. No chldm or 1.'f·Uppcrs or inconte proper-
2619 "L" Santa Ana Ave $15.l nio, * 673-8088. • pt'1S. 642·6..~l ly
667 "I{" Victoria St. $15.l Hun.t1ngton 8 1ach 5400 LGE I "-f , BROKER 540-3862 3 Br. 2 Ba. unr. Bltns, crpts, -~--''--'"-.;.c_.;.._ <><-un apt. \\"/l~-~::.cc.::...:....:c;;__:=_~
• Qui1t Adult Living drps. S250/mo. * Call rnESH-AlR garage. \Vo1·king adult. HB. \Vant boat for all or part of
2 BR. Shag cpts, bllns, beaut. 540-lf'513. \\lalk ~ blks to Beach~ ~:\t area . To $1Jj mo. $28.500 equity in 6-unlt apt
lndscpd. $170 nlo incl all i\TARJNER Sq. _ \\'estcliff 2 Beaut. big 2 br. apts. \1'/w 536-6610 house in H.B. Full price
util. Adults only, no pets. BR, den, 2 B! .. $255 / nio. crpt~, dl'J>S, bll~~ ex"':pt O LANDLORDS e $65,000. \Viii carry 2nd TD.
241 Avocado St. 646-0979 642-8016 or 615-0252. l'Clr).f;. $150 & .$155..lc)li!d FREE RENTAL SERVICE 01VN!r 213/657-3411
ok. No sng\s/pets. 53&--l7ll. Broker 53<1-6982 '61 Ch~rok~ 180 7~ hr to-
5210 NEAR l~untington ~arboU!_: FREE RENTAL SERVICE tal lin1e Xlnt co~ TRADE New Triplexes. Quiel area. ' . ' UELUXE 3 BR. 2 Ba1h. Lrg l Br. \Viii furn, SlfiO &. TO O\VNERS & MANAGERS $2200 equity for late model
~!!!~R ~!~~~~ Nowpo•f Heights
Bnch. 1, 2, 3 BR's. from SllO.
2700 l'etenon \\lay, C.l\-1. Crpts. drps, frp!c, & garage. np. Chilrl/pcl ok. C2l3) • 54&-1169 • ~tn 1\·agon or Lot. Cali aft
Close to i;;hop'g & schls. Call 592-2623, 714 : 846-35~9. HETIRED lady needs 1wn11_'_• _,_w_.23_39_. _____ _
2 BR. uni. Sl5:i, 1 ar.. unf. 1 ,.'="='=·='='=·i·="="=' ·=====I BEACHBLUFF APTS i~ Laguna _Bcarh ho~1c with Bo at ma1~ulactu1'C1· 11·ill
$130. Crnts, drps, bltns. 1 · 2 BR 2 8 1 1. F/I! kitchen pr1v. 642-880.1 trade new hberglass canoe ., I · 5238 ' a, poci pa 10• ' ill' I I ·
5-tG-0310
Pool. No children, no pets. I ;'~•;;'";';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; [ dsh\vhr. 8231 Elhs. 1 BR. hsc for v.·orklng nJale t'Cta ng . or $300 ~r a ~l·
32.i -J E. 17th Pl, C.M. I' S•l2-S4i7 or 847_39j1 in Ci\1 or near Bch area. nno, upright. or spinet, 111
5"1&-2738 NOW LEASING! 2 BR T h C -1 6-16--9419 al!k for Annand iood cond, 545-5489 $170 own SC, pts, B tns,
New, family and adults unf!s \Vasher/dryer, $165 n10. Rooms for Rent 5995 t' * *
SM • .Rancll-style ShQppin•
Cntr.---N/OC; Nu area. Xln.
potential. $1&5,00J F.q. Trade
for: Power cruiser &: w •.
tertrnt prop or ? 1, Owner:
523-2312 Bhv 5-? pm.
Santa Barb, 21 units fum'd
Isl Villa, for free-clear
home to ~100,000 Capis, San
Clem, Lag, Newpt, CdM.
213-222-4309, 714-673-5419.
8 Units, good rental ai-e11.,
!38,000 equity; I n c o m t
$13,500. Far hOuse, commer.
cial or horse ranch.
OWNER ~75-6259
Con1merciaJ Income proper.
1y, free &:-clear: next to
Scars. Val. $65.000. For un-
its, house or beach prop,
OWNER 67~6259
PAL?.1 Desert 4 stores, 3
apls eq $3·1111, also 4 choice
s.l side R1 lots $26~J. Wantl
so coast vac or imp bus
prop 496-1412 eve.
:>wner nds a 3 Br hm in CM,;
\\'ill trd 2 lots 1,J mi. frorr..;
Lake Arro\vhead. Beachl
privileges at Grus Valley
incld. S8000 per k>t. ~2313
SAIALL com'I w/rm to add.
Van Burne Blvd. Riverside.
521,500. equ.ity. Want clear
house, TD, or ?? Owner
!\gt Booc-201, San Clemente.
Have vacant & improved
l'lll incon1e, \VANT: Rt lot
or home, coastal area, New.
port Beach thru Dana Poinl
673·6809.
* * 3 BR, 1'~ BA, patio, bit-ins, ivlth tol.al recrcatJon club call Ardo Hazelvet, 114/ ------
crpts, dfllS. Ask about our ..... hoot 1 2 3 -ou2 RENT ll I~!':~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!~!!!"~'!!'~
di I 880 C S
.... ~ prc-sc . , , & -<""1""V'f'• -· 'I'op oor ol Corona .• scount pan. enter t. ._.. __ 1 II N ,_ d · c -•-ed ........ .,"" rom 50. I'. Suup-2 & 3 BR new apls-1~ mile c l\-1ar ~tlagc .• EmJ.UUy RENTALS 64:?-8340'=~==~---I pil'!&'., golf, schools. Just from beach, nr shopping. Ind)'. 6'1'.r-25&1 alt :J. Apt~. Unfurnished Industrial .Rental 609G i
$1-l:i ·ATTRACTIVE sep. hse south of San Diego F'\'Y· on Open llOure t"l'i, Sat. sun. • $15 per 11·eek·up w/kll· --r-o·R Ls noo sq fl '1 '
2 BR. 1 BA. ctp~. drps, Culver Dr., lrvhlt:·. 833--37"..3. 21002 Brookhurst. chcn. $30 P<'r \\'eek-up Apt!. Office Rent ii ·-6070 \\'are~~ e space-all~~~.\
I ii.dulls only, no pets. Refs. PARK WEST , -~lOTEL. 5-IS--975S t · I d i\1 "'··"--'1 23.l.i Santa Ana A" e. APARTMENTS 1 en., refr1g. bl!ns, crpls. __ SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY l"\'ir1e n • 1 r. DUUUu
613--()39j drps pool near lx'ach Sl.35 PLEASANT room for lady in 1·2-3 room, up to 3,000 r.q. 540-8QjJ, \
01\ncd an.d h1!nagcd by pt'r ~10 .. ~dulls, no pe\s. C.1\.t. neat' park. Heated ft. office suilC!, Irrimed. oc. 2600 SQ ti ,.,. I ollice, Igel
NE\Y 2 BD!li\1. Beam 1.,-eil-The Irvine ··ompa"y "-Tradcwinds Realty 847-8511 pool. 646-0669 cupan"", Orange C n t y. rear door $2!lj mo. Eve: ings, \\"ood paneling. All ITC ·-~~ features. $165. Arlults, no 2 BR. Near Ocean_ J.'rplc, QCE,\Nf"RONT 2 Br, 2 Ba. Airport Irvine Commerc. 646--0681. Dy: ~. 1240:
pets. Ca.II no'v &lf>-0013. Bick S.y 5240 patio. Crpts, drps. Adt1Hs. $2j() n10. Crpts, drps, Co1nple:>i", adj. Airp:lrter Logan St, Sp No. L, C.lif. I
e 387 \V. Bay Street e ::.::::::-=:!.----.:::.: LINDBORG CO. 536-2579 rircplacl'. Call 962-2341 Hotel .& Resta~rant, banks, NE\V bldg., 1368 to 2300 it,
NEW DELUXE 1 BR VJE\V • 2 BR. crpts, drps, 1 & 2 BR New ap1s. f"rplc's. San Diego t,; N Pt. Fwys. Nr Baker & Fairview 1 )Tl
b!rns, lg pool & sundeck. 011 Near Ocean! Patio. Adults. Room & Board 5996 UNCROWDED PARKING lease. Sullivan, 54g....217s ,
Range, dish\vhr, shag crpts, Irvine. $170/mo. 673-.1690 LINDBORG CO. 536-2579 LOWEST RATES '
drpst.1~•1rg. St50
54
';
2
"P·
1
E If 1 FURN. 1 unfurn, Bob"' & llOME for elderly, bright & Owner/mgr. 2112 DuPont Dr., Lots 610(!
.; v-913 01· .,. 32 ast Blu 5242 cheerful surroundings. Love-Rm. 8, Newport Beach. ---teenagers 01(. S125. 1: DELUXE 1 &. 2 BR. * 5:}6.1766 * ly ocean view, prlv. rooms. 833-3223 Courtesy to Brokers e \VANTED-LOTS
Gnrden .Apts. Bit-ins, prlv. -BR~~;o;iO;;;-;;:;:;~:l~'~·o~r;;"."'~•r'.,'.rn~':'.'~'o~",'.'~92~~'.'°"'~-I DESK SPACE lo CbA"ISHld Apt's.
patio, hea!ed pool. frplc. NEWPORT BEACH 1 BR. in m.octer:i iri-plex. NICE uil't friend! hon1e
Adu1ta. $145 mo. 546-5163. VIiie Graned• Apts. Lge pa.t!o, k1ng-s1ie br, gar · q • Y 222 Fore st Avenuo Write details to: Daily P ilol
& f I I~' .,.,927 In G.G. lor lady or a-ent, Im n-M ~· -· W n-•~-
E·SIDE studio· 2 br, l~~ ba, $750 Jo'urnished. Five IX'd-rp c. £.<.1. ~ ...:..__ child ok, R.,nbl. 531~215 QUA • ...,.,.., Mu. • °"'Wll
crpts. drps, bltns, dahwshr, roon1s & den, "-'Ith balconies A 5620 Loguna Beech Blvd, N.B. j
encl gar. 64~2939 a.Cove & patio below Grae-Sa nta n.1 __ Motels, Triller 49'-M66 BEAUT duplex 19,t 60X102 fl.
1
i\fODERN 2 Br, crpts, drps. ious living & quiet sui-round-Courts 5997 PRESflGE Of"FICE Nr. Park. Sacrlllce, $9,000.
GE kitchen, enc Io se d ings ror ramily 1\ith childt'Cn. VILLA MARSEILLES - -SUITES Petti Ir, Rltr Mll-0522
garage, near bus. $14j, Near Corona rlC'I J\fa r lligh BRAND NEW ATIR Roon1s-Altr Rates. J · r o Adu1Ui. 12{) E. 20th. School. Fireplace, "·ct bar SPACIOUS Start' $30 \\'k. Sea Lark 0111 the cite of range Acreage 6200'
I BR unf
~~/ p I & built-in kitchen applia.nc-1 & 2 Bdrm Apls i\lotel. 2301 Npt. Blvd. c:.1 c,~ .. untyt . 1in the tr vii"' I;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, -.• ...,., mo. 00. • • 64fr.74_1j uuus rLa area across mm 11
Elee & wtr pd. Adlts, M e&. J\1igh t consider unfum-A d ult Living ~~~--airport. Lease for a low 4lc LEVERAGE ~ts. l\TESA i\1ANOR. 241 !shed or furnllurp purchase. Fur n. & Unfur n . Guest Homes 5998 sq ft Call Rita Probst,
Wilson Ave., CJ\1. 548-1405 83J Ai'IIGOS \VAY 6-1'1-2991 Dish1\·ashC'r _ c.'Olor coordina!---5'1&--9822.
LRG 2 BR, C/D, carport, l Coldwell, Banker &: Co. ed appliant't'.'l • plush shag ELDERLY Guests, oceanl-~D~E~S~K~=S~P=A~C~E=--l\lanaglnr Agent · child ok. $133 mo . + dep. carf)C'l • choice of 1 rolor v1e1\', lovely home in
2214 College Ave No. 2 schenics • 2 baths _ stall Laguna Beach. <191-1686. 30 5 No. El Camino Re•I
646--0627. e NEW DELUXE e sll()\\'ers • mirro··ed \\·ard-S.:in C lemente o=E~L~U~X~E.-.2~=s=R-. -c,,=,,~B~A' 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lc.ise. l'Obe doors _ inclirect lighl· M isc. Rentals 5999 4924120
Studio. Bltns, new crpts, Incl spac, n1aster suite, din ing in kitchen _. breakfast ~I S. Brookh .5t & STORE . OFFICE
$165/mo. No pet.s, 1 ch.ild rm & dbl garage, auto door bar • hu.1:c private fenced · .. ui_ _ . .
ok. Call aft 5 pm, 546--0451. opener avail. Pool & Rec. aTio • plush landscapin • Adams, H.B. Kit. privLI. Pv1 52J sq. ft. off St. Pk. Ult!. inc, area. h .· ·k B 8 Q' 1, hcg ba & cntr. Pref. n1ature day Nc\\'J)Ort & Bay Center
2 BR, 1~~ BA. sharp, crpt~, F 0 1
1
1" 1"'&. 1· 8 ~ arge at-cmplyd perliOn. $100/mo. 2052 Ne1vpo1·t Blvd., C.M.
TAX SHELTER
SO Acres
Prime Location
Sum>unded by Nal'l. fort1t
Interest only 5 years
4 T.D.'s-releasc clauses,
drps. approx 1200 sq ft. • R I\ $265 • <'t poo s · anR!· !l68-3051 No lsc rcq. (114) 6'16-1252
Avail now. $l60 mo ., 865 Amigos Way, NB 3101 So. Br istol St. COLl-ll~ . . Rt>aHor~ 5~;).-4819 l\1anagc"d by ('ii Ml, N, of So, Coas Plaza) i :. sec this delightful EXECUTIVE suite • Harbor ''Our 2Sth Year
WILLIAJ\-f WALTERS CO. S 1 A ncv.'ly dee. sunny upstrs rn1, frontage nr Ne11•port Blvd I h H b A
2 BR. 1613 Santa Ana Av,. PHON••E.•557~•8200 11•/balrony. ifl happy home for lease. 1.000 + sq ft. n t e a r or r11''
$150/mo. Crpts, drps, !!love/ TNHSE -2 br, 2~; ba, bltns, , l'."/pool pr1vll. Empd lady. lcNf.i.B~. :j;P~h~• f."i2-4&;;il~4~fo~r~a;';p~p~I.; [ •'.!"""!"~6~7~3~·"!4~4~0~0 ... .,.'.,j
I "A~ o"72 Kl o '27 frplc, patio, f'ncl gar. 7j2 54!Hi1., l'C · .,..,,..°" or ""'· 9. Amigos \\'ay, 67j..50J3 · · LARGE ortices, 6 room 1ruite,
3 BR, 2~~ BA, sharp, crpts, Legun• Beach 5705 LGE roorn for \Vo n1 an $895 mo.. air, carpets, 40 AC. Zoned t-.foblle Homes.
clrps, fncd. Avail now. Sl9j Corona de l Mar 5250 · __ \\'/pool & . li!ic privileges: paneled, Beach Blvd. ex· Paved frontage, Next 10 s5o
mo. f>-15-4879 y2 BLK TO BEACH! ~~12·c~,8avail. Call aflC'r 6, posure .• \\'ill subdivide. Million development. SAC!
I • 2 B f •
..." """" -n s.12-2523 for S 1 9 0 0 Ip c r acre. r urn un, ... n apta. LRG Up-r 2 B•, ,_,., drpo, J.'rom $100. New 1 & 2 Br. ' J · ~st" 820 c-S ,-'' R00'1 f' t I TERl\1S: 'Zl4: 682-1337 s1~ ..... ....,nter t. ttfrig, range, gar. ~111t. POOL. 2115 S. Coast Hwy. · or r~n • pre er t'OR LEASE Lrg modern .
C1'.T. &12-5848. adlls. $17.'.i nw l8C. 704 ~99-3929 or 497-16.10 student. Tustin a rca · ocean vi'w OUices. Shops, For Acreage in Orange Co~ * 2 BR. 11,S BA STUDIO, 1 ~N~·~"=;~"~"~'=-,-=-.,-,-.., s7o/mo. 836-000l arter 5· sultable-prol or business ' oc~~n-~1• . . . ~ . ~ lf ' xlnt cond! Crpt~. drps. APT. Spacious.-Chcerlul, 2 apts. Furn or unturn. Crpts, Ei\1.P_LO'."ED .Gent, Kitchen 1999 S. Coast Hwy, Laguna JPllntn 11\fU y
Pool? $145/mo. 646-0196. Br, 1 ba, encl. porch, 2 blks d~s bit-in< pa!los \\'alk" pnvil. Jf desired. $60, H.B. Bch. <ls.J-9411. Coll "'" ·~ . ,, ' · ' · ing area 962-280-1 ........,.,..,, LRG. 2 Br. studio apt. 11.i to bch. Ulil. pd. $215. Rl'f's distance to to"-'n. 100 Cli!f ' · * NEWPORT
b I · 1 ,~ '"'3 ~vo 1 1 Be h-od /dlx ffi 10 Ac. So. Calif. $10 dn, $10
a, enc. patio, gar., poo, l ~"<I=·='=~=~=· =====!..:D;r~ .. =La=:'"=::;"':="'=h·~';;"'-=:":":;,,I' • car gai'8gC or rrn . ac m em o JC'tl. nr. sch!, $160. 64&--~1. Clean neighborhood. C.i\I. Alr/oond. Htd. Prlv. ba. mo, $995 f'/P. L. ShcwfeU,
l BR. Uni. All util pd. Fountain Valley S4t0Fountafn Va lley .5410 s.15-506.l 2400 W. Coast Hwy. 326 \\I. 3rd St, L'4. -0 213: 62J.-.j101. $150/mo. Adults, Infant ok. * ~~ of GARAGE * FFICE Sptce, prime loca· I ... '-"''-"'.;.:;;.;;... ___ _
301 .Awcado. 548-1442 Large & drep. Balboa. Uon In Newport Bch, w/ful\ Mount.\ln & Desert 6210
2 BR, 1% ba, aar-u.ge It pool. Island . * 613-308.) 1M1"1ice1. Secretarl&l &ervlce -· ~ avail 64•1z::cn. LGE, scenic Big Bear Lake No children, no pels. Quiet Lsc dbl garag,, Alley · "" ,,,_ 2 15 B C View loll!, $100 down, $50 mo.
neighborhood. &I~ e <*n!~~,,nc;,<;,;..1$; · H .• · CDELUXE 8!~nd oUlkde in 714: ri29-3111 or 213: 697-2137,
NEW 2 Br. apt, crpt t. .:i.:IU"""'JoJU · eves omputer .....,nter B g .
drped, stove. Nr. gchls &-\\TANTED: Priva!c board & Crpl!, drapes. Up le>3GOO sq. R. E. W•nted 6240
r;hopz. $180 mo. 548-1309. ~ c11rc for elderly \\'Oman. fl. 64&--1425 or 546-6080.
6B-67>; CORONA DEL MA-R
!"URN & Unfum 2 Br. Bltm, t ' crp~s. drps, pr!v patio, gar. oun at•n. A. 5 R~l suite, stot & pkg, 2 ba, No pets. 5-13-1867. a Business Rental 6060 1100 8Q'., gnd fir. 673-675:-
\\1ANTED : By private partf,
2 on lot • East Costa Mesa.-
under $30.000 (213\ 35>-0781
BUS IN E SS •nd
3 Bedroom. Adults. ~lediterronean Style Luxury
$165/mo. * Call 540--015-1 *
• LRG 2 le 3 Br, cpls
w/kkts ok, 1998 No. l
Mapt,, fi42..634.t.
2 BDJ\Il.f I unrurn Dupl,:ic:
Adlll only: No Pell. AVAIL
10/15. &t&-8600 * CLEAN 2 BR. l \t ba.
bltns. rlshw1r, cpt, patio, a:ar. Sl SS, no pet1. M~7
ANY Day 11 lhe BESrdiY!o
run 111n ad! Don't
delay •. call today, 642-5678
IT'S Beach houm lime. B\g-
si:c1t Mllflctlon t:vcr! See the \
MCt:lon nowi
.. . .
. , ...
1 &l 2 Bedrooms -2 Balbi
Ad nll Living
i'Uml&hed 1' UDluf'l!IWd
• OW.-Jla.r
• 5 ... c.,,., e ,.,,._ l'•dot
• 0..... C.r•tt• • s .. med c.u1,.,.
9565 Sl•W Av,nue
e-~, ·~~~·i~r.
N•lfl lo lt•lfl'· ttf! M IV 1' 96'8.W'511!""11tt.
Of"f!CE. STORE nr. 300-600-l200 s<t fl.
Ne1\'port Post Ofc. 2 Rms. OFFICES, Stl).$9().$180,
450 sq. ft. Good parking. Cosll1 Meu. 646-2130
$120 i\tQ, Graham Rlty. .., DOWNTOWN H.B.
&aG-2414 Remode1ed ofc or 11hop, blk to
FINANCIAl
Business
Op porlunltles
16443 Magnolia.. We1tmtn1ler, ocean. Undborg Co. 536-2579 LOCAL DEL1VERY
Store/office 14' x 50'. In e 2 llnall txecutlve oillces lifAN WANTED
11hopplt11 center nr SD h')'. furnished. $120/mo. ' PRrt or lull time lo dcllvtr
$17' mo 4M-<rll.6. 6i5-Q83 coffc. for notional rompaii)I
HARBOR BLVD fnmt. .19xT.' OFFICES • t11h z,, Or:tnge to C'C"'"lm,rcll\l or lndu•lrllJ
w/restroom. 7110 11~ Av,, CM . Attractive, R\'O\lnd cu:;·omr:r5. No tXPt.ritnce
Blvd, Ci\I, S200 mo. )'ear 1 noor, $6.'i mo. S.18--3209 nc -~)tary, Comp.any YittJ
lease. a.~. :=' tr::in, Sl!Y.!G en.sh lnvtstment 1
TIRED of that old turnlt\lre? In ~red Inventory to 1lart,
trs really not that hard Commetclal 6CS5 For pel'"'.,onnl lntcrv~.
lo n>pl~ce. Ju1t watch the •• -I \ITlte, lncludtni.; phone nurr
furni ture & m11cellaneou11 Je STORE Bldg for Mil" be!' to QUICK l<UP DIST
column• In the CJasslfled 68&-69.! \V. 19th SL Bethe! I CO., Ull \V. Robtnbood
Section. Towm t'Orntr. ~116S Jgt. Stotkion. Caht"..,,,.---------'--
I
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SO YOUR llTTLE RED WAGON
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. IS REl\LLY DRAGGIN'
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ADD HORSEPOWER TO THE FAMILY BUDGET
I •
.,
You can .. handle those bills. All you need are the dol·
, lars you'll get for all the still-good, but. nobody· uses·
them items you'll find all over the house. Make a list
of them today and decide to turn those unwanted ar·
ticles into extra cash. It won't cost you • • • it'll pay
you. And you'll be surprised at how fast you can sell
iust about anything with a DAILY PILOT classified ad.
Try it today. Every day is a good day to use
DAILY PILOT WANT ADS
• ,
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(And You Can Charge Them)
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E 642-567
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ILOT
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Tuesd11y October 13 l 91U li~IL'r' PIL01 ,..:;
, loNNQUNC•MINT.$ ,ANNOUNCIMINTS SERVICI DIRICTORY SERVICI DIRECTORY S&RVICE.DIRECTORY JOBS& EMPLOY/,{Elif .J OllS & tMl'LOYMENl _,J OB~ & 1'1Pl0VMliNJ:
_•_n4 __ N_OT_l_C_1~1•----•-n4_._,NOT __ IC_l_s_~--i l•byilttlnt '550 G•rdenlng -Pelntlnt, Jobi-Men, Wom. 7100 Jobs Men, Wom. 7100 J.!!l!-MMI~~ 7~ '
Announcements ' '41DAnnouncem~I '410 EXPERIENCED mothtr will AL'S GA!tDENI~-Paperhang ing 6l50 BABYSITTER, 9 mo lntani, e Countl'lr gU'I, exp'd, JISKPR .t: Ba b y t l 1 l t r • iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I bibYslt week d1lys. 50c per for G&i11enlna & 1m&11 land-No W11111na lite housekeeping. M u • t KUSTER 'S CLF.ANERS. tM tur . 8 ,,,,, l\IY'ln !>1'1~· 5
l>our.9mos-3years. Jo"enced 1eapl°'aervlce.1ca11~5198 +WALLPAPER* hil~ own lranl, HS . ~8-42"3 d'ls, ?ilo~F)i. 01'.'n l1'3na. i WANTED
OVERWEIGHT · LA,IES
yard. Iota of play ana. Serving Newport, Cd.\f, eo.. ~When )'OU ca.U •;Mac" 968--0112. C t S 1--Ph. $-D a only GW-6139,
Near llarbor S h OP P In &' ta Mesa, Oo\'f.r Sbom , 548-1444 _ 646.1111 BABYSf".I'ER. Slarl lVl, 2 T.YJ1in:•50o~:~f +e~~epot; ftol,1:.vlqtr • .t.i\'e In a5 pnrt .ol }
Center. 538-1396. Part or \Ve11tcllff. HOUSES, docks, boat!!, ,chi .child1'1!n, my hn11'I, S IOO&lll;y,No,Oranr:oCo.Call f:imity; 2 gi rlJ1'rno1h,c
1
r, O\tn
full time. Proles1. Garder\ li-1alnt. JI 11 pol a a• ah Y t I ng am-7.30 am. 81I...oC984 aft 4 Localne, \Ve1tc1IU Perron· !!!'/Iv + S~/m~ 6n 4145.
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SABYSITJ'ING. ?it y home. Prunl"f, tttt work. •Pmklr evuythlna: r t uo nab I y BABYSITTER: Occuional nel, 20"3 \VestcliU Or., 1'11.B. JA.~I roU.: Full-Pt t I rn •
M°' elf.I r.ta:r_ CM ~· IM'Y. attalklin. fe_r 11.I I 1a ,_ painted • .Far fret ••Umate sitter some eve1 &-wlr: eod1. &15-2170 JanlM;i 1J 'p, 2.j or o!du . For weight reducing program to establish
1tati1Uc1 for rapid permanent weiR:ht loss,
conducted by qualWed pbyalcal culturlsts.
Mu st be a mill1mum. of 20 pounds over·
weigh~ have-tta .. portaUon "'and ·.not cur· rently undl'F 4ottot'a care. All mquiri1s com·
pletely colifldantial. •
~Uent play f..clllllcs. GoOd -• dis ~., •-• ,,..,. ~2 18 d · 61 !""· pe .... , ease, w~~ eon .... vo. 17'9"'.,.... . ov . must rive. 3-8681 DAY 11 1 1. P.f'Ultl be r.e:1t & re 1.w... luncbl!1. Small th I Id re n Cl job &6tr-5893 me ca re or 1111m 01n-TbUn
w.loome. Certllied teacher. eanup •. FALL 30 day apeci&ll Inter-. SABYSJTTER, 3 wk1 work, valid lady in wheelchalf. NfJtlti1, S~ ~ -
519-{1726. AL'S Landacapl.na, Tree ~il~Extar palntin;. Free.est my hrne. 2 ICh1 thlldren, Sunday only.-Exp 'd . Good 'Y· :
LICENSED chUd care my remO'\laJ, Yard rtmodellna. Local ref'a. Lic'd & In.s. 5:~3:30 P:\f 847-1984 aft 4. 673-3547. J, YI. ROBINSON'
Kome •1etl h> s; Mon} lhnf Tr~ haulll!I' lot_Aet n1,1p. ~I Chuck, ~ BEAUTICIANS needed in DIS,J'RIBtrrORS wanttti In NE;\VPORT_SEACH
Fri. J,.IJ.nche• A anacks in-1-R_•,_pa_u-_c•P,_m_ld_•n_. -'-m.--'--t'-160 ___ . V INT. or EXTERJOR busy C.M. lhop. Some-even-. beach nl'W!a. for nationally
eluded, Vicini\)' ot Baker &: JAPANESE Landtcaplnr l PAINTING. L.oc. Ref, 11\t· in:; work, New grndull\e1 kl"IOwn product • your own
Bristol. 5'M038 a:ardenJna: aervl~s. Call to l\tED Se rv lce, Free welcome. CClaU1entele not business. Call 49f..19pl.
ASK FOR MISS POWELL-537·5414 EXPER. Child care tor tree esllmata. MS.7958 or estimates. 646-MIO ~Mary. manaaer, DRAP~_RY MJ.a4emale. !!!!!!!!!!I workln.( mothtt In my love-MS.0724. PAINTING & Paperha.ni;-ini:1;;;",., .. cc99;,1,9._,==~=~=I t'xp"d table r & tra.I~.
'USINESS and ly C.M. home, day a. NEW Lawn1, re-seed. Compl 25 yrs. exper. Only Quality BEAUTY UP ERATO RS Beach Drapery .5erv. 900 \V
FINANCIAL Loat 6401 646-M37. lawn can. Cean up by job work. Mixed co Io r s . booth space for rent. llt\lR l?lh St, C~f. ~3909. ,
n., tu11 UJn•
opentnc in OW'
STAMP DIPT.
(Experience Preferred)
or mo Free est For 1nio ·~~~1"3~.""'""'""""'-=cl-'::.v.=E~ST:,;Good~~d~•~&l~.~6g1>-<~1!'88~l-~1iiiiiVin'i"~;-luslne•s GERMAN Shepherd, fem. ~~~ c~f:t1~n 11!:e~0y ~ 897-2417 or 846-09i2. fMMEDIATE Eat. on quality BE A MODEL * DRIYIRS. * ,·.Apptip~~n~~. p.m. Blk ,. fawn, abort lea:s, ~-· & I I FAI L N ' ,._~ Opportunltlei 6300 choker chain & , flea tol-home. Fenc'd yd, hot GEN. Cl ea nu p-Tre e & in ter extt'r pant ng. Apts, ~ special Includes mo. 0 Evnerienc• • :1 r ashlOn Isl., N.B.
luf"IC1ies, any are. 557-3166. Sptlnklir Serv. Rot O t l 11 . homt'lt or ju11t 11.-room. Jack, d!!ling COllrst>, photog~ph8, ... ~::-:.~, -Equat·opportun.Hy employW-* CANDY SUPPLY ~~an!~~~~sue dC!ll! ~~ ,.1ESA Verde mother desires New lawns. Spraying. R.eu. 837~925. (213) 430-2866. television exposure. Holly-Necessary1 LADIES . Pt er fl time~ C A
DISTR. * 966-6l85 babysitting, permanent. T _64_6-084-'--'-"------FOR Your painting needs in· 11·ooct studio 1ou1"S, locaUon ?.fust have clean Caµforn1a S ltiaid··Serv. 1652 Newport
IPART OR F'Ul..L TTht El days/wk. Can pick up & J•panese Gardener. Exp. le-r. & <'xter. at lo\.\·est asslgnmf'nts. CaJI Academy driving record. Appjy Blvd C.M. , &42-9873 VERY HIGH INCOME LOST, in 600 block Vi•ta take Imme. 546--2986 Gentral Cleanup. Haulins prices, Paul 55T-7455, M7..J618 of Hi·FaMlon lit o de I 11, YELLOW CAB CO. Now available in Orange Bonita, Bluffs. Black half • 546-!894 • 5J5.l98l. 186 E lGth St. .. LADY. Average $7. per hr,
County and l!lun'oundtni reading classes ln black CHilD care in my home. =~~-'---~~-* PAPERHANGING C 1 M Ph~• F abillous \Vardrobfl.
area:\. Ali locations are com-case w/name. Also black Fenced back yard, warm EXP. Japanese Gardener. &: PAINTING. * 968-2425 Blu_e Dolphin os a esa No l n.vez t m en t , Car:
rnercial or factory furnish~ ~~~ .... ,&..,,._•~ss book. meals. 50c hr. 642-0819_ Gen, cleanup. llaullng trees. P • ti \VAITRESSES, exp'd, o~r ~l ~~E ll'!,;!: 2Roce."~nsl1~ ~ neces.W,-Ph: 776-73.Sl.
by us. Qualified person will 1 ~~=w,,-=··,..~_,,,.,·"....,0 .,.,.....,= V.'IL"L TEND CHLnRN. MY _M_•i_n_l.~Y_•_rd_64&<lli_~1_9_. --ain ng, as 3355 Via Lido N B airs ""· .. ..,r ""'· LEGAL SEC'Y
become distributor for our REWARD For lost dark HOME DAYS. GARDENING & Landscap... Repair 6880 8'0 T ' . · chai~ & ottorr.an $50. Bar & Busy Ne..mnrt Bch .. n·1 ' I --~------1 * A CARPENTER & 2 stools $20 Bahy hlchair ·•1-~candy (Nestles, Planters, 1ea po~nt Siamese kiflen, * CALL 645.04.39 * ing Pruning-Trimming A * PATCH PLASfEruNG REFINISH ER. Perm, job 57.50. Strolle~ $5. Car seat$$. !'~~a~!!_ce3 , ,'Salary open Toot.si~ Roll•, Milk Duds, Meredith ~arden1 area. am, I =sA7B~Y~S~l='IT=IN=G~-my-~ho-m-e.. Remvatinz 54s.5209 aft S All types. Free estimates t w/fringe benefits. LAKE Toi let scat $1.50, Infant Vftl"'UV<I' i
etc l You must have 2 to wry n, answs to Costa ?.1~ arta. Day or 6612 Call S4Q.S825 AR ROWH~AD MAR IN A seat $l .50. Portable !\eater f\tArDS For pt/Type situ11.-
8 hr~ JX'r wttk 'pare time "Eloise " aft •:30 962
-
7497
• nirht. Inlants OK. 642-5299 oG~e~n~er~•~l~S.~r~v~lc~e~l'..._~~j· ;;:;::~:::===~;;;;~J,~!7~Mg>~33~7~-~250~~1 .,,_-:::--;=cJ $1. Steel ahel f, WQQdaraln l~ tions. Exp I. RespO'risible ~
(d;t.J.&.Or eV65).' $25 REWARD,-1.Mt falcon, NEED-'typTfia: dol'le? we-Plumbing 6890 -BOOKKEEPI NG pt---.-fime, ish J$;--lS--lb. bowllng--hall . ..Adlll._l>Jua:t ~ A_R:r--r · $1750 C~SH R!:QUIRE~ brown back, lii,:hter splices Brick, Masonry, can do. Speedy. accurate, . med front ofc. EXp. pref'd. bag s1.so. 005 Park Ave .,· ply ln persorl. Jamaica Tnn 1 For more information wnte: on breu~ crow size leather . _::•;:.t<:... ___ ~_.:'5;.;60;.; reasonable, 64&-42J8. DRAINS Pluutd '! Dra1nu1& No ph inq 'a. N f'! w po rt Laguna Beach 494_9822 Hotel 2101 E. Cout Hwy.
':DISTRIBUTOR DIVISION straps on'Jeg, I bell.' 496-9777 -slow? Expertly cleaned $9. Orthopedic 301 Placentia . . CdM. B~v: 10.-2 Pm.
. #23, P.O. Box 1739, Covina, aft 6. D!lila Point. Brick, block, •totlf'. Patios, RAIN guile~ I n at a 11 ed . 24 hr serv. 530-3854. N B ' ' * DISil\VASHER. apply In • M 10 woi:i"'" 1 1.,,,.,...,
Call 9l122 I cl d h entrance ways, No job too Rainy ·season here soon. · · person Surf & Sirloin 59iO A ,~n. n exc ..... ,. .. f.' n u e Pone LOST : 1 Yr. male Samoyed. small. 646-7825, Rel tum. :rrte i?,t, Reas! 9t)S.2208 PLUf\1BING REPAIR BOYS •. Route delivery. c 1: w. Coast 1111')'. N.B. fc'!:,af!o..231'6 Newport Blvd ,
number.. Reward !or info leading to BRICK* BLOCK* STONE Ed's Cleaning Servi~ N; jost1~•m;U S r.t a i n le n a n ee, 16~2 DENTAL ASS'T Full time 1..:::":;.·..:~;c~o..:.;:=;.·~-~-~1 ASSOCIATE &/or return t1f s a me . 1 . Nf!\.\'J>Ort Blvd C.t.t. App 1n h . .d hoolt.... t.fEN 10 model suits "' Pf.RTNER ?.tANAGER 894-<191C By the hour, after 5:30 Carpets -Upho stery • Win· 24 H!i PLUi\IBING pers. c air s1 e, sc ... ~or ex-aporls\.\·ea.r part time eves.
N -petl"o" I" "I• ta•t I ~=~~~~~-~-642-1948 * 64~758 dow11 -Floor Care. 545--0487 & REMODELLING per. BJ0.3290. 0~~350l o ,.um u" " !'f' WIRE Haired T er r ier, * BUSBOYS * t.A.G. Inc._..... ~ growing. buaine1s, S9MJO ln-brown, 4 mo'• old. Ans lo 6580 Ed'1 Cleanlnr Service 557.9644 Apply in Pert0n, Alley West, DR.IVING Instructor wanted. I 'M'°l"N°"l:...,,M~O°'D"'E"SL~-~5~. ~2~,.-o-&· :~s::;i:~a~~s s!°':ou$2~ ~~zo·.~fl.v~c No. H.B. ~C.::•.::b:.:ln;.:e;;;tm:;,;.:•;;;kc;ln"1'--"--C::'~ y,~~:' s4s~~ PLUMBING REPAIRS 2106 Oceanfron1. Ne. ~~~ ~·~.' c~dem:;~~ und, needed for loc a l
your sleeves & 1e1 ready to Fine Cabinets &: Shelvin& l.: Install. 54S.66M training. ?.lust pau "'ritten fuhlon work. l .A.G. Inc.
go to wcrk. Mr, Duke, MALE Irlah Setter nr Agate, * 494 • 060'2 * Hauling 6730 BUFFUM'S t'xaminntion Oct. 15th, 71 .i835-3l0lii.iiii0iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;oi;I
7]8-4S41. Laguna. Ch ild's pet. Lrg [ ;:========;: Remodeling & Pill . 2284 Forest Ave , I• I
,..-·· hav~ truck will haul, move, · MANUFACTURING Rwd! 494--1257. 49:J-9348 C1r-terln1 6590 2 AMBITIOUS collei;e boyg Repair '"° . Newport • Laguna Bch. m l
Need m'an to 1upcrviae pro-Periontll 6405 • -1 --• d r LESS TIIAN ~n SQ. FT. EARNING Christmas money 'j CARPENTRY c ear \\'"'-"US. exp. ep. ree .., N . ' . . . "'· h t A vec duction. ErlG'i ncering & plan t -------est, 833-S6?J Free plan service, add-a-rm, ow in erv1ew1n9 1s fun & easy w/ ..... ra ~ ""''
supervision helpful but not * FULLY LICENSED * MINOR REPAIRS. No Job gar. conversions. Licensed. I' f Coventry, no exp, nci invest.
necessary, will rraln, $15,000 Reruwned Hindu Spiritualist Too Small. Cabinl!t in i:a.r· 'l'.N.T.,, La\\'fl Se r v Ice· 30 years in home bldg. Ph: •PP •Cants or 835-2583, 530-1407, 54J.-9066
investment required~ Salary Ad vice on all matters. agt's & 0 1-h er cabinets. Garage dean.ups, hauling&: 962-0140 F ULL or PART TJlt1E
plus share o{ profits. For Love, Marriage, BusirM!as 5t5-8175 if no ans\.\·er leave ll~ht movlni. 5411 -5363 • ========='I Full Time Earn up to $5 JX'r hr
appf. (714) 879-1433 11xt. M. Rcadinea a:tven 7 days a msg at 646-2372. H. 0 , 531-3729 Roof~~g 6950 * COOK * FULLER BRUSH 546-5745
. N rt week, 9 AM -9 PM Andenon YARD I Gar . CI eanup. llAIRSI'YLISf. male, !or BEAUTY salon 1n ewpo 31, N El C . R ,, R•mov• "-••. lw, t ... *b. LEE ROOI>'ING CO: Roofing (E • d) "-h lo"-'' Almost .... w -· amino eiu, REPAIRS * ALTERA-u .. ·J ... xper1ence Hotel Salon, Lam•na Bch. ,pcac • _. · '"" Sa Cl Grade, backhoe, 962-8745. of all types, r cc o v c r . "M
A9ency for
Career Girls
F /C BookkHpor
Lltr Sll. Monthly P It L's.
Santa Ana. area, interior, 5 statil>ns. ?~a ir n emente TJONS * CABINETS. Any ...,~,·..,, rool -•ti'"g•. Lo·" & **Call 4M-00&1** 492-9136, 492-0076 · job Tl'ASH • G I .--.. "" " .. cond ition dryeni, 2 w.e ~ "' aragr: cean.up, bonded &ince 1947. 642-7222 , Full Time FULL Or part time-Couples 410 W. Coast Hwy.
operators-will stay. Low I Am the candidate for the 25 yrs exper. 54&-6713 7 days. $10 a Joad. Free est. & lnd ivlduahi for local ~\es Newport Beach
k. Pl N• -·• M •-hi a~ An u·mo 54 .. =31 BEF"ORE Y.'" bu y, coll T. FOUNDATIONS ttn!. good pa1· ing. ease " .. ~ -i esa ~ •u. ROOFING Y • "" · .""'llrk, Local d is tr i butor ...... 'Mll'MI -o ,.~ nd N 3d J "'-Guy Roof1111t Co. Recover , _,., .... ,. call 642--0844 or ...,.,.....,.,, a ov. e ecuun. an Y .tr. All llome Improvements. M0VING, Gara.re clean.up it """'C. S45..117M, ,. .. 95!1) * SALl·SLADY * trains you for -fantastic op. .,....,,.. .... '""'""'"""""'! ask for 'Marianne. suga:estions or questions? Fr<>e Est. 536-1059 lite haollna:. Reasonable. -.--portunity! M~. 5-7 Pt.f. MAMEUS&Exp'd
-Carolyn Kimme, 546--0037. If ,. u· •A .u-1""2 (E • -~) REPAIR, Remodel&: patios. rce es ma"'s . .,..;,-""· Stwlnt 6960 x_per1en,C-O<:J Woman. Allio Tralnee.'. '305 no ans. leave m e s s a a: e 546-50l7. Let the Swede do It. Call 84.1'-7879
4!l4-7&53 or 673-5417 "H.,.oc;uc.•.o.•c;;.l.,.•.,.•.,.n· ... 1n,,g'---6-7_35 EUROPEAN Fashion train<'d • Xlnl. Company Benefits NEED Exlra money? We're
Business Wanted
• \VANTED ·Lawn &ervice
roott', Orange County. Cal.I
536-4385 aflt'r 5
• MALE & FEMALE CUSTOM WOOD\VORK ARE you not satisfied w/ oUers her talents in looklnc far manqerlal-~
slandini,: by lo 1ive you th.! Furniture & Ca bincls the way your c~ts, floors d r essmakinp:, alterations. Apply in (X'rson people to help UI in a new
best massage in the Wf'st. S48-423.i or 645.0044 & "'indoY"s look! Try I.he al!O children's clothes. Very 2 to 4 pm only business. Full or part time.
Separate Sauna's for ladles -========= r easonable. Si mple shifts Call &42-384!1. -----, & gentlemen. 10 Ai\1·12 AM. -Dutch \.\'ay. Call Dutch Sl Z & up, &k!rta $lO & up. J Fi\SlllON ISLAND
7 days. 17434 Beach Blvd. _C_a_m_•_n_t_,_C_o_n_c_r~te ~ f\1a1nt. ~rvicf' & you "'Ill 673-1849. NE\VPO RT BEACH ~ ,
'ff,B.J>h. 847-7879. S('C lhe di ffercncl!. 537-1508 I ~'.'.:::~".:._------l---:;:*-;Ccc'A;-;S;;-ll;;-l;oER/"7--1 newport '
CONCRETE, All types, Free bf'lore BA~! or aft 3P~t . SOMETI-lING ELSE -Custom l"'"NE PEDCQ L I *MASSAGE * est. Sawing, breaking, haul· dl"Cssmaking. Design your COUNTER G IRL ~ t'\.VI l\..J NNE ,. ,
SA UNA * WHIRLPOOL ing, & ~iploading. Service HOUSE OF CLEAN o11·n. Bring picture or sketch. 7 to 3:30. M~n thru F!t. Call SERVJCES"AGENCY personne ,
Lovely Girls. Plush facilities. & quality. 548-8668 Bob og:!.1E;'~!.YJ~~~ \Viii copy. Jean 494-8642. ~~·~~,;:~;~~"i-ss;,~ (1'ornierly AbWUes Unllm.J _ 8Q8ncy
Open 1' days, noon-midnight. CE'.'.t:ENT Work or all kinds. QUALITY-YOu·ve &lways
Money to Loin 6320
1st TD Loan
81'> INTEREITT'
2nd TD Loan 2930 W. Coast H\.\')', Newport Free est. 642-6824 \\'anted. Drt:umakiD&
Beach. 548-3608 636-0374 .t..llerations. Kt'y Say, 1763 CARRIER TRISH HOPKINS ProfiHlon•I S.rvlco for the employer Terms baaed on equlty,
642-2171 5'5-0611 WILL Babysit your house
Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. while )Uu takt trip or vaca-
S.ittler Morti.11e Co. . lion. Middle-aged couple,
•• ·-336 E. 17th Street ,reliable non-smokers, pct
DECORATIVE CONCRETE WINDO\VS & walls washed. OranJte Ave., CM. 615-1292 Firs, atrlpped, sealed Ii DRNES -WALKS -PATIO \\'axed. Free est. 897-7834 Alteratlons -642-5145
Boys 488 E. 171h fat Irvine} C.M. and the aGpllcant
'42-1470 13:3 Dover r., N.B. Y(ANTED GEN'L Ole,"'""'"'""....... . .'42-3170 CALL DON, 642-8514 day or nlcht. 673-3000. Neat, accurate, 20 ,Yl"ars exp. * CONCRETE work: patios,
drvwayi;, etc. Licensed ; Bay & Beach Janltorilll Tile, Ceramic 6974
Ph!lllps CC'ment. Sf.J.6380 Crpts, windows, Doors etc. l--'-------
t. ~r the pref'd. Artnt.' p/tlme, F.'t ~I' 11~v area 968-1122 . Nl.ll'll"ltli'!'· DA ... PILOT HOM~WORK!Rs WANTED • IQ<PERllNCED • :
::;=========•I kJvers. Aft 6:30, ~942ti.
MOney Wal,ted 6350 BIO-RHYTHM t~lls high-low
days $3. 6 months. S5 l .YCat.
INVESTOR, 2% monthly E. JOnt'S 20333 Acacia, S.n-
n:turn on fully secured in-ta Ana 91707
Res. & Comm'!. 64S-1401. • Ceramic Tile Work or ~10RE Concrete patio for 2 WOf\fEN, efficient, wkly Plastering. Reas. Free
Jeu money. Artistic setting. 1 -• C ,1 Call est. 536-2426
Dana Point, San Juan. (Envelope Addresser!).
Capistrano and Rush stamped, 1 e If -ad·
Caplslrano Beach. dress ed envelope.
Nurses Aide
vestment . Auto wholesale. ALCOHOLICS Anonymous.
l\11n required SlO,O(X), Mr. Phont'. 542-7217 or write to
Norman, 835-2a&S . P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa.
Uc .. call Max at 6«-0687 pre e,,.,.., · • area. 1 ;:====""'====! Eve1, 548--1227 ! --··-~··-CUSI'OM CONCRETE PATIO-DRIVES.ETC. Mesa Cleanlng Service
Free estimate. 675-M16 CarpeU, windows, floora, etc.
6910 TrH Sarvlce
Conta~t.Mr. Seay a.l LANGDON WOR'
DAILY PILOT "D Day'. perm., lull lime TRADERS, P .0 . Box
.:.A:=Nc:N:.;0.:.U~N:.;C:,,E:.;M'=-E~NT=s---
end NOTICES
F0und 1 FrH Adi) 6400
Res &: Commc'l, 548-<fltl Bob's TrH Surgery * 540-3798 *
San Clemente office l127-A2J, Redondo Beacb,
30S N. El Camino Real Calif. 00278
A_n_nov_n_c_e_m_e_n_1_1 __ '4_1_0 I Contr::•::<:::lo:.:r..:• ___ _:66.;.2;;;0 Ironing 6755 Uphols tery
49U420 HOTEL J\'IAID, pennanent, 6990 1 -c~O~A~S~T~A~L-A~G~E~N~c=y~ ycar-roulld po11ition. COITON T·shirt fabric $1.49/ * THE REMODELERS *
yd. Li~ at old C.M. Knitting, ,._" '''' • too n, lo·n,ncin"' lRONING, l'.1y home, $1 hr. CZYKOSKl 'S IC k k•y\ A member of * 494-U96 *
· K · -A N ,,_,_ " ... Dressmaki .... & Allerallons. sy-08• s 11· • s 111 1 HSKPRS Emplyr pays fee. Amencan nits, ~v~u-· nitchens, garages. c~ports, .... Custo1n Upholstery, 1831 nc ing "' ne ng nt'.
YOUNG Ti1er caL Long Tusttn, Orange. 637~20. Complete Remodelin... MS-7641. N 1 Bl d 01 The World's Largest George Allen Byland Agen· h I h., II N•a" ., ..,.!,':-plo r \' ' . . Prolesslontl ,..., 100.B E. 16th, S.A. ' II r. w 1 e eo ar. .u J-rO(.IDAY HEALTH SPA for Qual ity Contractors 642-3660 IRONING IN MY HOME .,..,,.. .,:>. ~?-039S
Sltnta Isabel & Irvine. 2 for sale. Call after 6. MY \VAY, quality home IN C.M. $1.25/hr JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Employment Service l"'====~---
Apply in person
HUNTINGTON BEACH
CONVALESCENT
·HOSPITAL•
188U F1orlda st.
64~. &42-3973 * MS-6970 * 2790 Harbor Bl, Ci\1 540-6055 HOUSEKEEPER • mu• t =="""=--.,.-,,,.--..,-= ==========I rcpalr. \Valls. ceiling, fl oor! h w·u FOUND. Purt white cat red etc. l"o job 100 •mall. Job Winted J1arbo1• Blvd. at Adams ave car. 1 exchange Thank you for reading our
collar \.\'il h bell. Cemetery Loli "II J1nltorl1I 6790 ' 020 , free rm &. hoard for lite claul"ed ad•· "----.. _ .....
CStana: Lane)
lfuntlngton Beach
~
.,.~ n.•;1 ---~--1 543-14\W Women 7 cocos . REUBEN'S \.\'Ork. 893-7&10 u . •ovi--.. IW•• .,......,..... """"'7=="°'-:-"°"= G COMPLEX helped you or can do IO Jn 'CRYPTS • •-1 ol•r ; .. Palm ROOfl.t Additions, 1 & 2 story CLEANIN SC'rvice, Inc. • d ·1 --DIM" L th• fu-·-. FOU ND German Shephrrd ._. u• I am not otd1nary! An 1 U-A-INES, 642--5678 '""" Court, Pa c If i c View &: gar. call Cm. Contractor 'Floors, windows, janitorial . ,. "==========-=========:::...! dog. Call to i den ti fy, R••· , "·mm. «2_9004 you are not a n or inary 4647 M A h Bl d 1 · &12-5308 Memorial Park. Sell al dis-for I t rice 642-2988. <>< ....., "" boss. I want you! Am exp 'd ac rl ur \' .
count. Write Daily Pilot Box GEN'L re elin& ,1; malnt. ·-" ·--in sccty / recept I writing / Newport Beach S~IALL female collie puppy M-2005. 330 W. Bay St, C.M. Net too 1 ma11. Limousine Service 6115 PR PBX R ust'
found vie Hamiltori &: Lic'd/lnsured. 675.8183 ····~· · ·---Ain hard 'wo;~rn:.5k:O:n fo~ lNTt:H.VJEWING ~10N-FRI
Pomona. Call 6~2--6004 Auto Additions * Remod'l!:lina: A~~~~!:~rs friendliness, loyalty & in-3 TO 5 PM
FEMALE Shepherd do&:. ~c. Transportation 6445 .... -..i .. k ._ Son. Lie. R 1 'Oc " Ml lO tellige nce. Elaine 64&-8749. h d H license uc• --• a es, ... a mue. , n. a pupa. u · 673-604.1 * 549-2170 mi's. 24 hr resv. 831).2404. H 0 US EKEEPERS, Com-
54S-0337 SHARE . ---panions, Cooks, Practical
BURMESt eat ·round. Ap. GAS EXPENSE _C,;;e:.J'l'°=t_C;;;l;;H.:.n..;l..;ng:o:..._66_25 MAID SERVICE 6815 Nu~cs Ava il. Live-i n or out. NO EXPERIENCE NECES·
prox 5 mo's old, female. Need ride 10 Costa Mesa from -Empl. PBY" fee. 1-lealth &. SARY. FULL TIME, PART
642-3166 Laguna, Workl'hi hrs. 8 to Diamond Carpet CJeanlna: C & S ?.1AIDS AVAIL, Im· :Family Catt Agcy. 1805 No. TIM E, DAYS OR NIGHTS.
2 White kittens w/black s. Ca.JI 642-4321 (ext 170) Autumn Special mediately. Reference•. Broadway, S.A. 547-fi681 * COLLECTOR *
&pots Ir. black tails & Oea days, 494-5739 after 5, ~fX!' $1
20
1· II F::~e 13E1•7t. 642-9873 or &42-9874, COMP. Sec. college a:rad. ex·
-Ila-. "'"32". :=========I no::pa r· nsta . .,.,_ . '--• . I to I I . -.v ·~ ......-.... ........-... g1r wani. c e11-n perienced In aw architec: Finance company experience,
Lgt' long·hai!M grey & black Tutoring 6490 Sl'EAM Jct carpet cleaning. apta It priv. homes. Gd rtf1 iure P.R. mt'd. Under 35 iklp-trace it demand collec-
v I · ndl VI 16th By ClarKare. 111tion-wide & reas. rat~s! 642-1224. seek;,,., ""r. part time or s "A"' ca1. ery nee Y. c 5ervice. Free est. 642-4055 -========= ~. ~ ~ St, NB &12-7031 CREDENTIALED Ens:;li1h -hr. day 640-8654, . WESTMINSTER
Found on Palaee Ave-316" red, Teachf'r Wishes to tutor in Carpet Laying & Painting, 'Jl\ PANES E lady COMMUNITY
• • BUSBOY
Job>-Mon, Wom. 7t00Jobo--Mtn, Wom. 7100,
Professional Saler
Specialist
Furniture & Appl iances
If you are a professional, top earning
specialist, not satisfied with a mediocre
income, then Grants has a proposition tor
you. Consider\the following :
Drake bike. ~ he r home in English, Gen R I 6626 Paperhangln _.1,__6151_ Hou1ework, NB, CM area. -HOSPITAL--ORANGE Studies Ii; study skills. epa r McAdam. Paintlnr Sel"I. nHd tranap. ~133:1 Call 847·7807 or apply
NOW's THE 5fS-8832. CARPET LAYING Inter. & Extcr. Spttlal rates Direct Malling ~rvlee Personnel Dept., 1T172
T. Top commission
2. PM's (1pecl1I
sates cOmm.)
7. Sick P•Y
8, Re tirement plan
9. Group Life and
Medical Ins. SERVICE DIRECTORY C.A, Page 642-~ on apts. 646-36(5 Fast and Efficient Beach Blvd., Hunt. Bch.
EXPERT 968-8401 Sheila or Dorothy CO!\IPANION, rrliable. Live· COASTIS PAlNTINU -Ext.·Int. lB yn. B•byslttlng '550 CARPET INSTALLATION exper. Ins. Lie, Fret eat. COOK • Companion, Refined in, room, board + salary.
TIME FO R CHILD Care my homt nr "REPAIR. ---!~~ PAAo<OUINTSINlGC.. '.'..""'11 .. 883-9 ... lla12<.bl&. ·-=i"'=°'=r=· :':.u=l·=· .. =Ca=~=·=~=h=,w;:k;:, Box= :;:.*~O!O'...Kl~*~ I I de Fairview &: Adams, C.M. Electrical 6'40 .... "' _ "'
$10 ~r Average Room ASST. APT. MGR
' ea 1ng I QUICK CASH a:y~~~~~7S~y txlme -Em-L~-.-.. -.,,.-~-.-N-.-~~~lA rr~: ?~sf10~~ S4~~1~c est. Jobi-Men. Wom. 7100
near Pomona Sehl. fe nced Llc'd &: Bonded ~5~ \'OU SUPPLY THE PAL'lT
arketplace TH ROUGH A ::;_,s.;:;:r w;;1:".% •• '" Floors
SAYD
£ASHI
•
··--6665 -· .. -~-lNYI.. Tl.LE
F'REE EST.
yd &: aandbox. balanced
lunch, xlnt catt. 645-2754 . CARPET V
WILL 11t far child 3 """ A: UC CONTR. ,.. * !141). DAILY PILOT l =~='"l~~r. :,,~~~n ;bl~Frli-'~-'-rn....,m._..•1" r.l6J
RELJA.80: mothtt wants to Gordllnlnt
JAPANESE
Service. Nta
yd. malnt. 918-
* -66IO
WANT AD
642-5678
bl.b>"tlt. On 21st St., CM. -· Llc'd Day can!, 1 am to 5;30
pm wkly, Hot meal1. Har·
bor/Bakr.r, 5f6.U39,
OIILD Caf'I In my home,
fenced yd., hot lunchc1.
Mea:a Verne al'f!a. 546-fllll
Cardeni nr
t work. Otanup
Complete
JIM
231>.l
Y1rd Carel
540-4837
SPECIALIST
repair. Mowing
CLE~ UP
New fence °"
L elf&in1. Re as. 54MSOO.
-
Frtc E$t. M7-8638, S.1~7046 $450 + Apt
EXPERT palntJnz • lnlerlOr Cou.ple to ht u11. mrr1. ~
k Exterior. J'r'l!e estimatet. Unita In pmtJ&e area, Some
B A: J Palntlrlii 4sa. 7842. ~-req'd. Call Mll1 Betty,
P&lnlin1 Inter A: exter, 557-6122, Abigail Abbot Per.
ll:i a room + m.terial1 IOnnlll Are~. 230 w. War-
00-1!05 * ntr. Suite 211, 58.nta Ana, * PAPIRHANGIR * APT. Cleanlna: "°'ome n Prcfeuklnal . 146-24<9 nteded, exper. Own transp,
PATNTING & Papcrhanaln1. Penonal rtf's. 642-1221
Int . • Ext. Reuonablf'. BABYSITTER, Rtl11blt , lol' Free estimate ~20 af1 5 3 sJ.rl• (5, 3 & I), Pomona
I PAINTIN G, lnttrior °" ~· School t rta. Ct.f. Mor. thru
terior, Frtt estimate. Fri, I h'I 1 or a to 5: 30. • ~1.20 * 548-7672 atter 6
• E • xperienc eel • Full time
• Apply in person
•
HUNTINCTON llEACH
CONVALESCENT
• HOSPITAL·
!Mll rlorlda St,
CSt11n( Lllne)
llunlln~ori Beach
~
NO matter wha t tt la. )'OU
CM tell It with a DAILY
PILOT WANT AO! MJ...0018
I
3. Opportunity for
adv1ncement
4. Employment
ne er your home
5. Quallty line to
tell
6. Paid vac•tlon
10. EmployH
discounts
Tl. N•tlonally
Htebll1hed firm
If you went to learn more about our money
making proposition in one of the companfu
fastest growi"j retnil orga nizations .••
Come prepare to di scuss your sales know· how ·and your previous experience.
APPLY AT ••.
w. Y: Gr r ~T CO.
i::~r•on 1:1 ( ~· ~ ~
9811 ADAMS AVENUE • GRANT PLAZA
HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIF. 926'16
An ~ual opriortunil.1 rmployer . '
.
-. -~ -.
I
f
•
ff DAILY PILOT t.,..,.,, Q<tol>fr U, 1970 f
···············································································~~~~D~~~R This variety of fine schools --1100
Newport Air Associales
Flile School & Flying Club
LEARN TO FLY
$500.
Compl1!1 Cour1• lnc:l1,1d1i:
-40 Hours fl ight time in Cessna I SO's with
20 hr1. dual instruction. Club membersh ip.
2 Month's free dues. Individual instruction,
teilorecl to YOUR ability.
could introduce Schools and you to a new tomorrow.
Instructions For further information r191rdln9 the Daily Pilot
School1 and ln1tnH;flon Directory
CALL 642·5678, EXT. 325
AIRLINE & TRA YEL CAREERS
.For Men and Women
e Travel Agent • Reservations
9 Ticket Sales e Air freight C•rgo
e Communic.tions e Operations Agent
Day and night classes
AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC
Accredited:
Sonia Ana 54).6596
610 East 17th Street
·-~
G•t the •fory , .. ~11ow th1 ••·
eifi119 opporfu11ili11 1v•il1\il1 to
YOU in tire U.S. 1110111 induitry. Git
"ill thii 9r11t 111w C:•r11r field wh1r1
•9• i1 no b,,,;,, •11d l1y-off1 ar1
unlr1•rd ol.
I Name ..... ·. M~l ·L· .CO~.P~N TOOAY.l
Mtmbe.r '11
Phone for FREE Broe.bare oa
"SECRETS OF BEAUTY"
EN_RJ)b_L NOW .J'9R
FALL CLASSES
Hours: ' o.m. to t p.m.
A.et~.,~1111 Course approved C~lldre11'1 ..... by tile ._ __ _.
Cal if. Supt. of Public Instr. * Modef11tt ancl Television * Charm & P.nolNll Development
Appl11nce1
SEARS CoJdspor Mi 1g"S:
Freight damaged, New.,
fully ~ar. Reduced up to
s100. Phone 962.ns1, Sean
Roebuck & Co, Adams at
Magnolia, HS.
REFRIGERATOR -G.E.
_CQJ)~ Likl' ncwi.fl~
54&-0281
WESTINCHS auto wa:shtr
top loader, Xlnt cond, ~
deliv. $50. 5-16-8672, 847~
•MAYTAG service man has
"'ashen, dryers in match.
sets, best ruar. 531-8637.
Antiques lllD
MAHOG. Din'g/Rm I et..
w/3 Exts & 6 J.fat.
C'hlng/Chr,;. No Bu ff et! sz:;o. Call Alt 6: 64:>.28-19.
Mu sical
Instruments 1125
LGE Kay cello w/canvas
bag, Xlnt tone ~ rond.
SIOO * 5-16-3851
SALE
. • "
10 OTHER AIRCRAFT AVAILABL-E
11 LOWEST RATES IN ORANGE COUNTY
learn to fly now - -and hive fun I * Fly Mexico & Canada
National Association Trade & Technicalr.r
Schools
Approved ·for Veterans
Eligible institution under the Federally in·
sured Student Loan Program
1 ANTHONY SCHOOLS
I Addre$s , .• , .•• , .•...........•••••• ··'l
City ..... , , ......... Phone .......... : '----------·· -·
a Innkeepers Institute International
1 I
I
* Dramatlcs·Speech-Llttle Theotre * Special Courws for Hom.,....., * Cateer Girls
PLACEMENT-ASSISTANCE 'THRU-
OUR STATE LICENSED
MODELING AGENCY •••
151' N. Maio, Saota A-547·6'71
1965 Sunny Crest Dr. ISunny Hiiis Vllklge)
Fulertao 197°1000
PIANOS e ORGANS
·ramou11 bra"hds at fremen.,..
dous savings? All with our I
exclusive Coast Music War·
ranty. I * Speci1I Rafe$ fo r Cammerci11
Instrument Students.
PHONE 776-5800 ORGANS from SZ"iO
PIANOS from $225
GRANDS from $695
Bank terms, Trade-ins For Complete Det1ils Call NOW
1717 SOUTH IROOKHURST
ANAHEIM, CALIF. 92104
IAl'l'ROVID FOR VETl!U.NSI 673-0313 0~;1 Sundays 12-5
Daily Iii 6 -Fri ti! t
COAST MUSIC
NE\VPORT l.. HARBOR
Cosla 1\Jesa, * 642-2&1 NEWPORT -MESA Enjoy Success in Life
through Modern Cosmetology
SEW-KNITS Introducing
Frog Lovers
To Chopin
llWOWll I
PRE-SCHOOL SPECIALIZING IN STRETCH & KNIT FABRICS
'"d LINGERIE
\Ve're Having a I
. \Vl!ALE OF A SALE I
on PIANOS I: ORGANS
Twu n1anual organs from $299
WE HAVE THE FINEST SELECTION
140 E. 22nd ST., COSTA MESA
645-2323
OF KNIT FABRICS ON THE ORANGE COAST.
2199 FAIRVIEW ROAD
Parents, don't \vait until
your child is out of the Frog
·Lovers Age before you give
them the gift of music -
\''ou wait and it may be too·
late! Children in the Frog
Loving stage (4-8) are the
perfect age for learning
music.
~ Pianos from $179
\VARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO
1819 'Ne\vport, C.M. 642-8484
OPEN SUNDAY
AFTERNOONS 6:15 A.M.-5:30 ~.M. ALLEN ORGANS
COSTA MESA 540·3268
COLLEGE of BEAUTY 1
The musician's choice for
home, school, ·church. E,..
dusively in So. Calif. at !
GOULD 1\1USIC CO.
Kindergarten Readiness
Arts & Crafts offers only the most advanced, updated
Courses and Techniques. Your skills
\vill be only as good as the training you
have been given.
S-T-R-E-T-C-H
& SEW jT.M.)
Yamaha, afler years of research, designed
the Yamaha J.1usic Course to assure that all
children can learn music.
Sinee 1911
2().;J No. f\.tain, S.A. I * 547-0681 * I 11 '•-,1"v •"N°"TE=o'",~""C7"'Y-;G'",-and-,'
Prefe111bly ·Ebony, (Fo r·
i\lodel Homel.
Music & Rhythm
Physical Fitness
Phonics CLASSES
Colors· & Numbers
Educational Field Trip/;
Hot Lunches New Classes Start Each Tuesday
Register NOW
646-2919
8 2 hr. $1500 Lessons
You do not have to buy an instrument, there
· is no home study -just lots of fun for your
children while they learn music.
Classes are now enroUing - 'von't you
please give us a call and let us show you the
\Vhole story of the Yamaha fvlusic Course!
Your biggest reward will be \vhen your
frog lover looks up at yo u and t ells you ...
"I gave my frog a new name, Beethoven."
644-64811 *
\VURLITZER Organ 4~10 &
lone cabinet $3j(), ~cash.I
673-WS:.:. Basic Bible Stories
Morning -Afternoon
and Evening
-·-·-· -. -__ ,
T.OTAL CHILD
DEVELOPMENT
O,.. Te P11ltUc -T•nd., Thr• Scrt11rdoy
No Appoh1tMe11t NKftlGry -Work DeM ly S,11~
1895 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa
2817 S. ~rlstol, Santa Ana 540.0667
LINGERIE CLASSES $600
Yamaha Music School
IN COSTA MESA 642-1844
Hi-Fi ~terto 82101
6' HAi"D rubbed \\'alnut
finish slereo-C'onsole
cabinet. $75. ;,.t~t613
Cameras &
Equipment l3DD '
* INSPECTOR
Young men, with
aerosp•c:• or eir·
craft inspection ••·
erienc• plus thor·
ovth knowledge of
sailboats needed, to
fill permanent poll·
tion fn Quality Con·
trol O.partment.
APPLY IN PERSON
Cahnnbia Yacht
Corporation
275 McCormick Ave.
Cott• M.1a, Calif.
This is a career oppor·
tunity in a dynamic
field -c reatinp and
meeting chal1cnges
daily.
MEN Enroll Now-Rnene Your s,., .. WOMEN
• Inhalat ion Therapy Technician
• Medical Assistants
e Dental Assistants
• Medical Receptionist
• EKG Technician
• Rehabilitation Technician
• Emergency Medical Technician
• Nu<>es A;de/Orderly & Others
e STUDENT PAYMENT PLANS AVAILABLE
• DAY I EVENING CLASSES e OWN~O I OPERA TEO BY MEMBERS OF THE PROF~SSION
• GRADUATE PLACE MENT SERVICE
----KE\V Yashica Lynx 5000
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT MERCHANDISE FOR. 3;i1nn1 Fl.8, $40. Ne111 Nik-1
SALE AND TRADE kor1nat !<"TN F2, Sl50. Ne11·• Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 • Nikor 200mm, $150. '4x51 Furniture 8000 Bessler enlargf'r wllenses,I $91.00 WEEK s Pt. time eves. No exp_ nee .• 8' sofa, nevl't' used, quilted 150· Aft 6Pi\f, 642-6697
\\"C train. !If/have 6 mo's floral. Scotchguarded. $12j, • P~LAR~ID i\fodel 160
n>sidency in Orange Co. 1\~atching Joveseat $75. , ~V/l\•1rik hie & flash fillerl
10 MEN NEEDED SJ0.8337 rncl. Good oond, $-l5orBest.,
547-7781 '* r"l-17-7782 l\J APLE dining table & 6 :>iO-Jll8. I
Schools·lnstructlon 7600 ~i~~-. ;\latch. hutch Sporting Goods 1500
* VOICE Office Furniture 8010 TENNIS RACKET
LESSO S STRINGING N * Retin'd 34x60 \vood desks, T{easonablc pri~~
kundaincntals of voice rlC'· $69.50 e Relin'd wood arm Fast ~rvice * '194-2563 I
velopment taught by expC'ri-rotary chairs. $29.SO e \Ve SCUBA 50 rrlCCd singer & teacher. have the largest selection gear·. cu ft tarik1 . . . \\'/dbl hose Voit rei:nUalot & 497-1358 or 642-5.112. of used 0U1ee turn m this misc. 642-88.)8 aft G.
1
1
Accepting Piano Student.~ area.
l.Wginners. advanced. Prof. r.rc r.tahan Desk Miscellaneous 160Q
pianist. Call for details & 1800 Ne\1'J)Ot1 Blvd.
appointment. !H~IO!l3 642-8450
MERCHANDISE FOR OFJ<'ICE f"URN· Dr sks ~DY'S '?iamond Cocktail
· ' ring, 13 diamonds. Pd. 3350 SALE AND TRADE chr_s, ~ofa, ~1 ".c-\\'ill sen for s200 '
l1-on1c/ttchllf:'r, tbls, p1c1, Tb1-type/postu t ( :
Furniture 8000 Credenzas. ETC. !\lust Sell! erciserl $2. ~ _!;_C'1s ex. l~s.~-'~';·~·;~~'~'":'..,,,.,,=-:::::==l"'Eiiiii>~'~·"iiii'~~ii'e.-;:---.I EXEC d k h . k:EN).f0RE \Va s hrr & Fl!RNITUR~: returned from o•• o • .., CALIFORNIA d;•ploy ""d;.,,, mod•I horn.
•
:t,.,. es, decorators cancellation.
• l'.~ . c air_. C'Ol'i:ic'r E/ec/drycr X!nt Cond noo
table, settee, 3 vinyl side a p,·,. 8' R" · ·. So
I · •27· "' •399 • · 1v1cn.1 fa c ia1rs. -1 IJ, .,..,_ ntt'ds cleaning, $2:>. 306
'i PROFESSIONAL Spon;•h & MooUMTaoean ;;. 1 R D FURNITURE "'l"o ' 1844 Newport Bl., C.M.
HELP THE WOALD SCHOOL CVf'ry nite •111 9
\\'ed., Sat. & Sun. 'til 6 OF MEDICAl & DENTAl PERSONNEt
1895 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa 645-2922 1:f1ii"ECF. b1thy furniture
c."'n1hinatiori ~r.I ST.i. in·
cludC'!i high cho.ir. bug;zy ,
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT srrollcr, !able & chair , Jab$-.Men, Wom. 7100 Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 ~--~-rocker etc. New nc1cr ll!rd.
--Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 Jobs-Men. Wom. 7100 :\lrs, HunlC'r 5..16-l:i74. * SALAD GIRL * SECRETARY in salrs offic<'. ----~ 1.;u~t ha\'c goOO p1't'pararion 5 Day work "ttk. Good --1 SAT 10 HR . SALE
f'.xpericnt't'. i\1on. lh!'1J f'ri. \rorkitl£: oondllion~; in Costa * TRli\li\IER. OR UPHOLS. \\'ANTED: Lady to prepare 2 THE USED
7-3:30. Call i\1N;. Penning. l\1C'sa. Pemialil<' Plasllcs TF.HER lo 11·nrk on boa1 in· li1e 1n<'als. sonic ll hskpi: In FURNITURE
Off, E . 8011 ' c;;At;;c";;' ,.L..:"·c..C:;;·';,;'o,· =~~-1 1c• qu1pment t.;:,11111 ~• • l'ORONA Elt<cV
NEAR-nc\V IBi\I office equip-Type1\Tlter, 110 i\Todel. SIOO
merit: 3 model 224 portable Telescope & attachments $30.
di..:taling units Y.J/'10 minu!l' 492-36:i1
l't'rorJlng capacl!y; 1 modC'll,;;;A-;;K'iiE'<'s'"c=·=-~=-1
272 clC'sk tnui"cribing unit & onunoous Sv.•ap
t black IB:\f ExecutiVC' 1\fC't!t. Buy.&U-nade 117 E. lype\\Tit~r. ir· carrlai;i:C', lSth, CM 642-56fi6
Doric type style. Best of.fer. NE\V. Tai;ro te I e 11 c 0 pt'
:>2S-&153. W/tnpod & Barlow Jeno; /.:.
*RECORD-A-CALL, 1 yr <'8.1:!1·in,i: c11se. 600 po1ver.
old, Good rood, $275. Sl 9J. &lft.--06.Sl.
WMi>-5739 • A STEAL
=========jBunk bcdi;, bx-sprng, matt
AD Garage Sale 8022 S3:i. Oriental rug. $20. 67l-1200.
ton S::.'Ul600 Ext 2037, bet\\·n, :,_IS-:i125 !•'rinr:oi .ti <'ltn\·r1:. C"OV<'l's . "'<'hangC' for fl't'f' roon1. I FACTORY
, • p,1 l'f'1·111 ,· ih. 1r1111:(' brnrhi.~. Balboa 1~1. :i blkll fl-on1 fC'r· SEE THURSDAY ··" : · SILK f'ini~hC'r, altl'ralions s, • r ~\1-.:E ,\RRO\\'llEAD ~ Call JUl-8619 ------,\ salary plus ~nlb.1anllfl.l $475.00 SAL ARY rnunter, porl rin1e, Dann ;\IAIU~A 11141 ,.37_2.,1 ·-----Sf.I.LING Honie: llseful of
C01nn1. 10 a qualified 1na n. R!1.l11e 111 s;,;.-1 in 9 11,0n1hs Point. 49G-26-IO --.... ~".'" .... ·--~---I *(h\\'1\fTRESS. part lin1£'. furn. Sclinl' mnplf', Slf'rro,
OLD truck~. brrok!ronl. olri PLAYl-IOUSE _ 6 , .
C81'•"ed f1rcplacr manlle, X-.XJ. Alr.o
ll'adit1~ lo a rr.rm11.ut•rit sale1i 11.S, irrad, good tnath, Pn!: .STATION hf'lp \l'lln!Nl.1· URGENTLY 't'r 21. neal in ap-Color 1V. ETC. 002-491~
.,, . . ; '"'" · • lf'r nti l1tnry ro1nplC'tC'. 21 or full time. Apply a l 319.) TME HEAD BAGE•L: 30,-, BUNK BEDS: \VI B rn n d -mgn>t c•-o· I Pt'itl'a!lf'f'. Apply in ""r~n.
All inqUll'IC'!i a~d lnlC'T'VLC"'$ 01'(1r. Cill Ann, \Ve~h·l lrf Harbor Blvd, C).! NEEDED I
•Ill be hC'ld 1n I J t . l\!Rrine Avf'., Balboa Island. ": 1 r(' ron. f"'l'1'sonnt'I Ai:;rncy, 2013 SOCIAL SF.CRETAR\' LABORE S
Nr1\' l\fattresscs. f"rain<'S in
Xlnt Con<!. Call 6.t4-0·tl9 \\'aill'C's..~rs·Apply in pt"rson -.-=~==""°-oc='°' Del11rwy·5 St-R sn.·uvv 6~ • llOLL')'\VOOD BEDS
Lido Park Or NB 67~100 I 1v/rornt'1" lablr .t bolstcn.
hden<"e. ~nd resume 10 Bo'.'! I ''"l'"leliff Dr .. N.n . 6.1:-.:mo 10 R •lOi7 Santa A~. Calif.1__ ---t'CSE"Rrth lfil'N'lor, )lu 11t
27 • I ha1·t' mlnln11.1n1 10 yn a'(,,,_
!r. iO.. • Sec'y Legal $750 f'CUli\·c ~N'l't'h1ry 11·/.~kill~
Equnl OPr"Ur em~1r. i\1/1' f1'o Chalrrn.1n of !hp b1Xlld &.! 11.~ ~inl hocll'!>"' i\111!11 bf'
SALES ·Ne«IC'd: 5 nX'n & j p1~11. SH 120. l1ping SO up. frf'C' to rravC'l & \\llll~rlt'<i!I' I
Interim
Per$onnel Service
ll:l 1-;. li!11 !'t, C:\I
642-7523 11·onli'n to d l' •TI on JI r a If' I Pn's.'IUl'C' lltlur1!1on fl?'I" pnid lo livl'·in <.111r1n.r; l)l"rlod-t (lj
SIJ,\l-G Y,\I &, JET BA'ni MISS EXEC AGENCY •t'm1na r'i ,t. li~n11)0~1un1c.. 1•.·,--------·I
;\13.l)' Lou Good, 96b-2U ~IO \V, Coai;:I ll"'Y. NP. ft('('('ni irnapiihot 1t niu~1.1 lH 110 1 .. STERER ~ Cus10111 j ;;~~-6,16-3!\.19 Re111unf'1~1tio11 l»ti(' in ""· ~xpf'r\('~ only. t;26 Center
SALE-Earn Chr is 1 ma ! i\IJIO 1-'rr PO!!ilionir ceu of $1 2,00Q 11·lth bonu,1•1t 1 '!. _r . ~~-7!190.
,-====·_.-·-,--co-.,-• 714/675-Gl Jl * * ... \\'AJTR}$s, part tinie. EXCEPTIONALLY Good 8' Elqx'11enced. mu!ll bf' over j ' . ' 21. Apply in perMJn Surf & l'OllC'h S•1.J; Sl\i\1el rocker $8.
Sirloin, :i93() \V. ()xi.ic! lh1}'·· 962--lS&I.
N.B. 8' NAUG. Avocndo :«Jf11 &.
5Cl" birch che11t. Both xlnl .
S6S ea. 646-3181
di •· ·1 I = "' "~ a h~ sn.,S, cruet1, ~L ver, ots doghouSf'. SIOO 6"2-""'""' mort>. Come &: stt no"·· Oki · "-'"-'
plO\\'S, 1'8kC', \Vagon l\"hN'I~. POOL TABLES!
«'lnent block~. lTa.12 Vari "rnoiesale to the Public
Bul'en, just off of Slater. Tf'rms_ 832..9:>2!)
Appli1nce1 EXERCYCLE 2 speeds elef-.
1100 tric. Pd ~. ~lakf' "offer.
Pnu::lica:.ll)I l)(>w. 6-~13
./ REFRIGERATORS·Largt" 10 i\lo ror 2. Holirlay HeaJth
&lec-tions: Slj..J4J.S55 & Up. ~PA. Sl80 or i\lake Ofkr
646-7820 • '.HS-:01."l-I. .
KEN?.IORE Elec riryer . LADIES Rolex r ol d
\Va11h 'n ll'!'Hr cyclC'. Xlnt chronon1rter v•atch. $JOO.
rond, $50. ~72, 847-SU.l. Phonr 6T;i.iS01 11flcr 6
mollf')' part lir,11'. S.'lrah & Ir a\.' fl I In i alln""Rl\Cf'S. I T II
Covenlr)' ttln~ now. No In--SEC-RETARY \\'ri1C' Box P 20.'U nally Vau t e er · · · · · .$400
It \\IAirnESSES • ExlJ('r'd
only. f'oori & cocktail~.
CALL 6-4~274 SANDIUU.. go Id A ~·hi!c KING-SfZE---maltmi5, box GAS Range, Re!rig. Bullet&.
\\'AfTRF.~I\ Ov 21, pt tinte. Bunk ~I set, good rond. springs & frame. Xlnl oond Table. 8(!d &. Dresser I -p ·1 I "" \" n. g, c \I 1·2 \'('Ill'!' l'Xrter. Lovrly olr· v;~1 . no dt' . f Tf'C. tnun:ng. s 11 100. rypi11tt 60 +, he:i(h . 1 ~. ,..,., v · PHY ...:... ...• _
for Info PM: 962-0.'i.'6. I 111"<'11. CAii L()r:iuie, \\'C'~!cHlr TRAIS1''.E for f!nr jf'\\('!r, lt'C. tit'1'nt pcoplr. ,\!ract. rn & 5111 Sl.6:i hr plu.s tlpi;. !!'iO. 5-16-.i&>I 11kr l"IE'"' sn . 646-9169 008-:>!19.i ·
u111lornto:. Equal opportunity emptoyrr ~.\LES Womo\11 l\'/lfrr~~. P,.1·1iot11X"I. _~.? \\'rsrr\IU ~Ion· ~alriirt1r1n ~l.ilt·~.21.2:;, Newr;rl
rpor1sv.rAr f':>.:Pl"r !'tr;idy J'I !Jr .. i\.B. 6i .... mo ,1i;z~1'l'!U;J\C' If B. S!\2.,,,""11
1 -----1 Ptr$anne Agency ~ rill'I(' (lldrr "om,n. Gl~>-n1:0 iT~'l-A -bn...,7e:-:S~0ITT TllT·: ~--:-11~1~1 rlrnw ln 11-r 833 D D NB
Golden B1'11r !'\.16-9102. CH~ID~E~ .. °'A°'·B"E"o'".-.,,-,,. .. -,"' .. -v.-.1 r..r llotpo!nt C'OPllC'rfOll{' CARii"Er. 68 )'ds good, Ullf'd,
\\'Ai\,.EO; ltC'lf;;1i1~ 110011u1 ! \1'11.~lwr. 111·in bN!~. mi'lple 1-efria-. S7J. \\'lll bargain. l'lea.n, It beige, nylon piH!
'"' lol·r It cnrt' tor ~lrl<t ~ & ~ dining SCI. hUIC'h. ~ls-still :>-ls-.">$0.l art 3. S7/yd 962~1 aft 4 '
on \\"('((, from i:~:30 iT'S-A-bt~~el-1 -your fRIGIOAIRE-~dr)Pr. /STANDARD SIZE POOL
i\lusl have r1·ansp, & rtls. I itcn1s 11·ilh C'a:-;t", u~,. Deily inod cond . SJ:"i. free <ltllv. TABLE ----, ove r r., .. SEl.JJNG Your boal? "U.1" 1 But iM!ll Opporl1u1l l!e1 ilC'ms "'1th ~11se, n!:r 0.ll) \\i',t ... a D:ld)· P!lut l 642·3870
with ut. .-.u ti ful 0.11)• in Today'• \Villi! Ad:!. Pll01 0 .. 1,slfied. 6~:Z..:ir.i8 011Sllifird Ad. &l2~:i61ll "'""""""""""""""""'I Cd~T area. 6-14-.'i9J7. PIJOI O a.'Slfied. 642~:i678 M6--86i2, 847-8Jl5. • ~!17-6410 ..
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Tutlday, Octoblt U. 1'70 DAILY l'llOT J1
MllllCHANDlll POlll
SALi AND TRAD! -FREE TO YOU
M ltc•ll•neous UOO AT'fENTJON Cal Joven !
TlllANSPO RTATION I TRAN SPOR1:..ATION _
S.llbool1 9010 'Aobllo H""'" ~
TPANSPORTAT ION TllANSl'ORTAT ION TRANSPORTAT ION TRlNSPOli fOiTION titAHiPO,!!!'!~
Moto rcycln fiOO R.;,..1t'n Vthlci~ t5t5 lmportM Autoa 9600 l mporttcl Autet HOO lmpert.d Aufol "'°
'67 Land C;;.ise," DATSUN KAR ~.i~NN G'"'A PORSCHE POLLUTI ON· Lcav1ne the •tate mwt part ALL NEW 16 UU?l ul?I:l•l•l~I§ 1i#r HONDAS ··• t'~ ldo!<Htf<I• 11•il9tt ii 'vheeJ ,drive, hardtop with
1'01l bar .t. winch, (UZlt461)
-~ ~-~
DOT DATSUN HIA '69 911 'S' .. SOL UTION wlih pell. 5 ''°"" cell
Orra.nlc, blodell't'Miable clea~ var!oua dl1crip. 548-1665
crs lot hOme & lnduslry.
1
________ 10_11_1
Thoy Really Work! U YoU'rt "SCHNITZEL!" tree to qu al not part o.l ~ IO!utlan; You're J>l.l't of the problem. hame, tncd )'d, w ry beau,
8\1,)" them or jJell them, but female 1Uwr pure bred
use them! Call 548-2.135/Your G/Shtp l}i yr1. watch dog.
authorized Shaklee Dislribu. 892--9086 10/15
1or HUNT dos 1ttt ~ 1d_h!>J[IJ,
' t c 11 cd yd , L avable
HOBIE CATS
ALL GOLORS
FR EE DEMOS
Pr1C9t" from 11195. Winter
Raci.Ju( ltlrtl IOOn!
CAP'N EDS
2700 W. C.t. Hwy. NB 645--2244
+ CAL 25 * • Fun Race Equlpm~nt
~ J!!,'IF
• Oeplh Finder
USED rtcol'M, book_ll. lamps, La,b/G/Shep. Polnttr 9 mo.
4 drwr linla __ tile. nt'.fl'_ love• child. ~ •
furniture, bunk bed, 3 BR 83&-449l 10115
,, sell:, kin& 1ile bed, KrrrENS: 2 beautiful black
and white; and 1 black
• E!xceptlonally Clean
fl40.1 559 67S.8220
KITE 201.Good Oond. Racing
bookcase•. desk. Columbia
Solid St•le A~i/FM stereo
record player, Curtis ?tfathll
Color TV console, kllch
(1cwer trained).
962-3285 10/15
1tem1, love Hal, co ff. BEAU. 1•nUe pu r e-bred
tables, din. nn se!. ~421, black/tan fem. G/Shep. 6
rtar, cvr, yd dolly, lifting
rtn&1. $&SO. 6 73-6760
wkda,y1; 543-nlS eves -
Wknd1. f· Ask lor Rev. Beals. mo, h1btk. love• children,
DID You KNOW 638-2461 10/1' 23' Tompo•" SLP, Fr. Aux.
,
I =''-=--0..-~-~~.~.-6 HP, FBG . Xlnt Cond.
that we have EVERYTHiNG 2 Ordinary lovable kitlent -Xtr11, Sall Now! Slp/avl.
from party 1upplies to gar-ne«I ham• wtth iood kid• $2700 523-1350
d.n • yard oqulp? Why bUY IMMEDIATELY, 494-6682 -~·==~=~--.,. l0/13 e HOBIE CAT 14 e
when you can rent what ==,,,_,,..,....,---.,-.-W /TRLR A EXTRAS
you need! BROWN female poodle 3 yn Sl095 '* * 67r.-134o
UNITED RENT ALL old older children only. l2' o. Swl !!board 548-8506 alt 10 pm Fri Ir _.a nger sa -no W. 191h St., Costa Mesa ?tion All Sat IO/ll tiberrl.as1, like new. $150. * &1>(1760 * ' ' 673-4153.
UCTION * ND Good home & <0m· -===~=~=-* A paPlonahlp 1~., children 2 HOBIE ~ TRAILER
Fine FUrniture~ yrs. male Peke &: Cocker Xlnt eond 'lll.50. 642-0900
• Appliances in i.x 54>2338 10113 Speed-Ski Boats 9030 Auctions Friday. 7: 30 p.m. 3 Female TeJTipoo pups.
Windy's Auction Barn Darling, I wks old. Come
2,075,,.--Newport, CM 646-8686 s;ee, 646-f.Us aJt 2:30 lgnJ
Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'!.
14' RUNABOUT w/4{) hp
Evlnrude, both In gd co11d .
Lt'i' h"cel tr1r;--f'6 :IO-;
548-8717 eve1.
14 K Yellow Gold Engage-2 Cock·a-poos blond mother
R" t good dispClliition OuJ!y &. B SI men! Wedding 1ng se , cute. Blk Ir. white pUppies. oat Ip ~~-rl~.9 !.O~ V.V.S. quality, tine color. 66 --·
pti. Appraised SIJO, Will 54>5175 10/13 SLJP avall, fine1t in Nv.·prt,
Sacrifice. P. 0 . Box 519. FREE to qu&I home loVhble for narrow.beam 1ailboot
Lakewood, Calif 00714. yg adult bottler ~Ilic, loves 26' to 34'. Ph. Kinplt>y
KfNGSIZE, Fully lined gen-children, filed yd, 548-0813, 673-8711
uine fur bed sp read, SJ&.4493 10/15 FREE dock for 20 to 28' boat
Origlnnl cost SllOO. Can be ND i d homes for beaut. 8 at Huntington Harbour In
u . ..ed as 'o\o'\\ll hanging or rug, wks old ,kittens, variety cf exchange for octas!onaJ uae.
S600. 837--8725. colors. 548-0813, 836·4493. (2131 592-251 2 or 483-5623
10/15 NE\VPORT Beach Tennis I ='==~~-~-,~~ I BoAt R1ntal1 9038 Club membership for sale, 2 BEAUT. Joni: haired kit·
s5oo. Call collect tens l wht / l blk &: wht Rent A Sai"lboat
503/222-5435. free to id homt1. 548-0813,
HOL1DA y J1ealth Sp a 836-4493 10(15 Cal 25, deeps 4, fully equip.
member. $10 mo, will pay 1 SOLID gray pt. Persian ped, $30 pe:r day, \l.'kdys; $40
tnltit1llnn fee, 5 ex:: Joc. k i t t e n f u 11 y h 1 b r k . ~r day wknds; $200 per wk.
, • 675-0.lSS 673-8128 1011~ Lcuon1 Incl. 968-4840.
-····-· ----W I LL BUY
REFRI GERATORS:
\llOR.KING or NOT. *'* 6-16-7820 **
2 RABBITS, 1 hutch. Take
all. 54&-9390. att 6, 10/13
FILL Dlrt -free for baWing.
546-7357 10/13
'°" 32' Twin-1cniw Chrl1 Craft
Sips I! * Oelux boat '* 548·"2434, 636-4034 *
AVAIL for charter, my
Columbia 26 'Mk JI sailboat.
Reai; rates. 833-3772
NOW
OPEN!
NOW RENTING
Spaces In Brand
NEW 6 *
Mobile Home Park
'W P11•" ~ 5•1-.lc• ~Ji••fl~i•Q t. l111•1•t1Cot
w.~~1~ ... ~.~~?.~ J!~1. l}fl.\111
Rickman
Metlsse
NO\V AT
JAMES L1'D
$2499
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGl!N
OPEN DAILY '62· G !)!mo! 5100 actual Dllk1.' su~7i'Ays RAd~. 11PJU<6> ~m".""~ :e:,r ~ Dta1.b Blvd, $ equipped. Y.OOW with blacl:
HuntJ>wton Dea<h 999 l•'•rlos'. <•SOI.DJ). s.~ .. ~11~.=,.., :"61"""o"a~tsun -BILL y ATES
831"'8001•93-411V•99-2261 H b v w VOl,KSWACJIN I="==~=== la1g St<!an. UJlht b!Uo exter· a r 0 u r • • tJl l!ood
Camper• 9520 ior with black vinyl buckel 18711 BEACH DL. 812--1435 ~ua~ ~~ .
. N '71 D t ....... ·-· dh', (TRJl'4) HUNTJ"C'I'ON BE'AC!f '8374!00'/l93.atlla&-2:!!1 eW G SUft Take 1malt down WUJ fin· '1
lSS I Newport, CM n42.oo-10 16()1' OHC, Pickup with camp.. ance pvt, Pb' c'11 Maury '68 KARMWN GWA, •ir '63 POUCHEI ~
1965 W,,Cc ltonda.: 1968 8Dcc er, Sa.le price U>99 dlr. 540-JIOO or 494-7506 aft 10 am, cond. $1668'. COUPI.
Suzuki; '67 l(J()(c Kawaqk\. ca 43S21J) \Vll} take car In --673--231~
All MUii be llOld this week. trade. Will rln&nce private FERRARI Hardtop, aln.mlftl metallic
Mako oUcr, 6'6-11703 Pvt party. C.U 04~ °'I--------MERCEDES ll!NZ 1Jtwr, with ltrand -In·
IN IRVINE .pty. 494-6811. FERRARI 1---------tcirior, chrerna wheell, ra·
ORANGE GR0 VES e YAMAHA 250 Bi& Bear '69 I>odit! Ad~nt~ % T. Nev.oport Jmports Ltd, Or. dial ttre1, W/FM rad.So.
Jtffrey Offramp Scrambler • 5,500 ml, Xlnt V-8 lr\lck w I AC, 3 gas ange County'• only author. Llc, PXW912.
ot Santa Ana F)v.•y. cond. 673-6693 tank• 2 batts 11'6'' I.zed dealer $2399
SEE 14 Auto s..Vlco w/m;ny oxtr.,.' 14295 or SAt.ES-SERVICE-PAR'l'S-CHICl\IVIRSON·
Fabulous Models & Parti 9400 ltade for eqty 2BR hou~. 3100 \V, Coa1t Hwy.
Day1 ~4-96M Eve1 642-8684 Newport Beach VW 1 ~.2in. acres ot tun llv· RARE FIND 7-9;M· &4!=r!zed FerTILrl :-~~ :-o3:~R66B~.
-Multl-mlU lon S mob!Je 356A Porache Speedster liiii,lil7iil10~v'wi!jil•c•AMiftiPll!EiijjR!iiil -~~~~~~.E'.~O. I
home community. Front Bumper. $50. === COSTA MESA
-.f'l.111 time In park ier-Oriiinal • No Dings Ever Fully equipped $2995 ZHX610 FIAT '70 T 911 'T' vlco center. Chapmao Mobile Homes , ar9a
-Continuous amoi free * Ms.&104 aft. 6 • 12331 Beac,h Blvd, G.G. -Demo! Exactly 182 mlle1. 4
OCt!an brttzc1. NE\V 390 F\>rd el\i .. 500 '* 714/!530-2930 * LEASE apet!d, AM/FM, chrotne
-Surrounded by moun-milt1, at1to tram., now in '59 M.B. 2l9 4-dr aedan, Xlnt "''' ' . ta~nsml~u~::1f::m ~vr~~"s '57 Ra.nchero or both, $350 '62 Corvalr Van rtblt eng, '71 VW BUG int. &: body. Runs v•ell, BILL YATES
largest •hopping center. or best otr. 536-8238 lux int., dash panelled, 'lB--n ON L y $1100. Eves aft 1 ot Sun.
(Fashion l.llandJ '63 CHEVY, a'OOd body, Like inspect, over $950 Invested '_ __ J:"":::-3:150=. :;=;:;::=== VOLKSWAGIN 1' Check These ftatures new 4-spd Muncie trans & S750 548-2829. $.!9
Champlon1hlp -be w n· linkaie, Also -IOO(l~283 f-~~~===~~,+--:> MG -7 !2!51=; lilt Road Bowllni:: Green, Free Car w/quad. ALL OR PART. • '66 VW CAMPER: RebH l,er J\1otllh San Juan Cap1itiiii0 '
Wash, Putting GrC<"n. 64:z-9600 motor, New Ures; tape deck AT -----·-137-4800/493-45U/499-2261,
Croquet Cour t, under· &: 1pel.ken. BILL YATES LEASE roor Shufnoboard, •n· vw Ch•""· T'<Mmisslons, $1750 EVES' 615-5"'5 '64 PORSCHE
closed Therapeutic Pool, and others. '71 VW BUG Swim Pool. 5;n;"d" e 6''-*I! e CAMPER shell aod boat for VOLKSWAGEN 356 SC COUPE
Game Room, Assembly Dallun pick-up lruC'k good 32852 V o~•LY Balbol blue, chrome whtelt.
Room, Boat & TTaller \VHOLESALE TO PUBLIC cond. · $295.00 &tt. 3:30 p.m. nlle Road ·• radial Ure1, concourse cor.
Storage Area, Lovely Eni: parti·Short blocks 531-7255 San Juan Capilitrano $49 00 dition. Uc, XOG99T
Courtyard. S.1&-4634 after ! pm 83'l-4800/493-451V49!J...2261 • $3099
-Small pets allowed. • ,64 VW E $175 e "Do-tl-yountU camper" P.:>r fl'onth
-lmoclnc all th;, from ng '57 Ford. 2 ton von 1750 ~THINK AT CHICK !VERSO"' $81 .50 per month * 540·3118 * 208 Pearl, Balboa tile. e °"
14851 J<ffr'J. Road. I"lno VW Englno, Good Cond. '64 vw, Faclocy Camper. "f..,IAf' BILL YATES VW
CALL ~OLLECT e 642-0443 • Nu' Tire• & Brokos, JM-' VOLKSWAGEN 04~3031 E,J, t!S " 61 714-832-8585 71~530·2930 MAC! $1450. 548-1794. 32852 Vil.lie Road 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
213-860-5210 714-531-8105 Troller, Trevel 9425 '67 Ford Super v a". ''FRIEDLANDER" San Juan Coplotrano _COSTA MESI.
1
1 ----------· 1 automatic. Xlnt cond. Must Triple Wide Corn•ll TENT trlr, st a re r a f t sell Immediately. &IH105. 11710 IUCH CHwr. ltJ ' 837-"8001493-4:'ill/49!J....226l '70 911 'T1
Continental e Paramount Constcllalion model, IC• * g~· ANGELUS CAMPER 893-7566 • 537.$824 .-. ----~... 0.mo. :WOO actual mllei. 5
Barrln&ton e Universal commodate1 !, 3-bumt'r gas AL~10ST NEW. NEW·USED·SERV. ~ "111!1 ~
l'lamtngo • General rangre, Icebox, 1ink, 10 gal e 642-S5l4 e ._ __ - --. 1 • THINK 1pel!d trani., AM/l'M,
broadmoor • Star water tank. 2 dln'g tb\s,1 -;:========~I - - -...--"MG'' Yl'ht!i:ll , emerald iree:n wi Hlllcre1t • Cambrtdre hard roor. p\aslic window &I"' -------bJ:i.~11 Interior. <•101166),
CHAPMAN "'"n'g, lo 1"'0111• wh'" Duno Bugglll 9525 111 BILL YATES
MOBILE HOMES travel.. rctrt1cf. j ack s , vw D R It red llJU!lfl > ' ·~ N H hydraulic lmpuloo brak•" UPe unnor.r'"" 'FRIEDLANDER' VOLKSWAGEN ~ , arbor, S.A. S.J4-4l49 1970. l1kenderlan cam .&. * 714/531.8105 * --~~=~=-.--I hydraulic l!ften , ll o 11 y ..I --=co-N=T=E~M=P=o.---'69 22 ' TERRY <a rb, hi notallon ""''· lull auto •port It ..
LAGUNA HlLLS fully 1elf-cont11.lned, fmt top & 1!de curtain•, many Authorlicd Sales e Service
23301 RIDGE ROtrrE DR. gauncho, sips 7. Like nc\v, xtra1. Xlnt on 1treet, dirt or DEMO SALE
l1Ht 11,1,CM (MWY, ff)
893-7566 • 537-6824
NEW·USED·SERV.
32852 v alle Road
San Juan Clpl1trano
837-4800/49:H~ll/ 499--2281
'60 PORSCHE Cabriolet, 1600'
r
f
I
LGE. clean Abalone pearl1.
The Golden Waves, 16
Princes• St., Sau1allto, Ca.
9'1965 Phone 4151332-1019
LARGE FA?ttJLY Would like
PETS and LIVESTOCK
P ets , General . llOO
FOX, RARE, 7 mo, gold col·
lat:, blk leg1 & _ean.. must
sell-leavinir country. Aft
7:30, 54!}.-2163.
LAGUNA HILLS Owner traded for l&:e mobile sand. $995. \\'ill con1ider 19'10 Ftat 1Z4 Sporia-C~.
Prestige adult comn1unity, home. trade. Jerry Gould. 646-8!!&1 Rarlio heater •pedal ex-
BOAT Storage In Coiita BC'a11tlful surroundings, all Ch•pman Mobile Hom11 or &42-9405. haust,' pin 1trlplng, radial
Boa t Storage 904I ~
MG
iiuper, with hard top..---New.--r--11
engl~. new cluteh; ~Wi
· to buy a Ret?lierator.
• 645-0207 •
REIKElt Buckle boots, sz 7;
Zermatt 11kis, -Both good
rond $50. 644-5597.
NEWLYWEDS Broke: Need
refrlg desperately! Pleue • call 8•17-73!5, tank )'OU!
FREE TO YOU
Mera, 85c per rt. lu:rury appotntments, put· 1206 N. Harbor, S.A. ./ FULL CAGE: Fait & tires, :ow mllC!!.
Water/elec Incl, Spar bldg ting rreen, hobby shop, '* 531-8105 * Powerful. Looks 1d. Runs $2795
shed ava!I. 5-15--8148 much more. * 17' SANTA FE Travel a:d. Must Sell! Askinit $5TS 9625 Garden Grove B\vd,r
Dogs 182.5 I========== I CALL 830-3900 Trailer Hydraulic brake•. or Ctr. Eve1: 642-3776. 537-7777 Cail Collect
-~--------Aircra ft 9100 --:w=""r=L"'l.,_I,,,...--1 Nu tire• & w11.ler tank. Very SAND Bugay 95% comp\., I ·.--------~ WIRE Fox TcJTier Pups -ant 0 ve n Clean S700 Cash. 897-6410 have all parts to comp!., $125 69 F IAT 85() coupe, gold,
Ch. sire & dame. Show FLY Relractable-lull l .F.R. COSTA MESA ,69 15, Field & Stream im-or Belt, Sac! &42-3047. 22,000 ml., rad. A~/FM-SW-
quality. Ch. sire at stud. Bonam.a., Fully inliured, 24 Local 1pace1 available now! mac. Sip• '· 1850. Phone HOO MB-492.7~~.· 120 E, Portal, SC . 894-6632. -hr 1chedullng. 644-4565. If you are serloua about buy. ,,.,
---·-. inf' a mobile home., .Now's 833-3710. lmp0rtecl Autos _ * POODLE puppies $15. 3 =========,1 ----:-:::=::-::---1 '67 FIAT 850
males, 2 females, No small Mobile Homes 9200 the ~AY,t0HARBOR Trucks 9SOO AUSTIN
. BEAUTIFUL » Germa.n children, pis. 2965ni TelT)' * REPO * MOBILE HOMES -c;..----,..-:::::--1·--..;....:..;....:...:.;.:..c.. __ 4 speed, radial tlres, dlr.
Shepherd. i,; short hair ' ~R~d~.,~La==gu~n~•-"-'~"~· ~--1·-Ba"·• St, (at Harhor) STRIKE POWER '69 AUSTIN MfERICA: (TOC 558). \Vilt finance prl· ' u c e • 9 c 'U;J llC Auro, lo ml. Xlnt cond. $1400. t •· «• '"52 or ,, .• Pointer puppies. Black wit h BEAUTIF L AK reg 6 eneral, 24X43, D!11h--Costa ~!esa. 541).9470 va e par..,, .,..,....,,
Sale1, Service, P arts
lmmediale Delivery,
All Models
J1rtuport
)hn ort~
3100 \V, Cout HV.'Y., N.B,
&12-9405 540-1764
BEsr offer! 67 Red MGB
GT, overdrive, Af.1/FM
radio, chrome w!re wheels,
Shl!.rp! 6"4U743 aft 5 P?-.f.
2485 Tu1Un, CltI Ian ma rk 1 n gs, Call Shellie pups, 5 wk1 old. Toy washer, awning. skirting. We have a KO<>C. stock of :~ewi.,:675-;7;364=· ======I 494-6811,
548-4916 l0/L1 collies, Sable & white. Set in "HWllington By the Mini Blktl 9275 1970 GMC Camper trUcks.1' 1_-_-_-_-_-_~_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_;: ---------
titt•, new pe.lnt, AM/FM.\
ju1t like new, can be see~
at 2089 Harbor Blvd., o
phone 64~1982, ~am to 6pm
'69 911E, leather inter ,
sunroof, elec wlndow1, tac
air, FM rad, cu1tm blu,
Mu1t see! $6900 673-6002.
SAAB
Au thorized Dealer
Sales • Service e Partl
Sonet Coupe1 in Stock
Oran1te County '1 Newe1t Dlr.1
COAST IMPORTS
>19-0726. Sea", JlepJ 115. $8•11. <• Buy now. h<a l tho prioe AUSTIN HEALEY OPEL
FREE to qual, home tncd yd GOLDEN 63281 BONANZA 4 HP minibike, raise, Al.lo Camper combin. JAGUAR of Oranre County Inc. •"""'hi• ,. odu1t apr . Joy AU STIN AME RICA ------1200 female poodle 1thots id RETRIEVERS • 8X28 Nashau, Under $1000 Indian Runabout go-ce.rt, a tiont: anO Ull!d truckll, 1970 Opel, xln l cond. Low · W. Pacific Coa..1t Hwy.
watch doll', loves children. AKC ** n4/53USB8 (#KB12471. Needs work, $80 togelher. UNIVERSITY S&le•, Service, Parts JAGUAR miltas:e, l owner. Call a!t 4 642-0406 • 5'6-4529
539-7181 1011s • 10 Mo'• 1R1SH sETIER. CHAPMAN B62.-2860. Immod l•ta o.uv.., HEADlj)UARTERS PM 5484095' · '70 Subaru Wa9.
BEAUTIFUL ~~ German male, AKC, must tell! MOBILE HOMES CO CART, 9 HP OLDSMOBILE All Modeb The only aulhortzed JAGUAR Excellent condition. (784.ASJ
Shepherd 1,~ short hair Lovable, trained, ~18-2988 ~ ~4i~r~:;;, s:. * ~~~:is * cka.lrr in lb• eatln Harbor PORSCHE dlr. Will take trade or fin
pa inter puppies blk w/tan German Shepherd Puppies 2850 Harbor Blvd. ARa. ,63 PORSCHE ance private party, 494-7744 kl" s "" '916 2314 San-h * BY OCEAN: Family Prk. ••-CompJo• mar .. g · ....,,......, SlO eac Motorcycle• '""' Co11ta ~fc1a 5-10-9640 "' ta Ana Ave. 10/13 842-5107 w/pool. 12x62 Expando. Li. SALES 'S' coupe, Agoan Blue tinl1h.
IJ!• 7yr old Fox Terrier. brown It ADORABLE BASSET corner lot. w/dog run. By ............. 'Si Chevy half.ton, V-8, with Sl!RVICE AMIF~1. (JGE 9721
wht malee to rood adull J~OUND PUPS .'\KC Dana Point l\larina, Job I ... - - -• Parkdale camper w I I h 3100 W. Coa1t Hwy .. N.B. PARTS BILL YATES
home. &16-0338 **642-3956** Transl. Must Sell!! THINK refrigerator and 1love , 1pllt fi.12.94~ 540-171f BAUER
496-2381 rtm, otandard •hilt, 1loop1 • VOLKSWAGEN
CUTE kitten orange blk & Hors•• 8830 Triple Wide Cornell HONDA 4. License N77·345. Sl ,695.00. * 1960 Sprite * BUICK
w ht ca 11 co fe m a I e Hlllcrcit e Flamingo Ill Jll\l SLE~IONS IMPORTS, Best offer, 49+8629 IN 328.52 Valle Road
673-8693 10/13 CHESTNUT ParamouP! • un;><~al "FRIEDLANDER" 120 w. WARNER, SANTAI==="===="' COSTA MESA 83~~~:~~;~,;.';',.i
FREE Rats-!\fany different Barrington • Broadmoor ANA. BMW ¥.u E. l?th Street ~!ors Pleue call alter 2. 4 year old mare · good •how Continental e Siar 196t FORD. VS, automatic ---------1 _. &4S.n~ RARE FIND
64'2-442·1. 10/15 prospect, In training for General e HillC'rest tran1ml11ton, power steer-LEASE hunter jumper i .. pc_ 6T"a-6172 1 b k 1 '61 JAGUAR 3 8 •-•a 356A Porsche SpeMster ,. (4l Adorable, ~;Siamese kit· v CHAPMAN ng, power ra es, a r con-· ,,..-u n, Front Bumper. SSO. ~· (ens, 7 wks, w/blue eyes. ENGLISH • Western BS¥ MOBILE HOMES d itionlna with H J way '71 VW BUG Mlchel!n tires i ood ct>nd. Orla;!nnl . No Dlnri Ever. ~ !t1.l2355 10/13 mare, 8 yrs. jumps well, 12331 Beach Blvd ., G.G. Campor Cruiser. Just the $895. 546-1713. MS-&404 l 8
I I * 67~1656 alt 6 * * 71415.30.2930 * thlni for the cycle' group, ONLY ----·-* at, *
r 3 Yr. old spayed emae Olr.54B.-9640or540-3510 l(ARMANN GHIA 1958 PDRSOiE. Yellow , ' Siamese cat, Chocolate Up. rRANSPORTATION 24X60 FLAMINGOS $49.00 Reblt/Erw. S900. "'·'750 10/ll Boats & Yachls 9000 Fully,,,;,, SAVE 12000 '65 CHEVY Yi Ton P.U. Por Monlh '63 VW GHIA •• llT>-0403 ••
.; Flulfy female kittens, 6 • Continental 24X60 (#2t22J AT '63 PORSCilE: NU : Pnlnt.
\\"kli old, v.·eaned. 646-4021 SCRAM· LETS $14,995. 6 cyl, stick, dlr. {S2'l475) \Ylll BILL YATES Convertlble. Recent engl~ BI k ' chrome I w h I a '
10/13 CHAPMAN take car ln trade or finance overhaul, hard to ftnd mo-A.\f/F'~t &38-1678, 646-8707
Si\f . mixed me.le do;r. \Veil MOBILI! HOMES private pa.rt,y. 546-4052 or VOLKSWAGEN de!. Radio, heater, 4 •P«d, '6·i PORSCHE SC. E1ec. iun-
lrained, Hsebrken. Owner ANSWERS 12331 Beach Blvd, G.C. 494-6811 . etc. . roof, chrrn whl1, AM/Fi\I
movlna;! 836-t493 10/15 * 714 /530-2930 * '!i7 11' ton Chevy, 8' bfd, 6 32852 Valle Road $1099 Weber carbs. $2MO, 839--5818
LAB \\'eimaraner mix blk Quaver -Cubit -11ouse -l\1081LE home space in cyl, 3 ,pd, step bumper, San Ju1.n Capl1trano CHICK IVERSON Did you ever think of llWIP-
TOYOTA ---'69 Corolla
Fastback 4 speed, Hu had.
loving care. Sacrl.f:ice1 (XSPI
497) TaJc& 1maU down, Will'!
tlnance pvt, pty, Call dlr.
Pal aft 10 am 54o.3100 or:
494·7500,
~-----1 '68 Corona
4 Door, a utomatic, radio,
heate r. (VHH S'l!ll
$1199
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
52852 Valle Road
San Juan Clpl1trano
1137 "'800/ 493-45U/499-2261 ....
.......151 , nlale 10 wks old 646-83ll alt Exhale -EXCHEQUER Bayside Village: Pr I v . '68 HONDA 305 on/oll road Ure1, 1,4 ton 837--4800/493-45111499-2261 VW tnr that White Elephant ln ~. l0/13 \Vhata l'!!tired 1upe rmarkot beach, heal<'d pool s, Bored out 333 cc. rear 1u1pcn1ton, trlr hitch. Authorized Dir. the attic for 60melhlf11: )'OU SACRIFICr.:. must sell, •66 WE need a g 0 0 d honle. employee Is known as. Ht'1 clubhouie, etc. $100 Per n!Q. Completely reblt $ 3 0 0. Xlnt runnlna oond . $1400. Sale• e Service e Part! 54g.3031 Ex!. 811 or 61 can useT Try the Tradm Toyota p$O or 0 t te r .
• '69 Coralla-U:ff,
deck, 17,000 ml.
Imel.
Playlull terrier pups, 7 an EXCHEQUER. Adults only, no pets. Call MS--9673 557-7315· All Model• to Choose From 1970 JlARBOR BLVD. Paradise column tn the DaJ. S@-7594. 985 Mission J)r,
weeks. )46-3870 l0/13 WHY NOT 673-1331 for info, 300 E. e 'fi6 Triumph BonnevUle '67 Ford Va n, alt cond, 40,000 Service ~fondl.Y 'tW 7:00 PM COSTA ME.9A Jy PUot Want Adt. Apt 3, C.~1.
TAKE A CRUISI?? Coe.st Hwy, NB Out of cra te 1969 ml '1, auto, 8 cyl. RAH, xln't Sat 'till Noon 1========="-'='=========-"'=========I
FREE Lon~ &: 11hort halrtd For Lea11 Or ON BEACH: \V/Pool & ~ ml'• • 67!)..6388 oond Trd 646--2698 COAST IMPORTS
kittens. box trained 7 'vks Charte r laundry. J7X35. 2 br/ba '69 450 Honda CB, 7000 mi'i, CA:-.tPER ~hell and
0
00.t for
old. 642--5536 10113 LOW WINTER RATES! Jiv'g rm, kllchcn, din'g r m, Xlnt cond, $700. OallUn pick-up truck p>d 01 Oranae ~unt)' Jnc,
CHOCO' •TE Tip S!an\eK' I 2 car cement drive. $3800, * M&-9M3 * cond .• •""t.oo alt. S:30 p.m. 1200 64~·,..~cU•ic "'~~liwy ...,, 40' \Vhceler C?ui.tt: Slttps 8. ~""' ~ ..._....,..,
cal, 3 yr old lemale, spayed, Make appt. NOW! OWNER: Must ull. "'ill linanet?. HONDA Slr350 19 .'J, 131-7255
968-8750 10/13 \Vkday1 ~9-8978 Evt1 6 wk· Pvt pty. &T5-033l Ll>w mileage, $675. ''6 Ford 11>; Ton 11take bed '69 BM\V 2002, AM/FM. Lo }( Yovr Dolly J.di¥ilf Gil/Je )(•
CUTE 3 mo. old mixed pup-ends: 827-1431. BAYSIDE VILLAGE * 673-1780 * good cone!. $400 firm. Cati mi's, PERFl:CTr 'Y" Aftording to th1 lf111. V'
py n<ts Jots of Jove & good 14. BOAT (cracker box) Newport's preslig!' mobile '68~ SUZUKI 305 cc ll73-T932. 675-ll275 To develop~f«Wednadoy,
home. 646-6690 10/15 w/hi po"1'.lr. Small block home park. 2 BR. 2 Sa. Scrambler. Xlnt cond. Must '68 Pod£e Van, 90 W.B. 6 cyl rwod wordstormpondlngtorunboi
FREE Kina: SI.le n'latlress &: Chevy cng. S750. See at Tex. ldcal adult spot. $l0,950. IU!ll. $395. C1ll f,4""4808 11tlck. lmmac ~.000 mi'•. l DATSUN ~Zodl~,~~:gn. It ~
box •Pri"ll'•· 645-0043 1.rt 11.00 Station 26874 Oriti • Owner 675-1642=~--ti '68 HOND"-_ 175cc Owner. Trade. 646-:M98. 1---------2Glft J2C-•2 Up
' 10/15 Hwy. San J uan Capistrano. PERFECT Nu lop-find, ms. ltARD to itt '54 :"ord ~ton $ 3~ H ~ t!~
FREE couch neOOs covtr. 493-41M 12 x 57 In five Blar adult ** 842-4934 '** P.U. Xlnt. cond., $575. &UM MTSUN ,.-m .!illl'lfr.l!M ~ 6SRtloltwt
548-0807 10/15 17' Boston Whaler 100 &: 8 hp, park. No pets, Ideal loca· "·6!""'Y'°'A">'°<A'°H"A"'."'305""'."'e"1r:--;;U.c-,:cr: I 56-T0911. *~~=lly ffo.. ~~bel)r l!J:~~
CEl.tENT Edgings Xtra tanks, bait lank, deck. UOn In Costa f\tcsa. Ph. ~mbler lo ml., Xlnt 1~96~9~0-AT~su=N~P~lclt~-u-p-. .,.11.,400~ "Le d 1 Th Be h C'tl ,. =~ ~;i,:r :Jr.
540.7647 10113 rall, cover, trlr, clectrontc 6*-8612. cond. 675-4775 or be•t ofler. ti er n e ac I ti TCIY""'JI "°""'""'-" 70 y_ ~"",;."~'•:-·_1_2500...,.. . .,.6<2-00-,-...,...-:c--,, 1wANT: rent or buy 2 BR. •s,, BULTACO 2M cc. Gd for * ~3658 * ZIMMERMAN 11 N..,. '1 lndlco:tJ 7t c ... 1'2V
KITrENS To iood home. ;w;. Navy whal• boat. o~ .. 1 I t _, b ho . 2••5 H·R"OR BLVD. 12~ A2[gqJ '~""""" 0113 "" "' ll e muu. mo · ntc 1n 1treet or dlrL Extru. $595. 'GD Gtii1C ... whl Drive ... ,.. P l ~LoN ,•JY0\11" 7J S. 497-1.138 1 ('ng w/mnorina. Mu1t be ocean pk. 12' •:id<' or ex· MQ..5\98. l..o•ded1 * $2995 540-6410 14Good •'8""9 74 1r
Jo"REE Fertlllzer 20 311 sold th i11 week-make oUtt. pando ok. 67~7638 "·6!""°H"o°'N'°'D..,A-.~305~Sor~•-"'°"b.,.lo"r • Aft 6: ~ * ,66 1600 ROADSTER li~,. ~~=«I ~: ~~ght
Cypre•s St., 54G--0(!25 10/13 -"~J>._9111_3_. ___ ~=~ 1967 SUN Valley l\tob~le Nu Un1. Xtra Chrome. 17Good A7(oi.c1"'lrf 11Ywt
FREE kitten: Beaut i ful 1 Ca_noo, good sh11pc $200: '65 Home, 12x40, 1 BR. Call aU S-C~. ** 962.7198 J1tp1 9510 ~;~ !:6r1°" n~utu,.
bl!1ck kitten. 962-3285 10/13 51\ 8HP Johnson >A'/tank 5 pm. &i2"-65ll -4 1peed, f'3dlo, hl!.ater , dlr. 20f'Off\lnl 3QJoy ICI0-
2 B'""•'"'"E lcma.I~ ct ts. S150 lo hn. Ensi,&n Yacht e SPACE f,\11.Uablt for '59 NORTCA"'I 630 twin, ex-1970 All :F'lbel"ll'IUI Jctp. (RUCSSl) Wiii lAkt car In U:O 21 S1ettllnt 51 ~ II 01 ~ =:-10113 s. ·;::,:l'.o'•'=.,._""='"""1._~~~ ~ Ad u!'· _ P'" Ne·~ etllrnt cond!tion, $ 4 5 0 , Tacoma wheel1, pad d I c tn.de or finance private par-~ ~rJ"t:r. ',', jj ~ ~.,;~,._. ~ 1;~ ~ t:", .•• ~,.., ....,._ RUNABOUT -1kt boa!, ff;;: 54g..7(21'"' ...... ~l~? !lre.t. Chev ... peed, Cbtv. I M5-~0."i2or 4!H-t!lt _s.,. ..., ..., .. .,._, ... "'.,. -""""
PARAKEETS CuUs. m•ny extru, fair prlc:o. KAWASAK I '68 125cc. A·l brake•. """' cal tank . ...!· :._ • 2 ... "' n~l'J' .!i5 A 15T..,..,1•
&48-4769 10113 392--1838 I.ft 7 pm, 543--tU~ TU'l.EO of tna,1 old fun\l tutt! oond SJOO• or bt•t otter Posltractlon. P"u1l roll cage. '70 DATSUN v1!o ~ I itt., ~r~ ~~fwf l"'"i'.'l=" 11'• re11Jy Mt that hard ~7236 or 1 I M-427 I Rtcently •xhlblted Anaheim ~ 21 N"" ~e r,.,,_., es veo.i,.. Adorablt'klttenstrtetol{ood da)'I. 10 replace. Jut! >A'lll~h thr ' CtinventlorJ Cenlt!t'. O\.·cr ·I DoorScdan,u1cdl60JAVA) / /\A11~·11 29,1111 .!9 1<1111C1t 191o1i...t
home. MM127 =•-•"'•'°· ~H"o~v"s"~"BO=A°"T"'.-x"'"1-n"'1. fl.1n1tture 1 nU•re.11n.lt4!0Us I '67 WAS I 3SO I seooo lnvoattd. Beil offer dlr. \\'Ill lake tnu1e 01· fin-• \;; lt,r. 11 I 3CCeuld 60 To trO Now ntf IUN NEV'lm SETS on lh·o aboard, Slip Avail. column• ln tht Oasalfled I"° l·lonepowet $400 cuh OV01' $~. MU~ SEl.Lll .. nee prlv1!e 04r1y, c. 1 l .1:~' :n(2i0ood. @ Adttnt ()Nig~f
Claul!led'a 1ctlon powtr . *" MS-UM * Secuon. BruC9 548-4478 I 541.o:m ev111. LM~>-<~O-o;~52!_o~r~•~'4~-6!!!!111~ ....... _ _! __ _!:::===============!:!~!'!!!!!_ ___ _
'
L
za GAILY PILOT Tuttd.ly, O<tobt< ll, 1'170
TilAHSPOitlA'i'lun TRANSrvRTATION 1 RANSPORTATION · ·-lmpomd Autos
TOYOTA
-lmpomd Autos -Imported Autos .~
VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN -------------
LEASE
71 VW BUG
ONLY
$49.00
~r r.1on1h
'68 vw
Sedan
'66 vw
Sedan
Radio. (RUl'081 l AT R&d.io. (\VAK 0:20)
:~~~s~1!~~ .~1588 l__ $1045 ·
s.~"fo.~"'~.f.~:.., Harbour V.W. Harbour V.W.
1--83-7-4S00 __ 1_4!M_5l_l_l_4 ... _2261_·_r1871l BEACH BL. 84Ut35 18711 BEACH BL, 8424435
HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH [flOIYIOJT!A! --c,6=9-=-vw=--1-·6s-vw-Bu9
'71 COROLLAS AUTO MA TIC N""'' """ & water.
HERE NOW Black with black interior, IYXR 'fW)
Wagons.,-2..Dta, Coupes economy 11peciaJ,-will fin-$-1199
Auoomalks & 4 Speeds anoe prlvato party. Lio. BILL YATES DEAN LEWIS XEU-224.
1900 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 $1499 VOLKSWAGEN
BIIL MAXEY CHICK IVERSON s.n"'i:.::•:!:.=.. vw 837-4800/4934511/400.22Gl ITIOIYIOITIAI 5!!>3031 Ext. 66 or 67 '64 vw • '"""'""""' ..._.... """""'" lll70 HARBOR BLVD.
11281 BEACH BLVD. COsrA ?i-1ESA Gleaming white, with red !n-
Hunt. Beach 147-1555 terior, can finance private
&m!N o!O>ut ""7 .... Bdl '62 vw P'U'l.Y Lk$799EJ
VOLKSWAGEN
'66 VW BUG
Competition orange w i t h
black interior. UOH144
$1099
CHICK IVERSON vw
549--3031 Ext. 66 or 67
l.970 HARBOR BLVD.
<:"STA MESA
Convertible
Radio. (SKU891) $499
Harbour V.W.
187ll BEACH BL., 842-4435
HUNTINGTON BEACH ---~~~-'68 VW BuCJ '62 VW .luCJ
CHICK IVERSON vw
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
'63 vw
Sedan
Great transportation buy!
(ASL634)
$875
TRANSPORTATION ,..
fer used cars 6 trucks Jua1
call ua for free etUmatt.
GROTH CHEYROIIT
A.sic for Se.lea Manaa:er
lS2l1 Beach Blvd.
Hunt.inatcm Beach
847..eo87 KI 9-3331
LATE MOOEl
CAOILlACS
WANTED
& ANY OTilER
LATE MODEL
GENERAL MOTORS CAR
SEE CHUCK TRAPP OR
SIU. MAC CRACKEN
Nabers Cadillac
2600 HARBOR BLVD.,
Costa r.resa--
540..9100 Open SUnday
WE PAY CASH
FOR YOUR CAR
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 54(' .. 1200
Used C•r1
WE BUY
CARS
9900
~~
2100 Harlxtr Blvd. 645-0466
AVANTI
e R-3: WITH PAXTON
SUPER-CHARGER. e
$2150. * * 675-52.58
BUICK
e BUICK '68 RIVIERA
FACTORY
CADILLAC CONTINENTAL MUSTANG PONltAC --CADILLAC LINCOLN ConUnental '69 4 •e '65 Mustarc, 289, kpd, e Pont. '67 t Pa11-Wag.
1..!67 COUP& O.VILLE •_ctr. llLm1nt condl!Jon. Vinyl good eand. FACTORY
FuU power, factory 1ir, Plldd. root, leather lnterior, air. Phone 962--0032 alt 4 pm AIR CQNDJTIONING
«I .... ""'"'" "'"''"" ..... "'""'· pwr .... & bkn, pwr OLDSMOBILE Dix. cataltna S14tlon Waeon. eo AM-FM racllo tilt .,,... windows, 6 way seat, tape v.s · p0-1
•·-w~J, power' .. A--........ ~·. 1tereo, Wt wheel. $4,195, Phd---------pow•~b~c ~· "u"to ~~~" ;:ui .. ~ .cntlnel, ~di:. da.Y• &'J3..T022. n It• s • Oldsmobile '67 91 nd-.,·--1
• .1:..~ .... ""1u··1 ~· 548-7873 tR ., r., w w...,..,
mer. Very JO"W mileage. · . A CONDITIONING wheel, electric v window,
(TI'B567) nus clean convertible has etc, (TSA..273)
SALE $3111 PRICE CORVAIR IUU ''"'''.· tilt .... ..,,.... SALE $2111 RICE Orange County's La~1t wheel •. radlO &. hea~er, wb.ite. I Oratlie Counc,y' Lariiest
SCtcx:tfon of Qua11ty ~iHUiC1 '64 Corv~ ~ ;;d, wall tirl'fl. Very-~ condl· -Setectloflof QUility caamaca
Naben CadUlac OverhauJed eng, ~st oHer. :0~~~~~~!~ ~:~ NaHrs Cadillac
2600 HARBOR BLVD., · CalJ after S pm: 8J6..0446. SALE $1666 PRICE 2600 HARBOR B(VD.,
540.9100 Coeta ::= suooay CORVETIE Nabers Cadillac 540-9100 C..ta ~;:Sunday
• Cad. '64 Cpo. do VIiie 2600 HARBOR BLVD., ---069 G T-0-
FACTORY e Corvette '70 Costa Mesa . • • •
AIR CONDITIONING Sting Rey S40-9lOO O?!n Sunday 13,000 miles. Automatic, pow.
Full leather int.e.rior. Cruiae FACTORY '70 OLDS Toronado $4,950. er stttrl.ng, landau top. buck.
control, tilt wheel. Automa-AlR CONDITIONING Air<ond., a11 pwr. A.\i/FM, et seats, radio. (YCN 065)
Uc drmmer. Full power, An Showroon·rrrestt rasttiack wtlfi tape deck. Green w/beire $2699
exceptional va1ue. (I\VUi73) removeable Panels 350 V-3 landau top. 557-461.l, txt 4· BILL YATES
SALE $1111 PRICE rngi~. Finished in spark· Wkdays before 5 pm.
N L-C d"lla ling Ermine white w/plusii '69 CUTLASS Suprtme, vleyl auwrs a I c metalli~ blue vinyl interior. ht, 2 Dr. air, p/s, p/b, VOLKSWAGEN
2600 HARBOR BLVD. AU optiol'lll incl. power steer., auto. Best oiler. eves &. 32852 Valle Road
C0$TA M'ESA brakes, electric windows. wk.nds ~ San Juan Capistrano
OPEN SUNDAY Hydro auto trans. Stereo '55 Olds 88 4--dr, stick. 63,000 837-4800/493-45ll/499-2261
1968 EL DORADO • Fully multiplex & just 7800 ca.re-mi's, 1 fam onr, xtra clean, l::0::::::=::::':=====-1
e q u l pp e d , all-leather in-fully driven miles. l756ASQ) nu paint, runs good •
terlor. Xlnt terms & interest SALE $5555 PRICE 548-6859, 246 Cabrillo SL. CM.
rate. Pvt pty. S4150. Phone Nabers Cadi"llac '66 Toronado, new tires, 549-0377, 8 lo 5 only, aak for [.()ri 2600 HARBOR BLVD. shock!, exhaust. Very clean,
COSTA MESA pvt pty, 6~388· '69 SEDAN de Ville-Green
w/wht v1,y1 top. Fully ,CoioiiPO'E"iN'i'StJN.-c;D;;;_f\;;Y;;:;-m-I _~P~L:Y~M~O~U~T'..'.H~-equipped, S5000. 549-0165, '63 CORVETTE Convert, 327,
• '68 El Do"do • c""m body, Real Sharp! '68 SATELLITE WAGON Fully equipped, lo ml $1275. 645--0439
RAMBLER
'63
• American
$4995 642-0900 --------
• Cad. '69 Sod. de Ville
FACTORY DODGE
Radio, Heater, Automatic. Automatic, PQY.'Cr steering, <IQY440)
(~K 108) dlr. Will take car
in trade or finance private $445
'68 DODGE RT '""ly. 5404052 or ....... u.
FULL PO\VER +factory air, PONTIAC
Low miles. Must Jiquidatel---------1 Harbour v.w.
Immediately. lst $2099 buys_ '64 G T 0
XEU'°' • • • ....... l.8ID BEACH BL. 8424435 CHICK IVERSON 4 Speed, radio, beator, 8 traok HUNTINGTON BEACH
VW stereo, dlr. American mags, ::;;::;::=:~===='I
new tires, VS w/3 carbuer· T BIRD
BAUER
BUICK
IN
COSTA
MESA ;
"Specializing.
• ID
Quality"
_r
GOOD
VALUE
USED
CARS
'62 SKYLARK
' ;
VI, t ulorntlit, r1dio, ht1ftr,
powtt al••rinQ, pow1r wh1·
dow1 , ftctory t ir. Only
-44,000 111ilt1. -.Jwat ill'lll'l ttu•
l•t•. !HMT J21l
$795
'62 INVICTA
l
J
4 speed, radio, heater. dlr. Radio, -i speed, excellent con.
{XOT 628) "''ill ·ake trade dition. dlr. (BWM881) \Vill
or finance private party, f In an c t private party.
5464052 or 494.sgl.]. 5464()52 or .f94..6fill. Harbour V.W. AIR CONDITIONING
Full power, vinyl top, strafo
bucket seats, chrome sport
\Vhtt.ls! AM I FM stereo,
power door locks; tilt & tele.
scopic steering wheel. Load.
ed w/extras. {XDL584)
SALE $3111 PRICE
Orange County's Largest
AIR CONDITIONING
Full power, vinyl top. Luxur-
ious cloth & leather Interior.
Dual comfort gcats. Stereo
multiplex, power door locks,
tilt & telescopic wheel, twi·
light sentinel, power trunk
opener, etc., etc. 1065AGC)
SALE $4777 PRICE
Orange County's Largest
Selection of Quality Cadillacs
549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 ators, completely rebuilt en-•
1970 HARBOR BLVD. glne. (HSX531) \Viii take 4 Door h1rdtop. VI, 1uhim1·
========'=I trade or finanee private par-'67 Thunderbird, Landau top, tic, r1dio, h11t1r, pow1r
ATTENTION BUYERS
Let us help you find a
car at no cost to you.
Sellers also welcome.
NEW VW BUG
$55.89 pr. month 18711 BEACH BL., 842-4435 Nabers Cadillac
2600 HARBOIJ. BLVD.,
Costa Mesa
FIREBIRD ty. ~2 or 4M-Mll. 4 dr, low mil. has every. 1f11ri119, power br1k11, 1ir ,
thing, good tires. $2000. condifloriing, Noni nicer. ~ 70 PONTIAC GTO, Blue. 2 494-4.105 or 494-8486. I INEI041.
· Call now 642-4431
Auto. Referral Service
1970 VW BUG, Xlnt cond.
$1795, klw mileage, mu1t
sell. 67S-1192.
$147.78 down includes
tax & Lie. Open End
VW lEASlhG
AT
HUNTINGTON BEACft
Selection of Quality Cadillacs
540..9100 Open Sunday
'68 Firebird 350-17,000 mi, 4-dr. owner. H yd r omatlc c,66~T~-B~l~RD~~Co-nv-.• ~.-~-.-.-~-.I
spd, loaded! Beaut. $2000. w/console. AM/FM stereo.
642-6747 or 646-3773 P/B, PIS. Ll.ke new rub. lo\l,r mil. 1 owner. $1295.
I ----------I =========I ber. Ram air w l t h _4::97.:..-.::1850=.::0 ':..o'""c:-:"TI;:92:,:..: ___ I
tachometer in hood. 400 cu. DAILY PU.OT DIME - A
in. 360 hp. Me.g wheels $3395 -LINES cost you just pen-CA MARO FALCON
642-5804 nles a day.
$595
'64 WILDCAT l •
'6& VW CAMPER, gd cond.
S1800 or best offer.
CHICK IVERSON vw
:-1910-HARBOR-BLVD.
'68 VW Bwi. Blue finish with
\vhlte interior. Air condition.
Ing. Heavy duty rear tires, a
really good buy $259!1. Lie.
146 BEL. Chick Iverson
Inc., 445 E. Coast Hwy.,
N.B. 673..0000 Ext. 53 or 54.
'68 VW oonvl. Outstanding
coriit. Best offer. 543=8458 or
673-6830.
Nabers Cadillac
2600 H.ARBOR BLVD.,
Costa Mesa
'6!!-Camaro RS, air, disc 1961 FALCON Stationi,;=========-=========I
brakes. PIS, 350 eng. Blue Wagon, good trans. car. Used Corl 990GUsed Cars 9900 4 Doot h•rd!op. Vt, autoll'lt·
wl vinyl top. $ 2 900 .1 J$22~5~. ~De~"'~"~da~b~l•~·=Call:~AJ~1'.lroi;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;:;;,1 tit. r•dio, he1t•r. pow•r ' - -* ~938~
COSTA "MESA Som-SJOO Open Sunday 64.J.-""5931. 6:30 pm, 536-1855 1ft11inq, pow11 brtlit1, fot·
tory eir. Extr• tl1tn. !EID·
'64 VW Bus. Engine rebuilt
and guarantee. CI u t ch
transmission. Tires in ex-
cellent shape. Special at
$999 See 83130. c h i c k
Iverson Inc .. 4G E. Coast
Hwy., N.B. 673--0900 Ext. 5.3
"' 54.
1970 BUICK Skylark Custom
4 dr. H.r. Sedan. PIS,
P/B. air·cond .. radio. wh.
w/b\ue int. $2995. Contact
Jean fttonley at Cadillac
Controls, Mon. thru Fri.
64G-2491, Ext. 222
'68 CAMAR0·8 cyl, good tOI)
cond. Pvt ply, $1575. 112 \V. _ FORD
'68 BUG-LT blue wlblk int,
Aftt I FM, only 24,000 ml.
Orig owner. Immac. Sl400
646-8613.
'63 vw
Kombi
'65 vw
BUG
American mags widt tire!!,
custom metalliC paint \\' "h
beautilW lace work. YPU.
001.
Radio, (IZX482> Several other customlz..ed
----'65 .Le Sabre
Coast Hwy, N.B. 548-5551 --
CHEVELLE
e '64 CHEVELLE: P/S.
Auto, V-8. f.1ake Offer! * ~7086 •
$ VW to choose fron1 2 Door. Loaded! Flawless con. 1289 CHICK IVERSON d;iion. d~. Mu.t .. u. Wilt CHEVROLET
TOP DOLLAR
to"
CLEAN USED CARS
See Andy Bro\\•n
THEODORE
ROBINS FORD
:2Xl60 Harbor mvd. VW finance. 494.7744
'67 vw BUS: csrr.t BUNK W/STORAGE. XI.NT 549--3031 Ex!. 66 or 67 1966 Buick Special 2 dr cpe. '64 CORYmE
COND. Harbour v.w. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. R&H, PS. air cond. In xlnt "327", 4 !!peed, AM I FM,
Costa ltiesa
642-0110
67~ ~.....,. * cond. Pri part)'. $1275. ---~·:,-~~-~=-I WANTED 549-046-Brand new wide <>vals, C<>m· '66 FAIRLANE WAGON
*"57 SUNROOF -R&.H l871l BEAOI BL. 8424435 :::i. pletely original, all this Vet
ttblt eng, good mech. ' liUNTINGTON BEACH '1•11 pay top &>Ila~ for )IOUr '67 RIVIERA: NU polyglass, needs is a new home. osc. Automatic, 90wer steering, * $295. 4944925 * '66 vw squareback this one VOLKSWAGEN today. Call air, F/P, 52,000 m.i. 279. air cond, stereo tape, dlr. 1-~~~=----,--1 sparkles, red with spotless and ask for Ron Plnchot. $2700. * 5464475 $l 399 lTAY 279) Will take car in
e '64 VW, Xlnt transporta· white interior, 8,000 mile on 549-3031 Ext. 66-67. 673·0900. '70 SPORT WAGON • Like trade or finance private par.
lion. $450 or Best offer. rebuilt tngine xlnt e '67VWSUNROOF e new,ps/pb,a!r.$3500. CHICK IVERSON fY.5464052or494-68ll.
962-l782· throughout and priced at Pristine condition 545-9419 or 6#-0637 VW '69 FORD Ranch Wagon.
e 1970 VW 9 PASS I BUS. $1499 Lie YWF 682. Chick e 833-1129 e '69 RIVIERA \Vht • w/blk· Auto: fac air PIS -
Sam• •• N•w 8 000 mi I·--" '"" 4'5 E Coa... 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 ~1·-lrad~. XI"! --•. """' ... ' . • .... _. ... , " . '" '68 VW BUS. Xlnt cond. New int. F/P. Air. Other Xtras. """=-"' ""'"' --.: * 675-3151 Hwy NB ~ -.,, 53 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Sa•. •~so. 837 "007. •"'""' " · • ,,,,,......,,......,"' ' tires. Be-st offer over $2000. $3895. 837-1789 * .. .,., ..... o• 54 ---------COSTA MESA •1963 SUNROOF VW -w/w ~,---· --,'""',_.-~--494-4791 '67 RIVlERA: NU polyglass, ~~""'=o--~~-~ 1962 Fo.rd station wagon. R&
tires, r &h. ~;580hl,2e, very Large Selection I========== ·air. F/P, S2,000 mJ. '63 CHEVY, good body. Like H. automatic. 1.fechanics 1-='=~=':::"·c'l=l395:,;.;; . ...:-oc..,_c-·~-VOLVO S2700. * 546-4475 new 4-spd f.1uncie traru; & SPf'('iaJ. Phone 968-5214 after
e '58 V\V Bus-Good cond, new Of VW Campen, linkage. Also good 283 6 P.M.
h V K b• w/quad. ALL OR PART. _:_..:.:.;:::_ __ ~----II
eng, I.rans & elute . ans, om IS, L.rl.ILrl.rU ___ c_A_D_l_L_LA __ c__ _ .. _,,__...,_______ 1967 Fairlane 4 dr. Hard to
$600. 9624573 Buses, New & Used find model. Xlnt. CQnd. e '66 VW, Good Cond. THINK e CADILLAC '68 '64 Malibu, Chevellc 2 dr. ht. 675-4554 · origina1 owner.
Many Extras * 847-8870 Immediate Delivery ~ 'VOLVO' EL DORADO V8d,l au1heo, ,pr. st .~ pr;.,.!;• '68 STN \Vgn LTD Country
CHICK IVERSON LVO sn CTOR ra 0, a'" '"'· ~·,. '63 vw, Xlnt cond, comple!e FA Y 644-1155. Squire, 10.pass, fac airtc,
mainten11.nce history, $650 VW , AIR CONDITIONrNG 37,000 mi's $2450. 646-6672 , "f IEDLANDER" Beautiful Firemist linish w/ '66 CAPRICE. 2 dr. Po"·er firm. 54>-16<> "'9-3031 ~t. 66 o• 67 R t . & b k A. \"I ., '57 FORD W""o". Good .,.. ~ padded top, Full leather ex· s cenng r s. ir. y 11 e, '66 VW Bug. good rondition & 1970 1-lARBOR BLVD. vinyl lop. Like ne1v $1699. mech. cond. $l2S, 572 B. 137D IEACh {HWY. n1 lcrior. Full po\\'ere<i door Plumm"r St C-t Mo.• good price! COSTA MESA 642-6115 ... " ~ .. a ~ .....
• 545-3182 * B93-?56G • 537-6824 Jocks, trunk <>pener, ligi,t ..::,::..,:.:::c=~-~--'69 J\'IACH I 351 cu in 4 '64 VW Bug metallic coppt>r NEW-USED-SERV. sentinel, stereo mulliplex, '63 n!EVY Van. Great run·
'63 V\V, rebuilt engine, new finish chrome rear wheels l\1ichclin tires. Sold nc\Y & -ning cond. S650 or best of. speed. Air. tape deck. Xlnl '
I t h I il -• 1 -------. ~ oond. 642-8858 aft 6. I cu c . ow m ea~. "-'n runs like new sale price this • ..._....._...... serviced by us. (UTI..582) fer. Rob 536-1229.
r-!II. $750. 5.3G-33~4 "·eek $1199. Lie ORK 717. SALE $3999 PRICE ,1 '63 Chevy Impala Conv: '66 GALAXIE 500-Pslpb, fac
'GO vw. Green, new tires, Chick Iverson tnc., 4.15 E. VOLVO CLEARANCE p p B p w· AIC air, tape deck. Very good IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Orange County's Largest /S, I , I In, . nd Lo . 642-2065 radio, motor & body perfect Coo.st Hwy., N.B. 673-0900 Selection of Quality Cadillacs "Clea~st Chevy in Tov.1n!", _00 __ . __ m_•_. -----11
condition. Looks great! S600. ext 53or 54. '70-STATION WAGONS Nabers Cadi"llac $650. 675-5023. '32 Model "A" Roadster
2264 Placentia, CM. 548-3113 'e~1969=~V\=V~C~A~M~P=E=R~:~Xl~nt '70-SEDANS-2 &. 4 Doors e '57 CHEV E Chevy P owered "10-1800 E CPE 'lenn llARBOR BLVD., Y-R D For an ad to sell around Cond. Ma1"' Xtras! ?.fake · ........., Gd Tra rtati' r--646-4665 aft 6 & wknds. ·v '70-164 SEDAN5--4 Speeds Costa Mesa nspo on .......,
the clock, dial 642-.5678. Olfer. 842-7257 DEAN LEWIS 540..9100 Open Sunday $95. ** &12-5539 '&I Falcon C<>nvt·Auto, r&h.
• C d ,66 C d V'll '59 CHEVY: Rnl. GD. new top. GClOd cond., $675.1 Imported Cari 9600 Imported Autos 9600 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 a • pe. e I e tram I car. S175. 642-352'6. 546-8543 wkdys aft 5 , 1l1imiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiijjjjjjjjjjjjiiiijil e 1960 VOLVO S44·Recond. FACTORY Ei07 Irvine NB.
IOW
II COSTA MESA
'71 HONDA s:.
e Al• COCMA"D Plt.Otff IMOINI e P•ONf WMllL D•IVI e "°"'. AllnTID II.,_ ADJUITI .. PllOffT DISC
lltAKIS
eng, ~w paint. clean. SZ15. AIR CONDITIONlNG ---~· -----LINCOLN
675-2785 Full power, all leather inter. • '59 Cht'vy, Good cond. $350 I------
=========' I ior. tilt & telescopic y,•heel. or best ofler. 1966 LINCOLN Continental:
Ant' Cl • 9615 Al\1 I Ff.1, light dimmer. 646-!Kl67. Llte/blu. Gd. Cond. Lots of iques, assici _ (SBB7141 4 to choose from. '65 Chevy SS.283, auto, pis, Extras. $2000. 6~ '32 Model ''A" Take your pick, only... extra clean, runs good. Sacl:::=::====c--'=='11
Ford Roadster SALE $2333 PRICE $699. 968-4691
Chevy Powe red Orange County's Largest '51 Chevy 2 dr, Good tires,
646-4665 aft 6 & w knds Sf'\C"Ction Quality Cad\llncs Runs good. S150. W i 11 '70 1'1AVERICK. Like Ne11,;!
MUST SELL.! J-lardtop ·29 Nabers Cadillac bargain. 5-!8-54-05 aft 5· Lo ml, Sheu star ion ·I
?>10DEL-A. Truck. 2600 HARBOR BLVD., 1963 Chevy BclAir S.pass !Goldenrod & PC Hwy)
* 54~24116 * Costa f.1csa ,wg~"~· ~F~u~ll~Y~"l~u~ip~ped~,~incl= II =1
':'
50=;· ~~;::;~~==II _ S4Q.9100 Open Sunday -:.air. Xlnt cond. 673-509'3
Raco Cars, Rods 9620 '68 c,d. El Do.ado 14.885. CHRYSLER MERCURY
'65 GT0-427 Chev, Cragers. Speed cont .. auto lights. FJ\.1 '68 C lo p k
Headman, LakeY.'OOd, Ht. !i.lt'reo, 557-16ll, ext 4· '67 CHRYSLER 300 ronv. 0 ny Qf
J ac ker a• X1ras. $1600. ~'~V~kd~•;.Y•'-'bo~lo"°"7-5"p"m".~~ Red "'fblk lop, air cond. 9 Pal!engcr Wagon. Full J)O\V·
646-1375 e Cad. '67 Convertible full pwr. buck. &ta, niany er + air conditioning. dlr.
FACTORY xtraa. Pvt, pty. ftfusl :.ell. MuU sell! (Xl.E S.l8l \Vlll
Autos Wanted 9700 AIR CONDITIONING 638--0650, t"-ke trade or linance:.I
run Jl(l\\'er, plush lull leathr.r =o=====--==== I _'::"".:..,-77..:"'::.·-~----
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR interior, sle~. tilt y,·hccl, COMET '65 Colony Park Sta, \Vag.
FOR TOP USED CARS door locks, light sentinel, FUii JWi't' & air cond. Gd
U }'OUr car 11 extra clean, etC"., t'fc. <VCU074l COMET con<!. Call 548-4765.
""""' linl. SALE $28N PRICE
BAUER BUICK Or~ County'ti l...8J"Rtst
23' E. 17th St. St-IC"ction of Quality cadillacs
MAVERICK
1964 Comet automatic. 6 cyl.
100.r. •Dool-Se<!'". 11., "'" MUSTANG
dio It heater. A fine econ-
1969 CHEV. MALIBU 396
f1tt. t i•, blotli: ¥invl top, 1p1rkling v•I·
low 1xttrior, IZKF5 971
$3195
1 ?70 9:1:.0.
2 dr. H.T. 9ttutiful 1old witli 1tnd1lwood
¥inyl top Ir lnl1rio r. Ftdory
tionin1. CZl277651
$3895
1ir c.ondi•
1970 OLDS CUTLASS
feel. t ir, pow1r 1l11r., 1t•r•O t1p1. popu·
ler 4-1p•1d, 1p1rklin1 rtd w/bletli ... in vl
top Ir butlitt ltth. 1#19]215)
$3295
1969 CAMARO
2 dr. H.T. V8, f1ctory eir, turbo hvdr•rn•·
tic. ett. Dirk g••v with .,.Jnvl top. !YOM
0721
$2895
1969 Pl YMOUTH GTX
Only J-4,000 l!'li. Gold with brown lop I
inte1ior, but••t 1t1h, rtdio, htr., powtr
1lt1r. -440 v.1. IYU-4 111 1
$2895
1969 FIREBIRD CONV.
Sp1rklin9 rtd with bltck t u1tom trim,
po~tr 1lt t rin q I fttlorv 1ir, !ZLH02ll
$2795
1967 MUSTANG 2 + 2
390 tn11 ., r1dio, h1tltr, powtr 1teer. E~·
c.tpliontlly nice lo-rnil••11• c.e r. fID9411
$1995
1969 PONTIAC CUSTOM S
J door herdlop. Fttlory t it, powtr 1fter-
ln11, turbo hydrtll'l•tic., 1ilw1r wit+i bltck
inltrior. IZOX612)
$2795
1968 CHEV. MALIBU
Unbt1it¥1bty bttut!ful. ll1ck w/blt tk in•
ftrior. VI, 1ulofll t lic., pow11 1fttrin9, low
11"1il11. lVtt7-4-4l
$2195
1970 MUSTANG MACH I
Fttlory eir, pow11 1tetri119, pow11 4'i1c.
brtk11. A Roll1·Rovc• trtdt with but
6,000 rnll11. 1011ACNJ
$3495
e MAXIMUM. IPflD 7S M,.M e UP to 4' MIUI "flllt ......... • ~AU«tltlll. t ... ..... s1395
,... 11• .._ Ctr ,..,..,.. .. LM:ll ~ fu a Lln!IM
-.JNIVERSITY
C..•• M... 548-ns; Nabers Cadillac lMPORTS WANTED
Orange Counties 2600 HARBOR BLVD ..
TOP S BUYER 54().9100 Open Sunday
omy , 1ransport.11Uon car. '66 ·MustanCJ
at SJ95. Firm. Call 8374239 Full po11.'er, air conditioning,
EI Toro. immnculate. dlr. 33,00J mil.
BILL l\IA..XEY TOYOTA
18881 Beach Bh·d.
H, Be3ch. Ph. R-47·"-'~"
Prioed .. u bolow blue book I R Q Y C A R V E R
1~;i;.~p~;:-:~.le CONTINENTAL -~"is~..:•' ... !.co:.s;ro..:· ... _'~;-~_"_"'_''_'_••_·11 11 ROLLS -ROYCE * "92-3S78 ;r, -·---'66 F11.s1btlCk 2+2 OLDSMOlllU
tlSO HAHOl ILW. COSTA MESA 540.9640
(
•
L
e CASll FOR CARS e
Running or not
5U-46r34 after 3 pm
·~ EL DORADO, 32.000:
1
• '!i6 CONT'L -4 dr, xlnt. 4.apd & Xlnl cond.
ml"s. All PQ'A-'er· Like l'IC\V. cond. Llhr, air, vtn, Ip., SUOCI or TRADE or OFFER
Call 5$7-9.\49. llM/(m. $187& 644-2859 llfl 7 * M().4187 *
292S HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA f.IESA
5·16·~ ......
$895
'65 FORD
F•irltne 500 i Dr. H.T., Yf, ·
1uto11"1tfic., r1dio, hetftr,
pow1r 1lttrin10 lll'lll'ltcul4t•
cir, ITIZl41l ·
$895
'65 OPEL
2 Door toup1. 4 ap1ed fttll••
ll'li11ion, redio end hteter.
! RGU0621
$695
'66 .CHEVROLET
M1libu 2 Dr. H.T. VI, 1uto-
rn 1fit lrtn111"1i11 ion, redio,
htiltr, power 1!ttrin1. be.ti· 1
lt nl t ufol!'lobilt. IYPWIJ?I I
$1295
• SPECIAL
OF TIIE
WEEK
'69 Mercedes Benz
Coupe Roadster
Fully tquip~d with 4 1ptH
ftt111minion, AM-FM r1dio,
power 1f1tting, t it coriditio.,._
inq, tft. Appx. 11,000 ll'lilt1 ,
811utiful beig1 1xftrior with
111turtl l•n inlt rior. Yo11
ll'IUlf ltl tnd 'riv t thil 9•t•
9tOUI C.tr.
PRICED TO SELL
BAUER
BUICK
IN
COSTA
MESA
234 E. 17th St.
COSTA MESA
548-7765
\
•
17
'·