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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-10-22 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17 • -' • • • .. •l :t. -' Three F e·et From Churc.h ' .· • 1 , - • ' ' ......... , .......................................................................................................... ·- Challlpion oi Evolution~ • • e1r I s error '-v Soviets Holding . --- !--U.S. Gene·rals -~ '·' • , From Wire Services i-'MOSCOW -An aircraft carrying two tf:S. Army generals "violated the air .pace" of the Soviet Union and is being ~d in lhe Amienian city of Leninakan, Moscow radio said today. :·The radio report said the U.S. Air Force Beechcraft U8 propeller driven plane carried four men -the two generals, a U.S. Air Foret major and a Tiirkish colonel on a night from Turkey. .. The two generals are Maj. Gen. t.dward C. D. "Pony" Scherrer, 57, of Ahawneetown, Ill., and Brig. Gen. Claude konroe McQuarr ie Jr .. 45, of Ft. Ben· iJng, Ga. Both are attached ~ the U.S. Military Assistance Program 1n Turkey. : Tass identified the pilot as a Major Jlussell and the Tw:k as a C.Olonel Deneli. !•The Tass news agency said all four .rere in good heallh. j The plane disappeared Wednesday on a 100-mile night from Erze~um to Kars, about 35 miles from Turkey's border with the Soviet Union. ~\J.S. Army authorities insisted the Pnerals were only on a routine tour of jl!Urklsh military. ins~llations .i~ con· tied.ion with thetr duties pertaining to OOlitary aid. ~They were flying In an army US Seminole liaison plane, a twin~ngine Craft with a cruising speed of about 170 miles an hour. , -Normally. \he U8 is unarmed and car· • -· Oruge \ Coast Weathr Look for BUnny skies over most \;or the coast on Fiiday, with temp- . era lures varying very little, from 68 locally to 70 further Inland. ' I NSIDE TODAY Tht uproar over dMUJ ~e among youngsters has spread to medico! use of such amphe t· omines as "speed" for overly actiVf children. See Page 24. Mnln u.u , Mwiv-1 Pll!lft • IUl'-•I ,._... +S O!"Mllt C9lnlly 11 ''"'" ,....,.., . s..111 u-n 1ttt11 JMrllm •i1 l11nhtn 22 TIINlen 22·1) w-• WMt. W111'1 U ..._.. ,...,,. lf·H ...... ,..... ... ries no cameras or electrenlc surveillance gear: Leninakan, where the plane landed, Is a city of 150,000 persons just across the eas.tern border. It is 575 miles east of Ankara and about 125 miles northwest of (See GENERALS, Page %) Bo1nb Explodes At Funeral Of Policeman SAN FRANClSCO (UPI) -A bomb ex- ploded outside a church Thursday as mourners, inl!luding 300 policemen and Mayor Joseph A1ioto, gathered for the funeral of a police officer killed in a shootout with a bank robbery. No one was injured when the explosive device, planted in shrubbery about 3 feet from the front door of St. Brendan's Catholic Church went off with a blast which shook the church and surrounding houses. Some mourners, police and ,reporters had already started filing Into the cburc~ walking a few feet from lhe bomb, when the e1ploslon occurred at ·9:47 a.m. The funeral cortege for patrolman Harold L. HamJlton, 32, shot to death at a Wells Fargo branch bank Monday, was on Its way from the funeral home for the services,_scbeduJed at 10 a.m. ''It sounded like a terrible bomb," said a teacher al St. Brendan's School next door. Across the street, Mrs. Edna J>eters-' said the ~x_plosioa shook her house. The blast discolored the front of the s~!aced church, built in cauromia mission-style with a red tile roof and bar· red windows, but did no·eeriou& damage. It did little visible damage to the O\l~_#.~)1111.,,~ Al.~~~ laid lt.'1\V have oone~·,·exteiulve damage" lo the underpinnings and the walls. Police and firemen swanned over the building and sealed off the area. Policemen discounted reports by a resi- dent of "two mc.n1• setn neeing the site and said they believed the bomb was a timed device which had been planted hours earlier. • '1We're going to make another fast search or the building and then go ahead with lhe funeral lo show lllCse bum1 they can't scare us out1" sal4 Alioto, his voice (See BLAST, P11e Z) • IN COLD CELL Author C1pote Truman Capote Gets First Hand Look at Slammer __ By Slayers . Revealed ' By JACK SCRREIBMAN .r.-letW Pr"' Wrllw SANT A CRUZ -A blzarri: declaration of war not was left at a horrie where five persons were slain lhreateila death to. anyone who "misuses the natural envir- onment." The typewritWt note, signed with the names of the four knights, on fortune-tel· lir.g tar9t cards, said fut~e killings would be carried out by the "People o( the Free Universe ." Disclosing the note Wednesday two days after the slaying of wealthy eye surgeon Dr. Victor M. Ohta and four others, Undersheriff Paul W. Tara urged the community. -100 miles soulh of San Francisco ..... to ·remain calm. · · "We have to. keep our cool.· We are righting a war and we might as well face it," Tara said . The undersheriff said the nature of the kllllngs and the note . indicated the five were slain by cultists. The note was found und«:r the windshield wiper of Ohta's red Rolls Royce after the bodies of'Ohta, his wife. two sons and secretary were discovered in a swimming pool at the family's $250,000 hilltop home Monday,n.ight, Tara said. Truman Capote. famed author ol. stories about murder and prisons, himJelf CAR ABANDONED became an inmate of the orange 1 O>unty Until the note was made·public, police jai1 Wednelday ni&ht. . · had· said they knew no motive for lhe ~-. . ~·0 at-,5:•~_.m ... ~,bre&in .·• '· slayings. ~~ere, trying lo find two "'l"'i ' ire:; young men it6d •. kirt' reported seen near th Y ia. ·sentence or contempt of anbther of the Ohtas' cars -a station court. "'He didn't teem very happy," said One j.''-r. "He looked as disinterested as ""agon -before It was found abandoned LR:' on .a rallfoad traCk. posa:ible," said another. Tara said the note ·read: Capate, ~·author of "In Cold Blood'' "Today World War Jll will begin , ~s was a:.entenced Monday by Judge BYron brought to you by the People o{ th_.e:'Free. K. McMiltml who held the autoor -in Universe. From this day forward anyone "willful contempt" for ignoring 1 sub-and/or company who misuses the natural poena to appear as a prosecution witness environment or destroys same will suffer in the J>l!!Yllty trial last June of triple the penalty of dealh by the People of the murderer Joseph Morae. Free Universe. Capote will be housed separately from "1 and my comrades from this day other priaonen, sheriff's Lt. J?O!l Chaney forth will fight until death or freedom, ~Id. He dJd not say why. Aniv~. al ~e against. anything or anyone who does not Jiii, C.pote. "°!W-ne-:amen: •• Tm tn· support natural rue· ~lanet, -....nt. Tiiis Is all a· mistake. -11!81• IW!"'I' 'l'"'t cji&. <¥",Ji>ukind. wlll." ' .Ear~~2'Wt.,. ,Rober( 1"* '' • ·nie 'note \fas S1gnedd: · appeared before Judge McMillan wilh a "Khlghi of Wands motion to set aside the contempt: ruling "Knight of Cups and sentence of the writer. The judge "Knight of Pentacles denied the motion as be did another fOr a "Knight of Swords." stay of ex:eculio~. . . . The pentacle· is a fivHlded figue Capote was given five days 1n jail on associated wtlh witchcraft as a magical condition lhal he pay a fine of $500 ('625 . or talisman dev.ict, in f.icUon often used wilh penalty assessments). As of this to summon up the devil . morning the line had not been paid. The Knlgbls are the.Jeur suits of the 7a. Capote tegtimony was sought by card tarot deck, \1sed to td1 one's fortune San Diego County proseculon in the depending on Wfllch -.direction the 18rge Morse case be.cause he conducted a film-cards fall. 1 ed Interview wilh Morse on San Quentin Tara said the note was withheld in- prison'a death row. (llff SLA YIN GS, P11e 2) su~~u11lhs -. - -. -.. .. • DAILY PILOT * * '* 10 ' * * * -: THURSO'AY >,.FTERNOON; OCTOBER 22, '1970 . ' .. ¥01.. .,_ "O' W. 4 llCTIOMI, H PAGll . ' . ' - ' : • : I ; • ·U'h""""' t ••• l"' • ' • ' • ' • ' l . . Crouching Sl. Louis police .officers , guns..!.&t the rea'dy,.~ t&n-ocover· cµid ·watch apartment w}Jere &ifelloW officer is beld•bostafe ... For the outcome of thJs.story, see ,Page 4. '""'. , . a .. ~ . . ~ ''Monkey Tri~', Defendant ' j • ' • .John Scop~~!Dies ·~i 7o ~ . 4·r~ •. ,.:, "'81-·.i~.encu:;ti"d .bw lhe SlaU---or-Inar Ill~ sovereign at.ate· Of · Tenneaee.!i: Tennes1ee that it. shall be vnlow]ul r11Dt to declare U bu gone tO get,_ final for ~~ti teacllv in tint1 ~f the uni~ ruliftc. , ~rntits. normals. a"1-·alt other pu~ John· T, ~pes around whom 1 tie hc.1chools of .the state to teach an11 . ' thtort1 that dt11its tht .stoT11 of fht aensaUonal MOOkey Triala .oLltlt.,ten- ditrine~ creation of •m.a;·OI , taught 'in tered and the most farhOU11 laW)'e:r1 of tbt UMi Bible. imil • to '""'" fn&l<ad that day bltUed, died here Wedneado1 niCll\ niari .laaa de.scended. tfrom a Lowtr· o: ... _ 1r. : order of animals ••. ". He was 70 years old, but he" lived ~.;. , Marih lJ ... .1 92.r his .beliefs upheld. . ·. , • SHREVEPORT, LI. -'!be !Oft.poken blolotY teacher wOC dared. lo que1t1ori the fundamentalist theol')' of'Divine creation SC<ilfes OSI hl!"Job ""I WU 1111!(1l!D fo. teaching evolution, 46 years ap ti was later cleirtd on a tedutkalft1 ~ (See SCOPEi, ..... I) " -. ' • • • . . ,. ! OAILY PILOT s ~ l'Na p .. ., I SLAYINGS ... W.Uy ao-u not to alarm citluns . Thursday, Oc.tobff 22, 1970 • 1'1be note Itself Is tn the hands of some of tho -coaipelent ... 1ya11 in tho . stet.." be llid. U. added: "We l'OCOllllu the lbock ~ llftlllas act bu brought to our ~fti-i.. We lnlll that the 'sober judg· 'fl"'\· ol ~ reeldenll wl1! prevail over w emoUOoal roadlon. ~Jlesldel Dr. Ohta, those sla1n were hil wife, VlrltDle, a , 10111 Derrick, 11. ind TM1art. 111 ·and secretary, Dorothy ~wallader, 38. . :Each of the viclJms was shM once in ~·back of the head, and Ohta also was slfot in the back. All were dumped lnto the swimmitil pool of the manilon &.tUtde tbe city. The house was set .nit. . Firemen, looking for water to fi;b.t the blue, dlacovered the bound, fully clothed bodies in the pool. Disoovery of Mn. Ohta's stolen ltll green Oldsmobile stat.ion wagon, smuhed by 1 switch engine In a tunnel near Felton Tuelday evening, WU the flnt an- nounced soUd clue In the case. Scores of law enforcement officers fan- ned out through the surrounding redwood forest to look for suspects. The vthkle was empty when struck by the engine, but the motor was sUll warm, and an attempt had been made to burn I.be car. 'two sets of footprints led from the vehicle. The tunnel Is north of Santa Crui. about seven miles from the killings and ln an area abounding with hippie-type communes. The road and tracks below run alongside a redwood gora:e of the. Santa · Cruz Mountains. The aherlff's ad- ministrative assistant, Lou Keller, said whoever drove the car on the t r a c k s "'just had to have local knowledge." He added, "I travel that road every day and didn't know the tunnel was there." Keller said the area's "indigent transient" population was being ques- tioned., but. other poalbWtiel were not being iuled out. Tbe fwo youths and girl · were being sought because a woman real estate· agent reported eatl1\!r Tuesday spoltlf!g the station wagon parked off the road in some brush near Felton. The three were reported seen nearby, where campfire ashes were found. HELD IN RUSSI~ lrit. o•n. McOu• rrl1 ., f'renl .... ., I GENERALS. • • Yerevan, the capital or Armenia. Tass said "the competent Soviet .utborities have been instructed lo in· l;estigate the circumStances ·connected with the above mentioned violation or the Soviet Union's st.ate frontier by a plane of the U.S. Air Force." In Washington, a state Department spokesman told reporters he was unable .to say whether Soviet authorities were holding the four men or whether they were considered to be in some other status with. the Russians. A department press officer, John King, said the U,S. Embassy in Moscow had re- quested ··~ • ecct11'' to the ~"1nerlcans. · That simply rneans, it wu explained, that the eP"1baS1Y asked the Soviels to ap- prove the dispatch of an embassy offlclal to Leninakan to see the four and report on·their welfare and condition. Asked whether the embassy or the U.S. goveruient OUtlnrtlt bid reqUe11.6d the im~ll!te ~l•.., Of lho llllll, King aaid so far, .as ht .Jutew the nquut had not •made:: · . A friend of the Ohtu Olld Mrs. Obta told ber two mont!Ja ago that bfr hlJl!iand had to cbue six 1'hipple-typu" otf the porch. . Dr. Ohta was known to havt prov1dei! ~ free medical care to some hippie.types, but there WB! no official speculation on' any relationship. King aaid.the department was Informed of the plane's safe landing and "we were advised that details will follow." Scherrer is a 1937 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y., --end a veteran of World War II service in the South Pacific, where he won the Distfniuished SerVic.e Cross, and Europe. .McQuarrie served as chief of staff of the U.S. Anny Support Command in 1961 Hippie Reveals Fear of Revenge From Vigilantes SANTA CRUZ (AP) -'ll hope to God · tt wun't lonal>alrs;' ,,.....; going Iii tii he.q to pay around b•e u it wu Jon1hairs." "n.e worde belonged to a young blpple- type worried that thi tilaarri klllinl of five persons near here wUI bring down on the innocent a kind of vigilante retribu- tion. · . Eye surgeon Victor M. Ohta, 15, hil wife, Virginia, o, their sons, Derrick, 12, and Taggart, 11, and Ohta's secretary, Dorothy Cadwallader, 31, were ahot dead Monday night and dumped in the Ohta EWlmming pool. . 1be 1layings sent waves of fur through thiJ ocenslde dty 70 mUec south of San Francieco, where some believe a "cult" micht have taken the Uves 1D a ritualistic orgy. Tbe hippie, sporting a beard and pigtail, who asked not to be named; swore he would ·1et a hair cut and shave.. if it turned out that blpple-typu did Iba . slaylngs. "Thls has cut I pall OVll' the Whole Cf .. ty," said a nun at Dominican Hospital, where Dr. Ohta wu a founder and prac· ticed ohptbalmology, • Slndra VaUelunga, whole family lives on tbe nut ridge over from the death scene, aa1d: "rm teared to death." DAI LY PILOT "..,., ............. ..... ----0.. M... ... Cl'aa1:10 OltAHI COAST l't.llLllHIMO COMINIY t llol.trt N. Wtt4 I Prni.111'11 •rAI ""'Wttr J1cl: I. i::J , VIM PmlMnt «..d ~ Tho'"'' KMYil ltllw TJ.111111 A. MW1thi110 MtMJilrll Etlltor ~!d1114 f'. Hill $0vlh Or111911 Cowtt1 uttor -I C.11 MIA: JJO Wttl..., .,_. .......,. ••cfl: "11 WM.I a.lllOt ~ ,, L.flOYIW IKChl 2U ~tt"lll AWMM .-vn111111illll ... cti1 ,,.,5 lffdl hultvt,.. kl Cltm1nlt;" al Hol'lll El C.mlno lttll • • and was named deputy commander of the 173rd airborne brigade in 111117. He Is a 1115 West PoilJt IVaduate. .Sa¥ ·f;et • • To Air Gripes SAN DIEGO (AP) -Sailors w It h gripea dial ".CAPT" to r11ch the captain at Miramar Naval Air Station and talk it over. By Wednesday, the end of one wee.k's operaUon, 50 calls had been made to Capt. Allred W. Chandler's office. A young man's vojce told Chandler that a_ one-way $lgn put up by a civilian con- . structlon company aft.er a road·resurfac- ing job pointed tbe wrong way. Chandler got it tumed. 1be complaints of other, have prompt· e:d Cblndler to order street· lights in- stalled in family housing areas and to set up a center where married men C'1\ dlance from civilian clothes to uniforms. A recording device allows two hours of ot>a every day. '4lt's working beautifully," s a y s Chandler. "We've already squashed Some rumors and solved a doien problems." Hot Car Class At College? CUPERTINO (UPI) -Sherilf's deputies said todtiy an automoUve mechanics teacher at De Aania Junior Colleee hu been arrested for running a stolen car operation in the college auto shop. They said the teacher. Kenneth Michael Delaney, 24, of Los Gatos, \\"Ould substitute the identification of wrecked can for that of vehicleJ stolen from the college parking lot and re-sell them, speclaliilng In Volkswagens and Porsches. He charged $250 for the VWs and $500 for the Porsches, they said. Delaney and his girl fr iend. Michelle Scheer, 21, arres t e d Wednesday and released on bail. ra~ charges or auto theft and pos5e1Sion of marijuana a n d · dan(eroua drugs. Panties, Piggies Pistol Purloined . A burilar willl odd Pftferenc.o for loot broke into 1 Costa Mesa home whil(I the occupants were vacatlonlng end stole 10 pairs of ladiea' pantie~ a pistol •nd two • piggy banka. Gtrald A. Kinsey, of 1852 Corsl~a Place, t.old police the lntrudtr Jummled a slldlns alas.s door to &eln entry to tne mldcnce. The Kinsey report on the pistol t\!)d panties case II.sled the total value at dlore Ulan $500, according to police. r< _,.,,. .. ..._ _____ _ ·--------------------------~---. -- u''"'...,..... DETAINED BY SOVIETS M•I· G..,, Scherrer Nader Rips Ellgineers Consumer Cl,i,ampion Speaks at UC lr~ine By PATRICK BOYLE Of "'9 D•llY Plltt fllff Ralph Nader came to UC Irvine Wednaday to ipeak at a convocation marking the completion of UCl 's new enalneerina and computer 1 c i e n c e buildings. He seized the occasion to attack the engineering and computer professions for "threatening the public with their technology." About .2,000 students, faculty members and villtors sprawled on the grass in the shadows of the engineering complex repeatedly interrupted the consumer ad· vocate with their applause. "American technology," Nader said, "is marked by its remoteness from 200 million Americans." Engineers are bl.l!y trying to find wa_ys to make car doors clo..e quietly and firm· Jy, he said, adding that the same engineers are Incapable of ni'aking an automobile that doesn 't pollute the air or one that can protect passengers from in- . jury in automobile collisions. ''The engineering technology that pro- pels a mbtot vehicle from point A to B but also pollutes the air is in part a serious engineering failure," Nader said. According to Nader, the engineer "i! not a free man. He has few rights in· side of the corporation." . And when the engineer discovers a detect in a product, such as flammable clothing or color TVs that emit harmful radiaUon, he is kept silent by "Q\e chains that require allegiance to the oreani.za- lion," Nader told the audleDCt. "The engineering code ol ethlcs clearly says that an engineer should exhaust all remedies within his corporation when he sees a risk in a product," Nader said, and ~hen the corporation Is unresponsive, he should blow the whistle against the be said, "and their grievances are Shut out of the Ieaal system." fie ~id that according to Chief JuatJce Warren Eurser, $120 million was spent In 1969 to maintain the American court system, but '1$200 million was apeftl on t!:J ... ~A airplane." "We have to develop legal services avail .. ~!e to e\·ery Am~ican that are as acc::ssible as turning on a water faucet '' tJ said. . 1 Nader .mggested that students. tn the engineering scboOls be put to work IOlvl" ' • Iota! engineering probleme that deal not only with developlug new produc:tl but also with the ef!ects upon man oi those ~~"'"ticts. From p .. ., I SCOPES ... corporation." "Eth~cs are not something to be put on two years ago. an office wall. The engineering pro-The U.S. Supreme Court last November fessional societies must protect engineers overturned an Arkansas law patterned from companies. but these societies are after the Tennessee statute upheld durin1 UCI Chief, Jane Fonda not up to the task," he said. a .. trial that set neighbor threatenln1 Nader took a jab at vice-president neighbor with Hell-fire and damnation. Spiro Agnew and Governor Ronald American Civil Liberties Union defense ~cag~n. _saying that they are attomey CJ:;·ence Darrow and silver· Called in Mesa Trial A trial which could make history in terms of spoken four-Jetter words reswn- ed today in Costa Mesa, with UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich and actress Jane Fonda subpoenaed for defense testimony. Ernest AdQlphus "Sweet Ernie," Smith,. 30, is charged with disturbing the peace and using obscene language in the pressence of women during a campus in· cident. The black graduate student and cam· pus leader -who supported Barry Goldwater and George Wallace cam·. palgns in the past -claims he was direc- ting his remarks to disruptive white students. He was charged following a campus disturbance lut May during protests over the U.S. invasion of cambodia, when protesting whites allegedly tried to enlist black student support. Smith. a former Los Angeles talk show personality now pursuing UCI studies in black linguistics, is being tried before Police Subdue Armed Mesan; Rifle Broken - Judge Donald Dungan in Harbor Judicial District Court. He has pleaded innocent and such a verdict could be a milestone in determination or spoken obscenities. ma~1pulat1nc the population by focusing tongued orator William Jennings Bryan o~ violence." but they .are ignoring the battled over the issue in a trial that b6- v1olence of the people killed on highways came part of America's folklore. from diseases, rrom fire and other r~ The aged Bryan -three-time presiden- of needless death. tial candidate -went to his own reward "These are forms or violence which five days after the trial in the sultry h;ive every need to be of special treat· Southern summer of 1925, partly due to ment through our political systems " he the strain of being cross-examined. said, "and yet the emph,a!:is is on ~treet Darrow performed one of his most Word Expected crime. Homlctdes constitute only one sarcastic L d cutting courtroom shows in tenth of the number of people killed on grilling Bryan on his reJigious-versu.s- highways." scientific beliefs. That Ber,•ard:ne He said tha t the engloeers and the He lost the bitterly.fought case, but " " scientists are the first to see the faults in won worldwide fame, as reporters tapped products and should be the first to speak out 175,000 words daily over the teleiraph I W • h L out. datelined: Dayton, Tennessee. S lt eary "However, they have become part of a Scopes dropped into relative obscurity less heralded silent minority than joining the United Gas Company u; ALGIERS (AP)-Black Panther leader Agnew 's silent majority," he said. "To be s_hreveport as a geol.ogist and retiring Eldridge Cle1ver· promised to explain at part of either group is to have resigned five years ago. a news conference today whethe r f. •.• 1 democr--v." The Tennessee Supreme Court finally Bernardine Dohrn, a left.wing militant on Turning his attention to the problems overruJed his conviction, but a planned the FBJ's list of IO most wanted persons, that have grown out of the complex com· appeal never reached the U.S. Supreme her_ sister Jenifer, or both, are with him pu~:::-technology. he said that one firm in Court. · and Dr. Timothy Leary in Algiers. Atlanta has personal files on 45 million The Monkey Trial, however, was such a On Tuesday, the Youth International J __ 1c:icans. celebrated case that it was made into a Party in New York and the official "This constitutes a very pervasive in-Broadway play during the 19505, titled Algerian news agency announced sepa-vasi· of privacy for many Am~rlcans,'' "lnherit the Wind.'' · rately that Leary, who escaped last Scopes inherited little but a dimly- month from a California jail, had arrived remembered identity. in Algiers with his wife and been granted F,.om Page I He never cared for personal publicity, pclitical asylum. although he published a book himself and A Yippie spokesman said Jenifer BLAST 0 a film was later made of the historic Dohrn had gone to Algiers with a delega. , , f.1onkey Trial. tion from the organization to welcome The defense readily admitted his Leary as he "came to the surface from i;haking with anger. teaching evolution at Rhea High School the underground." He blamed the explosion on a and ACLU attorney Dudley F. Malone -; Rumors had been circulaUng for days "psychotic crew" of terrorists. ••we're a liberal catholic -assisted in his cue _ ........ ,1~ ~. leave ~im that Bernardine J;>ohrn, 29,. who replaced going to slOR this nonaen.w," be Aid. against the rigid anti-evolution law . .aMW;_~1 ·Q:iita 1-M~"'m:ln allegedly black militant Angela. DavJ.s .on .the...FBr Mary Crawford, a reporter for the San Scopes never spoke a '!¥"Ord himself. threatened aeYeral with an old rifle Ii.st after MJss Davis was arrested in New Francisco Examiner, said something ''I thought all along -ever since It25 Wednesday, before~ policemen disarmed York last week, had arrive"d in Algiers. "metallic" hit her shoe. She was about 20 -that the law was urronstitutional," him in 8 struggle 50 violent the gun was Cleaver said on Wednesday that "Miss to 30 feet away from the door at the time. Scopes said recently. broken. Dohrn" had joined him and Leary in ex-Police later found a piece of clockwor~-"It was more or Jess a dead I~ Jerry c. Lawrence, 29, of 111 Sant.a ile. But he refused to say if she was like sp ring lying in the street about 35 anyway," he remarked after the 1967 rut· Isabel Ave., was booked on suspicion of Bernardine or Jenifer. Bernardine is feet away, and newsmen said they found ing against forbidding such teachings. assault with a deadly weapon following charged with interstate flight, mob ac-bent nails on the sidewalk. Another During his later years, Scopes became the incident at his home. tion, riot and conspiracy. \vitness said, "stuff wu falling all a lecturer and spoke just three months Police aaid 1 neighbor reported 1 man Cleaver said he would e x p J a i n around." ago about the carnival·like trial to an au- with a gun in the area, at which time of-everything at the news conference. Police Chief Alfred J. Nelder said the dience at Peabody College in Nashville .. ficen were dispatched and spotted bomb was burled under the shrubbery. He was just out of college, 25, a™1, Lawreoce walking toward his house with He said there were "no certain, concrete teaching his first year in the little town, a .%2 rifle slung over his shoulder, Southland GI Dies suspects." north of Chattanooga on the Tennessee J:le was told to st.op, bui .kept on ''It was one of the most despicable River, when the issue Oared into nationd gomg. WASHINGTON (UPI) _ The Defense things that could happen ," said Nelder. prominence. . "Don't come onto my property, you_ Department Wednesday announced the "A man lays down his life doing his duty Tennessee had just enacted the law - pigs," he cried, according to Patrolman names of 13 casualties in connect.ion with and we come to pay tribute lo him at a which was popular in the Bible Belt Rudy Malik. the Indochina war, including one Cali· Mass and then someone does this. states -and the ACLU offered to pro- He and Sgt. Robert Goode and Officer fornian. Army Pvt. Casey C. Perry Bell "It just makes you wonder what v•e are vide free defense to anyone who wouJd Robert Berg said they tried t 0 l..;;G;;;ard;;;;;;e;;;ns;i';;;dl;;';;ed;;;;in;;;;hos:;;:U=le~a~c~l~ion~.=;;;';;;;;;;;;;;;~co~m~in~g~to::O.';;;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ch~a~il~eng~e~i~t.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=, reason with the suspect, but asserted II Lawrence became even more vocal and violent. Officers Malik and Berg finally entered the house, only to confront Lawrence sit- ting in his easy chair, the old weapon on his lap and 50 rounds of ammunition nearby, police said. They said his wife approached the chair, with one officer edging behind her toward the suspect. "l c~n get it_ for you .•. let me get it," she said. but Lawrence resisted and had to be forcibly disamied, police said, with the gun stock ·being broken in the pro- cess. The gun and bullets were confiscated as e\·idence and Police said Lawrence became even more violent and incoherent while being taken in for booking on the felony charge. League of Cities Cancels Meeting Cancellalion of an Orange County League of CJUes meeting to be hoated by Costa Mesa tonight was announced late Wednesday, because of no speaker. San Diego Mayor Frank Curran presi- dent of the National League of' Cities, said be would keep the enga1ement even after being Indicted on bribery char&es re<:ently with eight other officials. He has been stricken with nu however and Is Confined to his bed, ac~lng ~ Cos ta Mesa r.tayor Robert M. Wiiton, who V.'B! to-have hosted the diM.cr meeting. Bond Passed, 100% CALIFORNIA VALLEY, Calif. (AP) - A unanimous vote was cnt in this a.gri · cullural community for a $350,000-bond IS!Ue to put up power lines. The Sin Lais Obispo County cltrk, Ruth Warn· ken, said It was lhe first time that a bond Issue Jn the county had carried un- animously, Twenty-nlne or the area's 34 registered voters cast ballots. Jaff Clearance • • • DINING ROOM GROUPS and GAME SETS Floor Samples and Discontinued I terns 25% To 50% OFF You /ooori!e inlfrior dedgnn tDill be llapp~ to Oltlst f/01' ••• Immediate Delivery H.J.GAf\l\ETf JURNl"fURE PROFESS IONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS ----...... -TRY OUI IEYOLYIN• CHAIGl- Op<0 Moo., T11un. & Fri. 1..,. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646·027• • I I • I I L ,, . Bnniington Beach_ Today'• Fl•al EDITION ' VOL. 63, NO. 253, 4 SECTIONS, 54 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA' THURSDAY, OCT:OBER 22, 1970 TEN CENTS Huntington Beach Attorney Scored by Boss' The: assistant city attorney of Hun- tington Beach, Miss Lou Ann Marshall, has got herself in hot water by doing a "fivor." !or her colleagues. Her boss, City .AUorney Don Bonfa, has criticized her in a letter to lhe city council for helping the formation of a new city employes ·association and for sending a letter to the press describing the aims of the association in his name. "In my opinion, it would constitute a • I HELD IN RUSSIA Brig. Gen. McQuerri• • conflict of interest for the cfty attorney or any mem~r of his staff to engage in the ifga1 representation of any city empk>ye group or organization," Bonfa wrote. Miss Marshall, who is leaving the city's employment at the end of .this month to go into private pracUct in Modesto, drew up the by·laws and wrote the articles of incorporation for the new group, the Hun- U,IT•~ OETA:INED BY SOVIETS M•i· Gen. Scherrer U.S. Beechcraft Held; Russ l(eep 2 Generals From Wire Services MOSCOW -An aircrart carrying two U.S. Army generals "violated the air space" of the"Soviet Union and is being held in the Armenian city of Leninakaii; )!oscow radio said toda y. The radio report said the U.S. Air Force Beechcraft US propeller driven plane carried four men -the two generals, a U.S. Air Force major and a Turkish colonel on a flight from Turkey. 'The two generals are Maj. Gen. Edward C. D. ;'Pony" Scherrer, 57, of Shawneetown, Ill.,' and Brig. Gen. Claude_ Monroe McQuarrie Jr., 45, of Ft. Ben- ning, Ga. Both are attached to the U.S. Military Assistance Program in Turkey. Tass identified the piloi. as a Major Russell and the Turk as a Colonel Deneli. The Tass news agency said all four were in good health. The plane disappeared Wednesda y on a 100.mile flight from Erzerum to Kars, about 3S miles from Turkey's border with Fountain Valley Halloween March Slated Saturday the Soviet Union. U.S. Army authorities insisted the generals were only on a routine t.Our of Tµrkish military installations in con- nection with their duties .pertaining to military aid. · ·They · were flying in an army US Seminole liaison plane, a twin'-engine craft with a cruising speed of about 170 miles an hour. Normally, the U8 is unarmed and car· ries no cameras or electronic surveillance gear. 'Leninakan. where the plane landed, Is a city of 150,000 persons just across the eastern border. ll is 575 miles east of Ankara and about 125 miles northwest of Yerevan, the capital or Armenia . Tass said "the competent Soviet authorities have been instructed to in· vestigate the circumstances connected with the above mentioned violation of the Soviet Union's state frontier by a plane of the U.S. Air Force." In Washington, a State Department spokesman told reporters he was unable to say whether Soviet authorities were holding the four men or whether they were considered to be in some other status with the Russians. A department press offi~r. John King, said the U.S. Embassy in Moscow had re· quested "consular access" lo the Americans. Ungton Beach Municipal E m p I o y e s Association . This group is being formed by city employes seeking better representation with the city administrators and council on personnel issues. They claim the present City Employes A ! s o c I a t I o n (CEA) is not legally constituted to represent Its members ln negoUa!ions. The CEA claims it is able to represent employes. Folldwlng reports of a power struggle between the two groups, in the DAILY PlLOT, Miss Mar~ll sent an angry let· ter to the editor complaining about "un- true. unfair and deleterious publicity" and then explaining the eoals ·of the new association . But the letter was sent oi1 the official stationery of the city atOOrney's office and typed at the end was "Very Truly Yours, Don P. B,onfa." Below Bonta·s -typewritten name Wl.s Mias Mirsh&U's signatUtt. This is what drew the· blast from Bon- fa. · · · "Said letter Was : not authorlzed by me," he told councilmen. "The prepara- lion of said letter and the sending thereof was not known to me . Neither the use of the city 8ttomey'1 letterhead not n\y name was authorized by me." Miss Marshall bas aioce apologized to Bonfa and explained that she felt no con-- fiict of interest was involved since aht would riot be in the employme11t ol the ci· ty when the ntw QSOdation la: organlled and goes to the council for recognition. She had offered her servicea voluo-· tarily as a parting favor to fellow staff members, Miss Marshall explained. The city council is also believed satisfied with her explanation. Explosion Rocl{s Church: Lawman's Funeral Interrupted by Bomb Bl.ast SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -A bomb ex- ploded outside a church Thursday u mourners,• including 300 policemen and Mayor Joseph Alioto, gathered for the funeral of a police officer killed in a shootout with a bank robber . No one was injured when the explosive device, planted in shrubbery about 3 feet from the front door of St. Brendan's Catholic Church went off with a blast which shook the church and su rrounding houses. Some mourners, police and reporters had already started filing into the church, wa1king a few feet from the bomb, when the explosion occurred at 9:4'7 a.m. The funeral cortege for patrolman Harold L. Hamilton, 32, ahol to death at a Businessmen Get School Ballot Plea Trustee John BenUey Wednesday aaked Huntington Beach businessmen to sup- port the Huntington Beach Union High School District's 69-cent tax override in the Nov. 3 election. BenUey, speaking .at a luncheo n meeting of Chamber·or Commerce direa~ tors al the Sheraton Beach Inn, said the issue had the unanimous support of the trustees, administration teachers and students. . Bentley said the measure. which would raise the tax rate from $1.39 to $2.m. was for operating revenue for the schools. "It cannot be used for building schools," he pointed ouL If the measure, labeled Proposition B on the ballot. fails the operating tax rate: will drop to 89 cents. "If the high school district were to an· nounce that it will reduce taxes by cul· ting the quality of education, all five trustees would be recalled," Bentley said, before describing the services the over- ride would help continue. "Youth nowadays is ·expressing concern about our values. What we do about Proposition B will show our ability to make a value judgment where they are conCerned." The board of the chamber of commerce has already endorsed the. override elec- ·tion. Wednesday the 27-member senate or the Huntington Beach HOME Council an. nounced its support of the meuure. \Velis Fargo branch b8nk Monday, was en its way from the funeral home for the services, scheduled at 10 a.m. "It sounded like a terrible bomb," said a teacher at St. Brendan's School next door. Across the street, P.1rs. E:1na Peters, said the explosion shook her house. The blast discolored lhc front cf the stucco-faced church, built in California miss ion.style with a red tile roof and bar- red windows, but did. no serious damage. It did little visible damage to the outsid~, but Chief Al Nelder said il may have done "extensive damage" to the underpinnings and the wal111. Police and firemen swanned over the building and &ealed oU lbe area. Leaves McDonnell David S. Lewis, president and chief operating oUicer of Mc· Donnell Douglas Corp., has taken a new job as chairman and chief executive officer with General Dynamics Corp. effective irrimediately .. Lewis, 53 , had been considered likely successor to James S. McDon· nell, 71, No replacement for Lewis has be~ named. Policemen discounted reports by a re!l- dent of •·two men" seen fleeing the alte and said they believed the OOmb wis a timed device which had been pllinted h:>urs earlier. ' "We"re going to make another fast search of the building and then go ahead with the funeral to show these bums they cen·t scare us out," said Alioto, his voice shaking with anger. He blamed the explosion ;t• "psychotic crew" or terrorists. \.~~·re going to stop this nonsense," he s &. Mary CrawU.rd, a reporter for t Francisco Examiner, said something ''metallic'' hit her shoe. She was about 20 lo 30 fee.t away from the.door at the.time. Police later {ound a piece of c;l<><:kwork· like spring lying in tho stnet about 3S feet away, and newsmen said they found , beat nails on the sidewalk. Another witness said, "stuff was fallini all around." Police Chief Alfred J. Nelder said the bomb was buried under lhe shrubbery. He aaid there were "no certain, co~ s\lspects." "it was one of the most despicAble things that could happen," said Nelder. ''A man lays down his life doing his duty and we come to pay tribute to him at a Mass and then someone does this. "It just makes you wonder ·w~ 'we an coming to." Santa iru: Jtlusaere • • ·Mu~derers Left War· Declard· ' •• on ' '" . . \ By JACK SCHREmMAN AMM1119t ,,_ Wrllw SANTA CRUZ - A 'bi:tari'e declaration cf war· note was left at a home where five Jl!trsc>ns were slain threatens death to anyone who "misuses the natural envir· onment." The typewrittert note, 'signed w'tth t~ names of the four knights on fortune-tel· Ung tarot cards, said future killings would be carried out by the "People of the Free Universe." Disclosing the note Wednesday two days after the slaying of wealthy eye surgeon Dr. Victor M. Ohta and four others, Undersheriff Paul W. Tara urged the community -100 miles south of San Francisco -to remain caJm. "We have to keep our cool. We are fighting a war and we might U wlU face.( it," Tara said. 1 The undersherlff said the nature M thf killings and the npte indicated tbi flv4 were slain by cultists. The note wu found under the windshield wiper of Ohta's red Ro~ Royce after the bodies of Ohta, his wife,,, two sons and secretary were discovereci in a swimming pool at the family's $250,000 hilltop home Monday night. Tara said. Until the note was made public, police had said they knew no motive for the slayings. They were trying to find two young men and a girl repcrted seen near another of the Ohtas' cars -a station wagon -before it was found abandoned , ... SLAYINGS, Pa&o II . Teen Help to Get Help • From Home Developer By TERRY COUILLE Of tlM Dell¥ ,l#t II.it Teen Help has found an angel. "Baldino will also serve on the finance . committee to au Ide Teen Help, 0 Holly .. wood added. Strike up the arums and roll out tpe trombones. Fountain Valley's fourth an- nual Halloween Parade and Barbecue gels under way at 11 a.m. Saturday. Four high school marching bands will drum out the beat as 80 parade units march down three streets. Hobo Kelley, the famous television clown. will lead off the parade at II a.m. from the comer of Talbert Avenue and Magnolia Street. County Living Costs Soar Rick Baldino, .president of Majestic Homes, has offered to build a m<>dular· mobile home for the struggling Fountain Valley youth organization. _ City officials have chipped In with an offer to place the structure near Brook· hurst Street, south of Talbert Avenue. Committee members met Wednesday night at city hall to discuss the future of Teen Help. Hollywood said two rtportl, one creaUng an administrative board and the other defining Teen Help actlviUes, will be submitted to Him for hla review, Colorful floa ts, fancy equestrian units, the bailds and other marchers will follow her north on Magnolia . They'll make a sharp right· on· Slater Avenue and follow that street to Bushard Street and tben doWn to Fountain Valley High School. Forty-three bool,hs; featuring food from cotton candy 'to tacos and games like the haunted house and the bean bag toss, will open at 10:30 a.m. on lhe high school campus. ..Al. l p.m...£o.untain V~lley firemen will start filling paper plates with bar~ed beef cooked over a large open pit fire, baked beans, drinks and other trimmln:gs. Cost of the barbecued meal 111 $1 .75 for adult.! and $1 for children. Afternoon events will include a children's lla\lo~·ecn Costume contest, telection of the liltle miss and little master barbecue, and intcr;niltent en· tertainment In the school's oil.door bowl. Booths and cnt.erlainment will continue until dark. The parade and barbecue are co- sponsored by the city and the Fountaln Valley Chamber of Commerce. Parade and booth arrangemerill were handJeQ by the women'a divilton,of the chamber. --- September Consumer Prices Show Sliarp Increases Baldino'! firm Is located in Fountain Valley's lndu~trJal complex. He cffered help to Teen Help Wedn~ay night after discussing the .sroup's plight with City. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of *t D91tr l'tllt Steff COMWner prices in the Orange County· 1.os Angelea area ahowed a sharp in· crease of 1.4 percent for the month of -Seplember, aCcordiRg to statistiC! retea .. etl Wednesday by the Bureau of Laber Statistics. Suzanne Fadowski, chief Of the Los Angeles Oflice of St.atistla, explained it all <this w~: · "Wl!al thli all bolls down to b thal·lfl Orange County. resident " ,olng to ·haYt to spend lt.!.62 Jo buy U.. same things that cost him $10 In the period from 1957· 59." While the Increase was the highest ln nearly 20 yeara, the con1Umer price index for the Soulhem C.lifomla area rt· mained below !he national average. .Mlsa Fadowskl said the price index for the area reached an all tlme high of 136.2. The national average showed a .4 per- .tent increase in the coat of llv!ng, brina· Ing the national consumer price Index to 13U. M~s Fadowskl said the majority of lhl Increase resulted . f(om a Jump In gas 3.9 percent which ls slightly less than Uie Councilman Ron Shenkman. prices. 4.3 increase recorded in the same period "Baldino1s company wilt build the mo-· "Ga!IOline prices play 1 very important in 1969," Miss Fadowski explained. bile ofnce, then lease it to Teen Help part in the calculation of the consumer The Increase in gas prices are chiefly for five )'ears at the Cost of materta.ls and ..,.ice index for •""" Los Ang_eles erea," responsible for the 4.7 percent r:tse ~tn l•bor,'' SizenlQnap explained t~.' .., r· · "Ther'"K\.. .n.t-. talion figur:e ia compoatd of ptjvate tran. Shenkman aleo 11id he will Ill ~ she said, e were "._,,. ..... d g~s lr rt ti coSts'"Th · tOtiil''tr'ail~ olty to11ublldb:' Tttl1 Help· at t1* n. ~a7e tring ~~~p~d endedfll·u'p.'!n [ · s>o'r':rk,n~ :~ch show'!ie an increase. of of $1,200 to .fl.~ a year, "~tU lt.ia P fl r, 11e......... 4 9 percent and public tran!pOl'tat1on, on Its own feet, " She aald higher paollne pric911 ac-.· ~hich went "uR 114 percent. r'lr.. ·~ •• Teen Http was formetl less than i Y,tli' ""'n\'d for nearly . _llaV tlle ' <>Yerall She sa'.ld flciuolna rooe by'l.3 Jier«il io ago II}' Mr. •Od Mn. Carl Hid> 'olllrlnf • ~· 4~ ~ boojljefltllld •P. a i.vel lrhich ~ g percent aboV. tl!af of\ll sevetal lefVic• '? .IJii ymitl> ol llil,tom-' parel P,l'iCtS were alao up.~=' year ago. The houslng C08l! are divided munity. "If the effect of the gas ~1ncr..,. Into three sulH:ategones _ s!>e~ They o_pened offlceo In a .small neigh-. were removed, it is estimat"eA that COQ· (ownershfP .and rental)~ fuel and,btillties, borhood ~plng.c«iler •nd let up ra jOb· sumer price wouJd have onlJ risen 0.1 and fumllihings and ~tions. , • tmployment .-rv1ce, a hot-lint (or drug_ percent," she explained. • Shelter. C\'Sls 1rG$e I.tr, wbkH ts the' user.a. ~~~for ~oaaeri, ~rid~ 'nle Septembe~ rise w11 _the ·largest Ja'rgest rWln 18,inont~~ o~rshtp· "=id,'. with neith~I . buat- month-to-month mcrease 1!!'0'iil¥., since CON·"P r.t~ond <lP 1.81"" iioWtver, IOr<Od Tien fftlP iO <Jooe' 111> February of ~r. when ifie ~. ... l' . ..,. I . -• ~ doo(I durloll the s\dnmer. srik that Hme , prk:e inde1 went up 1.6 perce~, • • • 'hill I~·~ • c~_O.S ,.,... sevtral citiuna, led by Shtnkman, have The C\JlTtnt !"el o( the "1" Of..,..,.,., ) IMat-lietl.ehOld. IW'nlshingt and fanned commltt•'1 to get Teen Help back SOuthem California is'S,1 pirCert~~f opcrallons w'ere Up 0.8i>ercent. in action In 1 good location. than It was a year ago. High prices on women's and girl's fall "We hope Teen Help wlll be back In "Consumer prices have rilen every f11shlons were blamed by Miss Fldowakl optratlon by the first ol 'the yt:ar," Jim month In 1970 except August when they ror the sharp J.7 Increase in apparel HoJlywood, ••lallnt to the city manager went down o.e percent. The overall In· costs. 11le level at the end of &eptember -and another Tftn Help Npporter, Hid crease ID tl>e prlc:e lnder 11nce Jon. I Is . tSee PRICES, Pa .. l~ . .' today. Orange Coa1t Weatller • '.J .• ! ••• : l.ook•for~',,\~· I of· !lie· coril•en Fiidayi •wltlrtemp.• etatures varying very little. from gg locally to 70 further Inland. INSIDE TODAY_ ' jThc uproar owr drug u11 among lfOUnQlttr1 hos .rprtad ·. to~mtdicol u1c of 1uch amphtc- ?mlntl a.t "speed" f or ov11rtr ccflh>e chUdrt?t. Set Poot 24. • -... MtflMll ....... • . ............. . car...-~ 11 .,Ml ,.,,.. • ,_,. ... __ .... T•llnWlll 8 , ............. -. , ... ,.. ..... . .._.. ..... , ..... --.. " t· _, ,.. ' ~--~-· ~---------~:-:~------===---------:--=-:---,::,,,.=:=::,.----,-,--:-------::-----. -·------ 2 DAILY PILOT H Thursdl1, ll<tobll .22. ilio Ba, De_ath Ca•! • Jury to Deeitle ' -..... -~ Fate of " Slocum By JACK BROBACK ot tlle Dllllf f'llltt IMlt 'I}le fate of Dr. Wesley G. Slocum, ac- cused in the deaUt ol his daughter in Costa Mesa six years ago, today went in· to tbe~ bands of a Superior Court jury in Santa .Ana. offered his flrt.Q;l instructions to the jury this morning and gave the case to jurors at 10 :45 a.m. Observers differ on how Jong the jury will be out in this difficult case in whic h there was no actual witness to the death of the daughter. In trial testimony. Mrs. Slocum ac- cused her husband of killing the child and he has accused her. • 1 . • ... • lOCt.l 1\11\ill\t\i\i . ~I ti ~n:.M\1\1\\i \ii\\lli ~· I ' • • ·~· • " OlolLY PILOT Sl t ff f'lltl• l'ro• Pagel SLAYINGS ••• on a railroad track. Tara said the note read: "Today World War Ill ·lilu begin u broog1!t ta )'(IU by tbo Peoplt ol Ult Fret _ llal\•-. From 1hll dty fornnf-i and/or company who misuses the n1tural IDVltoomenl or de~1111me will suffer 1he penally of dealb by 1he People ol tho Free Universe. "f and my Comrades from this day forth will fight until death or freedom, against anything or anyone who does not support natural life on this ·plane~ materialism must die or mankind wllt." ·' The "Mte wai slgnedd: "Knight ol Wancb "Knight of Cups "Knight of Pentacles "Knight of Swords." The once-prominent surgeon is being b-ied on charges that he was respoMible for the death of two and one-ball month old Cynthia Slocum, whose remains authorities allege were dissected and secreted in an abandoned freezer in the tloctor's Costa Mesa home. Some guess the jury will return a verdict today. Others think it might take two days or more. Judge Williams instrlfcled the jury to try to ~agree on oae of two verdicts: guilty of second degree riturder Or not guilty. SIGNS TELL STORY OF ROAD WORK THAT BUSINESSMEN SAY IS HURTING THEM In Huntington S..ch, You C•n't Get There From Here; Help Coming, City S•y1 The pentacle is a five-sided f I I u rt associated wjth witchcraft u a ml:aiW or talisman device, in fiction often uaed to swnmon up the devil. The Knights are the four si'.iita of the 71- card tarot deck, used to tell one's fortune depending on which direction the lar1e cards fall. Superior Court Judge KeMeth Williams From Pagel PRICES •.. is 4.1 percent above the level a year ago. She said feminine fashions showed a 4.4 percent increase with the price of men's and boy's fashions up 0.6. These two in- creases were offset somewhat by a drop of 1.6 percent in footwear. While meat, poultry and fish showed declining prices, the overall cost of food went up 0.4 ~rcent ln Sept.ember, putting it s.9 percent l.boYe·IHf year's :ievei.. "Leading the lncreue was a 1.4 per- cent rise in the 'other foods for the home' 5ub-groop due to a higher price for eggs," she said. FruitA and vegetables were up 0.1 percent, dairy products were up 0.9 percent and cereal and bakery pro- ducts were up 0.3 percent. The only decline other than footwear was shown in medical care which wu down 0.2 percent. This was offset by an 0.2 percent increase in reading and recreation costs, leaving the health and recreation category unchanged. Miss Fadowskl said the health and recreation prices are up 3.9 ove11 last year. New Bus Route Approval Seen In Seal Beach At least some signs of peace are er· pected in politically-tom Seal Beach over the weekend when new bus routes will be ad~ed by two -lraNplliat.ion OOIJloo .. panies. The buses, both from the Rapid Transit Di!lrict 18.TD)" aJll! the Long Beach Pu~ic Tr.,.J>9f!jtlone.impany, raised a flW'.P' hr complaints t'arl!er this year when !My_ ~egedly ~attled the windows and era~ the plaster along a nine· block s\{d~ of Electric Avenue. -trol Signs and banners urging the buses to .. "get out" went up in front of houses along the bus route. The city then ordered a change in the transportati(fl plan. Beginning Sunday, both firms will no longer be entering or departing the city from Ele:ctric Avenue. Instead; the buses will ~ the Jess densely populated Marina Drive. Fountain Valley Sets Back to School Night Parents will go to thtlr sons and daughters classes Monday night when Fountain Valley Hl&h School hosts its first "Back to School Night" of the year. They'll be 1ttend1ng a compressed schedule of classes from 7:30 p.m. to 9:15 p.m. during which lhey can find out er· acUy what "Johnny" ot "Jane" do on campus. DAILY PILOT ' ORANG! CO.t.ST f'UILllHIMO ICOM'AMY Roh t1t N. Wtt4 f'rHklrlll W.tl ~blllhtt' Jtcli: R. Cwrl•v Vitt f'r1s11111111 •r.d Gen«•I MllMIW Thom11 K11•il ElllDr 11iom11 A. Mwr,.i.IN Mtllllint E•1.or Al1n D11lr.i11 Wat Ort~ COlltl!t ~cl!I« Alh1rt W. 111" AH«.ltlt Ecll!OI' Hntl-.tM .._. Offke 1717l'i lttch loul1v1rd M11lin1 Adlrt HJ r.o. loa 790, 92641 ..__ LIOUlll l..ell: m l'"orHt ·-eo.11 !111111 »0 WHI .. V S"'9f ,,.......,. 1o1,111 nn W•1 ••lbu aou1_. a.11 Cllmlntt: • Norlft ll CtmlllO AMI • ( • Prosecutor James Enrigbt and defense attorney Michael Gerbosi agreed earlier that first degree murder and a possible death penalty would not ,be asked for. Cynthia died sometime on the night of Feb. 14, 1964. Her partially decomposed, dismembered body was discovered in March of this year: in a freezer from the Slocum home in Costa Mesa which had been taken to a storage company's warehouse. In bis final argument to the jury, defense attorney Gerbosi continued to at- tempt to discredit Mrs. Marian Slocum, wile of the defend.ant as a prosecution witness. "She baptized the baby on Lhe day it died claiming the doctor refused to let her take it to the hospital," Gerbosi pointed out. "She should have said, 'To bell with the doctor, my baby's dying, J'm going to take her to the hospital'." The defense attorney dwelt on past pro- blems of Mrs . Slocum. "She had pro- blems other than drinking. She tried to commit suicide six years before the baby Wal borfl." ~rbosl concluded by saying, "There is no motive for murder iD this case. The baby looked like the doclor. There Is no evidence the doctor ever hit the other children. The evidence is not convincing beyond a reasonable doubt." Prolecutor Enright in final summary pointed out that the Jury was not to con- sider a penalty, just guilt or innocence. "The defense haJ tried to try me the district attorney," he protested. "That's not tiew. It is an old trick." Valley Citizens Urged to Back - United F1md Fountain Valley homeownets, business-. men and workers will be asked to un- buckle lheir money belts this week to help the United Crusade meet its goal of $.11,500. Mrs. Jan Wilhelm, crus~de chairman for the Fount.a.in Valley effort, said resi· dents should receive cootribuUon re· quests in the mail this week. "Some businesses have already made major contributions," she added. The $31,500 figure is the city's share or the \Vest Orange County United Cru- sade's total goal of SSM,000. "Gifts may be pledged now and paid to the Crusade in 1971," Mrs. Wilhelm explained. Each business has been asked to set a goal of $100 for its contribution. The Uniled Crusade collects funds for redistribution to a large variety of char· ity agencies, eliminating the need for individual campaigns. * * * United Crusade Month Declared "Then the defense counsel said he was not going to try Mrs. Slocum and he spent most of his argument doing just that," Enright continued. '4~y are *ying the cild shell 1a.me. Try1111 ta mate 10!! forge! abololJl>o -tor's story. 'Let's try her ''°1hei ~are Ye citizens of Huntington Beach be . aware that on this day forward unto the 19th of November it shall be known as the montb of the United Crusade. saying." ' He continued to stress that the Me:rican _qiai4'.s teslimony ...cm:roborated \hi' of Mrs. Slocum. "They would like to get rid of Connie.but they can't," the di.ltrict at- torney chirged. "Enrightblt hard at Dr. Slocum's story. He goes: to the office that night after keeping the child in the office all day because she was so very ill . It is obvious he must not be at home when the cbii-I allegedly, diea. • ''.When'..he comes home why doesn't he 1ns1st on.examining the dead baby? He's a doctor~ Why doesn't he aay to his wile all right; the baby died, let's call the cor: oner? "No, instead be claims he looks for the baby's ~Y franUcally twice that night and again the neat day. Again two days later and then forgets about the whole thing . "Would you as a rational human being believe such a story," Enright hammered home. Valley Council Wants Bike Park Fountain Valley has joined Huntingtotr' Bea.ch urging Orange County to build regional parks for motorcycles and mini bikes. Fountain Valley City Councilmen asked county officials to look for sites at Los Coyotes. Ortega and other locations on an emergency bas.is if needed . ' The city itself is considering con- struction of a mlni bike park COuncil action Tuesday was Spurred by requests from residents who ride motor- cycles for sport. Both Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach have adopted Jaws forbiding the use of motorcycles or mini blieS on unimproved private property or any public property other than streets. Orange County has adopted a similar Jaw, virtually halting the sport for off· 1treet riders. New city and county governments are looking to regional motor parks to pro- vide an ouUet for motorcyclists. Such · is the determination by official proclamation of the Mayor of Huntington Beach, Donald Shipley. "Citizens are forthrightly urged to sup- port,tl!ls-ti~·bf·-'8ry donatioos to help the many good causes it does support," the proclamation slates. Hilcing Scouts Seek Members Explorer Post 468 of Fountain V1lley - the hilting troop -has room for about 15 more boys who like to walk. The post was formed last year on the premise that boys like hilting, Nine of them went on a 500-mile trek through the Sierra Nevadas this summer. Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach or Westminste r boys who would like to join up should phone George Keller, Fountain Valley Fire Department, 962-1314. No prior scouting experience is needed for membership. At least 12 outings are planned by the post for the coming year including trips to such places as the Grand Canyon, Baja California, Catalina and China Lake. Sailors Get To Air Gripes SAN DIEGO fAP) -Sailors w Ith gripes dial ''CA.Pl'" to reach the captain at Miramar Naval Air Station and talk it over. By \Vednesday. the end or one week's operation. 50 calls had been made to Capt. Alfred \V. Chandler's office. A young man·s voice told Chandler that a one-"•ay sign put up by a civilian con- siruction company after a road-resurfac. Ing job pointed the wrong "'ay. Chandier got it turned. The complaints or others have prompt- ed Chandler to order street lights in- stalled in family housing areas and to set up a center where married men can change from civilian clotbea to uniforms. Chamber of Commerce Hurting in Huntington The Huntington Beach Chamber of Comerce ts runnlng Into financlal pro- blems. Directon ,..,.. told at their lunch«>n meeting at the Sheraton Beach Inn Wednesday that the chamber's balance wu $4.012 at the be&imlnl of this month but thit expenditures had exceeded Jn. come since mld·Nmmer. Pmldeot Pele Horton proposed that the problem be discussed at an eaecutlve meeUOg of the board at the chamber's of· flctS In the Town and Country •hopping center 1t 4 p.m. Ocb 29. I ...... - Horton said there were a number or reasons for the fiscal difficulties but the chamber is known to have betn hurt pertk:ularly by the loss of a Slt,600 con- tract wi(h the city to retain an economic development director. The city's economic development direc· tor, William Back, bas vrorked at city hall since July. 1 At the Oct. 29 meeting, the directors also will take a stand on the proposed charter revisions for Huntington Beach, Including the quesUon of whether the.ir ci· ty should have a full·Ume ma)'ot • t Mer~hants l'lad Street Project Riiining Business Severa l merchants near a downtown in- tersection in Huntington Beach are unhappy about a street widening project -they claim it is huning their businesses. The businesses are at the Alabama Street intersect.ion of Adams Avenue and they have been temporarily blocked off by the project to widen Adams Avenue from two Janes to four. "'People have to walk 50 yards to get to my store," complained Jim DeGuelle who owns a glass works. Chuck Geers, who owns a plumbing business, belleves that he bas lost $1,000 since the work started Oct. 12. They took their complaints to the city council this week and Public Works Director Jim Wheeler assured the merchants that the work was being con- tinued as fast as possible. The project involves widening Adams Avenue from Beach Boulevard to Lake Street, putting a sewer line in from Delaware Street to Alabama and a water line throughout the improved haU-mlle stretch. Wheeler said this morning that the pro- ject had been held up for one day by an independent truckers strike but be hopes the work will be completed in two weeks. House Majority Leader Lauds Hanna in: Anaheim Rep. Carl Albert CD-Oklahoma), the majority leader of the House, Wednesday told a gathering of county Democrats the nation's great problems are not in· soluble . Albert spoke at a $100-a-plate dinner in Anaheim held to boost the campaign of Rep.· Richard Hanna (D-Anaheim). Slated to be the next speaker of ,the House, Albert and a ·colleague l'fom Tex- as, Rep. Olin Teague, urged the 200 party members present to "get out and raise an army for him (Hanna) from the public spirited citizem of the county." while speaking In glowing terms of the diminutive Congressman's eight years in Washington , Albert managed to slip in a few blasts at the Republican Party and the administration. "We are experiencing the worst hous- ing shortage since World War II and the worst decline in the construction industry since the great depression," he said. "This nation is in a serious slate or economic decline and the so-called solu- tions offered by the present ad- ministration have failed to stop it," he charged. But the veteran Congressman who was a Rhodes Scholar during the worst years or ~e depression, said he was not com· pletely discouraged by the grim economic picture. "Any nation that has the talent and energy to send a man to the moon and bring him back safely can solve any prcr blem. And this great nation of our!I does have the capabili ty and the know bow in men like Dick Hanna," he said . Teague, v.•ho had participated earlier Wednesday in a hearing on unemploy- ment in the county, emphasized the need to rebuild the space program. He is chairman of the House Aeronautics and Science Committee. ' He pointed to the uqemployed aerospace workers and the continuing ef- forts of other nations in space ex- ploration. •·The space program is a sign of growth," he said. "And II we start cut- ting back now. in three to five years, we're going to be very unhappy to be left behind. , "We need Dick Hanna and the support he has given to the space programs," Teague said. "Besides, we have enough Teagues in Congress already with myself and Charles IR-Los Angeles )." ~a/f Clearance • • • Tara said the note was withheld ln- Uia lly so as not to alarm citizens. "The note itself is in the hands of some of the most competent analysts in the state," he said. He added: "We recognize the shock this senseless act has brought to our citizenry. We trust that the sober judg· . ment of our residents will prevall over any emotional reaction. Besides Dr. Ohta, those slain were his wife, Virginia, 43, sons Derrick, 12, and Taggart, 11, and secretary, Dorothy Cadwallader, 38. Each of the victims waJ shot nnce ln the back of the head, and Ohta also wu shot in the back. All were dumped into the swimming pool of the mansion outside the city. The house was !let afire. Firemen, looking for water to fight the blaze, discovered the bound, fully clothed bodies in the pool. DiscoVery of Mrs. Ohta's stolen 19&8 green Oldsmobile station wagon, smashed by a switch engine in a tunnel near Felton Tuesday evening, was the first an· nounced solid clue in the case. Scores of law enforcement officers fan- ned out through the surrounding redwood forest to look for suspects. The vehicle wa!I empty when struck by the engine, but the motor was still warm, and an attempt had been made to burn the car. Two sets of footprints led from the vehicle. The tunnel Is north of Santa Cruz. about seven miles from the killings and in an area abounding with hippie-type communes. The road and tracks below run alongSlde a redwood gorge of the Santa Cruz fl.fountains. The sheriff 's ad-- ministrative assistan1., Lou Keller .. said whoever drove the car on the t r a c k 1 "just had to have local knowledge." He added, "I travel that road every day and didn't know the tunnel was: there." Keller said the area's "indigent transient" population was being quu:- tioned, but other . possibilities were not being ruled out. The two youth!! and girl were being sought because a woman real estate agent reported earlier Tuesday spotting the station wagon parked of{ the road in some brush near Felton. The three wtrt reported seen nearby, where campfire ashes were found . A friend of the Ohtas said Mrs. Ohta told her two months ago that her husband had to chase sir "hippie-types" off the porch. Dr. Ohta was known to have provided free medical care to some hippie-types, but there was no official speculation on any relationship. -IOGM Glo.s Hll GAME SETS ' Ffoor ~ ""'1 Di:tc9mmued l~ms ' 25% To 514" OFF ,,,. .. ,-.,,, You favorite Interior dtrigntr IDIU be haPPll to ..mt l'OI' ••• H.J.GAl\RETT fURNITtJRE ' , I j I I RALPH NADER TELLS UCI AUDIENCE ENGINEERS AREN'·T CUTTING THE MUSTARD lnetfectuel Professional Societies •nd Ethics Under Glass on the Corporation Wall Nader Rips Engineer·s Consumer Champion Speaks at VC Irvine By PATRICK BOYLE 01 tM DlllY 1"11•1 Sl1ff Ralph Nader came to UC Irvine Wednesday to speak at a convocation marking the completion of UCI's new engineering and computer s c i e n c e buildings. ·He seized the occasion to attack the engineering and C{)mpuler professions for ''threatening the public with their technology." About 2,000 students. faculty members and visitors spraw led on the grass in the shadows or the engineering complex repeatedly interrupted the consumer ad- vocate with their applause. "American technology," Nader said. "'is marked by its remoteness from 200 million Americans." Engineers are busy trying to fjnd ways to make car doors close quietly and firm- ly, he said, adding that the same eagineers are incapable o( making an automobile that doesn't pollute the air or Qne that can protect passengers from in· jury in automobile collisions. "The engineering technology that pro- pels a motor \'Chicle Crom point A to B but. also pollutes the air is in part a 5erious engineering failure ." Nader said. According to Nader, the engineer :•11 not a free man.· He has few rights in· side of the corporation." And when the engineer discovers a defect in a product, such as flammable clothing or color TVs that emit harmful radiation. he is kept silent by "the chains that require allegiance lo the organiza- tion." Nader told the au dience. "·The engineering code of ethics clearly says that an engineer should exhaust all remedies within his corporatlon when he sees a risk in a product," Nader said, and when the corporation is unresponsive, "he should blow the whistle against the corporation." "Ethics are not something to be put on an office wall. The engineering pro- fessional societies must protect engineers from companies. but these societies are not up to the task ," he said. Nader took a jab at \'ice-president Spiro Agnew and Governor Ronald Reagan , saying that they are "m~ipulating the population by focusing on violence." but they are ignoring the violence of the people killed on highways. from diseases, from fire and other forms Df needless death. "These are forms of violence v.•hich have every need to be of special treat· ment through our politlcal systems," he said. "and yet the emphasis is on street crime. Homicides constitute onJy one tenth of the number of people killed on highways." He said that the engineers and the scientists are the first to see the faults in products and should be the first to speak out. "However, they have become part of a Jess heralded silent minority than Agnew's silent majority," he said. "To be part of either group is to have resigned from democracy." Turning his attention to the problems that have grown out or the complex com- pu'. ::·technology , he said that one rirm in Atlanta has personal files on 45 million Americans. '"This constitutes a very pervasive in· vasion or privacy for many Americans," he said, "and their grievances are shut Dut of the legal system." He said that according to Chief Justice Warren Burger, $120 million was spent in 1969 to maintain the American court system,· but "$200 million was spent on the CS.A airplane." "We have to develop legal services availL!:i!c to e\·cry Am::-ican that are as accc::sible a:-turning on a water faucet,'' l::? said. Nader Juggesled that students in the engineering schools be put to work solv- . . total engineering problems thal deal nol only with develop ing new products, but also with the effects upon man of those products. Gaining Experience Truman Capote Lodged In' Orange County Jail IN COLD CELL ,(uthor Capote Truman Capote. famed author or stories about murder and prisons. himse lf became an inmate of the Orange County jail Wednesday night. He checked in at 5:30 p.m. to begin a three-day jail sentence for contempt or court. "He didn 't seem very happy," said one jailer. "He looked as disinterested as possible," said another. Capote, 46, author of "In Cold. Blood'' was sentenced Monday by Judge Byron K. McMillan who held the author in "willful contempt" for ignoring a sub- poena to appear as a prosecution witness in the penalty trial last June of triple murderer Joseph Morse. Capote ":ill be housed separately rroni other prisoners. she riffs Ll. Don Chaney said. He did not say why. Arriving at the jail. Capote told newsmen: "I'm in· nocent. This is all a n1istake." Early Wednesday attorney Robert Todd appeared before Judge Mcr.1illan with a motion to set aside the contempt ruling and sentence of the writer. The judge denied the motion as he did another for a stay of execution. Capote was given five days in jail On condition that he pay a fine of $500 ( $625 with penalty assessments). As of Utis morning the fine bad not been paid. John s~opes Dead at 70 Cancer Claims 'M onkey Trial' Biology Teaclier ... "Be it e11ncfed by ll1e St.ate of Tennessee t11ot it s/u1U be 101la1of ul for any teacher in 01111 of the 1111i· versities. normals nnd all ollier pub· lie schools of tl1e state to teach 011y theory that de nies I.lie story of the divine creation of man os ta11gl1t iri the Bible, t111d to teach instead that man llas descended from a lower order of animal.I· ••• " i\tarcla 13, 1925 SHREVEPORT, La. -The softspoken biology teacher wht darea to queStiOrf the fundamentalist theory of Divine Cteation and the sovereign state of Tennessee's right to declare it has gone to get a final ruling. John T. ~ropes. around whom the sensational Monkey Trial or 1925 cen: tered and the mosl famous lawyers or the day battled, died here Wednesday night of cancer.· He was 70 yeers old. but ht lived lo see Ji.is beliefs upheld. Scopes lost his job and wu lined $100 lo. teaching evolution, 45 years ago but was later cleared on a technicality jusL The U.3. Supreme Court last November overturned an Arkansa1 law patt'emed •fter the '!'ennessee statute upheld during • trial that set neighbor threatening neighbof with Jtelt·flre and,damnation. , American Civil Ubtrtie11 Union defense attorn-CL:tenct Darrow ind 1Uver· •• . . tongued orator William JeMings Bryan batUed over the issue in a trial that be· came part or America's folklore. The aged Bryan -three-time prcsiden. tial candidate -went to his oWn reward five days aft.er the trial in the sultry Southern summer of 1925, partly due to the strain or being cross-examined. Darrow -performed one of his most sarcastic and cutting courtroom shows in grilling Bryan on his religious·vttsus-- scientifiC beliefs. He lost the bitterly-fought case, bul wpo worldwide fame, as reporters tapped out 175,000 words daily over the telegraph. datelined: Dayton, Tennessee. Scopes dropped into relative obscurity, joining the United Gas Company In Shreveport as 1 geologist and retiring fi ve years ago. The Tennessee Suprtme Court finally overruled his conviction, but a planned appeal never reached the U.S. Supreme Court. The Monkey Trial, however, was such a celebrated case that it was made Into a Broadway play during the 195081 Utled "Inherit the Wind.'' ·Scopes inh~rited Uttle but a dimly· remembered identity. lie never cared for personal publicity, although he publ lshed a book himself and a film wa1 later made of the histor ic Monkey Trial. The deJense reAdlly admitted hill teaching evolution at Rhea High School and ACLU allorney Dudley F. Malone - R liberal Catholic -assisted in his case against the rigid anli-evolulion lav.·. Scopes never spoke a word himself. "I thought all along -ever since 1925 -that the law was urconstitutiona l," Scopes said recently. "It was more or less a dead issue anyway," he remarked after the 1967 rul- ing against forbidding such teachings. During his later years, Scopes became a lecturer and spoke just three months ago about the carnival-like trial to an au- dience at PeabOOy College in Nashville. He was just out of college, 25, and teaching his first year in the little town north of Chattanooga on the Tennessee River, when the i.1sue nared into national prominence. Tennessee had just enacted the law - whi ch was popular in the Bible Belt states -and the ACLU offered to pro- vide free defense to anyone who would challenge it. George Rapplyea. a local druggist , heard about ii and he and ScopcJ agreed to test its validity. Just before the Supreme Court finally overturned the Jaw, Scopes again visited the little town made famous by the Monkey Trial. "( may not agree with the law , and 1 may want to gti,out and work against it In every possible w11y 1 '' he said. -. T""""', t<to"' 22, 1970 H DAILY PILOT :J. Jetport Salvos· Fired I San--Clemente Officials Attempt to See Report 1be first !iolop in whit promises to be a loud and l•n1lhy fight qainsl jetport proposals in hUls behind san Clemente was launched by city councilmen Wednesday. Reacting to Lhe announcement Tuesday that a consultant to the county proposes . the multlmllllon-dollar terminal for Bell Canyon, councilmen agreed swiftly to seek a copy or the report and any other information they mi&ht need. One of the principal requests is for • specific location of the remote and nearly unknown canyon about lS miles into the bllls beyond Ortega Hl&bway. Councilmen already tiave sent, one resolution to the county opposlng regional airports in general for the area. Another could be expected after further information on the latest plans is received by the city. The suggestion came from Los Angeles consultant Ralph M. Parsons, who is con· ducting an elaborate and expensive study on solutions to. the county's vez.ing airport expansion problem. Parsons termed the conversion of the • IS. high. nat canyon as the last chance tor the county to find a suitable site wUbout surroundiq development Preliminary observations or ·the 'flight patterns from the proposed terminal show that the jets would spread noise at noticeable levels throughout the San Clemente and Capistrano Bay areas. The request by San Clemente's city council came during informal eral · reports from individual councilme.n. • All four men present on the panel in,J timated that they bad planned to brlnC the matt.er up. - . . . • • • Bulbs now ••• tulips later. " Llly~'Tu'­ Stataly tulips In mixed colors for flowers later ... from bulbs planted oovr. Pkg.ol9, 1.19 Anemone bullll. Your choice of single or double in mixed colors. Pkg. ol 25, 699 Kellogg's Gromulch. Excellent for retaining moisture, keeping roots cool. 1 cu. ft. bag, 129 2 cu. tt. bag, 198 Kellogg1'1 Nltrohumus, 50 lb. bag, 139 Kellogg's Nltrohumus TopDreulng. 3cu.1Lblg, 219 Tullps. Your choice: William Pitt, red; Golden Harvest, yellow; Queen of Night, black. Plant an three. Camellia that are delicately beautiful in assorted colors. 1 g1l.1Jze, 119 Bosdld lrll llulll. CltooN Blue Slly, blue ... or a- Golden Giant. yellow. Pkg.of 2, eM F,_.. bullll for mixed colored tiow..-. Riotous garden colorl Pkg. ol 15, 899 'l I ' .J 1~., ... ... .. .. Spiiciall Beddlna pllnl c!Mni\oii All' vlrlellea ... llmlted Quanlll\I!, • .. htiti'Yl Bottle Brush. Hardy, handsdme landscaping shrub. 5 gel. •tze. 319 l\nnetfJ __ DecorlllYI S1quol1 Birk for ground cover. · Medium, coarse or pathway for border beauty. 3 cu. It bag, 188 Avallableatthesa PannoyGardenCentors:• _ _ __ _ _ __ _ -.. • · Shop12to5,Sunday,too. FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER • NEWPORT BEACH .. ... " .. ·, -. • r\ -,., <\ . ' ' . ' ' ' ' • l ·:· - ... . ' • . . • • • • - • • I • II ' 1t1; ~ .... tM ........... tlltt'I Ol1t had u, be the most expensive Eick.le· Terr•nc• E. Smith ever il\84e. Sinith, Tl, a Wasbingion Statfl University student 'who never before had seen action on a foot- ball field, finally got into the ·act last Saturday in WSU's 63-16 Joss to Stanford. It was Smith who leap- ed out of the stands and made what one person called the-best tackle of. the clay on Eric Cross who was in the process of scoring for Stan· fQJ"d on a ~yard run. Smith was 8fJ'OSted and charged with puJi.lic c1hmkeness and disorderly conduct. Monday be forfeited $40 bond on 91e·charge. ~. .. • ' A policeman ustd a hacksaw Monday to cut through a chain someone placed across the main door to the West Lundon Maai.strate s Court, while in Cheshire , Police manning a ra- dar speed check clocked a deer (lClloping in frant of a car at 42 miles per hour. • '-There are no l6nger any provi· jfons for mules, swine, geese, and &ien j.n the Minneapolis city char- ter. Among phrases deleted from file charter recently by the City lj_ouncil's Charter and Legislative ~mmittee were: "To restrain the ning-at·large of horses, mules, tie, swine, sheep, poultry and se ••. " 0 To prevent all persons tiding or driving any ox from doing ~age to 'sidewalks." ~-• ,. Vic 'l'•rrott, a construction work· er w~rates a crane at the llenvonpon Royal Nayy dockyard Ill Eng~, has found that bis cab • fte.l in the air make an ideal f nl!tfuje. He has put tomak> ts'-around lhe'ob and is hopo for a bumpef crop. . ' . :. Polict were removing 33 illt· gal slot machines from a shop ond loading them onto trucks, whtn on unidentified woman 1topptd and plo11ed a quarter machine. SM was. advised to ltavt. 1he tncident occurred on HeltM'• main street, Last Chance Gulch in Montana. • ht ...... Freaks 5, Cops 4 in a ~ g"ame Sunday between blMrded local collegians and conr rQunity relatioos-minded police-rilen In-San Diego, But the game vfaa JUa exciting than the cops' attempt to get their mascot into tlle' ctuaout. The mascot, a large d.1 named S.rge, resisted all at· itDlptl to drive him underground alld wound up watching from the shade of an umbrella. • :John Wood of National City, C8.lif. was on bis newspaper route rkently when he heard 10mething dtop from a bakery trnck in front of him. It was a tackle box contain- iag ·.-io which the 15-year-old = returned U> the bakery, a 1.no cash reward. "I did rr oqlmull, lbauib," he said. . • Chilean Genera·} Shot • Army Commander i:n Serious Condiiion ~ ' SANTIAGO, ChllO (uPl) "-Gunmen llhol and crltl<alfy -Cbllean mny commander Gel. Rene Schnelder today in an apparent usus1naUon attempt just 48 JKM,&ra before obnsress was to conllnn Marxist Salvadof Allende as President- elecl~ 'lbe anny chief• or staff met Im- mediately after the attempt on Schneider and It oppeored llliely that a military alert or a declaralion of aome form of military law would be applied witil alter the COJlll'Ollionll vote. · Schneider WU ?WJbed to I military hospital for em<rgency ""lery. An ormy high coOunanil -.nunlque said be wu In smom ecndlUon. i.me duck president F.duardo Fiel and Gen. Vincente H~, commonder of the Corabineroo Notionol Police, rushed to the bolpital. , . . ' l!chnelder rocolnd three molvet bullet&, three bullet Jmpocta In the body and wu -In the neck, the lower obdomen and In rush<od to the milltory hospital where be, the arm -and that doctors were op-Is at Olis moment ln the ·operalinl room. 'timiatic because ao vttal or11111 were hit. in terioU! condiUon." The army hlah'command luu:ed 1 com--On Monday • cashiered army m1Jor;_,' munique giving thb .verslcn of the U,. Arturo Marshall, was captured by palk:e cident : ' · in pcssession of a telescopic rifle w 1th "'Ibis momi1111 1t 0!15 houn A rm y°' which he allegec14' Intended to kill the. Commander Gen. Rene S Ch D e I d er preaident-elect. Police Inspector Louls, Cht&Uu was the object of a CO'tll'ardJY at· : Jaspard described him as a "mental teinpt as he drove hls automd>llt from · case" who had been mixed up in the put his home to the defense ministry'. in various military coup consplrlciel "At tM comer of Amerioo Vespucio which never came off. ·, and Martin de Zamora streets, three Several terrorist noise bombBlp c» automobiles Intercepted the vehicle In curred early this month but ceuod alter which the army commander was travel· JM)llce arrested &e"'.en )'OUJ\I rl&htiltS, Ing. Jta occuponll broU out the wlndowa moeUy law studeota. 'lbe score or '° of . or !be genenl'• veblcle and !Ired lnllde. · bomhlnp camed 1 flir 11110W1t of 'pro- "AI 1 resal~ Gen. Schnelder r...ived pert)> damage but no CSS1llltlea. • POLICE SGT. ANDREW DAVIS GIVES HIS SISTER WARM EMBRACE He. W•• ht Free When Polle• Promised Not to Arrest His C•ptor1 Jt WU the first actual poliUcal as~Uon attempt -if that is what It · provel ti> be :_ of the embittered elec- toral campaign and its aftermath. Police said they had no Immediate clue as to·the political orientation of the assailants. British Envoy Said· Alive; Canada Infiltration Told Blark Policeman Freed, Police said Schneider was shot in the neck but Christian Democrat Sen. Juan· De Dioa Carmona, a fonner defense minister, told newamen at the hospital MONTREAL (UPI) -A hi&h-ranklng Held Hostage Six Hours l\T k R ftderal O!fici&I i! convinced that kidnaped ~ ,eWSWee eporler British diplomat James R. Cross is alive Expelled by Russia and can be saved bee•"!• Quebec Libera· tion Front (FLQ) terrorists "now think ment teamed the FLQ planne~ to dimipt Sunday's Montreal city elections with "explosions of all kinds and by further kidnapings or even shootings - at peo- ple." ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) -A Delroit couple released a b11ck policeman they had held holtoge for &'h hours Wed- nesday night after police said they would nol be chsrged with holding him. But tilt man wu booked as a fugitive wanted in Detroit. Another policeman driving the couple'& car to a police station was shot. Police belieYe another officer may have mistaken him for the suspects. Sgt. Andrew Davis, 33, bad been called ·Nixon, Gromyko Recall Old Days - During Meeting WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -President N11on and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko met today for a private di.scus- 1ioo which the President hopes will ease the Middle East crisis and eliminate the po,Uiliillt,v of I di(ecl -la)lon belwe'.eri U>e "two nUcleai !llper-poWers. Before getting down to substantive bargaining, the President and Gromyko chatted amiably while photographers reCorded $he event. Newsmen overheard Nixon 11k the Soviet foreign minister when he was Jut in the Presidential oval office. "Two years ago," Gromyko replied. "That wu whUe Mr. Johmon was President," Nixon 'said. "11le last Ume I reinember you being here wu in '59," • Sittln« in , on the meeUng were 5ecretaif of State William P. Rogers; Nixon's naUonal ~Jty adv~r, Henry A. Kissinger, Soviet Ambaslalor Anatoly . F. Dobrynln and 1 Soviet Interpreter. Gromyko, who flew from the U.N. headquarters in New York to Washington with Rogers, in a Lockheed Jetstar aircraft, told Nixon that he enjoyed the flight. "He wants a Jebtar and we're going to aell him Ont," Rogers said. "What's the price?" Dobrynin asked. ''We can get a reduced rate for you," Rogers said. "It has four engines, right?" Dobrynin said . "You keep one." Nixon reminisced th at when Gromyko was Jn Washington for the funeral o( former Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, Konrad Adenauer, the late West German chancellor, "remarked th1t the two .of ·us (Nixon and Gromyko) looked allke. Be 11ld we should change places and we would get more done." to the George Washington Hotel and waa MOSCOW (AP) _The SOviet Union is C'.3t they are not going to &•in anything" told an anned couple had barriclded expelling John Dorneberg, chief of the by murdering him. themselves in a small •room on tbe fifth Newsweek bureau in Moscow. Jean Marchand, No. 2 man in the floor. The official news agency Tass aaid ~ cabuiet of P.rime Minister Pierre Davis, a detective in charge Of the day the expulsion is because of "iJl. Trudeau, also a.id the f e d er 1 l narcotics squad. told the man inlide he volvement in an anti-Soviet provocation." government's crackdown on the FLQ wanted to talk with him. 11le man asked Jt alluded to a political demonstration by came because the Rparatist terrorists Davis if he was a black policeman and young French and Swedish activists last "have infiltrated our import.Int in· -pavis said yes. He was admitted, week in a Mo&cow department store. .stitutions." After Davis talked with the man, Iden-"It became known that Dorneberg took Speaking: Wednesday night on a radio tified as Wesley Copeland, 29, and his part in mimeographing: the anti-Societ talk show in We1tmlnster, B. C., wife, Goldie. "ll, Copeland said, "I'd leaflets" the demonstrators scattered, Marchand, Federal Minister of Regional Marchand reiterated the government's unwillingg.ess to meet FLQ demands for Crass' release, but added the Briton's life probably could be 11.ved because the ter· rorists feel they cailnot help their cause by further assassination. Cross and Quebec Labor Minister Pier- re LaPorte were kidnaped from their' homes by separate cells of the FLQ. LaPorte was strangled by 1 chain he wore around his neck with a religious med11. His body was discovered Saturday night in the trunk of the car used in bis ab- duction. rather die than to go jail." He was Tass said. Economic Expansion, said the govern· holding a .4S.Caliber pistol on Davis and 1~·~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ji his wife held a .30-caliber lever-action ri-·~ ~· fie . poli ce said, iJ~ ~peland's wife told Davis, "he's my husband ~d I'm staying with him," police said , Copeland pointed to Davis and told his wife, ushoot him if be moves," they said. Copeland talked at various times with two ministers, representatives of blaek militant organizations and police of- ficials. He fillally called for cigarettes and a black attorney he had met in a previous visit to St. Louis in 1965. An agreement was rea:hed whereby Davia would be released, the Copelands ,would llOl be charged for holding a police Officer Md they would be escorted otlt of the hotel. Polici-biou&ht their fed Corvair to the front of the hotel and left it with the motor ruMing. About 3,000 people had assembled out.side, and. in the confwion, the suspects and police got into an unmarked police car while patrolman Steven Georgeff drove the Corvlir. 40 Yanks Killed On ·Battlefront SAIGON (AP) -'lbe U.S. Command announced t.Oday that 40 Americlns were killed in action in Vietnam last week, the second lowest weekly toll in 4\2 years, while 3.'I othera died from causes other than battle. The total of South Vietnamese bat- tl efie ld deaths also dropped lut wetk, to 256. the lowes t total in a moii.th, govern- ment headquarters said . The U.S. Command reported that allied forces killed 1,08.1 North Vlttnlmeae and Viet Cong during the seven-day period, 119 less than the week before. The weekly casualty summaries also reported ·432 U.S. troops and 858 South Vietnamese soldiers , wounded in action last week. Thill wu 11 fewer Americans and 13 more South Vietnamue than were wounded a week earlier. · • avmgs e e e e I I e AllD LOAll ASSllCIATlll FREE ~ 1. -• SAFE DEPOSIT BOX for maintaining a SS0022 balance in any of our high rate accounts-take your choice.;. ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN.YEARS l79\ 7.50\ $100,000! ONE 6.18\ 6.00\ 5,000! TWO 5.92\ 5.75\ 1,000! ONE 5.39\ 5.25\. 500! %th 5.13\ 5.00\ 1rui ONE DAY AN IMPORTANT Your money earns interest from the day you deposit. ' ' I • !Rain Dampens East, West till the day you withdraw even if it's Just on8' day. ASK HOW PJ CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE • V .S. Su111111•rt1 ,,111, c*""' todfl', LltM -ltblt wlllft ~ 11!d mornr"' "°"" *-I~ wnlel'tl' 12 to 11 kl'lttl 111 1n ... -IOCWY tnd Frlcll-,, Hiii\ todoap 61. Coetfll ·""'•IM•--._ ,,_ IJ .... 1"1111d """""'""' ,_ '""' a .... W1!tt ..,_,_....,. 6ol. Sun, M0&n, Tides THUIUDAY ~ llltll 1:• ''"'' l,J s.e... low 11 :00 '""· .,. ,lllOAY Flr11 111911 •:• 1.rn. 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Many other FREE Services OPEN NIGHTand DAY Hows: MoilclaY-Friday 9:30 A.M~ ·to 9:30 P.M. Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:d0 P.M • ' SOUTH COAST. PUZA -.lftllTOL STllffl' • COITA M!IA. CALll'OANIA • "40NI 840-IOM M.tJN OfflCE: M01 hlmu IOULIVAllD, LOI A;NQILll, CALIFORNIA _. t i \ \ ' l . " ' - I I ' I I ' I ' .. . • .. JllllfMi, 9clobtt 22, 1970 '* O~ILV PILOT J& • ' " 1 12 _Million Suh Vikes JV a_rm_Up~ttack for LA __ Pistol Pete Gathers Splinters ATLANTA (AP) -What's this .•. a $2 million benchwarmer? It may aound unusual, but that's exactly how Pistol Pete Maravtch, the Atlanta Hawks' prize rookie, started bis National Basketball career. And, according to coach Richie Gueri n, lt may remain that way for a time. "I'm going to put the best players on the court," Guerin says. Maravlch, the former college shar~hooter from Louisiana State Uni· versity, says learning to come off the bench is perhaps the biggest adjust· ment he's having to make in professional basketball. "This is a position. I've never been In before," he says, adding quickly, "but all 1 want to do is to help win a championship. That's the only thing I've never accomplished in basketball." • . The boyish Maravicb, who reportedly signed with the Hawks for $2 mil· lion, was the nation's No. I eollege scorer with .3,M7 points .over a three-year span.' • . I ~ He averaged 44.2 points per game Wh'iie a~ Louj.siana ,State, but the Tigers never ma~~~ed .to wpi the Southeastem.Co~erence ba~etball crown. Maravlch's professlf:!l'lal debut came last weekend as the Hawks dropped a 107·98 decision to the. ~il'1aukee Bucks in the season opene('for both teams. He entered the game in the secOnd quarter, wound up logging 22 minutes of game time, but appeared erratic as be finished with only seven points - three of 13 shots fropt the floor -three rebounds and four assists. In Atlanta's second game Wednesday night against the San Francisco Warriors, Maravich played 19 minutes, hit three of 12 field goal attempts and er.ded lhe game with seven points. Guerin says he will continue using Maravich as an allernate for veterans Loo Hudson and Walt Hazzard . -- ; Cl,afl vs quarry Maddox Tells ,Lagunan Views on U pcomingFight Some people opposed to the idea of draft-dodger Cassius Clay being permit- ted to. fight Jerry Quarry in A~lanta (or anywhere) have written or wired their objections to Georgia governor Lester Maddox. One such person is Garrett E. Fagan of Laguna Beach. Fagan lent Maddox 's response to thi!I column so it could be shared with the public. · Dear Mr. Fagan: _ I appreciate so very tnuch being given the benefit of your views concerning the proposed fight which would involve Clay. Further. I sincerely agree with your posi· tion regarding this impOrtant matter. Being aware of the fact that State laws do not grant the Governor, any other State official, nor any State agency the authority to permit or refuse to permit a boxing match, I am helpless from a legal standpoint to prevent the fight. However, I was told that Clay had realized his mistake and that he is now a different and very humble man. But, I want to assure you that until he makes public his position and pledges his readiness to be inducted and serve his country -although I am legally bound from taking any action in this matter -I will continue .to voice my opposition to him or any other man fighting for money at home and at the same time refusing to fight for his country. the pfoposed heavyweight fight for Allan· t8' "In clarification of my stat.ement made in response to an inquiry about the pro- posed Clay-Frazier heavyweight bout, I wish to point out there is no law in the State of Georgia which allows the Governor or any other state official or agency to control boxing, sparring or wresUing matches, Or other similar ex- hibition!. Elthibilions cit this nature are controlled by local authorities. "In the City of Atlanta, boxing, spar- ring and wrestllng matches and similar -· -------~ WHITE WASH --------- . , GLINN WMITI exhibitio111 are under the sole direction, management, control and jurisdiction of the Municipal Buildings and Athletic Committee. This provision ls set forth in Article III, Section 6-26 through S.35 of the City of Atlanta Code. MINNEAPOLIS-ST .. PAUL (AP) - Running back Dave Otborn aald 'lt wu a matk.r of eonfidenct. Coach Bud Grant said lt must be the \;eather. Both were talk.in& about the jell of Min· nesota's offense the past two weeks as r Vikings stretched their National Foot· b<..ll League record to 4--1 going jnto nex:t Monday night's game at Metropolitan f'~dium against the Las Angeles Rams, also 4--1. - The Vikings, on successive weekends defeated the Chicago Bears Zt--0 and the Dallas Cowboys 54-13. Surprise? Clay Shoots Off Mouth ATLANTA (AP) -"I'm tile best, that's all, I'm the champ," said Muham· mad Ali . "Until I hit you on the chin," said Jerry Quarry. "I've beaten them all -Liston', Pat- terson," said Ali. "You're fighting me now, baby," said Quarry. "All 1 want to say is ... I'll see you fight night. When you beat me, you'll be the greatest fighter In the world," said Ali. "That's what I'm try.inc to say/' ~d Quarry. "Bring a slab," said Ali. ''You'll need it." That was the way it went Wednesday as Ali , former world heavyweighl cham- pion formerly known as Cassius Clay, and Quarry. current No. I contender in the hea vyweighl division, underwent simultaneous physical examinations for the IS-round meeting Monday night. Two Negro doctors administered the physical, prompting Ali to shout, "Soul doctors for a change." "You'll need more help than that," said Quarry. Ali, undefeated champion who was stripped of his title because cit a con- viction on charges of refusing to report for the draft, weighed 210 for his physical exam. . JJ,· ex\IOd\a"to be roe for the fight, his first in/'thttie arid ' a half•years. He weigh- ed 2l2 in March, 1967, when he knocked out 7.ora Folley in his last ring ap- pearance. Quarry. a 26-year-old body puncher, weighed 198 Wednesday. Quarry has 37 victories, four losses and four draws in his professional career. He has scored 23 knockouts. Cus D' Amato, who guided Floyd Pat- terson to the heavyweight title, was on hand· Wednesday, and said Ali's Jong layoff gives Quarry the edge in the bout. "While Clay has been inactive, Quarry has been fighting competitively for 10 years. That is the big thing," said O'Amato. For additional information about my position, please read the attached release in reference to the proposed fight. Angelo Dundee , Ali's trainer, coun· "The promoter~ of the fight and others tered, •·Ali has never been far out of Thanks, again, for letting me hear from you and rest assured that I will con- tinue to oppose those who will not stand up for America and never cease or weaken In my stand for what I believe to be Godly, good and American. Lester Maddox The following is a statement made by Governor Lester Maddox in reference to Kings Cash In On Mickey, 4-2 .LOS ANGELES (AP) -It was Larry Mickey's 27th birthday Wednesday, and the Los Angeles Kings are celebrating. Mickey slammed home his third goal of the i;eason at 8:27 of the third period to lift the Kings to a 4-2 National Hockey League victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins. ,_ Mickey's score broke a 2-2 tie and gave the revived Kings a 3-1 record. A 1967 auto accident almost ended t Mickey's hockey career. But he came T'back to-play on the front lines with Mon- treal, and last year was the Canadiens' penalty killer and point man on the power play. Wed.ne9day'1 Rt1alts New York 3, Toronto 2 MinDe10ta 3. Montreld 1 St. touis l. Calilomia 2 (tie) ,,()nly games scheduled. closely associated therewi th made. in-shape. He has taken care of himself." quiry of my office for the. purpose of The only ma jor thing still to be decided determining my attitude and position about the rules of the fight are whether with regard to the proposed fight. I was there can be a save by the bell. assured by them that Clay Is a changed _Championship rules _will be in effect, man, an humble man and one with a total w1lh a mand atory eight count on a change of attitude. ~ockdown but no th~ee-knockdown rule. ''Not knowing of the present status of Eight-ounce g_loves will be used. the criminal charges made against him, I The bo~t will be scored by th~ referee expressed my belief in the capacity ~in-and two JUd~es .. none _of who~ ~Ill be . an- dividuals to change. My expression as . o~nced until fight night. Offlc1al we1gh- consistent with my past actions in e-1n is set for 10 a.m. Monday. questing -early re.lease for prisoners, a Scoring will be on the New York round support for rehabilitation progrllmll system, with the 10-point must provision through penal reform. to be used only in case of a draw. "Had all Americans who have fought and died for this country acted as Clay and refused to serve in the military forces, then Clay and other Americans would not be frie today to enjoy the freedom and heritage that is ours. "If Clay has not changed and still refuses to serve in the military forces of the United States. then he should not be allowed to fight for money in Athlnta, or elsewhere in this country. "If Clay is ready to publicly proclaim his readiness to fight for his country, then now is the time for hin\ to be beard. Until he does this, or the conviction against him is removed, the City of Atlanta should not permit the proposed fight, Jest in doing so, Atlanta would raise lhe prospect of an affront to every mother, father , wife, Child and other relative who have had loved ones serve in the armed fon:es of this country, many or whom paid the supreme sacri!ice." BURNS, REYNOLDS .x_o JOI N ANGELS The Ca lUornia Angels announced the purchase Wednesday of right hand pitcher Archie Reynolds ' from the Ctilcago Cubs. Reynolds had a 7-3 record with Hawaii last season, on option from the CUbs. Jn seven appearances with Olicago, he had .~., ()..2 record with nine strikeouts in lSjn· nings. Earlier in the day, General Manager Dick Walsh obtained catcher John Burns and cash from the Atlanta Braves for il'I· fielder Marly Perez. Burns was with Shreveport in the Te1as League last year . and Perez played at Hawaii. "We've gained the confidence we need the last couple of weeks," pid Olborn, the team's leading rusher wltb 161 yards in 45 carries. hThe offense ls always slow in starting. Aplnsl Dallas, we moved the baU on the ground better than we have all year. Our offensiVe line really gave us the holes against Dallas. If they can handle those people they can handle anybody. The 54-point splurge was twice as many ~ .;nts as the Vikings scored in any other victory. · "We're just getting into our cold wfilther offense," said Grant. "When the -- weather turns 1, pttle coldef, our otf~nse g:~ a little better.'' Menlign Gf the weather might make the Rams sh~der a Jillie l>it. They came into Metropolitan Stadium Dec. '1:1 last year after a record mOnth of snowfall and lost the •::estern Con£erence title, 23-2q, to the Vikings in freezing temperatures. The season's first majqr snowfall has yet to hit the area, but 'Grant wouldn 't mind a tittle snow for the wannwbather Rams. • "We know what a fine team they are," said Grant. ~·They're just an excellent !ootbaJl team and they~1present us with a GAIL GOODRICH TAKES. IT AWAY FROM JIM WASHINGTON. 141-117 Laker Biltz LA Running, Winning With Goodrich on Tea1n PHILADELPHIA {AP) -Jerry West scored 37 points and Wilt Chamberlain netted 26 and grabbed ~ rebounds , but it wasn't either of these two Los Angeles stars who put a gleam in Lakers' coach Joe Mui.Jan ey's eyes. Mullaney wanted to talk about Gail Goodrich. the S.foot-1 former UCLA all· American. Goodrich has given the Lakers a new' dimension -speed and slick ball handling. The difference Goodrich makes in the Los Angeles team was evldent Wed- nesday night as he quarterbacked a 141· 117 victory over the Philadelphia 7Sers. He scored 22 points on 8 of 13 from the field and 6 for 7 from the foul line. More important, lie handed out 10 assists and made the Lakers R-U·N . Los Angeles lost the National Basket· ball Associatibn championship last year to the New York Knicks for one reason because its backoourt handled the ball as ir it \vas a hot potato. Mullaney, realizing his star-studded team needed direction and a steadying hand, traded 7-foot Mel Counts to Phoenix for Goodrich. "That's what we wanted," said Mullaney after his team blew th e 76e~ off the court with a 41-point third period. He referred to '~rich, who took outlet passes .from Chamberlain and moved quickly upcourt before the 76ers could set their defense. "We got Goodrich to make this team move and he's giving It to us,'' Mullaney said. In that third period rally, West scored 16 points, Happy Hairston 15 and Chamberlain 8, but it was Goodrich who made the whole thing go. Los Angeles soared from a three-point half-time lead to 19 al the end of three quarters, and led by as much as 28 points in the final period. Does Goodrich feel the responsibility for making the Lakers move? "I am aware of my responsibility to be somewhat of a quarterback," he said, "Sure, I'm looking for my points , but I think it's my job to make this club move. That's been their trouble for the past five or six years. Too much one on one and standing around.'' Goodrich, who played three years with the Lakers before going to Phoenix in the expansion draft two years ago, feel s to win a Championship, the Lakcrs have to run as did the great Boston, Celtics' teams and last year's Knicks. "If we depend on one or two persons for most of the scoring we're in trouble," Goodrich said. "We need more balance our offense, more offensive moves, moves without the ball. To win we need full-time participation." During his two seasons with Phoenix, Ooodrich averaged better than 20 point! per game and boll! years was among the NBA's assist leaders. major challenge. '[he philosophies of both teams are the same. We feel It wUI be knock-down, dragged~\ operation." Grant called the K-point 1how1"1 against the Cowboys "a once a year thing. It's very dea!iving in that It's DOC going to be \::at easy for us, especially wit.'.1 our schedule, "We feel we've got the toughest courae to follow In lhe next few weeks than anybody in our business." The Viking.;;, tied, with Detroit for the Central Division lead in the NaUooaJ. Conference, meet the Lions Nov. l in Detroit and again Nov. 15 in Minnesota. Laver Rolls; Blind Golf er Scores Ace BARCELONA, Spain -Antoni Munoz., Spain 's IS.year-old Davis CUp player, defeated his professional countryman, Andrts Cimeno, in the quarter-finals Wedne~9 of the Conde de Godo ()pt!n 1:11,.•~ tournament, 8-6, 6-2, 5--7, 6-1. In other matches, Rod Laver of Corona det Mar elimlnaled Graham stUwell, Bri· tain, 6--0, 8~, 6-4 and Ken Rosewall , I tratia, beat Patricio Rodriguez, Chile: . ' ~. ~·". 6-3. ~· .~ .. -. ·:· ' ' BlRM!NGffM1, Ala. -Blind llJ)ll champion Charley Boswell of· Binlt· _ ingham sank the first hole-in-ooe of bis 16oyear links career Wednesd4y. _:~ The ace came on the 141-yard 14th hole at Vestavia Country Club. Boswell usedi :six iron "or the shot. "-:• With Boswell, a( the time were ~? c •• · and caddy. ·::: . :::· DUBLIN, Ireland -A running bat& between fans took place at the Europeilil Cup or Soccer Ch a m.fp ions match.:.io: valving Glasgow Celtic an~elamta Waterford Team WednesdaY9tic won '1--0. ~·. A crowd of 48,000 turned out for Utt first leg of ~he European CUp mat:Ptl- During the game fie;hts broke out in 'de crowd and poli~-ieinforcements wert called In. Some sped'ators wielded sticks. . . ..-: .; .. SALT LAKE ' CITY; ..:.... Former mid· dleweight boxiii( <flimpion G e o e Fullmer, 38, will be inducted into ·tie Utah.. Sports Hall of Fame Nor. 4 a~ a banquet Jn Salt Lake City, spon~s of the banquet said Wednesday. Fullmer, who fought out. of West Jordan, Utah, retired in June' Of 1964. An elder in the church of Jesus Christ Or Latter-day Saints, he was called the "Mormon mauler.'' • CHERRY HILL, N.J. -A flre which swept lhr9ugh the stable area of Garden State racetrack Wednesday n I g ht destroyed at Jeast 21 thoroughbred horses, track officials said. Police said the number of animals kill- ed could t:c as high as .0. The fire occurred on the third day of a new meeting. It was the second fire in which horses were destroyed at the track in •wo years. John Medalas, chief security officer at the track, said about 30 horses were I~ to safety at lhe height of the blaze · in Barn D. Track officials said they did not know immediately the names of horses j" . • WENDOVER, Utatl -D e t r o i t motorcyclist Bob Leppan's left arm waa mangled Wednesday when his cycle flip- l>ed end-over-end at about 270 miles an hour·as he attempted to regain the world motorcycle speed record. Lappan suffered the injury w h e n the cycle spun out of control on Bonneville Salt Flats and its canopy popped. He was taken 80 miles to Tooele Valley Hospital for treatment, then transferred to a San ;·rancisco hospit al. Leppan was timed at 245 m.p.h. In tsis and that had stood as the world record until I Thursday: when Cal Rayborn of San Diego we.it 255 m.p.h. The next day Leppan arrived at the sa lt flats and 1 .. , ·~. · -: to regain hi3 Utl.e. 1\yala Gets Kicks 0 -ut of Other Things LOS A~Gli.IS McMU1~ tftllty Cllolmbl,/11~ . ' ' . .. . 0 2.J 2 f l·IJ M l'HILAOIL,HIA W1tlllnoton ··-"""" ·~"' (II.ti ,_ . ' ' ' 1.1 " 1 ,., l! ' .w n LOS ANGELES (AP) -A> the Unlvcnity of Southern Callfornia'1 place 'ki cker, Ron Ays.la says, "I Just don't have mueh time to get nervous." The reason is simple: when the W , 17> pound Ayala isn't prepar1ng to boot a field goat or kick an eitra point, he'• bmy makJn1 tackies, lntcrcepling passer, or punting. "I'd much rather play against a team that throws the ball than runs with It," Ayala, a ltl\lor lree .afety wllll dlsUnct professional possibilities, 11kf Thursday. "Oregon 9ute puts the ball in the air a lot," Ayala said of the Trojans' upcoming Saturday foe. 1'And they have an un· believable array of receivers.'' Ayala is the leading USC scorer with 34 points -22 extra pointa and four-ror-four on field goils ranging from 25 to 3' yards. He has also Intercepted five paS11e11 and returned thent 74 yardsj the longest for 30, 1nd Is credited wllll l-0 tackles, one fumble recovery and three. lhrowi knock· ed down. He Is averaging 37 .2 on his 22 punts, the longest 47 yards. Ayala played quarterback at nearby Lakewood High and u a freshman at USC. "1ltis . gives me an advantage m reading the offense," he said. ''A• a free safety, J'm •ble to walclt the quarterback's moves, his eyes. It's helped me. t know." Is he Interested in a pro cart<r! "Definitely and l think J can ·be valu.able. Tbat's why I'm glad I've been a 1ort Of jsck..of-all-tradcs in football. I can do a lot of things besides kick the ball.'' One thing he doesn't do is worry. "Playing defense ~eeps me involvtd With the game," Ayala st1id. "You can &ce a situation developing whtn it appears you'll be called on to try for a field goal. "Just standing on the sidelines, you may be thlnkJng too hard about whet's coming up1 or not Utinklng at all. That'• bad." ""'"" ftltktOtl Go1111r1c11 Ht!ttl tftOtl«IOll 'trQv1nl WMO Hlll'llon Tott ta • j . J I 11 . . " 0 o.o Q f I • S ' .... ' 14 f•ID )1 s 11-t• '° 50 •1·5' "' '""' "~" ... ~ Cilll'111n,tltm J-dtton Tot1!1 ,J ... • 1 1-1 , 1 M lt J 0-1 ,. . .. . ' °"' ' f f..S 21 . .. . 51 1$-l f IJ1 ,,n .o•,-141 :n•1te -l!T Fouled OV1 -•lllllOtlphl1, (IM~. Tol1I ftuk -Lii ""9flon "' ,..,ftldtlphl• )'. Altfndlt'Kt -10.11', Wlll"""'lf"t 11:11•"1 0.11'{111 1'1, BftlOl'I Ill 81!Umiff 111, (ln¢l11<11ll 1GS LOI il,l"flltt ltl, l"ll!llltllph(1 111 Allin•• 101, kn ,.,.rocltc. lot .. 1tt1' 110. PllOtlllll 106 SUFFERS MILD HIART A"!~ Olo Ml11 Ork/ CMch Jefln V . • I ' , Sailors Face Monarch, St. Paul -f th Str aight Grid Teams Clash Challenge ,r. ,Newport Harbor Hlgh's football team ""s under fire for the sixth time .this ~jlSOn Saturday night and the undefeated ''Sltlors of coach Ernie Johnson will be facing their fourth consecutive stiff challenge from a title contender in the Sunset League. ; Johnson's fifth rated team in CIF AAAA circles will be facing dangerous Loara High at La Palma Stadium and ~ctory over the Saxons would provide •the Bluejackets with a solid edge over the field of contenders with three games left. .. Loara ls locked up in a four-way tie .• with a 2·1 league mark and a second los.s would seriously Jeopardiz.e the Saxons' d\lncts at any porUon of the title along ·l"'\?t CJF playoff consideration . ....;tohnson sees Loara a!! a major -'.Obstacle and says he expects his team to be faced v.·ilh starling quarterback Mike 11un along with 9.7 sprinter Steve Elkins, ~·ho's missed the first li ve Loara games because or a knee injury. "I think we'll be catching them at full Srrength for the first time. You can"l ask for much more than a pair of 9.7 sprinters and a quarterback who's a good passer ind outstanding runner. . .. 1' And they have fine r~elvers. too. "Loara uses the sprintout somewhat l)ke we do except they use lots or motion With it. That gives you problems. They don't do a greatimany things, just a few things extremely well. """''Herb (Hill) and l havt been coaching "-&bout the same length of time. He work- 1id v.·ith a guy that was very instrumeittal -lih. lny career -Steve Musseau at Orange ~ast College," said the Newport boss. 1' Newport has shut out four of its five '\fietim! but Johnson says bis team has ~n lucky to do it. "We've been very fortunate. And you have to be to shut people out. And we have to have that because we have a prftty hard Lime scoring. "We 've moved the ball pretty well but It's been a matter of gettin g the ball over ihe goal line," remarks Johnson. · • .His tea m is coming off an extremely ·defensive outing against Marina. a game ·in which his secondary accounted for four irtlerceptions and the line play was vicious at every front. . Newport's ability to contain Marina's outside ruMing game was attributed to hustle. "We had to make the play inside -and then release and get the outside posi· lri, '~ especiaU)' Dlieased with Grant ~er's (de.fen!!ive ~ck.le} play. His r,t..i;~dershlp seemed to spark the defensive "licle," says Johnson. ":Newport will enter the game with the • lineup as lft"~. with running bactS' Mike East,rllnr. RJchie Simons 8l)d Dan Seals intact'behind quarterback Alvin ~te. -· . &lle~ck Rated ~o. 17 in Nation • Saddleback College has been rated the 17th best junior college foo tball team in the nation, according to the JC Grid Wire. The Gauchos (4-{)) are tied with El ~£amino (4-1..()) for the No. 17 position . · SQuthwestern. Saddleback's foe Satu rday . riight, is rated No. 16. : • FulJerton is top rated. The Hornets : have a S-0 record. Bakersfield (5--0 ) is se-; noind. ,r. •:t. Ttt m ~-F11Utrlon .. .,_ l••trill•ld J, ChtbD! ~. Fl. Scott, Ktn. S. RHdltY '·· Modtlto ,"MJ, Ptlldent ~· i . MtJI, ArlJ. );~ '· N, E. Olclol>omf I>~ 10. Wt1lt~. 0.1, •\ 11. W111 \ltll"° :'Ii 11, Col. l11!n, W11h, 't'" ll. T~lfr, Tt~. ~:I •. R~WOO(IS .... 15. Pearl ll lvtr, Miu . ~· l'· Sou1hwtl1Tr11 .~1 7. Siddletltdr. ,. • ll. El C•mlnD ,.~1•. Gt wllM ...-70. Arli. We1tttrt :-:21. ........ f!~l1. C,_.an. N.C. ::: ltt<ti;I .... .... ..... .... .... ••• ..... ·~· ... ••• S-0·0 , .... ... ... ... -••• ••• .... )·1-4 ... ... Pit. m '~ , .. '~ "' "' '" '~ ,. "' '" m "' "' "' no "' "' "' "' m "' DAILY PILOT Slt ff l'llolo "We d0n't dislike Mater Pei-wt hate 'em." That statement by Sl. Paul coach Mari· jon Ancich perhaps sums up the intense rivalry between Mater Del's Monarchs and the Swordsmen better than any other single item. Tonight at 8anta Ana Bowl they go at it again for the 12th straight year and the Santa Fe Springs bullch will be trying for their fourth straight win over Meter Dd. The klckoff is set for 8. A loss tonight for coach Bob Woods' Monarchs will just about wipe out any hopes of a champlonshlp year for Mater Dei since it would make the Red and White G-2 after losing \(I Bisho'p Amat. St. Paul's 4-1 crew is ranked fourth in 1~ Del JS. 51. P1ul 0 lNO--M1!1r Del 27, SI. Paul D IMl-$1. P1111 lt. Mtttr 0.1 1 !Ml-Met.,. Del IJ, SI. 1'1111 12 19'l--Meffr Del 7, SI. l'IUI 0 l ........... ltr Del U, SI. PtUI 0 1"5-Mlllf" Del 20, SI, P...il 20 (lie) 1~1tr C>tl JO, SI. l'•IJI 7 JNjl....Jt. Peul 7, Mt .. r Del J 1'61-SI. Ptul I~, Mtltf' Del 1 lfft.-SI. l'IUI I'-IN!lf 0.! 7 Mtlw Del luds Hrlt1, 7.+1 the CIF AAAA raUngs while Mater Del • who connected on a 59-yard touchdown dropped to seventh after holding secood p.ass to Jim Nanry last week . place prior to last week. 1 h • h' I 111 d f th The game has a slight twist this year Anc c ~ys_ is earn "! e ense e with St. Paul augmenU~g Its usual Monarchs trio_ of running backs Don strong running attack with a superb Roy, Rocky Sunpson and Dennis Wo- passer i.1 Je. .. :lc Quirk. jtkiewlcz with a reading okle defense (5-2 Quirk, 8 juni~r, ~Ill_ ope!ate from. a with a rover). DEFENSIVE NUGG ETS -A sampling of Marina's White. Other members of the airtight Marina re-shotgun fonn1t1on 1n obvious passing 1 , th th f th t ., 1· s ts at reesome o ruMers a s1ua1on . ill be 1 Ith iro nclad defense is offered here as the Vikings' sistance are Mark Rehling (74). Gene Taylor (21) Mater Del continues its trend of a ball-Woods w cowit ng on to ge e Bryan Kerns (33) brings down Newport's Alvin and Ron Schaefer (51). --'-~~~~~~~~-"'--'---~~~~~~~ control runnin& in game but there has Monarchs rolling offensively against St.Paul. Thin Marina Squad Strucl\.. By Flu Bug A thin squad already depleted by in- jury, Marina High School football forces have been hit by an additional setback. The flu bug has bitten the VikJngs with force and although coach Leon Wheeler isn't compl8.intng about his situation, he takes cognizance of the fact Marina will not be at full strength for the second . straight week against a Sunset League P.>wer. This time it's the Anaheim Colonists of Clare Van Hoorebeke who furnish the OJ>- position Friday night on the Westmlnlter High field. "If the nu would leave us alone, I think we could have a practice," Wheeler says with some exaggeration. "We just can't seem io eradicate it from our squad. We 1 have two or three kids out every day. "This is a big percentage of our squad when you compare it wilh a large group like Anaheim ." \I/heeler isn't naming a probable starting lineup this week. "h.fy problem starting lineup will be ..• " he says with tongue in check. Joe Ventimiglia, the Viking's top run- ner, was ham pered by the flu last week and Wheeler says he hasn't completely recovered yet. "It takes a while to bounce back." • In the injury department, starting wingback Steve Hernandez is sidelined for the Anaheim game with chest bruises. Either Ron Birdsall or Bryan Kerns, both juniors, will replace Hernandez. Other changes In the ?\-1arina lineup in- clude moving Mark }lov.·ard from right tackle to center and bringing Nick Vorono back to the starting tackle . Dave Rilling. the starling center, was also hurt in the Newport game . Wheeler feels Anahe im can do it with numbers if no other way. "They usually start off with power and if he (VaH<¥>rebeke ) can't get it that way, he \ViU throw and go around the ends. "They are just like Newport. They have a big aggressive team and have such an abundance of personnel they can throw and run with equal ability. "And be.sides that," he adds as an afterthought, ''they only practice 10 hours a day." 3 Tough Losses Bonwell Stays Sea King Grid Teani On Defense Haunted by Bad Breaks -:~.~~~~~~~~~Con· Eleven grimy looking grldders ln prac- tice togs moved up to the line of scrim- mage with orders to score in four plays or fact wind sprints at the conclusion of practice. On the third play an offen!!ive tack.le jumped out of his set and the fired up defenders smashed through to nail ' the quarterback. "Offside on the defense - he was drawn off by the defense;" barked the taskmaster and the ball was moved up a yard to the one. "That's the way the refs would say," snapped coach Dave Holland at his Corona del Mar Sea Kings. The move by Holland seemed ap- propriate. For during the first ball of the 1970 campaign the Sea Kings have not been ---------- ROGER CAR I.SON blessed with a team's normal amount of good for tune. Corona del Mar, despite good showings, is 1-4 for the year and on the surface ap- pears out of the champion!hip race behind unbeaten Edison and Fountain Valley. Consider this regarding three of C<llo1's four losses : Against Sunset League leader Newport Harbor the Sea Kings dropped a cinch touchdown flip in the end zone -by possibly the most talented end in the Irvine League. They ended up losing when a 39--yard punt return and a IO-yard burst up the middle provided Newport with a 7..0 win in the last 58 seconds of the game. Next was Santa Ana and the Sea Kings missed tying the Saints, 21·21, by an eyelash as the two-point conversion pass play was missed by a fraction. ho\vever, ruled the play dead with the Barons in possession of the ball. "Things ha ve to get better for us. The kids have been playing good football," says Holland . As for the costly erro4 by the official. Holland shakes his head and says, "He i'ust blew it." ference football coaches are groundless according to Ray Shackleford of Golden West College. The Rustlers are preparing for Satur· day night's opening league encounter with Rio Hondo and his starting quarter- back will be Steve Griffith and not Tony Bonwell. Fountain Valley coach Bruce Pickford Bonwell has taken over at a safety confirms it was an erroneous call. "No po!ilion on defense thls season alter a doubt about it, he made a mistake. But I highly successful campaign as starting give: him credit for sticking by t. 1r -1ignal-caller last year. . . , . . "I( you check the stata.shcs thl.s seuon would have been a lot easier for him to against last year you will find that we say he didn't blow the whistle. have had more offense ln every game "He made the wrong call but he didn't than we did a year ago," Shackleford compound it with two wrongs," says aays:- Pickford. U "I ~ no reason for changing at this But things could be worse for Holland. ~~·does leave the door open however. How'd he_ lik~ to be in Magno.lia coa~ "If Griffith is injured, the ~ibUity is Marty Hicks shoes'? Magnoha hasn t there that we will use Bonwell along with scored In three Irvine losses. Rick Saeman (a freshman )." * * * When Estancia High meets Santa Ana Valley Friday night the first Eagle touchdown of the night will give Estancia 131 points for the season - equaling last year·s total scoring output. Coach Phil Brown's outlit already has more wins than any other team in the six-year history of the school and the Eagle!! are heavily favored to make it five Friday against winless Valley. Estancia has allowed the opposition 36 points in five games compared to the following marks of the past: 1969 -140; 1968 -163; 1967 -108; 1966 -146; 1965 -262. Reader s' Hot Corner Dear Sirs; Lately I have been readlng Phil Roos' articles on foot ball games, especially Fountain Va lley High Schools matches, as it is m.y alma mater. Being a student of journalism, I will also say that they are written very nicely . Having met and interviewed coach Bruce Pickford, you probably agree that he is a very nice man and an ercellent coach. Quarterback isn't the big problem for Golden West this week. "Naturally, this is an important game. But 1 don't consider Rio Hondo as being any better than East Los Angeles or Los Angeles City College," Shackleford says. "Jn fact, I think we have to beat them all . The only team that isn't read y to win the conference right now and they are improved ~er last year, i5 Cyprts!." What does Shackleford think about the Rio Hondo offense'? "They have two real good ktds doing most of their running. Both are small, real quick and have good speed," he says by way of comparison with the RusUers' Charlie Buck.land. "Charlie is more of a power type run- ner with deceptive speed once he gets in the open." _ The two backs fn the Roadrunner at· tack are Denni! Tarango and Dan Lara. Both are freshmen and are graduates of El Rancho High School. Shackleford adds further: "Rio Hondo is similar to us. They will run the ball if they can. If not, they will throw." Doing the throwing for the Roadrunners Is letterman Steve Culotti. The Rustlers will miss another let- terman this week. Greg Forsdick, a member of the defensive secondary, suf. fered a knee injury last week and had the injured member operated on this morn· ing. He is out for the balance of the year. In the past three years, SL Paul defenders have limited Mater Dei to a touchdown or less in each hassle. When Quirk isn't passing, St. Paul's bread 'n butter play ls the smashes into the line from 200-pound junior fullback Mark Medina. Medina doubles up as roverback for Ancich defensively. St. Paul took away Mater Del's bait· control game last year, limiUng the M..narch.s to 15 offensive plays in the se- c:::.d half. Mtflf' Del SI. 1'1ul 1!S Jim N•nrv ' 'tick !l-4 1to Mlrlr; Gttlfn T s .. n Ml;Gour!Y 165 Otlt 8vtbff G ROY MlrllTllll'llel 175 M1rlo Mele ' JOl'ln ~IE 1tS P1f Htffern1~ G Jo. P'•rr' 210 srw1 KtmPlr -P1ul Mtrlh• l&S DtYe Nin .... ' M1rlc Trtul 110 8oil Ht UPfrl • Jtmlt Oulrlc 11.!i' Rocky SJmoton ' Merk Mtdl111 1!'!1 Coll RO¥ ' TOI!'/' ·Smllll 11(1 D_.n!I WO!lk lewlc.J: 8 Erl'!lt BoOtdlllt Tritons Must Contain Brea Speed Whiz •u '" •u "' "' '" "' •u "' ... ... Considering his team is 0..5 for the year and the biggest starter on the teanl of- fensi l'r'y or defensively checks in at 185 pounds, coach Hal Akins possesses a remarkably realistic attitude· as he prepares his Artists for Brea Friday night. Laguna Beach and the Wildcats will met for the 36th consecuti ve year and the Artist coach is hopeful that his team can upset Brea and its 9. 7 sprinter Tom Teeple. "They have this Teeple kid and he can really fly. He hasn't been been contained t . anyone and if he gets beyond the .line of scrimmage it's goodbye. "I saw Brea beat San Clemtnte earlier and I was really impressed. l"m somewhat surprised that they've lost three -but they've played some pretty good teams," says Akins. As for his own team, Akin! says It's a case of backs Mike Sweeney (138), Walt Ottmer (150) and Mike Wiezbowskl (180) finding enough daylight in the line. Defensively the Artists have tried gap. stunting, zone trap, man-to-man trap and heads up tactics but the most successful h;.s been the stunting from the Laguna S- 3 setup. "We'v e gone to some multiple type of- fense using the same offensive plays but from different sets and we've moved the ball fairly well." says Akins, who's trying to get his miniature football players on the winning track. ,.: rr;\Ve'll Ne ed Team Effort, j; The latest setback for Holland"s luck.less crew was to Fountain Valley, 26- 21. Fountain Valley scored the winning louchdown when a Cdi.'1 pitchout found Its way through the back"s hsnds -bounced once -and into a Baron defender 's mitts. who was off tn the race!! un- molested for a 62-yard TD run . Hov.•ever, 1 would like to point out that he has several fine assistant coaches, in particular, J\.lr. James Cook. who has been v.·llh the school and Baron team since it started. Tom Allanson, middle linebacker who saw only limited service last week because or ankle problems, J5 listed in the probable starting lineup agaln thi!! week. Two gridders are on the doubtful list for the Brea game. Halfback Sweeney sustained a shoulder injury and missed two day::1 or practice. Should he be unable.to perform reserve Robin Andrews (135) will take over. :}Says Gaucl10 G1,id Coach • ~ Saddle~ack College football coach : George liarunan figures that his team ~ wUJ have to play Its best defensive: game :: or the season against Southwestern Satur· e: dly nlght. ~ 'lbe game matches two unbeaten ( 4-0l £: MiAion COnference teams that ~hare the ::No. a ranking in the state. Saturday :.: night's lilt is slated for Mission Viejo :;Hi~h. .. :. • We got our best defenAive effort last •• • :-.week qainst Palom1r (a 37·14 wm), but •:It will Lake thlt and more to beat ;: Southwestern. It'll take a lolal team ef· ~!fort.'' says Hartman. ~~ The Gauchos will be facing one of the ~~hl1hest·scorin1 turns in the state. :!,.Soulhwt!tern has roll~ up 140 poinU, an )'!iaverage of as.o per gamf:. tt-·,'They have a well-balanced attack. ... ~eyo have the 1billly to throw the long ~tliomb wlrlch ii n1turally a tremendous •;problem. And they hive a real good run· • :.ntne 1ttack to 10 wt th It,'' says the Sad· ":C:eback coach. $: The two key fiaureJ In t h e .,..:southwestern attlck are quarterbaek ~n Arbna who has thrown 10 touaidown a>&-ond fullbadc 'Ira Porter, a 6"1, 207- ~ "ho tey1 a bru ising Apache "" •, l ground game. But the Gauchos have some offensive weapons of their own. Namely Toby \\"h:pple and Chris l1cctor. Tailba ck Whipple has rushed for 653 yards in •.33 carries al~ady th is season, scoring four TDs. Opposing defenses have keyed on him all season with no J1Juccess. Hector, who tossed only six p8Sl'ies against Palomar last week (completing four, two for TDs), gives lhe Gauchos a balanced at tack. The two defenses arc the toughest In the confere nce. Sou th\.\·eslern has given t' 42 poinL1 thlR season. 29 In conference play. Sc~.lleback ha s also allowed just 29 points In the two circuit gamC3, $0 for the season. "lllts ls undoubtedly the biggest game of the year for both teams. The wlnn(!r will be in the driver·s sca t. Btft each team will also have fo ur more'tough games left.•· says Hartman. The Gaucho coach r(!port11 lhe normal bumps and bruist! suffered in the Palomar game \~·Ith no major Injuries. Chuck Lockwood has recovertld trom an ankle injury, but fre!lhman Doug Rothrock will t1galn get the st.arting call al the offensh•r ruard position. • Later in the fourth period I.he coup de grace was applied to Corona by an ot- flcia\ who found it necessary to blow a play dead with his whistle before the ball reached a Fountain Valley punt receiver. The receiver called for a fai r catch - the ball bounced oft his shoulder pad! and Corona recovered inside the. Fountain V•ll~y five-yard line. The quick whi!tle, Also Mr. James Coen, Mr. f\fartin Johnson and Mr. Stan Clark. Our Baron football team deserves the very best in coaching -and they tiave it. How about giving these genUemen some credit in your paper? Perhaps in form of comments from them, or more favortbly, photographs. Thank you for your lime and effort, Sincerely your!, Louis J. Hailey, FVHS Otherwise, Shackleford doesn't plan any further changes for the conference opener. Duarte, Flores Fight LOS ANGE LES -Featherweights Mickey Duarte, formerly of Venezuela, and Mexico's Chu Chu Flores box the feature IO.rounder at the Olympic Auditorium tonlghL Eagle Running Ace Returns \Vith top running back Jlm Schull% ex- pected to return. Estancia Hlgh's footbnll te.arn seeks its first winning season In tho school's history Friday night e.gainst San- ta Ana Valley at Newport llarbor High. Schultz, a 145-pound junior, stri ined some muscles In h.ls neck In the Costa Me!la gam~ two weeks ago and sat out last week's 16-0 victory over MognoUa . He Is the leading Eagle rusher with 329 yards Jn 13 carries, a 4.5 average. A victory by coach Phil Brown's Ea gles would give them five for the sf:ason and insure Estancia of Jts first winning year, The bf:st prtvlous record was 3-5-1, • establishrd in 1966 and repeated In 1967 and '69. "'That should be a pretty good inctntive for us ." says Brown. now In his aeeond year u,t the Eagle helm. Will the Eagles be down against a team that comes Into the game with an 0..5 record ? "We've played our share of fiat games.·· says Brown. "I think we should start playing som(! emotional games." Although Sant.a Ana Valley ls winless and has only scored 30 points this season, Brown dooon't lake the r"alcons llgbUy. "They are a ttam with outstanding speed tind talf:nt. We fear their qui~kness and the speed or their backs. They have a couple of backs that are capable of shak- ing (ree from tackles and going the dlstince." With the e1ceptJon al Schultz, there are no of!e111lve or defensive lineup changei, saya the Eagle mentor. "Overall our kids are pretty healthy. We've had six starters out at one Ume or another since the Buena Park game. But gtnttally speaking we 're in pre.tty Sood shape," he adds. 8'nior quarterback Curt Thomas paces a well-balanced Eagle offensive attack. ThomH has hit on 29 of 63 paseea thus far ror 580 yards. The other is Gary Irvin at linebacker and Akins admits that if he can't play he simply doesn 'l now who khe can put In. Despite the thin squad (38) the ArUst! t. two-platooning except for Bart Tabor and Wiezbowski. Tabor doubles up at defensive safety and the latter shifts between defensive ta~kle and end. Area Sports Calendar • - I I r I I :I I l .. Jf ~~~iafu Valley EDITION J. • -• Tod•Y'• Fl••I ., ~ y N • .,... St.eek• . OrlANGE COUNff, CALIFORNIA J HURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, ~'70. , r' • 'l'EN . CENTS . I Hunting~on Beach Attorney Scor~d -_by B~~s 1be assistant city attorney 'of Hun- tington Beach, Miss loo ;t..nn Marshall, has ~t herself in hot water by doing a "favor." for her colleagues. lier boss, City Attorney Don Bonfa, bas criticized her in a letter to the .city Council for helping the formation of a new city employes association and for s"e_nding a letter lo lhe pres,, describing the aims of the association in his name. , "In my opinion, it would' constitute a • conflict of interesf fer the ctty attorney or any member of bis staff to engage in lhe _legal representat ion of any city employe group or organization," Bo'lfa wrote. .. Miss Marshall, who is leaving the city's employment at the end of this month to go into private practice in Modesto, drew up the by.laws and wrote the articles of incorporation for the new group , the Hun- tington Beach Municipal E m p I o y e s Association. This group is being formed by city ~ployes seeking better ·representation with lhe city administrators and council on personnel issues. They claim the present City Employes A s s o c i a t I o n (CEA) is not legally constituted to represent its members in negotiations. The CEA claims it Ill able to represent employes. Following reports of a power struule between the two groups, In the DAILY PILOT, Miss Marshall sent an angry let~ ter to the' editor complaining a~ut "un· true , unfair and deleterious publicity" and then explaining the goals of the new &S!IOCiation. But Qie l~tter was sent on the official stationery of the city attorney's office and typed at the end was ''Very Truly Yours, Don P. Bonfa." Below Bonfa's ,, typewritten name · wu Mias Marshall's. signatw;e. . This is what drew the blut. frtm Bon· fa. . . , "Said letter wu not IAlthOr~ by me," ht told councilmen. "The prepara- tion of said letter and.the aendlng thereof waa not knoWn to me. Neilher.Uwi use of the city altomey's letterhead n 0 t my name .was ~uthor:ized by me. 1• • Miss Marshall bas aince apologized to • Bonfa and e1plained that ~ felt no CODo flict of interest was involved. aince lhe Would not be 1n the einploymeit of the .cl- : ty when the new association ii argan!Jed and goes to the council for recogn ition. She had offeried her services volun- tarily as a parting favor to fellow staff members. Miss Marshall explained. The city council ls also believed satiafied with ber explanaUon. Lawman's Funeral Interrupted by Bomb B~t HELD IN RUSSIA Brig. Gen. McCuarrie • u,,, ......... DETAINED BY SOVIETS Maj. Gen. Scherrer V.S. Beechcraft Held; Russ Keep 2 Generals From Wire strvlces MOSCOW -An. aircraft carrying two U.S. Anny generals "violated the air space" of the Scviet Union and is being held In the Armenian city of Leninakan, Moscow radio said today. • 'The radio report said the U.S. Air Fo~ Beechcraft UB propeller driven plane carried four men· -the two generals, a U.S. Air Forcef ma jor and a Turkbh colonel on a night from Turkey. The two generals are· Maj. Gen. Edward C. D. "Pony" Sctierrer, 57, of Shawneetown, Ill ., and Brig-Gen . .Claude Mohroe McQuarrie Jr., 45, of Ft. Ben- ning, Ga. Both are attached to the U.S. Military Assistance Program in Turke~'. Tass identified the pilot as a Ma1or Russell and the Turk as a Colonel Deneli. The Tass news agency said all four wire in good health. The plane disappeared Wednesda y on a 100-mile flight from Erze~um to . Ka~s, about 35 miles from Turkeys border wttb Fountain Valley Halloween Marcl1 Slated . Saturday the Soviet Union. U.S. Army authorities insisted the generals were onJy on a routine tour of Turkish military installations in con- nection with their duties pertaining to military aid . They were flying in an anhy US Seminole liaison plane, a twin-engine craft with a cruising speed of about 170 miles an hour. Normally, the U8 is unarmed and car· ries no cameras or electronic surveillance gear. Leninakan, where the plane landed, is a city of 150,000 persons just across the eastern border. It is 575 miles east of Ankara and about 125 miles northwest of Yerevan, the capital or Armenia. Tass said "the competent Soviet authorities have been instructed to in· vestigate the circumstances connected with the above mentioned violation of the ' Soviet Union's state frontier by a plane of the U.S. Air Force." In Washington. a State Department spokesman told reporters he was unable to say whether -Soviet authorities were holding the four men or whether they were considered to be in some olher status with the Russians. A department press office r, John King, said the U.S. Embassy In Moscow had re. quested "consular access" to the Americans. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -A bomb ex- ploded outside a church Thursday as mourners, including 300 policemen and Mayor Joseph Alioto, gathered for the funeral of a police officer killed in a shootout w1th a bank robber. No one was Injured when the explosiVe device, planted in shrubbery about 3 feet from the front door of St. Brendan's Catholic Church went off with a blast which shook the church and surrounding houses. Some mourners, police and reporters had already started filing into the church, walking a few feet from the bomb, when the e1plosion occurred at 9:47 a.m. The funeral cortege for patrollhan Harold' L. Hamilton, 32, shot to death at a Businessmen Get Seh®l Ballot Plea •• .. ' Trustee John Bentley Wednesday asked Huntington Beach bµ:slnessmen to sup- port the Huntington Beach Union High School District's 69-cent tax override in the Nov. 3 e1ection. Bentley, speaking. at a luncheon meeting or Chamber of Commerce direc- tors at the Sheraton Beach Inn, said the issue had the unanimous support of the trustees, administration teachers and students. BenUey said the measure, which would raise the tax rate from $1.39 to $2.03, was for operating revenue for the schools. ''It cannot be used for b~ls," he pointed out. If the measure. labeled Proposition' B on the ballot, fails the operating tax rate will drop to 89 cents. ''If the high school district were to an- nounce that it will reduce taxes by cut· ting the quality of education, all five trustees would be recalled," Bentley said, before describing the services the over- ride would help continue. "Youth nowadays is expressing concern about our values. What we do about Proposition B will show our ability to make a value judgment where they are concerned." The board of the chamber of commerce · has already endorsed ll)e override elec- tion. Wednesday the 27-member senate of the Huntington Beach HOME Council an- nounced its support of the measure. Wells Fargo branch bank Monda y, was on its way from the fune ral ho~e for the Services, scheduled at 10 a.m. "It sounded like a terrible bomb,'' sa11.1 a teacher at St. Brendan's School next door. Across the street, li1rs. Edna Peters, said the explosion shook her house. The blast d:scolored the front of the stucco-faced church, built in California mission-style with a red tile roof and bar- red windows, but did no serious danlage. It did little visible damage to the outside, but Chief Al Nelder said il may have done "extensive da,mage'' to the underpinnings and the walls. Police and firemen swarmed over the building and ·sealed off the a.rei. u,,, ........ Leaves /tleDo.nn~ll David S. Lewis , president and chief operating oUice r of Mc- Donnell Douglas Corp.; has taken a new job as chainnan and chief executiv e officer with General Dynamics Corp. effective immediately. Lewis, 53, had been considered likely successor to James S. McDon- . nell , 71 . No replacement for Lewis has been named. Strike up the drums and roll out the trombones. Fountain Valley's fourth an- ...--nual Halloween Parade and Barbecue gets under way at 11 a.m. Satur~ay. . Four high school marching bands will drum out the beat as 80 parade units march down three streets. Hobo Kelley, the famous television clown, will lead off the parade at 11 a.m. County Living Costs Soar from the corner of Talbert Avenue and S b C p • Sh SI J Magnolia street . . · eptem . er onsumer rices ow iarp ncreases. · Colorful floats, fancy equestrian un1b, the bands and other marchers will follow 1y JOANNE REYNOLDS increase resulted from a jump in gas 3.9 percent which.is slightly less than the her north on Magnolia. They'll make a °' .... Nltr 1'1111 11.tf prices. 4.3 increase recorded in the same period sharp right .on Slater Avenue and fcillow CoO!Umer prices in the Oranie County· "Gasoline prices play a very important in 1969," Miss Fadow ski explained. that street to Bushard Street and then Los Angeles area showed a sharp in-part in the calculation of the consumer The lncrease. in gas prices are chieny down to Fountain Valley High School. crease of t.f percent for the month of price indei for the LOI Angeles area," responsible for the 4.7 percent rise Yi Forty-lhree bootM, featuring food from September, according to statistics releas-she aaid. "There-•ere widespread ps tation figure is eom~ or private tran.s- cotton candf tOtal:O'S and~games like the eC! Wednesday by the Burau-of Labor wars during August, which ended tn transportation costs. The total traruipor- baunted house.and the bean bag toss, will Stal.lst.ics. September, sendinl the price of 1., up... portation , which showed an increase of open st 10:30 a.m. on the bigb school Suzanne Fadowsld, chief of the 4.9 percent , and public transportation, campus. l.AJs Ana:eles Office of Statlstic.s, explalned She said higher 1a9Dllne pHces ac-wh!ch went up 1.4 percent. At 1 p.m. Fountain Valley firemen will It all this way : counted for nearly half the overall She said housing rose by 1.3 percent lo start filling-paper plates with bar~ed-"What-this all boils down to la-that an l.ncr~a~. althwgh food , ttou.sin& and ap-a level which ls 6 percent above that of a beef cooked over a large open pit fire, Orange County resident Is going to have pare! prices were also up. year ago. The housing costs are divided bsked beans. drinks and other trimmings. tb spend $13.62 to buy the same lhings "If the effect of the gas prlct. increase· into three sub-categories -shelter Cost of the barbecued meal is $1.75 for that cosl him $10 in the period from 1957-were removed, it II estimated that con-(ownership and rental), fuel and utlliUes, adults and $1 for children. 59." sumer prices would have only risen 0.1 and~furnlshings •mt operatlom ...... Afternoon events will include a While the increese was the highest ln percent," she explained. 1 Sheller ' costs rose J.6, which . ls ~e , children's Halloween costume contest, nearly 20 years, the consumer price indn: The September rise was the lar~est lirgesl rise in 18 montl)s, wlth.O'#nusblp selection of the llttJe fllss and ' little for the Southerg ~Iii~ area . re; month-~month tncr'tfSe recorded since ~,~·up IJI pe~nt and renta:,~ DP 1.t pe~. master barbecue, and tintenn,ittent en--n1aloed below ~ rilUonal ~rflt. .i:.:F~ of .1•1. , when lhe COl\lumtt .. "' " tiertainme::t in the schoo~i, outdOor '?Owl. MiaS"Fadowski did the pnoe-lnde1 for· . price lridel went up 1.9 percent. Futl and utUtty .bflls cl~~ O.S per- 8oolhl and entertainment wUl continue lhe area reached an all time high of The current l~el-Of the cost of llvtng In cent and household furn11Nn1s ,and· tmtll dark. • 136.2. • Southe rn Calif~. ls 5.1 percent higher oper8tlons were'up o:s ·~r~'t.. , The parade and barbecue are co-The national average showed a .t. per-:.. than ll was a ~r ago . . , · High prlc,es .on women~ anti Jlrl •tan tpon&Ored by the city and the Fountain cent tnereaae ln the cost of Uvlna. Srlng~ "COnsumtr pnca 1 have ri.sen every ; faahloos Wt/e blamed t;y Mill adowA.I ~ vall•Y Chamber of Commerce. Porade ing the nallooal consumer pr!« Ind.._ month In 1'10 ~·August -they I for Ille !lw1> 1.7 lncr'el,. In appml , and boolh arrangement. were handled by to 13t.6.. . wc::nt down o.S ·)lllln!ent. ~ Oftl'lll Jn· ~!-':i :I'1le letel •l the Ind o~ September the women'• division of the chamber. Miss FadowskJ aald lhe majont)' of the crease ln tbe pdct, lDdu ~u. 1 ii,, 11, .<~.1Pc1PC::S• !flt, I,: ,: J • ... \ • --, ., ... ___ _ -. •· ' i•~ -~ • • I ..,_ .., • ••-' Policemen discounted reports by a rell- dent or "two men" seen Reelng the lite and sa"Jd they believed the bomb was a timed device which had been planted hours earlier. "We're going to make another rut search o! the building and then go ahead 1o1•ith the funeral to show these butn! they can't scare us out.'' uid Alioto, his voice shaking with anger. He blamed the explosion on a "psychotic crew" of terrorists. "We're going to stop this nonsense," he said. Mary Crawford, a reporter for the San Francisco Examiner, said something "metallic" hit her shoe. She .was J,bout 20 to 30 feet away from the door at the time. Police later found a piece of clOckwori:- like spring lying in the street about ~ feet away, and newsmen said they fowXI: bent nails on the sidewalk. Another witness said, "stuff was falling all around." Police Chief Alfred J. Nelder said the bomb was buried under the shrubbery. He said there were "no certain, concrete suspects." "It was one of the most despicable things -that could happen," said Nelder. "A man lays down his life doing his duty and we come to pay tribute to him at a Mass and then someone does this. "It just makes you wonder what we arc coming to." ' Santa CMI% Musuere .. Mu·rdet;ers Left . . War· Decla tion By JACK SCHREIBMAN A-1•11111 ,,.... Wrltfr SANTA-CRUZ -A. bizarre declaration of war aote was left at a home where five persons · were slain threatens dea th to anyone who "misuses the natural· envir- onment." The typewrittek note, signed with the names of the four kniehts on fortune-tel- ling tarot cards, said future klllh1gs would l}e clrried out by the "People of the Free Unlvene." Disclosing the note Wednesday two days after the slaying of wealthy eye surgeon Dr. Victor M. Ohta and four others, Undersherilf Paul W. Tara urged the com1nunity -100 miles south of San Francisco -to remain calm. "We have to keep our cool. We are ' . ""' . fighting a war and we rhlfM-. well face Jt," Tara said. ~ · : , The undersherlff said tht nihtl of the killings pnd the note indicated. me five were slain by cultists. The note was found under the windshield wiper of Ohta's red Rolls Royce after the bodies of Ohta, bit wiff, two sons and secretary were discoVered in a swimming pool at the family's $250,000 hilltop home Monday night, Tara said. Until the note was made public, police had said they knew no motive for the slaytngS. They were trying to find two young men and a girl reported seen near another of the Ohl.as' cars -a staUon wagon -before It was found abandoned f'ee SLAYINGS, Pa1e I) Te.en Help to Get Help From Home Developer By TERRY COUILLE OI Ille DllllY ,lltt lttff Teen Help has found an angel. ·Rick Baldino, president of Majestic Homes, has offered to build a modular- mobile home for the struggling .fountain Valley youth organization. City officials have chipped In with an offer to place· the structure ne.ar. Brook· burst Street, south of Talbert Avenue. Baldino'• firm is located in Fountain Valley's ipdustrtal complex. He offered help to Teen Help Wednesday night after discussing the group's plight with City Councilman Ron Shenkman. "Baldlno's compafty will build the m~ bile office·, then lease It to Teen Help for five years at the cost of materiala and labor," Shenkman explained today. Shenkman .allO ,uid he will ask · the ci y to subsidize Teto Help at"lhe rate of tl.))O to ft,aoo a ytar, "until lt" 1ell on Its own feet." · Teen Help wis formed less than a year: ago by Mr. alld Mn . <!arl Hlnz: offering aeveral 1ervl<:e. to \ht youth ol t.he com- muni 'Y· They opened. ottices ln a small neiJ:h- ~rhood shoppin1 center aJM1 set up a jOb elriplOyment ~Nice, a hof line for drua 119er1, -couneell'ng for tee~1trs, and t ec-- reaUon. 1Co<illlct; · 'wllh · n!l#lbortnl · buslneu, hoft .. r. !Orctd ·Teen Hell> lo .cio. Ito d<ICll'.I durlq the summer. Sine~ !hit ume • several cldzei:is, led ·j>y ,Shtnkman, have !oimt<f ~111 ... w r•t r... He!P back in aclion In a I09d loc.tLlon~ "W• ·hope T1til Heljt Will bo back In oi>enllao'J>t 111• flnt or lhe· iurt Jim HoyYw<>oc!.Nlisllnl lo the CllY·'!•llllleT and ~ T ... Help oumner,. 11kl llOl11• • • - ,! ....... -- "Baldino will allO serve on the finance committee to gulde Teto Help," H9lly- wood added. Committee members met Wednesday night at city hali to discuss the future ol Teen Help. Hollywood said two reports, one creating an administrative board and the other defining Teen Help acUviUes, will be submitted to Hinz for his review. Oraage c ... t · W.e•t1ter · Loolf for' llWUlY 1ila over inoot of the coast on Friday, with temi> eratures varying very little, from 68 locally to 70 further inland. l ~!:!DE Tflltt\Y Tht uproar ovtr drugi . iut among ~oungtttrs ha$ aprtad to mtdJcal uie of auch omphci. amines as "speed" for overlt1 actiVf chUdrtn., Sce Poge 24. Ct hftrflle It ,.... • ... Cllttdllftt U, • 1 ---·~ • • ·c...,._. »• NaM!I.. NIWI' •4 C.lltln t1 °'"""' ~ 1t c~ n 1'1ott.,..... • .,..... Mttlctt 1l '"'" ... ~ II Strtcll -.........· ~ ·~, ... ' ~ . .,...,,....., tt>tt n..e.n .... ,~ .. n......, • ...,_ I• '""" ... • .... u..n ,, ........,,....,,... ._ ... U...lt ........... .. . ,./,. • ~ pAILV PILjlT H Babtf Death Cue I. '.• • ' Jury to ~ecide '.~Fate of 5fo·eum I , I ,. ' By JACK BROBACK offered his final Instructions to the jury Of "" o.uy "'"' 111t1 thts morning· and gave the caSe to jurors ,The fate of Dr. Wesley G. Slocum, ac-at 10 :45 a.m. ciwect in the death of his daughter in O!'serv~rs ·dlffer on how Jong the jury will be out in this difficult case in which Costa Mesa six years ago, today went in-there was no achial witness to t& dealh to the hands of a Superior Court jury ln of the aaughter. S~nta Ana. !n .~al testimony, Mrs. Slocum ac- _The; once-prominent sureeon..iJ being __ c~ Iler jlusband of killing the child and tried on charges that he was responsible lie has accused her. for the death of two and on&half month Some guess the jury will return a • • DAILY PILDT llttt I""*" Fro• P41Je l _S_LAYJNGi~.-. - on a 'railroad track. Ta('a said the note read: '1'oday World War W will begin u bro11ib1 to yoo by tho People al lht l'leo um-i-. P)oln lhll.dly ~,-·. and/or compiny whcl ..-a the nalln'al environment or destrors·aame wlll suffer . the penalty of d••tll bY. 111, People of the " F.ref; Universe. ' • "I and my comrades from lhlJ day fortP. will rigl\t until .death or freedom, against anything or anyone who does not StWPOrt natural life on lhis p1ahet.· miterialism must die ~ mankind wlll.11 The note was signedd: l'Knigbt of Wands ''Knight of CUps . "Knight cf Pentacles "Knighl of Swords." old Cynthia Slocum whose remains verdict today. Others think it might take ' · two days or more. ~uthorlties allege were dissect~ and Judge Will.iJms instructed the jury to secreted in ao abandoned freezer 1n the try to aeree on one of two vetdicts: SIGNS TELL STORY OF ROAD WORK THAT BUSINESSMEN SAY IS HURTING THEM In Huntington BNch, Yov Cen't Get There From Htrt; Help Coming, City S•y1 The pentacle is a five-sided f I & u re associated with witchcraft u a mqlca1 or talisman device, in fletlon often U;led to summon up the devU. The Knights are the four su.its of the ?I- card tarot. deck, used to tell one'• fortune depeoding on which direction the larp cards fall doctor's Costa Mesa home.-gullty of aecond degree murder or not Superior Court Judge Kenneth Williams guilty, · . Prosecutor James Enright and defense Fron• Pqe l PRICES ... is 4.1 percent above lhe level a year ago. She said feminine fashions showed a 4.4 percent increase with the price of men's and boy's fashions up 0.6. 'lbese two in- creases were offset somewhat by a drop of 1.6 percent in footwear . While meat, poultry and fish showed declining prices, the overall cost of food went up 0.4 percent in September, puttin& it 3.9 percent above last year!s level. "Leading the increase was a 1.4 per· cent rise in lbe 'other foods for the home' · sub-group due to a higher price for eggs," she said. Fruits and vegetables were up 0.1 percent, dairy products were up 0.9 percent and cereal and bakery pro- ducts were up 0.3 percent. The only decline other than footwear was shown jn medical care which was down 0.2 percent. This was offset by an 0.2 percent increase in reading and recreation costs, leaving the health and recreation category unchanged. Miss Fadowskl said the health and recreation prices are up 3.9 over last year. New Bus Route Approval Seen In Seal Beach attorney Michael Gerbosl agretd earlier that first degne murder and a possible dealh penalty would not be asked for. Cynthia dfed sometime on lhe night of Feb. 14, 1964. Her partially decomposed, dismembered body was discovered in ' March of this year in a freezer from the Slocum home in Costa Mesa which had been taken to a storage company's warehouse. , , • In bis rinal argument to the jury, defense attorney Gerbosi continued to al· tempt to discredit Mrs. Marian Slocum, wife cf the defendant as a prosecution witness. "Sbe baptized the baby on the clay It died claiming the doctor reftmed to let her take it to the hospital," Gerbosi pointed out. "She should ~ave said, 'To bell wilh tbe doctor, my baby's dying, I'm going to take her to The hospital'." The defense attorney dwelt on put pro- blems of Mrs. Slocum. "She had pro- blems ether. than drinkiog. She tried to commit suicide six years before the baby was born." • Gerbo6i concluded by saying, "There is no motive for murder in this case. The baby looked like the i:loctor. 'There Is no evidence the doctor ever hit lhe other children. The evidence is not coovincing beyond ·a reasonable doubt." Prosecutor Enright in final summary pointed out that the jury was not to can· sider a penalty, just guilt or innocence. "The defeme bas tried t.o try me the district attorney," be protested. u'I'hat•a not new. It is an old trick." "Then the defense counsel said be wa5 not going to try Airs. Slocum and he spent most of bis argumeol doing just that," Enright continued. ·~ are pl_aying lhe aid shell game. Trymg to mali you forget about the doc· At least some signs of peace are ex· tor'~ s~ry. 'Let's try her,' they are pected in politically-tom Sell Beach over saying. . the weekend when new bus routes will be He continued lo stress that the Mexican adopted by two transpbrtatlon com·.,. .·maid's te.ti~y corPOborated that cf panies. Mrs. Sl~m. "Tb~>'. wo\I}~ like to get. rid ~ buses, both from the Rapid Transit cf Co""!:!i' alt an't, the ~id at· Disjrict cam> .ie;"' Beach iomey ...,,..ec1. 11 Pu~ic i'ranspodliQI' '" y, raised a ,, Enright~t hard at Dr. SI~11.ptory • flurp' of complaints ear er this year He goes .. ·to the afflce that night after when the=lle~attled tlle windows keeping the chUd in the. office aJI day and ·er · tbei"t>laster aloog a nine-because she was so very ill. It is obvious block stielo 1tf Electric Avenue. he must n~ be at borne when the chi;) Signs and banners urging the buses to al~~gedly.dies. "get out" went up in front of houses . .When~ comes home why doesn't he along the bus route. The city then msist on examining the dea4 baby? He's ardered a change in the transportation a1f~ght.or. Why doesn't he say to his wife, plan. a n, t, •the baby died, let's call the cor· Beginning Sunday, both firms will no on~r · • longer be entering or departing the city N?, instead he claigls he looks for the from Eiectric: Avenue. Instead, the buses bab)' s ~y frantically twl~ that night will use the ltss densely populated and again lb~ lll!:xl day. Agam two days Marina· Drive. ltha~er and then forgets about the whole Fountain Valley Sets Back to School Night Parents will go to lhelr sons and dau~ters classes Monday night when Fountain Valley High School hosts its (irs~"Back to School. Night" of lhe year. y'll be attendlng a compressed Kh r tde of Classes rrom 7:30 p.m. to 9:15 p.mr. during which they can find out ex· act!;. what "Johnny"· or "Jane" do on camp,us. .. " ' ~ DAILY PILOT ,.OllANG~ COAST l"UtLIMtlNG C0M'AlfY Robc rt N, Wc~ l"rulllitnl troll "'"'"'*' J1tk R. C111lcy ~ \Ik e Ptnld"11 Moll GW1or11 Mlll'llllf I • 1hom11 Kccvil EtllOt Thom•• A. Murphl11• M•Mtin• ffJ;or Alcn Di1ki11 W.1 Ori"" COU!ltr !.lllltr Alt11rt W. l•l•• Al.toc:l•ll 1£1111!0!' ..... 1 ......... Offke mg. "Would you as a rational human being believe such a story," Enright hammered bonie. Valley Council Wants Bike Park Fountain Valley has joiried Huntington Be~ch urging Orange County to build regional parks for motorcycles and mini bikes. Fountain Valley Clty Councilmen asked county officials to look for sites at Los Coyotes, Ortega and other locations on an emergency basis if needed. ' The city itself is considering con- struction of a mini bike park. Council action Tuesday was spurred by requests from residents who ride motor- cyclta for sport. Both Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach have adopted laws forbldlng the use of motorcycles or mini bikes•on unimproved private property or any public property other than streets. Orange County has adopted a similar law, virtually halting the sport for off. 1tnet riders. New city and COW1ty governmentl are looking to re£ional motor parks to pro- vide an outltt for motorcycUsU. V al\ey Citizens Urged to Back United Fund Fountain Valley homeowners, bu siness- nien and workers will be asked to un- buckle their money belts this week to help the United Crusade meet its goal a( $31,500. Mrs. Jan Wilhelm, crusade chairman for the Fountain Valley effort, said resi. dents should reci!lve contribution re- questJ· in -the mail this week. "Some businesses have already made majar contributions," she added. The $31,500 figure is the city's share of the West Orange County United Cru· sade's t9ta1 goal of $5$4,000. "Gifts may be pledged now and paid to the Crusade in 1971," Mrs. Wilhelm explained. Each business has been asked to set a goal of $UKI for its contribution. The United Crusade collects funds for redistribution to a large variety of char· ity agencies, eliminating the need for individual campaigns. * * * Vnited Crusade Month Declared Ye citizens cf Huntington Beach be aware that on this day forward unto the 19lh of November it shall be known as the month of the United Crusade. Such is the determination by official proclamation of the Mayor of Huntington Beach, Donald Shipley. "Citizens are forthrightly urged to ~p. port th~ Unife<f Crusade by voluntary don~'llJiolP~ mw good ...... it ~~"~,!>~slates. ..... ,-, .I. if, Hiking Scouts Seek Members Eiplorer Post 468 of Fountain valley - the hiking troop -has room for about 15 more boys who like to walk. The post was formed last year on the premise that boys like hiking. Nine cf them went on a 50()..mile trek through the Sierra Nevadas this summer. Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach or \Vestminster boys who would like to join up should phone George Keller, Fountain Valley Fire Department, 962-1314. No prior scouting experience is needed for membership. At least 12 outings are planned by thl!: post for the coming year lncluding trips to such places as the Grand ca'nyon, Baja California, Catalina and Chlna Lake. Sailors Get To Air Gripes SAN DIEGO {AP) -Sailors w 1th gripes dial "CAPF" to reach the captain at Miramar Naval Air Station and talk it over. By Wednesday, the end of one week's operation, 50 calls had 1>een made to Capt. Alfred W. Chandler's office. A young man 's voice told Chandler that a one-way sign put up by a civilian con· struction company after a road-resurfac- ing job pointed the wrong way. Chandler got it turned. The complaints of others have prompt· ed Chandler to arder street light& in· stalled in family housing areas and to set up a center where married men can change fro?t civilian clothes to uniforms. 17175 l11ch lo1l9¥1r4 "11 ili119 AdcJrtn: P.O. a. 7t0, !1MI OtMr OHkel ; Llfllll9 &udu m foftll """""" )' Ctlt. Mnc: »O W•I .. y ltr9tt ..,.rt ''""' nn W•t .. n.n IOll!tWft 1111 C1m1tnt1: aJ "or1h fl C1mllll llttl Chamber of Commerce ' I • -. DAl~Y l"ILDT. wltll "1!iCll b C9ll'lbltld W. jlltft ,,..,, II ~ltl"e4 M lly .-11111 ~ "" "' ""''''' cAlllOM tor UlllOM llllldl. "--' teldl, Ct1lt MIU, ~-- --" .,. "-'''" v111ty, ,_,. Wiit\ -,...._, edllltnt, Of' ..... Q)H ,.,.,lllllllt ~ lll'IMllW ..,"" ,,. ct un ... , 1111io• th4!1 .. "-"°"' flKll. .,... .,. w..a ..., '""" 0.1• Mna. Tthlf• •• (7141 Ml-4111 .... ..... , "''Cal 141·1ut Cl ..... A .. etll:I I '41·1171 ""'"""' ,,,., DI'•• '""' Niii ... ~llY· ... .... .... ....,,.,, ........ •1w111 fl'lltt..-w '"""'""'*"' ._. .. ""' • ,...,.._... """"""" ..._i.1 ,.,. l!lllMlon .. c;WWll --· ....... <._ ........ ,_Id II N...-rt IMdl 91111 CO.• .._, C.lltltJILI, ~1911 1W c:tfl' .. '2,tl -llllY• .., tNll lt,11 "*lllll~t mlll'"Y ._...n.,... 12..!S ll*tl!llJ', H·urting in Huntington nie Huntington Beach Chamber of ' C.mere< b running lnlo flnlndal pro- blems. Directors were told al their luncheon meeting at the Sberston Beach IM Wednesday that the chamber's bllance was $4,012 at the beginning of th.ls month but that upendllur .. had ucoeded In· come sil1C(! .mid-summer. President Pete Horton proposed that the probltm be dlscuned at an execuUve meeting of the board at the chamber's of. fices In the Town and COUntry shoppll\& centtr at I p.m. OcL 21. Horton s&ld there were a number of reasons for lhe fiscal difficuJtles but the chamber ls known to have been hurt perticularly by the loss of a $19.600 con- tract with the city to retain an economic development director • The city's eeonomlc: development dlrec-. tor, William Back, has worked at city hall since July. At the Oct. 29 meeting. the dlrecton .1!90 will take a stand on the proposed charter revisions for lluntlngton Beach, Including the question of whether their cl· \y ahould have• full·tlme mayor. Mer~hants l'lad Street Project Ruining Business Several merchants near a downtown in- tersection in Huntington Beach are unhappy about a street widening project -they claim it is hurting their businesses. The businesses are at the Alabama Street intersection cf Adams Avenue and they have been temporarily blocked off by the project to widen Adams Avenue from two Janes to four. "People have to walk 50 yards to get to my store," complained Jim DeGuelle who owns a glass W1>rks. Chuck Geers, who owns a plumbing business, believes that he has lost $1,000 si nce the work started Oct. 12. They took their complaints to the.city council this week and Public Works Director Jim Wheeler assured the merchants that the work was being con- tinued as fast as possible. The project involves widening Adams: Avenue from Beach Boulevard to Lake Street, putling a sewe r line in from Delaware Street to Alabama and a water line throughout the improved hall-mile stretch. Wheeler said this morning that the pro- ject had been held up for ane day by an independent truckers strike but he hopes the work will be completed in two weeks. House Majority Leader Lauds Hanna in Anaheim Rep . Carl Albert {D.Qklaboma), the majority leader of the House, Wednesday told a gathering of county Democrats the nation's great problems are not in· soluble. Albert spoke at a $100.a-plate diMer in Anaheim held to boost the campaign or Rep. Richard Hanna (D-Anaheim). Slated t'O be the next sf>eaker' ct the House, Albert and a colleague from Tex- as, Rep. Olin Teague, urged the 200 party members present to "get out and raise an army for him (Hanna) from lhe public spirited citizens of the county." while speaking in. glowing terms or the dim1nutive Ccngressman's eight years in Washington , Albert managed to slip in a few blasts at the Republican Party and the administration. "We are experiencing the worst hous- ing shortage since World War II and the worst decline in the construction industry since the great depression ," he said. "This nation is in a serious state of economic decline and the so-called solu- tions offered by the present ad· ministration have failed to stop it," he charged. But the veteran Congressman who was a Rhodes Scholar during the worst years of the depression, said he was not com· pletely discouraged by the grim economic picture. "Any nation that has the talent and energy to send a man to the moon and bring him back safely can solve any pro- blem. And this great nation cf ours does have the capability and the know how in men like Dick Hanna," he said. Teague, who had participated earlier Wednesday in a hearing on unemploy- ment in the county, eqi.phasized the need to rebuild the space pr:ogram. He is chairman of the House Aeronautics and Science Committee. He pointed to the unemploye d aerospace workers and the continuing ef· forts of ether nations Jn space ex· ploration. "The space program is a sign of growth," he said. "And if we start cut- ting back now, in three to five years. we're going to be very unhappy to be left behind. "We need Dick Hanna and the support he has given to the space programs," Teague said. "Besides, we have enough Teagues in Coogress already with myself and Charles {R-Los Angeles ).'' :Ja/f Clearance • • • Tara said the note was withheld in- itially so as not to alarm citizens. "The note itself is in the hands cf some of the most competent analysts in the state," he said. He added : "We recognlu the abock this senseless act has brought to our citizenry, We trust that the sober jud&· ment of our residents will prevail over any emotional reaction. Besides Dr. Ohta, those slain were his wife, Virginia, 43, sorui Derrick, 12, and Taggart, 11, and secretary, Dorothy Cadwallader, 38. Each of the victims was shot once ln the back of the bead, and Ohta allo wu shot in the back. All were dwnped into the ·swimming pool of the mansion outside the city. The house was set afire. Firemen, Jaoking for water to fight the blaze, discovered the bound, fully clothed bodies in the pool. Discovery of Mrs . Ohta's stolen 1918 green Oldsmobile station wagoo, smashed by a switch engine in a tunnel nea~ Felton Tuesday evening, was the first an- nounced solid clue in the case. Scores of law enforcement afflcers fan- ned out through the surrounding redwood forest to look for suspects. The vehicle was empty when struck by the engine, but the motor was sUU warm, and an attempt had been made to bwn the car. Two sets of footprints led from the vehicle. The tunnel is north of Santa Cruz. about seven miles from the killings and in an area abounding with hippie-type communes. The road and tracks below run alongside a redwood gorge of the Santa Cruz ~fountains. The sheriff's ad- ministrative assistan~. Lou Keller, said whoever drove the car on the t r a c i: 1 "just had to have local knowledge." He added, "I travel that road every day and didn't know the tWlMl was there." Keller said the area's "indigent transient" population was being ques- tioned, but other possibilities were not being ruled out. The two youths and girl were being sought because a woman real estate agent reported earlier Tuesday spotting the station wagon parked aff the road in some brush near Felton. The three were reported seen ntarby, where campfire ashes were found. A friend of the Ohtas said Mrs. Ohta told her two months ago that her husband had to chase six "bippie·lypes" aff the porch. Dr. Ohta was known to have provided free medical care. to some hippie-types, but there was no official speculation on any relationship. -laOM GROWS 11111 GAME SETS Floor SfHftples and DiM:omtnued Items 25% To 50·% OFF I mms Jiafe You fovorite Interior d<rifllltl' V>iU be ham to aulst Vo" , •• H.J.GARREfT fURNll1JRE -TllY OU• --CHA..._ ~ llh\!o. ~ ' "'· ~ 22)5H.llMD. cOsTA Gllllf. ' ' f. 17 • [ 17 I l I . € -Newport D~_peh,,,.,,.__ EDITION . ' • T ... y'• Fl••I ' • • ' • • VOL. 6~. NO. 25l, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY; CALIFORNIA . ,_ THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1970 TEN C&jTS- Irvine '"1.e agreement by the Council of Com· mwiities of· IA'ine to give up their claim to the .Collins Ra,dio .Compahy property as part of their future city apparently was done without the blessings of the Irvin~ Company. A spokesman for the firm, which owns tJie in.acre tract, .,said today lhe~.ine Company has not dropped plans for its suit to block annexation of the property HELD IN RUSSIA Brig. Gtn. McQu•rrle Suit to by Newport Beach, at lemt not yet. Tbe Collini property has been the su~ ject of controversy since Newport Beach and Collins officials . started the an· nexation proceedings. 'lbe Irvine Company contends it must approve the annexation, since it owns the Jand. Collins officials maintain tbe ~ det"emilnation l!"""lh"'eln s nee ey ave a long-term (85-year) lease. Ul"IT .......... DETAINED BY SOVIETS M•i· Gen. Scherrer Bio.ck While the property WIS lncluded on tht original incorporation maps filed with the Local Agency Formation O>mm.lssion last month, CCI· officials disclosed this week they would agree to amend the pro- posed boundaries of the future city to ex· elude it. Alt..Qf_w_hicb._M.l_eas_t. lot..~r!I. hasn 't yet swayed historic Irvine ·eom. pany thinking that the property belongs Annex 'St.i_ll Pending' in Irvine, however. Newport Buch can be worked out," he Respoodlng to a query this momln(, said. GllbW W. Ferguaon, Irvine'· Company "U 1 satisfactory solution caitnot be vice president or corporat:e com-found, however," he added, "we remain munications, saitl that while litigation is prepared. to move ~ immediately still conte~~ated., thete are e I Io r. ts with a lawsuit to prevent annel:ation of under way to negotiate 1 soluUoo. --1hLC.O.llinLBAdlo sltej)y_any_city_w:itbout '' _are-hopellL._tbe-boundaty-dif--our~auen"'••~fee owner of~y,.!-! fere.nces between the council and Council He did not lndli:l!lte whether he was of Communities of Irvine and the city o( ref~rring to negoUalions between CCI and Newport Beach or negotiations between the company and Newport . Beach. The Newport City Council has not taken any formal action 'on the proposal made bf CCI to amend its boundaries to ex-· elude the Collina property ind Oranae County Airport. ~Maw--Ed-Hlrth-"411-the leU.,..fnlm- CCI President John Burton at the coun- cil's Monday night meef.in&. Explosion Rocks Church Lawman's Funeral Interrupted by·BQmb Blast SAN FRANCISCO CUP!) -A bomb ex- ploc:led oulside a ahurch Thursday . 1s mourners, including 300 policemen and Mayor Joseph Alioto, gathered for the funeral of a police officer killed in a &llootout with a bank robber. No one was Injured when the explosive device, planted in shrubbery about 3 feel from the front door of St. Brendan's Catholic Church went off with I blast which shook the church and surrounding houses. Some mourners, police and reporters had already started filing Into the church, walking a few feet from the bomb, when the explosion occurred at 9:47 a.m. The funeral cortege fur patrolman Harold L. Hamilton,• 32, shot to death at a Weill Fargo branch bank Monday, was on its way from the runerat home fo.r lbe services, scheduled at 10 a.m .. "It sounded like a terrible bomb," sa111 a teacher at St. Brendan's Scbool next door. Across the 1t.reet, Mrs. Edna Peters, said the explosion shook her house. The blast discolored the front of the stucco-faced church, built in California mission-style with a red tile roof and bar- red windows , but did no serious damage. It dlQ little visible damai:e to the outSide, tiut Chief Al Nelder said it may have done "extensive dam.age" to lhe wxlerplonlngs end Ille walls. Police and firemen swarmed -over tht bulldln( · and .,.iecl o~ the. area. ' : ' Police Seek Trio PoUi:emen dllcounted reports by a ml· dent of "two rnen" seen fleeing the site and said they believed the bomb wu a timed device which had been plant.td b?urs earlier. "Wi1'i going to make another fast search Or the building and then go ahead with the funeral to show these bUDll lbey can't scare us out." said Alioto, his voice shaking with anger. He blamed the explosion on a "psychotic crew" of terrorists. "We're going to stop this nonsense," he said. Mary Crawford, a reporter for lhe San Francisco Examiner, said· 90melhing "metallic" hit ber shoe. She Was about 20 to 30 feet awiY from the door at the time. Police lat.er found a plece of clockwork· like spring lying in the striel about 35 feet 'away, and newsmen stJd they fouq.d bent nails on the sidewalk. Another witneu said, "stuff was falllnc all around." Police Chief Alfred J, Nelder said th~ bomb was buried under the shrubbery. He said there were "no certain, concrete suspects." "It was one of the most despicable things that could happen," said Nelder. "A man lays down his life doing his duty and we oome to pay tribute to him at a Mass and then someone does this. "lt just makes you :NOnder wjlat we are coming to." V.S. Bee~hcraft Held; 'Sweet Ernie' . . '' ' .Deriied Bid Cu1it KJU~~s :tet.i tf ~te' D~clar_ing .world War Dr. Slocum's Case Goes Russ Keep -2 Generals From Wire Services MOSCOW -An aircraft carrying two U.S. ·Army generals "violated the air space" of the SGviet Union and is being held in the Armenian city of Leninakan, ·Moscow radio said toda y. The radio report said the U.S. Air Force Beechcraft US propeller driven plane carried four men -the two .generals, a U.S. Air Force major and a Turkish colonel on a flight from Turkey. The two generals are Maj . Gen. Edward C. D. "Pony" Scherrer, 57, of Shawneetown, Ill., and Brig. Gen. Claude Monroe McQuarrie Jr., 45, of .Ft. Ben- ning,_ Ga. Both are attached to the U.S. Military Assistance Program in Turker. Tass identified the pilot as a ?t1a1or Russell and the Turk as a Colonel Deneli. The Tass news agency said all four were in good health. The plane di sappeared Wednesday on a 100..mile flight from Erzerum to Kars, about 35 miles from Turkey's border with the Soviet Union. U.S. Army authorities insisted the generals were only on a routine tour of Turkish military installations tn con· nection with their duties pertaining to military aid . They were nying in an army US Seminole liaison plane , a twin-engine --craft with a cruisin& speed ol about 170 miles an hour. Normally, the US is unarmed and car· ries no cameras or e l e 'ctronic surveillance gear: Leninakan, where the plane landed, is a city of 150,000 person! just across the eastern border. It is 575 miles east of Ankara and about 125 miles northwest of Yerevan, the ·capital or Armenia. Tass said "the competent Soviet authorities have been instructed to in· vestigate the circumstances connected with the above mentioned violation of the Soviet Union's state frontier by a plane o1 the U.S. Air Foree." . In Washington, a State Department spokesman told reporters he was unable to say whether Soviet authorities were holding the four men or whether they were considered to be in some other status with the Russians . A department press officer, John King, said the U.S. Embassy in Moscow had re- quested "consular access" to the Americans. That simply means, it was explained, that the embassy asked the Soviets to ap- prove the dispatch of an embassy official to Leninakan to see the four and report on their weUare and .~l)dition. -' . - For Acquittal A trial which could make ,history in t.erms of spok~n four~letter words resum· ed today in Costa Mesa, with UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich and actress Jane Fonda subpoenaed for defense testimony. Ernest Adolphus ,"SWeet Ernie," Smith, 30, is charged with 'disturbing the peace and using obscene language in the pressence of women during a campus in· cident. . 1be black graduate student and cam- pus leader -who supported. Barry Goldwater and George . Wallace cam- paigns in the past -claims he was dir~ ting his remarks to disruptive white students. He was charged following a campu!I disturbance last May during protest.!I over the U.S. invasion of Cambodia, when protesting whites allegedly tried to enlist black student support. Smith, a former Los Angeles talk show personality now pursulng UCI studies in black linguistics, is being tried before Judge Donald Dungan in Harbor Judicial District Court. He has pleadefi innocent and such a verdict could be a milestone in determination of spoken obscenities. "I uncorked some real hot ones," ad- mits Smith, a disc jockey for KUCI, the campus FM radio station. No women or children who may have been present complained, but the action (Stt OBSCENITY, Paie J) -f ~ . By 'JACK SCHREIBMAN. ~,.. ....... wr11w SANTA CRUZ-· A bizarre deClaraUon of war note was. left at a hoµae "~re fiVe persona. were slain threateili· ·~atli , to anyo11e ·who "misuses the 'nltur1I ·envir- onment." • The typewritterr note, sl;Ded "ith the names of the four kni~ts ·on fortune-tel- llni; tarot cirdS, Said foture killings would be carJied. out by the "People of Youths Seeking Jobs. at Holiday Busy holidays are on the way and along with them less time to take care of chores, plus the need for more money among the young for shopping and festi· vi ties . The Harbor Area Youth Employment Service has the answer. Jobs for willing teenagers are eagerly solicited from Harbor Area businesSes or private citizens who need a ha Ji d with anything from labor to baby-sitting or gift-wrapping. Headquartered at 594 Center St., Costa Mesa, the YE.S. office may be 'rea.ched by calling 642-0474, either with requests for work or job offers that will be qulCk· ly lilied. ' the Frte ·Onlverse.'' Dlscloalna the note Wednesday two days after the slaying . of wealthy eye 1urgeoo, Dr. Y,ictor ,M. Ohta anij four others1 Undersherlff Paul W. Tari urged the' community -100 mil,es so,uth of S~ Francisco -to remain c81m. · "We have to keep our 0001. We are • fighUng a ·war and we mlsht as wtlJ face it," Tata said. The undersherllf gjd the nature of the .killing& .and the note indicated the five were 1laln by cultt,sts. The note was found under the windshield wiper of Ohta's red Rolls Royce after the bodies of Ohta. his wife, two sons and secretary were discovered in a swimming pool at lhe famil y's ~.ooo hilltop home Monday night, Tara said. Until the note was made public, police had said they knew no .motive for the slaylngs. The)' were trying to f~ two young men and a girl repor:ted seen near another of the Ohtas' cars - a station wagon -before it was found abandoned on a railroad track. Tara said the note read: "Today World War Ill will begin ·as brought to you bf the People of the Free Universe:. From this day forrward anyone and/or a:impany who misuses the natur:al environment or destroys same will suffer the penalty of death by the People of tbe lite Sl.AYINGS, P11e 1) Newport Councilman Cites Litter Problem Solution A penny deposit on a plastic bag, a nickel on a cardboard box? -That every can, bottle, paper bag, box or carton shall bear the imprint or County Living Costs Soa·r Putting in the profit motive Is a solu- tion to the Jitter problem suggested today by Newport Beach City Councilman Llndsley Parsons. Parsons ls proposing the city council esk local state legislators to introduce atate Jaws requiring such deposits . "Why should the public be required to clean up after industry," he said. "Volunta ry litter control projects art commendable. but generally place the burden of implementation on a dedicated few, an<f even tually elpire througll public apathy." Parsons sharply criticized a statement made by the glass a:intaincr industry pro- testing a proposal to bring back the returnable deposit because it "would put 40.000 people out of ~'Ork.•· Parsons said, "It aggravates me very tnuch to think that the pubtlc is subsidiz- lng the employment of 40,000 perSol\$, In one Industry alone . for the sole purpose cl manufa cturing litter." · lie Is asking the council's legislative (()mmlttee to approach State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter and Assemblyman Robert Ba·dham, both Newport Beach R•fubllca.ns, requesting they introduce a bll that provides: the manufacturer. -That there shall be a five-cent deposit on each of thele Items. September Consumer PriCes Show Sharp Increases -That CV""' styrofoam cup or pluUc By JOANNE REYNOLDS --Of"" ................ bag shall bear the imprint of the Consumer prices in the <>ranae' County- manufacturer, and that there shall be • Los Angeles area 5'x>wed a sharp 1~ one-cent deposit on·each of lbe:9e Items." creiae of 1.4 percent for the month of P:arsooa suggests that receiving sta-September, accortfllll to statistics releas- tions be established ln each commwtity ed. Wed.Maday by die Bureau of Labor for the refund of deposill and the statlstic!. preparitlon . or the returned Wiste for Suzanne Fadowsld, chief or tht reprocessing. Los An&elet Office or Statlat.lcs, e1plaintd lk_f!So_pro-, ''That any lunds "" It all thlo way: maining in the deposit account at the end 0 What thit au boU1 down to Is that in of each year. after deductJng the cost of Orange County resident ii ping to hive the receiving station operations, beyond a to spend $13.62 to buy the same thingA reasonable reserve, shall be returned to that cost him flO in OSe pietiod from 1957~ the local government on a per p:>pUlation 59." pro rat.a. basi.sJor t~mplementallon pf _WhUe the increase was the highest Jn environmen.tal project.." nearly 21 years, the COC'l!Umer price'liide1 Parsons 1ndic1ted hts proposal .U,hl tot thie Southern California area re- sometlay be e1tended to c o v e r mained below the national average. • newspapers, pointing out "the eon. Mis,, Fadowski said the price tndex: for servadon of wood pulp products by the the area reached aa all lime high of recirculation of newsprint might be 13'.2. 1 worthy ~f fu:ther investl~atlon." The naUonal average &bowed a .4 per- He said his pro~! 11 based on the cent Increase in the COit of llvin1, brln1- presumption that "the establishment of a Ing the naUOnal CODJmner" price tnde~ pm(it motive for the reclamation or Utter to 136.6. · 1. ' Will iJve us cl•an commWliUes.• Mlla Fadowlld Hid 1lii! iDIJQrui ot'tlia - increase resulted from a jump in gas prices. • 3.1 percent whk:h Is sllghUy leSll than the 4 .3 increase recorded in the same period ln 11161,"-Mlu Fadowskl explained. "Gasotine prices play a very important part: in the calculation of the coUsumer price lndex for the Los Aripler-arel ," she said. "There were widespread ias wars dUring Augu!t, •which ended ·in September, sending Ille price ol gu up." . She said higher PIOllne .prJces. IC• counted for nearly ball the overall Iner._ ellhough rood, houslnc. and ap- parel prices were also up. The lncreaae in 111 prices ·are chiefly • -nsponstble for· the 4.7 percent . rise in • talion Ugure 'is composed of private tranf. tranapgrtaUon costs. The total transpor-, portaUon. which showed ·an increa11e of 4.1 percent, ind pubUc trarisportatlon, 1 which tJent up 1.4 percent. She said housing rose by 1.3 percent. to a level which ls 6 percent above that of 1 year ago. The housing COflts are divided into three su1>;c1tegories -' shelter (owaenblp and rental), luel end uWllles, and furnishings and operations. "If the effect of the f11 price lncruse were removed, it ls utlroated. 'that co~ sumer prices would. have only r1lea 0.1 percent.." she explained.. • -The September r\oe. WN the largeat month-te>-month increase ret0rded since February of 1961, wheil the c:onsumer·, price Index went up t.6 percent. The current level ol the coot o!'Uvlllf In Southern Calllornla Is 5.t 'percoii\ 111e1>er than It was 1 year •IO· "Consumer price• ibave riaen every mOIJth' In, 1!1,0 ~cept, Mol\!ll wfleo Uley 1 wtnt down 0.1 percenL ~ •. omau ,m. .....,. ID Ult pl1Ce Inda ... __,, ... I fl I Shelter coota rose u, wblch Is the la....,t rise In ti mooths, "1ilrownmhip eo1ts up I.I percent and rental up 1.1 per. I ~nt. 1 _Fuel and ullllty bills climbed O.S per- cent and household l1U111sbinp and operatloot were u~ U percent. • High prk:el on women'a Ind 1lrl1t fall lllhlons were blamed by Mll4 Faclowskt ,rpr , lhe.._!IWP u 1ncru.. In ._.1 COlll. "-"' leYtI at ,lhe ~.bl 8<p1<mbor ( ... PlllCll, hp I} -~---.-- To Jurors By JACK BROBACK 0t IM ~Uy l"llM lltff Thi! fate of Dr.'Wesley 'G. Slocum,'ao. cused ln the death of hil daughter )n COsta Mesa six years ago, today went in.· to the hands of a Superior Court jury in Santa Ana. . The .once-prominen~ ·surgeon lJ be lo& tried on charges that he was rllfKNlsible for the death of two and one-haU month old Cynthia Slocum, whose rtmatni authorities allege were dissected and secreted ln an abandoned freezer in the doct.Or's Costa Mesa home. Superior Court Judge Kenneth Willlam1 offered his final instructions to the jury th.is morning and gave the case to jurors at 10:45 a.m. Observers differ on how Iona: the Jury will be out in this difficult .cue in which there was no actual witness to the death of the daughter. In trial testimony. Mrs. Slocum ac- cused her husband of killing the child and he has accused her. Some guess the jury will return , a verdict today. Otl~rs think it might ta,ke two days or more. Judge Willi:ams instructed the jury to try to agree.4'"!on one of two verdicts: guilty of second degree murder or· not guilty. - Prosecutor James Enright and defense attorney: Michael Gerboli agreed earlier that firlf degree murder ind a posaibl• death penalty would not be asked for. Cynthia ,-ated sometime on the night ot Feb. 14, 1$64. Her partially decomposed, dismembered body was dUicovered in March of this year in a freezer from the Slooun home ln Costa Mesa which had been taken to a storage company11 warehouse. In bis linlll argument to Ille jutjl, (SH SLOCUM, P11e l) Oruge «=•ut Weetlter Look for sunny sides over inod. of the coast on Friday, with temp- eratures varying very little. from 68 locally to 70 further inland. INSIDE TODAY 'fM wproar ovtr d"'O'' 1"t among 11aunasttr1 has sprtad to mtdicat Vie of 1uch amphtp. 1 aml'Plt.t as ".tpttd" for oVtrlr•1 actW.. cl\ildrcn. ·Ste· Pdge 24. , ' <•'"'""" ,. (~ u, 1 Cll...... 12>• ...... " (,.._.. 11 0.fll Mftkw " 01~ n .... ,..,., ..... ' '"""'...., tt·tl ...... """ .._,._ II Aflfl~ It MMT'-• LlrilliMI II' -.... ........... N ....... _... f..f Or .... ~ It Jyhl .. ,.... • ..... .....,. ---, .......... n ,.......,., at.1J ·-. ...... ..... .. .......... ~,·· .... ,. ..... ,,,, ___ _ .• • J DAILY PILOT N lly GEORGE LEIDAL "' Of .. ~..-,....,s ... .. ~ ....... 1o-. ... 11b llllDIPI -lo -11, a UC !A'lne psycblatry prol-r contends. '.Dr. John Kramer, assistant clinical Piof..,.r of psychiatry, addmsed lbe µc ·Ulension aeries "Psychiatry for the Wyman'' Wednesday night. ' He cited a ''temporal" relalion!hip between pot and btroin use that is "1aloeous to the Uzplng of mwnps and ~-Just as a person ii likely to get the nn1mp1 in cbtldhood and mOno in bis }eW or )'OUDi adullbood, use of berotD ' From Page 1 SLAYINGS •.. Fret ·Univene. "I and my colnrades from lhis day forth will fl&ht UnW death or freedom, qainst anything or anyone who does not support natural life on this planet. materialism must die or mankind will." 'I1'le note was signed: "Knight of Wands "Knight of Cups "Knight of Pentacles "Knight of Swords." Tht pentacle is a five.sided figu re uaodated with wttchcraft u a magical or tallsman device, in ficUon often UJed· to summon up the devil. The Knights are the four suits of the 71- card tarot deek, used to tell one's fortune depending on which direction the large card! fall. Tara ·Mki the note wati. withheld & ltially ao .. not to llarm cl\lzens •. of ·~e =~ii:~~:~=:, o~so: state, .. he said. He added : "We n!!•>cnJze lbe shock this senseleu 1ct bu brou&ht to•our cillzenry. We trust thal lbe _,. judg· ment of our residents will prevail over any emotional reaction. Besides Dr. Ohta, those slain were his wife, Virginia, 43, sons Derrick, 12, ind Taggart, 11, and ...,,..1ary, Dorothy Cadwallader, 38. Each of the victims was shot once In the back o! the head, and Ohta also was shot in the back. All were dumped into the swimming pool of the mansion outside the city. The houae was set afire. Firemen, looking for water to fight the blaze, discovered the bound. fully clothed bo<lies in the pool. * *' * Hippie Reveals Fear of Revenge From Vigil&~t~ SANTA CRUZ (AP) -"I hope to God · it wa.m 't longhairs. There's going to be hell to pay around here if it was Jonghairs." The words belonged to a young htppie- type worried that the bizarre klllinc of five persons near here will trina: down on ·the Innocent a kind of vigilante retribu· lion. Eye surgeon Victor M. Oh.ta, 45, his wife, Virginia , 43, Uteir soni; Derrick, 12, and Taggart, II , and Oh.la's secretary, Dorothy Cadwallader, 38, were shot dead Monday night and dumped in the Ohta BWimming pool. The slayings se.Dt wave.s of fur throqb this ocenside city 70 miles south of Sin Francisco, where some believe a "cuJt" might have taken the lives in a ritualistic orgy. The hlppie, sporting a beard and pigtail, who asked not to be named, swore he would get a halr cut and shave if it turned out that hippie-types did the slayings. "Thls has c11t a pall over the whole ci- ty ," said a nun 1!11" Dominican Hoapital, where Dr. Ohta was a founder and pr1c- ticed ohpthalmo1ogy. Sandra Vallelunga, wboee (1DU1y lives oo the next ridge over from the death scene, aald: .. l'm ~ed to death." DAILY PILOT OltAMGI CO.UT PUllLISHINCI COMPANY Rebert N. We.I p,...111.,,t •rid Pubtll .... J•ck R. Curl•v Themes l(,,.,;1 EClltor Th•m•• A. M11rphl11• M1111g1no e1111or l . P•l•r Krieg Nnpen llffdl err., Et11tw N..,.r .._, Office 2211 W•lf l1lbo• loul•..-1rd M1 ili119 Acldr11t1 P.O. lex 1175, 9266J --C..I• M-1 :UO Wat a.y Sll'MI t..OUM IH(tl1 222 l"-1 A..-.n.,. 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'"I'nkol ~ 1t1trs now. ~ -G<'YOUtlfl 11dulls" .... t:Gma . from midCqa CWI hon\ef, not ~ i!l&\- toea u llleJ' .... did, be Aid. Among apeculotlve .......,. for drug use listed by. Kramer wu lhe ''sensitivity to peer or sub-group pressures" evident among young people. These p e e r pressures have contributed to a decline of the use of alcohol in college communities, be noted. He lisled "availability" as the prime rtasoa drugs are used noting, "they can't Street Scene be abuled U Ibey .,. not ovallable. Maybe tlrill II why .doclor1 an more prone t.o uw more dnip." !llama: ~~ "Qt!I doi>tof Jn 10 lo 100 II aadle!H la ilplaie. ~ a lllOot rale tbao in lhe lhfttoes." • "RestrlcUve laww help keep some persons from using drugs. • .although more serl~ social problems often result," Kramer said. 11 Citing results of a study which found 50 Items of a personality test. which were common to heroin addicts but not to non· addicts, Kramer noted the items when applied to another sample of people drouchlng .St. Louis polil;::e officers, guns at the ready, take cover and watch apartrii.ent..,.here·a fellow officer is held hostage. For the outcome of this story, see Page 4. . . .. " • OB.SCENITY TRIAL ••• · against SmJth steins from a complaint signed by UCI CIQlpus Police Qiief Robert Helvey. No one else was charged ' in the Gateway Plaza speech incident and ·the defense contends white students as well as Smith used the four-letter word and words relating to Incest. Defen!le attorney James George used the word! frequently -and with . em· phasi.! -Wednesday while cross-ex· amining UCI Vice Chancellor L. E. Cox. The seven-woman, five-man jury in- cluding three white-haired grandmotherly types appeared unmoved by the terms and said during selection process that they could take them. Smith, a popular UCI campus figure, wore a snappy green block-checked suit, moss-green shirt. alligator-green shoes and gold tie, occasionally writing notes to his attorney. Vice Chancellor Cox, a Phi Beta Kappa key dangling from his tie cla sp, repeated- ly denied during cross-examination that he recommended ttimina1 prosecution to Chancellor Aldrich. He said he only passed on the petition for a cotnplaint. The defense argued for acquittal of Smith late Wednesday afternoon, but Judge Dung8:J said he believes the Services Slated For Mr. Reade Graveside services \\'ill be heltl in Garden Grove for Ralph L. Reade., lather of Costa Mesa civic leader Nathan Reade. who died Tuesday at Hoag 1i1emorlal HOlpital. Mr. Reade, who was 87, came to Costa Mesa about a yur ago to live with his son and family at 2285 Cornell Drive. Friendl!I may call at Baltz Costa Mesa Mortuary today until 9 p.m. Mr. Reade leaves three son!, Nathan L .. of Costa Mesa, John S., of Anaheim, and Harold R. Reade, of Garden Grove; two daughters. Mrs. Louise Shiveley, of CiardeD Grove and 11-trs. Rosemarie Jonell, of Anaheim ; eigllt grandchildren and two RJ'tlt·grandclllldren. Qimbing Ropes Stolen at OCC Give pollce a man with enoush 1rope and they may bani bim with It -on a theft chlr1e. Dorothy Lau. of the Orange Coast CoUec• staff, told Coola M... poUce Wednesday someone clipped two thick, 18-foot climbing ropes worth $70 from an A-l'.rlme on the alhleUc field. evidence for a conviction el.ists. He emphasized that the jury will decide, not himself. Smith 's attorney said he may call up to &ix defense witnesses, including Aldrich and Miss Fonda, the daughter of act.or Henry Fonda and sister of actor·producer Peter Fonda. Chancellor Aldrich is known to have urged settling the obscenity issue through on-campus procedures. Miss Fonda has become increasingly active in a variety of cau.seS including the Black Panthers Party, but was to testify as a typical , middle-class white American woman. Neither was to be called this morning . Deputy District Attorney R u s s e 11 Serber is proSecutlng the obscenity case against Smith and offered an analogy Tuesday that was ridiculed out.side by UC student observers at the trial. Serber said the excuse of what is ac· cepted in one culture and forbidden in another could be carried to the extreme of permitting certain visitors to practice cannibalism too. The basic issue in the Smith trial is freedom cf speech, as guaranteed under the Constitution, Vice Chancellor Cox admitted during cross-examination that he reaimmended to Chancellor Aldrich that Gateway Plaza 6peech-making should be suspended. "You were not referring to speeches dealing with the use of the term --- or ,"but to all speech?" pressed 8ttomey George. "That's true." replied Cox. He said in later testimony that he cer- tainly favors free speech and the right of students to use it -maybe after the strike ove r Cambodian involvement had cooled down -but not obscenity. George also prodded him on the fact he Is Vice Chancellor for Business Affairs and as such, shoul dn't intervene in mat· ters purely involving students. Vice OlanceUor Jack Hoy, who Is In charge of student affairs, also advocated setUing the Incident in whicti S m i t b allegedly tried to shut up equally-of· tensive whi~ dissidents with barsb words. During arguments ror a c q u I t t a I • Smith's attorney said evidence prt!sented so far had not proved the defendant's comments were vulgar, profane or in· decent , only that they were uttered . Mansfield Collins, a UCI black student serv ing as Sm.Jth's press assistant during lhe trial, rtmarked outside the courtroom th1t the only real difference In i~ldcnts Involving Gov. Ronald Reagan and Sm.Ith ls color. Ciov. Reagan made headlines recently after calling a political foe a son-oC·a·~ bllch. "They both said something In the hfal of emotion •nd it was heard by somebody who made somellilng of it," COiiins <haried. • to ·H·eroin "could predict oddl<lf among adulla" but not ._... juvtoll11. 'l'bll leadt l!Udeola ol drug •buaa lo believe lllere may be a "poyCholotlY of ·dnq: men" lart whether 1t It sickness or PIJCbolcClcal style of the individual, has )'el lo be delumined. Kramer, equates drug use to "an In· ,cllnaUon toward risk-taking" a personali· ty factor which he believes is normally distributed io society, like intelligence, site or other human traits. There are probably as many people who seldom take risks as there are peo- ple wbo frequenUy "1amble at a stop aign, skydive or skin dive." Ill 1be U.S. -as oppoo«l lo Greal Brl· tali> -"tddle!I vezy aeldom ba,. ldeo- tifiable psychic neuroses or psychoses/' Kramer contends. "A sample of inm&tes at Norco institution might show fewer in- cidences of mental illness than a random seleetion of people off the street. _ "This leads to the quesUon consi~ered a possibility amorlg some researchers that heroin cures psychosis," he said. He cited evidence that heroin causes brain wave patterns similar to those caused by lhorazine, a drue used to treat I psychosis. Genel"al Got Medal Told to Concoct War Hero Story, Gls Charge WASHINGTON (UPI) -Six enlisted men have charged that they were ordered to concoct imaginary stories so Brig. Gen. E. P. Forrester could receive the Silver Star and the Distinguished Flying Cross. Forrester received the Silver Star, the military's third highest medal, but award o( the Distinguished Flying Cross was never finally approved. Paramount Firm Awarded Fire Department Job The Newport Beach City Council has awarded the contract for the Newport Center fire headquarters to the A l e x Robertson Company of Para mount, the second low bidder on the project. The low bidder, the J. Ray Construction Company of Cosla Mesa, had asked that its bid of $347,444 be withdrawn because it was not aware of a 20Ckiay deadline for completion of the work. In giving the job to the Paramount company Monday night. the council de. ducted two alternates, OJ1e for carpeting and one for bunks and lockers, because of the amounts attached to these items in the Robertson bid. The contract, for $350,'775, is still about 10 percent above the latest cost estimates given by project architect. WUliam P. Ficker. With the alternates, Robertson's bid ttitalled $369,000, $22,000 more than the lowest offer. Sailors Get To Air Gripes SAN DIEGO (AP) -Sailors w i t h gripes dial "CAPT" to reach the captain at Miramar Naval Air Station and talk it over. By Wednesday, the end of one week's operation, 50 calls had been made to Capt. Alfred W. Chandler's office. A young man's voice told Chandler that a one-way sign put up by a civilian con- struction company afte:r a road-resurfac- ing jcb pointed the wrong way. Chandler got it turned. In a letter to Chairman L. Mendel Rivers of the House Armed Services Committee, Spec. 4 Roy R. Trent Jr. said, "our task was onJy to formulate the basic paperwork from thin air ... if it took all night." The dates were "picked at random," Trent wrote. At the time, Forrester was assistant commander o( the 1st Air Cavalry Division with headquarters north of Saigon. The New York Times, which obtained a copy of the letter, said Forrester was not aware oC the alleged fictitieus aature or the documents. Col. George Newman, 1st cavalry chief of staff, was quoted by the Times as saying he ordered the documents written on the basis of heroism be had heard that Forrester displayed while Dying a helicopter in Cambodia. "I just assumed it was checked,'' Newman was quoted as sayiVg. Trent said he was omitting the names of the other five enlisted men for fear of ''potential recriminations." However, the five submitted a signed statement ac- compaaying Trent's letter in which they corroborated his charges and said they "wholeheartedly call for and support an investigation of this affair." From Pa9e 1 PRICES •.. is 4.1 percent above the level a year ago. She said feminine fashions showed a 4.4 percent Increase with the price of men's and boy's fashions up 0.6. These two in· creases were offset somewhat by a drop of 1.6 percent in footwear. While meat, poultry and fish showed declining prices, the overall cost of food went up 0.4 percent in September, putting it 3.9 percent above last year's level. "Leading the increase was a 1.4 per- cent rise in the 'other foods for the home' sub:group due to a higher price for eggs," she said. Fruits and vegetabl es were up 0.1 percent, dairy pr¢ucts were up 0.9 percent and cereal and bakery pra- ducts were up 0.3 percent. Tbe only decline other than footwear was shown in medical care which was down 0.2 percent. This was offset by an 0.2 percent increase in reading and recreation costs, leaving the health and reGftation category unchanged. Miss Fadowski said the health snd recreation prices are up 3.9 over last year. Jaff Clearance • • • "In Great Britain the typical heroin ad· diet ls a tnuch sicker cookie. The lui.cide rala ._ aoldidl la macb l"°'Of lllOD 'among addicts in the U.S.'! ' Contrasting the occuional user wbt Kramer contends eventually 1ives up drugs to the opiate addict, he noted it .IJ possibl e that drug u$e ls ' "sel(·treat· ment of anxiety, a relief from a sense of isolation.'' He bases this hypothesis on Clb5trva• lions of psychiatrists who have found it easier to treat a ,pers9n's menlal dif- ficulties following a periOd cf'addict.ion. From Page 1 SLOCUM •.• defense attorney G~rbosi continued tt at- tempt to discredit Mrs. ?rfarian ,Slecum. wife of the defendant II a proltCUUon witness. "She baptized the baby on the day it died claiming the doctor refuaed to let her take it to the hospital," Gerbo!i pointed out. "She should have said, 'To hell with the doctor, my baby's dying, I'm going to take her to the hospital'." The defen se all.Qrney dw ejt on past pro- blems cf Mrs . Slocum. "She had pro- blems other than drinking. She tried .to commit suicide six years before the baby was born." Gerbosi concluded by saying, "There is no motive for murder in this case. The baby looked like tlwl. doctor. There is no evidence the doctoi' ever bit the other children. The evidence is not convincing beyond a reasonable doubt." Prosecutor Enright In llnlll summary pointed out that the jury was not to con- sider a penalty, just guilt or innocenct. "The defense bas tried to try me. the district attorney," he protested. "'Ibat 'I not new. It is an old trick." "Then the Gere.me counsel said be was not going to try Mrs. Slocum •nd lie spent most of hi! argument doing just that," Enright conUnued. "They are playing the old shell 1ame. Trying to make you forget about the doc- tor's story. 'Let's try her,' they are ssying." He continued to stress that the Mexican maid's testimony corroborated that of Mrs. Slocum. "'Illey would like to get rid of Connie but they can't," the district at- torney char1ed. Enright hit hard at Dr. Slocum's story. ''He goes to the office that night after keeping the child in the office all day because she was so very iii . It is obvious he must not be at home when the chiif allegedly dies. "When be comes home why doesn't he Insist on examining the dead baby? He's a doctor. Why doesn't he say to his wife, all right, the baby died, let's call the cor- oner? · "No, instead he claims be looks for the baby's body frantically twice that night and again the next day. Again t"'.O days later and then forgets about the whole thing. "Would you as a rational human being believe such a story,'' Enright hammered home. Russia, Turkey .Sign Highway Agreement ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -Turkey an<i the Soviet Union signed a highway transport agreement Wednesday th1t will make possible bus connections between the two countries, the semloUicia! Anatolia news agency reported. The pact abolishes all taxes on highway traffic between the two nations, the agen- cy said. -._ &IOUPS 11111 GAME SETS F"6r ~ ,.,a ~wlrems 25% To 51% 8Ff Yo~ favoriU Interior derignn will be happ., to ar.tbt vou ••• Immediate DM'IWfY H.J.GAl\l\ETT fURNl1lJRE -11Y 0111 --CHAlllll-l!f.:-..._ ......_ a l'rl. ._ 17 17 • tosia Mesa EDITl~N ' N.Y. Steeb • • • ' . VOL. 63 , NO . 253 , 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1970 TEN CENTS Explosion Rocks Church . Lawman's Funeral I~terrupted .by ~omb Blast Street Scene Crouching St. Louis police officers, guns at the ready, take cover and watch apartment where a fellow officer is held hostage. For the outcome of this story, see Page 4. Teetotaler Wins Approval For Coffeehouse in Mesa By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 lt11 D.iiY P'1'91 ltiU Plans are percolating for a coffeehouse Jn a defunct beer bar that will be transfOrined i~to a club catering to fo!k musicians. But Costa Mesa City Council issued a stern warning to run it right. Terry Morrissey is laking over the old Sarong. at 2280 Newport Blvd., under a zone exception permit approved 4 to 1 Monda y, with Mayor Robert M. Wilson against it. The softspoken teetotaler said no alcohol will be served . but only coffee. tea and soft drinks. while the 7 p.m. to 4 and som~times 6 a.m. club will feature quiet music. . . . One specific question raised involved the clientele. Morrissey said they may join for $1. receiving a membership card good for one admission only -literally a ticket or cover charge system -adding that • Noted Movie-maker Haller Dead at 74 MARINA DEL REV (AP) -Ernest Haller 74 who shared the 1939 clnem~togr~phy Academy Award for his work on "Gone With the Wind" died of an apparent heart attack while driving lo the grocery store". Sheriff 's deputies said Haller pulled out of the apartment comple1t where he lived slumped over his car's sfcering v.·heel. then struck a parked car Wednesday. His widow Mary Jane. 69. was lreated for &hock after learning of his death. rowdyism is rare in such clubs. "What are they gong to get high with?" demanded Councilman William L. St. Clair. "I beg your pardon, sir .•. ?" Mor· rissey stammered. "Their highs, Their highs. You know what musicians do after work," St. Clair explained. The young club owner replied that he doesn"t drink nor associate with those who tipple. "Then you don't associate with me," St. Clair responded. f.trs. Elizabeth Peterson, owner of an ad jacent motel, criticized the crew she said frequented the former business. "It's still the same color as it was befo're and that brought a hippie c\ientele which caused us problems," she ex· plained. Councilman St. Clair then discwsed musical theory. · "Folk music used to be 'Home on the Range' and th.at kind of thing." "Yes, 'Home on the Range," that's essentially it," Morrissey said. "Is this where we cry about how ter· rib\e life is and how we have to take pot?" St. Clair pressed. "No," the applicant replied, appearing weary now himsell. " ... And how the poor colored fol Its are downtrodden and we have to raise them up?'' St. Claire continued. "It wouldn't be a bad idea sir," Mor· rissey remarked . "Frankly, I'm suspicious," concluded Councilman St. Clair, voting Morrissey's permit explaining be just didn't want the young businessman to sink capital into something that might be shut down on short notice. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -A bomb ex· ploded outside a church Thursday as mourners, including 300 policemen and Mayor Joseph Alioto, gathered for the funeral of a police officer killed in a shootout with a bank robber. No one was Injured when the explosive device, planted in shrubbery about 3 feet from the front door of St. Brendan's Catholic Church went off with a blast which shook the church and surrounding houses. 'Sweet Ernie' Denied Bid For Acquittal A trial wh ich could make history in terms of spoken four.letter words resum· ed. today in Costa Mesa, with UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich and actress Jane Fonda subpoenaed for defense testimony. Ernest Adolphus "Sweet Ernie," Smlttr, 30, is charged with disturbing the peace and using obscene language iD the pressence of women during a campus in· cident. 'The black graduate student and cam· pus leader -wbo supported Barry Goldwater and George Wallace cam· paigns in the past -claims he was direc- ting his remarks t.o disruptive whitl students. He was charged following a e1mpu1 disturbance last May during protests over lhe U.S. invssion of Cambodia, when protesting: whites allegedly tried to enlist black student support. Smith, a former Los Angeles talk show personality now pursuing UCI studies in black linguistics, is being tried before Judge Donald Dungan in Harbor Judieial District Court. He has pleaded innocent and such A verdict could be a milestone in determination of spoken obscenities. "l uncorked some real hot ones," ad· (See OBSCENITY, Page Z) CofC to Sponsor 'Front Door' Sign Contest Rules for a contest to design decorative signs for all major highway entries to Cosfa Mesa will be developed at a meeting scheduled Tuesday by chamber of commerce officials and Harbor Area art specialists and eduCators. Mrs. Lucille Pinkley, chairman of the Front Door Committee, announced the meeting will be at 9:30 a.m. In the city hall's fifth floo r conference room . Students at • .six.. Harbor Area schools may submit designs until Jan. 1, com· peting for $50, $25 and $10 prizes. Rules committee members are Connie Cassady, art teacher, and Georgianna McLeod, assistant principal, &th of Estancia High School ; Marsha Christian , Costa Mesa High School art teacher. Thomas Wilson, assistant principal of Newport Harbor High School: Victor Casados, assistant professor of art at Orange Coast College: Mark Bell, pro- fessor at Southern California College, and Kathleen Pearce, UC Irvine instructor in illustration. C~.unty Living Costs Soar September Consumer Prices Show Sharp Increases By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of !flt DtHY ,ll1t II.ti Consumer prices in the Orange County· Los Angeles area showed a sharp in- crease of l.t percent for the .month of September, according to statistics releas· ed Wednesday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Su.r.anne Fadowski , chief of the Los Angeles Office of Stati.stic1, explained il all this way : ''\\1hat this all boils down to Is that an Orange Cou{l,ty reflden t is going to have to s?'):nd $13.6t to buy the same things that cOst him $10 In lhe period from 1957· 19." • While the increase was lbe highest in nearly 20 years, the consumer prlce indt>.x for the Southern CalUornia area re· mained below tt>c national average. I• .. Miss Fadowski said the price Index for the area. reached an all time high of 136.2. The national average showed a .4 per- cent intrease in the cost of living, bring· ing the national consumer price index to 136.6. Miss Fadowsld said the majority of the increas~ resul ted from a jump in la.s prices. .''Gasoline prices ~ay a veey lmportant part in the calculation of lhe consumer price index for the, Los Angeles area," she said. "There were widespread 511.s wRrs during August, which ended In September, sending the price or gu up." She said higher gasoline prices ac· counted for nearly half the overall increase. although. fOOd, housing and •P. parel prices were also up.. '"U the effect of the pg price increase were removed, it iJ ertimated. that con· sumer prices would have ooly risen o.a percent," she explained. The Sept.ember rise w1s the largest month-to-month tncreaae recorded since February of 1951, when the consumer price index v.·ent up 1.6 perctnt. The current level of the cost of living in Southern California ,is 1.1 percent higher th8n it was a year a~o. "Consumer prices have risen every month in 1970 except August when they went down 0.6 percent The overall in· crease in the price index since Jan. 1 is 3.9 percent which is slightly Jest, than the 4.3 tncrease .t~rded In the sa~ period In 1969," Miss Fado'fskl explained. The increase in pa. prim'-m cblefl)' · CS.. PRICES. PIP I) ' Some mourners. police and reporters had already started filing into the church, walking -a few feet from the bomb, when the explosion occurred at 9:47 ~.m: The funeral cortege for patrolman Harold L. Hamilton, 32, shot to death at a Wells Fargo branch bank Monday, was on its w·ay from the funeral home for the services, scheduled at 10 a.m. "It sounde<\ like a terrible bomb," sattl a teacher at St. Brendan's School next door. Across the street, Mn. ·Edna HELD IN RUSSIA Brig. Gen. McOt.Nrri• • Peters, iaid the explosJoa shook her house. The blast discolored the front of-the stucOO.faced churCh, built· in California mission-style with a red tile roof and bar· red windows, but did no serious damage. It did little visible damage to the outside, buL Chief Al Nelder said it may have done "extensive damage" to the UJ}derpinnings a~ the walls. Police and firemen swarmed over the \ . U,IT ......... DETAINED BY "SOVIETS - M•I· Oen. Scll•rr•I V.S .. Beechcraft Held; building and st!aled off the area. Policemen discounted reports by 1 resi· dent of "two men" seen fieelng the &lte· and said I.hey believed the bomb was a timed device which had been planted hours earlier. "We're going to make another fut search of the building and then go ahead with the funeral to show these bums they ccin't scare us out," said Alioto, hia voice shaking with anger. Dr. Slocum's Case Goes To Jurors By JACK BROBACK Of 1111 Dtllr Piii! Siii! The fate of Dr. Wesley G. Slocum, ac- cused in the death of his daughter ln Costa Mesa six ye~rs ago, today went ift. to the hands of a Superior Court jury In Santa Ana. The once-prominent surgeon Ls being tried on ·charges that he was responsible for the death of two and one-hall month old Cynthia Slocum, whose remains a'uthorities allege were diuected and secreted in in abandoned freezer in tbl doctor!s.Costa Mesa h.Ome. . · Superior· Court Judie Kenneth Will\aim ,offered· bis Onal instNctionl to Ute: jury thil morning and pvt the cut to )UrQrl at io:ts a.m. Observers differ on bow long the JW1 will be out in this difficult case in which there was no actuaJ wilness to tht death of Ila dauchter. · In trial testimony. Mrs. Slocum •Co cused her. husband of killing the child atld be" bas accused her. Some gu~ the jury will return 1 verdict today. Others think it might tall:e two days or more. . . Judge Williams instructed the jury to try to agree. on one of two verdicti: guilty of second degree murder or not Russ Keep 2 Generals "' guilty. Prosecutor James Enright and defenae aUorney Michael Gerbosi agreed earliir that first degree murder and a pouible death penalty ·would not be asked for. ' From Wire Servl«1 MOSCOW -An aircraft carrying two U.S. Army generals "violated the air space" of the Sc;viet Union and is being held in the Armenian city of Leninakan, Moscow radio said today. The radio. report said the U.S. Air Force Beechcraft US propeller driven plane carried four men -the two generals, a U.S. Air Force major and a Turkish colonel on a flight from Turkey. The two generals are Maj. Gen. Edward C. D. ''Pony" Scherrer, 57, of Shawneetown, DJ., and Brig. Gen. Claude Monroe McQuarrle Jr., 45, of Ft. Ben- ning, Ga. Both are attached to the U.S. Military Assistance Program in Turkey. Tass identified the pilot as a MajOr Russell and the Turk as a Colonel Deneli . The Tass news agency said . all lour were in good health. The plane disappeared Wednesday on a 100.mile flight from Erie.rum to Kars, Police Seek Trio about 35 milea from Turkey's border witb the Soviet Union. U.S. Army au_thorlties Insisted · the generals were only on • a routine tour of TUrkJsh military installations in con· rlect.iori with their duties pertaining to military aid. They were nylng in 1n army US ·Semloole liatson plane, a twin-engine craft with a cruising speed of about 170 mOes an hour. Normally, the U8 is unarmed and car· rles no cameras or electro n i c surveillance gear. Lenlnakan, where the plane landed, is a city of 150,000 persons just aoross the eastern border. It-ls 575 miles east of Ankara and about 125 miles northwest of Yerevan, the capital or Armenia •. Tass Said "the competent Soviet authorities have been iriatructed to in· vestigate the · circumstances connected (See GENERALS, Pag .. Z) .. Cult Killers Left Note Declaring W o~ld War By JACK SCHREIBMAN .t....t1tlll ,r .. , Wrllw SANT A CRUZ - A bizarre declaraUon of war note was left at a home where five persons_ were. slain threatens death to anyone who "misuses the natural envir· onment." The typewrltte1t ·note, signed with ' the names of the four knights on .foitune=tel· _ling tarot cai:ds, said' future ~llings would be carried out by the "People .of the Free Universe." Disclosing the note Wednesday · t'il{o days after the slaying of wealthy eye surgeon Or. Victor M. ·Ohta and four . ·others, Undersberlff Paul W. Tara urged the community -100 miles south Of San Francisco -to remain calm. "We have to keep our cool. We ·are fighting a war and we might as well face It," Tara said. The undersheriff said the nature o( the killings and the note indicated the five were 1laln by cultists. .. ~ The note was found under the wlndehleld wiper of Ohta·~ red Roija Royce arter tbc·~lef of Oh~.,hlt 'Nile, two tonJ and secretary were diacovtred tn a swimminl pool at the family's '250,000 hilltop home Monday night, Tara 11ld. ' . 'Until tbe'note was made public, poliCe Md . uld they knew no motive · (or tfie alaylnp. 'Ibey were trying to flild two YOWll 'men and a girl reported seen near . another of' the Ohtu' cars -a station wagon -.befott It Wll found abandoned on a r8Uroed trick. Tara said the note read: -"Today World War Ill will begin aa brought to yoo by the People of the Free Universe. From this da_y forw1rd anyone · and/or Compiny who mlsu~ the natural environment or destro)rs Hme will suffer the ponilty of death b)I the Peopfi of the . Fret Universe. .. 111 and my comrades fro111 'lhla day forth WUl fight until death or'lrtedom, 1gainst 1njthlng or anyone who dOet not support natural lite· on Oils planet, m.aleriaUsm must d!e ~ 1mankind W\11." The note was signed . • .. Knight of Wands ~ '.'Knight of Cups "K.nllht of Pentacles (flee 8LA YINGI, P ... I) ! Cynthia died sometime on the night of Feb. 14, 1!164. Her partially decomi)osed, dismembered body was discovered ln March oI this year in a rreeier from the Slocum home in Costa Mesa which ha,d been taken to a sto'rage company's warehouse. In bis final argument to the jury, defense attorney Gerbosi continued to atF tempt to discredit Mrs. Marian Slocum, wife or the defendant as a prosecution witness. "She baptized the baby on the day It died claiming the doctor refused to let her take it to the hospital," Gerbo,,l pointed out. "She should have said, 'To hell with the doctor, my baby's dying. I'm going to take her to the hospital'." The dJ!fense attorney dwelt on past pro- blems of Mn. Slocum. "She had pro- blems other than drinking. She tried to commit suicide six years before the baby was born." -... GerbosJ concluded by aaylng, "There I! no motive for murder in this case. The baby looked like the doctor. There is no evidence the doctor ever llit the other children. The evidence Is not convincing beyond a reasonable doubt." -· Prosecutor Entlgbt in final summary pointed out lhllt the jury was not to coo· (See SLOCUM, Pop I) • Ol'ufe Cea& ... tiler t.OOk for sunny skies over most of lhe coast ori Friday, with temp- eratures varying very little , from 68 locally to 70 further inland. I NS IDE TODA'\' The uproar ouer drug uae among 11o~slers has 1pread . to medical uie of auch amphet· amine• oa "*peed" for Ovtrl11 ochw children. See Pope · 14. CtlltlHwlt 11 Cllttlt119 u,c 1 C~lltll »-• '-"' " c_. tl Dt9fll ~ 1) ........ " 1•1t1r1tl ,... • lftM,11~ tt-Jl PhllflC:I at.ii -.. AM L...... 11 1'1"1"11M \.'""'9 II • ' • • J ·' ' " DAil Y PllDT .; Th""41J, De.-2.2. 1970 . Psy~hiatrist ~ -Discounts Pot to Heroin lly GEORGE LtloAL ot .. Diii\' "'"' ,,.., MarlJlio!!a • -~ --~ nunp1 dOel tO mooomKleolil a UC Irvine psycblatry profts30t conu;nds, Dr. Jobn Kramer, assistant clinical profeuor ot psychiatry, addressed the l!C e~nsiop series "Psychiatry for the Llyman° Wednesday night. He cited a "temPoral" relationship between pot and heroin use that is AnalogOus· to the timing of mumps and mono. Just as a person ls likely to get the mumps in childhood and mono in bJJ teens or yOung adulthood, use of heroin may ooly be Nlated to use of mu1,IU1111 by~:Kramaruld. .• ,,..... .....u-11111:' -.... ---· or JOUlll lllWU" ,.. ~ rr... mtildJe claaa bGliiel, DOI !Ill ..... Iola u tlley --did, be llllcl. ~ 'P"'"•IM .._ far dNi use listed by Kramer was the ''Mnsitlvlly to peer or au~ preaum" evident amont YOUDI'. people. 'Ibe6e p t e r pressures have contributed to a decline of the use of alcohol In college communities, he noted. . He listed 1·availablllty" u lhe prime reason drugs are uaed notlfte:, 0 they can't From PageJ OBSCENITY TRIAL ... mits smith, a disc jockey for KUCI1 ~ campus FM radio stat.ion. No women or children who may have been prestnl complained, but the action against Smith stems from a complaint lligned by UCI campus Police Chief Robert Heavey. No one else was charged In the Gateway Pina speech Incident and the defense cont.ends white studenta as well as Smith Uled the four-letter word and wordl relatin& to incest. Defense attomty James George med the words freque~tly -and with em- phasis -Wednesday while cross-ex· amining UCI Vice Chancellor L. E. Cox. The aevc-woman., five-man j\ll'Y in- duding thrte wblte-balred IJ'andmolberly types appeared unmoved by the terms and said ~ing selection process that they cou1d take them. Smith, a popular UCI campus figure, wore a sna'ppy green block~ecked suit, moss·green shirt, alligator.green shoes and gold tie, occasionally writing notes to his attorney. From P"fle J PRICES ... responsible for the 4.7 perce111t rise in talion figure is composed oi private tr~ transportation costs. The total trarulpor· portation, which showed an increase of 4..9 percent, and public transportation, which went up 1.4 percent. Sile uld housing rose by 1.3 percent ta a level which ii 6 percent above that Of a year agO. The houa1ng costs are divided Into three ,.l>Qtqorlel -lbeller (ownenhtp lbCI r<ntal), fuel and u~ and fumlshlnas and openUom. Shelter cmls rose 1.6, wbicb ii the largest rlle In 11 moalhl, with ownenhlp costs '!I> I.I percent and 1<11,tal ., 1,1 per- cent. Fuel and uUUty bills cllmbed o.a per-- cent and bcoaebold furnl!hlnp and operations were up 0.8 percent. High prices on women'• and girl's fall fashio111 were blamed by Miss Fadowskl for · the sharp I . 7 l!lcr .. se In appattl costs, Tht level at the end of S'eptember ts 4.1 percent above the level a year ago. She said feminine fa!blons showed a 4.4 percent increase. with the price of men's and boy's fashions up 0.6. These two in· creases were offset 50mewhat by a drop of 1.6 percent in footwear. While meat, poultry and fish showed Cleclining prices. the overall coat of food went up 0.4 percent in September, puttlng tt 3.9 percent above last year's level. "Leading the Increase was a l.4 per- cent rise In the 'other foods for the home' sub-group due to a higher price for eggs," &he said. Fruits and vea:etables were up 0.1 percent, dairy products were up 0.9 percent and cereal and bakery pro- ducts were up 0.3 percent. The only decline other than footwear was shown in medical care which was down 0.2 percent. This wu offset by in 0.2 percent increase tn reading and recreation costs, leavina: the health and recreation category uncbaD1ed. Miss FadowskJ said the health and recreation prices are up 3.9 over last year. DAILY PILOT . OllAMG• CCIAIT PWLUMNtct COM,AMV Roltort N, W ... J o&li: R. Cu rley Viet "rwi-.t Mil 0...1 M0110f1f Tho111ot K"'ll ...... Tllo"''' A. M.,,fiin• MllllOlnl EflW c:.... ..... Offtc• )JO Witt l•y SttNt M1ilint .Y4r•••i r.o. ••• 1160, tJ6t6 ............. N""*1 loMfl: 2111 w.t ..... 1ou11w,.i ~a.dl:m,.._.,,_ t41nllnf!M a.dl1 ""1 ... ~ a11111t"" $111 C......... -Mlirtfl ll CatnTM lt•I Vice Olanctllor Cox, 1 Phi Beta Kappa key daqlln& from his tie clup. repeatod- ly denied during cross-examlnation that he recommended criminal prosecution to Chancellor Aldrich. He aaid he only passed on the petiUOn for a complaint The defense argued for acquittal of Smith late Wednesday afternoon, but Judge Dungan said he believes the evidence for a conviction exilta. He emphutzed that the jury will decide, not himself. Smith's attorney said he may call up to six defense wllne55e5, including Aldrich and Miss Fonda, the daughter of actor Henry Fonda and sister of actor-producer Peter Fonda. Chancellor Aldrich ta known to have urged ..ui1n1 the obac:tnlty -lb10ulh Ol><alllpul i>iocedurea. "Ila Fonda bu become lncreulni1Y active in a variety of cauaea including the Black Panthm Party, but wu to teatily u a typical, mlddl~l111 white AIQerican woman. Neither WU to be called this momin(. Deputy District Attorney · ft u 1 s e l 1 ~rbeJ Is proaecullng the obtcenlty caoe agalnst Smith and offered an analogy Tuesday that wu ridiculed outalcle by UC student obaervert at the trial. Serbet Aid the excute of what ls ac· cepted in one culture and forbidden in another could be carried to tbe extreme of permlUing wtatn vlaltora to practice cannlballlm too. 'lbe basic issue in the Smith trial is freedom of speech, as guaranteed under the Constitution. Vice Chancellor Cox admlttad Wring ~tn.Uon tbit be recommended to a;a;;;uor Aldrich that G.....,111 PJua opeecb-mUJna abould be ajieoded. "You were not reltrrtnc to speeches dealing with the use of the Jann -- or ,"but to all lpeecb?" pmaed attorney Georl•· "That' a true,,\ replled Cox. He saJil in later testimony that· be oer· tainly favors free ~ and the ri&ht of ftudents to use it -maybe after the strike over Cambodian involvement had cooled down -but not obscenity. George also prodded him on the fact he is Vice Chancellor for Buaineu Affairs and as such, lhouldn't intenene in mat- ters purely involving students. Vice Q\ancellor Jack Hoy, who is in charge of student attain, also advocated setUing the incident in wtUdi S m i I b allegedly tried to shut up equally~f­ fe nstve white dissidents with harsh words. During arguments for a c q u i t t a I , Smith's attorney said evidence presented so far bad not proved the defendant's comments were wlgar, profane or in· decent, only that they were uttered. Mansfield Colllns, a UCI black student serving as Smith's: press as:sistant during the trtal, remarked outside the courtroom that the only real difference in incidents Involving Gov. Ronald Reagan and Smith is color. Gov. Aeagan made headlines rectntly after calling a pollttcal fOe a son<lf-t· bitch. ''They botb said something in tbe he1t of emotion and It was heard by somebody who made something of it," Colllns chMged. From Pagel GENERALS . • • with the above mentioned viol1Uon of the Soviet Union's slate frontier by a plane of the U.S. Air Force." In Washington, a State Department spokesman told reporten be wu unable to say whether Soviet authorlUet were holding the four men or whether they were considered to be in some other status with the Russians . A clepartment preu ofncer, John Kini, said the U.S. Embassy in MO!COW had re- quested "consular acce.ss'' to the Americans. That simply mean•, It was nplalotd, that the emhUsy Wed the Soviets to IJ>- prov• the dtapalCb of 10 emhUsy ~ IO IAnlnakan to see the four and rtpOrt on thelr weUare and cond1Uon. Aaked whether the emhUsy ar the U.S. IO•tnuntnt otherwlat hid ftluested the immediate release ol the men, Kinr pld to far as he knew the recpaest had not been made. King llid the clepar\meot WU Informed of lbe plane'• sate Jandlnc and "we were lldvlMd that clelalll wUI follow." Scherrer Is 1 1137 graduate of the U.S. Mllllaly Academy at Wm Poln~ N.Y., and a veter111 ol World War II 1trvlce In the South Pacific, where he woo the Olatlnsuiahed Servlco Crooa. and Europe. McQuarrle aemd 11 chief of •llfl of the U.S. Army Supporl Command In 1916 and w1s named dcpu:r.comtn1nder of tbe lllrd airborne brlga In 1117. He Is a 1115 Wiii Point IJ'aduato. be abuled if I.bey ari. not av1ll1We. Mayj>e ~ Is why doctora .,. more P.'IM to uae more dnlp." lnmeriUI ··--to•to IOI II ~ It .,i.141 -I blllllt rate IUD ill UJe lbettoel. .. "Ralrfcllvo 11... belp keep-· some persons from using drugs. • .alt.bough more serious social problems often result," Kramer said. Citing results of a study which found 50 items of a personality test which were common to heroin addicts but not to non- addict.s, Kramer noted the Jtems when aP,plled to another sample of people Hot -Ca'r Class At College? CUPERTINO (UPI) -. Sheriff's deputies said today an automotive mechanics teacher at De Aania Junior College bas been unsted for running a 1tolen car operation In the college auto shop. They said the teaicber , Kenneth Michael Delaney, 24, of Los Gatos, wou1d substitute the identlllcation of wrecked cars for that of vehicles stolen from the college parking lot and re-sell them, speciallz.ln& in Vo!Uwacens and Porsches. He charged l250 for the VWs and ~ for the Porscbta, they said. · Delaney and his girl friend, Michelle Scheer, 21, arrested Wednesday and released on ball, face chargea of auto theft and poeoeoaioo of marijuana 1 n d dangeroua cJrucs. Fro• P .. e J SLAYINGS ••• "Knlgbt of Sworda." The pentacle is a five-sided f i I u r e assoclated with witchcraft as a mqlcal or tallaman device, in fiction often U&ed to summon up. the devil. The Knithf.I are the four suits of the 71- card tarot deck, used to ttll one's fortune depending on which direcUon the large c:arda fall. Tara said the Dote was withheld in- itially ao &I not to alarm citizens. "The DOie ltsell Is In the hands of oome of ~ moot compelent anal)'W ln the ltate," be Aid. He added: "We recognize the shock thta senaelt11 act bu brought to our dtlzenry. We ' lrult that the oobeJ judg. ment of our residenta will prevail over any emoUonal reaction. Belllda Dr. Ohta, those slain were his will , VJrlinia, G, sona Derrick, 12, and TAuart. · 11, and secretary, Dorothy .Cadwallader, 38. EKll ol the vktima was: shot once in tht back of Iba head, and Ohta also WH shot in the back. All were dumped into the swimming: pool of the mansion outside the city. The bouse was Rt afire. Firemen, looking for water to ficht the blaze, dlscovmd the bound, fully clothed bodies in the pool. Discovery of Mrs. Ohta's stoleh 1968 green Oldsmobile station wagon, smashed by a switch engine in a tunnel near Felton Tuesday evening, was the first an· nounced solid clue in the case. Scores or law enforcement officers fan. ned out through the surroundina redwood forest to ,look for suspects, The vehicle was empty when struck by the engine, but the motor wu sWI warm, and sn atte'mpt had been made t-0 burn the car. Two sets of footprints led from the vehicle. · The tunnel is north of Santa Cruz, about seven miles from the klllb\gs ind ln an area aboundin& with hippie-type communes. The road and tracks below run alongside a redwood gorge of the Santa Cruz Mountains. The sheriff's ad· ministrative assistant, lMl Keller, said whoe\·er drove the car on the tr a c i s "just had to have local knowledge." * * * Hippie Reveals Fear of Revenge From Vigilantes SANTA CRUZ (AP) -"I hope to God it wasn 't longhairs. There's 1oing to be hell to pay around here ir it was longhairs.'' The words belqcd to a young hippie- type worried that the bizarre killing of five persons near here will brina down on the Innocent a kind of vl1llante retrtbu· Uon. Eye sura:eon Victor M. Ohta, 45, hia wife, Viflinla, 43, their sons, Derrick, 12, and Taggart, 11, and Ohta's secretary, Dorothy Cadwallader, 38, were shot dud Monday night an4 dumped In the Ohta swlmmlna: pool. _ _Ih~ al.lyings sent waves of fur Jhroulh thlt ocensldt d ty 711 mlles ~ of San Francl1ct>, whert some believe a ''cult" might have taken the lives ln a rttut.llltlc ora. Th• hippie, sportlll( 1 beard and pJ.a:taU, who asked not to be named, swore he would get 1 hair cut and shave If It turned out that hippie-types did the alay1na1. "This has cast 1 pall over the whole cl· ty," said a nun at Dominican Jlospltal, where Or. Ohta "'!•• • founder and pr•c· Uced ohpthalmolo1Y. S.ndra VallelUft(a, who!e family lives on tbe next rlda:e over from the duth tcene, oid: "I'm ICOred to dtath." "could pndict addict.I among adults" but net &JnOll& juvenlln. Tllil Juda lludenta of drufl ·-to believe there Dill' be 1 "PIYcbolOflY of dnac men" but whether it is sickness or ps)'dtoklcjcll tt)'le of tbe individual, has yet to be deJermlned. Kramer equates drug use to "an in- clination toward risk-taking" 1 personali· ty factor which he believes is normally distributed in soclety, like inteWgence, size or other human trails. There are probably as many pe<>ple · who seldom take risks as there are peo- ple wbo frequently "gamble at a 1top 1ign, akydive or skin dive. 'J ln the U.S. -as oppdled to Great Brf.. tala -"addicts very seldom have tdeo- tifiabli psychic neuroses or psycboles,'' Kramer contends. "A sample of inmates at Norco institution might show fewer in· cidences of mental illness than a random seletUon or people oU the slreet ''This leads to the _question considered a possibility among some researchers that heroin cures psychosis," he said. He cited evidence that heroin causes brain wave patterns similar to those caused b)" thorazine, a dru1 used to treat psychosis. Mesa Lawsuit Challenge 8eartng Will-Be-Slated A hearlni date on Costa Mesa's sult to test sections of the municipal code cover· ing disability retirement pensions will be sel within the next two weeks, City At· tcfney Roy June said today. He filed a declaratory relief action Wednesday in Orange County Superio r Paramount Firm Awarded Fire Department Job The Newport Beach City Council has awarded the contract for the Newport Center ·fire headquarters to the A 1 ex Robertson Company of Paramount, the second low bidder on the project, The low bidder, the J. Ray Construction C:Ompany of Costa Mesa, had aSKea that its bid of $347,444 be withdrawn because it was not aware of a 200-day deadline for completion or the work. In giving the job to the Paramount company Monday nighJ, the council de- ducted two alternates, one for carpeting and one for bunks and lockers, because of the amount$ attached to these Hems in the Robertson bid. The contract, for $350,775, Is still about 10 percent above the latest coat estimates given by project architect. William P. Ficker. With the alternates, Robertson's b i d totalled '389,000, m.ooo more than the lowest offer. Youths Seeking Jobs. at Holiday Busy holidays are on the way and along with them Jess time to take care of chores, pill.! the need for more money among the young for shopping and festi· vi ties. The Harbor Area Youth Employment Service has the answer. Jobs for willing teenagers are eagerly solicited from Harbor Area businesses or private citizens who need a hand with anything from labor to baby·sitting or gift-wrapping. Headquartered at 594 Center St., Costa Mesa. the YES office may be reached by calling 642-0474. either with requests for work or job offers that will be quick· ly filled. Court as the first st~ ig un~~ a thicket of thoroughly confus!h1 legal con· cepts. The problem involves the amount of retirement disability benefits to which Ci· ty Manager Arthur R. McKenzie, who suf- fere d a stroke last spring, Is entitled. Conflicts~ In the occasionally changed code books say $1 ,000 in one tection and Sl ,700 in another, with the California At- torney General's office interpretin1 the larger amount as Cilrrect. June said today the court requires 10 days for Mcltenzie's own attorney to prepare his brief for !iUbmisslon, after which the two lawyers will agree on a date for settllng the friendly lawsuit. June said McKenzie will be represented by Richard Ranger, a.partner in the law firm headed by newly elected State Sen. Dennis carpenter. "I feel sorry for the judge that has to take a look at this and decide it," said June, adding that the matter is ex- tremely complicated and contradJctory. No an!mosity between the city and the administrator who rose over 17 years from pollce chief to the top municipal ex· ecutive post is Involved. Mayor Robert Ai. Wilson stressed Wednesday that it is simply a matter of getting an unexpected problem solved before any other potential disability retirements arise to make it worse. McKenzie was stricken last spring and, while his physicians predict eventual teCilvery, he chose to retire for the time being due to the length of his con· valescence. He came to Costa Mesa as police chief after coming out of retirement as a Los Angeles detecti ve, imposed as a result of polio. He may eventually take an ad· ministrative· post witb an organization such as the March of Dimes, for which he was Orange County chairman for many years. Panties, Piggies, Pistol Purloined A burglar with odd preferences for loot broke into a Costa Mesa home while the occupants were vacationing and stole 10 pairs of ladies' panties, a pistol and two piggy banks. GeraJd A. Kinsey. of 1652 Corsica Place, told police the intruder jimmied a sliding glass door to gain entry to the residence. The Kinsey report on the pistol and panties case listed the total value at more than $500, according to police. :Jaff Clearance ... "ln Great Britain the lyplcaJ heroin acl· diet J1 a much sicker cookJe. The IUitMSe ' rate amoq ~ ii much area&.er u../ among addicts in the U.S." Contrasting the occasional ustr wM Kramer conlertm eventually glvte: UR drugs to the opiate addict, he noted ft 11 possible that drug use Is i. "self·treat .. mentor anxiety, a relief from a senee ~I isolation.'' He bases this hypothesis on observ• ti~ of psychialrllts who hive f~ it easier to treat a person'• mentaJ 41!· ficulltel fonow1n1 • period of addktlon. FroMP .. e J SLOCUM ... sider a penalty, j111t guilt er In_._, "The clefeoae bu tried to try me, the district attornef," he proteited. ''That'• not new. It is an old trick." "Then the defense COWUlfl laid be was not going to try Mn. Slocum and be spent m011t of biJ argument doltl&' just that," Enright continued. "They are playing the old shell game. Trying to make you for,et about the doc· tor's story. 'Let's try her,' they ue say ing." He continued to stress that the Mel.ic:an maid's testimony corroborated that of Mrs. Slocum. "They would like to get rid of Connie but they can't," tbe district at- torney charged. Enright hit hard at Dr. Slocum'1 ltory'. "He goes to the office that nigbt after keeping the child in tbe Office all day because she was so very ill. It ia obvious he must not be at borne when the ctu;f allegedly dies. "When he comes home wby doesn't be Insist on examining the dead baby? He's a doctor. Wby doesn 't he say to hil wife, all right, the baby died, let's call the oor# oner? "No, Instead he claims he looks for the baby's body rrantically twice that ni&ht and again the next day. Again two days later and then forgets about the whole thing. "Would you as a rational lilman being believe such a story,'' Enright hammered home. Industry Pln:nt Fire Causes $5,000 Damage A malfunetioning production machine dropped a load of styrene plastic ipto a heatlng unit at a Costa Mesa induttrial plant Wednesday night, igniting a $5,000 blaze and sending up clouds of choking black smoke. No structural damage resulted from the fire at W. D. Adams C.Ompany, 630 W~ 17th SL. but only to the machinery itself; according to Fire Department Battalion Chief Ron COieman. "It was pretty spectacular for awhile, but when we got inside we found it only involved the equipment,'' said Chief C:Oleman. He said the blai.e occurred when 1 pr~ duction unit dumped the plastic com· pound onto the healing coll of a machine used in making items such as waab basins and dishpans. The &:09 p.m. alarm sent 15 rtremen racing to the scene, the standard auign- ment on tires involving industrial plants. DIMf«i ROOM GROWS llMI GAME SETS , I I I Fwor Stwnpk8 and Dite8Min;uied Items 25% lo 5t% y OU favorif.c Interior iUrigur loflf b• hoPJ>ll IO airilt ~ ..••• /mrM<lhi#e Deltvery H.J.GARRETT fURNITURE P~OFISllON"'~ ll'm*l~ OUfeNE~S -Tlf OUl a"9L¥111• CHAaM- 0,.. W.... n... 1 M.-. 221SH3· ... COSTA fl9. • 1.r. l . . . --I Saddlebaek 1 • VOL. 63, NO. 253, 4 SECTIONS, 54 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA · --· THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1970 ' . ' N~Y. Steeb • -' . Lawman's Funera·I Interrupted by Bomb Blas~· ' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A bomb ex. Some mOumen, police and reporters Peters, said the ex!'lnsloa shook her Policemen discounted reports by a resi- ploded outside a church Thursd.Jy as had already started filing Into the church, house, dent of "two men" seen Oeeing the site mourners, including 300 policemen and walking 1 few feet from the bomb, when The blast discolored the front of the and said they believed the bomb was a Mayor Joseph Alioto, gathered for the the explosion occurred at 9:47 a.m. stucco.faced church, built in Califofnia timed device' which had been planted funeral of a police officer killed in a The funeral cortege for patrolman mission-Style with a red tile roof and bar-hours earlier. ...,. libooto.ut with a bank robber. . _ Harold L. Hamilton, ,32, shot to death at a red windows, but did no serioos damage. "We're going 19 make another fast -~.,o-one was-injW'.e!Lwhen the explMive Wells Fargo branch bank Monday.._w"•~•~-jl~t ,di.cLJittle._.y~damag'e....-to-lhe-~arch..Of-the building-and then-;-go-ahead- device, planted in shrubbery a!Xiiit"1-feet-Oili1s way from the funeral· home for the outside. but Chiel Al Nelder said it may with the funeral to show these bums they from the front door of St. Brendan's services, scheduJed at 10 a.m. have done "extensive damage" to the can't scare us out." Said Alioto, his voice catholic OiiirtllWint off with a blast "It sounded li)l;e a terrible bomb," salt! underpinnings and the walls. shaking with anger. which shook the church and surrounding a teacher at St. Brendan's School next. Police and flrem!!'! swarmed over the He blamed the explosion on a houses. door. Across the street, Mrs. Edna building and &ealed off the area. ''psychotic crew" of terrorists. ''We're going to stop this nomense," he saJd. Mary Crawford, a':' reporter·for the San Francisco Examiner, said something "metallic" hit her shoe. She was about 20 to 30 feet away from the door at the time. Police later found of.c~kwork4 like spring lyi e street ·about 35 feet away, a neWsfuen said they found bent nails on the sidewalk. Another witness id, "stuff waa fallinc all POiice Chief Alfred J. Nelder said the bomb was burled under the shrub6ery. He said there were "no certain, concnte suspects.'' "It was one of the most despicable thifigi that-cOuld happen; .. Wd-N""tliliir. "A man Jays down .hia life doing his ctuiy and we come to pay tribute to him at • Mass 8.nd then someone does this. "It just makes you wonder what we are comina to." San Clemente ~officials Gird for Jetport Fight HELD IN RUSSIA Bri9. Gan. McOu•rrie UP'IT ........... DETAINED BY SOVl.ETS Miij. G!"· Scherrer V.S. Beechcraft Held; Russ Keep 2 Generals Fi-om Wlre Services MOSCOW -An aircraft carrying two U.S. Army generals "violated the air space" of the Soviet Union and is being held in the Armenian city of Leninall;an, Moscow radio said today. The radio report said the U.S. Air Force Beech'craft US propeller driven plane carried four men -the two generals. a U.S. Air Force major and a Turkish colonel on a flight from Turkey. The two generals are Maj . Gen. Edward C. D. "Pony" Scherrer, 57, of Shawneetown, 111.. and Brig. Gen. Claude Monroe McQuarrie Jr., 45, of Ft. Ben- ning, Ga . Both are attached to the U.S. Military Assistance Program in Turke¥. Tass identified the pilot as ·a Ma1or Russell and the Turk as a Colonel Denell. The Tass news agency said all four were in good health. The plane disappeared Wednesday on a · 100.mile night from Erzerurn. to Kars. about 35 miles from Turkey's border with the Soviet Union. iJ.s. Army authorities iris~ted the generals were only on a routine tour of Ttirll;ish military installations in con- nection with their duties pertaining to military aid. They were Oyjng in an army US Seminole liaison plane, a twin-engine craft with a cruising speed of about 170 miles an hour. Normally,, the US is unarmed and car- ries no cameras or electronic surveillan<:i! gear. Leninakan, where the plane landed, is a city or 150,000 persons just across the eastern border. Jt is 575 miles east of Ankara and about 125 miles northwest of Yerevan , the capital or Armenia. Tass said "the competent Soviet authorities have been instructed to in· vestigate the circumstances connected with the above mentioned violation of the Soviet Union 's state frontier by a plane of the U.S. Air Force." Jn Washington. a State Department spokesman told reporters he was unable to say whether Soviet authorities were holding the four men or whether they were considered to be in some other status with the Russians. A department press officer, John King, said the U.S. Embassy In Moscow had re- quested "consular access'' to the Americans. That simply means, it was explained, that the embassy asked the Soviets to ap- prove the dispatch of an embassy official to Leninakan to see the four and report on their welfare and condition. Information About Plans Requested The first atop in wbal promises to be a loud and lengthy fight against jetport -··· in billJ ......... s.. ..... ~. p • ..,...... .......,.,. ~ ....... - was launched by "City ~llmen Wednesday. Reacting to the announcement Tuesday that a conauJtant to the county proposes the multimilllon-Ootlar terminal for Bell canyon, councilmen agreed swiftly to seek a copy of the report and any other information they might need. One of the principal requests is for a specific location of the remott and nearly unkoown canyon about 13 miles into the hills beyond Ortega Highway. Councilmen already have sent one resolution to the county qpposlng regional airports in general for the area . Another could be expected after further information on the latest plans is rect!iVed by the city. The suggestion came from Los Angeles consultant Ralph M. PPi sons, who is con- ducting an elaburate and expensive study on solutions to the county's vexing airport expansion problem. · Parsons termed the conversion of the high, flat canyon as the last chance for the county to find a suitable site without surrounding development. Preliminary observations of the filght patterns from the proposed terminal show that the jets would spread noise at noticeable levels throughout the San Clemente and Capistrano &ay areas. The request by San Clemente's city council came during informal oral reports from individual councilmen. All four men present on the panel in• limated that they had planned to bring the matter up. County Living Costs .Soar September Consumer Pr_ices Show Sharp Increases By JOANNE REYNOLDS ot IM DlllY ,lie! 11111 Consumer prices in the Orange County- Los Angeles area sflowed a sharp in- crease of 1.4 percent for the month of September, according to statistics releas- ed Wednt;,sd~y. by the B.urcau of Labor Statistics. , Suzanne Fadowski, chief of the Los Angeles Office of StaUslics, eiplained it all this way: "What this all boils down to is that an Orange County resident Is goirig to have to spend $13.62 to buy the same things that cost him StO in the period from 1957- 59." While the increase was the highest in nearly 20 years, the consumer price index toi the Southern California area re· msined below the national average. Miss Fadowski said the price index for &he area reached an all time high of 136.2. . . ' The national averag'e showed a .4 per- ttnt increase in the cost of living, bring- ing the naUonal consumer price Index io 136.S. Miss Fadowski said the majority of the lncrtase resulted from a jump In gas prices~ "Gasotlne prices play a very important part in tht calculation of the consumer price index for the Los Angeles area," she said. "There were widespread gas wars during August, which ended In September, sending the price of gas ap." t She said higher gasoline prices ac· counted for nearly half the overall increa. although food, housing and ap- parel prices were also up. "If the effect of' the ps prke increue were removed, it is estimated that con- sumer prices would have only risen 0.1 percent," she explained. The September rise was the largest month-to-month increase recorded since February of 1951, when the consumer price Index went up 1.6 percent. The current level of the cost of livtng in Southern California is $.I percent higher than it was a year-ago. "Consumer prices have risen every month in 1970 except August when they went down o.• .~rcenL 'lbe overall in· crease in l.t>e P.rice Index since Jan. t Is 3.9 percent whlCb is slightly less th8n the 4.3 increase reeorded In the same period in 1969," Miss FadowskJ explained. The lncrease in gas priees are chieny responsible for the 4.7 percent rise in tation flgurt Is composed ol private trans- LransportaUon costa. The total transpor. porta,kln, whiclt showed an . Increase of 4.t percent. and public &ranSPortatlon, which went up 1.4 percent. She said housing rose tiy 1.3 percent to a level which is S percent above that of a year ago. 'Ibe bou&ing costs .re divided ·into three sub-categories -shelter (ownership and rental), fuel and utilities, and furnishings and · operations. Shelter cosLs l'03e 1.S, which Is the largest rise in ti moriths, wlU'I ownership COits, up I.I percent and rental up 1.S per- cent. Fuel and utility bllla climbed 0.3 per- cent and household fumlahings and operations were up U.I percent. High prices on women'• a:nd girl's fall fa.shiOOI were blamed by Miss FadowskJ for tbe sharp 1.7 .increase in a'pparel costs. The level al tbe end of 8eptem~ is 4.1 percent above tbe level 1 year ago ,. She said feminine fuhionl showed a 4.4 percent incrtue with the price of men ts and 'boy'i fashions up o.•. :l'hese two lfi- creaSes were offset ·somewhat by a drop of 1.6 percent in footwe•r. While meat, poultry wl fish showed declining prices. the overall cost of food went up 0.4 percent in September, puttlnc it 3.9 percent above last year's level. "Leading the lncreaae was a 1.4 per~ cent rile in the 1other foods ror tbe bomt' (S<o PRIC~, Pa1e II 100% Approval Council Appoints Rose Laguna City Manager By B~RBARA KREIBICH Of tlM EMiiy P'li.t 'Mff Lawr:erice n. ",Rose, SO.year-old ,city manager of UitNorthern California city •of Tibuf!ttt ei'lln Fr~~ , '1 l!ld 11: ... fonner city ldmi'!i'kal<>r of <;Armel, will be . the new city manager ot' Laguna Beach. 'i'he City Council Wednesday night wianimously approved the appointmenl, with Mayor Richard Goldberg noting th1t councilman Roy Holm, absent on vaca· lion, had as)l;ed him to say that he ''completely supports" the council's selection. Rose was among 105 applicants for the position .vacated in August by James Wheaton, who left to become city manager of Corona. In a lengthy screening proc·ess, the ap- plications were reduced to 25, of whom five finalists were personally interviewed by ail members of the council, with unanimous agreement on selection ot Rose. Married, and the falher of three children, Cynthia, 18: Marilyn, 16 ; and Laurie, 7: Rose has been city manager and clerk of Tiburon. a city of 6,000 on the northern shore of San Franciaco Bay, since its incorporation in 1964. From 1956 to 1962 he served as city ad· ministrator and city clerk of Carmel, having been elected to the cily clerk post and re-elected unopposed in 1960. He resigned from the municipal government assignment to become edltor and publisher of the Carmel Pine Cone, having been a general partner in a group that purchased the well-known newspape r in 1961. A serious automobile accident in Mex· Joo, which involved a long period or recuperatlon, ended his publishing career and he returned to government upon the incorporation of Tiburon. Commenting on the appointment today, Mayor Goldberg said, "I think Laguna is very fortunate to have Larry Rose as city manager. He is very Ji)l;able, very 1incere and, most of all , very capable. The caliber of applicants for the job was ex- cellent and to gerour 1trst cltoice out of such a good group makes me very con- fident In our good fo_rtune." A native of San Francisco, Rose was graduated from Beverly Hills High School in 19.11 and from the United States NEW LAGUNA MANAGER L•~'rence .D. Ro1e Merchant Marine Academy in 1943. He has a strong background in city finance, as a member of the1 California Committee on Municipa l Accounting and the League of California Cities Com- mittee on Finance Administration. His resume pre~ented to the city covers experience. In many fit!lds of municipal administration :· -Zoning : W ,·ote zoning ordinances for the city of Carmel and directed the preparation of subdivision, site plan- ning, building · regulations, occupancy permits and sign con~ols ·for the city. Pei-formed the same tasks for the city of Tiburon, eventually f'VJlling a Depart- ment of Community D·e v e Io pm en t me 1 d l n g the (unctions of ' in!pec:Uon bulding co;itrol, plannin« ind zonimr into one unit:--:-----------:-:--r.-t"" -- -Planning: Served as staff ·and. _ · :retary to planning commissions In carmel and Tiburon, prepared a draft master plan for downtown Tiburon and (See ROSE, Pa1e I) 'Monkey Trial' Defendant· John Scopes.Dies at 70 . , . "Be ft ent1cted bU the St.ate of , 7'.en.ner.!ee that it shall be unlawful for a11.11 ttaclutr 'm any of the uni· , 'Verlitfe1, nOrmol.s' and all other ·pub· 1 'Iic -schools of• th.e~'State to teQ,ch anv theor_ll th;at ~en.ie1 the. 1to1} of th,t ' divi,n1 creation of .man 41 tqugh& in the Bible,' and to teach tnsttal! thoi man ha.! d1scended from a ' lower order of animall . , . " Morch 1$, 1915 SHREVEPORT, La. -The soflspoken • otfiof9gy teacher ';l'ht dated lo questioa, tbt t ~enlll(at tll<Ocy of Divine C<eOl!oo: f ' and the sovereign state or Tenneistt's ' right to.~l'f';tt.h4s gone to-gel a fin~ ~Ung:· ,· ••. : John T. -!'<opes, around "'ho!Jl.' the sens:aUonal .MOn• Ttl•l " ti( .1• · cen.· tmd ft<! the mill! lomous lawyeri of the' oi;y, boi~0ed, dleil.hert, W~•Y· nlaht: ofcan<ef. ffe·w .. 70 )'tltS old, but he Uved to ,.. hlJ belle!J upheld. Scopea• loat hJa,job and wu fined 1100 • fo. teacblna evolutiont 4$ YttrS ago but· wil lilOr"clw .. rciri • \Ucbillcalily jult '.'·'(a. ICOl'll1: .. il1 t.' ' ' --·------... --·--· ='-'----·-·-··----........... _..,, __ -.. . . Councilmen Repeal Dog Ordinance . Tn an almosl anti-climactic finale lo one of the biggest controveraiea Laguna Buch has experienced in a decade or tG. t6e City CounCll voted 4-G Wednesday night 1o ~l ·an ordinance Ou.\ WOta4 have banned 46is at all Uma from cJty beaches and three parka. MOtion to repeal the ordlriance wu made by Its author, councilman Edward Lorr and seconded by councllman Peter Ostrander. • CoWlCilman Roy Holm wbo, wiili coun- cilman Charlton Boyd, had voted a1aind the original ordinance, was absent. In repealing the ordinance, the councll fulfilled a legal obligation plated upon It by the filing of referendum petitiOn with signatures of more than 10 percent of the city's registered voters. Its only alternative would have been to call a special election to place the iasue before the voters, a procedure that wouJd cost in excess of $2,000. Noting that it would take about slJ: weeks for the new ordinance repealing the controversial legislation to become official, following a second reading and required Jlkiay waiting period. Mayor Ric~rd Goldberg stated that after tbis period a new dog control ordinanC1! will be prepari?d, taking into consideration · some of the points of ·controversy that precipitated the referendum. In sharp contrast to frenzied earlier meetings on the ordinance, which on one occasion found 700 people jammed into the high school auditorium after tlie regu1ar council chamber overflowed, Wednesday's session was brief, quiet •nd without comment from the 1udience. Two of the foremost spoll;esmen for th1 referendum, Richard Challis and Arneld Hano, listened to the cut-and4ried le1al proceedings but did not speak. City Clerk Dorothy Mulftlt presenLed her certification of the pelilions, stating that 1, 190 ~ad been verified, Well in n:- cess of the tll required. Rimel presented a res o l'u t Ion actnO"ledglna: r e.c e i pt of the peUUon which was ad:lpted. • The attorney hn advised the councU; (See DOGS, Pip ZI • Orug~ l\'e.dter Look for sunny skies over molt of the coast on Friday, with temp- eratul'f!t varying veiy little, from 68 locally to 70 further inland. l:.:.;;;(i:; TODAY 'fht uproar ovtr drug Ult -among 11oungster1 Mu fpreoa-r to medical U§t of 1uch amphet- amines a.r ' "spted'~ for, ot¥r.lj aetit>e' children... .S.1 Page 24. -.... --. M""1MI ,...... t-4 °' ..... c-" 11 ..... -. ........ ' ... Slldl ........ JWt T-a -..... -. """"' ..... . . . =:'.I.::"' ":I· • \ • - I ' I • , --; • ·J-DAILY PILOT SC One More Der.g Vote on Mobile .. Home Po,stp.orled "Youf alternative now ls to repeal Ordinance 6M> or call a rtferendum elec· tion in oot les:i than 60 nor more lhan 7S ct,ys." Mayor Richard Goldbtl1 1tked Lorr lo report on his lhr<e-hour parley with tlle representatives of the Laguna Beach Doe Owners Association. LA.Jrr listed points presented to him as "non-negotiable" by the association. · By JORN VALTERZA • 01 fN Olllf •1111 •••ff Faced with an impending tie vote, Sin Clemente's councilmen Wedne sd ay aj:reect to just one more delay in the t:Ttonths-<>ld bid by a savings firm to dtvtlop a controversial mobile home park near Shore<:llffs. From Pagel SCOPES ... two year11 ago. The U.S. Supreme Court last November overturned an Arkansas law patterned after the Tennessee statute upheld during a trial that set neighbor threatening neighbor with Hell-fire and damnation. American Civil Liberties Unlon defense attorney C'..-·ence Darrow and silver- tongued orator William Jennings Bryan battled over the issue in a trial that be- came part of America's folklore . The aged Bryan -three-time presiden-. tial candidate -went to his own reward fi ve days after the trial in the sultry Southern summer of 1925, partly due to the strain of being cross-examined. Darrow performed one of his most garcastic : :f cutting courtroom shows in grilling Bryan on hil religious-versus- sc'.!ntific beliefs. He lost the bitterly-fough\ cue, but won worldwide fame, as reporters tapped out 175,000 words dally over the telegraph datelined : Dayton, Tennessee. Scopes dropped into relative o~ity, joining the United Gas Company in Shreveport as a geologist and retiring live years ago. The Tennessee Supreme Court finally overruled his conviction, but a planned appeaJ never reached the U.S. Supreme Court. ' Capo Beach Votes Down Nuclear Pl.ants Opposition to the San Onofre site for two proposed nuclear reactors wu voted by the C.plstrano Beach Community A&- aociation Wednesday. '!be unanimous action by members in general meeting will be rommunicated lo the Public UUliUes Commillloa (!>,VC) and other gov ernmental rij)FeSiiill:Uvt!s in a letter st.a.ting the grounds for t h e group's opposlUon. Written opposition is sWI being accepted by the PUC on utili· tJes seeking the San Onofre expansion. The letter will slate the organization's conviction that "our southern California beaches are too precious for recrf:ational and aesthetic purposes to be med as sites for atomic reactors. "'The Capistrano Bay area is Cast be.o coming an urban center, and two miles is too close for the blg1est reactors in the United States." In the statement, the association will agree with scientist Edward Teller that react.ors should be buried underground, and will note that the people of the Capis- trano Bay area are "living in a nuclear e.i:periment with one reactor already; it is not just to subject us to the addiUonal hazard and ugliness of more reactors." A series of questions which members Of the Community Association posed as unanswered in reeeit PUC hearings will also be incl uded in the letier. Members of the association, Including President Arthur Billstein and director Ernest Reason attended portions of the hearings in the San Clemente Clv:lc Cen- ter. The association action was taken fol. Jowing a slide presentation and discus- sion of pollution of the Capistrano Bay coastline, led by Lyn Harrls Hicks, vice president of the Capistrano Beach Cham- ber of Commuce. DAILY PILOT .. ..., .... h .. Leil•l'I• INt. c .. t. Mn• .............. .. ...... ,.., .. _ OltA.NGE COAIT PUll.llHlNCi COM,. AMY, Robtrt N. Wtt4 Prn ldtnl 1r.d l'l'Mfllltr J1clt 1t C11rl1y Viti ,.fflldlllt tr.4 0-11 ~ 1hom•• L-1•il EdUOr Jhol'l'llt A. Murphin1 M1n191n9 Edllot Richtr4 P. Hill $011111 Orlll(!O Cow.ly EdllOr -Cost1 Mtw: m Wnf lly llr ... Nnport 811cM 2'11 'Nn1 ••lllot Sovltvlf'd • U.llfll llMClll 2H l'or•I A- H1111tln91if1 &11cM: 017S ... Cl'I 8111119~•11 &.11 CIC/l'Wln!t: JllJ Nlf'!h 1:1 Clmltlt RMI -• MeeUng without a council supporter oI the Lincoln Savings proposal-Dr. Wade Lower -'the council heard more than 'all hour of public objection to the proposed mSpece coach park. After the bearlng closed a motion to deny the conditional use permit ap- politication falied. The move was made by the most out.spoken council oppanent to mobile homes in Shorecllffs, Thomas O'Keefe. It died fer lack of second Then a motion for approval of the ap- pUcaUon came from Councilman Stanley. Northnlp. ~t. too. succumbed. CoUncllman Cliff Myers then suggested the council react to the major objection or opponents and instruct city staff to draft figures com paring tax revenue of mobile homes to 'single-family houses. The motion and subsequent passage sparked a loud groan in the audience· as opponents to the plans expected a final vote to the oft.erHlelaytd matter. Myers also had aid that the bsue should be settled by a lull council. But City Manager Ken Carr reminded the council that Dr. Lower's vote on Nov. 4 would be invalid because be did not sit at the public hearing. To skirt that technicality, councilmen voted to reopen the hearing In two weeks. Jn the meantime, the mi!Slng councilman will review transcripts of the hearing be missed. More than a dozen foes to the mobile hOrne park propose d along -the upper reaches of Shorecliffs Golf Course asserted that the park tenants would not pay enough.taxes. But proponents of the Lincoln plan r~plied that the park would carry !ls fair share of the lax burden. The development's assessed value, they added. would .be about $1.2 mUllon and would be taxed as improved property. Much of the meeting Wednesday was a carbon copy of previous council sessions which had resulted in denials or delays of the mobile borne park matter. Coouncilman O'Keefe reiterated his strong ol:ijectlons to the use of the Sborecliffs area Ior the coaches, then cited county regu]ations on block waUs and parkiag "'!ulrementa which would not apply to the LincOln development. It proposes to use modular homes with modernisUc exteriors on the perimeter 61 the park and other areas vblble from the surrounding areas. Thus fant least 23 development con- dltion1 have beea,\placecli on the permit approval -Jt>Oll, ol tl!em bt p!Uning commissioners who have okayed' the plans twi~ Le.ague of Cities C8ncels Meeting Cancellation of an Orange County League of Cities meeting to be boated by Costa Mesa tonight was announced late Wednesday, because of no speaker. San Diego Mayor Frank Curran, presi- dent of the National League of Cities, said he would keep the engagement even after being indicted on bribery charges recently with eight other officials. He has been stricken with flu , however . and is confined to his bed, accordlng to Costa Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wilson, wbo was to have hosted the dinner meeting. From Page 1 PRICES ••• sub-group due to a hlghtr price tOr eggs," she said. Fruits and vegetables were up 0.1 percent, dairy product.II were up 0.9 percent and cereal and bakery pro- ducts were up 0.3 percent. The only decline other than footwear • wu shown in medical care which was down 0.2 percent. This was offset by an 0.2 percent increase in reading and recreaUon costs. leaving the health and recreation category unchanged . Mlsl Fadow&ki said the health and reqeation prices are up 3.9 over last year. OAIL Y l'ILOT Sllfl ,Plt11 lfhey were: removal of the dog ban In Top of the World Park; lmposiUon of·tbe Riddle Field ban only during LltUe League season; setllni of hOW'I when owners could walk dogs in Bluebird Can-- you Park; limitation of the beach'· ban to summer months, as already agreed bf. the council, but with slight elite cbanries. NATURAL GAS BUS REVEALS ITS SIZE OUTSIOE LAGUNA BEACH CITY HALL P1rked Ne xt to Sm1ll Foreitn C1i"•(left) ind U.S. Vin "Going to a vote is putting the city in the position of spending taxpayers• money which is not practical on sucb an isSQe.." Lorr. said. "I recommend we re- scind Ordinance 650 and follow up after 1 period of sJ1: weeks with an ordinance revised only to the extent of the revision • approved at the previous meeting allow··: ing dogs on the beach in the winter months only. Laguna Studies Transit "The ·six·week wailing period would give us. as the Dog Owners Auociation has said, a chance to see the results ef our new animal control agreement with the SPCA." Councilman Boyd said be understood Lorr's motion would be to repeal the ordinance only. Rimel said this wa s the resolution he had prepared and noted tha.t sections on animal control in earlif:r . ordinances (the leash law) would remain in effect. The law banning dogs from beaches and parks, which was SUIP.l!nded when the referendum waa filed Sej,t. 19, · would remain in suspension unW com- pletion of repeal proceedings. City Officials Take Ride on Natural Gas Bus Laguna Beach city officials took another JCM\k at the looming prospect of rapid transit when they inspected and test-hopped another bus Wednesday on the hills of Laguna Beach. This bus was green and white and true to its natural colors, it was powered by natural gas. Built by Minibus, Inc. or Pico Rivera, the vehicle, when measured on the mini-midi-maxi scale of b u s e s would fall somewhere between the calf and the ankle. Minibus president Bud Dardenne said the bus would cost anywhere from $14 ,000 to $21,000, depending on the quality of the stereo, air conditioning and other fa ncy options. The bus had large glass windows all ar'Ol,lnd that could be opened by the passengers and a single entrance-exit door on th e curtrside of the vehicle. Dardenne said the bus would run on either gasoline or natural gas and he demonstrated how easy it was for the bus driver to switch from one fuel to the other. The 212 horsepower engine was running and a grey smoke was belching from the exhaust pipe. Dardenne gave the signal, the driver flipped a red-bandied lever and the exhaust became invisible and odorless. Dardenne said that the bus, when run- ning on the natural gas, falls below the pollution standards already adopted by the state for 1975. Under the stringent standards that all auto manufacturers must meet by that year, oxides of nitrogen emission must fall below a level of 1.0 on the standards special scale. Gasoline engines now pro- duce about 3.07 and the natural g3's bus produces .72, Dardenne said. For carbon monoxides, the standard will be 12 and the natural gas bus produces .54. Dardenne noted that the bus was originally designed to transport people around large airport terminals and thus had a luggage rack. He said removal of the rack would pro- vide more space for seating and would in- crease the present 13 seats to 17. lf the people v.·ould stand up, DardeMe joked, 30 people could be packed into the bus after the style of New York subways. From Pflfle 1 ROSE ... He said the natural gas costs about the same as gasoline and that the bus, with established a board of design review. its three tanks of natural gas, could go -Personnel : Designed a m a st e r about 75 miles before refilling. personnel system for Tiburon, with an Planning commissioner Bob Hastings exemplary recruitment and &elect.loo pnr said the bus, If purchased by the city, gram. would be required to travel about 90 -Culture and Reereation : Originated miles in the course of its 10 hours of daily and directed programs to encourage rewarding lLSea of public beaches and 111 use. outdoor theater in Carmel, helped initiate ·• DardeMe sa id that another gas tank a cultural center and was secretary to could be easily added to allow the bus to the city Arts Commission. Orianized - go all day without a refill. parks and recreation commilsion in · "One advantage of the natural gas,'' Tiburon. l(illing of 5 Believed Dardenne said, "besides the reduced -Public services: Established refuse pollution. is that spark plugs don't carbon collection sy:tems, public transit pilot up as fast and the life of the oil in the prograrr.s, landscaping and beautifica- crankcase is doubled." ti on programs. Dardenne said that the buses are -Public Information : Author of a . Work of Weird Cultists already being used at Leisure World in '7-~kly newspaper column, frequent Seal Beach in Redwood City and in speaker before public. groups, written several cities on the east coast. reports on undergroundlng of utilities, · By JACK SCBREIBMAN .U.0Cl1ftd ,.rtu Wrlltr SANTA CRUZ, -:r A bizarre declaratjon of war"not-"°as left at a home where five pereons were slain thl-eatens death to anyone who "misuses the natural envir- onment." The typewritteJt note, signed with the names of the four knights on fortune·tel· Ung tarot cards, . said future killings would be carried out by the "People of the Free Universe ." Disclosing the note Wednesday two days after the slaying of wealthy eye surgeon Dr. Victor M. Ohta and four others, Undersheriff Paul W. Tara urged the community -100 miles south of San Francisco -to remain calm. "We have to keep our cool. We are fighting a war and we might as well face it,'' Tara said. The undersherilf said the nature of the killings and the note indicated the five were slain by cultists. The note was found under the windshield wiper of Ohta's red Rolls Royce after the bodies of Ohta, his wife. two sons and secretary were discovered in a swimming pool at the family 's $250,000 hilltop home Monday night, Tara i;aid. Until the note was made public , police had said they knew no motive for the slayings. They were trying to find two young men and a girl reported see.n near another of the Ohtas' cars - a station wagon -before it was found abandoned on a railroad track. Tara said the note read: "Today World War Ill will begin as brought to you by the People of the Free Universe. From this day forward anyone and/or company who misuses the natural environment or destroys same will suffer the penalty o( death by the People of the Free Universe. 1'[ and my comrades from this day forth will fight until death or freedom. against anything or anyone who does nol support natural Ute on . this planet, " mate~ialism must di'!~~ mankind will." The note was signedd: "Knight of Wands "Knight or Cups "Knight of Pentacles "Knight of Swords." The pentacle is a five-sided f i g u r e associated with witchcraft as a magical or talisman device, in fiction often used to summon up the devil. The Knights are the four suits of the 78- card ta rot deck , used to tell one's fortune depending on which direction the large cards fall. Tara said the note was withheld in- itially so as not to alarm citizens. "The note itself is in the hands of some of the most compete nt ana1ysts in the state," he said. He added: "We recognize the shock this senseless act has brought to our citizenry. We trust that the sober judg· menl of our residents will prevail over any emotional reaction. "Nobody really likes to ride buses,'" drainage, liability Wurance, c a b I e • Dardenne sa id, "so why-do people need a television franchises and others. big bus with lots of empty seats? We -Legislative Advocacy: Familiar with . built this bus big enough to handle the legislative structure of state government • people that have to take the bus, and and have <o.t-jleared before ser:ate and that's all .'' ' 2:-•mbly committees on such subject& u Dardenne said the purpose of the dual cable TV, drainage. public information fuel system is that if the buses are kept and ,·ecords and budgeting. in a storage barn outside of a big city, Rose states that he favors the "task lhey can be driven to their downtoWtJ f--:e" concept of problem -solving, draw·· routes on gasoline and then switched to ing together t:.e beft resources available.· natural gas in the smoggy city. and describes hi .... --.. as "a rl'!sponsible He said the natural gas tanb could be ir.novator, an experimenter but a finan· filled in about 10 minutes from a com· ,. · conservator." pressor which the city would have to purchase from the gas company. Taking the bus on a triaJ run to prove its power, DardeMe told the driver to lake it up a steep hill , and the bus, loaded with passengers, climbed to Top of the \Vorld. "Y.'e made the steepest hill in San Francisco in one of these buses, "Darden- ne said. "We had 14 men in it and we stopped in the middle of the hill and started up again to prove that it would make it." Bond Passed, 100% CALIFORNIA VALLEY, Cali!. (AP) -. A unanimous vote was cast in thiJ agri- cultural community for a $350,000-bond • issue to put up power lines. The San .• Luis Obispo County clerk, Ruth Warn- ken, said it was the flrst time that a bond issue in the county had carried un- animously. Twenty-nine of the area'1 34 registered voters cast ballots. <Jaff Clearance • • • ,• DINING ROOM GROtWS llMI GAME SETS Flvor S(l;lftpks and Bi:Scootinued Items 25% To 58% OFF San Clemente Ol{s Funds To Construct New Courts San Clemente's shuffieboard and tennis playen won assurancts Wednesday that their new court! would be ready before the old ones are rated ln reconstruction of lbe-bUrntd--out community clubhouse. Councilmen voted Wednesday to earmark $35,000 for the ne" playing areas with details to be worked out later. '!be l'Mral proposal ts to relocate the tennis courta from the clubhouse aite to another city park to rtfllke room for more parking at the new meeting facility. Original plans to do the: same ror the shu!Oeboard lanes, however, met with protest from tht 1hufnebolrd usoclation. The cl~y then agreed to keep lhe courts M lhe clubhOl.tM site. bul move them to a dllltrent opot on the lot. '!'bat job wilt '°'t about 110,000: the tennlJ COW'I matter would tau up th• rest of the appropriation. An offshoot of the council action Wednesday was a suggestion by Coun- cilman Thomas O'Keefe that the city ex· amine the chai\ces of private developers -financed through municipal bonds - building a tennia club open to the public ln San Clemente with profits used to pay the costs of constru<:Uon, maintenance and operation. The Idea, made in form of a motion (it failed for a lack of second), had one skeptical critic. Mayor \Valter Evans said It would be impossible to get locAI tennis players to pay for playing when the courts at San Clemente lligh School are offered free to the public. The matter will be sent to par'ks an4 recreaUon commlssionen for study. Yov fcwonu cnurior derifl"n IOlll bf ham i. orrilt ,.. ••• /mm1fli•#t Delivery H.J.GAI\1\ETf fURN1l1JRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS -TRY OUR HVelVINe CHAIM-o,_.. Moo., """"-• "1. -- 22t5 HARIOR ll'\CD. COSTA MEsA, CAtlF. 646-0l71 " 7 ' I I I 7 I I I I , j • ~ Laguna ~ae_~) EDIT '\'GN ' VOL. 63 , NO. 253, 4 SECTIONS, 54 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22. 1970 ' • . .. . • • • . . ·-Today's Flnal ·= N.Y. Steeb "' .. : • . "' .. TEN CENTS · Lawman's Fun~ral Interrupted by Bomb Bi r ./t· s~ FRANCISCO (UPI) -A bomb ... ploded oulside a church Thursday as mourners, including 300 policemel). and Mayor Joseph Alioto, gathered for the funeral of a police officer killed in a 1hootout with a bank robber, No one was injured when the es:ploslve device, planted in shrubbery about 3 feet from the front door of St. 'Brendan's Catholic Church went off with a blast which shook the church and surrounding houses. Some mourners, pollce and reporten had already started filing into the church, walking a few feet from the bomb, when the explosion occurred at 9:47 a.m. The funeral cortege for patrolman Harold L. Hainllton, 32, 'shot to death at a Wells Fargo branch bank Mon;day, was on its way from lhe funeral home fur the services, scheduled at 10 a.m._, "It souriOed like a terrible OOmb," said a teacher at St. Brendan's School next . door. Across the street, ~Mrs. Edna Peters, said the exploslo• shook her house. " The blast diso:llored the fronb of the stucco-faced cl)urch, built in California misSion-style with a red tile roof and bar- red windows, but did no serious damage. Jt did little visible damage to the outside, but Chief Al Nelder said it ma y have done ''extensive damage" to the underpinnings and the walls. Police and .firemen swanned over the building and sealed off the area. Policemen discounted reports by a resi· dent of "two men" seen neeing the site and said they believed the bomb was a timed device which had been planted hour.s earlier. "We're going to make another fast search of the building and then go ahead with the funeral ·10 show these bums they can't scare us out," said Alioto, his voice shaking with anger. He blame~ the explosion on a "psychotic crew" of terrorists. "We 're going to stop this nonsense," he said. Mary Crawford, a reporter for the San Francisco · Examiner, said something "metallic" hit her shoe. She wa1 about 20 to 30 feet away from the door at the time. Police later found a piece of clockwork- like spring lying in .the !!reel about 35 feet away, and newsmen said ttw:y found bent nails on the sidewalk. Another witness said, "stuH was falling all around." Police Chief Alfred' J. Nelder aaid 'tbe bomb was buried under the shrubbery. Jie said there were "no certain, concitte suspects." ' ''It was one of the most despicable things that could happen," said Nelder. "A man lays down hi! life doing hia duty and we come to pay tribute to him at a Mass and then someone does this. "It just makes you wonder what we are coming to." Laguna Council Junl{s Dog Control Ordinance HELD IN RUSSIA Brig. Gen. McOu•rrie U'IT......_ DETAINED BY SOV IETS M•I· Gen. Scherrer U.S. Beechcraft Held; Russ Keep 2 Generals From Wire Servlcn MOSCOW -An aircraft carrying two U.S. Army generals "violated the air space" or the Soviet Union and is being held in the Armenian city of Leninakan , Moscow radi<I said today . The radio report said the U.S. Air Force Beechcraft U8 propeller driven plane carried four men -the two generals. a U.S. Air Force major and a Turkish colonel on a flight from Turkey. The two generals are Maj. Gen. Edward C. D. "Pony'' Scherrer, 57, of Shawneetown, Ill, and Brig. Gen. Claude Monroe McQuarrie Jr., 45, of Ft. Ben- ning, Ga. Both are attached to the U.S. Military Assistance Program in Turkey. Tass identified the pilot as a Major Russell and the Turk as a Colonel Deneli. The Tass ne\.\'S agency said all four were in good health. The plane disappeared \Vednesday on a 1(1()..mile flight from Erzerum to Kars, about 35 miles from Turkey's border with the Soviet Union . U.S. Army authorities insisted the generals were only on a routine tour of Turkish military inslall1tlons in con- nection with their dutie!I j>ertaining to military aid. They were Oying in an army US Seminole liaison plane, a twin~ngiDe craft with a cruising speed or about 170 miles an hour. Normally, the U8 is unarmed and car- ries no cameras or electro n ic surveillance gear. Leninakan, where the plane landed, is a city of 150,000 persons just across the eastern border. It is 575 miles east of Ankara and about 125 miles northwest of Yerevan, the capital or Armenia. Tass said "the competent Soviet authorities have been instructed to in- vestigate the circumstances conneeted with the above menUoned violation of the Soviet Union's state frontier by a plane of the U.S. Air Force." In Washington, a State Department spokesman told reporters he was unable to say whether Soviet authorities were holding the four men or whether they were considered to be in some other status with the Russians. A department press officer, John King, said the U.S. Embassy in Moscow had re- quested "consular access" to the Americans. That simply means, it was explained, that the embassy asked the Soviets to ap- prov e the dispatch of an embassy official to Leninakan to see the four and report on their welfare and condition. Councilmen Noisy Over Air' Site The first stop in what promises to he a loud and lengthy fight against jetport pi;oposa!s iJl hil!J behlnd S.. Clemente was launched by city cOuncilmen Wednesday. 'l.r·-, Reacting to the announcement Tuesday that a consultant to .tM county pro~ the multimillion-dollar terminal for Bell Canyon, councilmen agreed swiftly to seek a copy of the repor:t and any other information they might need. One of the principal requests Is for a specific location or the remote and nearly unknown canyon about 13 miles into· the bills beyond Ortega Highway. Councilmen already ha ve sent one resolution to the county opposing regional airports in general for the area. Another could be expected after further information on the latest plaru is received by the city. The suggestion came from Les Angeles consultant Ralph M. Parsons, who is con- ducting an elaborate and expensive study on solutions to the county's vexing airport expansion problem. Parsons termed the conversion or the high, fl at canyon as the last chance for the county to find a suitable site without surrounding development. Preliminary observations of lhe flight pattern s from the proposed terminal show that the jets would spread noise at noticeable Jevel1 L1roughout the San CleMente and Capistrano Bay areas. The request by San Clemente's city council came during informal oral reports from individual councilmen. All four men present on the panel in· timated U.at they bad planned to bring the matter up. County Living Costs Soar September Consumer Prices Show Sharp Increases By JOAJIWNE REYNOLDS Of tht o.llY ,1111 llltt Consumer prices in the Orange County· Los Angeles area showed a sharp in- crease of 1.4 percent for the month of September, according to statistics relea&- ed Wednesday by the Bureau of Labor Statistii:s, Suzanne Fadowski, chief of the Los Angetes·OUict! of Stalislics, explained it all this way : .;What this all boils down to is that an Orange County resident is gotng to have to spend $13.62 to buy the same things that cost hlm $10 in the period from 1957· U ." While the increase wa1 the highest ln nearly 20 years, the consumer price index for the· Southern California area re· mained below the national average. MiS! Fadowski said the price Index for the area reached an all time . l)l&h of 136.2. • The national average showed a .4 per. eent Increase in the cost of living. bring- ing the na tional consumer price index to 136.6. Miss Fadowski said the majority of the Increase resulted Crom a jump in gaa prices. "Gasoline prlcts play a very important p1rt in the caJculltion o{ the ton.SUmcr • • price index for the Los Angeles area," she said. "There were widespread gas wars during August, which ended in September, .ending the price of gas up." She sald higher gasoline prices ac- counted for nearly hall the overall increase, although food , housing and ap- parel price1 were a1so up. "H the effect of the gas price increase were removed, It is esUmated thlt con-sumer prices would have only risen 0.8 percent.'' she explained. 1be Seplember rile was the largest month-t&month lncreue recorded 1inc:e February ol 1151, whtn the COlllWl1<t price index weot up 1.8 percent. 1be current level of Ute cost of living in SOuthem <:alilomia Is 5.1 percent higher than it was a year ago. "Consumer prlce1 have risen every month in 1'70 except August when µity went 'down1 0~1 percen&. 1be overaJI ift. crease In the prloe index since Jan. 1 ii 3.SI percent which is slightly leS! than the 4.3 increase~ In the 1ame period in 1169, ''Miss Fadowikl explained. The Increase In gas prices are. chieny responsible for the 4.7 perceAt rise In talion figure Is composed of private trans. traMPortatlon cost.I. The total tran!pOr· portltlon, which showed an Increase ot U percent, and publlc trwportaUoo, whlch went up 1.4 percent. She said housing rose by 1.3 percent to a level which i.s 6 percent above that of a year ago. The housing COila are divided into three sub-categories -shelter (ownership and rental), fuel and utWtles, ·and furnlshin19 and operations. Sheller costs rose 1.6, which Is the largest rise in 18 inonlhs, with ownerabl p cotta up 1.1 percent and rental up 1.6 per· cenL . Fut! and utility bilb climbed 0.3 per- .... and boulehold lumlshinp and operatlom were up 0.1 percent. High prices on women 's and girl'1 fall faab.lona were blamed by Miss Fadowski for tbe sharp 1. 7 increase ill apparel costs. The level at thf: e~ of September Js 4.1 percent above the leve l a year ago. She said feminine fashions showed a 4.4 ptrceat locrtase with the price o( men'1 and boy'1 fashions: up 0.6. These two in· creases were offset !IOmewllat by a drop of 1.8 percent in footwear. While meat, poultry and fuh showed det:lininl prjces., the overall ~t of food went up 0.4 percent Jn September, puttlDg it 3.t percent above Jut year'• level. 1'Leading the lncrtase wts 1 1.4 ~­ cent rise in the 'other foods for the borDe' IS.. PRICD, Pore II 100% Approval Council Appoints Rose Lag':'na City Manager By BARB ARA KREIB!CH Of !tit O.llY Piii! llatf Lawrence D. Rose, 5()..year-old city manager pf lhe Northern California city of Tiburon on San FranCisco Bay and former city administrator of Carmel, will be the new city manager of Laguna Beach. Tbe City Council Wedntsday night unanimously approved the 'appointment, with Mayor Richard Goldberg noting that councilman Roy Holm, absent on vaca· tion, had asked him to say that he "completely support.I" the council's selection. Rose was among 105 applicants for the position vacated in August by Jame1 Wheaton, who left to become city manager of Corona. In a lengthy screening process, the ap- plicatioru were reduced to ZS, of whom five finalists were personally interviewed by all members of the council, with unanimous agreement on selection of Rose. Married, and the father of three children, Cynthia, 18; Marilyn, 16; and Laurie, 7; Rose has been city manager and clerk of Tiburon, a city of 6,000 on the northern shore of San Francisco Bay, since its incorporation in 1964. From 1956 to 1962 he gerved as city ad- ministrator and city clerk of Carmel, having been elected to the city clerk post and re-elected unopposed in 1960. He resigned from the municipal government assignment to become editor and publisher or the Carmel Pine Cone, having been a general partner in a group that purchased the well-known newspaper in ·1961. A seriou.s automobile accident in Mex- ico, which involved a long period of recuperation, ended hi! publishing career and he returned to government upon the incorporation of Tiburon. Commenting on the appointment t<fday, Mayor Goldberg said, ''I think Laguna is very fortunate to have Larry Rose as city manager. He is very likable, very sincere and , most of all, very capable. The caliber of applicants for the job was ex· cellent and to get our first choice out of Such a good group makes me very con- fident in our good fortune ." A native of San Francisco, Rose was graduated from Beverly Hills High School in 1938 and lrom the United States NEW LAGUNA MANAGER -Lawrence · D. Rose Merchant Marine Academy in 1943. He has a stping background in city finance, as a member of the California Committee on Munici pal Accounting and the League or I CaJifornia Cities Com- mittee on Finance Adm ini stration. His resume presented to the city covers experience in many fields of municipal administration: -Zon9 g: w .. ote zoning ordinances for the city of Carmel and directed the preparation of subdivision, .site plan· ning, buildlng regulations, occupancy permits and sign contJ:ol1 for the city. Performed the same tasks for the city of Tiburon, eventually forming a Depart- ment of Community Deve l opm'en t m e 1 d i n g the functions of Jnspectlon buldlng CO;ltrol, planning and zoning into one unit. ' -Planning: Served as staff · and • .retary to planning commissions in Carm el and Tiburon, prepared a draft muter plan lor downtown TiburOn and ISte ROSE, P11• I) 'Monkey Trial' Defendant John Scopes Dies at 70 ••• "Be ft enacted by the State of Tennesste that it &halt be unlawful for any teacher in anu: of the, uni- versities, normal! and alt other pub· lie schools of the state to teach an11 theory that denie1 the SlOTJI of the divine creacion of man 12.9 taught in tile Bible, and to teach instead that mtin hos descended from a lower order of onfm(:ils ••. " Morch 13, 1925 SHREVEPORT. La. -Th< soflspoken b"'logy teacher wh<.. dared to question the fbndameni.ll>t theory or Divine Creation •• • ~ .- . ' and the sovereign st.ate. of Tennessee'• right to declare it has gone to get a final ruling. John . T. ~~opes, around whom the sensational Monkey Trial of 1925 cen· tcred and the rnost famous. tawyez;a: of the d•Y battled, died here Wedne.9day nisht of canctr. He waa 70 years old, but he lived ~see hla bel!crs upheld. Scopes lost his job and wu fined $100 ro. teaching evolution. u yeara •Co t19t wu later cleared on 1 technicality juat IStt SCOPES, Pap I) ' • I ' ' Councilmen Repeal Dog Ordinance ln an almost 1nU.cllmactlc finale to one of the blgges\ c.ontrovers\es LIPA& Beach has u:perienced in a decade or ID, the City Council voted H Wednesday night to repeal an ordinance tbc:.t would have baMed dogs at all times fro m city beaches and three parks. Motion to repea l the ordinance WAI made by Its author, councilman EdWard Lorr and eeconded by councilman Peter Ostrander. Councilman Roy Holm who, with coun. cllman Charlton Boyd, had voted against the original ordinance, was absent. In repealing the ordinance, the council fulfilled a legal obligation placed Upon it by the filing of referendum petition with signatures of more than Ht percers1 of the city 's registered voters. :J; Its only alternative would have Deen to call a special election to place the issue before the voters, a procedure that ~ cost in excess of $2,000. Noting that it wo uld take about 1J1 weeks for the new ordinance repealinc the controversial legislation to become official, fQJlowing a second reading and required 34Hiay waiting period,.-Mayor Richard Goldberg 1tated that after Ulil period a new dog control ordinanc.t will be prep8red, taking lpto consideration som~ of the points of ·controversy that precipitated the referendum. In sharp contra.st to frenzied earlier meetings on the ordinance, which On One Occasion found 700 people jammed jnt,9 the hlgh school auditorium after the regular council chamber overflowed, Wednesday's session wa1 brief, quiet and without comment from the audience. Two of the foremost Spokesmen for the referendum , Richard Challis and Arnold Hano, li.stened to the cut-and-dried lel-1 proceedings but dJd not speak. City Clerk Dorothy Musfelt presented her certification of the petitiOM, stating that 1,190 had been verified, well in ex- cess of the 871 required. · Rimel presented a re !Io 1 u t'f'O n acknowledginJ r e c e I p t ol the pew.ion which was adopted. - The attorney then advised the council, !Ste DOGS, ".•I• I) Oraage Ceallt Weather ... Look for a:uMy skies over most of the coast oh Friday, with temp. eratures varying very little, from 68 locally to 70 further IJjland. · INSWE TODAY 'fht uproar over drug liSf • ' among ~01tngi.ster1 Ma aprnd to medical use of sucll amp~;. amines 0$ "speed" for ~~Tlp active children, Set Pa.oe 24. • ( -... ...... ~ . N..._..NIWt .... Or-.. c-tr • 11 ., ............. ...... -.,.. ....... ..,. ·-. = .. -.., -·-4 --.... _ ' · . • • ' j ' )' 'Z DAILY PILOT >C Tl!Llf'td«Y_, Octobtt 22, .1970 ' One 1'fore DelaJI ' . V·ote ·on. Mobile. :::"Home Postponed . " By JOHN VALTERZA Of lfll 0.llY P>lltl 'ft" ·Faced with an impending tie vote, San Clemente's councilmen Wedne s day efi:eed to just one more delay in the ropolhs-old bid by .a savings firm to ~~op a controversial mobile home Part near Shorecliffs. From ~age 1 SCOPES •.. two years ago. 11le U.S. Supreme Court last November overturned an Arkansas law patterned after the Tmne.ssee statute upheld dijring a trial that rel neighbor threatebing neighbor with Hell-fire and damnation. American Civil Liberties Union defense attorney c : .. :ence Darrow and silver· tongued orator William Jennings Bryan battled over the issue in a trial that be- came part of America's folklore. The aged Bryan -three-time presiden· tial candidate -went to his oWn reward five days after lhe trial in the sultry Southern summer of 1925, partly due to the strain of be.lng cros.wumined. Darrow performed one of bis most sarcastic • j cutting courtroom shows in grilling Bryan on his religious-versus- st!antifie beliefs. He lost . the bitterly-fought case, but won worldwide fame, aa reporters tapped out 175,000 words daily ovu the telegraph datelined: Dayton , Tennessee. Scopes dropped into relative obscurity, joining the United Gas Company in Shreveport as a geologist and retiring live years ago. The TenneSllee Supreme Court finally ()verntled his conviction, but a planned .appeal never reached the U.S. Supreme Court. Capo Beach ' Votes Down Nuclear Plants Opposition to the San Onofre site for two proposed nuclear reactors was voted by the capi.strano Beach Community ~ toelation Wednesday. The unanimous acUon by members in general meeting wlll be communJcated to the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) and other govenunental representaUves in a letter stating the grounds ... for t h e gro:up's oppoe:Jlion. Written opposition i1 .till bel.ng accepted by the PUC on utlll· Ues aeekfnf the San Onofre .ezpanslon. The letter--wlll state the organization's conviction that "our southern Callfomia beaches are too preciOWJ for recreational and aesthetic PJrpo1es to be used as sites for atomic reacton. "The Capistrano Bay area Is fast ,be-- coming an urban center, and two mdes is too close for the . biggest reactors in the United States." In tlle statement, the association wilt agree with scientist Edward Teller that reactors should be buried underground, and will note that the people or the Capis-- traDQ Bay area are i•Uving in a nuclear eiperiment with one reactor already; it ts not Jurt to subject. Us to the 8dditional buard and u1Unus -Of more reacton." A aeries of quellions which memberl of the Qlmmunlty AssoclaUon posed as - unanswered In recent PUC hearings will also be included in the letter. Members cl the auoclatlon, including President Arthur Blll1lein and direct-Or Ernest Reason attended portions of the hearings iii the San Clemente Civic ee. ter. The association action was ta.ken fol· lowing a slide presenlation and disCUS9 slon of pollution of the Caplstr•no Bay coastline, led by Lyn Harris Hicks , vice president -0f the Capistrano Beach Cham· ber of Commerce. DAILY PILOT " .......... --'"'""--·-c.t. Mn• S. a.-.. 01\ANGli COAST l"UIL.ISHLNO COM'AN't ltobtrt N. W114 Prnicllnt tr.• 1"1191..W Jtclc lt. C 111!1y \Ik e ,,.r•tnt 1r• 0-11 Min .. ,, lho111t• Kt1'fil Elfltor Meeting Without a council aupporter of the Lincoln Savings proposal -Dr. Wade Lower -the council heard more than an hour of public objection to the proposed 200-space coach park. ' . After the hearing closed a moUon to deny the conditional use pennit ap- Polillcation falied. The move was made by the most outspoken council opponent to mobile homes in Shorecliffs, Thomas O'Keefe. It died for lack of aecond. Then a motiqn for approval of th~ ap- plication came from Councilman Stanley Northrup. That, too, suo:oumbed. Councilman Cliff Myers then suggested the council react to the major objecUon of opponents a'nd instruct city staff to draft figures comparing tax revenue of mobile homes to single-family houses. The motion and subsequent passage sparked a loud groan ln the audiehce as opponents to the plans expected a final vote to the often-delayed matter. Myers also had said that the issue should be settled by a full council. But City Manager Ken Carr reminded the COWlCil that Dr. Lower's vote on Nov. 4 would be invalid because he did not sit at the public hearing. To skirt that technicality, councilmen voted to reopen the hearing in"'fwo weeks. In the meanUme, the missing councilman will review transcripts -Of the hearing he missed. More than a dozen foes to the mobile home park proposed along the upper reaches of Shorecliffs Golf Course asserted that the park tenants would not pay enough taxes. But proponents of the Lincoln plan replied that the park would carry its fair share or the tax burden. The development's assessed value, they added, would be about $1.2 million and would be taxed as Improved property. Much of the meeting Wednesday was a carbon copy of prfvious council sessions which had resulted in denials or delays of the mobile home park matter. Coouncllman O'Keefe i:elterated his strong objedions to the use of the Shorecliffs area for the coaches, then cited county regulations on block walls and parking requirements which would ootapply to the.Lincoln d<vetapmmt. It ~~.~~:,.=~ the park and other areas villble from the surrounding areas. Thus far at least 23 development con- ditions have been placed orrthe permit approval -...i ~1JllF by plaMing commlsldilwl W 'ljlite okayed the plana twiot.:' f ' ' Leagu~ of Cities Cancels Meeting CancellaUon of an Orange County League of CiUes meeting to be hosted by Costa Mesa tonl&ht was announced late Wednesday, because of no speaker. San Diego Mayor Frank Curran, pres!· dent of the Nationa l League of CiUes, said be would keep the engagement even after being lndlcted on brlb<ry piarges recenUy with elgbt other offic~lS. Ht bu been stricken wlth nu, however, and Ja confined to his bed, according to Costa Mesa Mayer Robert M. Wilson. who was to have hosted the dinner meeting. From Page 1 PRICES •.• sub-group due to a higher price for eggs,'' she said. Fruit! and vegetables were up 0.1 percent, dairy product.! were up 0.9 percent and cereal and bakery pro- ducts were up 0.3 pe.rctnL 'Ibt only decline other than footwear was shown in medical care which was: down 0.2 percent. This was offset by an 0,_1_ percenL increase in reading _ and recreation costs, leaving the bealt!i and rtere&tion category unchanged. MlSf Fadowslti said the health and recreation prie6 are up 3.9 over last year. j l)All'I' PILOT Sii" ,....,.. NATURAL GAS BUS REVEALS ITS SIZE OUTSIDE "LAGUNA BEACH CITY HALL Parked Next to Small Foreign Car (left) and U.S. Van ?' Laguna Studies Transit City Officials Take Ride on Natural Gas Bus Laguna Beach city officials took demo~trated how easy•it was for the bus ~~rdenne noted !.at the bus was another look at the looming prospect of driver to switch from one fuel to the or1gmally des~ned {c; transport peoi:~ rapid transit when they inspected and other. around large airport terminals and test-hopped another bus Wednesday on The 212 horsepower engine was numing had a luggage rack. the hills of Laguna Beach. and a grey smoke was belching froi:n th e He said removal of· th~ rack would p~ This bus wa:; green and while and true exha~t pi~. Dardenne gav e the signal, vlde more space for seating and would 1n~ to Its nalural colors it was powered by the driver Dipped a red·hand led lever and crease the pre.sent 13 seats to 17. lf the natural gas, Built by Minibus, Inc. of the exhaust became invisible and people would stand pp, Dar~enne joked, Pico Rivera the vehicle when measured odorless. 30 people could be packed into the bus on the mini:midi·maxi ~ale of bus ea Dardenne said that the bll!, when run-after the style of New York subways. would fa ll somewhere between the calf ning on the natural gas. falls below the He said the natural gas costs about the and the ankle. pollution standards already adopted by same as gasoline and that the bus, with Minibus president Bud Dardenne said the st.at e for 197.5. its three tanks of natural gas, could go the bus would cost anywhere from $14,000 Under the strmgent standards that all about 75 miles before refilling. to J2t,ooo,. depen~ng.on the quality of the auto m~ufacture~s must m?et. by that Planning commissioner Bob Hastings stereo, air cond1t1on1ng and other fancy year. oxides of nitrogen emission must said the bus, if pui'chased by the city, options. The bus had large glass windows fall below a level of. l.U on ~he standards would be required to travel about 90 all around that could be opened by the special scale. Gasoline engines now prcr miles in the course of Its 10· hours or daily passengers and a single entrance-exit duce abol!t 3.07 and the natural gas bus door on the curb-side of the vehi cle. produces .72, Dardenne said. For carbon Dardenne said the bus would run on monoxid es, the standard will be 12 and either gasoline or natural gas and he the natural gas bus produces .54. ·Killing of 5 Believed Work of Weird Cultists • By JACK SCHRE!BMAN AllKllll .. ,,... ~rlltr SANTA CRUZ ~ A bizarre declaration of war n~:' J~t at a home where five per._t ~iil:ttn threatens death to all)'OM w&0 .,mlaliSes tbe natural envlr· Onment. r, 1 , The tY1?0wrllW,,~ote,. !lined with the names of Ut& four knights on fortune-tel- ling tarot card11, said future killing! would be carried out by the "People of the Free Universe." Disclosing the note Wednesday two days after the slaying of wealthy eye surgeon Dr. Victor M. Ohta and four others, Undersberiff Paul W. Tara urged the community -100 miles south of San Francisco -to remain calm. "We have to keep our cool. We are fighting a war and we might as well face jt."' Tara said. The undersheriff said the nature of the ki!Ungs and the note indicated the five were &lain by cultists. materialism must die or mankind will." The note was signedd: • "Knight of Wands "Knight of' Cups "Knight of Pentacles hKnlght of Swords." The pentacle ls a five-sided f i g u r e associated with witchcraft as a magical or talisman device, in fiction often used to summon up the devil. The Knight! are the four suits of the 78- card tarot deek, used to tell one's fortune depending on which direction the large cards fall. Tara said the note was withheld in· itially so as not to alarm citize ns. "The note itself is in the hands of some of the most competent analysts in the state," he said. He added: "We recognize the shock this senseless act has brought to our citizenry. We trust that the sober judg· ment of our res idents will prevail over any emotional reaction. use. Dardenne said that another gas tank could be easily added to allow the bus to go all day without a refill. "One advantage of the natural gas," Dardenne said. ''bes ides the reduced pollution, is that spark plugs don't carbon up as fast and the life of the oil in the crankcase is doubled." Dardenne said that the buses are already being used at Leisure World in Seal Beach Jn Redwood City and in several cities on the cast coast. "Nobody really likes to ride buses,'' Dardenne said, "so why do people need a big bus with lots of empty seats? We built this bus big enough to handle the people that have to take the bus, and that's all." Dard enne said the purpose of the dual fuel system is that if the buses are kept jn a storage barn outside of a big city, they can be driven to their downtown routes on gasoline and then switched to natural gas in the smoggy city, He said the natural gas tanks could be filled in about 10 minutes from a com· pressor which the city would have to purchase from the gas company. Takin g the bus on a trial run to prove its power, Dard enne told the driver to take it up a steep hill, and the bus, loaded with pass engers, climbed to Top or the Worl d. "We made the steepest hill in San Francisco in one of these buses , "Darden- ne said, ';We had 14 men in it and we stopped in the middle of the hill and started up again to prove that it v."Ouid make It." The note was found under the windshield wiper of Ohta's red Rolls Royce after the bodies of Ohta, his wife, two sons and secretary were discovered in a swimming pool at the family's $250,000 hilltop home Monday night, Tara said. ~aff Clearance • • • ' f'rom P"fle 1 DOGS •.•• "' ••vour alternaUve now ts to repeal OrdinarlC* 850 or call a referendum elec- tion in not less than 60 nor mort than 75 days " ·-llldwd"Gotdb!rl Wed !An' to r<pOrt 00 hll ibrff.boui parley with the re~sentaUves of the Laguna Beach Doi Owners Association. Lorr listed points presented to him a1 "non-negotiable" by the association. They were: removal of the dog ban fn Top of the World Park; im.pasltion of the Riddle Field ban only during LltUe League season; setting of hours when owners could walk dogs in Bluebird Can. you Park; limitation of the beach ban to summer months, as already agreed bY. the council, but with slight date changes. "Going to a vote is putting the city in the position of spending taxpayers' money which is not practical on such an issue." Lorr said. "I recommend we rt- scind Ordinance 650 and follow up after a period of six weeks with an ordinance revised only to the extent of the revision approved at the previOUJ nieetlng allow· ing dogs on tbe beach ·in the wtnter months only. "The lix·week waiting period would give us, as the Dog Owners AssoclaUon has said, a chance to see the re1ulll of our new animal control agreement with the SPCA ." Coupcilman Boyd said he understood Lorr's motion .would be to repeal the ordinance -0nly. Rimel said this was the resolution he had prepared and noted that sections on animal control in earlier ordinances (the leash law} would remain in effect. The law baMing dogs from beaches and parks, which was suspended when the referendum '98 filed Sept. II, woold remain in ~Ion until com· pletion of repeal proceedings. • From Pege 1 ROSE .•• established a board of design review. -Personnel: Designed a master personnel system for Tiburon, with an exemplary recruitment and selection pro- gram. -Culture and Recreation : Originated and directed programs to encourage rewarding uses of public beaches and an outdoor theater in Carmel, helped initiate a cultural center and was secretary to the city Arts, Commission. Organized parks and recreation commissJ.on in Tiburon. -Public servi~s: Established refuse collection sy.:tems, public transit pilot prograrr:s, landscaping and beautifiC'-· li on programs. -Public Information : Author of a \"." :!:ly newspa per column, frequent 1 spea ker berore public groups, written reports on undergroW1ding of utilities, drainage, liability insurance, c a b I e television franchises and others. -Legislative Advocacy : Familiar with . legislative structure of state government and have 11.p?eared before se::ate and a:-'mbly committees on such subjects as cable TV, drainage. public informatinn and "ecords and budgeting. Rose states that he favors the "task f--:e" concept of problem-solving, draw· ina together C.e best resources available. and describes ti: .... ~-·· as Ha "P.sponslble ir.novator, an experimenter but a finan· ,. · conservator." Bond Passed, 100% CALIFORNIA VALLEY, Calif. (AP) - A unanimous v~ was cast In this •(Ii· · cultural community for a $.150,000..bond issue to put up power lines. 1be San Lui s Obispo County clerk, Ruth Warn·_ ken, said it was the first time. that a · bond issue in the county had carried un- animously. Twenty·nine of the are.a'a 34 registered voters cast ballots. Until the note was made public, police had said they knew no motive for the slayings. They were trying to find two young men and a girl reported seen near another of the Ohtas' cars -a station wagon -before it was found abandoned on a railroad track: • INNING ROOM GROUPS lllMI GAME SETS Tara said the note read: "Today World War Ill will begin as brought to you.by the People of the Free Universe. From this day forward anyone and/or company who misuses the natural environment or destroys same will suffer the penalty of death by the People of the Free Universe. "I and my comrades from this 4ay forth will fight until death or freedom, against anything or anyone who does not support natural life on this planet, Ffuor Samples and Discootinued I terns 25% To 58% Off 1ho111t1 A. Murplrii110 M11119ln9 l!dl1Dt' fli,~1r4 P. Hill San Oemente Ol{s Funds $oulh OllllQO "91/nly Ed/IOI" ....... I COl!I MUii S» Well ll'f Strttt HtwflOH •••<h; n11 w~u ,,.., a-1t'l1rd • LIIOUM lltl(h: m ...... , •v- lil1111ll"'11110n llHcll: 11171 lllldl llovfn'I,. ~n c:1tmentt; ~ Ntrlh El Cimino "e11 ' To Construct New Courts San Clemente'1 lhuifleboard and tennls players woa assuranctt Wednesday that tbelr' new courts would be rtady btfore the old ones sre razed in r~nstructlon of the burned-out community clubhouse. Councilmen voted Wednesday t o earmark $351000 for the new playing areas with details to be worked out later. The general proposal is to rdocate the tennis courts from the clubhouse site to another city park to make room for more parldng at the new meeting facility. Original plans to do the same for the shuffl eboard lanes. however, met "'Ith protest from the &hu!Ocboard assoclaUon. The city then agreed to keep the courts on I.he clubhouse site, but move them to a dll!erent spct oh lhe lot. That job wlll cost obout 110,llllO; the ttnnil court matter would take up the rest of the ai>propriatlon. An offshoot of the council action Wednesday was a suggestion by Coon· cilman Thomas O'Keefe that the city ex· amine the chances of private developers -financed through municipal bonds - bu ilding a tennis club open to the public in San Clemente with profit! ustd to pay the costs of ronst.ructlon, maintenance and operation. The ldta, made In form of a motion flt failed for a Jack of second), h8.d one skeptical critic. Mayor Walter Evan!! said it would be Impossible to get local tennis players to pay for pla)·ing "'hen the ooura at San Clemente High Sthool are offered fret to lhc public. The mslter will be sent to parks and rccrcauoa commissioners for study. c ' /mm1rli.#e a.liwr-y You favorill inllrlor dulonet IOill b• llaJ>P1I lo .. .ui (IOll ••• H.J.GAl\l\ETI fURNllURE PROFESSIONAt INTERIOR DESIGNERS -nY OUR REYOl.YIM• CHARM- o,.. ~ ,..,._ .. "'· ..... ' 2215 HARIOR ILllD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. M6.0Z7r I I I 7 I 7 ' . ~------- Mrs. Rose Gardeiaitag The show must go on, so must the garden. Mrs. Betsy Rose, vice president of Laguna Moulton Playhouse board, tends greenery around the finance-plagued new theater. She and other volunteers are donating their time in a variety of ways to ease playhouse over the hump. Volunteers are nee~ed, they say. So is money. City Council Turns Dow11 Teen Dances at Boardwalk The Laguna Beach City Council voted unanimously \'lednesday nighl to deny a request from the Free Clinic to hold weekly dances at The Boardwalk, 111 Ocean Ave., former home of the Barefoot Bar and later the Revival Teen Center. The vote Was taken in the abSence of Dr. Eugene Atherton, who had been ex- pected to speak for the Clinic, and after acting city manager Joseph Sweany sa id the Chief of Police had been unable to complete a reporl on the proposed event because of inability to obtain detailed in-- formation on plans. Later in the evenin g. Dr. Atherton ap- peared in the council chamber, stating that his duties as a physician had Lagunans Back Transit Issues The board or directors or the Laguna Beach Citizens' Town Planning Associa· tion has endorsed the two rapid transit measures on the November ballot. The board Tuesday urged passage of proposition 18, which would divert gaso- line tax funds for rapid transit develop- ment , and passage ()f proposition A, which allows for the establishment of a county Rapid Transit District. \Vith the endorsement or the t"·o measures, the board voted to carry on an aggressive campa ign on behalf of the propositions by placing advertisements in loca l newspapers. In its discussion ()f controversial pro- position 18, the board emphasized "the need for preserving Californ ia's towns and countryside from spreadirig asphajt and increasing .numbers of automobiles.". Ji'ad Ticks On prevented an earlier arrival. He said he had devoted much time and some money to preparing for the dance and had secured the permission of the Jessee o( the city--0wned property to bold the dance. Mayor Richard Goldbefg said the city bad been obliged to cancel Recreation Department use ()f the premises for dances because of crowd problems ge11erated in the area. In response to a question as to the purpose of the danc.e, Dr. Atherton sa id it would be fund.raising for the Free Clinic, \Vhich has established' quarters at 422 Glenneyre St. but need s "$25,000 to SJ0.000 worth or drugs un til the county Health Department bas time-.to evaluate ()Ur operation and provide us with the drugs." Goldberg said tie was also concerned that a permit ror the dance would be viewed as council endorsement of the Free Clinic. Atherton pointed out that permits for rummage sales and other events had been granted and said he realized official city recognition "'ould "take some time.'' He cited the need for dances to provide "good, clean recreation for young peo- ple." Councilman Edward Lorr said the city had established a Recreation Department for that purpose. Councilma n Charlton Boyd, who earlier had voted to deny the request in the absence of Dr. Atherton a.nd in vie"' of inadequate information, said, "I feel this is a fairly stra ightforward attempt l<l use some space. What would the city re- quire?" City attorney Jack Rimel said the city could deny a dance on city property for any reason at all. Latest political caricatu re to hit the watch ranks is this model called .., '1Tickic Dickie." Featuring the President, It will be produced by 19-year.old Anahei.m entrepreneur Ken r.Wler. Motto over ca ricature Is "Now, let me. make this crystal clear." Miller plans to become a Republican and live in San Clemente overlook ing Western White House. I Thurid.Q, October 22, 1970 'L DAILY PILOT 3 Laguna Subject-of New 8urvey County Social Programs Team Seeking Pilot Program Site Another county team is looking over Laguna Beach this week, this time a trio from the Orange County Community Services Project seeking to select a city In which to establish a 30-month pilot prcr gram designed to help diminish social problems. Members -of the survey team, wh ich is not connected with the Health Survey under way in Laguna for some v.•eeks, are Ann Feyh of the County Health l>epartment, Bruce Sandie of the Proba- tion Department and Saul Stolzbe rg of the Community Mental Health Depart- ment. They are visiting 14 o( the 25 Orange County cities invited to volunteer for the . -project which was funded by the Board of Supervisors .in June. Laguna, eighth of th e 14 communities which volunteered to participate, will be examined by the county representatives for a period of one or two v.•eeks. The team already has visited Garden Grove, Westminster. Buena Park. Santa Ana, Seal Beach, Fullerton and Stanton and will visit six more communities before selecting a single city for the pilot Nixo11 Aide Seeks Wage Top Priority Speaking at a two-day ronference at the Western White House in San Clemente, a federal o!ricial Wednesday called for top priority in enforcing federa l minimum pay Jaws involving the working poor. Robert D. Moran. region.it director of the U.S. Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division, spoke to about 1,000 labor department employes. lie told them, "they number in the hun· dreds of thousands, forgotten men and women who need help the worst." He said records of his division show a tiigh percentage of violations in the lowesl-paid segment of the national work force, with violations adding up to $89 million in the last fiscal year. "Our obligation," said M o r a n , "bec<>mes increasingly clear in the fact that about 45 percent of the ap- proximately 45(),000 underpaid people were working for $1.65 an hour or Jess.'' Forty percent of the others, he said, tiad incom.es below the lowest family budget set by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Stalistics. Moran said most violations were due to ignorance en the part of employers. Saddleback Sets 3 Night Showing Of Follies Revue Saddleback College"s annual follies revue. "A Show For Lovers -Rated G" offering music, comedy and song, will open for a three-night run Oct. 28. The production is open to the public at $1 and will begin each of the three nights at 8 p.m. in the campus theater. Tustin student Chris Clawson will be executive producer in charge of music for the affair. Executive Producer is La rry \Vheaton of San Clemente; Laguna Beach student John Brown is technical director. Among the cast are Hal Proppe. Ralf Reynolds, Connie Myers, Glenn Daniels, Jill Hallock. Renee OuUouchel, Mark Monroe and Kit McDonough, all of Laguna Beach; Mike Dwight, Jan Jensen and Randy Iles of Dana Point: Susan Killion of El Toro: Carol Sasoon of Laguna Niguel, Bobby Stone of San J uan Capistrano, Lou Pellon and Karen J acobsen ()f San Clemente and Bob Courtright of University Park. Firemen Bracing For Court Test SACRAi\-1ENTO <UPI ) -City firemen, their 14-day strike ended. looked to the courts today to resolve the issuP.s which ca used the walkout. Members or the Fire Fighters Local 522, AFL-CIO, voted Wednesday to com- ply with a Superior Court injunction pro- hlbltlng the_ strike. The firsl of the fire department's three 120-man platoons had reported for work more than two houn before the vote was counted. . h-1eanwhile in San Francisco, attorneys for the local asked the California Supreme Court to set aside the injunction unless disciplinary action taken by the ci- ty against the strikers was resc inded. Legion to Hear Talk On Iron Curtain Trip . 0. W. Price will address American Legion Post 222 and its Auilllary follow· Ing a pol luck supper tonight at l ::Kl p.m. at the Legion Club Hou.se. Price recently retur~ with hi! family from a tour or Russia. Hungar-y and C:r:echoslovakla and will show color 1lldt.!1 of hb ltlp. program. The project ls seeking a city where all tiuman Institutions -city government, schools, buslnesses, service clubs, police, county agencies, churches and the general clt.lzenry -will join together in locally develope4 action programs which could include child care, VO prevention. drug education, police ride-alongs a n d any others deemed necessary. Basic purpose of the project. according to Sandie. Is to "head oU problems before they arise, rather than continue the ex- isting pracUce of reacting to existing situations." · The team, which will be Increased to six members in the city selected. would help deve lop the programs along with local agencies. City, county, private, state and/or federal resources could be involved as needed, Sandie aa!d, notinc that "Tremendous rt90Ufces a r • available. but the problem is to get peo- ple with a need turned in to them." . - IS. In each community being studied, the suryey team is tnterviewing government leaders, police chiefs. school officials. businessmen, churchmen 4nd residents to determine the dt!gree or enthusla1m for parUcipatlon ln such a unified action pro- ject. , ll is expected that the pilot city will he. selected by mid-December. Programi. proven ,successful during the 30-~. test period then will be adapted as neecS-.. !d in other Orange County cities. ~ •• • Bulbs now ••• tulips later. Lily Flowering Tulips. Slately tulips in mixed colors for flowers later ••• from bulbs planted now. Pkg.ol9, 1.19 Anemone bulbs. Your choice of single or double in mixed colors. Pkg. of 25, 89~ Kellogg's Gromulch. Excellent for retaining moisture, keeping roots cool. 1 cu. ft. big, 129 2 cu. It. big, 198 Kelloggs's Nllrohumus, 50 lb. big, 139 Kellogg's Nllrohumus Top Dressing. 219 3 cu. It. beg, Tulips. Your choice: William Pitt. red: Golden Harvest, yellow; Queen of Night, black. Plant all three. Boarded lrla buibl. C'- BJue Sky, blue ••• or chocM Golden Giant, Y911ow. Pto-,ol 2, eat F.-bullll for mbced colored flowers. Riotous garden color1 Pkg. ol 15, 8" Special! Bedding plant cre\rs.-. All varieties ... limited quantities ••. hurry! C-Jathatare delicately beautiful in assorted colors. 1 gal. size, 119 Bottle Bn11h. Hardy, handsome landscaping shrub. 5 gaL size. 319 ~nne.,1 3 ITIYI for 129 ,, ,, Decorlllva Sequoia Bark for gr01ind cover. Medium, coarae or palhway for border beauty. 3 cu.11; bag, 1ss Availableatth-PenneyGardenCenter1:1 ______ .. . . . ---. Shop 12 lo 5, Sunday, 100-:- FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER • NEWPORT BEACH I ' I .. ~ . • ... I I•' f '· I •• ' . • • • , ---------~-~----- ...,...,.,....,,,_,_~_ -. _, ---.. ~ -·---• t • • • ' • I Ghilean ~e-neMI , Shot~ • ~ 11 l~ ., .. ~ '*' ll•ffl ~/"'d t~ be the most expensive e Terr•nc• E. Sm ith ever Dlad,, Smith. 27. a Washington St8ie_University student who never before had seen action on a foot- ball field , finally got into the act last Saturday in WSU's 63-16 loss to Stanford. It was Smith who leap- ed out of the stands and made what one person called·· the best tackle . of the day on Eric Cross who was in the process of scoring for Stan· ~ on a ~yard run. Smith was E ed and charged with public eness and disorderly conduct. ay he forfeited $40 bond on ~echarge. ... • POLICE SGT. ANDREW DAVIS GIVES HIS SISTER WARM EMBRACE He W•1 Set Fne When Police Promised Not to Arrest His Captors Bia~ Policeman Freed, Held Hostage SiX Ho11rs Army Commander in Serious Condition ; SANTIAGO, Chile (UP!) -Gunmen flhot and Critically wounded Chilean army couunander •Gen. Rene Schneider today In an apparent assas.sinaUon attempt jwit 48 hours before congress was to confirm ¥arrilt Salvador Allende as President· elect. • . The atmy chiefs of staff met im- mediately after tile attempt on Schneider. and J\ appeared likely that a military alert or a declaration of some form of military ltw would be applied untU afler the congreSslonal vote. Schneider was rushed to a military hospital for emergency surgery. An army high command communique said be wu in seriowi condJlion. Lame d\K!k president :Eduardo Frei and Gen. Vincente Huerta, commander of the Carabineros National Police, rushed to the hospital. Schnelcltr received line molver blllletl -In the neck, !lie lower ......... and lo the arm -and that docton were op- tlmlsUc because no vital orpns were, hit. The army high command iaaled a cofn. munJque giving this venlon of the flo- cident: t "'This morning at 0815 houl'1 A r .m y Commander Gen. Rene, S c h n e I d e r Chereau was lht object of a cowardly at- tempt as he drove bis automobile from his home to the' cle!ense mlnlslry. ':At the comet of Ameri~ Vespuclo and Martin de Zamora streets, three automobiles intercepted the vehlcle In which tbe army commander was travel- ing. Its occupant.a: broke out the windows oC the 1eoeral's vehicle and fired inJlde. 1• As a result, Gen. SChneider received three bullet Impacts In the body and _, rushed to the military hospital where be ls at this moment in the operaUna room in serious ccindlUon." On Monday a cashiered army major, Arturo Manhall, was captured by police in possession of a telescopic rifle w I t h which he alleged1y intended to kll1 the president-elect. Poll<:i! Inspector Louis Jaspard described him as a "mental case" who had been mixed up in the past in varioua military C{)UP conspiracies which never came off. Several terrorist noise bombings fJCo. curred early Utls month but cea.sed after police arrested seven young rJ&b.Usts, mo&Uy law students. The 1COre or IO of bombings caused a fair amount of pro- perly damaa• but no casualtlel. It was the first a~tual political assassination attempt -if that is what It pi-oves to .be -of the embittered elec- toral campaign and its aftennath. Police said they had no immediate clue as to lht political orientation of the assailants. Police said Sdmeider was shot in the neck but Christian Democrat Sen. Juan De Dios Carmona, a former defense minister, told newsmen at the hospital British Envoy ,Said Alive; Canada Infiltration Told MONTREAL (\IP!) - A high-ranking N k R federal orficlal is con•iDCed that kidnaped CWSWCC eporler British diplomat J1mes R. Cro" is Alive E ll d h R . and can be saved becauae Quebec Llbera· xpe e Y USSta tion Front !FLQ)-terrorists '"now think ment learned the FLQ planned ·to disrupt Sunday's Montreal city elections with "explosions of 111 kinds and by ~r kidn1:pin1s or even shootings -at peo. pie." · ' Marchand reiterated Ute government's A police11U1n used a hacksaw Monday to ~cut through a chain someone placed across the main door to the West London Mcigistrates Court, while in Cheshire, Police manning a ra· dar speed check clocked a deer •galloping in front of o car at 42 mile• ptr hour. ST. LOUIS. Mo. (UPI) -A Detroit couple released a black policeman they had held hoslage for 6'11 hours Wed- nesday night after police said they would not be charged with holding him. But the man wu booked as a fugitive wanteQ in Detroit. to the George Washington Hotel and was ?i.10SCOW (AP)_ The Soviet Union ts t:.Jt they are not going to·gain anything" told an armed couple had barricaded expelling John Dorneberg, chief of the by murdering him. ' unwillingneu to meet-'.FLQ demand.a for Cross' release, but add'Od the Brtton'ilife probably could be sa¥ed beca111e the ter.· rorilta feel they .caruiOt help tbelr cauae by further usassination. themselves in a small room on the fifth Newsweek bureau in Mosaiw. Jean Marchand, No. 2 man in · the floor. The official news agency Tass said to-cabinet of Prime Mllmter Pierre Davis, a detective in charge of the day the expulsion is because of "in-Trud~u. also aaid the federal • narcotics squad, told the man in!lide he votv.ement in an anti-Soviet provocation." government's crackdown on the FLQ wanted to talk with tum. l'he m111 asked ,Jt alluded to a political demonstration by came because the separatist terrori1ts Cross and Quebec Labor Minister Pier- re LaPorte were kidnaped from ~ei.r homes by separate cells of the FLQ. LaPorte was strangled by a chain he wore around his neck with a religious medal. His body was discovered Saturday ni&ht in the trunk of the car UJed in hia ab- duction. .. There are no longer any provi- llnns for mules, swine, geese, and ~'en in the _Minneapolis city char· ~efc. Among· phrases deleted from ·Ille charter recently by the City Another policeman driving the C{)Uple's car to a police station was shot. Police believe another officer may have mistaken him for the suspects. Sgt. Andrew Davis, 33, bad been called Davis if he was a black policeman an<! young French and Swedish activists tut "have infiltrated our important in· Davis said yes. He was admitted. week in a Moscow department store. stitutions." After Davis talked wlth the man, Iden-"It became known that Dorneberg took Speaking Wednesday night on a radio tified as Wesley Copeland, 29, and his part in mimeographing the anti-Soclet talk show in Weslminst.er, B. C., wife, Goldie, rt, Copeland said, "I'd leal1ets" the demomtratora scattered, Marchand, Federal Minister of Regional il's Charter and Legislative ttee were: "To restrain the g-at-large of horses, mutes, .~1)ttie, swine, sheep, poultry and teese •.. " "To prevent all persons Jjding or ·driving any ox from doing famage to sidewalks." Nixon, Gromyko Recall Old Da ys During Meeting rather die than to go jail.•• He was Tua said. Economic Expansion, said the govern· holding a .45-caliber pistol on Davis and 1~·~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~· his wife held a .30-caliber lever-action ri· •((' ~· fie. police said. iJ~ • Vic Perrott, a construction work· ler who operates ·a crane at the ID~nvonport Royal Navy dockyard :fh England, has found that his cab " ~ feet in .. the air make an ideal ~nbouse. He has put tomato ibmts around the cab and is hop.o ttftl for a bumper crop. -, e Police were ttmoving 33 illt· gal 1lot machi'nts from a shop and looding thtm onto truck!, when on unidenti~d U{oma n ltOPPf!d and ploytd a quarttr tn4Chine. She was odvistd to leout. The tnddent occurred on HelsM's main strett, Lolt Chance Gulch in Montana. • it Ji.as Freaks 5, Cops 4 in a §lf game Sunday between rded local collegians and com- unity relations-minded police- en in San Diego. Bur the game less exciting than the cops' pt to get their mascot into · dugoul The mascot, a large •2 namocl Sarp, resisted all al-imlpta to drive him underground ~· wound up watching from the tde· of an umbrella. :' . . Jolin Wood of NaUonaJ City, ~· was on his newspaper route ently when he heard something p from a bakery truck in fron t ~him. It was a tackle box contain· ~ '2IJO which the 15-year-old fl'Ol!lptly returnocl to the bakery, accepting no cub reward. "I did il!t ~ dOll&bnull, though," he said. [;1 WASHINGTON (UPI) -President N"txon and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko mt:t today for a private di.sc\ls. slon which ·t~ President hopes will ease the Middle East crisis and eliminate the posa.Jl>llity . o! .a dir:~t conlrootattoo between the two nuclear ·super-Powers. Before getting down to substantive bargaining, the President and Gromyko clllW amiably while photographers reeorded tbe eVent. '~ Newsmen oferheard Nixon 1sk the Soviet £oreign mini.ster when he WU last in the PreatdenUaJ oval office. "Two years ago," Gromyko replied. "That was while Mr. Johnson was President," Nil:on said. '-?'he Jut time I remember you bein8 here was in '59." Sitting in on the meeting were Secretary of , Slate William P. Rogers: Nixon's naUOOal 1ecurity adviser, Henry A. Kissinger. Soviet Ambassalor Anatoly F. Dobrynin and a Soviet Interpreter. Gromyko, who flew from the U.N. headquarters ln New Yo~ to Washington with Rogers, tn a Lockheed Jetstar aircraft, told Nixon that he enjoyed the ffighl "He wanb a Jetstar and we're going to sell him one,'' Rogers said. "What's the price?" Dobrynin asked. "We can get a reduced rate for you," Rogers said. ''It has four engines, right?" Dobrynin 13.id. "You keep one ." Nixon reminisced that when Gromyko was in Washington for the funeral of former Secretary of State John Foster Dulle1, Konrad Adenauer, the la te West German chancellor, "remarked that the two of us (Nixon and Gromyko) looked alih. He said we should changt places and we would get more done." Copeland's wife told Davis, "he's my husband and I'm staying with him," police said. Copeland pointed to Davis and told his wife, "shoot him if he moves," they said. Copeland talked at various times with two ministers, representatives of black militant organizations and police of. ficials. He finally ca1led for cigarettes and a black attorney he had met in a previous visit to St. Louis in 1965. An agreemenl was re.:hed whereby Davis would be released, the Copelands would not be charged for holding a police officer and they ~ould.be esr;:orted ou~ of. the hotel. Police-broujht their red Corvair to the front of the hotel and left it with the motor running. About 3,000 people had assembled out.a:ide, and, in the confusion, the suspects and police got into an unmarked police car wlJ,ile ptitrolman Steven George.ff !h'ove the Corvair. 40 Yanks Killed On Battlefront SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Command announced today that 40 Americans were killed in action in Vietnam last week. the second lowest weekly toll in 41n:· years, while 33 others died from causes other than battle. The total of South Vletnameae bat· tlefield deaths allO dropped last week, to 256. the lowest total in a month, govern· ment headquarters said. The U.S. Command reported that allied forcea killed t,083 North Vietnamese ind Viet Cong during the aeven.<fay period, 119 Jess than the week before. The weekly casualty awnmarles also report.d 432 U.S. lroopo and BM South Vietnamese soldiers wounded in action last week. 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Traveler's Checks 3. 11cketa to Sports and : · ~ 1 ~~ 2. Collection of Notes Theatre Attractions mcketron) ,'I;,.; 4. Many other FREE Services OPEN NIGHTand DAY Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. SOUTH COAST PLAZA -... llTOL ITllRT • COSTA M18A. CALJllOlllllA • PllOlll l40-40ll ' • • . ---------.----.. • San Cle111enie . -- . Today'll Fhlal ~ ED ITtON Capisirano ~-- N.-Y.-Steeks -. VOL. 63 , *~RANGE JEN CENTS • f - Lawman's Funeral Interrupted by ]Jomb Blast SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A bomb ex· pioded outside a church Thursday 'as mourners, including 300 policemen and Mayor Joseph .Alioto, gatflered for the funeral of a police officer killed in a 1bootout with a bank robber. rjrbne was injured when th!! explosive device, planted.in shrubbery about 3 feet from the front door of St. Brenda n's Catholic Church went off with a blast which shook t.he church and surrounding houses. Some mourneMJ, police and reporte.rs had already started filing into the church, walking a few feet from the bomb, when the exp)osion occurred at 9;47 a.m. The funeral c;ortege for patrolman Harold L. Hamilton, 32, shot to death at a WeUs Fargo branch bank Monday, was on its way from the funeral home for the services, scheduled at IO a.m. "It sou nded like a terrible bomb.'' saht a teacher at St. Brendaii's School next door. Across the street, Mrs. Edna Peters, said the explosiol'l shook bet house. The blast discolored the front of the stucco-faced church, built in Cllifo"(!!Ja mission-style with a red ti le roor and bar- red windows, but d,id np serioU§,damage. It did little visible damage to the outside, but Chief Al Nelder Said it may have done "extensive damage"• to the underpinnings and the walls. Police and firemeri swarmed over the building and sealed off the area. Policemen discounted reports by a resi- dent of "two men" see1i fleeing the site and said they believed the bomb was a timed device which had been planted hours earlier. "We're going to make another fa st search or the building and then go ahead · with the funeral to show these bums they can't scare us out," said Alioto, his voice shaking .with anger. He blamed the explosiOn • on a "1>3ychotic crew" of terrorists. "'we're going to stop thJ1 rtonsense,'' he· said. Mary.Crawforci; a ,rePorter: for ·ihe San Francisco Examiner, said something "metaJlic" hit lier shof. She was· about 20 to 30 feet aw'ay from"thei'.door at the time. Police later found a piece of clockwork· like spring .lying in the street about 35 feet away, and newsmen.said they found bent nails on the sidewalk. Another witness said, "stuff was falllng all around.". . Police Chief AJlttd J, Nelder said the bomb was buried under tilt shrubbery~ He said there were "no certain, concrete; suspects.'' ''It was one of the .. mostrclespicabl6 things thai could happe~." said Nelder.; "A man lays' down his life doing his duty and we come to pay tribute to him a& a Mass and then someone does this. "It just makes you wood.er what we are coming to." - San Clemente Of·ficials Gird for Jetpo1"t Fight HELD IN RUSSIA Brig. Gen. McQuarrie U,1 T•I••'-"$ DETAINED BY. SOVIETS Maj. Gen. Scherrer ·U.S. Beechcraft Held; Russ· /(eep 2 Generals From Wire Services MOSCOW -An aircraft carrying two U.S. Army generals "violated tbc air space'' of the .Soviet Union and is ·being held in the Armenian city of Leninakan, Moscow radio said today. The radio feport said the U.S. Air Foret Beechcraft U8 propeller driven plane carried four men -the two generals, a U.S. Air Force major and a Turkish colonel on a flight from Turkey. The two generals are l\1aj. Gen. Edward C. D. "Pony" Scherrer, 57, o( Shawneetown. 111.. and Brig. Gen. Claude Monroe McQuarrie Jr .. 45. of Ft. Ben- ning, Ga. Both are attached to the U.S. Military Assistance Program in Turkey. Tass identified the pilot as a l\1ajor Russell and the Turk as a Colonel Deneli. The Tass news agency said all four were in good health. The plane disappeared Wednesday on a 100-mile flight from Erzerum to Kars, about 35 miles from Turkey's border with the Soviet Union. U.S. Army authorities insisted the generals were only on a routine tour of TUrkish military installations in con· neCtion with their duties pertaining to mllitary aid. They were flying in an army US SeminOle liaison plane, a twin-engine craft wiUt a cruising sJ>eed.. of about 170 miles an hour. Norma lly, the U8 is unarmed and car· ries no cameras or electronic surveillance gear. Leninakan, where the plane landed, is a city of 150,000 persons just across the eastern border. It is 575 miles east of Ankara and about 125 miles northwest of Yerevan, the capital or Armenia. Tass said "the competent Soviet authorities have been instructed to in- vestigate the circumstances connected with the above mentioned violation of the Soviet Union's state frontier by a plane of the U.S. Air Force." Jn Washington, a State Department spokesman told reporters he was unable to say whether Soviet authorities were holding the four men or whether they were considered to be in some other status with the Russians. A department press officer, John King, said the U.S. Embassy in Moscow had re· quested "consular access" to the Americans. That simply means. it was explained, that the embassy asked the Soviets to ap· prove the dispatch of an embassy official to Leninakan to see the four and report on their welfare and condition. Information 'About Plans Requested The first stop in what promises to be a loud and lengthy fight against jetport proposals in hills behind San Clemente was_ launched bye ·city councilmen Wedr)esday. : /-~~ .t toJ1.,' Reacting to the aMoWlcement TuE!sdaY that a consultant to the councy .~ the multimillion-Oollar terminal for Bell Canyon, councilme n agreed swiftly l<t see~ a Copy of the report and any other information they might need. One or the principal rtquests is for a specific location of the remote and nearly unknown canyon about 13 miles into the hills beyOnd Ortega Highway. Cou ncilmen already have sent one resolution to the county opposing regional airports in geperal for the are~. Another Could be expected after further information on the latest plans is received by the city. The suggestion came from Los Angeles consultant Ralph M. Parsons. who is con- ducting an elaborate and expens ive study on solutions to the county's vexing airport expansion problem. Parsons termed the conversion of the high, flat canyon as the last chance for the county to find a suitable site without surrounding development. Preliminary observations of the flight patterns from the proposed terminal show that the 1ets would spread noise at noticeable levels throughout the San Clemente and Capistrano Bay areas. The request by San Clemente's city council came during informal oral reports from individual councilmen. All four men present on the panel in- timated that they had plaMed to bring the matter up.· County Living Costs S9ar September Consumer Prices Show Sharp Increases By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of llM O.llY l'lltt 1 .. 11 Consumer prices in the Orange County- 14 Angeles area showed a sharp in- crease of I.4 percent for the month of September, according to statistics releas- ed Wednesday, by the Bureau of · Labor . ... Statistics. Sw.ani>e Fadowski, chief of the Los Angeles Office of Slatistics, explained it all this way : • ·"What this all boils down to is that an Orange County resident is going to have to spend $13.62 to buy the same things that cost him $10 in the period from 1957- 59." Wbile the incre8se was the highest in nearly 20 years, the consumer price ind'ex for the Southern California area re- mained below the national average. ·'Miss FadOwski said the price ir\dcx for the area reached an all time high of 13U. '' The national average showed a .4 per- eent increase in the cost of living, bring· in& the national consumer price. index lo •l!U. Miss Fadowski said the ma jority of the Increase result«! from a jW'lp in gas prices. "Gasoline prtces play a very Important pan lti the c•lcultilion of the consumer price index for the Los Angeles area," she said. "There were widespread gas wars during August, which ended In September, sending the price of gas up." She said higher gasoline prices ac- coonted for nearly half the overall increase, although food , housing and ap- parel prices were also up. "Jf the effect of the gas price increase were removed , it is estimated that con- sumer prices would have only risen 0.8 percent," she explained. The September rise was the largest month-to-month increase recorded since Febru ary of 1951, when the consumer price index went up 1.6 pe~nt. The current level of..t_he cost of ll~ing in southern Ciliforriia -is t.1--pe rcent higher than it was a year ago. ·~Consumer prices have risen every month in 1970 except August when they went down 0.6 ~rcent. The overall in- crease in t~e price index since Jan. 1 is 3.9 percent whic~ is slightly lesS than the 4,3 Increase l'eC(lrded in the same period in 1969," Miss Fadowskl e1plained. The increase in gas prices are chiefly responsible for the 4.7 percent rise In talion figure is composed of private trans- transportaUon cOsts. The total transpor- portation, which showed an increase of 4.t percent, and public transportation, ' which went up 1.4 percent. She said housing rose by 1.3 percent to a level which is 6 perttnt above that of a year ago. The housing -costs are divided into three sub-categories -shelter (ownership and rental), fuel and utilities, and furnishings and operations. Shelter costs rote 1.8, which is the largest rise in 18 months, with ownership costs.up 1.8 percent and rental up 1.6 per- cent. Fuel and utility bills climbed 0.3 per· cent and household furnlshinp and operaUons were up 0.8 percent. .__ ' High prices On women1s and gi~l's fall fashions were blamed by Miu Fadowskj -ror -5 sharp 1.7 increase-in apparel- costs. The level at the eDd of Septcmbel- is 4.1 percent above tbe level a year ago. She s8id feminine fashions showed a 4.4 percent increase with the price of men's and boy's fashions up 0.6. These two in- creases were offset somewhat by a drop of 1.6 perttnt in footwear. While meat, poultry and nsb showtii declining prices, tbe overall cost of fooCI: Wtnt u .. 0.4 percent in September, putttng n 3.t percent above .wt year'•· level. "Leading the inc:rtase 'wls ' 1 1.4 peti. · cent rlse in the 'other foodl f'on'. the borne' (See PRICES, fo&O.l) 100% Approval Council Appoints Rose ' Laguna City Manager By BARBARA KREIBICH 01 111• P.llY l'lltt Stiff Lawr.ence D. Rose, SO-year-<>ld city manager of the Northern California city of TibU11>n on. Sa,n Fra1)ci~cp , B.ay and fo~er ~!tr ~~f lra~~~~~I, l'i!l · ~~: ·ll'l" <1W,,.man1~·i>J'-;U(Wi& " The City Coullcil Wednesday nigh\ una nimously approved the appointment, with Mayor Richard Goldberg noting that councilman Roy Holm, absent on vaca- tion, had asked him to say that he "completely supports" the council 's selection. Rose was among 105 applicants for the position vacated in August by James Wheaton, who left to become city manager of Corona. In a len'gthy screening process, the ap- plications were reduced lo 25, of whom five finalists were: personally interviewed by all members of the council, with unanimous agreement on selection of •Rose. · Married, and the father or three children, Cynthia, 18; Marilyn, 16; and Laurie, 7: Rose has been city m8nager and clerk of Tiburon, a city of 6,000 on the northern shore of San Francisco Bay, llince its incorporation in 1964. From 1956 to 1962 he served as city ad· ministrator and city clerk of Carmel, having been elected to the city clerk post and re.elected unopposed in 1960. He resigned from the municipal government assignment to become editor and publishe r of the Carmel Pine Cone, having ~en a general partner in a group that purchased the well-known newspaper in 1961. A .serious automobile acc ident In Mex- ico, which involved a long period or recuperation. ended his publishing career and he returned to gove rnment upon the incorporation of Tiburon. Commenting on the appointment today, Mayor Goldberg said, "I think Laguna is very fortUnate to have Larry Rose as city manager. He is very likable, very sincere and, most of all , very capable.' The caliber of applicants fo r the job was ex- cellent and to get our fi rst choice out of such a good group makes me very con- fident in our good fortune." A n$tive of San Franc!~, ~se was graduated from Beverly Hills High School in 1938 and from the United States NEW l1'.GUNA MANAGER ~1wrence 0. Rose Merchant Marine Academy in 1943. He has a strong ,background in city fina nce, as a member ·Of the Galifomia Com~ on Munici pal Accounting and the League of CalifOmia Cities Com· mittee on FinB.nce Administration. His resume presen,!e:d, to the ci,ty covers experience in many fields of municipal administration : ' -Zoning: ;wrote zoning. ordinancf.s for the city q( Carmel and· direct~. the preparatio~ of'. subdivision, site, plan- ning, building regulations,' occupancy permits and ' sign ·coniiols for the city. Peffoi1;ned the sam~ las'ks for the City of Tiburon, eyentually fanning a Depart· ment :of COnlmunlty D'e·v e Io P: men t m e I d Ln g the 'funttiOns or mS~uon bulding contrOI, ]lannlni and zonirii:· 1rtto oneuTiit.(··r~ ' -Planning : Served as staff ·and -: -;retary to planning commissions in Carmel and TiburO'iJ;, prepared a draft master. plan Jor. doWntoi.rn Tiburon and (See1~E,0 Pa1e'2) . ' -. 'Monkey Trial' Defendant: John Scopes Dies at 70 ... •se, ft enacted by t~• Stilt• .of · Tennessee that it shalt be ·unlaw/ut ' /Or any teacher in a'ny of tht uni- versities, normals and all other pub- lic schools o/'the statt! to teach anu th.eor11 thot ctenie.s the stor11 of the divine creation of man as taught 'in the Bible,· arid tO ttach itl.$ttad that fl)On· ·ha.s, desce.nded fr'orn a . lower order of animol.S •• .'' · • March iJ, 1~25 '. '·~ ,,.. SHREVEP0RT, La." -'The IOf)tpolten biology lelch<!r wb< dired to·qllatiofl the fUJ1dam$211alitl theoey of Divlne!Clution • -' ' and the soVerelgn state of Termeuee:s ~ . . . right to decla,e ;it1his gooe.to get ·• f1n.al , rvllng. John T. ::copes, around whom tlie sensational Monkey Trial of 1925 ctn- teted an·d the mos~ falJIOU~ l~wy!?,ot the . day , battled, died hore, Wcdnesdiy · nipl · or cancer., .He w'n 70 Years old , but"he lived to tee . his beliefa 11Jpheld'. , '' • · ·'' ' ~· !Seo!* IOtl hi• job and wa• 'nn..t •IGe' fo. teaching evolution, 45 years ego l:ft.it1 was' later Cleared on • technicality Jult (See SCOPES, P ... I)· ,, ; J , ' Co·uncihnen Repeal Dog Ordinance ln an almost anti-climactic finale to .. one ot the biggeat ·controversies Laguna Beach has experienced In a decade or so. ttlc Ciiy Council voted 4-0 Wedneiday night to repeal .an ordinance that would tiive 'tiannea dogs it •It ti!Mi lnnti city beaches and three parks. MoUOn to repeal the ordiriance was made by its · author, councilman Edward Lorr and seconded by Councilman 'Peter Ostrander. Council!J1an Roy Holm , who, with coon. Cifman Charlton Boyd, had voted againat pie: or.iginaJ ordinance, was absent. In repealing the ordinance, the council fulfilled a legal obligation placed upon it by the filing of referendum petition with signatures or more than 10 percent of the city 's registered voters. Its only ·alternative would have been to call a special election to place the issue be fore the vdters, a procedure that would cost in eXcess of $2,000. Noting that it wOuld take about six weeks for tbe new ordinance repealing the controversial legi slation to become official, foJ!owlng a second reading and required 3\kiay waiting period, Mayo~ Richard Goldberg stated that after this period a n.ew dog conb'ol ordinance will be prepared, taking into consideration some or the points of controversy that precipitated tht referendum. · In sharp contrast to frenzied ear1ler meetings on the ordinance, which on one occasion found 700 people fammed into the high school auditorium after the regular council chamber Qverflowed, Wednesday's session was brief, quiet and without comment from the audience. · Two of the foremost spokesmen' fof the referendum, Richard Challis' and Arnold Hano, listened to the ,cut.and-dried legal proceedings bdt did•l\()t''•P'flk. · City Cler.k Dorothy Musfelt presented her certification of. the peUUons, stating that, 1,190 had been verified, Wfllr in eJ:• cess of the 871 reQuired. Rfmel pr~sented a r e 10Jutfoft acknOwledging r e c e' i 'p t or the peUtiod which was adof>ted . · The attorn,ey then advised the council, (See DOGS, Po1e l) • Oraage Weadter Look for sunny skit's ·over mod of the coast on Friday, with temp. eratures varying very litUe, from 68 loc~lly to· 70 further inland. _.:.ms_mE TODAl:' TM uproar Ovt';· druQ u.se among J10Ungater1'--.has gpreod to f!Udi~al me of sitch amphtt- amint.s as "spefd" /Or· otitrlf active childft1i, Ste 'Page z~ Cdltnl.. lt ,...i.. D·tt Cll9clllll9 Ill' 1 ..... ,..,. • Ci.llln.t ... , N ........... +,s C-ln t1 OrMM a.,, 11 ~! • Jl • .,. .... ,""' l .. Dft"'~' II ...... , ...... ONtr-•{ 11 I ""*-'---.. Mltti.t.... . ' ~t • ' 11 •11nn1o111-1 n.ti """"" au .. --. >Wt ·--• ,..,...... It ....... • Allll I....,. U ......... fltlwt ,, .. Mirr! .. ~-II w.N ...... .. ( 1- 1 l -'· -- Thursday, Oc\Obtr 22, 1970 Otte More, Dela11 •, Vote on -Moh.ile ·~, I ' . • Home Postpone·d ' ' By JOHN VALTERZA OI tM !Mlfr 1"1111 Iliff Faced with an impending tie vote, San Clemente's councilmen Wednesday agreed to jwt one more .delay in the months-<ild ~ by a uvirlgs firm to develop a atroverslal mobile home park near Shortellffs. Front Page I SCOPES ... lwo years ago. . The U.S. Supreme Court lut November overturned an Arkansas law patterned after the Tennessee statute upheld during ... a trial th)t aet neighbor . threatening neighbor with Hell-fire and damnation. American Civil Liberti.es Union defense attorney c: .. :ence Darrow and sUver- tongued orator William Jennings Bryan battled over lhe issue in a trial that be- came part of America's folklore. The aged Bryan -three-time presiden· tial candidate -went to his own reward five days after the trial in the sultry Southern summer of 1925, partly due to the strain of being cross-examined. Darrow performed one of his most sarcastic : :1 cutting courtroom shows in grilling Bryan on bis rellgious-ver~ sc:.mtific beliefs. He lost the bitterly-fou1ht case, but won worldwide fame, as reporters tapped out 175,000 words daily over the telegraph datelined: Dayton, Tennessee. Scopes dropped into relative obscurity, joining the United Gu Company in Shreveporl as a geologist and retiring five years ago. The Tennessee Supreme Court finally overruled his convict ion, but a planned appeal never reached the U.S. Supreme Courl Capo Beach Votes Down Nuclear Plants Opposition to the San Onofre site for two proposed nuclear reactors wu voted by the Capistrano Beach Community Mo &0eiation Wednesday. The unanimous action by members in · --,_general meeting will be communicated • to the Pul>lic Ulllltle1 CpmmWion (PUC} and other governmental represent.1Live1 in a letter stating the grounds for t h e group's opposition. Written opposition is still being accepted by ·tbe'"PUC on utili- ties seeking the San Onofre expansion. The letter will state the organization's conviction that "our &OUthern CaUfotilfa beaches are too precious for recre.t:tl<*lal and aesthetic purposes to be used as sites for atomic reactors. "The Capistrano Bay area ls fast J>e.. coming an urban center, and two miles is too close for the blg~st reactors in the United States." In the statement, the association will agree with acienUst Edward Teller that reactors should ~ burled µnderground, and will nole that the people of the Cap_la· trano Bay area are "living in a iiuclear · ei:perlment with one reactor already; it is not just to subject Us to the additional hazard and ug~s of more reactors." A series of questions which members of the Community AasoclaUon posed as unanswered in recent PUC hearin&s will also be included in the Jetter. Memben of the association, including President Arthur Blllsteln and director Ernest Reason attended. portions Of the hearings in the San Clemerite Civic Cen- ter. The aS!IOCiation action was taken fol- lowing a slide presentation and discus- sion of pollution of the Capistrano Bay coastlb1e, led by Lyn Harris Hicka, vice president of the Caplstraoo Beach Cham· ber of Commerce. DAILY PILOT ,...,.,. ..... l.9111111 '"'. CMt9 Mtt• H1lll4fw .... .. .. ..i. ,.., ... _ OllANGI!: COAST ,.UILUHING COMl'AM'f ll.0~1tt N. W 1M PrHldlftl M".d """"""' J1ck It Curl1y \lltl ,.l'ti!Hftl 1rA G«IW•t Ml "'"r lhom1' KeeYU £dlllol' Meelin& without a councll supporter of the Llncoln Savings proposal -Dr. Wade Lower -the councll heard more than an how-of _public objection to the proposed 200-space coach park.. Alter the bearlng closed a motion to deny the conditional use perm1t ap- paliticalion falied. 'Ille move was made by the most outspaken council opponent to mobile homes in Shorecliffs, Thomas O'Ktefe. Jt died for lack of second. Then a motion f®·approval of the ap- plication came from Councilman Stanley Northrup. That, too, succumbed. Councilman Cliff My~ then 111Uested the council react to the major objection of opponents and instruct city staff to draft figures comparing tax revenue of mobile homes to single-family houses. The motion and subsequent passage sparked a loud groan in the audience as oppcnenta to the plans expected a final vote to~ often-delayed matter. Myers also had said that the issue should be settled by a full col01cll. But City Manager Ken Carr reminded the council that Dr. Lower's vote on Nov. 4 would be invalid because he did not sit at the public hearing. To skirt that technicality, councilmen v(lted to reopen the hearing in two weeks. In the meantime, the mlsslng councilman will review transcripts of the hearing be missed. ,._fore than a dozen foes to the mobile home park proposed along the upper r.eaches of Shorec!Ufs Golf Course crsserted that the park tenants would not pav enough taxes. But proponents of the Lincoln pl an replied that the park would carry its fair share of the tax burden. The development's assessed value, they added , would be about •t.2 mUllon and would be taxed as improved property. Much of the meeting Wednesday was a carbon copy of previous council sessions which had resulted in den1aJs or delays of the mobile home park matter. Coouncilman O'Keefe reiterated his strong objections to the use of the Shorecliffs area for the coaches, then cited county regulations on block walls and parking requirtmenta "Which would not apply to the Lincoln development It propoaes to use modular homes with modernistic exteriors on the perimeter of the park and other areas v\llble from .the Stfi'l'Oundihg areas. ·Thus far at least 23 development con- ditions have bee:a., placed on the permit approval~r-~ of them by planning commisaiDnerl who . l\ave okayld the plana twi<e. • League of . Cities Cancels Meeting Cancellation of an Orange County League or Cities meeting to be hosted by Cotta Mesa torught was announced late Wednesday, becauae of no speaker. San Diego Mayor Frank Curran, presi- dent of the Nations! League of CJUes, said be would keep the engagement even after be.1ng indicted on bribery charges rectnUy with. eight other official.a. Re·has been stricken with flu, however, and is confined to his bed, according to Costa Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wilson, who was to have hosted the dinner meeting. From Page I ' PRICES ••. sub-group due to a · higher price for eggs." she said. Fruits and vegetables were up 0.1 percent, dairy products we re up 0.9 percent and ce real and rkery pro- ducts were up O.!I percent. The only decline other than footwear was shown in medical care which was down 0.2 perctnl This was offset by an 0.2 percent increase in reading and reereation cosLs, leaving the health and reoreaUon category unchana:ed. Miss Fadowski said the health and recreation prices are up 3.9 over last year. --' DAILY "ILOT St•H l'IMlll " --. . . .. ' . . • Frot11 Pqel DOGS .•. 0 Your alternitlve now is to repeal Ordinance 6!50 or call a referendum elec· lion in not less than 60 nor more than 71 days." Mayor Richard Goldberg uked Lon-to report on h~ three-bour parley with lhe representatives of the Laguna Beach Doi Owners Association. LOrr listed points presented to hlm 11 "non·negotiable" by the association. They were: removal or the dot bill tn Top of the World Park; Imposition of the Riddle Fie!~ ban on)y during LltUe League season ; setting of hours when owners could walk dog& In Bluebird Can- you Park ; limitation ·or the beach ban to . summer months, as already alfffd bY. the council, but with slight ditt cbantea- NATURAL GAS BUS REVEAL.$ ITS SIZE OUTSIDE LAGUNA BEACH CITY HALL Parkltd Next to Small Foreign Car (left) end U.S. Ven "Golng to a vote Ls putting the city in the position of spending taxpayen' money wbicb is not practical on aucb u issue." Lorr said. "I recommend we re· scind Ordinance 650 and follow up after a period of six weeks with an ordln1nce revised only to the extent of the revision , approved at the prevleus meeting a)low· ~ ing dd'gs On the beach in the winter months only. Laguna Studies Transit "The six·week waiting period WOutd give us, as the,Dog Owners Asaoci1Uon has said, a cbahce to see the results ef our new animal control agreement with the SPCA." Councilman Boyd said he understood Lorr's motion would be lo repeal the ordinance only. Rimel said this was the resolution he had prepared and noted thlt sections on animal control Jn earlier , ordinances (the leash Jaw) would remain in effect. The law banning dogs from beaches and parka, which was suapeded when the referendum was flied Sept. 19, would remain in suspension until cem· pletion of repeal proceedings. City Officials Take Ride on Natural Gas Bus Laguna Beach city Officials took another look at the looming prosP.fct of rapid transit when they inspected and test-hopped another bus Wednesday on the hills of Laguna Beach. This bus was green and white and true to its natural colors, it was powered by natural gas. Built by Minibus, Inc: or Pico Rivera, the vehicle, when measured on the mini-midi-maxi scale of b u s e s would fall somewhere between the calf and the M k.le. Minibus president Bud Dardenne said the bus would cost anywhere from $14,000 to $21,000, depending on the quality of the stereo, air conditioning and other fancy options. The bus had large glass windows all around that could be opened by the passengers and a single entrance~xit door on the curb-side of the vehicle. Dardenne said the bus would run on either gasoline or natural gas and he demonstrated how easy it was for the bus drive r to switch from one fuel to the other. The 212 horsepower engine was running and a grey smoke was belching from the exhaust pipe. Dardenne gave the signal, the driver Olpped a red·handled lever and the exhaust became invisible and odorless. Dardenne said that the bus, when run- ning on the natural gas, falls below the pollution standards already adopted by the state for 1975. .- Under the stringent standards that all auto manufacturers must meet by tha t year , oxides of nitrogen emission must fall below a level of 1.0 on the standards • specia:I sca le. Gasoline engines now pro- duce about 3.07 and the natural gas bus produces .72, Dardenne said. For carbon monoxides, the standard will be 12 and the natural gas bus produces .54. Dardenne1 noted that the bus was originally designed to transport people around large airport terminals and thus had a luggage rack. He said removal of the rack would pro- vide more space for seating and would in-- crease the present 13 seats to 17. If the people would stand up, Darderine joked, 3£1 people could be packed into the bus after the style of New Yor k subways. He said the natural gas costs about the same as gasoline and that the _!>us, with its three tanks of natural gas, could go about 75 miles before refilling. Planning commissioner Bob Hastings said the bus, if purchased by the city, would be req uired to travel about 90 miles in the course of its 10 hours of daily Front Page 1 ROSE ••. established a board of design review. =Personnel : De!:igned a m a 1 t e r personnel system for Tiburon, with an exemplary recruibnent and selectioa pro- gram. ., -Culture and Recreation: Orlglnated and directed programs to encourage rewarding uses of public beaches and an use. outdoor theater in Carmel, helped initiate Dardenne said that another-gas tank a cultural center and was aecretary to could be easily added to allow the bus to the eity Arts Commission. Orp.nized go all day without a refil l. parks and recreation conuni.sa:ion in ''One advantage of the nat\l ral gas,'• Tiburon. · DardeMe said. "besides the reduced -Public services: Established refuse · pollution, is that spa rk plugs don'~ carbon collection sy.:tems, public transit pilot up as fast and the life of the oil in the prograr.:s, landscaping and beautifica· crankcase is doubled." lion programs. J(illing of 5 Believed Dardenne said that the buses are -Public Information: Author or a ... already being used at Leisure World in r:--?!dy newspaper column, Jrequent Seal Be~c.h in Redwood City and in speaker before public groups, written several c1t1es on the_ east coa~t. reports on undergrounding o( utilities, ' W o:rk of Weird Cultists By<JACK SCHREIBMAN -- Allkltllllll Prt11t WrtlM' SANT A CRUZ - A bizarre declaration of war not was JeJt at a home whe re five Pei-sons were slain threatens death to anyone who "misuses the ·natural envir- onment."' ~ typewritte11 note, signed with the names of the four knights on fortune-tel- ling tarot cards, said future killings would be carried out by the "People of the Free Universe." Disclosing the note Wednesday two days after the slaying of wea lthy eye surgeon Or. Victor M. Ohta and four others, Undersheriff Paul W. Tara urged the community -100 miles south or San Francisco -to remain calm. "We have to keep our rool. \.\'e are fighting a war and \\'e might as well face it," Tara said. The undersheriff said the nature or the killings and the note indicated the five were slain by cultists. The note was found under the windshield wiper of Ohta's red Rolls Royce after the bodies of Ohta. his wife , two sons and secretary were discovered in a swimming pool at the famil y·s $250,000 hilltop home Monday night, Tara said. Until the note was made pub1ic. police had said they knew no motive for the sla yings. They were trying to find two young men and a gii'l reported seen near another of the Ohtas' cars - a station \\'agon -before it was found abandoned on a railroad track. Tara said the note read: "Today World War ID will begin as brought to you by the People of the Free Universe. From this day forward anyone and/or company who misuses the natural environment or destroys same will suffer the penalty of death by the People of the Free Universe. "I and my comr ades from this day .Jort.h will fight until death or freedom, against anything or anyone who does not support natural life on this planet, ··Nobody ~ea~r hkes tc> ride ~uses:'' _dr~1E!_J~_ liab~~ty._in_s_l1.(a.nce: •• c.a bJ e_.i_ . . ·-· ~· .. ··------··-:--;i·-~rdenne ~a1d; ·90 why-do people need a--teievl!non franchises and others. . -matenalism JhUS{ die or mankind will. bi g bus with lots of empty seats? We -Legislative Advocacy : Familiar with . The note was signedd : built this bus big enough to handle the legislative structure of state government "Knight of Wands people that have to take the bus, and and ha ve appeared before senate and "Knight of Cups thafs all." a:-~mbly committees on such 1ubjecta u "Knl ht f p ta 1 Dardenne said the purpose of the dual cable TV, drainage, public informatinn ~ g 0 en c es fuel system is that if the buses are kept and •ecords and budgeting. "Knighl of Swords." · b I ·d f b" ·1 in a sto rage arn ou s1 e o a 1g ci y, Rose_ states that he favors the "task The pentacle Is a five-sided f igu r e they can be driven to their downtown f"'·::!" concept of pro'Jlem-solving, draw- associated with witchcraft as a .magical rout.cs on gasoli ne and then switched to ing toge~er t:.e best resources available, or talisman devi ce, in fiction often used natural gas in the smoggy city. and describes J>i ... ~~" as "a rP.aponsible to summon up the devil. He said the natural gas tanks could be ir.novator , an experimen ter but a finan·, The Knights are the four sult.s of the 7S. filled in about 10 minutes from a com-c' ·conservator." > card tarot deck, used to tell one's fortune pressor which the city would have to depending on which direction the large purchase from the gas company. cards fall. Tak.ing the bus on a trial run to prove Tara said the note was withheld in-its poy,·er, Dardenne told the driver to ltially so as not to alarm citizens. take it up a steep hill. and the bus, loaded "The note itself is in the hands of some with passengers, climbed to Top of the of the most competent analysts in the \Vorld. state," he said. "\Ve made the steepest hill in San He added: "We recognize the shock Francisco in one of these buses, "Darden. this senseless act has brought to our ne said. ··we had 14 men in it and we citizenry. We trust that the sober judg· stopped in the middle of the hill and ment of our residents will prevail over started up again to prove that it would any emotional reaction. make il." ~aff Clearance • • • Bond Passed, 100% CALIFORNIA VALLEY, Calif. (AP) - A unanimous vote was cast in this agri· cultural community for a $350,000-bond • issue to put up power lines. The San ~ Luis Obispo County clerk, Ruth Warn- ken. said it was the first time that 1. , bond issue in the county had carried u~,. animously. Twenty·nine of the are1'1 34 •· registered voters csst ballots. DlllNG ICM>M GROIWS allll GAME SETS Floor Samples and Bi:scontinued l lie ms 25% To 58% OFF 7hom1• A'. Murplilnt Mtntt lnl fdlllN' fU,h 1r4 P. Hill Soulll O'tl'lfl Courity Editor San Oemente Ol{s Funds -Calll Mftl: 311 WMI llY Slrftl JrrlfWPOrl •••d'l1 m1 w .. 1 9.fllle• SOlillrvatC. LIOll'I• BtlCh; tn l'•r•I A-tluiillf'!lfllll 8MCll! 171JJ ... di 8oultYt td Jiii Cltmtnlf; 30S Nlol'lll 1:1 CtmlM 11 .. 1 • DAr\.Y "ILOT, wl!ll Wllldl II ~ Ille N•_,.,_,, II publl111ef C•ltr •ClllJlt '- 0.r M ~'"• tdi'I-fw L'9IN l.Mdl, Nril'lllN'I 8ffd'I, c .. 11 M9t, """"""*' IMcfl Ind 1"9U~llM \11 111'". "'"" ....,. !Mo '"... ...r.!IM. °' .... Cent ............ ~, Pl'lnlino C>l•~lt ..... il:J11 -l 8t!llM ll\oll,, HIWPMI had!. .,.. D .... .. ,. '"-'· C..tt Mtu. 1 ...... • 171 41 64lAll1 Cl .. tn.4 AIHrtltl., '4J.U11 la ell• ... All n., f "IJ T•••••• 4n-wn CMrrll!ll, 1f?Q. °'"'" C...I ......... """"""· .,. """' '*'"· rt"-"9"""' illllltwltl ,,..ttw w .. ....,,!Mnwl,. ....... _, be-r~f wl~ .,..i.1 ,... mlMloll "' ctn'lflt! .,,_. llc01'4 tltllt ""111" ,.111 If N..,.,-t hfcfl _,. Cotlt Mt.:., t1ltf9rftl1, Sultlc,~IM Irr "'"""' u .11 """"'''' W1t1tll "·'' IMll!fll)tt ftllllllry •tlfllllfl•• UJS INMllJy, To Construct New C<>urts San Clemente's shuffleboard and tennis players won uaurances Wednesday th.at their new courts would be ready before Uie. old ones are raied in reconstruction of the burned-out community clubhouse. CouncUmeo voted Wednesday to earmark $35,000 for the new playing areas with details to be worked out later. 'lbe pne:ral proposal ls to relocatt the tennla courts from the clubhou.le site to another city park to make room for more parklng 1t the new meeUng fecUity. . Original plnna to do the same for the ahufOeboard lanes. however, mtt with protest from tbt abufOeboard association. The city then .111reed to keep the court& on the clubhouse 1lte, but move them to a different spot on the lot. Thot Job wlll cost obo<Jl '10,000; tile knnll court 11>1Uer would 1Ue up tile rest of the appropriation. An offshoot of the council action Wednesday was a suggestion by Coun- cilman Thomas O'Keefe that the city ex- amine the chances cf private developers -financed lhrougb municipal bondJ - building a tennis club open to the public in San Clemente with profits used to pay the. costs of construcUon, maintenance and operation. The idea, made Jn form of a motion (It failed for a lack of second), had one skeptical critic . Mayor Walter Evans said It would be Impossible to get local tenn is players to pay for playing when the courts 11t San Clemente High School are offered.free to the: public. The mauer wUI be sent to parks and recreation commlsslonen for study. You favoril;t interior desfgntr will bt 1IOPJ'JV to artist you ••• -TAY OUR RIVOLYING CHARGl- Op<• Moo., T1"on. i l'rf, - • 1 I -, .-.. , "' .. -;T·--~--~..,,--...... ---~~·-.-----~--------------- ThmdJ}', October 22, 1'170 DAILY PILOT H ·-LEGAL N01'lCE LEGA!.. N011CE LEGAL N01'lCE LEGAL NOl'ICE <••Tlf'KAT• tW I U11Ml1S. f'·1'4" -NOtK• TO <tt•D1T011f. •ICTITIOUf. MAM• CllTll'ICATI: Ot" IUf.Ullll 1Uti>ll.OI <OVIT Of' THI T~ '°" ... .,.,.,.. dllM "'111¥ ft I• CM> PICTITIOll'f. NAMa ''''' o• •• ,,, ... ,, •O• NOTKa TO C•IDITOl.f. dudllll • buslflff.I •t 1" 1.lrlcon Ct .. s.n Tiit llllllH11tnte1 dOH urtlf"tl ht I• (eft-~.. SUf'alto• touttT OI THa <..,_.., C•UfOl'fllt, llt'IWf" INI lldltlcw lfiudlrtt t Wtl...U ., ,.,. w .. 1 llflc•lft THI cou..:.~ .. ~~-OllA ... I STATI ~ CALIPOllN"' •Oil !Im\ -°'SAN CLEM~H~E T?i"::.:N~ ~::=.. ~:;"'~ c;1~ ~~ Etl•tto .i NOIMAH Cl l KLE1 DKNtH. THI cou.:_n~ou•11 ~0!,A~ ~~:: ..... ~, wllole A~ ttwll !NII Ml4 flrl'l'I It ~ C1f NOTICE II HlltEIV GIVEN M fht Etl•lt of LEI.ANO O. l•CKt:TT# i.. "11 Ud ,.i.,a of r-'"tM:• It • ~ toHowllll ""°"' wntw MtM Ill tvtl cndll1111 of IM 1Ww "'"""' •-' DKuHd. ;:;.1• 1 elld •i.e. ti r"ldenc:1 11 " follow1: !Nit I ll--• lllYllll Clllf'IU ... 11\St ll'1t NOTICE IS HEllEIV OIVIN i. - Arline M¥T CelcHM. 1:10 corfobl, ll•YR'IONI P. ll1ftlnllne Jr,, 705 W"I Mid ••nt •re re<N lrlld 10 1111 ~m, crt(lli.., of tne 1bovl MmM OKNint• $1n (ltmffllt Cillt l lV, llltlol, C11ifomll ,,..1 wllll 1111 lllOHl!'Y 'l'OU(httl• In IM oftlu 11111 11 Ht'tCllll fl.tYllll cMlim ... 11111 thl' Deltd Dct~ ll. 1'1o 01tlld DctoMr l:t. lt1t ol 1111 cllrti et Ille •Wll lflllllfll ~I. w wkl ltKldent •r• reeulrtd te fife ~ Arllii-M•rl C•lutnt ••Vl'nOll4 P. ••-lftt· k . to ......... , 111*11'1, wlll'I 1111 MCHMI,., wlMt 1111 llt<flll,., 'l'OU(lltfl. "' ""' fftk9 Sltlt o1 C•llfonll1, Oflftt'll C-IY: Sltll 61 C•Ufoml#, Or•not C911n!v: VOllCMF'l, It tllt "*!Ill'*' II t:b 00¥w of !ht (Je.rk Cll' !ht ltovl tnt1t1H Ulffl, flt' Dn Oclabl!' U. l,,O, ~f ~. 1 On lO-\S-70 bel«t fl'lt . 1 Nolin' Publlc CW., lt.oltto I. H!"'""°H lffdl, C1Uforrila, to Jtn1nt lhel'rl, wllfl Ille MC...art Nill""' Public In •!Id fol' Wld Sttl1, In tncl tor .. Id 11111. M•ll«l•llv. ·-•rt<! ""'°' wlllcfl i. .t11t_p11ct of butlneu Cll' V0\1Chtf1, to tfll llPICMr11t1111d •I ll'lf o ... _. MrMl'!'llV _.,td Arline M•n' C•luoftl l l Vmond P, R .. nmlr11. Jr., kPIOWll to IM IM uncllolftlff lii'"•ll m•llHI ,.,.1.1nrne ol flt• • It 0 r" • v • • OSHMAN.I lo-n lo me to be !flt Mrton Wllo\f lo Ill 1111 MrHn WlloM llllM 11 4~crlb-lo lht n ttlt of M id ~tnl, wtll'lln lour ll•OWNSFIELD AHO $MITH, is.- NIM 11 sublc:rlbld to tbt wllhlfo I"' td le Ille w11111n lntil'\lmlflt t lld montl\t •lier Jilt llr" IM.lbllclllon of 11111 Wllsllll'I l oullv•rcl, lJll A r1 11 lf(•t 11rvment i ncl 1cknowlM11N lftt utculld 1rknowltclllff lie e•tcullld 1"-Mmt . nol1c1. C1lltornlt .COOS, wt11cn 11 tl'll •ltc.t Ill 11111 MIM. (O FFICIAL SEAL! 01ttd Dctoblr t, "'° bu1lnet1 of lfll' Ul'ldltl'tltMCI 111 111 ,,,,.._,.. !SEAL) W1lld'tl L. Schopfer Htltn M. Ch1tlt Hl'f•lnllll lo lM 1l111t of u ld dtc:.-t, OOAOTHV JEAH SYMMS Noll rY Publlc-C1Ulornl• Eae<utrlW wllll!n tour montN titer 11)1 rlrtf ""'lft-Nolln' Pulllk ·C•lllon111 Ptlncl11I Dtllt1 of Ill• Wiil of h above tlOn of llltt nollc1. Or1ne1 counlV Or1l'IOI Cou111V n•med O.CIClfflt D•fH Dctober 21, 1'10. My Commlltlllll lulrea My Comml11lon Ea11lret. MUllltAY M. CHOTINI• & ll1rbllr• a. ll«ktH o.c. 1. un M11' 1. nn • H, H. •111MAH .t.omrn111,..1r1• of """-lift et ~ Mll'llll H, Wtl11 Putllbl'led O•IAD• COllf 01111' "llol al Dlww Df'., 111"-' IM tbovt n•llllCI O.Cllltnt. '1'1 Wlllflln at¥4.. Oc;tot-U, :n, 1' •nd "Ncvtn'lber 5, N--' lfM11, C•, ""' OSMMAH, 110Wf4jll'll LD A.HD SMITH at-1¥ Hiib. CtHf. MUt 191'11 1901·10 Tth (114) ...._1r.: 11'1 1*"1 •· 11111111 A""'"lllV A!Mor'Mn ..... I rla ... Wlhll'"' ... ..,,.,.. Pllbllt.htf O•tnff (Olli Otli1' •tlot, LEGAL NOTICE f'Ulllltlltd Or ~!NI Co•ll Olltv Pl~t. U.. ,,,...._., C•IH, ,.. OCtobef" lJ, n. 1' •nd NOYlfnll!• 5. Gmlblr u . n. 2' Ind No\oambtr $, Ttli ltlU tu-f!M 191'11 '"""10 ........ 1110 191t-10 A__,. fft ........... 1rt11 ""'"llil'lld O.."" COlll 0 1111' Pli.1. LEGAL NOTICE Cl •TIPICAT• Olll I UllHl11, LEGAL NOTICE Od9tw ,,, " ..... NOYll'l'lber '· lt. PICTITIOUJ NA.Ma 1'111 11't·lt Tl'lt ulldeUl•IWCI dMf certll1' lw .. COit- -T4*f1 ductl,_ • bvlln.u •I P.O. BOii 1391 Coal• ! P.Jlln •• ' ••o .. •VI' ,,. SALa Meu, Cltll., ~ndtt' 11141 ltdlH-firm ClltTll"ICATI OP I USINl11 LEGAL Ncn:IL . ... ..... rwirne or Co.t.ST 015TltlB\JTOllS Uld ""'' PICTITIOUS f'llM f!AMI TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: wkl tlmi 11 c~ of tl'le fllllowlnt THE UHOE I SIGNED don M~bl' CllTIPICATI Of' •UllNIK Nollet 11 fllrebl' 1IY111 1111/ ell Dctoblr H•SOll, '""'-"""" In 11111 1fllf Pilct of etrtltV ttwl ltlchlnl P. Ettl, condUdl"' 1 PICTITtoUI HAMa 11, ltr.J, 11 t::IO A.M. • oulllk u lt wm 111 rfliffnct 11 •• to1i.ws: macfllt'llnm & l!llllUllctv•lne Minna 11 '"-underlilntd dCllS cwtlfV heh -held II Sin!• Arwi Towl ... &ervlct. •u J""" w. FJto.i, ltlS KIWll Pllce, tUl2 StlllMllCll Or., City el Mlssloll VI• dudllll • bullMll I I ?Ill Llfl'fffllJ Soulfl 5lnl1 Fe, knl1 Alli. Ce .. to Mii fof' Cot!• Mf!W, C•I"· lo. Covnfy of Dri nee, .Stl ll of C.11fomll , StrHt, N.-t Bffdl, C•lfloml•, u~ ull'I !hot loll-I"' co1i.1er1I, to wit: O•tod ,_.10 llPl!Mr 1f1t lldUiout firm ,..me of lflt 11dll1out flrl'l'I ,..,,,. Cll' THE N I. Oltel Rllf1't Strlll Nt. ntll llft, JOl'ln W. Flldeli MISSION MACHINE irid M,AN\JfAC· •ENAISSANCE l lld IMI Mid fl"" Lie ..... No. OllASP Sl'1e of C1rlfoml1, Or1111t Cou111V: TU•ING COMPANY And 11111 Mid nrm 111 COIY-.d of fht flllloWI"' --· ....... Mid 1;0ll1!1r•I bllne Mid to secure 1n On StPI. 30, 1t1Q,, belt•• ,,,,, 1 Noltrv comPollCI of Ille followlnt PHIOn, wt>oM nemc In fvll •ncl Pit<• of ••sldftlc• II M olllttlrllf• ••111111 under • •11•11 II'-Public Jn Ind ..... Mid Sllolt MfMlltll1' "',,,,. Ind lddrlli II II fGllowl. ~tt· fllllowl: . 1l•lm1n1 MCV•llv 11rNrnenl !Cllndltlon1I ·-•t'fd Jol\11 w. f tldn tnoW11 Ill ,,,. to •lctl¥d p Ertr 2UQ:J s..11 .... MI 0 . O•n L. Levln. 21., Or•nt• Avt •• (Mtl u l1 ~:intr1ctl lleld 111' G1ner11 MCl'o" Ill lflt _._ whole nime 11 1ub1crlbtd Ml 1111r1 VI 1f c•111 '" Mete. C11il. AtCtPll»CI CorPOr•rlon 11 H<urtd P•rtl'. lo"" wltflln lnttrumtnl 1nd 1elr.nowle.c1t-w1TNESS 'm~ hind 11111 1$1~ d•1' of D•ltd Oct. 1S, ltJO. S1ld 1>11Dllc tell 11 lo 111 condudlCI •C-ed he ueculed tf\I ume. s llmbt 1'10 Din L, Ltvln cordllll lo Ille l•w1 ct Ille Sl11t or tOFFICl.o\L 51!ALI rP R[d.trd p E II. Siii• fJ/f C111tornl•, Ol'•llN C-IY; C•lllwnll, G-r•I Motort Atc'°llMt Muy K. Henrv STATE OF CALIFORNIA Oil Oct. l!, 1t70, bel'oft me, I Not.,., Corpor1tlon rnervet Ille rl!ltl! II> bid Nollrv Pullllc-C1111ornlt COUNTY OF Ol .. NGE f'ubllc In "Id IOI" Uld Stitt , Mf'Mllllt'f 11111 .. It. PrlMIP•l Otlltl Jn ON TNIS Hiii dt1' of Sffltmber A D •-rid 01n L. L1Ylr1 known to IM lo M TIMI co!lllltr•I h P•Htnll1' 1torlld Ind Or•llft Counl1' ltJO be~re m• Gtll# l eMOn 1 N01t.V the perun wfloW llllM 11 MltllcrlbM lO m•v be $fltll •I 6'5 Scull! 51nll Ft. Stnl• MY Comml11I011 E•PI••• Put>ilc 111 Ind lor llld County Ind St1te, !hot Within ln1fF111Nnt •nd •clulowl'6tld Ant, C•. Nov. 24, 1tn rt1ldln1 1111rtln duly eomml1stontd and "' ••tculltd tfll wme. ) Gl!NfltAL MOTORS Pullli$1'1ed Or1nt1 Co.it 01111' Pllol, -n J1e•111nil11' 1-••M •lchird p !SEAL) ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION Oc;t. 1, 1. lS, .'tt, \t10 1101·10 Erk, knoWll I<> IM lo Ill Ille P1rllln w"°°'i MlfY K. Htn,., .Joanie Bowls The1n Over Hitting the campaign trail for her hus9and , Sen. Ed- ward KeMedy, Joan Kennedy stops off at a \Val· t bam, Mass., bowling alley to greet women bowlers. UPI T1l ..... ll1 \Vhile there, she tries her skill a t candle pins, ap- proaching the foul line shoeless (left) and reacting 'vith joy (right) after rolling a strike. Milestone for Mankind PubUlolltd Ori n" Coell OlliY 1111?1. -n•me 11 iubKrlbed to !flt wllflln In-NOll.Y Publlc-C11lfor'lllt Oclobtt ll, 1910 lff7 10 LEGAL NC\TICE ;tnrrMnl, .nci 1cknawledelld to ""' '"-' he ~~~::•~:~~ 111 1--------------1 •~KU!ff ll!t ti me. IN WITNESS Ml' Comn\IUlon E•plrn P411M WHEREOF , I 11.ve htrtunk> llf my Miid '" •Nl•td rnv Dllkl•I st•I ll!t d•Y Ind Nov. 24, 1t72 CllT~J:Cfj~~ou~' N::~Nlll, 1't•r In 11111 «rllllcl!t flral •tio-v. written. f'ullll$hld Or1"" Coelf D•Uv Piiot. P» .. 11 TM undlrsltned do Ctrtltv lhlV 1~ (Of'P:ICIAL SEAL) Oc;tot>tr U, 2' t lld HOWl'nlllf' f' 12• Cl•TIPICAT• OP I UllHl11 condudlltll • butlntu •f 19012 NOiiy Ge... BIMOl'I lt7' ff.&.7'1 P ICTITIOUI NI.Ml 5trll!I, Huntlntlon llHtl'I, C•Htcrnlt, N0!1'1' Pubrlc Tiit 11ndtrtl0Md do certlly ht 11 eon-under Ille llcllll-firm ,..,.,. .i $!•It of C1ll Pornl• dudll\f I bu1lntH ti 1)11 N. El C1rnlno STEELCllAFT M'ld 11111 Mid firm 11 com-Prl»Clt•I Offlct Ill Re•t, Sin Cltmtnl#, n•n CIHl«nll, P05ed of Ille tollowlnm "''°"'' wMY Ortnet Ctunl"I' N•WPOllT -MISA UNIPllO ICltOCU.. ul'ldel' lflt lldllllUI fir,,, ntme °' Moffitt ntmes In lull Ind •l•Cll or rtildtncl .,. MY Comrn!Hlorl Eu lr" DIST•tcT .~ ... Vtndlne ltlCI !NI uld "'"' .. c;OmPOMd ol Hetbttf ltodt. 17"1 S1nl1 Luci•, AUii. n, 1•n flOTICI INVITIN• •101 ~. 1111 fool_!,.. MUOll, Whole ri.ame lri 11111 Faunllln V1lle1', Ct. Lind• Whitney, Publlllltd Ortllll c .... u Ot llV •llot, NOTICE 11 HEREBY GIVEN 11111 " Incl PllCt of retl~ II Ii lolloW!i: 12'1 Ptltr1 Ave., Mldw1Y City, Ct. Or;l. 1, I, IS, 72, 1'10 11til-1Q IOlnl Cll' EM•llllrl of ~ N, __ ...... Howtrd Moffitt, Ul3 Goodllw Ave.. Ktr.ne!l'I Wl'lltnev 171• S. Sprt<lr.lea, -linlll.cl 5c11ooo1 Olttrlct ot Or_. C A"'h1lrn, C1t1t. t2102 lteOondo kldl, C1. •ot•r Wl'lllnev L EGAL NOTICE C1111-11, wllt rtcelw '"lld 'Ids ,.. 0 11111 ~lobtr lJ. 1'111 tt:ll Gll>IOll Pl., ltdotldo Stldl, C•. 2:00 P.M. Oii tl'le 3Cllfl div If L E G AL NOTICE LEG AL NOTICE H-t rlll Mol'lltl 0111d Soepl. 7t, 1t10 NOTICI INVITING llDI Ult •I tht olfk:1 of Nld SClllllll Dl1tr Sl•lt Cl! C•ltk>rnl1, Orlntt C°"'"h: He~ ltoell Nollt1 l1 fle..0. olYlll 11111 Ille Bolrlll of loc:•ltd 11 lW Pltc#llll• A-. Cotl9 On Oc!Ober 13. 1'111. bllor1 me. I Lindi Wrilt""V Truden of tl'le CCNlf CornmunllY Colletlt Mffl, Celitornlt. et wlllcll "'"" .. Id Mill r1011rv PUO!lc 111 •IMI hlr stld Stitt. Ktnneltl Wflllnt'I' Dlitrlct of°''"" County, C•llfornl•, will wur bP oullUclv,,,....... tlld r•ld tor: ~ Ptflllrl•llV •-•rtd Howard Mofllll llOiltr Wl'lltney receive lffltd bldl ut0 lo 11·oa 1,,,,,, Fr~ FOOD SEIVICE WA•l!HOUIE • lr.,_n lo me to be tflt 11tr10t1 whotf Stile of C•lllGr11I•, Or•11111 County 1 clav, November 1, 1'10, •I tlM Purdltilne OHE PltEFAll•tCATEO WALK-IN ~ neme 11 wb$Crlbed to Ille wltlll11 In-On 5ft>llrnber 2t, HIO bel«t mt. I Oeot. of ••Id ictiool dhtrlct lociled 11 •EFltlGEIATO• -i llrvtne"I Ind ICk-ll!dttd t.1 tX~Uled Nolt,., Public In tnd for Mld Sll lt, UIO Ade~ Av.,,.,., Cosfl Mf", All bld1 •r• lo bl In t ctorN nct lflt Umt. P1rsontl11' •-erM Herlllrt lodt, Linde C•lltornl•, •I wtlldl ltm# u ld llk11 will bl COncllflOllS. I n 1 I t u ct I 1 n •, COl'P ICl,l.L SEALl Wl'lllnt1'. KIPIM!h WllllMV Ind ltotllf t>Ubllcly Olltntd Ind rffd f 0.: SlllcillClllont, wl'lldl .,. now Clft nra lit Turt M. 01vt1 Wl'llrnev known lo ,,,, lo bl 11141 oel'10ll• AEROGIAPH -WITM ACCESSORIES tM ofllce or IM Purd' .. 11.,. A-.! crf 1114 Nollr1' Pull!lc-C•llfornl• wflost n1rne1 •rt 1u1Kc:rli.d to the within AH bids 1,1 to be In •ccordince will! SChllcl O!tlrld, 1m Pllc111tlll AY•"'f"o PrlMlo•I Otllc1 ln lnllnrrnent Incl •<lr.nowled9ICI lfll't I•· tf\I lnilrudlon1 Ind ConcUllons tnd Cost41 Mftf, Cttllornll. H iglt Yiel.di11g w lieut Is eeds Br: ng No'bel Pr i'ze :::v•nl!,,c;,,°r~!:n ERPl•es ~~;'lc'i':L~~:·LI ~:11~"=u~.':.1f~n·r:n,no:i,k. II~ ·.: In E:i: =·· otm~ll c!~"I:~ 1 orbldu::r, ... ,., ... v l , 1t11 JEAN L. JOIST Purcf\11lng Aveni or Mid K"-1 llllslrlCI. dleclr. or • bid bond ICIUll to tlv• MrClllt PullHIFlld Or•nt • COISI D•111' f'llc.I, Nol•tV Public .. Ct llfornl• E•th bidder ITIUll IUbm!I wltll Ml Ilk!. (S~l of the 1mour1t of Ille bkl. m•d• Oc!cber 1', 12, 2' •nd Novtmbtr ~. Prlnclp1110tflct In ctll'llM'I cl'lldl:. certllltd ct.Act, 01 bid-1111'•bl• to tfll orcler ol lhe NIWllO<f·MIM B BRIAN SU'UVAN Bo I f th r bl t -• 1•10 lt05-IO Orl!IQI County di<''• borid m.cll PtVtlli. Ill "'' Ofdtr of \Jnllled Scllool Oltlrlct. A -lorn111K• y .. . r aug was one o e our. · una e o pa rticipate. be Jike in the absence of the ~,. ~"';"';W31on EMplre1 ihl c011t ComrnUfll!Y coHeo• 01,.,k, llond m•v bt ..... u1rtc1 ,, ttit dlKrllloll fl/I N E W YORK (AP ) The Virtually unknown lo the There have been dram atic Green Revolution." L EGAL NOTlCE '' • c 0 1 ,.11111 11o1rc1 of Tr111tp11 in 111 •mount not rus tht 0111r1c1. In h _, of t•INr• ht -d Pulllllolled o .. ,,.,, 0111 • IV ' ll'ltn live llHtlfll (!%) of !flt IUll'I bid I I tnttr ln!o IUC:h COlllrKI, !tit ,,OCllOI et ne w seed s developed b y ''"orld until now, h e v.•as a vances in India in cer eal C.Onditions would have been 0c1. 1• L u, 27• "0 llOS-10 , 1u1r1n1"' 11111 111t lllllld•r wm enter 1n10 t111 dlflc~ wtu 111 torte1tec:1, ..-inc ... of• production, from J.2 million ·•pretty tight in much of Asia. NOT1c1 o• PUILIC MEAllNG LEGAL NOTICE ..,. 11rwo>ed cont•KI 11 !fie .,.,.,. 11 bofld, ,,., 1u111um ""''°' wm bt 1ort11t .. Norman Borlaug may affect awared the 1970 Nobel Peace NOTICE IS HEIEBY GIVEN th•t •w•nlld to fl!m. In 11.t 1w111 of t111ur1 lo to uld sc-1 011trlct o1 Or•nt1 Counf"tl_ to~·n 1965 to 21 million tons where in the m id-1960s famine PubUc hr••lnt wltl be htld "" 1111 City inter Into well contrttt. Ille 11roefltd1 ot No lllddtr m•v wlllMlr•w 1111 tlld tor • the well-being of more """pie Prize Wednesday for h is sue-in spro·ng of thi's year. seemed · · ,. couMH of 111t c11v 01 co111 M .... on cE•T1PICAT1 o• su11N1s1 1111 cMdc wm be 1or1111ed. o• 1n ""'<••• l>fltlod Cll' 1wiv-11v1 i's1 dtY• lfler the y vv 1mm1nent. Brown Nove<nbtr 2, 1t10, 11 tflt llou r of 7:l0 "ICTIT+Ous NAME of • bond. tflt lull t.11rn tMreot will be d•1• Mt '°" lflt -lne tl'ler....t. in a shorter t ime than any cess in that mission . The seeds a re now being us--said. In 1960 200 acres were o.m .. or••.-tMrNtte• •• pr1<11t1bl1. Tl'lt unc1ersl1J11eC1 -certify I'll 11 to... lor1•1™' to ulcl •c-1 dlttrkl. Tiie B!llrd of Educ.111111 of"" Ntw.rt- cd I • , ' , • I" ll'lt Counc:ll Cl'lllmtler of , .... CllY H•ll. duc:ti"9 • bu1lnt11 11 1'111 L1111H Or., No bidder m•1' wlltldrlW 1'111 bid !er I Mela U1111lltd Scl'IOol 0111•\d rt1trw1 lbe other technological advance in The Nobel winner developed a SO m Turkey, Afganista n planted With wheat and rice in 11 Fair D<lv•. coat• MeU. c1111orn11, on Hu111~1on Bt•dl, ca111orn11, llll'Hr 1111 oerllld of fllrtv.flw c~si 111v1 •lier ll'lt rloh! 10 rtled 11"1Y or •II bld1, •!Id Mt history, an Ame rican experl high yield \\'beat seeds. The and more r ecently in Twiisia, As ia from Turkey to the 1";,=111 ~;~IKI 11t111111111.., , g::.,i:s,. :~m tM~':id 0111rrn E~,!: ".};,. M1B:!r.:"'111~::',:!:'";°'t$erve1 1111 :i~,w~; ~C:~'r'i:v ':'t~,:~i.~1~ ': Pr' .nci'ple "•as then appli'cd to Alorocco a nd Iran. Philip pines exc luding China •••'"'" "'· "' wl'l1c11 c<111ie.1 .,. 111 t!te pOMd "' 111e 1o11ow1"' -111r1. -" 1r1vutf! o1 reiKtlne •nv ·~ 111 bid• or 1nv llld '"''"""· maintains. • " "There ha"e been and · l9'10 u.n · tn lflt Oftlct of Ille C!l1' Cltrk. 111me 111 tun Ind 111<• ol r11lde111;1 It 11 lo .,,,~, 1nv irr"ul•rill" or 1"' 01ted Oclcber 15, 1'1t • any m ..... acreage was 1n NOTICE 15 FURTHE• GIVEN 1h•t •t tollows: lorrt\#lllln In lllV bid or In"" lllddl111. NEWPORT-MESA But what Borla u g 's work rice. number of second generation excess of 40 million or one.. "'' t1rne ind 011e1 .11o ... , tnef'lllontd. '"" JOflfl e. EdtnOnJOn, 1•111 Litner or., Sl•Md: MORMAN E. WATSON uM1F1Eo SCHOOL 01sT111CT --has-dOrie-iSlifbUYmantclndil---iJ_o_r-raursrugll-yreiarng--problems assoctated-wtth-the·-tenttrot-the cropland. !;:! .. :;1 11;e~:.:._-~ci~ed co'::~n ~°'i: ~~:~~~~; 1;~11· <>Ptft~ J;;.":.· 1~:.'~1 i'oa T;i:,:,~" ~v °J!..c,"';..,c:'::..,c;i,=i· little time, perhaps 10 or IS wheat seeds w1'll doub'le lhe Green Revolu tio n.. Brown But among the p-•1 s r Clfl' or COii• Miit on ffll 1bove-rntn-,,lolln Ed"""""'ll Publl.ried 0..111111 Coe11 0•111' Piiot, Purc11111nm ,...,,, k Id • . " • ' lVU em 0 II-" Hem. ~TATE OF-CALIFOINIA, Oclol>tr n. ,.,, 1'70 1'45-10 Publi111ed Or1111e Co.11 D•llY Plllf. years, to attac the v.·or ·s yield of the traditional seeds said, and there is a tendency success, Brown noted. are EILEEN P. f'HINNEV ORANGE co1JHTY: October u •M Oclabl!' n. "" 1•1:1-1'1 real proble m of overpopula-they a r e replacing, p r imarily to focus on them, but I t h ink serious m a rketing problems. Pu11111~: c~~kn1e c a1tt 0111,. 1111o1 N~"' ~=fc '11~ ~;:· i:,eic;:ld '":t.1e~ LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CE tion, the expert said. 1£ becaus e of their response to the best wav to a ssess the In n orthern India schools oc1011er :n, 1•10 n .0.10 ·""°"'nv ·-•red Jll/lft E. Edmot1son NOT1c1 o• 1NTINT10N noth'"g ,., done Borla ug 's G R 1' t' ' k h ' llllOWfl to .... to bt Ill• Ml'lllFI wl!D.. TO llLL llAL PllOf'EllTY ,....., .,, • fe rtilizer. A problem with reen evo u ion IS to a s ave been c losed to store LEGAL NOTICE .... me 11 subKrllltd 10 "" wtll'lln 1.... NOTICE 11 HE•EIY GIVE N 1h•t oft cl!llT'IPICATI o• austNISI work will h ave been in vain. o lder varieties was that a oneself wh a t w ould conditions wheat. strul'!lfrit •nd •dlnowllelffd 11e executM '"' ~~ d•v 111 0ct.10er. it~. tl'le lkllrd UNDl'.I •1cT1T1ou1 NAMI These are the Views of a teading authority on the Green Revolution , Lester R . Brown , senior fellow at the Overseas Developme nt C o u n c i I , a p ri vate i n st i t u te in W ashington. B rown is the author ol "The Seeds of Change: The Green Revolution and Development in the 1970s." The first pargraph or that p.JtOtt 111'1 iime. of Tru1IH1 ol ll'lt Oc:ttn Vltw Scl'IOol Tiie undel'llt nltd dO lllrlbV cHllh' 1118' heavy dose of fertilizer would c•llTIPICATI! 0" co•l'OIATION POlt (Of!IClll Se~n L J.O.t Dl1tr1<1 of or1n1• counlY, c1utorn11, 111•1' 'Ir• conducllnt bu1lnn1 ••""'"'•in od h · Id f d TllANIACTION o• I UUNEjl UHD•• ran ' . •do!lllCI 1 llllllllul!on dtcl1rl"' Ill l~h!lll common •I !SIG W. ll1lbol l lYd., N#WllOft pr uce a eavy y1e o see PtCTITtOUS NAME Not•"' Put111<-C1lltcrni. to ull '" 1n1.,a11n r111 ,,_,,., "'wll: 11 •• ,~. C•Hfornl1, urider 1111 tlctll~ but on a tall, thin stem that R e j ect lon Upset THE UNO E..RSIGNEO CORPORATION PrlM!Pll Oii/ct In I n t #Mmt<tf '"' 1trnt '"" ufltlrv 111me of MAI TAI APAllTMENTS ... dllft l'ltttll¥ c#f'llf¥ 11111 11 It canduttl!IQ I Ori 1111e County PUl'l'OMs, Jn 1"-t Cttf1ln rt•I prapcrtv ~-lh•I u ld butlnttl II COITIPOSM of Ille COUid n ot SUpport the he avier llutlnr.ii loc•ted ti 1'd Newparl Blvd , My Commlstlon E••lrtt l1otnt 10 OcMn VI-School OJ1lrlcl Slit fotlowlne Hrt1111, wflou "'""'I •"Iii load . The plants would fall Coat1 Mn•, C1U~rnl1 undtr tl'lt llcllllou• p >II ~ ... M~ 2• ~n 1 D !tr PJllll No. 21, loclled In 11141 vJdnltv ol Wrt nlleld plec&s cl r11!dente I re •• follows, to-WU; J Urm lllmt of C I $ FULL MAIN-~ 1.,.,.. .,,.ne, Oii 1 ' Orlvt 1nd Goldtll Wtll Slrfff, In 1111 (!IV PETEI 0. MAC$, MO, J2ll E. Ccr~I over and not survive. udge Rules Nudis' t TENANCE, co .. •ncl lh•t .. 1d firm II r,,~oblr n. 2t •nd Novtmber f;.._1~ of Hunlt"91on Be•efl, C•ltfGrnl1, ti more St., w. Covlnt, C•lif. .... cornl'Oll'CI of Ille folklwllll torPOrllllon, p1rllcul1r11' ~Krlbed In u ld relOl11tlon. WILLIAM C. WAL TEA.$, ti$ W. The seeds also a re "Vl•idely wl'loM prlncl11•I •ilce of 11u1rn111 11 11 LEGAL N011CE A •Ullllc metllne wlll be l'ltlcl •' nn C•!lllltn!•, P1llMn•, C•llf. • d ted " d f f0Uow1: W•rntl" Avert1141, 1111 r"ul1r mHllPlll Pltc:e ELIZABETH H. WALTEllS, 215 W. a ap • an can grO\V as ar O, c .. E \JNITEO COltPOltATION, °' IM BN•lll or Trutl-ot Ille O<••n C1lllornl•, PtsH tn•. C1llf. north as Tur key and sou th lo c ''" Ntwtorl ll lYd., Cool• M111, P·•1 View Sd\11111 Dl1tr1c:1. on November 11, w1tne11 our h1ml1 1111• 111 ••v ..., ~ r " B p z · Cllllornl•. c T' CATI OP SUSIN••-1910, ti 7:30 P.M .•• , w~lc!I llmt HI~ Odober, 1t10 par a g U a Y • "' uere Ore, an e 0 iceman WI TNESS Ill fllnd 1111• 1'111 dlY ol Oct., •• ~liTITIO\JS NI.Ml • ,,_..11 to pUrd\tM U ld lnltreJt In r .. I Pet#r 0. Mtcl, Md. Brown said "this b r e a k • ltlO ™ ur..senlt nld Oott certllv ,,, 11 '°"" 11r-'1' wm bl recelvH •nd ton•ldtrff. wm11m c. w111er1 !CORPORATE SEAL! ducll 1 bu lneu 11 2'0l Clltt Or Dr1I •r-111 wlll l lllO be received Ind l!'IU1111tri H, Wi llert through in Mexico has led to a 0, c I E IJnlled Cort. 1'111' I •• OW11Jlller .. "11111 tkne. $TATE OF CALIFORNI ... b k th · food BALTI MORE lt1d p Do Id D llf'blrt H. C111m mi:" ~di, ~::'"''at und~~LTf ... ~t;( Tht mlnlm1,1m •~et11l•llle bid lor 1•id COUNTY OF LD1 ANGELES) 11. rea • rough m pro--. , . (A ) -m i s s ion e r na , Prnl6Mlt MARl(ETING SEA.vice •nd 11111 t•ld 1n1trn t 1n ,.., •r<111er1V 11 111.00. T.,. 0n 1r111 111 d•' of October, 1t10. ""''' "Late in 1944 , a group of duc tion in tbe world.'' A nud ist has the legal right to Pomcrleau·s "b 11 STATE OF CALIFOANlf<. tlrm 11 com!Klted or it.~ tcllowlnt "'IOI!· ourd\111 price 11 HY•llle '"<•""· m•, • Hot•"' Pu1111c In 1nd !or tM i•ltf J·oin the Balti'm ore poli'ce are a ega .. COUNTY OF OllANGE. H . -n•me In full •nd •l•c• If ruldtnct C•ln of ll'le 1tnolutl111·•~ 1v1111111e 11 counlV '"" S11i., rnlcllnt tlllreln, dU/\r four young A mer I can s Jn the mid·1960s. P akistan f .. h t t' 1 On 1h111'111 d•v of Octobe<", 1t10, before 1, •s tclhMI· 1111 bvlhM!11 ofllc• "' ..,. SdloOI c 111r1c1, com,,,1111or1tc1 ,..., ._,n, .,.,_1.., ... book reads: force. ions w ere not SU S an 1a m• MlrY IC, Htnn' 1 No11"' Publlc In Jol'ln F: Wt llt r. "°' Cllff Or., 1Pc:1tltd 11 7'12 w1r1>1r AVflllUI. 11e1rtc1 Pt!H o. Mtca. MO .. w11111m c. assembled in the hills outside with the help of the Agency e gh f t • •"" tor .. id Counl"I' ,..., s1111, reildlnt HIWllOff B••dl c.ntornl• DA.TEO: October 111. 1t10. w111e,.., E11talldh H. w1tfff1 known te 'leXl'eo City. rR.eir mission for Internatio nal Development A U .S. Dis trict Court judge nou or urnmg away 1111rt1n, du1v mrnm111lolled •rid IWOfll, oited s.p1 be,. :io 1'7'1i IOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE me to bl "" "'"°"" w1ta11 namn If!' ~· '" h I d nudists. p....-111' "'"''ed l ollor1 H. Ctl'lllt Jol'I :;"' Wtll ' . 0 c EA N v t E w 5 c H 0 0 L 11111Krlbed lo IM wl lflln htotrvmenl, ~ was to export lhe United b rought in 42,000 tons of Mex-as so ru e • B k.-n la ""' to bt lflt pret.ldtnl of "" STiit Ill C•~lto;nl1 o;.nee Cou111y· OISTll tCT 1eknllwtedtld to me !hot! 11111' _._. 1 1 1 · ican wheat. Once harvested. A jo b application by John J. runs. who is married and a cor1or111on 11111 ••tcuteo t11t wnhtn '"" On Sttot lO 1t10 btlore ,,.,. • · Nol•rv OF ORANG E co v NT v, ll'le u1M. • States' agr icutura revo utlon B I ll ~ Id d resident of Glen Bur n i,, 11"""""1 on 11th11t o1 the torPOr111on Public in '1,..j 1or's•ld Siii• '11trHn•ll¥ CALtFOllNtA 1nw11neuw11erto1,t h•vel'ltrwntol1'1 t ?tf ·co 1'le bel'e ed that there was enough seed to plant runs • a """year--0 nu isl. 1111r11n n•mlCI, ....,, 1c1<now1tc1gtc1 tom• •PPtared Jol'ln F Wt!ler kno.:.n 10 me to 11,. Geor11 G. Lot•n ml' Mfllf •"" •ltl•ld mv 6111<1•1 -1 tt-• O ex! • Y 1 v was rejected by the city 14 belongs lo the Pine Tree !Mt 1u(fl tor110r1!l111 t •Kutfd Ille um!. be 111, per111n wfi011 1111111 11 iulKc:rlbed Clerk of u ld 110.rd d•v •ncl VN• In 1111• c1rtHlc111 tlrlf 111We the a pplication Of scienc' to the entire country. This WOUid A · t' J A In Wlln.,, WMrl'Qf, I haw l'lertv"la it! to tilt wl!Mn lnilrumt<tl i nd tc:kl\owltd9-Publllhtd Or1n001 Co11t 0.111' Piiot, wrll!ln-h h • ed 5 5 months ago. ssocia ion, nc., an nne ml' h•nd 1nd ''""" m,. or11t11t M•I '~• e11 "-.. K tec:1 1111 ••m• ottobet 22, n •ncl NOYtmber s, LENOll lA WALTEIS agricuJture could achieve t e ave r eqwr to I years Chief Judge Ed ward S Arundel County nudist colony d•v • ..., ~··· i.. 11111 t1r1111c11111rs1 1bov1 csEALI u • 1970 111M-10 Not•rv Public -c11i1Grnl• " Sam e resulls In the poor .. Un-other w1' •• As • result Wesl . w•!llen. • • H c ''' Prlncl111! OltlC• In -· ' Northro h d ed th whose m embersh ip includes a !SEAL) !~1 · '"' • LEGAL N01'lCE L111 A·r111ifl county tries as in t he United States. Pakistan has nearly doubled P as or er at MARY K. NENA.Y Ho!•,,. Pubtl<, C•lito1n1• Mv comm1111o11 E••lr11 Ce~•I produ cti'o n i'n the fast Bruns be placed on the ro rce veteran of 26 years on the No11,., Public_ ciiltornl• Prlnc!P•I 0111ct In o~. 1,, nn Like M ao Tse..tuog t be Y ,,_ BaJt' f PrlMIPll Dllltt In Or1ngt Cou111"1' CllT!PICAfl! OP IUS1Nlll WILLIAM C. WALT•lt1 believed that the fut ure or f d • t' as a probation ary officer imore orce. Or•nv• countv Mv comm1111on E•Plr.1 •1cT1T1ou1 NAM• .t.TTORfllY AT LAW ive years an IS expor ing 'th ' d Authorities said the veteran Mv comm11110~ EJ<plrl1 Sept. u, 1t11 Tl'lt un111ra11ntt1 do certify 11'1•¥ .,. 111 ••If "'"• st .. ••· N•" these countries would b e w heat and r ice. East Pakistan, w1 in seven ays. B 1 . t4ov. ,~. 1"2 Publl111ec1 Or1nee c oest 0111v 1'11&1, condut11n1 , bu11111si 11 '°' "II" Jo.rm p,, ...... , c1llftrlll• fnn decided In the coun tryside." without proper irrigation, is The jud ge declared that the a timore policeman f irst Pllb•i,l'IM Dr1rt01 coul 0111v Pllat, Oct. 1. 1, .,, n. 1t10 1110-10 s1 .. c1111 Mii•, c i nMrn11, under ll'le tic-T-641• , - _________ ..:, ______ ::---'--'----'----decision not to hire the became a cop a nd then a O<fllbtr u, 21, 2' •nd Nov1mM• s. LEG'L N01'lCE 1111ou1 tlrrn "'"" of COIJl•I w"' M11n-Publlll'led Or•nee c1111 0111'1 "!~ nudl.st . lt10 ltll-10 " 'tlMnc• C,,,,_nv, 1...:1 ffl1t sald firm 11 Oclllbtr JJ, ''· 7' t ncl Htvtmltitr ~..5. department's to p applicant COll'IPOlld of 11141 11111ow1ne oer911n1, wll<!•• 1•10 1tw-?1 I UPIT ........ Beca use I t I s T h e r e P..1t. Everest. the world's ta!Je st peak, will be chaJ .. Jenged again In the spring of 1971 by an intern&· tlonal group of climbers. The Interna t ional Hima· Jaya Expedition will attempt to scale the he retofore unconquered southwest lace of the 29.028-foot moun- tain. Group will include climbers from Austria, Great B r itain . U.S .. _Non'lay, ltaJ y_._ \V.cst Gcrmaoy, France: S\lo1llzerland, India a nd Japan. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICI! TO C•IDtTOltl n1 m11 In full 111d pl1ct1 of rnlllltMe •r• because of h is membership in LEGAL NOTICE SUPE1t10• cou •T OP TH• 11 tooawi' LEGAL NOTICE a nudist colony violated Bruns' ITATI 0" CALIPO•NIA POI M1dl•tl J. McCl11ktY. '°' "I" J01nn1--,,,,,.,"'""""""":::::=:-:"7,,-- t 't t' ' h P-UOI CallTIPl(A:.-::. SUllNl!IS. TN• COUNTY OP OIAflOI St.. Cos!• Mtt•. C•. Rt .... 111 s. "OTICI Of' SHllltf'l'"I SAL• coos l u 1onal rig t of free Cl!ltT!FICATE OF OISCONTtNUAfl(l "ICTITIOUS NA ME NI. A"'"" Withrow, lllS E. 7th Na. s, L-B••dl, A11trr11nclet Olflc• Eoulp., fie. f'lllftl>ltf assocl'at1' OF US I f T fl I Etltlf ol FLORA M. STARK, Dtct11ed. C1. s. Ill L ter1tlolllmM Dtfll'lll nt Ml. on. E ANOfOR AI ANDONM " I'll vncltrsl~ntcl dots {!11111' •• toll-•• ,,,, •• ""'" GIVEN ·-llM D1tod 10-11 ·1'10 vs. , • ' ••• , The P I, 1Je h d OF "ICTIT!OUS NAMlr dw<Unt • llullneU ti 702' H•rbol' Blvd., "' lUISJ 0 ice partment a Tt!E IJNOERS•GHEO "°" llertbY (Olll MtM, C1lilornl1, under "" Ile· crtdltort of "" •bove Fiimed lllecedllll R•ncl•li s. Wllflrow llv Ylrful of If' e11ecvtlon IHued tft"!I rejected Bruns ' application for certify ti..1. e11ec11w Octolltr '· ""' 111e 11Hou111r,,, ,..,.,. of YlNCO REALTY •l'Wl ~~! '.!~_-, l'l•v!!!..',",.'-.~:~MJ!,' stilt ot4t~~nti ~~~'l-'Y· Oc;lobtr_lt~ kw"" luflt,rlor court, COU11-ce•1ed ta dO bu!IM'H vnder 111r lldllWs 11111 Mlcl firm II corn-~ of lflt toll--"' ~n •re •W'<V' • ' · IY of °"""' Sttlt of c11"om11, uPClft • e mployment be Cause """ n•nM 01 CAROUSEL P~NHEL 1,., "'''°"· WlloSt ,.._ In tull •nd Pll<e wl111 ll'le M<••11n' voucftera. 111 1M oftlct On Octcber JI, ""· belor• me. • ll.llllfl'llllll ltfll.,ed 1n t•-If th tu r d b I • AGENCY it 1Gl0.AI w. Lincoln, n-"elM, of tet.!df!nce II 11 toll0W1: af tltl cltrk ol ll'le l boY• 1nllllld court, at N&lll'Y Public ln Ind tor .. Id Slllt, ALFE RNANOEZ OFP\CE EQ\JI PMElllT, au or es eare P U IC c1111ornl• wtllcl'I buiJnesi ...,11 mt•I• 11.r· nonc1 o vir.ctnll 111 \111 Lieto to orestnt !hem. wtlfl lflt ntetu•n' "'IOFllltr •-•ed Mltl'lffF J · 1 Coroor111011 11 tucllfn1n1 cr .. ltw Miii c riticism. fell he \\'oold h ave {Ol'njl(l!.fl(l0 of "'• totlowlng jiff • ~t Nord: N-i lltl<fl, c'1111. JN'O YOU<llfln. lo Ille """""l•llld I I 1'11 McClelll:t1' .. l •nd•n s. WllllrOW, kllOWN 11•1Mt 51.ltAH L. 11.t.•THOLOMAf: .. , • , , """'e !" full •fllf Pllct of rttklenc:t It I~ Dllltd Od lJ. ltl'O WUltUff Orlve, IUllt iot, N-llOrt lt•dl, li:t PIM to Ill tltl ""°"' wlooH rllr!la •re !udtment dllltor, W-lnt I IM!l ltll1nc:t.., dlrhculty inves tiga ting ht-lllllows 10 wfl· Ra1'fnonct 0 Vlnctnll C•llfOf~I• nuo, wt11cri It tM •1•« of •ublcrlbtd to "" wllllln lntltume~• Ind °'"'" u Klu.lly •ue ..,. Mid IUdtfNf'lt decent exp 0 5 u re and MARIAN M. PARKS. 1411 Weit ll•n· Sl1le Ill Ctllloml1, "or1nee c_,.,, lllnh'lflll of Ille lllMl•rlltntd 111 •It mill••• td:-ledtecl ~Ill~ tJKUlecl"" lltnt, Oii 11'1 .. dll• &I tfll IUUIMI of Mid 11!• dam, A ... ~ .... Ctlllornlt '*' Drt Oc;I. IJ. 1910. betart ,..,,, I NOlll'Y per11lnlne M Ille lllllf el llld llececltnl, Mtrv ' "'"'· KUllOll, I htw ll~ltd -Ill lflt rltl'lt, pornography cases and would certitlc11~ for tr•n$1CllOll 111 bui1ne11 Public In 111d for uld s1111, P!riorvi1•v w11111n tour ,._1111 otter Ille 11•11 t>Ullll<1-~~'f' ~~~~11'°"'1' 11111 •fllf 1n11r111 of u ld IU'Cltment ~ter be Un.bl t Undtr lilt ibov• l!ctllklllt nin11, incl it-•-rid Rev/Nlncl O. Vl»Ctnll known to !Ion ol Thi• notlcl. r nc: P• te n In ttMo Of-rtl' IFI 11'11 Coun!Y of Or1n1te, e o carry a weapon 11c11v1t of ou111rcit1o11 !Mr.or, ••e on flit me to be Ille "'"'n .,_ t11mt 1~ 01tltd Dctolltr n, 1t10 0..11111 Covnl"I' s1111 llf C•Htorllll. llncrlbtd 11 flll!M: 24 hours a d ay -a depart-In ll'le office at 1111 Countf Clerk of 1ublcr!btd to tile wllfl ln lnslru-.nt 111d :•r~ H.::_~11 of ~v c;f7:;;111n E••1'" P11•ct1 HO. l -Lot liS Incl Nortfl h1lf ment rcgul t• 0•1<\llt County, under !flt 11rovllllll1 of 1cknowtedttd hi t•ecvlld l1lf' Um~. -1!.K~ " ._,. ' ' • .,.,...""'· cH-t COlst Olll1' Pllol of Loi 2"' TrKI 1-. In Ille City If s.rif• a ion. Sec.lion lfU" "'' CIYH COdl. (OF FICIAL SEAL) "'"' ·-·· n•m ..... tn UIJ' ' Anl. COUlllV of 0r1.,... SID of Northro held th t " I f WIT NE SS rnv hind 11111, 6th di¥ at :lEllA H. Cl.NETTI WALIWOllTN, lllDIL 6 CllAIL October n, 2' I ncl Novlf!lblr 5, 17, C•lllornl•, 11 "' m" ~ In hok , p a Qcfl)ber, 1910. Notl!'Y Public. C#11torn11 1117 Wtt!CH!f DrlYI, l •Ut.. lt10 1912•10 )0, Pt8t t , MIKl lll-..S ~. Ill ... hl.e ra lly enrorced , this rule M41tl•n M, P••k• Pr1nc1011 Olf!ct 111 ~~.r~~111:;:,, LEGAL NOTICE office of ttie Count'f 1 1eorc11r 11 ~ would p revent a mem ber or :,1::i.':" .~!~· ~¥•7:.,C,.,~~;:,, Eaplr"' ... Mr..,., tw 1ncv1w '",_ Nt. l lM'H ~:t'~~~~,. ... ~:.,:~:. •, the police force f r 0 m Unlttl .... Seu1re, 11111t n... SIP!, 14, 1111 Pulll!lhecl o''"'' COllt 01Jlp l'llol, NOTICI TO C••Dl'fOIS P1rc.i No. 2-SOUll'IWIS'-"" Vt 11 ltt . , . • . . Jll Stulll Mii~ Slrlfl, Publlll'ltd OllFIH Coesl OlllV Pl!lll, Oclobtr IJ, t1, ilf Ind NoYamtler J, TO TN &: Clt(.OITOI S OF t llUNO SI, Trtcl 17,, Mfll rtc"OrdM ln aOClll IS. pert1c1pattng In any sw1m m1ng °''"''' C•UforNi. ""' Oc!Ol>fr u . 22, tt and Novt,,,ber 5. ltl'O ltCl7•70 MOECKLI AND HERMAN FIGGE, PIGI "· MIKl lillllOllt Mtll. Cllft'l-t., or water activit y." Put1!1$11ed O·~~ C.c81• D1!!v 11tot, 1t1a 1\IOO·IO TRANSl'Ell0 1t: known •• 2'2' o r'""' C1111t ~· I Odober 15, ·:n, n 11111 1+ov11nber J, LEGAL NOTICE Purauint te StdlOlll •1os incl 1107 of C•lllornlt . 1e said p 01 1 c e Com-lt10 1'°7-70 L E GAL NOTICE ""Ctllloi'nlt \Jnltorm•cornm1rct11 Code, P1rctl No.,_ L&tt 17. It.,, Block 4 ,.......,, vou ,,. l'ltretw no1111ec:1 •• fftlowt: of Tritt um. Mt11 recorOtd Ill &ooll Jl, LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NO'l1CE HOTtCI: TO CllOITO•S Tr1111ltror t1 tllout to rntk• t tr1n1ler Hit "'· Ml1c1111...ou• MltK, Counf"tl•M ... .,,. IUP••to« COUIT Of' THI ff ltlt llnclfrtltned Tl!lllV SOMOOI AHO Or•net. COllll'nOlllY --II m t HOftl'I -P·'"51 Cl•TtPICAT• OP llJl lH•tt STAT• Of' CALIPO•"IA f'OI JONA$ 1. JUSICA, Tl'tllllltr", In bull(. 111 HrUotr-, 11nll Alll, C.ltfOr'Flll. • SUlll llO• COU«T 0 1" TN!! CEITIPICAfE OP SUllflEI$ PICTITIOUI HAMI! THI COU..TV Of' OIAN91 of 1f1t -Piia. rnttc:Nndltt or ON!' i... Tottlfllr wllll 111 Ud ....... ltt t ile 1TATI OP CALl"OltNIA POil PICITIOUI flAMI The Und#rtltntd "'°" ttrtltw .,,. .. COi'-......... 11• YllltorY. •NII -~ of 11111 Ctrlt!n ltMmenb. htrl<tlll!nlf'ltl • ". -Tfl• COIJ NTY OP OllANGE Thi uncle'sltllfd dOt:s (trll11' lie II (:Ol'I· dvtllno . butlnnl •I :nn DvPenl, Suite C:1111e of OLOA F. LINSTIUM. Bfll' •• , ll11llllfff, II-II TM G•llerv. IMJrtw.•-tllll'M'llt Mlllrllllll "'''" Ml. ""'J4)f dutlll\f 1 111r11ness 11 11'9 w , Octtn n1, N•-1 llt1efl, C4111fornl1, unci.t OecffMd. t H of wl'lkll 11 loc•fH 11 110 f , B111»11 emwfM u111r111r11111. :• NOTICI OP NIA.lflG 0 1' PITITIOfl F,ont, H-rt Btldl, C11iPornllo, Ul'ldtt ll'lf tldU1ou1 firm Nrnl fl C£NTll.... NOTICE It HEllEIV GIVEN to !11t S"'4 N-1 B..c" COUlllY ef Oll ftlt, NOTICE 11 Ml!ltEllV OIVl!N hi M r~;T;:oSATI OP WILL ANO POI ttw flclltlol4 11,,,., Mmt If RAM IMPORT Llll!O OFl'ICI! SEltVICEf. 111111 llltt crte1ltor1 Clf 1111 ""°" n.mlCI decildffll C1llf;;,.nll, • Frldl1' •• M MwtmDft 1911, II IO:• 1!cMittl f T J 0 P ADMINISTIATION OIST•ll lJTOll5 •nd ll'ltl Miid firm It plcl nrm It ~ Clf fllt ltllOwlnti fl'ltl 11 ,..._ fl1vlr19 cl1lm1 ... 11111 !flt Tiii tw1ttnf M~ tr "'""' 111d AM. II M.11~ LotlbV. ,_,._,,.., M :1 H-;11E:J'll/~L·AHNIXED tomooled of Ille lotktwlt11 1erun, wlleu --_._ MPlll Jn tull 11111 pllCf of .. ill &ttcHenf •re rMUlrH It fltl lflem, IM!rltn tdd•etlff of Ille Trtntlt<Ot tl'ld ClvlC Ctnltr Of"Nt W11f, C!°' If llllte N~~~E 1fN~~~~}E~.,~et~I =-I~ full •NII ltllU If re11ttfnee II ., r11kl#llCI .... fllllowl: .. =~ ~ Plfl.C"'':: .~~.!!'ke: Tr~r~~~,. :~1ow1~1(fl .,. I ~~~Ill c;... ~=k =-: Mtrlorle Lee crn 1'111 llled llefeln 1 otl\. Ar~ Mt!Y'l'n P•rkf!', $441 11....,.,d J1Nt L. "rkdm1n, 17171 l loollhurst, kl .,. ·· 1 '";jj11"l9;i-:.&'i' 1,;,,., Btl._ ,...,;, .. "'-' II~ Ct lll: fl'le llltlllfll bldcltr. tor ulll In ...,...... tbl lor lrotl•lf DI Wiii •!Id for Letlf"I ef SI., Cnt1 Miff, C•lltorfllt No. 6J, Founltlft V•IWI', C.111. YOllCl'ltt' to lllldlllr1lllWCI 1111 offlct Kttlntn J'lftl, 111 Ii, l•lbM 1"'11., tnll'lf'I' of lflt \Jt'lllell Sffltll. 1111 tlie ritll• Adm In IHr•llon wlll'l·lfll.wlll .. n111~1d, Otlecl Oclllblr u , 1f1' Dl!td Ott. '· ltlCI Cll' NI 1 . JONH P. GINLEV, N_.1 l#tdl, Cell!. 11111 ltllll lfoltr11I If Mid IWlimfl'll ...... rrftAM# to wtllcfl 11 ~ tor turltlff ArnolG Nl•lvVll P1rtr•r Jtntl L, f'rlld!Nll ~ Wlllll • le\ltrd. h i ,,,., LOI Tt•M·-Ter,., '°"*'1 l'OI E 1111 SI "' IM "'°" Mtcrl• ..,_..,, fl' .. PlrllCul1rt. •NII lfltl l1lt ti"" •!Id •ll"ct Sl11t 01 Ctll!llrlli.. Dr•r111 Coun!Y! 1TATI 01" CALIFOllNIA. Al'lltfln. C•iftor ~ toooS, hlcfl It ll'le S•flll At141, Cllll. JOf'lll .: l'tlHi. 201 i: mlilcll llltrl'OI '" llllV bt _...,, .. of lletrln1 IM Ull'll flit llttn HI let On Del. "· 1'10. llttort ""'· 1 l<lfll,., OltANGE COIJNTYt •i.<t ot tMlftls.I of fttt-Vlldt'5ltMtl 111 •II 1111 II Stntl Ml C1Nf MIJlfy Nici ntalflln. wlil'l .et""" ""' Hov•mtier '· 1910. •I t tJll 1.rn., 111 !tit Mlle 111. 1nd let ulcl S!llt .... ..,..1ty On Dclolllr '· 1'7'. klort Piii. t Noifln' """"" Hrt•lnlne to tl'le u t1to OI' "'Id Alt ;;i...., tMlllt~t ,..,,:.., tlld lllldrffltt ~I •!Id eo1b. courtroom of °"''""""'' Ho. 3 of Mid t PHlr!'d Arnold M. P•rker ll.lllWrll to fl'lf Pull!IC In Incl fOf Mid st•"· -Mlllllf llltfdetll •lfhlPI '°"" '""""" titer fl'lt uNlll llY fl'lt Trtl'llftrof' W1"'1" fl'll.. ,,.'" 0.lt<I ti 11111• AFll. C•li!Wtll .. ~ cour::, II 100 Clvlt Clfll•r Drive Wttl, In to W 1111 ltfton Wiiow "'"" It •ullKr!b-~·ttl J•lllf L. Ftlld,,,111 k1IOWll IO .,... flrtf 11110ilc1tlon of 1111' notltt. 1'llfl tltf •111, to l1r 11 -.-n ft t1t1 IS. .,,., ' lht llY of S#"ll A1141, C4lllfetnl1. .,i to 1111 wl!hlll lntlru-flt Inf to Ill ll!t Mtllln wlloM MIM It 1U11Krlb-Olltcl Ocioblt' 12, 1t10 ''""lerM lrl' N-4 JAMii A. MUStCIC. •• D.ll!'d Oc!obtr 1t, 1'1t 1c.tnowlf0ftd M •Xtcllled llM! MIM. td Ill fl'll Wllflln tntltY"'fl!I Incl tllWIN OUJTEPf OHLSSON Thi but~' tr1n4llr It 01# bt "'"IUTMtllecl IMr"I "t:· I!. ST JON N, (OF,ICIAL SEAL! ltll.llOW1"8ecl lhl 1•tcllltel fl'lt U/'l'lf. E~tcullll' ot ll'lt Wiii of 11 UfllTIO CALl.OINIA •.t.NK, ""'' CIUftf'r et Or ..... , ~lftrlllt. OU"llY Cltrk ittbl M. Clntlll (Olflclfl Sttll !ht "°"'' """'" o.c..o.nt Ar11 M•ln Qtflc<I, 1011 No. Mtln ,,,..,, 11' (, A. 11._.11, '\ Tl'IOMAI M. JOlllS. Nol_,,, f'llflllt-C1!llorll!• Ml,., 1(, HelltY JONN "· MtOINL•Y "nl• ....... (-ty of Or1noe, C1tlfll'nT1. ~\llY ~Ml WtU<lllf Orlw, PrlnclHI Qlflc:I In NOlll'Y Pub!I( .. C1IHOfnl1 >Mt Wiit.._ aM ., "'"' llU on er l fllr Nov11nbt.r 7, IJIO. N, M. •llSMAM ufll NYrn ber nt, Or1n11t (OUftly PrlflCINI Dllltt lfl L-. """"'' C•llftrtll ,_1 Oltod Oc~r If. lfJO f'lll"'111'1 ... ,..,_ " """"°" Sttcft, C1llllrnl1 nlH Ml' Cllnlrnl1•lon E'llo1rt1 Or•ng1 Coun!Y f tl! ftU) )U-IUI T'trrv lomodl W 0.-Dr., hfll • Tt l: Olt) '41·•1n Stlll. 14, ltn M1 Commlu'-1'1 •••lrn Atl11'1111' "" l•IClllfl' J-• It Julll:t HIW9fl'I llllCll. C•IH. .... ' Allfrtlf1' lllr Pt!IH-· PubU\Jltd o ..... , CO.Ut O.ttr Pl!Ot, NOV, '" ltn PVlll!lhed O••not Co•ll Otllv Piiot Tr#llllf.:... Pvbllthed °''"" Cotti Ot!Pr ''t!t Pu~ll""ltd Or~11... COlll 01lly 11(\ot, ()(loOlr' JS, 22, 2' Incl t4ovtl'llb•r S, P11bllll'lt0 Or•t111t CoeJI Oally PllOI, Qe!cber IS, ~~. Jt t nd ~•mbtt s: Publh~td Qrlftll COIJI 0111~ Piiot Otlobflr 12, 2' 1Nll llw¥1•1 J. otf~ n . ~;-11. "111 l•S•·IO lt1'1 ltlJ..10 Oc.1, .. U,J.2, __ J!. 1•10 ltSl·I! Jm lfOll•l'O Oi:tober n , "'° ltU>lt lt10 ~ , I I I~ . I• -- 3f OAILV P1LOT SC ThursdaJ, October 221 1970 Your 1'lohe11's ll'orth OVER THE COUNTER Q.mplet~New York Stock 'List 'free' Heal~l1 Se1·vice Costly R..-ftl'llll't l-!tr .. 11141: WllOlllM 11 .. ..,. • ..._" t t • tr.. tiAI• l'ric.tl • 1111 lli4i.M tot1ll ., _,..111, """".._ w-dMMIMIM Hf'll' YOtl iiock l.11tM11t1 '' (ltt-1 .Mt.I .... Leif c• qm Q11b I N ... Lew C.... a,. Nl!W YO~IC ,.,,. Tholr..-.~·, nm,Mllf ... N• l ..... •• illn M.t NASO LI.II-I ftr w-•1--•ty, ~-t-•-r 21 , 1-1 lllifl I Mltll \. .. CIM C... ~:l~ ~ I~ ,\ti !':t '\\ t {~ 1::!1t.rl4IHI l ntt ret!li r. ! 12 ••• ..,,_., -. ..,_ 7I _.__ l1r1 rv I. I 111\ 11'1 1••\ T l"' ..-ou.>i I.XI '! 3)11 ~~ -l\ By SYLVIA PORTER " Whit would hallJ)fn YOUR medical bills lo 1f ·eon,ress • uiacted -as it almogt surely ~Ill t: n a c t aomttime during the first hair (If this decede -a national btalth l~ance system" How v.ould such a sy1tt:m be f1nanctd? What would ~ the effect on the way ln which ~e pay our doctors and dentuts'' Hert art the answus from \Valttr t¥1cNerhey, prtsldent -through pnvate lnsuranct premiums and ~paid plaru1, plus funds from federal. 1111.te and local cofft:r$ Tius com· blnatlon would help prevent the f1nanc1n& from becoming, a~ 1t has to a great extent ln Creut Britain, rellant on poh· 11c.al considerations Permit re.el choices by con· sumers -among different l)pes of providers or health care such as individual doc· tors. gr011p6, prepaid plarui, ,,..,.., ... ...,.,.,. ... .,,.,., ... ,...,...,...,..,..., ... .._""',_~• ----~·' 'f 1~ 1 · 1n \ + ,, lflMll to l•'!ao + \l lo promote grtal.er efflcle-...ies11 'F,"" t11 111\i, in' ' "' -~ """''I' J •l.I. 1"' l'~ -114 t·•~• '"' ,•,•,, '" "' ~I " L. • 110 .. 61 '4o -'""f.' .. DI ).111 tt:• ·~ -~. .., LI 11 I'\\ -... and t:llm1nv.te the. sort of -N{,: ~~!"11111'•:J ~~f"'t1 ii~ ,Jh :t:.:11rNC '!:! l::JT~=• ''?, ,'i',1 ~:J':,,! 1 ff.,, ~1~ + \ ii: fP ~ I, 1n! il•t ~~ -\'t .-/" n '~. 'J \:!! 1~ :it.+ \! v.a1lt which coeii: on In the l.flO llkM •1114 .. l'l,..r I i h ' uroH I •. ·~ .... w ]"" llm~Mkt Tb 1Mj, • ~ + ~ II() ... rlJO IOI 1115~ ·~ I -"" r I 1~ ,: ll" l,,.'~1 "~ 'I di Id 11or1t WHllfG br F1t ;b' •P •1JMet n ll" 1~"'~1 1• ~ m ~ 1 u1 H tlii 1 1 ~ lnGl J 11 -i •',,• t ~--. " 1• t: ca proaram tho N•t'-1 "'ll:"••• I' ,, r1'o '11•1 ... t,• ,. 1 -, ·~ ,,, -», -ttloll )\. ,. •• • • o --·o-0'" I •--•-•ff> I·' 0 2 2 1 lfl'l.ft r: ft '1' ~•'-' [' • • rn ... \I; 4,1>\ ~ + '~ En<:Outllge innOVal,lon and OMleftOI j~,llr ~~: =r~l<N n Ill!._ 11..: Ow r ' r.0 tt• •• ~ .. , ... s 1" "'\.'I ~lr11 -I YI 11• \Ii -I I! ".t 1'1" I 1 1ilii"' I ii(·\·~ 1J to1"" llllli ~~ -1t Chana' "°' K1u11 •••n'" """ "' • 1 1 CM ,r141 , 1,._ Th«"' A t Jlfo ,,..1,.1t 1 •o 1 ·~ '° ;m -• 'I •• rJl 1 '' ' _, "llil 1.~ fl ffi' II~,• + '1 rltn• 11\11 1r• ,., l'.,11 OU I ~ I' T lrll I l "lln~ Co 1Hl 1 11\~lflrrt Co J g;• t'~ + 'h r.1t~YI 121 II '3\l l2t • 4 -+•'I ''\ BC .n)o y.bl. •"d '''"'lt!IYI lnl•• l'orrnlt !t~ ·~•lt•id ovn 1214J"'l ln~ In II)'" "n lrot .. ·~ ;m, s +h 'I~"' "~ , ... '" +•\ "n~Vt ' • 'l ll1! -· dllltr ,. ''' t ) t i Fo11 Gr111 ! \lo fjl• 1t1h1U c I"' "I' (; '" -· .r. r Prllll 20b S) J d 1• , , 11 ~Id U 'I 'jl'o 11~ + '' ~n .JO• q '• ti \ t ~ I II rdl pp t llru t, I J Fol ~ \Ii 1t1::1 El tti ri\lo ,;; c'\!' 214 j~ A '" lj,(l' U I 11\• \Ill -\f 11~ ,..,:-_10 21t ~! 1J\\ IP , -l• en,' "'• 2-'I J ISlt 14?\i ,• _+ :1 • e<:onom ca y rewa ng to ,• m"•• .. ",,', , •••• ,,,""! ,, !'" , , f tt , , '" ,, ,, •-·~•· -''l ,,, ,,, , -• ~·I"' .tit .a. 1 ttl4 ,.u. 1 ~ A• ' l ··~ v. , ,._ '" O "OI• ,,'!'m ,' nKn • 0 1 '"' i •• l ll ~ -V. t!•i -t:I t ii" ~i = \~ tn Fd1 tto 1,1 1•1:i ?Yo>t. ... lhose work.in& within the •teu•rr... COii~ l'rnll n E " ' \r I j•l'ltnl 0 t\o ni ·~ION • > n ~ -\i tlclA I • ,. 22\'> '' ,~,, + •• n Hoit ... tt'o t .: :t systtira ~~:e; 'r:t;..a1 "":,. ~~·:~ l!: ;tt =~~r:: y l'VI T~fllll~O~ 'JU 1: :1: .. ~''1n!.',~ !f v. IB1l ll'O -~ ~~ H" ... 'H ~ !I _,,. "1~:,~' :~ .. 1.\,, I~ l•I• + lo \Vhen wUJ national health In· :~ie. (Didi m1.i::i·· g'l'f' c:i; ~}! :~ =ir;; t.: ~:YI J T~ '1,P• 2'"~ I'~\=~~ !J. ~ n\li l ~ !r.11; = ~'1 !;Yl111u1 i1t l' ~ ""'='~Ff:'"•, " .1 r.~ t:: ~ = :? '~''' ,, .. ,,-., !'" '''' •-·· •· _,, ,. j,., ,, ,_ Ak.,1..,1u 1.20 I' 1111 2 -1 "'"• 1, 7 I'' l"~"', x, M•• '-'" "•' ,",:1 n l• 71t1 + '• surance become the law of the °"1 1,,. ••r P.1c., ••'"he ""'It'";" M iiit n Tr..,, ,, I'~ • • ,,ict,111'111 :111 t 111o ,,...., 1JJ.t • " L"!tl" .. ·r G1 ' w -,. M:; w.,, :S ... ~ "14 -tr. land" oo ntt lncludt "'l•«t 1"" \o It~ 4 01 unn-c: II\ 1t11..ir1 ior ,._ t1•1 2140 -"' N'l'i' r' • l 1 4 t~ -::2 lit"' J s !II\ SJ n1' or the nationwide, non -profit Blue Cross system wtUch now adm1n1stt:rs hospital insurance c overi n g 100 n11lllon An1er1cans and also bead of the Nixon adm1nlstrallon s • task force on Med1ca1d which recently submitted a rtport detailing the deep gaps 1n our present health care syste1n '" St under federal leadership -but administered lar;ely by pnvate authorities Earmark slen1f1cant funds Almost surely within five ~=wn :•rt=. ·i~i:i~ '"° ~14 :: ~~ Jtf ~ tl~ J.J~:il 2flli 1fJ ~l~"t~ :~ lJf uu ~ d~ ~ ~ ::tr.~.,\~ 5 a~ a~ iS;rJ ~ ~ ~:x::~; 1~ ~~ ra ~ ~ :: bu' 'bl "' • ' ,, • J'' 4 llrt." HI ., • u1 .... t\~ 1 99 "" l " ff \Ii 11\'i 1t -~ ''"°" • • 00 '"'" Gtn 1i. 1,211 II "'"' W o ~ ~ yt:arS poS:S Y aS SOOn aJ Ml C;~ 4 l"' to!ll II 1t! fl1 t::i;r[ E l m 0 lin¥tl 2 ~ n~ "1~11 1 70 111 I .., I 11 -14 oc1C.l i,U 11 Jtt.; 7N +1"11 GMj Slci Pf 4 I t•\\ t4 \0o M\ii - ld972 fortcuts P.fcNe mey The •"•o"oi:...• I•,•,•"•" l','1'",,, ! l\o, Sclwl in ~~ S\jo tll \'W{ fit?~ A•I ,",•,,~, • '"" '' +VI oc111i. .l2 11 :!I~ 4'\\ 1$'~ +"' Gtn rt1114 ilO s n~ n it :... ~ '~ It 2\\2 k• ttr 1:1 13'U• "'"p 21 1\<i A eel I'd .. 21 ,,f: ~~'" ~-" :el~~I; J ~~ m ~, .. _ ... g1~~f1J 1s\ 12f L'!! i"•"• ''*-'"' ., • ...... If 2G Vtt t.O 6\'o ) "ti~ I~ ~ ,U 1''1 1-'o -<\ o lnllt 1.llO IS J!:. 3 lflcl -\l Tlrt pf! 130 6J IJ\IJ ~ l eneratlons :~\.'',. !'.•, m,. •!!' •• 'c "• 1'1 kr • " (I' •u "'"'' i. lJV. U\li All I tlm ]J 11\'o 11i. 1 .. ~, + \Oj 0 Sau~ ' JlfO " .. .. +2~ lfll.C:• 1 111 ., 23') 22\'i •:r -l"f I ea IS hardly new Jt ha& been AITS Inc 4 ,j.41' lffUI W 11\\1 '!•"" k~, 1n.1 \4 ~, u11h SLd to,1 t..'1 Al Sir j 40 J 2 1~ 22 2)'~ Oflln, Alk 1 11 IB' Wi'I ~ -1:{ ~tll' ptl n aoo ".. , ~ -~J around the us for two lull :~g ',1' ,':". •,.. ,'f, ·~~~ 1,~, 11 •• ~.·i:i'"'• •' ' 11 v, u111 1n111 '' 2i\{ .1111 s1, · 4 i 1CA s 1, JI~~ s111r , "{1"'• :rci11 21 o ' 1S!t -"' '" T1,, 1& .,. 1119 1,\, 1"":; \: " .., N -• ,.., "" !11rlt '' 11~'1 11 Vlt!ron J s1• .1111111 .oe ' l~ ~· im o 11111 J 11 l~o 1i6\<i 1•~) +" noltr ~ » ''• .,., 131• -'• :~m~IKf:I ~h 11\ :::i: ~ 111t 11~ t).'.,~m· ·,u "" ~:~",w It~ ~ f."' :"~·,1,r.1 '°1 1111 .c, l 0 11l:; It + 'ti t 1i !!.• 11 ,J :U:U "tt M.~ = ~ "''IJnP1 1 1 JU• ~l't ,r.:. + \• Air 11111~' • otli '" "'f, lo\ .CV. Svc G•G 14' w1ii ao ,.,_. 20 M .r. .JO 21 ~ ft~ -,,.,, a .,J , 'G'\.\ l!t, ~'""_'iii P •c !It n u Sn\ n" + (• T SI l d D l "lrwn ~ 11!1\l\i rttn t lf"'jll5t'lll\ U•"' '!l!w •••dt )ll 31o mtr 1 110 10 1~ lt\'o $"i\i 01~011 t•t 7131'4 1fA:) l"-'IG:I"~ "in~ 4 t•V. 1• 1•~1+1 t AJ!Ht H 1•'1 I rntl e I YI 1 It $11tndofl J\% trlftw ,.... ~ ""' Htsl .nr !"' Ul1 41\o W. t~I "! !S 11411 141Ai 1411 -\ fil'Wr M · S 5'YI SJ Sl -t UX le e1·e ea S :~~~ ~~~t~&~:;:~~ ~:~t:~hs•~ ~t!~l<t:::=~ 1::i 1Jll•04 ~~11r.n= l7ii:!"t• 11 ' 01 ,.\-1 1aVf:ll1A~1·t1'' ?.J:'~ ,r.12 ll~~1.:,: Alkl Lnd 11111 U''1 a~•r' Ch l 'o ·~I SCtl W1I 12') UIO Wtl Tr th Am Alrlln ill 3!1 1~ ~ -\0 = 111 ~ I a\~ ~1-ll o-oclllfl to 2 161-l II 1•\'I + ''I Alli ''" J 3\ti UM Int &\Ii 111 SoNf Ttl Sf'< »\,I Webb ltt 10~ 1 ""''"• os. :» j Ul4 16 + \'I om Sol¥ A \I 1.llU. -~ '" '°' J la t !li N -'• A,llltoj fq 1\o JI.II YfMn f'' t\O sw GlC• lj~\ Ill! Wt14trn 1Vo 1'4 .11,erro:,1 1. IG 13l 3 lo ;lu, lt\'I i4 omwld 1 Ill loi ~ :r.!Ui l + It l~t_'' Fl'J.o. 1' It\' I~ lf'i -lo M C Y M :~oc"'' r,~J~)H:=',~ 1 11,21',.~:'ic~:!vc 1~1!~~~:f!:':T ~ 1:._1 1,.~:~t!:\1/: ,;i~~~ .. =\~ :\•::1 ~, 1f~\""1W!';,'l i11i.r:",_., J:J"Jt?.~=~~ Today. you and maoy other Americans are paying an AVERAGE o( about $300 a ) car for health services -1n the form of taxes health In- surance premiums and cash If you and every American were provided with ''free ' health services this average would probably rise IS 111 30 percent to at least $350-400 Today we art spending 6 9 percent of our Gross National Product on health care Under national health 1nsuranct this share probably would rise to 8 and possibly 10 percent. ''I would guess. ' say~ 1'-1cNemey, 'that about 60 In 65 percent or the total national health bill would be paid directly by the governmenl and about 35 10 fO percent by private mdiv1duals -JUSt the reverse of today s ratio " HOWEVER, t.f c N e r n c y stresses, all lhese estimates are gross underestimates 1! our national insurance plan falls to provide !or a ma1or overhaul or today s 1neff1c1ent system or "a la c1rte medicine ' l l is because we have failed to bring aboul ~f f1c1ene1es 1hat the Medicaid program iii: cosl1ng as much to serve one,.third of 1 h e or11lnally pro1ected populet1on as It was suppo!ed to tOBt to 1erve fbe entire population It JS for Utis; reason, too, that the actual costs of the British health system ~ere far above the 1n11ial est1mtes \Ye also would see fa r more doctors wcirfiiig~ on salary - tn groups or 1n hospitals - than for the tradidiuonal fee for·servtce And a much larger amount of our health care dollar would got f.or preventive er maintenance s e r v i c t s rather than for • cr1s11 care • Would such preventive care save us money" N ot necessardy. except 1n a few art.a:s • However " McNe rnt:y stresses 'prevenuve core ts lhe humane thing to do we should make every reasonable eUort to prevent illness ·• What should be the key in gred1enls or a v.orkable na tional health insurance plan fo1 the U ~" In t.lcNerney s view il must Be comprehensive Represent a com bination or public ANO private financing 1,lff'S OF Oil PAINTINGS WHOLUALI WARIHOUll OPIN TO THI PUILJC $5 and up lilt I EDIMGllt 5AN"t • ANo\ l'HONE UM40I Ol ,t.llill:5 WANTIO r SOMI DOCTOlS & DENTISTS AH USINCO HTPNOSIS ~y TDIT au.MT, I ... ay Ost -Ou Oney ""' 9"'" Ill< 12\~ HllUh '" J\.,. Sl~.Yn It~~ :!Olli Wtf" N,t. J\• s;o, A'4ill-' JS 3 Jfl,: Uh '!"' IW'lW 011 .44 fl' '"I 1aU. 11''1 S:'",9' I 11t lit~ ,.... -.. + 14 " f l Ltb t\o 4U litnftd I' 'Jll '9\~ Shi 111 .. 11 lt llU WI~ M!o , "~ A,m Ctm <ti• 4 111 th '' Cll'lllDlll k t 11 IH 10!\ 1111'1 -''I II(: '' 1' 11''1 J1\1 • •m Ell•• 11 n~ Htl!!_ C• 0 3'H Sit" HPd '1\<i 2• W•lfl Pu!> f l• """-'Cl"l':W. I tO 14d JI~ :M:\11 2 ~ +W. Cll'lllll I.Ill :U ... 4\li 4$t) -11 \ .n AIWft li ~'I 11\6 •lll -t' •m l'urn '1\ r Hmr;; Int 31i JI~ 5ttrlt sir It uu Wine Y(li ~\ , "Cl"l' pl .f JO 130 ~ .W .5' -"' ~ rr,111 1 l \I\\ m'I ln'o -\' "..,Id J: J I 11\'I •IVJ 41\'I NE\Y YORK (UPl)-Tax-hon Hrms that have con ~ a~:. g\• ~Vi ~~11m .... f!P •n J1t ~:: f! 3;\i ~~ ~~':iw"l: ';~ 'iVi :or;r1:1 1il.! 11: 241: r.~! m; = ~ :El:~l'. ~ 11 '&'. ,~\ T~~ ta ~. Mtrl! I ~ r,. .. l'Jl ! \ . ""' T•tv 11\0 ''"Ho ob<rl ni, 'iii; Slltlllll I' ,., ,, Wrl•~t w , •• ,. J~ "'" Ou•1VHI J 1\11 "' m .... idll 1., 14' ff\\ 13'4 2)1.li -il loll u~ olO ,, 1t\\ II 11Vi -1, Sheltered Investments 1n 011 SISlently Jost other N>Opit'S .... ~~.,!' .~ •1,, "·~" ·~,,',"•• '•!"• !»' ::_Sit~ F"d IU 4\ VrdnV E •IA 4'0 "°"JI' Pl.Ut 1 1111 llh lll'o + V4 tl!1 ,f J 4 l 51 Jt -~ ekll 1 11 .. 'Jl'o J01 25 -1,. ' .. ~ " " " H Ii ,.. AmEll'W I"' •:it 11-1. ,, .... 11\<i + \t on OOll 1 11 \1~ &<-'. 31'\ l"' + H r •S ..... 21~ 1' ,, ~ dr1lhng, cattle breeding and money Demand a proven ""' Ind ''" " How•d Gt 1, '""'""""'"'"" ... """"""""• .... IAm E•P 1..0 u Jt \4 1111) ,,,, onl'r1l1h1 I '\~ 2114 TA -1.1i ou1t111'1( I '° 30 :wo >Ol:. Im-• o\rden M 7',i •• Howm In 1,1, ,,, AEKlntl ••.116 17!10 S1 w~ 5'\lo-""' on Lltlll'lll . ll I" j'4 "' -\\ t1(9Co SI 102 2t\\ 27* • real estate have made a lot of record of earnings and return "rdt" ., :tt\\ 31v; Huck Ml st. ' AG1n1n1 .JO d 1• 1Jt~ IS'4 -~ oritfotG •.• n 2 t"" 2ni + \.\ G••"~v 1 "° ' tl\~ n\'o -.: ,o,,rw MoP uv. 14 Huct '"" 'r " .r.Gn•n •11 IO 21 1~ n• .. 21\~ + l' oni l"owr 1 .5' 11•; .i.1 31141 + 11o 011n11un " ,, 11~ 21\\ = ,, • money over the years but 1( of capital lvrow H 31 311,, !:jlltl 011 I • ,,,~ MUTUAL "1nHolll 10 s 10 10 10 onPw pfl so z'l'f Sl:U. 51 ~ _,,, r1nllt( Ill ,.. nv. 11'-11'~ -10. you 're -eareless you can Jose Choose only plans 1n which l';C1~· e~ J'i.t Ji'Q, ~~~~l C• ,,,~ i,'., ~ ~= ~'°, 1~ r,i't tt~ t~ t ~ :::::~:n 2f~ 1:0 1;~ 1f;~, ~t = ~ ~rn1~1 \1so 1 loe 'J!u .. ~ ~ = ~ · every'"'·g you ha ve in one lh 1 d Ault x.1 s . ,,1 If?•" 1n1 ,. Am HOiP 11 2:u s.r JJ\oli »It -1'1 on1 °" '1'2• tt 111 !ii! 1 '"" .r 1ts 11oe,, !!~ ~ Jb-· \, i..iuu e 0 1 company an the a11•t1 .r.1 114 ~. Hl'il• Atft 311 3'• Amlll'<'fll so ,, t111 ' ·~ + ~ on1 c, J 11 mo m.11 -"' '''°'" 1 '° .., ~ ... !1•e 'l' >o•> OmoH 5w $1 ' /4.M•:g::,-1..-IO UJ ll ll\o n~~ -\lo IC• .r"2 JO 14 l6'o It :Jtl• -4 I "~p I 30 _.. lo ll -,.,_ The Tax Reform Act of 1969 sponsors invest themselves If 911 P11"1 • S\) 11111 G•• n 1! :ttl~ .r..M•t IK Pl' 1 ti\~ t1v. tiv. tCP••'lll JO ' u:i M, $. -~ tNor r T JJa • 17'!, u 12t1 + \: I h bl I 'lo I ••tin I' •I' ,, Ond NIKI 16"2 27" FUNDS Am or1 50 tn f'" ,,.. + ~-Oii! t• t2 3J 1• • ...... VYI tNa *il 1.60 22 ~. u;, "'' _ dt:a I m1g ly ows lo mosl any reg s1ra nor sa es COits 11111r1 ,11{ n '0 1111,1,,, l Jlti AN1rG11 111 n .,,., •\a ni. + t~ S°"' ou 1 '° '°' "'• 1..-. 1to11 INN •111,. 1 JJl(o 1>11o 27'. 1 tax shelters other Ulan oil and are lo be taken oul or the 11•~i.o,u 1J'o ,,1, '"' cont "' "0 ~.~B:1' ,;_2 ,t'I ~~ !;!! s~: ~ 1• ~::: 0t~",l ,l! ~ ~: ~~ -~~ JH~,r,.r.,ifn1 71 ~f~ ~l ,1f~ ~ ,•:, gas dr1lhng A few months nloney put up by the ::1~ 11~~ 1~ 1;~ :~: ~~;r, 1.,. :!O\~ ~~-... _..,_Am Sfl/p .o11 M m~ 71 2ni _" n011 •''so 110 J1ia Jl~ si·~ -1~ wu n 1 h 1 Illa ,.._ itv. _ •\ I~ m '31~ 14\li lnlrm t11 !~! f:_; "'m SHllnt 1 1~'1 S\• 1~ !Olltftll Ott• 113 d '4~ 4'1l\ _,.,, !WnU"~ fll :n ,, ... ~~ *? back Ole nation was trealed to part1c1pat1ng 1nvelltors, tell the 111•1c H• ,. l'lv, 111• s~1 ,.\~ 1a ~ .r. lmt Tt 1 ta 191:1 211. 11 11 --.. onwooe1 I !ID 4 lu, l-11'1 34~ + \, IW•1h n so 1 114 1 f -" I I I lltlt Lt!r Jt1\ ltl~o Ill! Sy •I 15 U\1 OUllllt 2I IN"'"'N llJ O AmSo.llfr 10 II d "''1 •1 OGk U"lf JO 10 l't ,_\o, :!ti'> -\'l rfll!G"I fl 1 l'"' !11% 1 \4 + '• the diverting bu' '.d Spectacle part1c pal on sa esman to gel'"''• w , •• ,,, ,,,,, ,,, " I ... JI Arn s1d 1 10 w. lll~ ,..'"' c-1r1n 1.0 1J l2v. ljt1 Jn i -,,.. 1u n.Sft 110 10 .-. i.11a 2~, -'• u( some hundreds or City IOSt =i~ch~n 31 l4:itol:"1i!uill ~::.t,..i-Tl\f lollowln1 ouo Inv C.uld 105 IOS A,mSlerll 11 S 70~ 1011 :i111 .-v, CIOPT pfllJ I 161• lt'I ll't-~i rofltr !Q I 'I -U 2j ' ' " ' 01•;• NEW YOlll( !,..,.inv Co.II 11 Sl12 U,,rn5!<1 pttlJ l l00'4'1QO 100 1-r Tlll I J U\'l 1 '4 ll'~-14 rl'YMl!nd I I, 1~1 j.a.. 14'-•+t l litt toll 21,, JIV. JtcODI F I\ •• 1111001 W:flled by Inv lndk: I tG I tG A "-111r 1 IO lll JJ\• Jljl!1 lit, i ~ Ol't(l nd I 10 14 ''h "b "'' -\\ rurnmnCG 1 ll I i II 1 l• ·' slickers who were ::&tuck v. 1th Insist on 1mmediott 100 per 11,,.,u1 f l ,._ ,,1 Jioul" c 1 • •~ • the MtllOM• Anoct· 1nv11 •o• 10 11 11 ""sue p1.11111 J """ 111~ ~• •Pll:P• 56b JU .P\4 ll ln· -1'-§llLfHld c1 1• 111'1 1''~ ,.._ -.,. f 15 ,. 000 h d f ' " • ' ' w I ,, .. t tli.ot. Of Stc:Ulltltt 1nv111art GfO\IP Am5l'' pf H I ,.. !• 1\1 I• !OPWISll 1.19 H ,, 13'• Ult -.,.. MOit 2 IOe • "'"' '5l\ "''-~ +1•, rom 000 to .,.,, ea o cent deductlb11ity by buying 8:C,,"" 'C ,i.• 1~: ::;.. i 33,U ~ 0t111ri 111t Ir• 1 s no. i.u '11 "T' w1 1 •lf io 1 '> TVo -~• or1n1t11 JOt 11 11 1.,,. 11ii + 1' ult ~11 1 50 ioi ,,ti 21• ~ + l1 hungry blac" angus breed mg only into plans where the oil •,~,,' ,•,•, ',',I, ",',1• ~·,.~sb,•,, 101, 1011 '"" •tic•• 11 wtik~ M111 1 n •..w .rim Tl! 1 tt m u1o 11\11 •>14 -• o orGW 1 Silt J1 1u1, 1•1 ,.,1~ +t11o Gull "rt•• 11 1q ••A ~ _ ,., • to~. :n q\lht•e 11eurlllt1 Pro1 J ll •01 AmWW1 56 l II 11 11 -\ACar-11n 22 3' 2~0 :1119 m~-11to 01fltt1 Gl1IO I l~t Ill• 11\1'-'• cattle when tht' !ponsors of a ll .. _ II••~ .,, ll J~ Pd 1J\' ?6 could hive w.n Stitt! ) t 12 t » J,,W P.rtl 1 u zJO 1111 11\• '""' -lo c-1,. C111n n •'• ll'r •\.\ _ \' ~ul~i11u1 » t' 20 1"11 ltv. + 1, company assumes a tu.: 11,111-s in ~~ , 'Mt: 11.,7!:r 51 -" • ,, sold CbkO 01 bG</1h1 ..,,, "' • u 'n Am ZJl'I( • t 1<1 1!'o -~ Co>1 &«11 JO '.s 1~• 11 11 _ ..,, 11 ... !J "" 2 11so " ~~ " +1 (ax Sh.l'er ••bemo •enl d d 1 bl •· S • , , I ' , ,, '' c11kedl Welln1<h 1,..., llffh • °' •.11 .., .... ,on .oO 12 J!I' 20 20 -lj CPC 1n11 110 n :io 2th 29, , ut,../lfld 14 ,, • 1~ ll . .... .. non e UC i e cos... Ince r • S•• ll•i lll't • I I ~ ' l it .l.1k hl•I "., 11 Jf Amel~ '°' ll I '• lit• 111.ll -.,, Crll'lt 1 IOlr l 35 :lJ 35 ° -0 GulfYI QI) Sil • •• .. bankrupt drillong and exploration cos" R~:'.'i. ;~ 1;"" JZ:~ ~:i;..,.G•n 1;, 23,~ .111Ntron 1,, 1" 1vv 'so •.JO •MF 11>e N n• u. • U i• 1s•, -1. crt<111n F"ln 1 1 111. 1ru 11l, t., G0u1rw •ll..11 , ., 41 11 -~ dcd I l w<krti I\\ ,. ... "''"" ] • Jli ol.dm lr•Ur Funt! J l-lncock ''2 1.n A,mf..; IO 105 :Jt~, ~ 3t -I\ Cren;.pl(~ IO J 1"• 1.Pt '~· '~ Ut19!'1 Ind I 1q u. ltli -It n-8p1t f e q e n t pro are uclib e and comp I el on , , Grwth .s is • :io '""""n 11 tt •''AMP Ill( M u Jill,, :.o ~ + 1 • crou11Hlll4 1 2 10'0 '°'" '°"' + l' -ff.1-in: e r U I \Jnrl CP ' I'\ l(ur r~ ~{ IMClrn Jr. J fl k"'ll-Fund1 AmPt!• Cor_p lot ,",'••' ,1:~~ 1,r.! -'~ CrtwColl IOI UI I~ !Mi 101' + \~ Hltll"rl I.IOI 11..., f1tab1hty. OJ! and gas dr!Jl lng COSts are not deductible, the trc~ •• ·, 's:~ 21m'",•,',["!! 1ru ·~\;, lnt~r I 0 1 11 APOiio ! ft I 1 Anultt 1#' • f o •• • C•-"I. Corl< ft lr\11 1~ 11'\' a 111 .. rt O ,,! U''r JJY,. -'i ~ 1... ,... ~ dvitro 1'4 JOI ~"' 11 1 u1•n "m1t1 n 12 l •'• ':&,,-\Uc,...nz,11 lllO 11 3 ~' 31 1 Wi ti:i .,. Jl\i -:II -1 tax shelters can lead to 1u11t oil company really can afford ~::,: t1 ~ J?14 ~~'Ii,,, ,;:: ,.~: .11t1111 Fill ..... t1J vi 112 1 tz 1•11 :~ocL 'f ~'f ,111• ;f.~4 ~u· -• CT1 cor1 • 10 16~, 1611 "'' -... :::::m•~.P \ \1 1iv. 51• 1~~ = l! h d D d l d lh ~-h CtnnM I 10 12 ICl'YI Cllt 1n\'o II ""Iii.to •.JJ '°' ~·(I( , .. l ll0.11 NSv I , 111 11 1?14 1ud•hr "' 11 ll'i ,, llt4 + \:.Htrnmnd «I II 1'"1 1:.."' 114 sue a 1saster, says av1 o o IJ """'ause t e com c.11,1,, 1,0 JI~ ""''' l"c 1,, 1,,., +u1r1 'u 1 •1 cu1 10 1 ,, 'n ... ~f., 110 5 "• ~1; 3-1•_1 _ c; vdlW '" 's s 11~. U'o u•, Htndirnn ,1 'j 7"l• 29 • ,. 1, racer a ew or spec1a1s peon coss sa ony a r c•P S:: 1~ 1,,."j~•1 lit ,, ,,,.11111111e t111ou Cul SJ u1M11 .11"'o011 1311 " lo 1tv1 3, _,,.cumm1n IOI> 7 J1 XI'• JO'•-•• 1ne1 co ~o '° 1P 1~ 1~+' G N Yk 11 1" l 'rt I fle C••lllf 1P·ou'1o ln1 l \;1AllAm l' ..s1,3Cu1 1(1 t ]1 111 .r.otcllt<o 1S uµ,••14 1011 -vou1111•n'8 J ll\a ll U ~1ndH1r11 1••,1t1,,,;:( 'h b I d g h be. f d CA 1 1,. 1 IC -c:: S\ ~~"'Ph• Fd • •j 10 51 Cus 51 I ts t n APL Co•D f I 11 u CunnOn111 •I n t>'o •l• •'• -\l •nneM 1 30 111 '53! "'h •J _ :! 1n e us1ness 01 an as ave noun ci:T,~ ~l~ ~K:, • ..,".,, ,.,:,,.,,"..,,....c•p '' 111 cus S> ,,,. rotAPL. pfCI" 1~ 1jt• ,,.4 +v.cur11uwr "° • 10•• 10111 l!X'o +\ 1rcour11 !Q •,:! ,1," 31 +\• 'You ca lose your car f 1 I d ll c;orr O '"''"k l l 71 3 Ame~1 1t1372 Cuos• l1'1U ,..1tAS1~10t !tl\H,10 1~-1\,lj C11rrwr "' 11• 11 ,, 1rr11 1n11 ..,,,,,.,~,..,~_1 , n , nves ony1ngroups r11ngc if" • ... l•••• ,~,Am 0~1 .. t :i.1o13 Pal•• 301 336 ,.,,,,, 10. )(111"' 1'• t -\~Cut1erH110 tl 11•0 ,,,., 21•,+oJ,H••KO C11 J• 11\i 11\. 17v.+•-. )our home your bank ac In p-e II 1 A 1 ,••:' G1 ,?l, 711 LMc 0 1•1 2n;,., "rner E••ren ""lckb ••3 10..,.rc111 ott 1 3 1'1 311'1 v.-v,cvc1ap11t0 t 21 . t lli 2Ji 1-11r1sM1x 10 , " n 21 -'• , ... vno counry. noi c:~c'Nt iol;iJ,,r:~·"~ ~· /\ c11111 1tt 1 oeKnk~c;1 1111 31 ..,,c"01n1 t lj 31h \o-V,CJ1rv1M 110 1•1P.JJ 57~. H1rvAt1211 '"'•lf!•l••• count your business 1r uou company can afford lo gamble '''" , , .. , •• '•n• w• <o• 111tm• • Jt '11 Le• Orth 111 • 11 .11r1•PSvc 1 ot j l 1 •o 11 11•\ + ,,,. _,.. k1wu E1 1 ~• '1 '6'• ''t• 2•l4 + '~ blunder 1nlo an unlim:ted ... _ill ·enie11 •• n~ :•" t''''" ,!!· ,~~ ~:U1 11'!1 1 71 ~r:..rr"h 11;: 1~ ~ :;~1s?~, l: 1l if!: ,W if~+ :i;, ~1111 1Y• 12s. 1 "';;; ,.,,. 1h -l\ =:r:~1..!1"' 1 ~ 1J("t 11 1: = l: on w-1ng rn rt mote spots If "'" VI'~ 17"1 ir-1 L••-z,n 1A " ~ 1..._ Sttoct 1 " 1 51 111 Slk 4 11 5 ., Armco on 11 I n. 2rv. 1'.I -¥t ~n• c, ti 11 141, n•t ,, _ , 0 HC" 1114 1o. 1 4~~ ii.\ •loli _ ,~ hab1hty deal.'' Gr acer said 11 hits Jt slands to make a half. ~~~ ... ~·0 ;.~ ~;~ t:;: "c::.1 ,,, ,_: ""' Eot~ • :u , ~ 111 1nv 1 t1 • 11 Armour 11 ~J , ~~ ~3 Ut~ + ~ R:~ I:= " l: ll:~ Jl\, 11,,. -•.,. H1ct1Mn 11r u 'R• D~ 1~ -•. • Avoid such deals as 'Joint dozen profits on ~fining ~=~" 'o,, •• • •,•,, Cl!!'1~ ;;: :.:;· l~ ~ F..~·n ~:: ~"ti: Ntl ~]; ; = zmElr te 0 k ~ 'l! Jl1~ ?f\ n· = ::: i:illt ,.,o:,., $1 I~ i'f,--: n1-o = ;~ U:I•~ "tu:, l: 3*1? ' :ii1~ = :'! .. 1 1 • ~ .. 1 IN; "'t i: ,.1 ,.,. Mut ,,, t..JI 1.oorn,1 s1111, .r.rm k •ffls 11,i ;1 ~ -1,ji •vc.c, 1 u s 1n~ 111, 1Jt. _ •i Hfftt11n1 '° 'l ,,.. 1m !Mi+ t,. vtntures enan !1ncommon transportalion and d1vers1!1ed r~ ti':t 1~''i ,:"'!:~11w ' "~ 1 .tmH Gth ,.ff 2u c1111t 1'0Gl4.t0:~=1n'1nd''i° it f.4! ,1• ~·!111 8:~:J4-'~ iio 'l!: ,,~, "tt.-H•H•meP61 t u•. 1Jl• 1!1.'-'• or 'pr1nc1pal agenl contracts • products. perhaps even a :~~1.~'\I 1rif"1~;v. t" [,~ ,~1; ,~'t "~.':; Gror1 t 111 ~·:i·t I; g I; JJ ~· Jd i~le-120 , 2~t ' t: ~. + .... 2!:::"} I " ~ ~\' It n -') ~~~ t~. 1t l~\~ 1tr. 1;v: t }! Insist on a !lr1clly hmlted rettul credit financing profit ,•,•ls1 .,1 "IGll .•.~h,.,'",, ,.,,1111 orwi~ t.u10~1 Lu1" 11ro lb,11141..,:S.,oG t'JO i11 J4"1 :u 11;1+i'oo.1rn1r~'1112 tt ~: ffl~ fft'+l4 ~~1\~ fl• J f• ,r• 'h P.rlne-hip" B h I •~de! I 7 .-,· '• 1,~· •4 l11tmt 1 Jl 1 t1 f nl '" 110 I IS Aud $PQ ':IO , 1t\1 ,. ,. -l'i Ofl Mnll I" J7 ,,,. 14'L ''. + '• Ht~F• , ,e, •r, ·~·· "'' -,,. • • ut your tax s e ter comes ''''' '' , • •'1¥ '"'' ~·. Fd 1nv 1" 1 o 1n1u.. 1 » 1 n, ,. -, 1\1 110 ~· o,1, , ... .. .,o ~ ~, -·~ !f.! '"•' -'• I r h I f "'Ir 11': ~~:;;:•i M•llk•I t••~», .. Vtnl Jtt140U"l•u Fn •1t l011 Ahi10:"100'• 'l'2 15'.i 15 151.+\~o.1t:C 1~1""" ii 311~~ 'f,_0 1r.•-··~~,~~k·Jo 21 I') ........ 43 ~-'4 Gracer offtred other rules a on y out o t e sa e o the 011 ritii u 11 7,1i ••l ~.~'":' ,., • • ,1 APOiio Fd '61 1 :11 M•n Gt~ 10.J4 11 s.t Al1C1¥1i1 1 a• 1o1 !!'• im i t i . + ,,. Otnn .,,,, '° 13 10v • ~• Hfllll va1 111 211• 'lt? 27u. + '• b ht foll d <'!!yin ,,, 1,, 1~l 1"""".., a;-:-i111 ,,uoc11 I U 175M1n Tr IJ:r.suq,,tl(EI plSl7 ' ,, t2'h 1rv.-1 0 .... l'IMl•Gll 1 "'~ lJI~ 1l~·-~·Hl!lonHPl~'°t ,i, Jn: ''~-·· us1ness man m1g ow in or gas from th e groun ,.,1,~ Mt 2n ' ,,,.,: ;:::~orM~• 11• • 13,~ """'"' 1 ot • •1 M1~\ 3"' J &1 ,..11 R1ct1t1t1 1 •11 s.•. sn~ " + ~ 01nnyR1t 04 19 •h j'lo • Holl•" 1 70 1 lt\'> ~..... L~ -'• investing 1n 011 and gas lax •. 1 k 1 th r1~vton "" ,,1 ~•rin 0, • t\,; Axe Hou•~ltin M1!ht11 10 '° 10..111 AllRch pfl 1! 1100 501. 1~\IJ •JV. -1·~ ge1111•lr1111 1 J 13 1 , ,;~ -h ~rnw11 " , 1:r. ~~ 'J'• . Sh.lier' 1~ a e cer a1n e company r int M.. 1~ ) n•; M 91_, 'l~1 ,,I'-Fund .r. •" J •1 Mt•I" Fd 11 li n 51 .1111 Jtlth ~! J 1 ••', tJ~, ••1~ + ~· tnltGr 1 11 s 11111 11 • 11 1 f lectrn , "'• ... ~ •~• _ I\ h 'h I f r11"1on O < 5 M ' o' l "I F~n<I 8 •to I :It Mid.II Mull 4 5 15 AllRcft 1>11 to Jt d" •J~o IMO + \' OttKt •I" I ~I 41 '' -"J alklvl11n ,1 7fl li~k )J\t 311\ + 1 a~ e serv tes or an tll-r1ow ('~ ,,,,1r"M:~., 0 11, 11 ( Stock sn 5JOMoodYC•1' 1'J0..,111•C~•m t 3J 11•. 11"• 21 !i+•1Dara<.o F>fl , 41 11 41 -J"'I olklo\ lrGD J s1 JI)•, 50•\+2•: Metl the fellow Jn Te.xas or de ..... ndtnl rvotroleum engmeer !:O@l.I• ,. ~·· T\j MtO!I• 1~•' ?n•, Sci (• • 00 0 JS Maoctv . 1112 ,,,. ... 1111 Ctro n !t~ ,.. '~ + ''1 OtSatelnc 00 ' MIU '11P.4 2IJI -11 t10Uvlu1 I 20 n 111/, II!\ 11\~ th I ... ~ ... ~ ...... ,.. .. JI 50 Ml411 ... ~ Jl~··bi.on 1 21 t 1?MIF Fd f l.I IJllATOl1>t Gii 111 lb I 1•i-VoOl!U!:d11 ltil 11 11. 11 i114 •Hornt1tke tO -u 25"1 ,51, some o er petro eum region ~ ilh 3 soil" professional ro••m ~... ~•. ,, , ,1..,, 1,1 "' , "'~ &•vrc~ 'Jt 1 21 MtF G1" • •• 1 °' .r.uro•• I' rad • 1•• 1~ "• -• • ~' Ed •IS 50 1 n 1J 1a 0 + , H-.wi~ 1s1 '°'~ 11v. n \\ -1•. h t II t lee' :JI'.-l'""a!11\'rs-,.._ H'Yl""? Mtotrn--:IO'I J~ llMcon -U...11 UJI .'A.ll.U~-G"t. J0..20...Ui..U 1,t,ilolnl11 Ind d C.0.-•'• Jo"'--. -11 t_!_ $1.fel }. 1•1•-11 -U--.-, ' O!IY_ 9j 6 2lit lfi , .... ...__,·~ w o ac ua Y IS going o se reputatJon roion sir '"• ,. ....,..1., '" 1 ~ 11.\i ,.,, K111 ' u ' Ji .v.v OmG 4 *' .1 °' ""'° c, 6Cll ss 11•. 11.. 11'• -~ ~r~ ,,-• '' 1s:, 191 '\ •n• '" A~ ""'' lhl' drilling sites and carry out romce , ,,,_ 1v1i.li.r Ct 1 • 1'\ e .. ~ Giii 5 ~ J"' "'u °""1" • 1• '" Ave• pn :i; 11 ll\~ Jllo l.n. -,,. it1F1,..n • 10 101, 1t1, 10--• Hot.id nd .JO » 1011 ljl• JnvesUgaie: the groups ex.-rom r .. ,.,~4,,,."'lkilt• 1 . 11,llt•lr Ft .1•s 110\\vl Sh11 1JJ1 13n ..,,,...,F'd to .. llP• 301" J~o +1•0l1mrn1t 11D n 31!. lS 3n•··, H0vtMlfl t0 •JI'• 1Jlll '"-'• the operations If he doeii:n't "om .-. •• 11•.1•1,Mkl"" GT 1.,1vv,B-111< 5JI '°'"'ut Trrt 16' 1•1..,,,11111" lOP .. t•o "" 1•1 011,.,.s111m 1 1• 11n 1ri1 1n •-,4Hw1onF IJO JJ :u. 31 • Perienct in 0 .-..rating oil and rem ,.., ,, 1111 1v1 ... h G•• • ~" 9<111111 s1 1 OJ 1" Ht:A Mut • oo • • ,.,....,,"d 1 10 111 '''• 1,\, J•i~ -''< or15h "c2 • 21\1 211. ,11; -+ •! Hw1,. .,. • • 111v. 114 1u -:4 1mpre55 you a:s being rom r-~ ,...., '"'1th ,,, "• MlH v1r. 11J1 1 ,1~ 11~1 Fdn • n 11 '' N11 1n0 1 !IO • ,..,tK 011 r 1 u ' 1i•.. n~. ill • + "" Olt! _, 0110 • 1J 11~ ,1, 1iou1it "1 J1 1 51'U J11. JJ">. • gas properties I S well as 1tll rorn P•y 11 111 ... MG 1t•e11 ''• ·1, llaston JJI 11 N11 lnv11 • 10 1.u • DkltP""'1 •• 11 101, 10ta ii>•4 , HouuLI" '° '' •11<t IO'• ..,.. -1o pelentandhont:st run "omP • • 1'"Mod 'kl s 1 ,.,.er11d si 11Hu1&N~1 5tcur S-• --g1t0o111 All l •1 "1, 12 •+,•Hou1tNG1 •~ ",.,. ~ .,..,._,, ex.plorallon and d r1lling rmo cm 1~ 1, Mdl"'~ • • ,.,..au11oct ct1vf11 11111n •'-11n"e•b(k w so 2J 10 ,,,, 1tU-'• [Gla,~lt .tO 11 11•. JI \• 110 ,4HouGt "I ~ '"'""'~ .. ~•-I Stay away from paruc1pa· rec~rd A ••ell can be brought ':~•. •,·,•,• •.··. ···•"•''-''m '•'•1 •111 "t 11u11c~ 11 •t11to I'\•••"' 1u 111 81,rou1 u Jo n tl 111o Jl -•4 081',"Nc"" "° 11 t1t<o 11~. u•! -,; ~-Ja11,n ..}' ,n 'I lf'ili 11 + ~ Bonds Slated For Bidding LOS ANGELES -Southern Cahforn1a Edison Company s board or directors h a v e authorized plans for a $100 m1lllon offering of first and rrfund1ng mortgage bonds T t.f McDaniel Jr , Edison president, said the new 1ssur Series Z due 1995 ts schedul- ed for b1dd1ng on 1'hursda}, Dec 3 The electric company rx· pects to Ille an apphcat1on with the Cn.hlornla Public Uhttlitics Comm1ss1on o n l\londay. Oct 26 requesting author1zalion to issue and sell the bonds at compet111ve bid ding F1hng or a registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission tn \Ya!!hlngton, D C 1~ planned for Monday Nov z ~tcDan1el said Parl or lhe proceed! from the offering v. Ill be used to retire short-term Joens Tht remainder will be used to help r1nance Edison's conlinulng construction program Edison supplies electr1clly to more than 7 m1\hon people llv- 1ng 1n the compan)•'s 50 000 square mile service terr1torv ln port1on9 of central and soutbern California Dowuh·odclcu Men Organize ·" -,r -, w" 11 11>, Candn 111] SO )II nlvld 1 '• 41!'1 &flt GE 111 tt 11'11 N l't 1U• + \\ km O '4 l 15h lfh lJ'• -DWmt "' 21 I 11'< 11"'1 + '' 1 th II doll le rcmr•• ., , 'lloart • • t " Ol~ld l7) 351 C.""W•n '"' 11•11aiG ,111 50 '1.0 "°' .C .0 -'lo J...., lOb 1711•1.li llJ llOI +lo tJ ubbfcl 1'1t IJ 21i'I m' 20'4+'• n \\I a m1 LOn ar po n-"°" •'!Ck ,. I 3• Y.0«t s •••• ,~~ Na!W $ '1J 10,, ,, S!k ',, ~ lt BellG PIC• ZIG Sl SJ SJ +• ~llS••• I 20 l 4 •'o 4 '• ... ,; -\\ Hudlly I 70 B flU. ~ 11 Ila! but the potential can be "on•r111 ' ~· •""••"'•'•"• 11\t'&\• NY Vnf Ull 14tl 1n~o.,., ••' s~•eantPnl 15• •o 1~ •'o I -\~ ,""•Ind 36 '1 +'4 th ~--'l'luu1~H,11 ·'° 10 "'• '"* ti.I -'~ '"lllll•~n ~ .. ~~ ' ••• &•HIWA un•~ell 511)<"~ 1'1 J'O•nP r>l7 J ,,\I I' l••+\• vMlt ISlt JS "'~ 71\1 '1\li I .-.u11,,,.m l) j llll., 11 1714+!4 fr ittered away by 1ncomr,,.tcnt "onoe• l , ... 1• Mo..,'",,!,' 0 ~ J • 1111sM Fd '01 • "° N,t G''~ 1 •1 • 1~ e~ ~ c11 1 :w 11 :n-. 2111 n v. -11o •l"•PP., >0 2J it 1110 ,, + it ld•h01 •,w 1 '° 21 '*'' n """" + ~. I"'~ '"?•t ~ ,,1 4, M II• tl'.l" CG ~cl 1tt l ~J NtUw f~I o<1 1••e kolNY 1 t l •l'I 11 A!•4 .._lj tMt" IO ? M'l ti '4 o,~ Ott ti 60 •l 1l 11h lJ O""rallon "M"' Yr • .,. ut tr I • I CaP.Jm• 1 ot 11' "louw c~ 11 ''11 ~' en 214 • 11111, n i1 lt\1 _ ~' OomFnd 411 ' t ''• , -+ , ldtt e Pl• 15 l 6J1h U 'AI •Jiit -I'• .. -,.,..,,.,.d , ... 1 .~Mu!Jll f • 11 C10/! Inv 7tl 31t 'l~ .. \Vld H ••1,,,e.ll~Tr ~, 31 Jt l6 °""rt"••"' "IJ 1'! 11 ,\Ill Ctn! Ill 31 l''" ''"" M\ii 1•· F1nelly donl take the .. ,~.,,,., • • ~t~·.~ 'j :! r.1011 Shi J..12 •es"l-10" l'"l•""l:;:~~15:i1 1s '1', .,,~ i•1 ... ,og:,c,fp l' ,, 16 is•; lS\4 !~U:~:,:'\5:i If-'"• .q .q.,. '• '"•r•• ('' ,.. ,., N r • c I~\~ hl c~· Sh• 10 n 11" !'lien St•• • 11 t Tl e1slc 11\C ao • I?. 11h 1 , .. -'• ~ ... ~ 1 Ji ~ l71't 37).1 l1\. -v. Im• c .... m L r ... ttt'! Poii't \, sponsor s \\Ord for 1t that the """~" • ··~ ... , ~:,c:, " , t'• h4nnl.,. Fund' ..... ~~·1 I• ft' 14 n• ,.,,, Ml• 11 1ru 11•. or•voC• 1 40 "', UJ'> ~4 1N" Cp 1 .t11 16s .111• ,.~ 30 I d 'YOf H (' • , t(CmP .. " ''\ 1i e.11n 1on11,. ft•1th ,,~ -··e.1nM! ..,, • ""'ISi• 15'•· g••Hlnd l.O I 7f o :tf i 2tl:·+'•lnCOfM Ctpll ! .~ +'• \ en ture IS proper y rewn to .,•n• L~ • ~• ,.11 f' -,, ,, i n · Com s1 1 " 1 11 ,,_~, ~ •• • .. 8•!h tnd ~, 1~. 1"-' 111, -+ \\ r1111 12 tO " '"' 1114 Mh + \' 1necum to. 1 ,, ;i"' "t d I It h ll lf "'""lv '1 I" 1• Nt1Gto u 1,1•i.. Grwtn ••S •N'""'F<I ,,,.l, .. 911M,.nl1~0 ,.3'\~ 2' -1 01ttu~1• 1'3•''ol2"1!DV.-•,jndltnHdto le 1iU,,.,,fl,..,_:!:!ll, provteaega axseer "'•'•"'"S ,·.v...,,_1Llb • ;1 .. •ncom •111 11 •niF~ •-...•1•11.u..:ftLblO u41>o 41 11 -1\\0vktPw'"i ' t»hJO JO\li +V•ndH••l•JO ltl .. ""'' 'he nlcmal re··enue ..... n ••• o .... ,~ ,. Nttl "'Pd 1l )70'~ S..ecl J..JJ ),, ....... Vm5 , •• , ... , •• XlrLID ,, Ill 23'o ll'h 2l\'J-\o o ..... ,.r.1'l, IOO """' 21!i Zf'A -''""'Plr"L l!,O JJ "'• !!,, f\L='·• I • servh .. <: .......... • • • "'lt NII ... , ' ~· C"•I~ Gr eos "Ne" II"' 11 ·~. I 1 • WI :W\O :It' i 0 1 t1 t1 " + 'i lnlh NII tll , lt .. •• J decides 1t isn't ) ou will have "•~11 ""' ' • • N•! Stclt •; •i, '•"11 'Dt • ~1 ..,._., • '" 1 •• 11!:~ ;:: , " Jll• >t J1•~ = •i o~ni:n• ~:HI ~ 4P t .... m o + •, lnt•r••nd , 11 w 17'• 1"1 -'" ' '1•vM'• 1•'•1 "'N•r~"-' 2>1, l"~rtd l till 71"""1'1M • ..,, • .,., l!m SO 1111~ 2l'•1~''o +'O<lll,OfttJ)it ll ~•JOlti -~htlllttpfllJ l lli:lfo ~r--'• to pay lhe taxes not the ,.,.,,, ~ " ·~· NI SllY• '• • Frnt '' ,, 10 1• "TC <•c • 111n 1• I~' 01~~ :io 21 JJ 0 ll'I »'i + t't !luP011j llf• 50 11? 1l?U 111 111~ -t 1nf1nd $11 J 101 211., 2,v. 1..J = i'! .... ,.,~, "' •• N_11 G<= 1• 1oi.. S~r~d ••110,t•,r•"M ''''" h.111 7J 1'1l'o 11~o1 1'0 -'l OuP ~ lJ t.S +v.lnman1 1tp Jt 1141 ·~ ~ •~ sponSOrSof thcplan "~•· ,.., .,, .... ,4af. •~11~ 1~ Clio Sot1e1 '~~ e i1 °•~1 ,..v ,.., 7•1ee@C1 '1 50 o 11 17'~ 11 O on f'l.50 1 5p , SH~ ™~-1.1n1llai 10b 11 h i'! II -11 Soha•eyouro•nl•W•ers~:,'',.",' ,'.·,·,". ,',~!",' ',',~~,,',",m',', H1,11J1:~11~.·,• ;,~•7 ""R!~n•P1'.o ,,.,.21•~J•••+•,o:"}ls..no7 ,l,'"',,'',"'• t -v.1,n1•l•COP Jo 2t 10V.lt•o ll"'.!1;,• • " ' .... • " ' ,, 0 on I • u ' • "!•II HOW ~ •I lN )Hil 'l~ + .... 0 L ,, + ~ ... rtrco , 10 11 lt''t 1'l'o ,..,.. d I ( l f k Lh "••A-1• l•'Nltl1 9 J~'~l''A Etuh lU lJ••~lt~ 1.,,,,,. •II lnl•rcoll ' 11.0 '"" ,;_v.0~01175";j 1>0 ii~ l lo 2•1~ 26\•-•, lnlllklnc ltO l 23\o '~1 1 llb ~ran ~~e~c~~~;f:l~ys a: cone ~~:.~y1~: 1~:~ 1~: ~~~~~~ il~i 1!~ ?~b ill'!~ :::1~,., 1~;1 1~~ 11:~~ \:.o: ~: ~;1: 1r: ~~~ ±1 :~ g~;:,.~~lOp i;; fl~ f! ~:1io :: 1!! l!C~::r~~ 1tl ::: 1nn 1*~ Jr: suit an eX""rt in the field .. ,.,., .. ,~ ~ • 1 ~PA G•• l Vt nv, V1111 • 11 o 4• •1on l'ft~ 1n •• 11 ~· enerlCP 1 64 ~ ••t. •Sl, ~ _,,,. -E·ll-Int HtrY 110 11• 1•'!11 21 1411 I"'-"~· ••I o-, ••• N~ MUG n' I'' Cal Gr!~ 110711 0? .,l~n I"" t 11 10 It lontll P'-50 1101 ~n S• 51 -1 EIQlet>ch IO I -11 11\t lndull 633 13'1 UYI 17':\ -1 ... ~·~•~ , • , , nn e "'11 'Iii t u. c .... i 11<1 4 31 •" "'''' "und• e1ne11 .,. )0 nVo 13 -•4 f c ..,, ?l 1n1 Ind Pll 10 1• »\;; 11 n _ ,,1 """" J·~ •• ., fl' Sctn I~, 11ro rwu~ Al 170 1:iet r:.,,,,h fl~111ft'l"n"' Joi7JO 110 30•~ "'• 2t'l -'~f::f'.r.1f L~ 2J 11'0 11,. "'•+ \.lnl Miner lO It 11\t 12 """'" ,..._ ?" '"" '"'("I 1 •1 ,}Cwllft C l ll ISS N F•I '"" •)!' t119Uel " &\;, I 11'+''oftll GF Ill II ~I • IJ't 11 1111 Mnt lllt <'I l•''i I"" l"\-1, ...... H ,. •••• fV " ,:.~1'11 Corn•"' I.JI •u N l"or '''•7'"8"'k'' ,.llfl J7 l'I 1'1 I -'•E•otUtll llO 1 11\: 1n. )!!'-'''"' N!tk 110 'Ht ..... 411:. 4h -•1 .., • 1. o ,,,_ "" P ,c, 1~0rl '"U 1 ,• ComPt\ SH 1 11 •ro "u,... '", &•rmtt Cott 7! 1to ,., 2>0 -, El·~~ 0 11'• lfH +\~Int Pto I JO JJ• l S'o 3.lv, lS _ ~. ,., •I·•~ , ,., ., P:t I .tut~ °1 ' (om' ti I 01 I n •ro l"Ot1f I'" '"" Bltll $!1 I h Ill '1'• '1 i.:, ,,., + \~ Ii ~Ol\Yt I J 31~ Mil U \1 M -\~ 1111 Pt• pf I 12000 S!_, s., "> -'o -_ .... ,, •• 1·~l''-'"••< ''' _1 ,1,.comp Fd •1• '01•rov1n• tM '' l!1TIV1t j,(l tt Ul.-1 12\4 '2V.-21'.'''' MO > 30 1t"'O '° , !nit lt1dll ,., c ,., "Comllk l ltt ,oi•rt"1S~t t 14 •"B11c-0to;N 17 ~4\'t JO.lt +I c n J 20 1? 26Yr 17 +•oln11&TIOJ 3?3 .1.1\ilJ'ou _1• .;:, ... ~ 1 • ==~~:ico 3j, ,tt c011Co•d 11J1110 •11111n t l>O t11111rlrJoi.n •• u 'I"' u vo 11\•-·~~~~~r 11 1 11 :n 11'" l lll-,lnrT r PIC 4 1101"',1 ... w1 ... .,.._, :·.·~ ·.·'. ,._. •• •• ·.·.·.~·. o,r ~· '~ c ... 101 In 101)(11011(1 '""'nt"' Fund• P;I IJ LI .... , • I h 1llo I '• EG&G ;'I .~ 2•'1 ,. 1( -11 ln•jtT it/E . lll 13" 1:U Ill _, • • • 11,lj c ... 11 1111 • n ',, l'tUll ',, ',,, e1oc-H ,. u Jf'• tllo jHo + \\ EjM I 1•11 IJU Uh -\, ltll f "H . 1 141 ~ .. .....,, -..... '" p , "'' 1•. ,., •tr~w H t•~ lO'<. Cont G!h 166 711 l":f"<I I~•• 11 J• 81_,. Belt 110 311 ti'• ._.\'o 1$ £ K~I ~ ti t ll '~' l1l 4 \ ITT ~I! 4 Sil J ID\:o ff'" 16V. + W -,., ~ 1 ••!" l'•uliy p I ·\~Cor• Ld 1J.M l479 l":r!~ ~I• ••1IClll>blt Brin ,, 1 .r~ 14 I • -•\Ii llOC •"oo •'1 •lo II\ l11!T&T 1111 4 4 11 l l ll .,., ~~ , • " 11, llH 11..,,cniv C1p 107J11j,C lncom J,, ,,.eotlnoCo 00 ••"',,,111/l'o IJ'.10-1, fl~m Mf~ 012 '"' Po t1--11411ntTlT ""• ,. 19 11 1 •1 he Newpoi 1 C c n 1 e r :•, ·., 0 ,· ; ,·,•.",~,'.~1,,',111~ 11 • 13 , C•n \YOrv 5 36 J '6 1~v•11 ~"' ~ ~ 10!1C11_;1sr. • 1 v. II -1141 ei"1~g pf u 1041 11~, _ '• lnjT plL 'lo i :io ,,1,. ,, .~ =1 ·~ _ . , 1, )O ~CrnWOll•XllH VIII• J'>lff10ndlnaU l t\,;i 1'4 •~+~\ gnttlttd 14 S'o S'• S!~+\\ln TPINt S 1'1JJ~i ll Jjl~-, .. -•fr ,, • E I " > dlVGh M SI lJ H IS Vtll'tl ~.,. ~ •• llOOl<Mlh 1.2t 1 I• I '.l 11'-I -llo EIF'tl<INO 1 IS 16'4 ''°" 16'!1 lnl "nO > -, >> ·• Ki wan is Club has elet ted Dr • !(•; ' : ' .. : G1W ,, ~ I~.~ Ofl1Wfrl Grll'J• ·~....... • ~4 • ,. llorden 1 20 Jt n~ tHo tt + ·~ en11 CP I 20 ti 1t\\ 131'1 13111 + It Int U111 ... -2.1 l l \/o ll•t -., ~-k -1 ~ ~ • ~ ,. p 1~ 11f 01,11 I041Hj,(l ttlnl••' 11•t1•.,,Boraw1• 115 40 21~ 13'-'o J'""•-1'• i 1t11 1>1140 zlO 23 13 n lnllrPlct 1 lS > 31 , Jt\~-1~. Jameg E """"' er to serve as -1 ... ~· ., Y' ,.::, ,,.,! 1 • 1,; Oelwr 11JI 11 :111tot•n1h s •' \ ,. 11orm•n1 10 • 1 •o 11'11! 11'• El'l'!tr Eil.c 1 10• H'1 J714 511• +I•\ 1111 •r•nd to ~ ir' 25"' 2PI -+ '• d l 197071 .,,~, •• , Sl!lll Li .. Otllt .,., ... ~.11'"Fd 1 l•S '"'losEdl1 1 1• llJO)Jt 11.-··~mEltlf Bto !1ft.~•ll"9 -itln!tril'wl u ~ l4V.Ul'l -•'J pres1 en ln .. ,..0,' ,.,. ,.,~ •on .~-~. ~' ~1 u Or•~ll ,, Jt n Jl ~chu•lf u 1114 Jt ~r.,l}'..,h 111ei,o 11 J 1)0'io ,io l~o + ~1 ~=r~A!j ,:o !!. .sti... so;,,. -,, lnffi'llSt• 11 .: 111• \1._ 1• -'\ Servinu as first vice presl ••• -· .. •• ,.. •hi! SuD 1110 ,,,, Ortvr Fd 10 11 11 4 sc1,..<1t• Fu"fl~ e la 51 1 c 1 ~ 0 1,• tt 0 ~ "'' • ... l lt1 11•, • law• Beel lGJ ;::0 ,,l hJ!ol • "' a ,,..~•• •· • l"ka!en th .,001,¥1 \.¥ 11U12 "' Int Inv '"r.n "'B;ls~I.'" 17, 109 .w ~1: 5'\~+1 : ~m=11 11: 3 1111 11\~ ,71.· 1ow1E11. 1:io n 1r•~ 111~ lJ'\t ='·· dent will be Waller Haas, --·w• • • " l'lnkrln u 5• Ettonl.How•rtl ~.,,, 1• ~''JI' erlitM• or 2 11 J''4 ,. 39, 10 e""i 11 11 ~ II.I 1l 11~ 211> -~~ 1ow1111G 1 ll 1 l'(I , 20 ~ M "'h -..... c~·· " •• ••rtr t>IK 11 :, If'~ lltl•~ 'JI 10 11 1111 1J ~ IJ.(11 p,111 i-o1 ~~ .ti 11 • 11 11 '= h e"n,1 u•, J1 II 1110 10'< 10".o -1, ltwtt>Lt t •o ll 21 , 21 '"• realtor Raymond c" ertt:r -1 .. ,, '"ol'" ,,, Gen >• .r~ G'WI~ 1111 111~ com s• ••••H er Pt• 1n 4le 30 100, 100, 1~ 1:.""iG:1 20 ,,•, Jl>o 31,,.. 311i11 -h1tw1PS• 1;,i u """ 19 _, 11 be d -•t ~.. 1 • !"rot Allt 1 , ,1, Inc"" J 4 S" St'"wlly Fund~ 9W't Htlt 9G .. 7f\4 )t 1t -' 1111 V t IOr 2.S\1 U... ll\;li -\lo lpe:o Ntlt l • 2 n' an optician ~I secon -• ....... ., • l'ru<1 1 ·1~ '" '" 5Pte1 1 •1 !" EQuT• ,.., l'l4&11w¥Ha1 911 1 31 w; 3!~-1 ..Z Ell 11'1(: 110 It Ju, 11in Jl\\-\11 ITE lmt., •1 23,~ ni~ Il\Q=:: Vice pre.Iden' "•nT°"( ·-.. ,,.\l~S NM 11'~17'o Slocll 111111 Jl l11vttl 11•111.0artwyGJ 10 JI lPI $, 2'· ,E•IWI•• llll 11lh 111.io 1"--""lltkCOI'-ISi _ n .• -·-·· EDe•<t 11 ,.. It l4 Vttrt ~ ll ~ ·• 1klvr.UG In lj 13\t Ji 'll• + ,, lll•lnt l 20 IJ Jiit )1 l1~ + 411 -J K ...... Th board Of d'rector' for E1rt1 l1 D1 !1 N ~e1_., Am ,,, ,..,. rtw" Ca I 6\1 '• 10+1, l!U•• "'2 11 t 12 •11 ~ 11 \,i-1 • -e ~rnro k 1•t J 41 <.t S..-S 1, 11 ll ,, llwn5ftirp )I l1 l>t t t \a -\.\ E11trllnt Ille 11 !Oii 10\1 IOU + 'r\ Jltk,n.1111 )I l'l ''I t the coinin~ year w\11 include -ne••• 11 01 11 11 \¥111 oth • ,. • 111 ewnlhot , Joi 10 :n 1 "' :n "" •i l!lftvl '' .14 10 21n 11 ,, .. -141 Jt<11Au 11 .. 11 ..._ :.. ++ :.· Enl•ti• Jl'' ~~tm I'd I IS • t51•ufl\Wk ~ 10 110• 11 1 .. 0 -'• Elhyl Pl'3 II IS ll'\' "'' )J\~ Jl"H l'(I 7 I~ rit° Robert ughes, Carter P'J t M l!:11uuv 1J1H 'h••'Aa ,.,~2,11i llC~E•t 2C51• t.!$i"lt'•t1~E,.,.111nd .... 111 11 11 -\11 Jtnltt11M11 •l•V.ll• .. ,',:! 1 0 ag l!out Gth I ll 15'"' Oe1n 147114'1 !•" £' iO 1\1 l1o ~•-'1i E11rold fn lOt 1 1' I• 1' JIPl ,.f'd l6t s' ·• " I McDonald George R "11u1 Pro j"'"!lde t.W t lt ulld 0P J 11oo s.i S<I s.i +•1ll!vtN,.IOll Jl:Jt'\17\\M +'•J••l't lne&e 2 ),•,,•••,•,'"'l\l+•. J Tu I E11•w; 1 1.1 u ~ 1 • ..,, Fund• auj• "'·'° I !'~ 1•1 s•o -I\ f•ClllO 1 ts t I" uv. ,,.. 1 '\ Ochsner John Uc '""'' 1 ~ 1 11 11 C••'I '" 1111eu 111n a.. ,. "1'• 1\\t 11F1btr111 Ml 11 ,• 1:ru ui;=1!J::~~~~~' Jt 15 """ '1"'' -1 ·-· n Sch I d I Ft!•l<I ISi' '""e•• ••·1~ ... 1u1F.,, 110 LI s,, )I J.t~1 ... \lF1ct11A, '°"' 51 »'o ss:~ "\' ~-I,, 1.,.,.. 1'14-1\ '-'Cs er w9 ger an N i F''"' a~ l n , T .. ,11 •..,. • ., u1o ... w '° u ,,,, 1tl4 1•>.t -14 Ftiicne s. 111 ,, 21 .... 22, -~ jrw•t.ic•11 1.se ," ...,~ "' 4t -l., lf.rold T Bult' Pro&raon Jl C"'POJ P-.i 01111 1 11 u to ~mlt~ 1 •vi • "V< 1~,. R•..,. JI •11 '~ 11; -•1 1111, Hiii ll<t 20 1,; t t.1 -m • •o 111 '•11'1 '11 1t!10 _ " YY Flt! Ci• ltUll ?l 'Wllt j~w 7'' '°"' unil lll p(IJO 1 »• 1th 311~ -•1 Ftlrfl'IOlll I ?I l \'>II~ lt'\ + ,, JlmW1ll ti ? I J ti ., -1 chairman 15 Re"" Jones Fltl Funo u u 1s 1• ~wtnv r:t 1 ~· i"' url Ind 1..0 It "° • oo oo -'• "•lrmni 111 1 2 ,,,, lt\<i 1,.,~ •i. J1mw 111" ,,,.1 2211 l'I"• "'ti -\\ l!i Fkl Trnd '.IO Mn SI 'ovt• 1"v r ••,,,. ur 1Nor ~ 11 ~\ » o :IO'~ 11111111« IO!t 11 111 6u, -Jlrn\1111! or 1 It\\ 11'4 11'• .. Thr Ne"°J)Ort Center An air pllot orl e ntedF1 .. 111c111 Ptot : ,., •• , •• ~·,~,.a:::;• 111 ~ i:;: :!: 1:tz=~:l'1m11J r1 ., 1• io>1 ,,,, ,g::+1t JoMM•n 1'° '° ~""' ""-'• Cl b •~m l·" 41M""'"' C.I I JI •ll l urrt1t1 • IU 111 111'• 11t•l -4\ PtMIM lllC If "• At .... + •• 1--------------Kl\~an1s u meets everv magaz1newlth1 readersh1pof •nou11 .3'11151111 s1 ~00•1t611u.,,Un• ,11 "12 Hh 11,, 1:l'1<W•11 Fn 1• 1111 11, nu.+1 : 'I d l OO lh I I d ll'ltorn SU l H Slttlmtn F11n11• , -l'AS lntt ltf " t\t p U'o • "on ay a n n 1n e s an somt: 121000 1s now being Vent 111 •n "'m 1nt1 J' 31.1 -... -.,..,111,, JO lll ~ ll~ ,, - I IOU!t:, Fashion I s I a n d , published 1n Ntwport Beach :::~ .. Ji• ; :g 1f~ s1~1~11\" -1'1, '11 t:f"'~1nC:n1 "° i' ~· JJil~ ~ ... 1? ~:::;: l·: .l l? ;~; h"i: · ·~ Newport Ct:nler. Airport News an a1rcra!I ~:: 1~nsi: ,fl I,.. ,.:~ o. 1~:1;_: :~':'&1..MM ,u !.\' "!" M. =~:=~~1·e~ ,,.: ~~ ;t:: :~=.,, and aviation magar.\ne was"•t Mu1t1 J7' ,,. s1oct 11791110 irnps1 I~ CO,,~ 211 lf.,_~FMl'11 1t1 i • 17'' 17\' 1110'· h _, b D Id A' E =:: ~;:. ~fl,llJ 5~;:11' 1"i"M 1~ ~,...';'1 ;11 1f ,ft': ,~1t~ :r.1~. FMSl1nS .o u ltt• u.,, i.-.+·1, pure as= y av p-Flet ,1., J"' ~~mil rt , ~ lf!l!ll:!I 1 10 IMt. 1 h 1 1;..:: "• l'tdfl"•ll tnc 1 "" .Pio 'll'! " B k' Aid person of Cosl M nd F11• ""d 4"' Ttth ·~ 1 ~J ,, c •d~" 'l 11 1 J , 1n , l'.ao,ptSI\' 1 :i-1 :wi. 1('t \1 -•1 all S e a esa a Fl• r.1~ ! 01 s •7 sv11<r Gt 1 4S t 36 1rDr11n 1.so u1, , 11 • :: ; l'ld D•• Ce u t t•1 -I~ Denni~ 0 Shat\UCk Of South "'"" Oltl ti 41t TMlt. A• IO ff 11 ls trll,11 60 I 1)>; ,11J\/t u1, ., l',•1.,•,• •• <1• ~ 11 lttt i,.t•i !,!1• t 1,l K.i\vanians Tab Decker Market Once hypnQSlS was l)nl y an t'nterta1nn1ent n1edlum But today II IS being U!ltd med1° cally niort •nd more In th1 tre11tment of many etuidl· t.ions. There &rt Ael ue.lly phya1c1an~ who are ju1t ape· cle.Jltlng 1n lhe u1" of h)'ll- noall It has pro\en effl't• live ln liUC'h 31tuatlon• a.~ "or.pin~ 1hurnb•1uck\n1J nal -bft1n;, And cxcrl!sh e drtnkln~ And rrCC"nlly 11 was provl"d 10 br a ,.1u11blt &ld 1n lr~11 1r1; n1u1culo 1keletal du1ordrrt 1uch As A Tl!ENS I UPI ) -A aroup bunll1'-of Athenians apphtd lo the °'Ollrldr) 1 ,, I 01 , •• ~., 1 '· • • t ro LI l " ',Ill HI~ '' -•'. "' ,. 11 ,,,,.., • ,.,, -i..8guna l'OUtto I tJ 'JJ .cfll'ICl c t I trp Ch I .0 if 11~ 1)U J:p., -I\ f i:'~t~llll 1: tl l\ n \ 11•\ .+ ~ n. ,_lllwlltl .. t HI< ,. mnhll ... 2 • fh Tht magatlnt:'s tdltor1al "'~~11~n Grr;;i 1 f,11 r:: J: '!'"'Ji :J t~f~\5• .-.:! n ft1• f:1! fl~i ::: !.% ;l<'('li,!. ':f!t •1 • .._ 0"• •J>t -JI" 111t 1ttc11: 1110r1t.1t .._,,,., \.) l'lnd arvert1sl ng officers l re ettr~ i ~ '1H ;~:: l'.' ~f, ~.Y :r.:..cl,-,fl' lll n:! l!'• n~. ='~ .::,..., ... 1i IO ?1 g:~ :i"~ ~ + •. ~~~~,,.*'"<Ill trypn0i1J for mrdical ron-court of Oral 1ns1enct: Thurs· dltloM 5hould Al\\.-ays hr ln day ror le1tllt11ion oC an tht' h•nds of trained tic· orian1tation c a 11 e d tht" Pt!rU The amatrur h,ypno-tl•t eould potentially cause Brotherhood of Tyrv.nn11td num. for thcrr IJ 1tUI A husbands great dee.1 ti'I learn about Ceof&e Rt:puasls, 43, pros!· how tt actually works 1.11d dent of the aroup. said. "we Ill poii'lblot. a.Ide l"ffecll Do d not expolll" yourit:Jf to hyp· are not for divorce and wt o noa111 unll'l!S your ph)'lldan not want to break our n11r· ad .. ltt.1 It r\ages but \\'t art tryina 10 YOU OR \'Olin DOCTOR ha>i.ten the tyranny ~1th CAN PHONE US •Mn you d I need a dtll,·•rv. Wt will da-humor, jokes, parties an p ('· llver prompti:Y without u· ";;;;n;;lcs;;;;';;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1 ,,.. cha'ie. A .,.., '"'"1 II ~e rdy on uJ for their health nteda \\l'e •elcome reQuetlJ: for delivm servlm and c:ttar~ at"COUn1.s ,All LIDO ntAlMACY )11 H..,.... .... N..,_,...... Ml•llH ___ ,,_ "'" ........ .a....n .. ........,, ....... t"ff .. •11 .. .,.. ........ TIUPHOMI ANIWUIN• 1uauu 935.7777 I led •500 rA inc"" I J Tlldor Fd 11 •_1,,o Ct or• 11 I" I'' ••• -14 Fi!NClt'I' ,.,. t.W ••l~ .,._ _ '' ._,.,. -"•., .. ,,.., ....._, "'-now oca at .... mpus ,., ... rn 1 1 +:~ GI 1 rs J 0, c1 'l "' H 1 1 1, 1 •· 1, ... '" '"1' NotJlt" '• 1 '°"t '141 ttlt pfu1 it.di. fl"ldlM. o--&.lwtMtlrrlt tlhlt-~iarshall J Alfaon. u s1st.anl Onvt, adJactnl to lht Oranae ~~,,J''f~1 (;-.:· t IU u"I' ,,:.~ l \1i : 1: :t:111!!J1" .l ill~! .u~ 1;\1 :!:. :: ;~"': ,-:i. j~ th, :~ ~ + I~ WM. d--Otc:llrw ., "" 11'1 ,,,. lllut manager of Bank or America s County Airport cm·~ lj' 'lj n M 1 «1 I " ,11n ;il,•.so ' ·• 1111 -., •1111ers<1 1• 1• ,,.. 1110 11Yi ~ '' 1tMt1 tiflll*N -••It 11, , .._ ,_ II' ilff Pl b b • •meor • t n C~•l11 IM U "'" ln1 .II It 1 • 11•1 :n ...__ :>o f'ltml"" ff 1 1n 11 1/1 • tttc a7.a rane 1n Epperson e d I l 0 r and 1"" frt 1e •I II~ \IAllttl l"llfldl 1111 Far t ~· re· J l1 + 11 •llnll!Glt ' ~\ zr~ )I ""' .l '• ,..,. .... "' t!Klr." .. """' ,,,.. ~ Ne~·port Bt:ach. ma rlts his publisher, i; a former editor Of .,,::i,,'" :fi : :: = 1i·T: ,l ~ !~11 ~/ t~• JI ~l )~ ll~ -!.< :n;i ~~;~ 11' ;;,, ;t ~1~ :!:,~ = :::. -.:' ~.'!!:."" ., ~~ 25th anniversary with the bank t•-1 ,._ I nd 11.,....,.. t."'I 13° k ton '" 1• 1 e~ it • 1~ '.J. 1'1• Ii c .... , • ,..,~ ,.,\ :t:"'· -•• ~ ·-• .... • '-' b 111011c:rava_..,m1g1znea r.•n ~ '·"'I"' v1~ t 4~ 1J :~· 11 j 1 .., +\!"'' r;,, 1. ll" 1111 1n,-t,.,.,1. "''' ll-0«""9., H141 "'°' lhlS mont • ma.n11Jng editor of J Pllol g!D(altr,fi: '°' II ~"it, t1;.... )~~ 711 =~\ ~II 1Jl • 1: o' ~ + i :1:=1 ,.. ;,; f;:! r~ ;f _,.It.di f!'ti.IW .. _,. ... t-0.Cll,... Alfson 'liho joined tht: bank maaazlnr. Shattuck 18 1 'J:, " vn'"'l! t ,1 t,Jn 1 !l •01 ,,, , 11 f : [' 1 -.1• f l• 'C"' 1 ,, >'I ~ -,.. .,. .. 11 "'t• , .. r, •" occ'""11111,... ''-'• as a teller 1n Fullerton came " ~11 Fd u~•v• Inc:•.-•" 1 'T '"] "' ' ~ \ 1 ' -' .. \t"r :i ~~' 1; '"1~ ll14 "'l + '• wlltr dlvldtllft In 1rtt1r.. -Hrw IMr.lo. freelancr. contr1bu\or lo •\•l•·n~r;"<1'~ .~~'f\1J v;:~s i.~!1 :a ti: :;t ~'a1't 14 '0 •-1 i:rrTI,1, J' ,.'f ~\ ~:! a:'~.1.·1 -P11d t11r~ ''''• dlvlfttlol omtltM. ,,. to \\'tslcllffP\1ia1nt9061sa uon and automotl vt:r;"~ •flt ,.,~,1·'•v•11t1"'1 I"'" 10,.,.., IO~ 19 ~· 11 -•1 "'~"' ""~ 11 ,,,,_,,.1tr•M.,,.•ct1ent11Wt1 •.'"1flvtflnf lending officer ind was pro-r-rv1011n u I' 11 •• v1...., •• 4 M 1 su 101 l 1 '• I" ;f' -?o ;.,. ,•n _ 1n fl;: 1j n. -1~ tM•tlnt r-Oec11l'Tt .,. "ld 1t1 1tx. •hit ma1taztntS "11••'"n ft IH21V•• 111111" t tt l ""'dOfn l~c I o '• •-'o •~r.,, l' l'~ l••-•1 moled to assistant mana1er a ., Htrnlt1tn Vllil... '~~ • hMl!tl "'·· I'" ~. .... •. eoot• "' ... , ' 4 11'\o 0 • -•\ rlKlr. •1·~:. t-Jltie •• ,.. t1urlrt1 Tht Newport publ1c1tlon hu 1o1•1 i 01 ''' w111s1 1n 'M 1~. ~m.",J· j ,_ j to +. ~ • ,::!! ,/; '8 \ 1J,"' 1! ',' + Ii 1tn. 11tlll'lli'M u di nlw .,, Q<flvi.t.w year later PrtvlouslY. he "" -· .. served as an operation• ofhcer 'l\'t:Slem slate&. ~1-;.tw:• ... ,: 1i 1:1: r,.~r :~ n ;: ~ =er' M.t ~ ~i '.' I ~ :O:lij '~: ~I ':, • tt': ~ t~i : ~ tllt..(.&llN. --.l:r4ho ...... r-t!Mllv .. attlle\'orbaUndabranch1nd """ G ... .., ,.., ,\OI", •1• ,10 "''"• .2• '• ~' \I-*"" wt.i • 1 ""~ ,,., 4t. """'11111111tt In tutt. ~.fl ... c:r4lllt"t< .' • l.nd'n" off1cr.r at the .i.,.ft. ,.,,.,.~,. 'f(~• 1111 =~jlj' 10 • i.~\,i :r~~"_.;, 1; :! {i:l~ il'', ,, Mlln. .,._,,_ "'"' n-wllllfvt """ ' THE BEST ...... '"' •••l•tT•vwl ·~lft "lli-!'I! b +•~c t"ll'l~"' -East Santa Ana branch ... '""'" ,, nu " w1n•• 11 •4 ,, ,,.. ftt• "'V", l' 1 1~ Ml~ ~\; .•. Frv 11 111 : l'I•, ~~:t =11' •tf'lh. --w1t11 ... ,,.,...., ..,....,,_ ~ I "P ..,...__ J 41 :lo,. '" !tr" 1~ "I 11 "' M-1 00.la 11 1 tt 1' -'O •lilOllt (n Jet I •i 111, lJ~ ~ls'I•~ •1-WMR ....... IW-Ht.d He and his Wife. Cit>Jene. lh•r •11 iilinn11' ''Ii JI•••• 11 :~,~ GF~nl ; ~ t ;: w~\'"'.'.,. ! ~ : :: i'l'~~,111 II '~!~ .,.t, • ,\l :!._ ~~ -Q-' ffl' •ltllll"'I', "1-1" "ftktllotCT or teul.., I'll'! Su dent Streel In An1helm nwh ' ;, •n• ...... woil4 I 1110•1 '""' !'.•• '-'~ '... llHlh II •• "•1 I~ r 11' ' I ~ '1'' -'• Oo\t: c. ' 511 f-1 f''l "" ,.,. -o, lnfll• M "'"' l10f"tln1 ... un..-1111 ,.,,,., e•ll'l•C" ,,,;,, .... ~ II ·->."·~ # ftl • " ........ ll'tl 4" ... h M ! ~I 11 • I " -... roAli Ct1• "° ~ i ,., .. . They have one dsuJhter ~,,1, 1, 1,0 "AllY •rLOT, fir "'' ~,·1 ,., 1u1ft11•1" ''" J " h!"-"-"' f 11 /l:i + •• §•' ttJ J! 41 •1 ~· i;: ... ,1 !_!krv.in, -••,· w_ ... ,_~rttltt "'it-" D .na • n u l""ltt"" 11;.!1 '"'""-t'lt Jftl 111 hl'l l't! UI" 1 It !, tl"<Mlf l' It 2'0\ -''t(-,Nn... Of Ml .... 1ant, ..... '---------------"'flt",.,. J." 1 ii we:rlh ''"" u1 1t11" c•ww • • , 1 , -.. '"'' ,,, , s ~ ,.,., _ ,, ,.,.,..,. ttt11111t11n.,,..., • • • --y-----·-------~--' - Trwnd1y, October 22, 1970 SC ' , • --· DAILY ,,LOT ;fl Leaves Service After 20 years or actlvf! duty service, Marine M 1 s t e r Sergeant Robert H. MJUer, rellrtd here today during the 3rd Marlne Aircraft Wing Awards and Re ti rem en t Parade. A veteran of Korea and Vietnam, Sergeant Mlller now resides with his wife Bobble and their two c h i ldren, Wllllam, 9, and Beverly, 6, at thefr home al 16475 Spruce Street, Fountain Valley. Youth lssured Training Auto D•vtd W. Rt,lkf:k, son Clf Mr. and Mrs.' Charles J. Havlicek of Huntington Beach, recently enllsted 1n tbt AnnY. for three years. According to Sergeant First Class James Long, U.S. Arm)" Recruiter ln c.osta Mesa. David hu been guaranteed training In Automot l •e Ma intenance. Vietnam Duty · For CdM Sai101· Marine Pre. Danie! C. Cox,• aon of Mr. Kenneth F. Col of 2138 UnJon, Costa Me.111a , has reported (or duty with Flr1t Marine Olvitlon, Vietnam. GI Promoted Morine stt. Rol>trt G. Elm1h1eattr, husband of tbe lormu Mi• Clrol A. Jones of Colt.I Mtsa, W11 promlMd lo - his pretent r1nk while Mrvlng It M1rtne Corpl Air Slltion, El Toto . I t" • .! HOUSES FQR SALi ·~-~G~ono;;•;•;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'OOO;;;°";;"";';•;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'ooo;;~;°";;";e;•e;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;lCIOOGono;;;;;;;;';•;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;lOOO;;;';l;°"":;;;~e;r•;l;;;;;-;;;;;;,;;;;1000;::l ;G;e;ne;r;•;';;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;'OOO;; General THE . RE"A"L {) () /} NEWPORT HEIGUTS ONLV .$2&,• 4 BEDROOM 1000 N•wport Buch-1200 NEAR NEW DUPLEX Corona 491 Mar' I 675-3000 " The number to call w~the;\ I buying, selling or" leuina · . ol.inda J<Jle so. ·of 15th st VA No Dow.n 2 BATH EstATE. R' .s PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES $30,700 In mini cond, 3 Bdrms., 2 bath IO\\'er w/blt·ins, Swed. lsh ftp!.. cpts. &: drai>es. Up.. per 2 BR, 1 ba, Nice patio & 5undeck Priced at S.55.500. Call : 673-3663 642-2253 Eves l ~vfne Terrace •2 , Spacious 3 BR. home, ap. prox. 7 yrs~ old. Quiet area. 2Khl:120 Lot. Adult occupll!d. ' Lovely prlv_ patio, SbowJ: J .1 ~ Newly listed-Lot • 60 ; perfect for the tam· ily who wants a spacious waterfront home. 4 That's right! Unbelievable In Th J trees. covered pa.tlo & the excellent care ot this home makes this truly en. joy;ible living, Localed on quiet cul1.ie-sac street • please call us right away on thls good buy. Anxiou.s own- er will even pay yoUr clos- ing costs so you dO no1 have even one peMy move-in ex- pense. Newly painted inside & out with brick fireplace. Back yard patio, dble car ga,rage, automatic water softener. $1100 Down to ht TD. Full WANT EVERYTHING? Extra lge BR., 4 Ba., pwdr, rni. Lge. !iv.rm. Nowpon B<ach. Vlow. Large .ti bdrms., 3'h baths, formal dn.. rm. & den; 3 car garage. Beaut. patJo/garden, BR'1, 'Formal dining nn. associated well • A&kbJe $46~900. 1 family rm., breakfast rm., laundry rin. deck & dock. By App't. Jiuge family rm. with cathe. 'th bit · · t l I I ,dral beam ceilings, 2 fi.re- price $23,000 BROKERS-A EAL TORS 202~ W Balboa j)7 }·1bb1 ~II I\ ,\ Ill IC 11 !' tit: II.I\ I \1 . W~ -m sewing. cen er, ove Y poo For Complete information places + BBQ. Paneling in with loads of deckrng & covered lanai, on all homes & lots, please call: tam. rm. Cherry kitchen. 2 *THE BLUFFS See this choice Bonita model, 1 level home: 3 Bl', 2 Ba, the ultimate in gracious liv- ing. Approx 4 yn yng. Nr all sehJs. $43,500. ~ Vista Caudal. Ruth Seeley Realtor, ask f o r Marge Tustin, 673-4766 or 675-0666. i • . . : l fruit and shade tree yard, courtyard en-batrus. Lath & pluter, eus- try, 1 and even a bomb shelter. AU for CALL: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR tom built. Brick patio, Ter- Newport 2407 E, Coe.st Hwy., CdM : 1 ,65,950. Phone 646-7171 to inspect !!'33~!Do~vo~r!D!r!.,!S!u!lto~3'",!N~.B!.~~~64!2!-46~20~!I rac!d rear yd, -v:on•t Jast. SIMPLY . MAGNIFICENT H"'"'· c.ii m41 '"~5585. Gracious adult living for two can be 11-Go_n_or_e_I ___ l_OOO_ G•noral lOCIO FOREST l OLSON Nichols Real Estate II Fairview 646-1111 (1nytime) AN EASY .WALK To all storeis & markets .. CdM duplex, Li:l\\'er l -BR1 is a complete chalmer! tJp. per 2 BR. Never vacant. App'I. only. 546-9521 found in · this spacious bungalow with * . TAYLOR RQman baths, 2 secluded patios & fire. p lace. ANO an e legant garden walk to the pool a nd outdoor entertainment area. A special property to meet your special n eeds .•• only $48,500. To inquire call BEAMElf~EILING Jnc. Realtqrs 19131 Brookhurst Ave. CORONA BY OWNER CURT DOSH, Realtor : 673·8550 . "WIFE PLEASER" Read this ad completely and consider this five bedroom home on a quiet tree lined street in Ne\vport Beach for only $44,950. This charmer has a secluded living room, spacious family room, and a modern sunny kitchen. Now for the wav of life; the back yard <it's 171 feet across the back) has a fantastic patio, lanai, a lawn, a lawn volleyball area, and a pool. You must see this before you b.uy. Call 546-2313. SUPER HOUSE A roomv 1900 SQ. ft. With 3 Bedrooms, 3 baths, large separate Family Room and formal dining room. Near new lush car- peting -extra large landscaped yard · with tons of concrete at a low, low, ,$32,- 500 -Only 10% down. Pbone 673·8550 to inspect. THE TWINKLING LIGHTS will fascinate you. Th~ fresh ocean breeze will relresh you, and the spacious well-engineered floor plan will please you. 4 Bedrooms, 21h baths, walnut cabinets, tinted g I as s and red brick patio, $57,500. A Lu s k Harbor View Hills View home. Call 673-8550. FOR A MR. FIX-IT One bedroom livable cottage in Newport WESTCLIFF f\fod. pool home with 3 gen. erous size bdrms & great storage, $45,850 DOVER SHORES Brand .NEW & beautiful 4 BR, den, formal din rm. OPEN 1·5. $108,00J 410 Morning Star Lane ''Our 25th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO. BEAUTY fluntinglon Boach H•";, a sparkling one year Continental old home that shOws like a s • I modol. This 3 hedrm hom• pec1a features a huge master bedrm suite, lovely garden 3 Bedroom F R E E D O M kitchen, 2 patios, upgraded HOME wi1h huge 70xllo Jot shag .crpts &: <!Ustom .drps. -block wall enclosed. aean. ~ oversized lot has room sharp and easy to own. $100 for a boat & trlr and is Down + $750 closing cost. beautifully l""""apod wil $20 995 many exotic plants. TIM'.! . , 1 , "-'Ork is aU done lor. you Exclusive with: here. Move in and start liv. Newport ing. Just listed -$35.950. ·Realtors NEWPORT CENTER 2111 San Joaquin llills Road 644-4910 • CD:Ts LEISURE LIVING WALLACE SPACIOUS TilREE BDRM. ,.. REALTORS •• F•iNiew 646-8111 (•nytim•) T\VO BATH CONOOMIN- l UM with huge l2'x24' car~ Open Evenings peted, enclosed and covered . e 962-4454 e palio. Offering BIN Elect. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•! SPANISH •NOR- 5 BR plus POOL Open Dai~ 328 Aliso oven & range, f.ircplace, ra. diant heal, BIN bookshelves, lush carpeting and drapes. Detached double garage: · professionally landscaped thru-out. Enjoy easy living on the badminton courts, shuf:tle board, putting green and pools with 32 o t h e r charming neighbors. $47.00 per mo. includes out.side maintenance and all exterior painting. Relax and live - Full price only S35.950. Newport Heights Big and beautiful. Spanish corner of Beacon M. M. LA BORDE, Rltr. 646-0555 Eves: 646-4579 arches to carved wood dou· J short block from ble-door enlJ'y. Tri -level Cliff Dr. DIVORCE SALE Spacibus 5 bedrm & family1 3 bath hOme on lge corner lot. Owners say sel) NO\V! Submit oHen _ Asking. , , $42,950 CUSTOM 4·PLEX Choice Newport Beach area, 3 BR & 2 BR units -excel- lent owner occupied & tax shelter property, $12,00J Down. $75,000 " PERRON T'J .. •• - HOME & INCOME Two homes on a corner loL One 3 bedroom • • • each \vi!h individual fenced and landscaped yard. Both re. cenUy redecorated and in excellent condition. Live in one & let your tenant m8ke lhe payments. Call now: Only $39,500, Colesworthy DEL MAR WESTCLIFF AREA 4 b'. f'l'IO, bllM, "P"'. d'1", FIXER-UPPER '•rlnkl•"· poo1. •i•"' yan1. 642-6472 Eves. 673-346& lT.l() W. Coast Highway $29,000 Nr schools. You own land. VACANT. 1===1:::::=======:1 LitUe work for a beach area. ONL y $38,500 3 bdrms. country kitchen. G42-l6ll or &12-999& MARVELOUS VIEW Cheecy l.ireplacl!. En j 0 y _.,.c..======= 12001 Bayside Dr. Be au l backyard BBq + Patio. TAX SHELTER.!J'RI-PLEX shake roof l ·sty, 3 Br. 4 ba, Store boat in backyard, al-2 br units/lse bold land. waterfront home xlnt swifui J ley access. A best buy. Hur-$39.500 by owner. ming beach, N~Jy redecor: • f)'! 838-7494 aft 6 pm wkdys $175,lm SHOWN BY APP'l'. DIAL 645·0303 Newport Heights 1210 o~110ov1 GrunDrdy,N RBH.','.,"~~ FOREST E. OLSON 1 =~~~Utt= l ~-~~e~r ~.,;;· ~· ~~;;.;;1 REALTI)RS RENT OR SELL * PANORAMIC VIEW · 2299 H bo C ~1' Luxury Ocean Blvd. Duplex.. ar r, · · EARLY NE\VPORT. n~ BR., Chkriooking Jetty & Hub:r: LIDO WATERFRONT APTS.·320 LIDO HORD NOW REDUCED TO $150,boO-Xlnt T erm1 w/3 garages, on ~. lot. By Owner: 673-8866 * Home)' & livable but needs -=''==;=====;;,==;! work. Asking $24,IXXI • or Lido Isle 1351 ~nt at $175. SALESMAN WANTED . We have an opening for a creative &: knowledgeable 6 .Beautiful uriits. 6 car garages & utility room with 80 fl frontage on excellent swimming beach. Units are newly furnished. HIDEAWAY. Charming, se- cluded home; 3 BR., lV.. be., bltn. kltch. w/BBQ. 'Lge. frpl. & radiant heat; new paint, spic &. span! $32,500 • or rent at $250. •, person who wouJcl like th!! "• freedom of a .smaller oUlce Bill Grundy, Realtor 8.l3 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4620 LOWEST PRICE CALL e ,-..6-2414 ~ .. Nr1r Nrwport Po11 orrlcc PACESE'ITER with large Jot, 3 bedrm & family rm, read)' to mo~·e into at $34,950. I .CN::•.::wC?:po:.:::..rl:...::S;,;ho:;;ro=•--1;,;22:;:.;0 Crpts, drps, 1ull bltns, $28,800 Joan is assumable. Owner moving north. must sel1 Don't pass up UU, lovely home. CaU lleritage Real· ton 540-1151, Open Evenings Large Family HOme 3 BR. & family rm. Near commun. clubhouse. Needs some painting & 90tne clean- ing, Submit your offer on & the advantagl"S of a prline location, dealing in fioer properties. bowORb loweoo Jrr. aealtoa · : 3416 Via Lido 675-W REDUCED Immac • .5 BR., family nn. 45 t . lot street to street. By app't. only. $93,T:iO LIDO REALTY INC. Un Via Lido 67:1-73111 Heights on a 50xl27 foot lot. Rent or live ONE OF THE FEW _jn.lhis.untiLyou.are.ready_J,o.buiJJly9,.,,ur~ .. , ----- charm. Huge master suite. By Owner $36.500 Step-Oown formal dining. Spacious 3 bedroom '.? bath, Separate family i:oom· Large Jiving room with fireplace, breakfast area 1n all elec. large dining area overlook- kitchen. 2~ baths. Red tile ing lovely seclu4ed lanai, roof. Covered rose gardens. carpeting drapeJ built.in Trees. Sparkling JXK>I. Jt's electric kitchen. G'arage oU AAA -it's 4ifferent -So alley with electric eye open. hurry. Call ITI4) 962-5585. er. Nicely landscaped cor- -fQR[.Sf-l-.QL.SON-~· & Co. REALTO{t ffewportBeaChoffice 1028 Bayside Drive 6754930 asking price of $29,850. ~ NO DOWN!~ 6=~ RE~~~t ~"."'~~.°~_l~j dream home. Best locat ion in the Heights for $19,950. Call for. showing. 546-2313. . ALMOST NEW CUSTOM DESIGNED 4 BEDROOM + POOL Executive type home wit h Mission Tile roof. Top quality thruout. Formal Din, ing + Family Room + Spacious r.-ras- ter Bedroom + 3-Car Garage. On quiet street with Park and Schools close by. $69,950. 646-7171 BLUFFS DRIVE BY!! 2150 Vista Dorado (Eastbluff Drive to Vista Dorado). DRIVE BY to see the love- Iv location and CALL US to set the beautiful condition inside this roomy 3 bedroom 2 l)i bath home -gold shag carpet and outstanding greenbelt view. Only $42,500 with excellent terms. Call 673-8550. NEWPORT HEIGHTS CUSTOM 4 Bedroom, 2 bath. 2000 sq. ft. home. Sit uated in one of t~e most prestigious n eighborhoods. Completely refurbished and decorated throughout. Relax under the covered patio or soak up the sun by the pool. Beautiful minimum care land· scaping · makes the picture complete. Total living for only $46,950. 546-2313. EASTSIDE SPARKLER It sparkles with cleanliness, has ne\v kitchen, new bathroom, new. carpets and drapes plus a beautifully la ndscaped yard and patio -alley entrance for boat or trailer -$24,500 -See anytime ••• 646-7171. . . POOL HOME -$27,500 It sparkles f rom the new roof and paint job to the pool. Can't afford a pool - Try this on for size ..• 3 Bedrooms, covered patio, Solar hea ted pool. All in top condition -Phone 646-7171. UNIQUE -·-$23;950 -BEACH PROPERTY ·1 4 Bd. + Family Rm. Dover Shor11 ln7 54S:l#I -- Beautiful adult occupied 3 bedroom 3 bath home with 1nc. Realtors Ownor d"""'"· Book •helv. .,., PANORAMIC -3 BR-ONLY $18,5DQI . SUPER SW AP ,,;n CO'Y don, natural Pol0< VIEW . RENTING??? 4 BR + DR + FR Verd~ stone fireplace, d~ Perfect for entertaining, W I upgraded crpts, drp1, a pa-19131 Brookhurst Ave. * TAYLOR tio & sundeck & a large cor. __ H_un_Ung~l_on_Bo_a_o_h __ 1 ner lot. lt's near UCI with pool, tennis courts and backs up to a lovely park. Asking $34.950 will show anytime - open evenings. ing rm, huge family room, ow! Hanf to believe, Mod. I $21,~ FULL PRICE. PAY-HOTEL LOBBY? BOAT SLIP builr-in. Park like yard. Spanish conlemp, Court & em 3 ~room 2 full baths, I MENT Sl53 illC'ludes ALL, Well, almost! This 3 bdrm., 540-1120 atrium, 5 BR. 5 ba, ~sq family sii.e dining, latest 'I , subject to 6.S annual per· OR., executive tiomr has a Owner will trade all this ·. TARBELL 2955 Harbor ft, hi ceiling, 4-car gar, push button built·ins. Large. centage rate Joan. Two 65 ft. liv. rm_ . .\Loc· on quiet for GOOD lot or Land. Brand. I o ...... i.i ................. I $169,000. 548-7249 corner lot with boat gate.! COATS story, 3 bedroom home with cul de sac. $&11.950 new waterfront home with Enomiou.s covered patio.I • doubl e garage, G"~ bui]I. OPEN FRUlAY ].5 36' boat slip. VACANT. Im-DUPLEX Lew low"· V t F ·• • ~ Universitv Park 1237 • QVwn, acan. a-. WALLACE ins, deep pile carpets with 2242 DONNIE RD., N.B. mediate possession possible. ,. possession. Won't last. Hur. REALTORS matching drapes, 2~~ baths. "Our 25th Ytar'' Valued at $84,500. Bring ry & Call (TI4) 962-5585. : Submit'""',,.~ paym•nt WESLEY N. wh" )OU have and le~ BARGAIN HUNTING? FOREST l OLSON ' -546-4141-lo • TAYLOR CO. trade. HURRY ! ~'ith garages, $26,SOO. See this neat, clean 4 BR., •1. (Opon Evening•I w lk & DIAL 645-0303 w.11 .. McCardle, Rllrs. ,.,, ha. towvhou" with; ... II=~======== I a er L·ee Realtors lBlO Ncwpon Blvd., C.M. 1he right amount of patio Inc. Realtors I NEWPORT CENTER FOREST E. OLSON S48-n29 & lawn; It leaves lots of time 19131 Brookhunt Ave. I Rentals/Leases Realtors 2111 San Jooquln Hills Road REALTORS for tennis, gol1 & swimming. Huntington Beach 1 * 1.tesa Verde Harbor Es. 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 644-4910 2299 Harbor, C.J\.t. $27,900 4J Acres of parks & recrea-..................... ,..,...1, tates _clean, vacant, 4 1..l..'"'~~~-94~91'...!:0~pe~n~'ti~·1_!9~,00~Pl'.''~'.l• ...... iii ... iiiiii ... ,.. .. l ;;;;;~~:'::~:-:~~iiii0 Huge Family Rm. t!onal facll. lor USe by both $21 ,500 FULL PRICE I family. Lse S26o incl gar. Everyone Qual1'f'1es GOLDEN DAYS 4 Bedroona. entry hall , din-children & adults. 0"-1K'r dener. And jeweled nights are yours ing rm, built·il"lll, central anxious to join family out * Back Bay 5 bcdrm, dining, when you buy this homey floor plan. No down Cl or of state. Only S32,000 -& it A.Mume this low inlert'st loan Realty Company l · d family & brkfst nns. $325. three bedroom bungalow. tHA tenns. ~1720 can be sod with small own Optiontobuy @ $34,750or and save. SpacM>ua and IRVINE TERRACE It's unusual, functional and Tarbell 29SS Harbor payment. best oHer. roomy, cozy fireplace quiet Immaculate four bedroom charming -$2500 wiU han-• d h•11 den, plush C'Ptg, a11' bltns, home with pooJ alze yanl, * Professional offices -$84 die. Has formal dining area, SEE YOUR REALTOR re I to $100, near Westclift. 2 baths & walk to beach. A Beautifully landscaped, large living room with tire. FOR YOUR BIG FREE -. "-'OnderfuJ buy al $29,950. Family room wirh \.1-'et bar, t u KIT 54 •• ••aa C 54 •• ,24 h'd d / Ill P ace, exai ent potential, NEWCOt.1.ERS _ all ,,...,.. . 1 f'.away en o ce, brenk-,_1;1n1m1""""' fa st space In kitchen & high UGE REALTVCll beanied ceilings in living PAUL•WHl'l'B AdlmltHI"*• room & maslcr bedroom. CARNAHAN Costa Mesa $65,000. ' •aALTT CO. 1100 REALTY Univ. Park Center, Irvine Call Anytime '33-0820 3 Extra large bedrms. dininrl area in kitchen, like new hardwood flOOl'll, clean & neat doll house. What a buy! No down Vets, low down to anyone. REAL ESTATE lJUNTINGTON BEACH OFC. 894-5311 NEAR THE BEACH 675-3210 642-1235 .,. °"" JUST REDUCED SEE us .•. Great location for this 3 bed-1 -~~~:""':":'":''":":""'lii:=i:=i:=i:=i:==:i=:::Z:=: l093 Baker, C.M. ......,,........., · . For a fine se]ection of homes !!!!!~~~'!"~~!!!!!!!! room home situated on a 1 · E ' ite L "nd I I "'"""""""""""""""""I Now $36,95() -2000 sq, ft. 4 oUered for sale in University GI NO DOWN coun"'-· _ Style Lot w 1th xquis 1 a 1 • Joyous Living EASTS I DE FHA-VAi bcdnn, family le dining. C\,,...,, 4 bed Open 1 days • 8:30 to 8:30 WADS OF TREES, Fann. Plush carpets, l~h cteror, Relax & enjoy life around this Large two Bdnn. home with Large covered patio, drps, Park & Turtle Rock -Per-....... ., nn, 1%. ba. elec \lice kitchen with gas range, imml.CUla~e. condition. All beautiful he1Hed & lillered HRDW. FLOORS and fire-shag crpts, block wall & haps we have the right one kit., lovely crpts & drps. wuher and refrigerator In. t~ amen1t1es of the vecy pool Home is custom built, place. Freshly painted -New wrought iron gate. Excel-for YOU! Jge comer lot. Submit any eluded. WHY RENT? No fu'll'tt 01 Bal'.lront .homes. 4 bedroom l-14 hath. detach-carpets. Copper plumbing lent location near park, ~~~ 1 Monoy Down Gl's or $800 Jll!t vacated -immedrate oc. ed garage'. on a quiet cul-throughout. Kitchen range, school & shopping. Now va. Eves. 968-1171 cupancy -call for further d -1 I Ba k a... ref""'"ralor, nnu'er mower, cant make offer Call Her m FHA. CALL ME. details e-sac su~ n c ......., ·-&~ .,.... -• -•1• 'I Walker & Lee PETE BARRETI ~au;w ""w anylime -;';,~'°~tw:=e'. .... ~: ~~ni~:~Jo .. 540-ll5l,Opeo /:hS'i .t .. i. \ REAL TY 642S200 and grape arbor. Large rear 1,...,..,;,.,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! -• • • 1tea11o" 1-::=::=c::=:::z=::I ~ 146·!1!0 yaro •ilh a""""' fruil WHERE ELSE hi Westorn Bank Bldg, -7i90 Harbor Blvd. at Adams I• ----MWCIMN"-"Jt trees. Alley access for boat University Park XLNT view across trom. golf ., .. ., """~ o-n 'Iii 9 PM LEASE LEGE REALTY or trailer , ........... c. run prioe Day -• •101 N·1•hts course, very lge modi1led 2 11.-0.~ .......... ~ ............ ,. I _ .. _.... . ... _ Monticello condo, \Vhcre elM .._ • B0 3 ba. 17X24 fam m] Near new, 3 king sl~-bed,. .-only -000 '' ""' •6J, ' can,...,., get a beautiful 3 BR, w/beam cellin ... , lge llv rm, BLUFF VIEW nns, 2~ bath, bltns, 2 trptcs, M M LaBORDE Rltr ~v~ ... $7500 DOWN near beach. ~ompletely re-WALK TO BEACH ~ Ev 'S48-326s 2 Ba home with carefree Eestbluff 1242 formal din·g rm, blln bbq in • d-,..1~ '"•th ·~v car-es. POOL for-only $22,7501 See kit, bltn range &. oven, Creal view! Immaculate ""'" ""' .. '~'°'' · 5 d la h bou by Spanish Republic Home. Yes a large five , bedroom lri·level home in lovely Mesa Verde with a separate family room and dining roem . It has the laraest yard in the Afesa Verde area, 45xl54x49x128x 104. U you're looking for a large home and a larae yard this is ill Call now !or an appointment to ins p e cl $53,500. -i., dble :·.·--. $300 Per Near new 3 Klng aire bed-,y, .. ,•• this anytime. e BLUFF e e c gar, open se, ~=~~r 0~~n:t 8:1°~'. ;0• --.~ l'lJl!. 2% baths, extra lge Jiv. 'd -'+~' 1 CALL '-\. '''·1414 ''EXTRAORDINAIRE" O"-'ller, l-5 pm Sundays. L h R I . 2 f' I bl! ' ...., 9 .:.0, 3 Bdrm., family -.• 2" •·. 846-6754 alt 6 pm $47,500 _ $7500 Down. ac enmyer ta ty 1ng rm., uvp aCCtJ. ns, ·•A ,.... "" .,. "" ean 646-3928 or ~ redecorated, new crp111, dble -L-EAS-.0 ..... -on-a1>incscel'lt~t:-2-on An R =not -- garage. Consider trade, vs-REALTY &>aut. secluded patios. Lovely home In front, rental 546-2313. CORONA DEL M>,R ))2 Mer9uetlte 61l,IHO COSTA MESA 2790 H"b.' l lvd. 546-2) I) INVESTMENTS 2784 H•rbor Blvd., Suit• 20 I, Coit a M••• 546-21I6 Experience Elimin ates Experiment REPOSSESSIONS cant. S4S,95CI. Unique Spanish Condomin. Nt•r Ntwp•rl P••t Offlt• $18.SOO 1 ium, 3 bedrms. gold fihag unit n rear, Best H.B. Joca. Colch·Nlll,S.... Sparlding clean homes, some Lachenmyer Rlty carpelJI, arched flft'place, e OPEfll DAILY l·S e BOYD REALTY tion. Illness,' owner mtl!t -:0:.~·. 111!rwly painted A carpeted. 2, Call 646-3928 or S45-34S3 walled patio and all ele<:tric "nl llOld! A&rume 6"~ VA 3629 .E. eoa67.s5t91.!,.~ .... Oit<of liquidate at .$22.~. Submit 83}0700 644-2430 BE A WINNER With The Winners. You'll learn more with our lndl· viduillred on-the-job train. 1ng program, You'll ~lll'n n10rr and work "'Ith excil· inr, pl~nt people. ~k ua out Call todf.y. -546-23.16 O THE REAL ,"'\,, ESTATERS ' . .. 11"S Beach houM Umc. Bia• aest selection evtrl Set thl! tec:Uon nowt ~ . .t A 5 bdrnu1. Some v.1th li=:==:=:=:::::::::;:::I loan. $148 Per mo. Redemr. ,,.. -alJ terms. kitchen. Vacant, owner anx-pools. ~'HA-VA conv. terms, • .,,,., th ( 3 Br, W/W cpts, drpa, Im-KRAFT REAL TY from S.17,000 to $40,(0)_ HARBOR VIEW :-'~~n also one med. posses.sion1 Onty $22,-Corona del Mar_ 1150 842·1418 962.&0ll Collins Ii. Watts Inc. 4 BR., 2~ ba. \\1atnut paneled !M 1984 Federal Ave BETTER TH •N NEWI ••• Ad A ~ 0~-1 ~di f 1 Call:. -Patri~w~. 0 ;0 2300 LAST l_D_U.f.LEXES ~ <)O'O,I am.a ve. ~ A111: •'m.; "· rm., rp c, u.-""" ~ ---S itl'kll Pool (HAF' 2 DUPLEXES Arudou& 001 of t~-n owner! e Bill Haven, Realtor RcdtJCftl -Priced to Sell Thi! &:; "!"" ' • )l~•sa'\(ro, 'J\rnttr 546·5990 $65.000. CALL: 644·7'662. 2lll E Coast, CdM 67J.32ll Weck Only, $&.500. So, of !.. rm1 T Fa~_!.ly Rm 2 BR. per unit. Close to beach. You QWn the. land! $42,500 Etu:h Georg• W illiamson Realtor 673-4350 645-1564 Evos. MAl.TOfll C:0...JN•iylAlmNij NEWPORT HEIGHTS QUALITY HOME Ivan Well s & sons new" BR, .'llOO Sq, fL. 4 bt'droom, 2 1~ 3 Ba, fam ilt rm & P'"'dr rm. __l_'O th. Lease -lt 11se opllon or Cou1fyaril poo . V •: \V. !<.'Ile, SI08,!>ll. RO) J, Wa•d. Rltr.. JEAN SMITH RLTR 646-1~. ()pl!n Daily, I ' Dnt:~-UNES. 642-5618 400 F~. 17th, C.?>1. &16-311).j ESTATE SALE rrlme £..aide IO<'alion near SA COUnb')' Club. 3 Bedrm, hrdwd fin:, ~xtra lg lot & yard. ~tra 2 car go.r. Sell FllA _ VA or conventional S2.i,IXXl. Costa Mesa Investment • 541-7711 OAlt.Y PTLOT~WANT ADS! Ola.I ~78 It ch&tp 1l. · }fwy. Short v.·alk to beach. '-~tom ea!Uft!1! ~t area! CAPTAIN BLIGH lst & Colde:nrod. Fine home Under pr1ced!!I i~ goifllt to ml!I'! chasing rab-~I.: ~ntal. Crpted, sell clean. HAFFDAL REAL TY bits 1n lhc fields bck>w lhis Ing ovem, large rooms. 142"440S cozy 3 br home on estate-Shown at your alnvenlvlct. $47 500 sl2rd ocean view Jot, Tree Call &«-04'66. 1 · 1 M' Id 2' -_ ~·,,. yr o , sliM}t, 6JUU 1q. 1;nro cul • d, • oae. noar LOW DOWN It, 8 """"" + G..,. Room. 11 c h o o I 1. $27,500. Days 9684816 -~~ft!-0~~92'::: ::::::'':::'!• ~&\2.~U'.'.22::,. -BU)'s thls.bc:lter...nJ>ew~ . ..,==--=· =-:,-:=,.,,==I --moin view home. fo.1USI' SEU. 11115 WEEK Open House Dally t-S u-ase/opiion? $5,00'I Down' d BR/3 S.. Owner Aruc'aus! l004 'l"aylor Wy. Ne\\'ly/decor. 328 POPPY OPEN DAILY Agt : 64>1070, 962-752'1 (.!ite! _$27,f(X): Realtor. Unl~l~ lttally · 67J.6.510 O.H. Dittci,Ol')") * * ~ 642-5671 Ir ch&rae 1L 3001 E.. Coast ll\\'Y ., CdKf . Sa~ • DIMrrA.um::s1 1 ' J i Fad Ticks 011 Latest political caricature lo hit th e waich ranks is this model called "Tickie Dickie." Featuring the President, lt will be produced by l9-year-0ld Anaheim entrepreneur Ken Miller. Motto over caricature is "Now, Jet me make th fs crystal clear." Miller plans to become a Republican and live in San Clemente overlooking Western Whi te House. Nixon Aide Seeks Wage Top Priority Speaking at a two-day conference at the Western White House in San Clemente, a fede ral official Wednesday called for top priority in enforcing federal minimum pay laws involving the working poor. Dow1a the Mission Trail County in 70s 'f o Be Discussed Robert D. l\.1oran, regional director of the U.S. Department of Labor's Wage and I-lour Division, spoke to about 1,000 labor department employes. · He told th em. "they number in the bun· MISSION VIEJO -A panel discussion dreds o( thousands. forgotten men and examining Orange Coun ty in the I970's women who need help the worst." will be held on the Saddleback College He said records of his division show a campus Tuesday, fea turing speakers high percentage or violations in the from major developers and government Jowest·paid segment of the nationaJ work agencies. . force. with violations adding up to $89 Authorities on land use planning will piHlion in the last fiscal year. join with students in the two-hour panel "Our obligation." sa id Mor a n , presentation in the M building starting at "becomes increasingly clear in the fact 7 p.m. th at about 45 percent of the ap-The participants \Viii include : proximately 450,000 underpaid people Phil Charlton, director of planning for were lvorking for $1.65 an hour or lesSc." the Mission Vie~ Company; Sadd\eback Forty percent of the others. he said, business instructor Jerry .IJavidson ; had incomes be low the lowest family Orange County Planning Commissioner budget set by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Harold Ekman; student George Statistics. Moran said moSt violations Sausman; San Juan Capistrano Coun- were due to ignorance en the part of cilman James Thorpe ani! Peter Tresselt, ~rqp1oyers:-· ----gtOIClgyJfiStiUctor.----~--·-~ Saddlehack Sets 3 Night Showing Of Follies Revue Saddleback College's annual follies tevue , "A ShO\V For Lovers -Rated G''.. offering music. comedy and song. will open for a thre'e·night run Oct. 28. The production is open to the public at $1 and will begin each of the three nights at 8 p.m. in the campus theater. Tustin student Chris Clawson will be executive producer in charge of music for the affai r. Execulive Producer is Larry Wheaton of San Clemente; Laguna Beach student John Brown is technica l director. : Among the Cl!St are liaI Proppe, Ralf :tteynolds. Connie Myers. Glenn Daniels. .fill Hallock, Renee Dulfouchel , Mark Monroe and Kit McDonough. all of Laguna Beach; Mike Dwight, Jan Jensen and Randy lies of Dana Point; Susan killion of El Toro: Carol Sasoon of Laguna Nigue l, Bobby Stone of San Juan Capistrano, Lou Pellon and Karen Jacobsen of San Clemente and Bob Courtright of University Park. e Halloween l'un SAN CLEMENTE -The annual Halloween carnival sponsored by Las Palmas Sehooi PTA will be held in San Clemente from ·10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on the popular holiday. Games and prizes will be offered in booths staffed by Las Palmas room mothers. Persons interested in donating time or prizes can contact the PTA at,496-4544. e Spook Danre MISSION VIEJO -The Saddleback Valley Jaycees will hold a pre-Halloween dance Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the Mission Viejo Swim and Racquet Club. The $1 tickets may be purchased at the door or from a Jaycee in advance. Refreshments will be served and costume is optional. P1·e111ie r Not Curious UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -Swedis h Prime Minister Olof Palme was asked his opinion Tuesday of the sexy Swedis h film s. "I am Curious -Yellow" and "I Am Curious -Blue". .. , haven't been curious enough to see them myself," he said, "So I can't pass judgment," Nuclear Plant Linked ;To Infant Death Rise HARRISBURG. Pa (AP \ A radiology professor testified Wednesday that the-infant mortality rate had in· creased in an area surrounding a nuclear power reactor near Morris, Ill . Dr. Ernest J. Sternglass, professor of tadiatioo physics at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. spoke before the Pennsylvania Senate's se lect Committee studying nu clear p o w e r "Just prior to the st.art·up of the Dresden Reactor, the tales of Illino is and New York had closely similar infant mort{tlity rates of 24.9 and 24.5 per 1,000 live births respectively,'' Sterng\ass testified.·· "However, in 19&1, a year after the r11pid rise in emission from Dresden, the mortality rate for Illlnois began a sharp climb while that in New York began to ---~------oec1ine, -giving rise to f period when the Illinois infant death rates exceeded those IC>r New York by 2.7 per 1,000 births in 1968. with an absolute peak o( 25.6 per 1,000 births in 1965." -plants-. The professor said he was presenting results of a st\ldy made by fiimsclf and a group of stud ents on the child mortality rate near the plant. The Dresden opera· tion has been generating electricity since 1959 and Is located 50 mile south west of Chicago. Library Friends Need Old Books Sternglass said the Increases appear to have occurred from the radioactive gases release<t, in the normal operatioo or the Dresden reactor. -The-professor-said the 'Dresden plant used a bolling water reactor, which Is not in use at all nuclear power plants. He said a pressurlzed water reactor used In a nuclear plant at Shippingport, Pa., for ' An appeal went out this week for con· example, wa$ not ntarly as dangerous as tr"lbuUons of old books to serve as tile the Dresden operation. lhet'Cbandise Cor lhe annual Friends o! Sterng\a$S and two-thirds or Illinois' , the Ubrary booksale in San Clemente population, about 6.6 million people. livts Nov.J .1 and 14. within a radios of 50 miles from the reac-. -1'6ei!Ven w1JI-behcld"'tn-the*patioo-of-¥t~he4nlant><.MQl!tallt)I rates,J.na~ the &in Clemente Efks LOdge from 11 3nd decrtased accorcUng to the rlst and a,m. to 4:30 p.rit. each of the two days of decline of the gaseous activity released the fund·raisina; pJe. into the air from the plant, he aaid. -. ----·---------- ' Thunday, Octobtr 22, 1970 5 DAJLY PILOT 3 Finch to Deliver _Major Talk San Clemente Dons ·Host . Ecology Stamp CeremonieS .. By JOHN VALTERZA 01 tlle 0.llY l>llflt Still Top Presidential Adviser Robert Finch will make the major address \Vednesday in ceremonies attended by hundreds of officials at the We stern White : 5e commemorating the first-day issue of four ecological postage stamps. Finch, joined by Postmaster William Blount and other top government of· fic ials, will speak to local and other dignitaries at 11 a.m. affair on the lawn near the helicopter pad of the President's offices. It is the first time that an Orange County clty has been chosen for such a stamp issue. The ceremonies will be held one day berore Mr. Nixon arrives at San Clemen te for a visit to be marked by heavy campaign activities for Sen. George Murphy -a visit which will last beyond election day. The task of organizing the first-day . issue~ fell two weeks ago u p o n San Clemente's Dons, the official host grc:.:p for the chamber of commerce. Don President Bob Gannon held a news bric~i:ig Wednesday to detail the plans for the dispensing or thousands of cachets to stamp collectors. 'JlhP. cachets -traditional envelopes emblazoned with an engraved scene and messag~ on the left and the stamps on the right -will be sold from more than a dozen locations. Other specimens of the stamps will be sold th rough the local post office branch -either via post cards sent in advance by collectors or purchasers al the win· dow. General issue of the stamps throughout the nation will begin a day after the San Clemente ceremonies. Gannon said the specific locations for the sales to collectors have not yet been firmed-up , and will be a!Ulounced later. The prices for the cachets will range fr om 30 cents for one stamp, $1.20 for all four (each stam p bears a dirferent eCQlogical message and illustration) and $1.50 for the plate block with a serial number on the border. Gannon stressed that the Dons would handle sales of the only official version of the 1.. .. -:hcts. Private collectors and stamp merchants he added, will offer their own cachets: The "official'' ones , he said , are or the ,llr>:atest value to collectors. Lending perspeclive to the fir st-day Issue, Postmaste r Kenneth Toney ex.- plained that strict rules are set up to guarantee that the stamps are not releas- ed ahead of time. Thus far, he said, 150,000 orders are ex- pected at the post office. _-:.Jfhe· ·Dons effort -is geared ·to-50_.000 - orders for the cachets. Toney said that his staff already is p~ ducing specimens which will be cancelled in advance. Cabinet Chief Settles Gripe l 11 Saber Duel ?>.10NTEVIDEO, Uruguay lUPl l -An Uruguayan cabinet minister and a senator fought a duel with cavalry sabers \Vednesday to settle a question of honor, the minister winning when he opened a gash on the right arm of the man who had challenged him. The duel, which is legal but strictly regulated in Uruguay, was the first fought in this Latin American nation in 12 y~ars. Julio Mario Sanguinetti. 34, the minister of industry and commerce was the winner by law as a result of drawing "fil'st blood" whtn he slashed the right arm of Sen. Manuel Flores l\1ora. 47. after approx imately three minutes of the duel. Flores Mora challenged Sanguinetti to the duel last Monday because of an arli· c\e in the newspaper Accion. which Sanguinetti edits, that had referred to the senator as "liar" and a "coward." Sanguinetti accepted the challenge. and 11 three-man court of honor ruled Tuesd.lf there was sufficient cause for a ¥e~. Sanguinetli, as the party chalJenged, chose cavalry sabers as the weapons. The duel was fought on a 100-by·S.foot strip of grassland on the grounds of a military school on the outskirts of Montevideo. Each of the duelists was ac- companied by two seconds. and a physi· cian and police guards were present. The duel was private and newsmen and photographers were not allowed t.o at· tend, but witnesses provided description. Flores Mora and Sanguinetti wore only trousers and sneakers when they fought, the witnesses said. They said Flores Mora's wound was not serious, and Sanguinetti suffered no injury. Both men left the dueling grounds smiling after their encounter. Re tirei.1-0ff1ce rs Luncheon Scheduled Retired l\.tarlne Corps officers from communities s u r r o u n d I n g Camn Pendleton were invited this week to thls year's retired offieu's luncheon at the bate on Oct. 31. The .11 o.m. program will be held In the area or the officer's mess and will open 'IV I~ a ro11i!lr gJ'Oetlllf"ltom~th . 'CO?Tlmandlng general of the base, Maj. Gen. Georee s. Bowman •Jr. .l.-.::-pite the jump-the-gun cancellalions, however, all cancellations will bear tlle date of_ Oct. 28. Proceeds from the Dons sales effort will go Into a separate fund to be used for local causes dealing with ecology and en· viro-· .. •nt. ';In light of the expenses and the work involved, we don't'-.iiticipate much profit in the venture," Gannon sajd. After the ceremonies at the Presiden· ti:.l compound several hundred major guests will attend a luncheon sponsored by the chamber gr1>Up at the San C!cmente Inn. ;ut cachets will be given to each guest and will be hand cancelled at the inn by a postal employe. · Dignitaries besides Blount and Finch will include RUssell Train, chairman of the President's Envimunental Quality Council; Kerry Mulllgaf!, the official d~egate for Gov. Ronala Reagan and chairman of· the California Water • I • IS. Resources Control Board, plus hundreds· of local and regional government an~ civic le:ders. · Blount will give a press briefing . 4S mjnutes before the ceremonies to discuSs- the special Issue and other· postal maf... ... ters. ''; The Postmaster General then Is ei.O. peeled to remain in the SouUi coast area for several more day s, perhaps ~ participate in a_ctivities with the ~! denl • Bulbs now ••• tulips later. Lily Flow1<Ing Tuilps. Stately tulips in mixed colors for flowers later ... from bulbs planted now. Pkg. 019, 1.19 Anemone bulbs. Your choice of single or double in mixed colors. Pkg. of 25. 69• Ke1Iogg'1 Gromuk:ll. Excellent for retaining moisture, keeping roots cool. 1 cu. ft. bag, 129 2 cu. ft. bag, 198 Ke1Iogg1·1 Nltrohumus, 50 lb. bag, 139 Kelloog'1 Nilrohumus Top Dre11lng. 3 cu. ft. bog, 219 ! Tuilps. Your choice: William Pitt, red; Golden Harvest, yeilow; Queen of Nigh~ black. Plant all three. C-lluthatare delicately beaullful in assorted colors. 1 git size, 119 Beerded hit bulbL Chooee Blue Sky, blue ••• or chooae Golden Gian!, yellow. Pkg.of 2,8" F.-11 bulbl for mixed colored flowers. Riotous garden color! Pkg. of 15, 8K v • J Special! Bedding pllnl cleeroMe. All Vllrfeties ... Ilmited Quantities • .• hurry! 3lrlyafor129 Bottle Brulh. Hardy, handsomelandacaplng shrub. 5 111L lln, 319 enne111 o-ntJve Sequoll Bark for ground cover. Medium, coarae or pathway for border beauty. 3 cu. It: bag. 188 Available at these PenneyGardenCenten:• -· ---_ _ _ Sholl 12 to 5, Suncf9Y, too. FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER • NEWPORT BEACH -- " .. ·- '• .- .. · •· .. .. " ' ' . . . •. • ' i •. -l ; ' • i ' • i i • • I l i I J-- l4 · D.UL V PILOT • .!·"\ (~ .., "' D911J PllM l letfl .1 Flt had .to be, the most expensive 1-Ckle Terr11nce .E. Smith evtr mal!e._Smitll, 27, a Washington State University student who never bef()re. had seen action on a foot- ball field, finally got into the act last Saturday· in WSU's 63-16 loss to Stanford. It was Smith who leap. ed out of the stands and made what one person called the best tackle of the day on Eric Cross who was. in the process of scoring for Stan· lord on a 66-yard run. Smith was wrested and charged with public ~eness a nd disorderly conduct. Mt>nday he forfeited $40 bond on ale.charge. ·" •• • A policeman used a: hacksaw Monday to cut througfl a chain &omeone placed across the main door to the West Lo'ndo7l Magistrates Court, white in Cheshire, Police manning a ra· dar speed check clocked a deer 1 dalloping in fr Ont of a car at 42 milt!t ptT hour. • -;:rhere are no longer any prov\-~pns for mules, swine, geese, and oxen in the Minneapolis· city char· -------------------------------------- --- ---- U .. I T1 ..... le POLICE SGT.' ANDREW DAVIS GIVES HIS SISTER WARM EMBRACE H• W•s Set Fr" When Polle• Promised Not to Arrest His C11ptor1 Black Policeman Freed, Held Hostage Six Hoiirs. ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) -A Detroit couple' released a black policeman they had held hostage for 61h hours Wed- nesday night after police saJd they would not be charged with holding him. But the man wu booked as a fugitive wanted in Detroit. Another policeinan driving the couple's car to ·a police station was shot. Police believe another officer may have mistaken him for the suspects. Sgt. Andrew Davis, 33, had been called to the George Washington Hotel and was told an armed couple had barricaded themselves in a small , room on the fifth floor. Davis, a detective in charge of the narcotics squad, told tile man inaide he wanted to talk with him. The man asked Davis if he was a black policeman and Davis said yes. He was admitted. After Davis lalked with the man, ideri- tified as Wesley Copeland. 29, and his wife, Goldie. 27, Copeland said, "I'd rather die than to go jail." He was Chilean General -· ·Shot . ._,_ Army Commander in S~rious Condition SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI) -Gunmen shot and critically wounded Chilean army commander Gen. Rene Schneider today in an apparent assassination attempt just 48 hours before congre.ss was to confinn Marxist SalVador Allende as President- elect. The anny chiefs of staff met im- mediately after the attempt on Schneider and Jt appeared likely th'at a military alert or a declaration of some form of military-law would be applied until after the: congressional vote. Schneider was rushed to a military hoipital for emergency surgery. An amiy high command communique said he was in serious condition. Lame duck president Eduardo Frei and Gen. Vincente Huerta, commander of the Carablneros National Police, rushed to the hospital. It was the first actual political assassination attempt -.if that is what it proves to he -of the embittered elec- tora1 campaign and ils aftermath. Police said they had no immediate clue as to the political orientation of the assailants. Police said Schneider was shot in the neck but Christian Democrat Sen. Juan De Dios Carmona, a former defenJe minister, told newsmen at the hospital Newsweek Reporter Expelled by Russia MOSCOW {AP) - The Soviet Union is expelling John Dorneberg, chief of the Newsweek bureau in Mosco~. The official news agency Tass said to- day the expulsion is because of "in- volvement in an anti·Soviet provocatj.on. '1 It alluded to a political ·demonstration by young French and Swedish activist.! last week in a Moscow department store. "It became known that Dorneberg took part in mimeographing the anti-Soclet leaflets" the demonstr1tors scattered, Tass said. Schneider received three revolver bullets -in the neck. the lower abdomen and in the arm -and that doctors were op- timistic because no vital organs were bk .. The anny hJgh command issued a com- munique &lving this venion of the in- cident: ••This r.noming at 0815 hours A rm y Commander Gen; Rene S c h n e i d e r Cbereau was the object of a cowardly at- tempt as he drove his automobile from hla home to the defense minlstry. -- "At the comer of Americo Vespucio aqd Martin de za:mora streets, three automobiles intercepted the vehicle in which the anny commander was travel- ing. Its oeciJpant.a.'broke out the windows of the general'l vehlcle and fired Inside. "As a result, Gen. Schneider received three bullet impacts ln the body and w1s rushed to the military hospital where he is at this momeqt in the .operaUng room in serious condition." On Monday a cashiered army major, Arturo Marshall, wa,. captured .by police in ~ession af a telescopic rifle w it h which he allegedly intended to kill thli presidenWlect. Police Inspector Louis Jaspard described him aa a "mental case" who had been mixed up in the past in various military coup consplracieL which never came ofr. Several terrorist noise bombings oc- curred early this month but ce1t5'd after police arrested seven young righUsts, mostly law student!. The score or so of bombings caused a fair amount of pro- perty damage but no casualties. British Envoy Said Alive; Canada fufiltration Told MONTREAL (UPl) - A high·ranking federal official is convinced that kidnaped British diplomat James R. Cross is alive and can be saved because Quebec Libera· tion Front (FLQ) terrorists "now think t:.J.t they are not going to gain anything" by murdering him . Jean Marchand, No. 2 man in the cabinet of Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, also said the f e d e r a I government's crackdown on the FLQ came because the separatist terrorists "have infiltrated our important in· stitutions .. , Speaking Wednesday night on a radio talk show in Westminster, B. C:, Marchand, Federal Mi!Jister of Regional Economic Expansion, said the govern- ment learned the FLQ planned to di$Tllpt Sunday's Montreal city elections with "explosions of all kinds and by further kidnapings or even shootings -at peo- ple." Marchand reiterated the 1govemment's unwillingness to meet FLQ demands for Cross' release, but added the Briton's life probably could be saved because the ter· rorists reel they cannot hel p the.ir cause by furth~r assassination. Croas and Quebec Labor Minister Pier- re LaPorte were kidnaped from their homes by separate ce1ls of the FLQ .. LaPorte was strangled by a chain he wore around his neck with a reli1ious medal. His body was discovered Saturday nighl in the trunk of the car used in bis a~ duction. r. Among phr8.ses deleted from ·e charter recently by the City ouncil's Charter and Legislative ommiltee were: 14To restrain.the .ginning-at-large of horses. mules, ~tile, swine, sheep, poultry and ~se ••. " "To prevent all persons r iding or driving any ox from doing jamage to sidewalks." Nixon, Gromyko Recall Old Da ys holding a .45-caliber pistol on Davis and 1--,,i-~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!iiii!iiii!iiii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~g~ his wife held a .:JO.caliber lever-action ri· I -'[('' ~· fie. police said. Copeland's wife told Davis, "he's my husband and I'm staying with him," .... • i.-Vic Perrott, a construction work-ir who operates a crane a t the Denvoitport Royal Navy dockyard fit England, has found that his cab ~ feet in the air make an id.881 f reenhouse. He has put tomato PJBnts around the cab and is hop- li\g for a bumper crop, • -Police-were removing-33-iUe.- gBL slot machi'nes from a .shop end loading them onto trucks, whm an unidenti.fk!d woman rtopped and pla11ed a quarter machine. She wa.s advi3ect to lt4vt. The incident occuN-ed on Helena'1 main street, I.alt Chance Gulch in Montana. • " -:Jt. was F reaks 5, Cops 4 in a ball game Sunday between ed local collegians and com- allity relations-minded pollce- eli m San Diego. But the game 81 Ie1S ei:citing~ than the cops' ~mpt to get their mascot into e du1out. The mascot, a large ' named s.,.., resis.ted au at- l pll. to drive him underg~ound wound up watchlng from the de of an umbrellL ~ . !oJohn Wood of N~Ollal City, ~-w.11 on his newspaper route rlC~Uy when be heard something ~ ffOll1 a bakery truck in front ·~~Im. It was a tackle box contaiq- i\!5 f.100 which the IS.yea r-old ~P!!Y returnee! to the bakery, 811CePling no cash reward. "I did Pl six doull>nuts, tboa&h," be said. ,, During Meeting WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon and SoViet Foreign Minister Andrei ..,Gromyko met today for a private discUa- slon which the President hopes wil l ease the Middle East crisis and eliminate the posSibili\y of a direct confrontation between the two nuclear super-powers. Before getting down to substantive -bargaining, the-PYe·s1aen1and-Gromyko cbftted, JliniabJy while photographers retord«I ;tllO ~erit · t· \ ' • ' Newsmen overheard Niloii Uk the' Soviet forejp miniatet when he wu last In ,the Presldentlal oval office. "Two yean ago," Gr0myko replied. :·That was ,wnle Mr. Johnson was President," Nh:on. said. "The last time I remember you being here was in '59." .Sitting in o"' the meeting w~re Secretary of State William P. fl<!lers: Nixon's naUooal security adviser, Henry A. Kissinger, Soviet Ambaasalor Anatoly F. Dobrynin and a Soviet interpreter. Gromyko, who flew from the' U'.N. headquarters in New York to' Washington with Rogers, in a Lockheed Jetstar aircraft, told Niloo that he enjoyed the flighl "He wants a Jetslar and we're going to aen him one," Rogers said. · "What's the price?" Dobrynin asked. "We can get a reduced rate 'for you," Rogers said. "It has four engines, right?" Dobrynin '8fd. "You keep one." Nixon reminisced that when ,Gromyko was in Washington for th e funeral of former Secretary of State John Foster Dullts, Konrad Adenauer. the late West German chancellor, ''remarked that the tWo of us (Nilon and Gromyko) looked alike. He s1id we should change places and we would get mere done." police said. Copeland pointed to Davis and told his wife, "shoot him if he moves," they said. Copeland talked at various times with two ministers, representatives of black militant organizations and police of. ficials. He finally called for cigarettes and a black attorney he had met in a previous visi t to St. Louis in 1965. An agreement was reached whereby Davis would be released, the Copelands would not be charged for holding a police officer and they would be escorted out of the hotel. Police brought their red Corvair 10 Ule· front-o('lhe-hotel and left it with the motor running. About 3,000 people had assembled outside, and, in the confusion, the suspects and police gOl jJlto an unmarked police car· while patrolman Steven GeorgeU clrow the Corvair. 40 Y auks Killed On Battlef rout SAIGON (API -The U.S. Command aMounced today that 40 Americans were killed in action in Vietnam last week, the second lowest weekly toll in 41,2 years, while 33 others died from causes other than batUe. The total of South Vietnamese bat- tlefield deaths al&o dropped last week, to ~. the lowest total in a month, g<lvern· ment headquarters said. The U.S. Command reported that allied forces killed 1,083 North Vietnameae and Viet COng during lhe seven-day period, 119 less than the week before. The · weekly casualty aummaries also reported 432 U.S. troopa and 8S8 South Vietnamese soldiers wounded in action last week. Thia was 81 fewer Americans and 13 more So¥Ut Vietnamese than were wounded a ~k earlier; ~.. - ~ain Dampens East,. West • ' i· ·~ I• "' ' t l Warnings Issued to Travelers in Northwest ••1C81lfornlc ., ITio ... I SS UITllNATIOMAL • '.IU!irW.' •Ill wilt! Vll'll ble cl°"" end eOOI ""'-'""'" ....... II'! SOu!Mrn C1Uflnll• ......... etld ,,.., of • ,, .. ....... "'!"""' tflrou1h fllt S.Ulh· f Pl W(lfMl1 P'OTIUlf® \.'.! l'. . Mll.D .., Ir UNITI D Pll:llS INTlltMATIONAL LO<.tUr. t'IH¥Y rtlnJ cenllnuMI 10 IMl'!'llltn fM ltll t nd W11I «ot•ll ~ "''• lltM wrl/\kl11 con!lnuf<f In !ht mld-Ml51!1111!11l lllver V111er 1no m!Kh of 11\t n1tlor! hto 1 cloud <ovt r. "'"'"' '" lncn i ncl 1 ht!! of rt!n hit Atllnllt Cllr, N.J. 11'1 f t!ll·llouf INn lftdlnt tlrl~ tOc11y, In "'' , •• c;llk NOftfl..,..I ~ rtln lvfntd to '"°"' 11 lllthlt' tlt v1tlon1 1nd lrt ..,.ltr1 .,..,,,. 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SOUTH C ST PLAZA nl3 lftlSTOL STIIEET • COSTA M18A, CALIFORNIA • PHONE 540-4068 MAIN Of'FJC!: M01 wttlTTllJl,90UUVMD, LOI ANGEL.ES, CALIFORNIA ' ; ·' • ' .. • -------~--------------------------------~--·------------·----~---~------ Snipers Battle Police CAIRO, 111. (AP) -Heavy gunfire Oared between police and entrenched snipers for three houn Wednesday night in this racially divided Southern Dlinoi.s city, then it died away as abruptly as it began. There v.·ere no reports of In· juries in the shooting that • broke out afier an early mom· ing fire destroyed a Veterans ol Foreign Wars hall. The gunfire was centered along a 25().yard strip between the police station and a black public housing project. QUEENIE , • By Phil lnte rlandl Rockies Crash Prob ed Police darted into the street and, taking cover behind 1..;:::=;::.i;::::::;:::;:::~.Jl!.!::~:::.::~::.:;~::::.:::~::..J nearby build.logs, fired with "Oh, I wouldn't worry about getting lost-- pistols, carbines and sub-just ambushed." machine guns. ________ :._ ___________ _ 1 Witnesses said most sniper muzzle flashes came from near the housing project. They said snipers as well as Police were armed with automailc weapons. State troopers called by Mayor Pete Thomas sealed off roads in and out of town after the fire, attributed by officials to arson, razed the VFW hall. A white railroad worker was stabbed anrt wounded seriousfy by a Negro al the fire scene, police reported. Snipers also shot at firemen trying to e:ttinguish the blaze. In a n o t h e r development Wednesday, the resil{llations of Sheriff Chesley \Villis of AJexander County and his son· in-Jaw, Cairo City Patrolman Steve Thomas, w e re an- nounced without explanalion. In an emer{ency meeting. the Alexander County Board appointed Coroner Donald J. Turner lo act as sheriff . . . Icebreaker ::Oil Tanker ~:Abandoned ; HOUSTON (UPI) -Humble ,Oil and Refining Company has decided to abandon al least temporarily plans to transport OU from Alaska through the --MorthWes£-Pa.SU£e~:hy mew- • a giant ice.breaking~~­ '!-Humble & p 0 k e s m 1~··111- ftoun ced Wednesday the cofn· pany will, instead, commit {tself to construction an SOO. mile pipeline system. The oil ,.ill flow from Alaska's oil-rich J!Ofth slope through the $1.3 million pi peline to the port of Va1dez on the Gulf of Alaska. From there it will b e · transported by ship to the West Coast. Humble sponsored the two voyages or the giant ice-break· ing tanker Manhattan through the Northwest Passage to study the feasibility of using this ship or a prototype to transport north slope oil to the East Coast. Humble has since leased the Manhattan and the ship is car- rying grain between t h e Uni ted States and Europe and Asia. .. , Radicals Take Over SF Radio Station OPEN MON. FRI. 9 A.M.-9 P.M. SAT. • 9 A.M.-6 P.M. -SUN. 10 A.M.""'4 P.M. JOIN THE GLYCINE GOLD RUSH Beautiful bracelet watches-by Glycine. all in 14 karat gold. From the top: With matching 14 karat cial, $295. The link look. $450. Reptile finiah bracelet. $225. Olt .... ~111'1'11td AtMrb~ hpre1 l•nlc.\IMl'k_,.. «Ml Mtllwr Ctlll'tL ... SLAVICK'S Jewc1en SI.nee 1911 11 FASHION ISLAND NEWfORT .BEACH -644 -118.0 _ Op" Monday .. ~ r.ldty ••Iii 9:10 • FOR ALL YOUR PLUMBING NEEDS REPUBLIC "GEMINI" WATER HEATERS 20 Gal ••••• 547.99 30 Gal. •••• • • 40 Gal ••• SO Gal. •••• 549.99 559.99 574.99 INSTALLATION . AVAILABLE GARBAGE DISPOSALS IN·SINK-ERATOR . ·-... , s33sa 1.,. Sit .ti OUl PllCI . , Mod.I Jll- 1 Yr, 6 u•r111!11 M-•llS $4688 .... ,,t.tl OUI Pl lCI,, Mo41I 5SS- l Yr. 6111r111t11 :..~.~.::-15795 OUI PllCI •• Mocltl 17- 5 Yr, Gwfr111f11 INSTALLATION AVAILAB LE • T ........ Octobot 22, 1970 DAILY PILOT t4 Sevareid Clai ms ~~i·utiny • Bet'ongs on VP's Writers .... try to be that: but that ii be free. And that meam, 1n the Ont Instance, freedom from ony and all attempts by the power of .19vemment t o coerce it or int.imldate it or police Jt ln anY way." Reynold.I had commented . Tuesday night that " I h e Agnew aug•gestion ~ ridiculous, I think the vloe prtaldtnt makes· his points ms l ma'.lte mine on the air." r; Smith sald, "I auspect ~ vice president b merely t,,_. to. destroy .the credlbUliy' ·iii people who art obliged tq report new~ that is not alW•Y• favorable to him or the , W. minLstraUon he rtpresent&. ~ • ' . Patricia Nixon Take8 Campaign to Florida . : . " ,: '} .• . ., !o . .. ... WASHINGTON (AP) congressman· who defeated. Judge G. Harrold Carnell ll the . GOP j,rtmary. He's ~ facing Dem~at Law t d,JJ Chiles, .a state ee nator lor''l1 years, wbo gained fame by walkJng 1,000 miles ICl'tl&9 Florida to win hla prtmaijl batUe. • ., ' Tricia Sees ~ GOPSenate '~ '.1 For Father .:1 ----·- .•. Bush mills. The whiskey that spans the generations gap. For 300years, a \Vhiskey from· Bush mills has been with us. Charming us. Beguiling us in a smooth, polished and altogether lighthearted fashion. 15 generations have refined it.15 genera.a ions have sipped it. Theverdict: Near perfection. B ushm ii Is. Fu II of character. But nolheavy-handed about it. Flavor- ful. But never over-powering. Bushmills. It reflects the past with a ligh t and lively flavor that is all today. Compare it to your present whiskey. You ~n~t purchase' ii bottle. One sip at your fj,vorite pub \'(ill tell you why Bushmills has intrig ued so many gen· crations. lt"ls, sl.mply, out of sighL ' BUSHM-ILLS IMPORTED FROM THE WORLD'S OLDEST DISTIWU A lll~DOf \OGJ IRISllWlllS~l(S•N 'ROOf-IOfTlto IM IRlWD. THIJOl.Gl.AllU.U'°.,lltwTQ~I(, lt,f.•ltlt ~ •• • ... • " • ' . ' ' . • • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL P AGE Yes on All PropositionS California voters fa ce the usual be\vilderin~ pile of confusing propositions -20 in all -on their ballot Nov. 3. Some are routine, some are important, some are crucial. Proposition 18 probably has drawn the most atten- tion and tt will draw the biggest prob1em for the thoughtful voter. Basically, it would provide that por- t ions of the sacrosanct highway funds derived from the gas tax and license fees could be used for other pur- poses -notably smog research and control and rapid transit where desired. There are some legi timate arguments against Pro- position 18. \Viii California drivers, for example, ever use rapid transit facilities~ even if they're available? And is it a "fair" use of auto-derived fund s to help solve smog originating in part from other sources? After \veighing all the pro and con arguments, how· ever, the DA.ILY PILOT has concluded it is in the best Jnterests of California to support this mepsure. Vote yes on No. 18'. Other key propositions include these : No. 1. This is the clean water bond law of 1970, to provide $250 million for water pollution control. It's a program or state grants to local agencies to develop waste "'ater and sewage treatment facilities. The Cali· fornia Tllixpayers Association, among other leadership groups, strongly endorses No 1. Vote l'es. No. 5 reouires all meetings of the University of California Bo8rd of Regents to be open to the public. No reason exists for the ·regents, handling millions of dollars of tax money, to be exempted. from the anti· secrecy law applying to other state and local governing bodies. Vole yes. streamline the cumbersome California constitution, they warrant strong support. No. 20. A\lthorizes the issuance or $60 million in slate bonds-(Jor the development of the r ecrea tion, fislf and wildlife potential of the state water project -to the bene(it of 15 million citizens each yea r. An invest· ment with repayment in recreation on 18 lakes and 800 miles of streams and canals. Vote yes. Nos. 2, 3 and 4 are procedural; deserve approval. No. 6 authorizes Legislature to permit stock in'·· vestment of up to ,25 percent of teachers' retirement fund. Vote yes. No. 7 would make Assembly Speaker a n ex·officio member of the State College Board of Trustees \vith voting rights. Vote yes. No. 8 authorizes one additional depu ty superin· tendent of public instruction exempt from civ il service. Vote yes. • N~ .. 10 ~ennits corporations and partner:ships to pay P.reva1bng interes.t rates. Concerns private transac· t1on s only. 1'axes unafffcted~ Vote yes. No. 11 permits State Board of Chiropractic Exami- ners to adopt rules and regulations including educa·- tional requirements for license renewal. Serves public welfare and safety. Vote yes. ~ No. 1~ provide's that county governing body rather than Legislature shall prescribe compensation of its members by ordinance subject to referendum. Vote yes. No. 13 increases the property tax exemption from $5,000 to $10,000 for totally disabled veterans and ex· tends exemption to veteran's \vidow until remarriage. Endorsed by California Taxpayers Association. among others. Vote yes. ~ No. 9 permits the Board of Education in non· chartered counties to appoint the county school super· intendent if voters authorize this. Vote yes. Nos. 14. 15, 16 and 17. These are constitutional re· visioo measures. As part of the over-all program to No. 19 changes penalty for usury from misde1nean- or to Jelony for any unlicensed person who makes an illegal loan. Vote yes. The DAILY PILOT recommends a YES rte on all 20 propositions. "~ND 1\\1~ ll.1\lt ~ ~O t~~~ l'tll.lll(,11.~S FOR fiLEllSION.'" Laws Do1a't Solve Social Prohle111s Enforcement is Resisted WASHINGTON -An unremarkable diseovery has been made by the U.S. Commisson on Civil Rights. The passage of laws does not correct social probleins. one.· reason laws do not correct social problems, and prob- ably the least im· portant reason, is ineffective enforce- ment by federal aeencies. Often the greater reason for in~Uective enforce· ment. as has been di scovered time and -again, is pubHc re-.a. sistance to their enforcement. Thal is certainly the case with th e numerous laws on civil rights which have guaranl.eed equality of treabnent to people of all rolors, race~. religions and SC:IC. It is usefu l and clarifying that the com· mission has actually studied the ex· ecution of a set or laws by -10 departmeots and agencies of the federal government. If a commission were now to study the execution or anli·poverty programs in the same spirit the same conclusion would undoubtedly be reached. THE lJST OF PROBLElt1S in fairly re- cent limes which have not been solved by fe deral legislation is v e r y long and dispiriting. It begins with prohibition, runs on through the farm problem , the unemployment problem, lhe welfare problem, and the civil rights problem. The fann problem is especially in- teresting in this respect. Numerous laws \\'ere passed, ambitious schemes were ef· fectuated, $50 billion and more was spent, f -- Richard Wilson total civil righls program is or the role they shoUld play in carrying it oul." BUT TO BLAME THIS on the Truman • -4. " :-.administralion. the Eisenhower ad- n1inistration, the Ken n e d y ad. ministration, the Johnson ad1ninislration or the Nixon administration -in all or which ad vance s were made in civil rights legislation - is far off the mark. but the fann problem was not solved. It solved itself and does not exist anymore in the form that was deemed to require such immense outlays of money and so many programs of control and regimen. Lation. Tbe fann programs in their tin1e did cope with a condition which existed, an'd it wa s an explosive condition Politically. BJJL J.IJe. progranl.s persisted and still continue long .after the con- ditions they ~-ere designed lo correct vanished. NON.COMPLIANCE, in the phrase of the time, was a substantial factor in the failure of fann programs. Those pro- grams were wholly economic i n character but when the social issue becomes I n v o I v e d non-compliance becomes more subUe and widespread. There is no induceni ent for compli ance, only punishment for non-<"'ompllance and that Is one of the weaknesses of the civil rights Jaws. They depend in large part on moral concepts. So it is that apathetic government agencies find themselves u~ual to non· compliance, and the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights can credibly say: "The most serious flaw in the en· forcmlent effort has been the lack of overall dirtction and coordination whi ch has resulted in agencies operating in- dependently ~·ith little recognition or understanding of ~·hat the government's There is. in fact, no American con· sensus on the goals of a total civil rights program and that is why no pres ident has ever been able to define it except in vague generalities. • The nearest any~presidenl has come to this was President Nixon's long and little read treatise earlier this year in which he supported neighborhood schools and quality education. The Nixon doctrine on race and social status does not appeal to ci\'il righls activists beca use he said: ''We cannot be free, and at the san1e tim e be required lo fit our live~ into prescribed places on a rac ial grid - whether segregated or integra ted and whether by some mathematical ronnula or by automatic assignment" THE U.S. COMMISSION on Civil Rights veers toward the mathematical formula and automatic assignment, and because federal agencies cannot, or will not, enforce the civil rights laws in this manner their efforts are found to be in- effective. There is no better illustration than the "Philadelphia plan'' for Negro employment in the construction trades which has been pushed by the Nixon ad· ministration to the full extent of its abili· ty without the desired. and expected results yet. Private Drah's Peace Plan "HI, out there!'' Private Oliver Orab, :\78-184454, shouted over the sand-bagged parapet. "l want you to know I've ceased." •·You've ceased what, Drab?" inquired Ca ptain Buck Ace politely, lapping his boot with his swagger stick. .. I've ceased fir· ing, sir," explained Private Drab. "l feel that in these critical times it's the duty of every Amer· ican to support his or h e r President. Don1t worry, sir, the PresidenL can count on mt." "'Ibe Presiden t. ~ soldier,'' said Captain Ace, scowling, "Is countlng on you for one thing -to zap the enemy and iap him good.'' "OH, NO. SIR, haven't you heard? The ----- Thursday, October 22. 1970 T-• •ditoricl poQ< of Ille Doilv Pilot seeks to iuform 011d s!lm· tdote rtoders b11 prt".stntfng thil Mwspaper'1 ophtio-n.s and com· ~ntarv cm topics of intert .s& end 1ionlfkance, bu providing a for um for the ezpre.sst"" of ot.1 r readers• opinlo11•, -and bu presenting the divfrie view- poinu of htformed obstrv~r.t and -1polceimen on r.oplcs of th• day. Robert N. Weed , F'tlbllsber ( ' ~. Art Hoppe President's finally unveiled the secret peace plan he promised to unveil richt after the '68 elections. And it sure was ~·orth waiting for. It's the best peace plan in years and years. He wants me lo cease firing, stand still and gradually ~·ithdraw mysell. t don't know why somebody didn 't think of It before." "You been .smoking that Saigon pot, Private?" "Oh, no sir. I'm just following the President's wishes. First t ctned fire, then I stood still and now, sir. 1'11 gradually withdraw," said Private Orab, edging toward the supply road. "So long, Captain, It's been a great war and ... " •iDAMN IT, DRAB, get your rifle butt back on the firing line!" "But the Presidenl, sir ..... "Loolt here, soldier, the President doesn't want you to cease fi ring. lie wants the enemy to ceaae firing." "Oh, that's exactly what I want, too, slr," cried Private Drab enthuslastleal\y. "Frankly, I've got nothlna agai nst firing at him . It doesn't bolhcr me at 1111. tr!I h1m Hring at me that counts. You 1';now this thln,i I've got 8bout not wanting to get killed ... And I'll bet he feels prelly much the same. So .•. " "Oh, shut up, Drab. You 'll cta6e firing 11.•hen he ctases llring and not e. minute befo~" ''OH. l DON'T ttUND btlng lil"$l, sir. I mean If the Priu;ident u•ants re11re so bad , wh.11 t am I shooting al him for allj'Wl)T!" "Your job, 50Jdier, Is to zap the enemy and keep zapping him until he agrees to a cease fire.'' "You mean I'm shooting at him to make him stop shooting at me? Gosh. sir, that doesn't make much sense. Ir I had my choice ... " "You can have your choice, Drab.'' said the Captain coldly. "Ten hours on the firing line or ten years in Leavenworth.'' ;,WELL. IT STILL seems to me like somebody's got to stop firing first." Private Drab saJd that night to his friend Corporal Parti as they crouched in a rainfilled foxhole. "Everybody ought lo see that." "Oh, they do, Oliver," said Corporal Portz, ducking as a machineg un burst whistled overhead. "They even agree on who ought to stop first." "Who's that ?" 1'he Corporal pulled a pin with his teeth and heaved a grenade out into the darknen. "The-other side ," he said. Dear Gloomy Gns: Gre~ght pollution with !he processes of chlorophyll and photosyn thesis. so people who never water their lawns ''to 5al'C water and money" are all \\'t t. At the same Lime-, ~·e shouldn 't w11ste v.·a1cr by running hoses nll 1\IQllt. --T. t-1. rlu, •••N" •fl!tct' rou''"' -1•wl. ~•• ~t(~Hlrl!J !~ell DI I~• MWll'l .... f, ilflf .,.ur 1111 lttVI " OMIOlftJ G\I,, Ot l!J 1"1111. .,.::• .. Invasion of Men 's Clubs By Wonie11? Editoriai Research "f irst, it's the tap room. Then the bil liard room. Then the card room. And eventuall y, it'll be the men's room." So spoke an u n r econs tru cted ma\e. ·chauvinist during a recent debate-at th e National Press Club on the question Of admitting "·omen members. "This is a men's club. Il's alv.•ays been a men's club." But from the other side co mes the .11rgw11ent that "this is an issue we have skirted too long.'' And with it is the warn- ing that action should be taken before "we hear from the Women's Lib l\fovement" and veiled threats of possible la1v sulls on grou nds that discrimination violates the 14th Amendment. THE ATTEMPT by women journalists to gain me mbership in the 62-year-old press club is part of an all-OUt assault on male exclusiveness in Washington that runs fro m Stag bars to· the prestigious Gridiron Club. Some newswomen put on t?;vening dresses last March to picket the Gridiron's annual '"hite-tie dinner at which President Nixon and his ad· ministration were roasted in song and verse . "Sexism is not sexy," proclaimed one sign. The club as a place for eating, drinking and socializing developed in mid·l7th Century England out of the coffeehouse. As they spread through London, the col· fee houses gradually acquired different kinds or customers. Some catered to lawyers. so me to merchants and others to military officers and literary men. Slowly, they became priv8te clubs \.\'ith the older members selling fees and pass· ing on admissions. \\'HITE'S, THE oldest sur\'iving Lon· don club, was founded in 1693. and at last report had an 18-year waiting list. In the 18th Ce ntury, many clubs, ~·hich had divided along political lines. were centers for gamblihg and other forms of high life. Some served as hideouts \\'htre members could escape their ~·omen folk. The im· age is of deep leather cha irs, oak panel· Ing and easy conve rsation punct uated by the tinkling arrival of lresh drinks. London clubs have their dis tinctions. The chief tradition of the Travellers' is that members do not talk to each other. Bul al the Beefsteak. conviviality is the thing \\l ith members speaking to each other v.'ithout introductions. \Vomen·s cl ubs did not come along until 1883. when the Alexandria, \\'hich excluded 1nen fro m the premises, wa.s established. Even the future King Edward-VII waS forced to v.•a\l outside for his wife, Princess Alex· andria . FEW '''O~I EN wom.o want to join the National Press Club because of its decor "'hich reminds some visitors of a vlntai;e 1927 railro3d car. But the club doe!I S!).)n"or luncht.'Ons which leading of· ficials and foreiGll visitors believe to be an important forum lor getti'ng their views across. \Yorking newsv.·nmen are admitted as i;:u ests to these afralrs but ,they leel the door could be ~l am med in their faces al 11ny moment while the public relations men "'ho make up a sizea ble pnrl of the mcmb<!rshi p would sllll be welcome. "f don't.. ~·ant to drink in lheir bar~" says ~1nrianne ~leans, the columnist. "But the problCHn I~ lhat sometimes they close off e.u.sy access to sources that others, my competi tors, have." • Money-making Is Isolated ·Talent ~1ore nonsense has been written on the subject or money than on any other sub- ject in the world, except love. Whilst, in company with the best philosophers, I am ignorant• about love, I have studied the ::;ubjcct of money and think I understand it pretty well. The reason some people can make money and others can't has absolutely noth ing to do with the virtues and vices ascribed-10-them. 'A-- man who knows how to get rich is not brilliant, forcelul , courageous or super- ior in any way lo his fello w men; neither is he crafty, di shonest, depraved or in any way inferior. THE ABILITY TO make money is oin isolated talent. l.ike being able to wiggl e your ears , and deserves no more praise or blame than this. Some persons are naturally gifted at turning one penny into two : others are remarkably consistent in lo.~ing the fi rst penny. ll is ridiculous either to revere or despise the rich. All the platitud~s on the subject are worthless: persel'erance and honest toil will not make you rich, and dishonesty is as likely to land you in prison as in a penthouse. THERE IS ONLY one axiom I am -r (~y,d~:;·,J. ~a~il ·'I ' ' "-· ~ ' '1' • reasonably sure of: lf you want mone}' hard enough, if you want it more than anything else in the world . and to the ex- clusion of everything else in the world, you will get it. The price you pay will be high, bul u ... ·fanat ic is-willing. •.• . The only thing the moneymakers have in common is the intense desire for money as an end in itself. They are dedi cated to a cause, and when lhi.s dedication is combined with the peculiar talent for acquisition or material things, success is sure to be theirs. IT IS AS FUTILE for people like me to try to get rich as it is for an armless man to paint a picture. Misery and frustration'. awa it those whose ambition exceeds their abil ities. The only sensi ble procedure is, lo ded icate our~elves to other values and find happiness in them. The earlier in life we leam lhis lessori the more contented we will be. Lacking the concentrated sense of avarice (which is more of a curse than a blessing). we can free ourselves to conce ntrate on the pursuit of truth, beauty , love and friend ship and the other consolations of human life. Panthers' Law Firni WA S HINGTON -Arnold a nd Porter. th e big Jaw firm of 1vh ich former Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas v.•as one of the founders, is representing the Marxist revolutionary Black Panthers in their fi ght to force the D. C. Armory Bo!1rd to permit them to hold the next round of their "Revolutionary People's Conslilution:il Convenlion'' in the Na· tional Guard drill hall. Original name of the Jaw firm ~·as Arnold. Fortas &: Port er. Only remaining partner is Pa ul Porter, New Deal brain· truster and chairman of the Federal Communications Commission in the 1'ruman Administration. Se nior partner Thurma n Arnold, an assistant attorney general and federal judge in the New Deal, died las t }'ear. Fo rtas sought to return to the firm aft er being forced to resign from the Supreme Court. But, although strongly supported by Arnold and Porter, that '!as decisively rejected by younger partners. t-.trs. Fortas, a cigar·smoking ex pert in tax Jaw. is still a member of the nrm, and insiders say is now the principal partner. She' has a staff of some: 20 at· lorneys working under he.r. \Vhy Arnold &: Porter took the nolor iou:i; Black Panthers' case: is known only to them. \Vhen quer ied, spckesmen declintd to discuss the matter or the Black Panthers' violence and murde r-scarred rea>rd. The first meetin g of the Black Pan· thees' "constitutional convention" look placti tn PhUadelphla In September. Numt:roUJ Communists participated, and most of the rhetoric and avowed plans Wert heavily Communist tinged. SOCIAL NOTES -Inside word on swank e1nba...uy row Is that the Earl of Cromer will be the next British Amba5sador to the U.S. T\\·cnty years ago, he was ~tationeti In Washington as economic minister of lhc embtissy. Later. he \Vas named a governor of the: Bank of England, one of the youoaest to hold that A!)en·Goldsmith \ !).)Sition ... Dr. Arthur Bur ns. chairman (If the Federal Reserve Boa rd, is an amateur painte r. He carefully disclaims being an artist. pointing out his painting includes doing chores about his home as ~-ell as pictures. Says Burns. "When !here is no painting to be done on the house, furniture or other th ings. I try my hand at a picture." ... J oe Kenned y, JS. year-old son of th e late Senator Roberl Kennedy, has let his hair grow to hi! shoulders. Chided about that. he claims he intends lo "trim it after Uncle Ted is re-elected." Asked whal he'll do If that does n't happen, young Kennedy looked starUed and shook his head. B11 Gt;orge ---, Dear Goorge: We read lhc complaint of the husband who .said he didn't gt l fed as well as hi.s dog since his wife started going to women 's lib meetings. Whal kind of a man Is he. anyhow, to put up with this? Our wives go to lib meetings. hut if "'e didn't get fed a.s well as our dogs v.·e v.·ouldn't put up with it! (All you have to do. we\·e found . 15 heat up that dog food that makes it.s own gravy. Yummy!) NO NAMES PLE•SE Dear Nameless: Yeah -well , It's 1 good lhlng we have husban& like you guys lo show the dl!ft.rencc between men and mice! (Mice never havo nice hot dog food: just crumbs and a ht· tic cheese.) 1 \Vhy keep your v.·orriPs to yourse U "'hen simply by wr iting la George )'ou can worry mnllon.s?) • ·-~·~·--·----.,-.-----,......,.-------------------------------.,--~----· • .-• CHECKING •UP• ,.Pl"-fimr Fair Mad~ I"' . . ' . $31·2,012 In Profit > :: 1,200 Americans SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A profit of $31.2,012 was netted this year during the 20-day California Expasltion a n d Fair, Gene_ral Man ager Thoma'.s E. Bai r has reported, l(illed in Riot 'l1le total was $64,000 higher than the figure for 1969. IF NO MORE than a filth of Penn's in Philadelphia ••. Q. the sky is cloudy, the "How big is an elephant's weatherman is authorized to heart?" A. About lhe siz.e al a call it clear . • . TEA WAS 45-pound pumpkin. Bair said revenues totaled $1 ,949,918, up $158,000 from last year, while expenditures were $1.637,906. Horsttacing brought in the most revenue with $864,030. Dair ~id this was fo llowed by ONCE pronounced tay, but CREDIT MR. SHAKES- you and 1 weren't around then PEARE also wiUl creation ... FOR EVERY SIOO you (If such commonplace spend on a TV set, you'~ expressions as "It's Greek to spend anolher $20 to keep 1t .. "th d fixed it's said , .. THOllGHT. me, e gr e.e n -e Ye N J d admissions, $563,321; carnival, ew u ge $230,000 ; concessions and com· mer c i a I exhibits, $197,486; P F• par.king, $77.451 ; and ays me mlseellaneoos, $17,623. vov'might want to know your .. monster," "Give the DevU his brain is about six times due" and "dead as a heavier than yoUr kidneys . . • doornail.'' ••. FA.CI' THAT a Mr. Watts works for the elec- tric company at Oak Harbor, Wash., certainly qualifies him for the Proper Job Club, does it not? ... IF YOU WANT to lose weight, go to Key West, Fla. Pull of gravity there is Jess than anywhere else in the country, i~'s said. Horseracing had a HANFORD (UPI) -Ne~1ly pa f i mu tu e I handle of appointed Justice Court Judge $8,393,513, up $&00,000 thl! S. c. Dittmar Jr., \vound up year. The daily average was his first month on the ben ch about $600,000. AN EXPERIENCE D HUNTER says an undisturbed deer never, no never travels &lra~ght downwind. AM ASKED how polatoes came to be called spuds. Hasn 't that come up before? Anyhow, some Irishmen, who thought potatoes were JXlisonous, organized an oulfit called The Society for the Prevention of Unwholesome Diet. SPUD, for short. ''Eat potatoes and die!" That was th eir cry. But the citizenry laughed it off with the nickname. SPRING is for Oower.i, sure enough, but this time of year belongs to the trees. When the complexion of all those crowns turns fiery, like the fever before the chill, and the ailments in the wind trim the branches. and all the barks go dark under darkening skies, the line that comes to mind is Willa Cather's: "I like trees because they seem more N!signed to the way they have to live than other things do." CUSTOr.1ER SERVICE -Q. "How many of the 13-year-old girls are wearing lipstick now?" A. Hereabouts maybe 70 percent ... Q. "Where was the first brick house built in this country?" A. First en- tirely of brick was William by paying a $2 fine Oii his own The general manager said racing license fees to the state delinquent parking ticket. rose by $30,000 to $419,676. Dittmar sa id he had forgot-Bair said the fair attracted ten about the ticket Issu ed 942,691 pe rsons for a record Aug. 6 until his clerk noticed it tot.al. The number was 95,265 TIME AND PLACE of the in department of motor vehl· higher than last year's show. Nation's worst riot -that's cle records Friday. "The 1ncrease in attendance what a subscriber wan ts to He paid the fine saying that reflects the £air's Stead., In the rush of business of his J know. During July of 1863 in new position the ticket had growth at the Cal Expo site." New York City it was. About slipped his mind. Bair said, "It was certainly 1,200 people got killed. ln four;;:;;;;;::========; the most successful ooe we days. At issue was whether have had. civilians ought to be drafted THE BEST "A survey of fairgoers has into the anny .. _ IF YOU R.1d.nflip poll, prov• "P••-revealed more people from out ARE 48 years old, you were nuh" i1 on• of t~. worlol'• 11101t o~ town attended than ever born at that time \\'hen cigar· populi, c.omic. '"ip•. R •• d it before, a most encouraging smoking was at its most '-:::d•="='='"="='=D=A=IL=Y=P=IL=O=T=. =~.:s~ignc:·_" ________ / •****************** popular peak. Songs yourl • mother and dad ~·ere singing that year were "Carolina in the ~1orning," "My Buddy" and "Three O'Clock in the Morning." GET IT RIGHT -Did I say you can pave a road 40 feet wide and 1,850 miles long with a billion pennies? Those dirty decimals! Mae it 100 billion pennies. Your questions and com· mrnts are welcomed and will be used in CHECKING VP wherever possible. Ad- dress letters to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Bo% 1815, Newport Beach, Calif., 92660. MERCURY SAVINGS and loan association NOW Ol=IEN EVERY SATURDAY 10 A. M .-4 P. M. Open Mon.-Thurs. 91.m.-4 p.m.; fri. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. BUINA PARK Mercury Savings Bldg. Valley View at Lincoln ********* Mercury Savings Bldg. Edinger at Beach ******* P'd. Pol. Adv. -·---------------- <a·mir'i-ki> noun.: h ~ry, war, riots, burning, killing, bo egregatlon, pornography, poverty · , olerance, prostitution, diction. A·MER'ICA (a .mir'i·ki> noun: freedom, equality, opportunity, justice, choice, hope, compassion, strength, . . change, brotherhood, courage, accomplishment, work, peace, pro1ress, people. WHAT DOES AMERICA MEAN TO YOU? Join Senator George Murphy in .taking what's good about this great nation and using it to make .an even better America. RE-ELECT SENATOR GEORGE MURPHY A man who · cares •••• who works hard •••• and believes in America. Jt•11 l_. & Vic: ... ,.... C..c)91,_ o,..... eonty C•Hftinil-tot M1tplty C1111•n. hyel c-11 I•, A..ti.l111, C•. 101SW.hll,~m Thursd.IJ', October 22, 1970 ' ' ' l ' • • ' 99 • OOreg. 135.~0 SAVE 36.00 .ON CREST 2-PANT SUIT What an opportunity! B,uffums' Own two-trouser suit has !he new lon g body shaping of today. Expertly tailored with wider lapels, deep pocket and back center vents. A fine selection in luxuri- ous wool worsteds, ~;n soft heather tones of blue, brown, grey or ol ive. A great buy. , , come in , , • try one on! 5.99 reg. 8.50 STOCK UP NOW ON CREST DRESS SHIRTS 'Buffu ms' Own' superior permanent-press shirts ore made to our rig id specificat ions. "Bromley"• semi-spreed collar. French cuffs, fully-aJt body, 80% polyester/20% cotton. Blue, gold, brown1 14Y2-l 7. "Charisma": long point collar. double- button cuff, tapered body cut, 50/ 50 blend. In you r choice of blue, gold, bronze; sizes 14\7-1617. Sole ends October 31st] Store f« Men ' . DAILY PILOT 7 • • • ' ' t t N1wporl II F11hlo11 hit~ f\11.-rrt C.11t•r e "44·2200 e M•"·• Thur.., Fri, 10:00 tlll t :JO: Other cfe't'I 10:00 Hll l1JO -l • -- . . . . -~ . . . . I llAltV PILOT Thursday, O<tobtr 22, 1'70 · 2 Million Left Homeless in Mideast Wars By PHIL NEWSOM .. '. Ul"I , ...... Ntw1 ,t,Mb'll 'lbe Jordanlari woman look· eel out acro11 \he wall dividing old and new Jerusalem. Poin- ting • .she declared: "Set! 'Ibat is my bouse." A simple 1tatement of fact. lier ho111e. 1· , As 1f &be would return to 1t l lhat nigbL ' , She woold not became llbe f <Was an Arab refugee and what ! •)tad ~ her bouse now was a l)art <i brael ~ She was a bit or Middle East ,ftotam cut adrilt by the first Arll>Tsni<ll war In 1948, Jumpo11 to more than I00,000, On llloy lll, 1948, the Jewish refused permission by lsrael went from tllere to more than Stem gang killed Count Folke to return to her home , l,000,CIOO and after the 1967 Bern ado t t e • the U.N. manipulate<! as a political tool ' to than 2 000 ooo b sta war more , , . -·"·tor by the established Ara tes, l~ • an object of oceasonlal con-As of tM 19'7 war, U.S. aid 'nlen, after the third Arab oern by the wealthy among alone to the Arab rtfugea bad defeat bt open warfare in 1967, the United NaUons who coo-come to ..,.., million. And DO came Al Falah and the lributed to ber relief and aolullan yet In oljbL Rwoala, Fedayeen, th e Palestinian hoped that eventually abe and Incidentally, bad coolributd Arab commandos pledged to be prob! Id y J!Othlnc. Dght their own µnderground r em woo go awa · · Nor was ·~ to be an _ _. war ·and to drive Israel into On that sunny day when she ~ - pointed across the wall, the to tbe Mideut chronol<>IY 1ll tbe sea. third round of the Arab-braeli violence. · Ill tbe light o! history and war sun was to be fought. July 22., 1M6, saw Jewish the demonstrated depths to When she fled her home in Irgun ellrentists blow up which both Jewish and Arab 1948, her number was British headqua,rter1in ~.can be aroused over estimated ~ 300,000. Jt quickly Jerusalem's King David Hotel. 8 lancf°bbly to both, it MJemS ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . 2666 HARBOR BLVD. 546·7080 . COSTA MESA WEEDAYS 9 to 9 ' . SATURDAY SUIDAY 9 to 6 · ' almoat incomprehensible now that Jt took a civil war Jn Jordan finally to coovlnce government.II that without a settlement of the refugee pro- blem there can be DO Middle East peace. Egypt's President Gama! Abel Nauer, before his deoth, <ame belatedly to tbe bellel that tbe Palestinian refugees, their spark o! hate against Jsraet fanned by Arab pro- 'paganda and fed by depri••· Uon and ·squalor, suddenly had become a force not anticipated by eslabllsbed Arab rulers. The commandos led by I Yasaer Arai.t bad become the new beroel. No. map allowed a Palesti· nlan Arab state. But In tbe minds <i Palestinian leaders it bad taken form and subslmce. Tiie Palestinians eannol win the war agaln5I Israel. But they can be<ome tbe destro)"1'1 of the pe-. From this reallzalloo IJas come a dfclafon to take a new look at .. old i>roJ>Oaai -the posslbWty of a PalQltne Arab lllate, eltber }ndepeodent or linked with Jordan, with an avenue to the sea through Gasa. S-pecial 1nw prices on Quality LOOKS som ACTS TOUGH!. IES'T OF IOnt IN $Pflm SATIN! AVAll.ABU(lN 2.978"fllOO~dltORS 'INTERIOR-OTERIOR SI lllASONRfl ·craftsman w.miUIEXWOU.,.,.r l>rCCOATIM ' COSTS SO UTTUWITH CRAFT-N -super craftsman latex wall paint GlUlilens ( bett,er than selling junk, JW matter what the price) . ~ -----.. 'i696 GAL = . -!~~~ ~o.,!!;~.... ~ ( brii,a ... Maltf-to•gJ ....... ..:. &r'i. -'· , . .,. ... .... • U.• tMn ..,.t NO WPtNOI MAWTPOl'UtM . DECOM.TM~COLOM SAYE 72~ Of 173 i W..;.,. U:J • FOR WOOD AllD srucco OIVEI RAT. Vf.VUY FIJUSH 1,900 llEAU11FU\. COl.OOS, EPECUUT FOR EXTERIOR IVRFACES ' •2.45 ~ VI 1.71 5 •• 9 FOft WOOD AAD ITUCCO GAL. ~! GIVU Fl.AT, VELVUY FINISH i HUNDfllml OF CUSTCIM<COl.ORS AVAIUISl.E • weathershield acrylic latex house paint UPI T ....... Record Tuna Catch Bert Reed of Newburyport, Mass., looks on as friend measures 82.inch girth of 946-pound tuna Reed caught on rod and reel after tw~bour strug~ gle. Reed will apply for U.S. record to succeed 9'l1· pound tuna caught off Newburyport in 1941. Englishmen Toas t Renowned ·Epicure LONDON (AP) -Three hundred Englistunen absorbed 20 cases of champagne in toast to a Frenchman in an unusual delayed wake at Westminsrer Cathedral. The Frenchman w h o s e memory evoked a requiem low Mass in the vast cathedral and the distinctive reception in the cathedral hall was SJ.year-old Andre Louis Simon,·an epicure ol world renown . Simon died Sept. 5, a French national who became a Com- mander or the British Empire in a private investiture in 1964 at the age of 87. 1 This gounnet from Paris would bave hesitated choosing between bare feet a n d wineless meals. "Wine may be dear today,'' ·-he .. wrote-in· one-oC .his· 200-or more boOks on ·1he grape and good food, "But so are good shoes, good schools and lots or other things which are none Che Jess necessary," As bis 300 friends lifted their champagne glasses, o n e associate commented : "Andrew would have loved this. You know what he said when they asked him how long he had been drinking cam- pagne? 'Right afier I stopped drinking my mother's milk.' " Simon was the dean of British wine· c:onooisseurs and an expert who carQe to Britain to sell dlampagne for a French wine finn. He founded the Wine and Food Society in 1913 and spent his lifetime in selling the pleasures of the kit- chen and cellar. "'Ibat's why hls son, Andre, decided to give this recep- tion," said a business associated. '"he would have liked it. 'Ille family thought tt was a highly appropriate thing to do." At 80, Simon told 300 members of the Wine and Fooi Society dining in his honor the secret of his long years: "All my life I have had a wonderful appetite." 'lllat appetite kept him Wrilize books about h i S passion until his "In the Twilight" appeared in his 92nd year. He was a strict non. nonsense gounnet. "Gounnets," he wrote, "are au, of ·us who happen to be bor\i. with a palate. It Is a gift. If it is not there, forget about it am think of something else." His 600 ~w to be a wine -eipert 'iiillli Own-riifif :a;r-- founded a wine company on the educated tastihf oss -deub the educated taste-buds of his father and himself. It has been so successful that Americans annually drink 50,000 cases of French wine selected by Simon, Pere et Fils. Mafia Figure Sent to Jail NEW ORLEANS <UPI) Carlos Marcello, 60, reputed to be the leader of the mafia in Louisiana, has begun serving a six-month federal jail sen· tence. Marcello, wearing a black suit and carrying a grey top- coat over his manacled wrists, said when leaving Wednesday he had ''no comment" about the jail ·term. Two ri ngs for.two' lovers ••• both rings $88.00 fi•t 4'11 .. lty ....... n41e9ht.rMI 0.141..W -- Emy oed"tt terms • ttudeftt «COURt1 O¥ailohle.• up to 12monthsto poy latikAmericard • Moster Otorge "THE ST6RES CONFIDENCE BUILT" I 4 , ,• " Estobllshed 43 Yoorst ttAJl:I09: SMOH'_. C•N11R Ult,..,., ..... ( .... ""'-"':"" or1N MON., THUl$ •• ••1.11L t P.M. , .. -------~------·---...,---, • • .. Tl111rsda,y, October 22, 1970 Issue In C:8Dlpdgft - • N~xon T':'f.ns Up Vietnam War Heai · -: CaliforniaColle9e By EUGENE V. RISHER WASHINGTON (UPI) Backstairs at the W h l t e House : that by next spring more than lpr a generation,'' Nixon told hall the SS0,000 Americans hl5 audiences he needed su~ who were in Vietnam when he port. , took olrice two years ago will "A ma)ority ol one at this ·be out. American casualties -Ume -even before we control During his race for the then running 300 per w'eek -the Senate -determines presidency t'wo years ago "are now at the IO"Nest level in whether the Prtsident is going JUchard NixoR· succeeded in rour and a half years and they to be supported in his plan for putting the isSue of Vietnam are continuing to go down." · a just peaee or whether be is on the backburner. He ref\.lsed And for Ule first time there going·to be reje<:ted." to talk aboUt it in specific J is a peace plan on lhe table in The challenge is a daring terms. His Vietnam plank Was Paris _ one he modesUy one. '!be party In the White a vague promise that he would t ed the bring the war to a successful enn "most generous House tradiUonaUy loses dur-peaee settlement in the whole ing off-year elections. Public e~. the t.J· h i s to r y of internaµonal sentiment in the United States ·. n : ..,.ixon campaign diplomacy." against the war has · always rhetoric of l96B, the capture of But . ~--1 1 that ~-H ·• ·"'el and · Sl1e Ref uses To _ Accept Blindness the Pueblo by Nortli Korea .. . in O•UQ o ge -· uooa• ~ ~ ! .. -.11 weapon . was a more terious affront to ' peace that tnlt end' all wars .-. serk>Us GOP defeat 1n American insu&e than the :i~~rxt~emated war in nus year, hi>wever, he has turoed up 'the heat. Tht clearest thing that as emerg- ed so 'lfar 1n is 1970 campaign DETROIT (UPI ) -= Ann swings is \bat in the Marston, an archery prodigy President~s eyes the ba1lotin1 and beautiful enough to Nov. 3-wlll be a test of his repreS""...nt Michigan in the 19®. Vietnam potici;es. Miss America pageant, He wants It that way. He wouldn't take no for an quite pJajn)y is asking en- answer when doctors klld her dorsement of his efforts to she would be blind fur the rest gradually wind down the con- of her life. flict: With the aid of binocular-"We are ending the war," he type "goggles,'' fitted by a told crowds in Ohio, Missouri New York physician who said and North Dakota. "\Ve are on "there might be some hope ," the road to .a just and lasting the pretty blond~ can now see peace in 'lietnam. '" more than just the fuzzy . Ticking .olf the fonns she's had to contend complishments of his with ror more than a year. ministration, he _ pOinted ~liss Marston, now 31 and operator of a booking agency for Rock groups. became nearly totally blind a year ago after doctors dis covered massive hemorrhages behind her ·eyes. These caused her retina to become detached. Her sp ine was Injured when she \Yas trampled by a runaway bull during a rodeo in Iowa in 1962 while she was performing an archery act. Doctors believed the damage to her spine finally resulted in the almost total loss of sigh t and said she would never see again. .1 Custer Saber Belt Missing MONROE, Mich. (UPI) Gen , George C. Custer's civil war saber belt may have made its last stand at the Monroe C o u n t y Historical ' Museum. It disappeared. ' "I don't know what hap- pened," Museum Dire cl or Matthew C. Switlik said. "It was lying right on the shelf when we went to lunch Tues- day. I guess somebody stole it." "I could see forms , but not features," slie related. "It wasl;::::::::::::::==::::::::::::==I i:vc~Y ·•ooy• SUM GYM like looking through a steamed bathroom." Miss A-1arston realizes she'll probably never regain her skill as an archer, but now she would like just enough sight lo get a driver's license. -------~. In this lOll 4 Diil• llZ'E 1111 I WllKI Fiii I 1-«>ME DCMONtTllATION 'IU.EPHONE WAll (71.tl1Jt·J771 I AGE OF AQUARIUS' .,t-_SJDIEY 01111 .... IRI .,, .................... I 6 .... •11c.1wwu-~-. ...... _...,,..,. .... '° .. --...-r • .,.., o-a.. i!.f;!.:;,,o1111l1MI wri• wi• a IUabJy amid _... s,daorO-.. ................ __ l'IW.-'pol ..... .. _ ... ___ _,., ........ ,... DAILY PI LOT Today's Newspaper for. All the communities of the .Fabulous Orange Coast - Ji~or Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PILO.T 2666 HARBOR BLVD. 546-7080 COSTA MESA YIUKDAYS ._. to 9 SATURDAY SUIDAY 9 to 6 12 SPEED HAND MIXER My wff1 11ld 11't1 co11ltln't rtt1lt:11 c1\-01 witho.it on1 of th111. ' 0 Ol:y,.10 I 9ot her one. . Still no c1•11. NC.w I h1v1 to find 1 1i,1r11lo1p1r to plwt it info. 700 0 Now your ti"Y ltih of thi1 ind lh1t l1ftov1r froll'I din111r c111 r11t ift · p11c1 1n1hri..,14 In pl11lic. D _Sof conloin1 ni111 , ~ 1111ortM 1i111 wilh·lid1, --·49c -· A colorful ch1119• of P•P•r ,.,.~ ••• .,;,, diff•r1nc1 i11 1ny clo11I or d row1 r. Fer • 11"1er1 dr111"11lic 1ff1cl CO••• the wi ll i.•hi11d the th •lf 11 well, 88C4YD. ROLL R.11id111t To 11"101t-1ltv11 1sc1pl beint thrOw11 1o111d11 .1 t1ucll. If vo11 ·c111'.t thi11ll of • b1H11 111• for if tho"' do throw ii 1o1nd•r 0111. • " ~ Ofcommerce ~~.tt.:-•:::-.. '."''·-· . ' -1--\.tlle --~ ,...,_. ... ,, November ~ would make the Communist negoUaton I n Paris even more difficult to deal with. Appartntly underlying the President's strategy is tM thinking that H an o I ' s negotiators have not moved' an inch so--far and a showing ln November. that could b e claimed 'as a mandate might induce them Into meaningful CONTINUOUS ENROLLMENT .TELEPHONE: 436-9767 or 435-5367 "DAY"'OI EVENING CLASSES" negotiations. · Jn other words. fallurt could hardly hann a sJtualion which canoot get worse and 1UCCeSS might mean negotiations that could shorten the "".&r. I TWO-Y!'.IR COUISES IY11M11 .U .. illit ... 1tiN Kithlr Acct1111Jilt AcCM•liflt -0.111 PINI .... ~·Me Sec.r ... rW SHORT-TERM COURSES s.t..,,.,Wt Cleric .. ic..,,."'" h!i.IH lil&eciliAe1 0..1.l A11isliflt M1d ic1I T1111$c1•1iteist Ftll.CMrt•IM~ J,tlh•., 0.IMS Siie,._. Mii TM llH111 er AIC ~Mil ONE· YEU COURSES I v ·ERY HEAVY • HE~cS T.HE. MAR<;tll'\AU.OwS? MANZANITA 'FIRE ·sEt · Your Choice: FOUR LOGS OR STUMP.- o Th111 loci 11h .111 10 r111i1tic ·~ t~111"1it1 co.il,l'l't lilt th1 dfff11111c1. 0 We won't f11I I.id If yo.i cho11 ff11 1t1111"1p 1tyl1 !11 pr1f1re11c:1 lo the fo1,1r 109 1tyl1. 0 l11cl11d11 the p111, b1U11er, loci1, tH•• 1.J 11M, •JHI f11• co'•111ctor, yo11 provide the f••· • Deluxe . -' ·• Complete Ad¥el'tl1ed lpKllll Ori toOd tlltot.IQlll -Ottobtr 2t Ul'llHI YOU SIY 1110 'llltk ~ "Kitrfll Ill..,.. 111 the II,,,." lh9ll we'U 11111\k yoV'r1 trom Holllnd 1nr:I dlretl )'Otol lo ... ""'"' Clllr.1 •• 0 lf th1 only vi11 in 'l'Ollr life i1 thi1 0110 yo11'1• will off. 0 ''R1fllind1 "'' of tho thi.., th1 d111tl1f 111M1'il ,.,., tooth l11t Ii"'•· -8 -Mu1t-N•1 •floth1r· 1 1ppoi11tfno11t ••ho u1 flll'I0 ¥1 it. 7 PC. MORIC SOCKET sn 0 Sit 11y1 1oc•111 011ly, l l l " or 1/2". D Al10 11y1 1 pi1c11 i nd I co.int oi9ht. 0 1'1rho p1 lh•y cil•• yo11 111 1xtr1 0111 if ve11'r1 ciood? II co111119 J 311 3 PC. CUT DOWN SHA .. K . DRILL SIT Thi• 11y1 thr11 pl1c1 end 111r1 1110119h th•r• 'l'OY l rl . If Ker"" R.11111 t1y1 it'• 10 '!'ell c1n I.it your I.its 011 ii. : I "'"'' met 1 drill bit I co11ld11't lik1 or 1 K1rll'I R.ill'lo 1ilh1r. ' • ,77c · SIT PRE.· FINISHED PANELING . Get •"• probl1,., w1tl1 ''"'' it for l.11ufy. .(U ofYout will1 1r1·a prob!111177 Mev1 out. 4x8 PANEL 2'' Yo1o1 do11't h1 ¥1 to b1 .1 bloc•h•:d lo ficiutt out u111 fer thot•. l.ut yo11 c1n ••• Try p•i11ti11t th1 i111itl11 1 tliff1r•nt color with 01o1r tpt1y ,,;.,,, Co11111 111 l.e!91 or "''"'''' fi11Jt~._121:ll w J._J6 lwlle1. 69' . ' RUBBER WELCOME MAT O J111t th• thi11t fir oil tho11 J111iddy f11t you'r• 9oin9 to •11lc-• •ltl• it roln1. (J Wortcl1r if .,.. iv.I t¥l'9 it o"9r f11 11"111vit..I ..... 111. ~ ......... -TI weli"-.,.11..i '6 n. PLAsnc RUG RUNNER D H1t1 to ""',... like • r1 i11 ,.,,11,~ I.wt 1~111 1t1rti119 t1 f11I 11•0 Ofll. 0 l1o1v lh.11 "' f.lks. 0 On• 10119 dry'wi11t1r 111d we'll 1:ie19iwinci the"' lo our wl¥11 for Chrl1t11'111, 111d they 1xp1(t ll'li11k/S1v1 111. ll1ckw11'1 i• llNllow. left... k••P if "'"41 ritht 1itl1 .ip. ____ , __ , --1 I I I ,. WI~~~· I RAIN BONNO I ' D Hffo w1 t• 9t1i11. Titi1 0/llf it ft11, 'tlll tlo1'f I IYlll 1\9.f tfrl1 COii,... . ' J1o11t 11y "Dickl1 •.t 111•·" Cio •"' 1.t11r1 yow. I I I __ .. 45 PIECE · DINNERWAR.E $IT O Tho lit,t!• P••f.lt 4fl11'J tell 111 If th111 w••• pl11ti11 ff cil111 type tl!tHot. l?h.Y'r• !0119h pl11tl•I O The'• ,,', o~i; 1i .. ,, ... .i ,1t il'I llock 011.I vo11. "''\tell th:- 4iff11111c1. . ~ O Whet tl id yo11 1•p1tl for tl ... t11S,04f77 ··'(' , i • • • ... • . ' . . . .. . .. " . . . , J 8 ·DAILY PILOT Campaign Styl.e Hit '~o•akey·see, Monkey-do' ,. Reagan Att·acks Terrorism Alquist Asks FTC Aid Over Reagan Ads By United Pres1 niteruaUooal Sen. Alfred E. Alquisl "'ants the Federal Trade Com- mission to stop Gov. Ronald Reagan from using "certain f.alse and misleading television advertisement.s" in his cam- paign for re-election. Alquist. l h e Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor, told a Wednesday news oonference in Sacrameir to that his attomey has sent a petition to the FTC with ooples to the Federal Com· mwiications Commission and the fair campaign practices oommillff. Also named in Al· quist's action wu Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke. The Santa Clara County Senator accuaed the ReiCan- Reinecke team or mating misleading statements o n Reagan administration pro- gress in the fleJds of public school 1upport, tax relief and oonservation. In other campaigning: -Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty, a Democrat, endorsed Republlcan Sen. G e o r g e : {'> • • j ~ay Takeover~ ' . . Alpine County 'Powerless' • . ' ·SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP l ...:. An official of sparse:ly set- Ued Alpine County says there is no \Yay to prevent hundreds o( homosexuals from becom- i.Qg residents and laying the groundwork for a political takeover. ·"U these peaple oome up and abide by the laws there's npthlng in the world we can do to prevent them from becom· ing residents of the county." said Hubert Bruns. chairman of the Board of Supervisors. The Gay Liberation Front. an organization of homosex- uals. arulO.LJnced plans in Los Angeles Tuesday to start an influx. of homesteading homoseruals into the county in the Sierra Nevada mountain range. Bnms and four other of- ficials discmsed the situation behind closed doors Wed· nesday with Ri chard Turner. assist.ant legal a f f a i r s secretary to Gov. Ronald Reagan. Alpine Cowity, with a population of slightly more than 400, had 384 eligible voter.l. in the June 2 primary election":'~Tbe Gay liiberaUon Fronl said'-.l"uesda,y 4. 1 9 homosexuals had siiD&.(up for the move into the county. --·• . They said they would de- mand a special election after waiting ®t the llO-day residen- cy rtquiregient, then vote out the present elected officials. l11e replacement.!! -in- cluding a judge, sherlff and members of the five-man board of supervisors -"'ould be homosexuals if the plan v.·orks out. Spokesmen for the Gay Liberation Front said its members planned the tak~ver to escape persecution from the "etraight" society. They said the county could eventually beo:Jme a mecca for hornosei:uala from across the nation. The homosexuals Sfid they would be .!lupplied at fJrst by support JP'OllJ>S Jn Los:Ang~ .. and San FrancllC<l. After the elections,-. they wouJd make use of the $2 million the couD- ty recelv.es annually from state and feder&I sources, they said. I Brulll Jftdlcted the new ar- rivals would receive· 'A cool . ricepUoll -both from Alpine County resident.I and the weather. The planned Jan. 1 starting date for the influs: is in the dead ol -win~. when snow sorpetimes r e a c: h e s t!_epJ!ll_ol 25 feet. _EREE . HO~IDAY l ... . FOR-TWO-L,_ 1\AS VEGAS 3 DAYS 2 NIGHTS with the purch!ise 9f any major appllcrnc:e or televisiOn at Hendenon's. _____ , • Enjoy the Holidays. A KitchenAid tfllhwnher wid wWt your dilhts. wk Pots ond pans -· Ond d!y _.,,,.Ina wilfl --· fen.circulated •ir. Choioe of built4nl, front or top.loeding por1>bles, -or d--KJtdoenAid d -lllhers ... mode"'"'"-· -1lnd -nnuf.cturer ot co~ dlltM......_ Get a KitchenAld Disposer •. too. Grinds finer. ten. .......... ; EltY to lnsteff. DltpoMI of _,,.,.,no flOm -to llrfnor wget.ablee. Continuous or bitch foodmodolLll-.-. An~·jommlng. Built to !alt. t't r - - -NEW OWNER SPECIAL-- -1 This Coupon Good For $12.50 Service Call On Any .1 Wa.twr, D.-,.r, R.trl,.,.ator, Dl&hw11her, DltpOM r. I ...OD TMUU • .fll. f, $625 U T. ONLY. OCT. 21 fOt I U. 14. J ~---------- • t.furphy for re-election. Yorty sald he opposed democratic Rep. John V. Tunney, Mur. phy's opponent, because of Tunney's stand on the Viet· nam war. -Speaking in San Fran· cisco, Murphy proposed set· ting up a natJopal jobs for peace agency to coordinate transition ol the nation's defense-oriented sclentlfic·in· dustz:ial complex to p,eacetime uses. He said the proposed agency was aimed at fighting unemployment in scientific fields. Democratic gubernatorial nominee Jeu Unruh described the proposed southern m>saing .. over· San franclsco Bay as a "political p1¥off'' for Gov. Reagan's supporters. Speaking at the east end of the proposed $500 million structure at Alameda, Unruh said Reagan "appointed the majority of the toll bridge authority which is pushing this project and hi;.. can control its action." He said the governor "owes political debts" to publishers of the Oakland Tribune and Hayward -Review and those newspapers "are supporting" the bridge. Gag Rule Se t In San Dieg o Bribe Cas e SA/I DIEGO (UPI) - A stringent gag rule was im- posed Wednesday to prevent public dissemioation or i.nfor-• mation on the indictments or eight elected officials. Superior Court Judge Rob- ert Stainforth imposed the gag rule after a brief hearing. He also ordered the trans· script of grand jury proceed- ings leading to the indictments of Mayor Frank Curran, As- semblyman Tom Hom, IR-San Diego), four city councilmen, two members of the board of supervisors and a campaign worker. MODESTO (UPI) -Gov. Reagan, campaigning here Ronald Reagan today declared in be.hall of R e p u b I i c a n war on the · "monkey-see, Assemblyman Clare BerryhlU, monkef-do" revolutionaries , condemned political terrorists who are threatening political in a speech prepared for th.is kldnapings and elecUon-day farm community 's an nu a I violence. "good egg breakfast." The governor said stale and The governor. designated local law enforcement officers "Good Egg of the Year," jok- are ta kin g "precautionary ed that "it's a pleasure to measures" to guard against · have my egjs fried, on a plate violence by radicals when and handed to me by a Californians go to the pelts waitress instead of raw. in the Nov. 3. sheU and thrown at me by ' DQwney Oihnan F Qils ( . . .. 4 Strongarm Bandits , i;lOWNEY !UPI) -Oihruin GeOrae F. Thagard Jr. foiled an 'appirent robbery attempt when he shot and wounded one of four men attempting to enter his home Wednesday night. Police said two of the men went to the Thagard home on the pretex of seeking d i r e c • tions. When 'Ibagard's wlfe, Ann. answered the door, one of ~he men pulled a gun and began pistol whipping her. Thagard, alerted by his wife's screams, picked 'JP. a .38 caliber revolver and ran to her aid . He said the suapect shot at him and he returned the fire. The two men escaped ln a car driven by two other men. Later Darrell C. Dixon, 21, was arrested after a n anonymous caller reportf(l a ".!lick man" on a South-Central Los Angeles street. som!One elipresslna: hls o w n poUt.lcal opinion." But then Reagan, who has had eggs thrown at him during his re-election campaign, bl>came more serious. "When the childish act of egg throwing ' gives way to the deadly act ol bomb throwing, as we saw in three west coast cities just recently, then we've got to come to the realit.ation that "'e're not just playing a political game," he said. "In a kind ol 'monkey-see, monkey-do' maMer, revolu- tionaries of all eras since the invention of gun powder have used the bomb as their calling card. .But they've added to their arsenal." He listed alrUne hJjackings and kidnapings among the militant!' "fiendish tactics." "'It happened in South America, in Europe and in Canada. And now scores of radkals are th reatening political kidnapings to advance lhel.r cause," he said. NEED A DENTIST? -EMERGENCY PLATE REPAIRS yo'Z"~!1t Fillings -Extractions Pet1tothal -Credit Dr. WATT COSTA MESA 261 E. 17th St. -Phone 646°1882 SHOP NOW! SAYE NOW FOR THE HOLIDAY'S 4 days only • Thurs.; Fri., Sat., Sun., Oct 22-23-24-25 ----- ALL NEW! ALL ZOOM! Ii s43ztiMOVIE OUTFIT Is there any other way to take a picture? 9-piece kit-everything you need for better shooting, better showing! POLAROID® 320 AUTOMATIC ll'tC\.UDU: COLORPACK CAMERA Featwes transistorized electronic ah.utter that measures light available for each ahot. Deluxe range, viewfinder, 111te1 easy loadinr Jilm i;.cka. Detachable cover; strap. ,. FLASHGUN ArrACHMENT, Fits obowe c.nera ·····-··-·-·-· Sale .Synchronized with ahutt•r. Por perfect Indoor shots. M.J FLASHIUUS .................... Solo 596 96' •Its above flt11h1un. ENJOY IEmR LIVING WITH GUNTS CREDIT GE RashPacl< Electronic Rash • For Pol•ro!d i! Folding Pack cameras (except model N360} and moll 35mm cameras Sale I Sale GAF COL,... 94 S0PrR I ZOOM MOYlt CAMDtA • llwp f/1,7 zoom MM • fhru.th.-lent U pl)9Ul9 control • l rilht refln: ......... • Low•Jlcht wunlnc ailnll •Film pulH indlcltor • Lolhlped ll'iP wtth tflurnlt rMIH traer • [IKtrlc motordrtv. GAF ANICOYISION9 38IZ DUAL I ZOOM MOYIE. PROJ!CTOlt • U.., t/1~ 100m lens ff.lit your SCNtft • Acatsts ..,,_.I •rid ltllullr Imm• Attlomltfc film thl"Ndln& • ExdusM AdjuttHl•ISc tllrMp C'Ofltrel • I• 11..tM Ult S20I. ti Seff<0ntatn.d m1Y'l"1 ai• • 500-watt ..... llMICll • 400-foot l'ffl upedty PUite ur Antc:Oml'tie c.mn ltlil • c.m. .. canJ1n1 ca. • W Alacad'nrM' II tuper I ootor fllm with PtOCIHtlnc • 30" x .tO" table....,• c•ni111bnllb•4 ..,_ .,_ twn, lw • GAF P'hOtO: llooll: Yes! We 've got 'em! IHDW 1DD ILIDEI Sale New 1UP411'18nsitlve fl11 cubes-flash when others won't , •• on week batteries WITH THI NIW ANICDMATIC'' 1680 ILIDI PRD4ECTDR Thll AnKOrMtic: l •&O let' ~ ..,...,,. up to 100 llldtl w!ltloUt atoppJ11110 NkMd, tri111Q to 1h• Gd""" tPJh-«ool Aototn~. You llb F\IM Nmott control llkle -~ feev• & ,..,.,... 0 "" Jnd!L A,..1ticm1t 11111 o .....,, a llorflOl'l~I tilt eorotrol a OAK tamp o 0:-11. Cllf!l91ned Clfl')'Jns case, .• .:.·- Sale 55996 Brookhurst at Adams • Huntington Beach STORE HOURS: Dolly 9:30 to "l:30 Suii. ro to 6 l'lione: "962·3387 ' • ··-----·------ Political Notes 3 Candidates Set f 01· OCC By O. C. HUSTINGS Of TIMI OeUr l'JMI 11111 Rep. Richard Hanna (0- Anaheim) has been .named in a $10 milllon lawsuit by an Orange County doCtbr c'harges him with pirating a b.i$iness idea a(ld using his influence tor a cbmpeting tirm. Hanna f a c e s Repul)llcan 'Villiam Teague in a hotly con- tested race for the 34th Congressioni l District seat. The suit against Hanna was filed by Dr. Jotin Magrann who has a clinic in La Palma. Magrann said Hanna worked "'ilh him ln forming a cullural and trade center in Anatleim called The Orient. He claims llanna left the firm and helped form a rival company and us- ed flis influence lo win con- tacts. A spokesman for Hanna tenns the suit "political" and says the Congressman had no financial interest in the en- terprises. The suit is a renewal of a complaint lodged two 1 years ago. • State Senate i ncumbent Dennis Carpenter CR-Newport Beach) will be the guest speaker Wednesday at a meeting of the l\Jesa Verde Republican Women·s Club. He will speak at 11 a.m. in the home of Mrs. William Rorick. 2743 Albatross Drive, following a business meeting of the group. Further information I s available through ft1 r s . Calhoun Sumrall, 549-141.0 or l\1rs. James W'oodin, 543-8959. • Sunday, Joe Greene, can- didate for county tax collector, \viii hold a question and answer session in Costa: ~1esa. He will discuss his campaign from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the Pushbutton ease plus new in-the-door silver basket .. pushbutton cycles: SU!'Ek WASH', •tNSE-HOLD, CKJNA• CRYSTAL and SHORT • Ea5y-lo-see iJantcd COlllrol panel • Automatic dispcmen for rinse conditioner and detergent • Full-time &elf·clcanini: flltcr • Porcelain-enameled 1ub • Excluaive ba.e-plate assembly for fut installation. CERTIFIED APPLIANCES "Cost• ~•se 's 8.tt•r C•re D•el•r" 333 E. 17th St. -642·0240 COSTA MESA (Beh ind The lntern•tion•I P•nc•k• Hous•) • Orange realtor J ohn G. Valentine has been named Orange County chairman of the Realtors for Reagan. He is president of the Santa Ana-Orange-Tustin Board of • For Weekend er Advertising Phone 6424321 Get p • Choice of 5 cycle selections: NORMAL; GENTLE; PERMANENT PRESS ; SUPER WASH; SUPER PERMANENT PRESS • Ex· tra small toad setting • Enzyme pre-soa k setting • Special Permanent Press cool· down • 3 agltal lon, 2 spin speeds • 5 water temp. selectlons •Bleach and fabric toft~r dispensers • MAGIC CLEAN• self-cleaning Uni filter • Super SUAGILAT~ agitator • Fluorescenl-flghted top. t~iAcrs Ask about.our other specials, too. THIS WEEK ONLY! CERTIFIED APPLIANCE COSTA MES~'S BEITER CARE DEALER ~33 E. 17th Phone 642-0240 • COSTA ~MESA (Behind the lnttrn1tlon1I P1ncok1 Hou11I ·-------~--------------------- •' • 'thunday, Octobtr 22, l~O DAILY PILOT J J •' Initial Cdy Freeway , lf ork Planrted By L. PETER KRIEG 01 llM Otllr PIMI SltO -. nn l~ II.st, followed im- mediately .by tofl.'t.ruction of I.he Coast Freeway soq1hweSL rrom CorOna del f\:far lo the San Ole11> F r e e w a y In· terchange. A 7.5 mile stetch or lhe Coast Free way east from Roule 39 to San Gabriel Freeway (Roule 605) was ranked 10th Construclion of the Laguna Freeway (Route 133) rrom the Coa st Freeway to the San- Diel!!O Freeway ranked 1 lth on the list. I . ' f.or 1971, we-improved the left side redt 'window. Al last, o Votkswogon improvement you con see . Along with o ur 2:S hidden improve· ments fo r 1971, we proudly an nounce a· new price. $1840 will now pul you behind the wheel of a Volkswagen 111 sedan.• Yo u see, we found little thing1 to NEWPORT BEACH Chick Iverson, Inc. ' 445 E. Co•tt Hwy. (7141 673-0990 toke out of our little car 1hot won 't of feet what you gel out of ii. !After 25 yeor s of perfecling one model, you con do ingenious things like !hot.I f or even !hough ii now runs around on o new, more powerful engin e, ii still runs around on around 26 mil es to o SAN JUAN CAP ISTRANO Bill Y oles Inc • 3l8S2 Ville. Rd. (7141 499·2261 gollon·Of regular gos. It still refuses wa ter. II still abs tain s from antifree ze . It stilt surYives on pints cl oil ins teod of quorls. And in cose you coul dn 't 1&11 lrOfl't the picture obove, II s1ill le>ok.s lilt a Beetle. HUNTINGTON BEACH -Harbour Volkswa9en - 1871 I Bt•ch Boultv•rd (114) 142-443S • ··- . • ; • J 2 DAIL V PILOT For the Births AHDEllSON N ,jry A. Ander1()11. A91 61, ol m 8 1v St., Cu.ti Me.,., 051e cf 1H1t11, Oc!Ol>'!r 70. Survived bv d111,hl1>r, Irene T1JcP!· ,..,sn, R11111o1 rwo b•ctl\tf1, L.«le •11d R..s•ell Morrlso:i; sl!!•r, lluth Kelty, S5ti!1 AN. Str\llCfS will i.. l\tld ~llu<· d1y, IO '·"'·· Bell 9rc.ctw1v C"•p<ol. I,.._ l•"l'U.I. MNtJor lteSI. Self 8ro111W1Y Mortwrv, Dlrec·~·•· : DIE ltUl'I' p_.1 0t ltutt. 6'4 Serl SI .• Co1111 MHI. S-lcn pendl"' 11 8111 llro1dw1y N.or· .... ...,.. DONATI Al•IJ>O It Oo11.il. Allf! ft, of l'9' Del M1•, C0911 M• ... Dille cit Cleam. October n . Su,...tved bv wife. Gr•cti two """'• Mi· c'lr!I 11111 Jettrrn two 01wri1tu. G11y11 •1'>11 L11urll1 tour brotl>fr1, Vidor, Fr111- 111d c1-tt, 111 ct c111<1M11 wm11tm, ;1;.,~~jl Ill~~; °*;':!.~i!'t~l\I:~~ ·~:~1~s~ 0,,,,1111 Victoria Krtwlck1 June RlcM•d1 1M Ald..,1 Cll.llrblll, 1/1 of Clllce90, Ser· v;en, Frld1v, Oct~ 73. J o.m., 8111 8 rn<1W1r Cll111er, wl'I\ 11..,. ConHll\Jlna S1>liM otfkl•ll11t1. l11ft'll'leflt, Ptclllt View M"'™"""I P•rfl. 8tH 8r01dWIW' Morl!Hry, DlrKJOra. ARBUCKLE & SON Wblcliff A1ortaary U1 E. 17~ St., Costri l\tesa -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona dc:I ~tar .... OR S-9451 Costa ~tc:sa .... -:-:-:. ml I-MU • BELL BROADWAY MORTUA RY llt Broadway, Colla l\fesa u wm • McCOR.\UCK LAGUN A BEACH MORTUARY 17tS t..guna Canyosa Rod. • PACIFIC VIEW 4M-t415 MEMORIAL PARK C.emetery .P.forl CUp<I S5ll Pacific v" Dri\·e New,.rt Be.acb, C&llronla mnM • PEEK FAMlLY COLONIAL FUNERAL D<™E 191 8ehll Ave. Wat hR• .•.• m.w.s • lllDFER MORTUARY 1--...... 414-1511 S. O rz-•e ~O'Ulto • llllJ1lB' MORTUARY 117 -Mahi SC. ....... -Ul a T~ursda,r, Ottobtr 22. 1970 Record Licetases O!lAl!Gl COUNT'I'. OCT. Ill. M1TCHELL·WHITLEY-Ellts L. 11, ol ntL Or111ffWOOd, Sll!~t,.., ""' ~'ftt~. 11, of 11&SJ, S1nl1 'WEll~l!lALE5-J1mn A. 1', of 't'M•re111 s111111c1n 11111 cvn11111 M .. of I 2. T11nlar11', Croress. Mt ELV Y-EWING-Jftmn F ,, 11. Dl !21 llh Srreel, Huntlnl!M 8'>1t1i 111C1 l\eryl M .. 73, of 11211 Or1 . .,,., Or., Yorb1 Llllll11. ,ALOMINO.MURILLO-Cerlal It .. 71, 1'111~~J M~· :.h J1·1i:~sw.inll~~ ~~ S•11I• Anl . THO<>Nf\ACK At! l;N-(~rle1 L., ••, of 1'1•, TnurJIM Or., Ll~U.,. fl~iich ~llCI JlllP L., ... of L.i1un11 l!tft<h NE L50N-CANNON--G1ry M., 1,, of 1536l GokH-11 Wnl t'lunlh•i;n~n t e1ch .,.., Crnll'l!1 It of •u1 L1•~•P11• (lrtle, Hunt11101M ~t-.;h, REINECKEll·SMITH-llabert l .. U. of JJ60, W~ll llOICI 'Nt•!mlnster r.llCI ~rle N.. 11, of •M ,.toWml ll. -·· M JllMAN·5UMR0N-41CeYhl It., 70, of 10'l75 Sl.itr ,..,. .. FOWll1!n V•lln lllCI (lier! l., 11, of 11431, 11.•t .. elo Lene Hunlln91Gf' 80~Ch. COLGE R.LeGAKES-H!ll e,,_u. of ~n, w. n St.. NIWPOrl ~•ell •na P-1• s. "'· of 2l15, M1re1ret Ori"" New..art 8e1c;,, Et>WAiiD5-SCHWEITZE'l-RaOPtt L .. '2. of "9, Norlll Cllru1 Ot -! 11111 Norme F., 31. of 7.aJO. Or11'Kt '°""" (0\11 Me!'e, M(CREARY-Sl!YOER-l'"UI J ., •IJ " tin lltllhevfn, LI Pnlm• 1nd o.n •l of 3'<11 P1rflrlftW L~ne. lr1int!, \tADER·WH .. SON-Rl<ll~rd L., 31, of :J002 Klllrltk Dr .. Lot At~mllos 11111 P1me111 a .. n, ol UJJI r"~11n, vrnne W1v TusUn. OCT. 2'1d. •vD$'·~::~Au.~.~~t': ~~.'~~ Julle L .• 21, of 105'. Prlsldl1 Or., (OJI" Mt•ll. CULVER·CJlOCKW<;LL-OOllOYfl\ C., 50, ol '2'2 W1r11er ,.,,,.., tt.1ntl11tt1>n 8eld\ lllCI (hlot 0,. •t, of 141\ llOM! Ar~. L1>1111 8e11<:". HOllllS.HO!lllS--8 111 '··• 1J, cl ~ Coivmbv1 Clrtlf>. (-• del o\\lr •1111 Loll R., •L of CatON Ot1 '-'tt. WACNER·MACUSIH-i•i~ ~ ts, OI 1J"I !1111• An. «r.ve~ ~·•• Mna 11>11 E1r lne M., 70. oo 27.-io Nt.,rorl Na~~N!..Xf~AAet1-w11111m. E. 11 c! 20I Tl!lrly Sllll'I SI .• N-POl't lltlCll end NlllO' R .. 21, of' JU E, Co1l1 MH& 51., COlll MIU. SUMMl!!llHAY5-FltAPKES -11..,lt · m111. J., SD, o1 inn. eo1u Olk•. Hvnlll\lllOll BHctl, Ind 'M1J!M E •• 17, of lll W1telltld, A111helll\. 8Altl0W·Mc:OUINN-Tl'lomas C,, 1', at 115 E. WlllOfl 51.. C0\11 MtJI ,1nd P1t11nr l., 11, Of COS!• Me•t. M1cCONNELL·SCOTT-T~rt JI.,"' l)f tl'OO Pl!trlOfl PIM:I. COlll Mtu. •rid 8tllr AM 'l. Ct! Co1l1 Mtlt . CAltOltAN>FREE~W!Hlem C~ 20, ol LS'O I LIVI Wll'I• WtJIMln1ter, llfcl Lou 0 •• 17, of 7'2' Onllrlct Or .. Hll"'· ln11on 8"<:11. SCULLY·SLEEP-Olvld W .• ''· ef 115 Elty..,111 St., Se11 ··~ell, Ind p,..,.. t1 C., ,.. of U' Tllltd SI.. Stll 8tKll. MORRISON·NELSON-P•lll A., ?!, cl 1"63 Goldt<!wftl. H!Jn!IM1'!1fl fl!tdl, tnd Jilli! It~ 11. of lOOD EU9tl'M! CW .. Fulltrlon. OOLL·TARR-All•I-F., 71, ol 1141 J..,,..I, Soo.1111 L19u111, Ind Alhll A., "· ot 5'17 Lf "'IOll Gl'Owt. L.A. LIHDSTltOM·ARELLANO-TtrrtllCt T .• 11. ol 1"30 Son.ic:t. Founlllfl V1H1y, •11111 R111<W It., 34, of F-ll fll V1ll1r . AOO 1 ,,,..rrll9ft l t l JI CAltTEll·llOLINGElt-Tllort\11 M,. n , of 126.St Moo"nl~IOI Aw~ G1rd"" c;,.....,_ Ind ''°" A., U. ti tGrl Monllclte CW •• Hv11ll11111o11 llMt ll • HOllS..COLLIN5-Cl•11rln P ,. $2, el 1«111 M1111Dllt, Wfttmlnslt•. 11111 E11Mor M •• U , ol W111m111ster. f'LANOElt~ltl!:EN-lt .. W,. 2t. 01 l lff ll!i.tff\ Aw .. Whlllltt Ind Ed•~ L,. )I, et '1n CllOCI w Or;:-'l'l'nf> ml111ttf', MAltltlAOIS L.A. COX·,1'.!llSSON -Jtl!'lf• C.. .,. J<Ofttdt~. Aflron1. t nd E:lhP! I .. JJ • m• 1"111ml•1n WIY. C111t1 M11·1. WlttCHT.+!E.YOLAUFF -Litty [., n ...... ~,,. HHL .... P1mel• I(., "' ~ Vlltt Gr ....... NtwHrl •NCl'I. G1•ove Progra11a ' Blir1d Children BOLD AND BRIGHT " 'MOD ART' PILLOWS ' ' _.,_ ~ t.--1.;,- : ! _: - f~ ·~ ·-.-., .~ ' -___ --!'. -- NO-FADE ANTIQUE SATIN DRAPERIES s396 ••• Compare 63", t4", l1n9th1 ' AN1ley ••• ,xtra h'avy antique u.tin (r1yoo and 11Cetate) ,..,i1 h detailing you'd o"er ope« ro fi nd in draperies t his low prices. Satin •·eave bark ltf\'f1as1 lini ng. Great rotors! WASllAIU YllYl I :;;;;..-;;:;;;;:;~··•DOW SHDIS .......... s~ ..... 96 c b~:f;::;:::J • W!ih rolltr ... • City Keeps Abreas• _,. SanUt Ana Passes A1iti-nudity Law FLANNEL f>' REMNANTS ) >s11u1~l1 i11t• Illes• ·/.NO-IRON FAVORITES SALE incredibly sofL blend of 50~,j Avril• rayon/SO~; cotton that is pcrfccL for 1llce11wear, <lus· ters .•. cu<ldly for in fao L-.' l\·car, too! }.fachine ""'ash 11nd dry. 35/36" wide. Sale';"' quaU1y,$1'""'C,7 Twin Size Full Si re •••••••• , ••••••• 2.37 'l'hc.;;e l\re the i<hcets !hat ~ell eh;ewhcre fur .is much 111 $1 more per :iheel. 'l'hPy're n1Rile for us by f:unou~ mills, ll\h·lested for weKT. J 86-count mtlon percale. 2·1Mt BOU CLE-EFFECT DRAPERIES 'Sotwm', .. boucle c.flec~ in Fibers!••"' 11111 fiber. Practical loo ••. won·• shrink or stretch; fireproof. •o ...... ..c:...-...1111 GRANT <llST' TI H <UH AINS Sale51.86 ~·.)ll"l••nliLh.o • W1•h 1Pld hanr • Protly J!or1I prlnta Vtle1tr1 , ........ 1.3• ' ' / . I ~ . ' '. /1 CHll,DREN LIKE UNCLE J,EN FABRICS Textured Blends i 2 s100 / I YDS Dectrated Upholstery SALE $1~~ .... Plush 'n' thirsty bath towel ii excluaive pattern ii available only at you Grants atorel Sumptuou1 velvet le.ltuttd cotton terry, jacquard wt1.ve, Vivid ahtdea! 84c 66 $486 shorty io", 36" leng1h1, Cafe rings and the crisp perfection of Rayon le Colton. Peppy colort. Valance noc iacladcd. ,, .. ~ .. ~ 'Baroque' towel by Cannon Mills Sale$166 Give."tlegaoce lo bath. Deep. toned jacquard weave. Soft, thirsty cotton terry. 22x44". H.114 .... 1 ·-·---· .. ··--t iM W•lllrt.lfl ---· 6k YEAR ROUND SIESTA ILANKET • 46% polyeettr/45'r. rayon! JO" acrylic • '7219CT ANAHEIM Lincoln It $1111 Coll111 if~.::: HUNTINGTON BEACH f • .. , I • • • I • • ' ' • • ~ 'I ' • " p • d ' • • i ' ' < • r • -·--------------~---------·--- , 1 Illinois Bananas? It's hard· to."believe, but Mrs. Pau1 Koester oC Hoyleton, Ill ., ha& the liviilg prboi. Abou~ f!ve years ago a ~eighbor gave Mrs. Koe ster' a banana plant slip. She nursed 1t in b~r home through, the winter and set it out this year. The plant s~ot to a ~eight of 20 feet and now bears fruit. ~------- Fullerton Man Lauded I• State Race Lawyers S·ubmit Cases to Voters SACRAMENTO (UPI)-- Two Of Callfoml1'1 top lawyers will ' submit their cases lo the Voters on Nov. 3 to decide which will become the st.ate'.s at«>mey general and No. 1 policetnan. Democrat Charles O'Bri!n and Repub!lcan Eve lie J. · Younger have Hten&lvely campaigned on the fact I.hey are now important law en· fon:ement olficers. O'Brien. 44. has betn chief deputy !~!'te attorney general for the past nine years. Prior tn that, he was executive secretary to former Gov. Ed· mund G. Brown. ' be cm1kJered a gubernatorial proapect four yean hen~ lhould he win election to u.e' top law enforcement job. I One of the controversies in thelr campaign I n v o I v e s distribuUon by Youncer or 1 money clips and cuff links with '"!'lieu of depuly dbtrld attorney badp. I O'Brien charged Younger with soliciting $250 from businessmen and lawyers fori the replicas to mllntain a $150,000 .polillcal slush fund during the past flve years. He calls it ''snakedown politiCs.'' Younger denies there was anything !Uet:al ablJiut his so- Younger, ~. has served as called "E.JY Club," which has Loi Angeles County District beta dilba.nded. He said) attotney for si:r: years. a job between IOO and 700 of the he was twice elected to after clips and links w e r e silt~ as both .a.·munl.cipal and • distributed since 1966. I superior court Judge. One r/ Younge!''s campaign I The attom.ey general's office pledges has been to present to1 automatically makes I t s the legislat~ a packagti ot holder t,fle chief law en· bllls designed\to speed up the force men t officer in California court system. California. He supervi~ He said in capital case~,' di strict attorneys and sheriffs, such as murder. as many as acts as the slate's legal ad· IO years will elapse between viser and represents it in legal the selling of a trial date and bcltlles. final appeals. A post distinctly separated O'Brien, a Harvard Law from tile administration in School graduate. has called for 1 Sacramento. the San Fr•~ tougher regulation of the cisco-based attorney general overproduction of drugs and operates more inciependenlly for more •money and effort to than other .g l at e w Ide of-protect policemen. ficeholders. ''l think we can do this The l'lttomey general is also without tearing up the bill of paid more than othei-con-rights." he said. stitutional officers, $ 4 2 , 0 0 0 ~;;~~~~~~~~ SHANGRl·LAI Halfv.·ay 'round the J:Tt'('ns and Fullerton resident Henry M. beginning Jan. I compared to;. ,.....,, '"""' 22, 1970 ' j DAILYPILOT J3 Wou\ld removing 99% of the poll1en in the air -- help your all,ergy? Aok your. do<N< -. o HHty• wtl lltctrotdc Air Clea.er. It remo•" up to tS•/. ef •• tlllt alrborwt il'Titofttl p • 1 I I R t thr009h. Pollen1, hous•hold clust, smok._ • Hontywell ElectrC1nic A i r C letnet c1tche1 111 kinds of ir· ritants. All 1i:r:e1 , too. In feet, it traps, p1rticle1 10 Jmall it woul d teke 7000 of them to stretch ecro11 th is dot (.I I A Honeywell Air Cleaner is .no cur• for allergies, but c11e his- tories heve shown it does pro- vide relief. Tetk to your doctor about ~t. Then, telk to u1. flEE ESTIMATES-NO OBLIGATION TO PURCHASE PACIFIC HEATING CO. AIR CONDITIONING .SPECIALISTS Call Us for Prompt SerYice and Repair Who Cores? you are really in another v:orld at l •n Brown's Deutsch will be the guest of $35,000 for other statewide of. WeMe..ful World. The 9-hole golf course is truly hon-Or at a dinner opening 1· t f the "" 100 1iplendi!cro1.1S, spilling lazily dov"n rron1 tCC'·Off at Orange County 's campaign for ice.rs• ex~p or .-, Ne ofh•r "''"'P'P'' in th e LAGUNA IEACH the modern pro-shop, past the beautiful rcstaur· St I B d f I I earned by the governor. werld ,,,., ebet.tl yor.rr ,ommr.r• 494 9745 ant perched picturesquely above, the shake-~ e on s 0 srae · The post has alao been used nity 11~. yor.rr ,Ommr.rnity diily • LAGUNA HILLS-VllJO 837-2000 roo(ed apartment.motel units and swimmi ng The dinner is scheduled for in recent history as ateppln1 111w1p1p1r do11. 11'1 tk• DAILY ' ' . pool, under cool i::recn trees. over eolorful bridges. 6:30 p.m. Sunday at the ...._A, lo··-~verno-•ip by P'ILOT. gas a"1r cond1•t1··on1"ng 2175 I -una ,. __ Rel. around the curving, •lop;ng hillside into a won-• llWIK: u,..; •-nMI .,.... -n1 Alrporter Inn, Newport Beach. tw me .,_,bli 1 v. 1:)=~~~~~~~~~~1~::~;;~;:~:~~::::::;::;:;~~=~~~~·:-~•:na~l:-:·~~~~J derland of majestic mountains. O n -...... Y"' C n .-r .,.... Walk the course or chC'Ck out your ~ame and partake i~ the Deutsch is a native of Warren in 1941 and by a1cart _you don't ha,·e 10 bc cocktail hol!r fun. Comphmen· Poland. A businessman in Democrat Edmund G. Brown & pro to enjoy all this. And ir tary hors d ocvres ar~ o(frrt'd Fullertcn, he has been active in l9S8. you wanl to learn the game or Crom 5 10 7 pm. You II s~rely in the Israel Bond campa;gn, brush up on technique. count be tempted to ~t~y for dinner . Younger has indicated if on o.w Adams \\'ho also car-in the elei;ant d1rung r<Ml1n. Thi.'! which is now in its 20th year. elected to succeed retiring l ries all the right duds and ac· Sun. thru , Thurs. s~ial1 at Jnfonnation on tbe dinner Democratic Atty . Ge n , cessorics In his comple-te shop. $3.tS conti~ue to i::a1n ravC!l. and on the bonds may be ob-Thomas C. Lynch, he would be , Why nol have lunch first Latr,r theres dancing to the tained through the office of 11tnd ~ruse thr scene \vhllc sip· m~s1c of Thi' N.aturals., And a\ th 1 Interested in making a run at 1iln1: a frosty cocktail. The 10.15 pm and 12:15 you II Jau~h e sreel· Bond Organization, the governor's office in 1974. menu features a daily special up a storm to those howlln l? Suite 216, 18833 E. 17th St., •·If I'm elected attorneY. in addition to some 60 other com edians The Happy ~rs.tersllir-Sa~n~t~a ~A~n~a,~921;;;0~1~, ;"~'·:55.1§:7.~:'!-Jgcneral , I'll do an out.standi ... J.t.ems lncludiog,_sf_yer-a! varie· r:i:om Las Vegas. and arumat.ed ~·• 1ie11 nf omelets served \\·i1h !11ni:ter-,Duke-Mttchell:-.J>o-Jt-Q-C:-1." ·oo~and...tb.er:L:_a._114.~0!!!Y Ben Brown's tasty fresh spi· Up B~'O\Vn at 31006 Coast HY.. ,..,, -will I con.sid~ what will nach nlad. So. La.i:runa. No other' n•wtp•p•r t•ll1 vou happen.foor years from now,'' Wander back to the loungel---"--------ll inore, 1w1ry cl1y, ... out whit'• ·1s the ay the Nebras• delicious•• •xh1"!1"•a'-' at,,.. ADVERTISEMENT . . . .I 6 w .... •:t • LC\!. • 901119 o• 111 "'' '''''' Or1119• educated Youngor put it. -;::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::::::============================::1;c::,:o•lt ~•n_~=·==D=A=ll=Y=P=ll=O=T=.~~~:::.::::...::.::::..: ..: = O'Brien would a1so. have to DISPOSAt SALE of $25,000 worth of USED FURNITURE r Returns from Rentals--Many from Model Homes Nothing over 3 years old--mostly ohly 1 to 2 yean old. FANTASTIC SAVINGS ' on LIVING ROOMS--DINETTES-BEDROOM FURNITURE MOTELS-HOTELS MATTRESS & BOX SPRING SETS G.E. TV'S--REFRIGERATORS & RANGES All Quality".·High Fashion Items 1 DAY ONLY • • • • •••• OCTOBER 24th 10 HOURS • • • • •••••• 9 AM to 7 PM -, THE -USED FURNITURE FACTORY 1_185 Harbor hulevanl Costa Mesa 541-9417 --- TOMORROW & SATURDAY ON THE MALL Come join us at th e Fashion Island Ski Funfair on the Mall Friday and Saturday October 23·24. See exciting ex hibits and demon strations -visit with popular ski professionals and ski club members for an "up-date" on what's new in skiing. Open Friday night. FASHION J ISLAND NEWfOllT CENTER P1clflc Coe1t l!l11hw1y -Between JemborH ind M1cArthur 58 FV!• Store• ind Servl.ce1 • Open Friday end Monday nlghta . ' • . _J • ' '1 \, I J 4 DAIL V PILOT Thursday, Ottobtf 22, 11110 ' Ohio Bridge Falli1ig Do1vn \·Vorkmen recently pushed the last or three spans of the old C & O bridge across the Ohio River and then with explosive charges, caused the span to be brok.- Bit: of l1·eland Gr ee n Popular in Cong o KINSHASA. Congo (AP) -government has decided that The wearin' of the green has Crom Nov. 1 domestic water come to the Congo. and electricity prices will be T a b 1 e c l o t h s in some cut. Funeral services will be restaurants have taken on verdure. women's dresses in provided free by the state. green are becoming popular. As from J an. 1 a 11 Newspapers are delving into employers must provid e de- green ink. cent means of tran sport for 'l'he reason Is that elections the ir workers "and not in are coming up and voters will crates like · cattle as at get two cards at the ballot box : present" green means yes and red Meanwhile the newly in- means no. stalled N a t i o n a I Bank The pesidential voting will governor has warned of in- be held Oct. 31 and legislative flation and the need for the elections Nov. 14. President government to tr i ffl ex· Joseph D. Mobutu has no penditure. challenger and the only list of The government's inJome legislative candidates comes has been hit by a fall in cop- rrom the People's Revolu. per prices but this news tend- tionary party. or MPR. ed tn be lost down page under en into sepa rate pieces as it hit the water. The piers are being cleared of the 80 year old span to make way for a new highway bridge. ' Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve -You: -tr MAIN OFFICE: 9th l Hill, Los Angeles • 1123-1351 WILSHIRE .t GRAMERCY PLACE: 3933 Wilthlte Blvd., LA •38&-1265 LA.CIVIC OfHTER: 2nd & Broadway • 82._110% "fr HUNTINGTON BEACH: 91 Huntington Centtr • (714) 897-1047 .... . SANTA ANA LOAN SERVICE AGENCY: 1905 N, Main St . (714) 547-9257 -ti-SANTA MONICA: 71 8 Wilshire Blvd:• 393·07-16 tlSAN PEDRO: 10th & Pacific• 831-2341 :tl'WEST COVINA: EasUand Shopping Ctr.• 331-2201 tlPANORAMA. CITY: 8616 Van Nuys Blvd.• 892-1171 -trTARZANA: 111751 Ventura Boulevard• 345-8614 -tcLONG BEACH: 3rd & locust • 437·7481 -tcOpet Slturdlys-9 111lo 1 Pl' Dtily Mours-9 im to C p11 ~- ASSETS OVER ssoo MILLION • -Flourney Surprised GOP Leaders some voters, is conducting a dri ve tack.s the ftMncla1 ~ less actl\'e campaign and pins port Brown ipparnl1 11 SACRAMENTO (UPfl - Californians wil l tOect a new secretary of state Nov. 3 and he M"ill either be the son of a former governor or the firsl Negro ever nominated by a major party for.. statewide or. flee. director of Afro-Americans for Nixon-Agnew. i:ieceiving. A recent poll has indicated part of his future on Gov. Reagan hu c b 1 11tn 1 t d that name confUlion may have Jbm~ld Reagan. Democrats . to vote for· Edmund G. Brown Jr. won the Democratic nomination for secretary ol Stat~ In his first bid for statewide office. cantribtted to hls victory in "If the goVi!rnor does well, FloUrnoy saying, "Let's fi9d the June primary. Sixty.two then most of us (other out if our friends in the other percent of those polled were Republicans) will come ln," he party really mean it when. unsure whether Flournoy and said, whlle maintaining his they talk about minor1Ues. 11 state Controller Houston 1 .. 1 ~~iiiii~-jiiiji-~~-ijjjiiiiijiiiijjjjiiijjjiiiiij~i The 32-year-old bachelor son of thf! former governor won a seat two years ago on the Los Angeles community college board of trustees, a non- partisan post., but this Is bis first try at partisan politics. Brown, a lawyer by pro- fession, has ret..-eived behind- the-scenes tutoring from his well-known father, but little actu.al campaigning help. James Flournoy surprised many Republican leaders by ,winning the GOP nomination in the June pr\mary over the widow ol fonner Sea'etary of Stale Ftank M. Jordan and p r o m i n e b t as&!mblyman, George Mllii.s of Gilroy. Flournoy, a black attorney, has been active for years in the Republican Party, but has never held elective office. Jn 1968 he was national executive Flournoy are se para t e11 persons. Flournoy the controller has been a popuJar GOP votegel· ter. first as a two-1.erm assemblyman and then when he won his current office In 1966. ' Young Brown, cailed Jerry by his friellds, has conducted a vigorous race pledging elec- tion refonn it he wins, in· eluding the requimn#nt that candidates more fully disclose their campaign contributions. Brown also has urged the F e d e r a I Communications Commission to r e q u I r e television stations to provide free · time to candidates, filed suit to end voting .,residency requirements (a provision an appeals court recently struck down) and proposed an in· itiative to abolish all res.iden - tial property taxes. Flournoy, who agrees his name is "very confusing" to Art Linkletter Shows You a New Way to Beat Inflation ... Just Join 61he lrslllem Oub With a $2,500 balance in your savings account, you are eligible to become a member. Substantial savings are available when purchasing many items Including automobiles., furniture. a pplianC81, jewelry. Plua many free serv ices -money orders, safe deposit boxes, etc. . COAST . AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS . ' . . . . TALENT WANTED for new ve riety tel.vision 1how st1rtin9 Nov•mb•r 'th. e MUSIC GROUPS • COMICS e DANCERS e SINGERS . ' Call Bill 'Kinq' Johnson 956-0980 htw ... t A.M. & S P.M. For A•cllti.• Ap!Nl..-..t to be sponsored by BEAUTY CARE, INC. 1424 ALLEC, ANAHEIM Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: COMPOUNDED DALY AND PAID QUARTIN.Y.• 5.000/0 •5.130/o Pan book; No Minimum. 5.25 °1°-5.390/o Th ree Month Certificate; No Minimum. 5.75"1°-5.920/o Ona-Year Certificate; $1,000.M lnimum. s.00•1 •• s.1a•1. Two-Year"Certificate; $5,000 Mlnimum. •Et1•ctlv9 Ann&MI E11t1lrrpa INSURANCE TO s20,ooo The party machine is work-stories about Mobutu's success Ing to deliver a 100 perttnt in attractiilg American in--,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iii~~~~~~~~~iiiiii~iiii __ Jl.P.'JIQUt for green, as re-vestment here. quested bY "MOOulu: l l ufg&.5": ~-Alffi0ugh-ffiere -Willlle-oii1Y --------• ® ---·----• "If you stand for continuity one ~party in the new and stability, vote usefully -legislature it will contain L A -z -B 0 v vote green." familiar fatts. Of the 420 can· Mobutu feels a heavy en-didates on the MPR list about dorsement would enable him" two-thirds served terms as fice for seven years. governments that preceded Ll 1l to conllnue confidently fn of-depulies in the siring of ClA'A' SSilCS §:AlIEY To help lure !he volers the ~1obulu Des i g n er' s REAL ESTATE • • • An Investment Worth Investigating take a look at the R5AL ESTATE INVESTMENT SERI ES Are you searchin_g high and Jo\v. seeking just the r ight investment for your money? This series of free lectures on the real estate market. fe aturing top-rated experts in the invesment field, might be exactly \vhat you have been looking for. Plan no\v to attend the lectures to be held on Tuesday eve- nings al 7:30 o'clock in the College Center Bldg. or Golden \Vest CoUeite. Remember ... there is no charge to you. Just sign up this Thursday and let the experts poin t th e way lo successful investing through real estate. ~ LECTURE TOPICS Oct. 27-Creativity in Real Estate Exchanging-Jack Kistler and Bab Steele Nav. 3-Reca9ni1ing a Goad Invest· ment-Dan Olson ' 'Jh~ La-Z-Boy• Xreli n.a.Rorkc~ SOFETIE• is your j1n·ilatio11 1o J'eally :-tart living 1rith the !!!Ola of to- lnurrnw lo,lay! 'fwo J11'<1Ple can :rrlax and recline in thr SOFF.TI~:~ jntlt'pruilt'nlly oI ('llt'h 01her, • .,,mplece 'Villl iud.i-ridua} rnoln':-1!1. Jt l'V'ft :n.···'1.:o! CoTcred jn populilr ~rrtn ·gol.I h•'l:lur,rf vt>lvet tri1 n1ned i n ..,·hite vir1) l \\.'<'It rnr<l ; t lir SOFE'TIE,. 1-<: 6'~ • of !!IOUd com· !orl-11.umediate dclh·cry. ~peeial sale price ••• REG. PRIC:E SO FETTE The famou s Traditional La-Z-Boy® style is now available in the world's ONLY r eclining sofa, the Reclina-Rocker® ~I SWlft $ S OFETIE~ as well as matching individual Reclina-Rocker® chairs! --~. ---__,-~ SALE PRIC:E ALL 3 PIECES FOR ONLY MODERATOR -PAT McVAY CO·l ,ONSOll D I T DA ILY PILOT RECLINER RECLINER w/swivel $417 $241 $261 $35950 $19950 $219'° SAVE $220 WITH THIS 3 PIECE INTRODUCTORY OFFER .$699. HUNTINGTON BEACH · FOUNTA IN VALLE Y llOARD OF RE ALTORS COAST COMMUNITY COLLEG! DISTRICT Rea d the DAI LY PILOT Use yaur Master Char9e, BankAmericard, or Revolvln9 Char9e. Cos ta Mesa's Oldest Ho1ne-oivned Furniture Store 1865 Harbor Blvd. • Downtown Costa Mesa • 548-5131 ' • • •• Out of Harm's Way Little Arlene Schmit of Philadelphia may be safe • ~but she doesn't feel secure. She was put .on top of he car by mom who has her hands full opening the door. Arlene just wis hes she could hurry faster. : ··Trains Make Eerie ~Trips to W. Berlin 1 By EDWARD K. DELONG BerE.1. Simultaneously, two M A R 1 E N e o R N , East irai.LS leave Berlin for the Germany (U PI ) -The young West German cities. American lieutenant and the For 258 miles r r om Russian officer saluted, shook Frankfurt the train runs . hands and smiled in the pale through West G er many, yellow lamplight of this border town's railroad station. Then gliding almost without vibra- the lieutenant handed over the tion at high speeds over weld· bundle of passports. ed jointless rail. The last stop It was 2:45 on a recent r-.1on-in the west is Helmstedt. day morning, and the nighlly Red-and-white vending duty train from Frankfurt to machine.$ ~ith the familiar West Berlin -operated by the "Coca Cola" label around the U.S. Army -was getting its Helmsted t platform, and the clearance to enter Communist newsstand features g i r Ii e East Gerrrlany. magazines prominenUy among Only a couple of curious its wares. The lieutenant, passengers poked their heads bearing the title of train com. out the windows to watch the mandt!r, got on there and ceremony, carried out with entered a car isolated from elaborate deliberation belv•een the rest. The train pulled out. the .men of two occupation No signs marked tbe border II~"""'_,, e~~ 1, ed E t in the darkness. Only the sud· G -bound~orm r-d_.a s -den.beginning of a rough.ride .. erman r er guar , ex-. , eluded from the entry pro-. Minutes l~ter the station cedures because the United lights of M~r1enborn appe~red States does not recognize the and the train stopped again: East German government, The lieutenant lef~ his car, ~ stood in the cold night air foll~~ed . by a middle-aged .; chatting through a window clv1han 1nlerpreter, carrying a with a middle-aged woman baltered leather bnef case. running the newsstand. He The case contained all the hardly bo(hered to look up at passports, m i Ii t a r y iden- i what was taking place -5 tification cards and travel feet to his right. orders of everyone on the Inside the train signs by lhe train. windows warned a g a i n s t These documents had been speaking to East Germans or taken up the ni&ht before at l\uulw, ll1d q11n1t taking Frankfurt. Th< RuulaJI alllotr pictures' through the windows outside the station and another inside Eut G e r m a n Y . inside, both dres.ted in brown Cameru1 the signs said, were unUorms and armed with to be kept out of light. . pistols, checked them an That, plus the fa ct that U.S. again. Army military police had All was in order. The checked each passenger onlo Russians stamped the travel the train in Frankfurt and orders, the lieutenant shook patrolled the corridors hands again with the Russian throughout the night lo make officer outside, stepped back ' sure there were no unaulhoriz· and saluted. The interpreter ed departures, gave the trip gathered the documents into and air of eerie unrealily. his briefcase. made some The duty train is one of comment to the Russian of. three wa ys the occu.pation ficer that brought smiles to authorities in West Be rlin -both anO boarded the train. British, French and Americans -maintain a link with \Vest Germany. The other two. links are by ~highway ove r specified autobahns,• and by air:...through three 21).mile wide corridors. U.S. authorities in Berlin said only the aii cortldors are con· 1 sidered surely open. , But to do everything possi· ~ ble to keep the rail links open, four duty trains run each night. One leaves Frankfurt and anot her depart s "Bremerhaven in West Germany, both bound for West The lieutenant followed him. Aboard now in that same special car was an East German conductor in case something went wrong on the tracks. But be was confined by the military police to hi! com- partment. "We're in East Gennany, but we depend on the Russians to guarantee our free access," the lieutenant said. "They tell us what Ume we can run the trains." The duty train pulled out In- to the night. I See by Today's Want Ads e NEED A TAX SHELTEJI.? 2 Bedroom trl-plex unit.a lor sale by owner, e MEN &: WOMEN A'ITEN. TJON! U you have a pleu. ant telephone volee, lhi1 may be your job. S2. per hour plu.s bonu..ws, • Here'1 a great buy! 35m1 pmjcctor Sl5. Screen $5, Better huny on this one. e CIC BEAR BUY! 2~ be1utifl.ll wooded acre1 nr, Lake R.lneho;-ttWltieii. Build your dream cabin & enjoy the snow this win. ter. • , Th""4ty, October 12, 1970 ' DAILY PILOT J G Malay8ia.:Calls for U.N. Seat for Peking KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia Peking's admisaion into the pvty oolleacue Tunku Abdul friendship with all eountries, Thal bon:ler and conunued grappled wtlfl guerrillas sup- (AP) -Malaysia, after years United Nations while asking Rahman, who rttired as prime asking only that her ln· broadcutina propaganda from ported if not supplied by COm· of ignoring Cmnmunist China world powen to persuade mlniater lut month. dependence be respected. aouthem China. munlst China. and Its hoatility, hu taken a Chlneee leaders to leave Ruak dusted off Malaysia's So far, Ruak admit.., tt Peklnc rtfers to Malaysia's Malaysia bu Sl30 million I• new tack: if you can't lick Southeast Asia alone. policy of IOftali&rlneat, long . hasn't worked. He 1 a Id 1ovemment u H'l'he Rahman-yearly trade with Ch In a 'em, at least talk to 'em. The change came as Tun on the boob but scarcely u1-recently ChJna st t 11 en-Rauk clique." Since its 1957 throucb Hong Kone • n d M1laysia ls pressing:_l_o_r _A_bd_u_1 _11ua ___ k_succeeded~---hl-• __ ec1_._H_•_oal_d_M_•_la.:.yi_l•_110U_;:gh:_1_cou_r_aged.;:.__:_llU"__;_rri_H_a_s _•_.:lon_.:g::...clll_.:•_cilld=•.:.pe_ndence _ _;•c_M:_•_lay.::_sla __ h1-'1-S_ingapore middlemen • .. JIHI \ 1:_-"2! llRl.I =· I 11111dl:_·'-:-1 lllll\[·-:· TIHI\ ,. . TIHl\'c·-1111111::::::. 111111 -·~1 llHI\ c::::::.:! JIHI\ c:::"'...::.• MARKC. BLOOME MARKC. BLOOME ROAD TEST, NOV. 1970 brand new TUBELESS 7.75xl 4 (F78/15) 7.7Sx15 {F78/15) 7.00xl 3 l .2Sx14 l .2Sx15 7.3Sx14 (G11n 41 (G11n s1 lmll·Ull .lk ,, .. • lllC~ 8.85xl 5 (J78/15) 95 DATSUN•TOYOTA•OPEL 5.20x13-5.60x13 6.00xl S-6.8Sx1 S 5.60x15-5.90x15 (Kl.+ '1.111111.11 •hf. (J, Fu lac• Jml•·ttlO l urflu llKl••lt $ 'fruc,sfi.Oa.e!rs• FOR TRUCKS,CAM,.(RS, -9 PICKUP5 ,DUPLI X, VANS, TRAILERS, HOW Ill STARTING AT ... 1 6.00x16 · l1<l.+Sl:ll Ull fd [l.lochdl Hiatlquart~s for all types & brands ;J WheeU la·)"~~ .. -.,.., INCL. 14" & 15" ••• FORD, PLY., & CHEV.\ I Super Chro111e Whetls ••• -)4: $ •• , MOST CARS ••• $~9.95 vw. 6.so.13 (171/13) V l .1S•1 4{G71/14) 7.00.131.25•1 s (C71f13) tG71f1 5) I WHITEWALL I World's finest 115x14 ..... ' 12.ll ,., ti. fll SPfCIAl ON AltSllfS While They Last ... Guardian Premium or ll'tdo 6.tS•14(D71/14) 7.35•14 (1711141 7.7S•14 IF71{14) 7.7Sx15 (F71/1 S) '22' 1.55•14 (M71•14) l .SS•1 S IH71l\5) 1, llAND 111w• 20,000 MIL{ GUA•ANTllD IONDID UNING 2. LAIOI & INSTALLATION INClUDID l . MICIO·MIASUll All 4 DIUMS 4. ADD llAICI FtUID AS NllDID S. AIC-GRIND LINING 6. BLEED SYSTEM & CLEAN BACKING PLATE AS NEEDED 7. GREASE & PACI WHEEL llAllNGS I. AU CYLINDEIS INSPECTED IN· CLUDING MASTEi CYllNDllt 9. ROTATI WHHLS l ADJUST llAllS 1 O. IOAD TIST VINICLI TO STANOARDS 'fHI REPLACEMENT GUARANTEE - 1f LINING if it W11rs 01t lel•re 2p,DOO Miles Pits Senice C~arce MOST CARS GARDEN GROVE 14040 BROOKHURST 530·3200 COSTA MESA· NEWPORT BEACH AREA lvWsl ~ ANAHEIM • BUENA PARK 6962-UNCOLN Bl.VD. 826-5550 re.,.,., u ..... • "'"'"' 3005 HARBOR BLVD. CORNER Of IAKER & HARIOR Doily 8:30-9 Niles 'Tll 9 • ' I . :: .. . . .... ' I • • A ROSE IS A ROSE· BUT IS A DIAMOND A DIAMOND . '1 ' rt's easy to pick a perfect rose: Diamonds lake a lot mQre knowing. Let an expert help you choose. Our knowledge · of gems has earned us a coveted membership1 in the Ameri· can Gem Society. · · ' .. Choosing a diamond can ·be 'a plea~ureable experience ••. · •. tike.fallin& in love ••• or picking1 a 'r~!: Come"In-:an.d~see • . @ .' '. . ~~~-.---'-X"'°~~-~·__,_~~- ·(:!H•All~E·S'·,lt . ~AR;R • .~1 ' ' Welldi!Plm, Newport lleaob, Calil. LJ • • . 211 Marine A-mrpt. ' "11>0& )llond, Cllil. • • ' .. '·. . ,\· ' ...... 1''J/ ,.,~ t~I . l . > ' • J . 1..-"' .. 'bp.ej-'?~~ l§lh;OP.Pirig ).•,. 't at i'~1 f;;i.nestr . .. ' , OPEN THURSDA y •Alilb MONDA y EVENINGS ,', ,-. ;! ' ' . "SPL~DOR" . ' $17. SO SOFT •.• IT'S THE NEXJ' BEST THING TO GOING BAREFOOT •. ~'Wliere Slioppin'J J!J ~ Real Pfea!Jure " ~(JJ tsf {J[j1'8HOEB YY,~ , .. INlllll!j J,~MllY 1052 IRVINE WESTCLll'F ,PLAZA NEWPORT BEACH . -,S4a."84 • Veta's llrtnllft APPAi£~ ---·~·~ I ~. : . . . KNOW-BODIES GREAT GRANNY Old Feshioned luxury In Super Soft Pech9lo@ $13 • Phont 642: 11.97 .. , ' Romantic Peasant Look! Colorful orion chellis in ankle len9th. For at home weer, pertyin9 and petio. By Anne Fo9arty $49. Wostcliff Pina • 17th & I Nino • Newport ·a.ac11 JtGJn-tatd Tho Nowporter Inn • Newport kach :~ ' ! ' I l l I ' ~ ' -c--~---------• ~;.,., . ..,., . SWEET TASTE .OF SUCCESS -It \Vas sugar Bild'''.; fpunder. Funds 'vere raised during the guild-Spon- spice for members \\1hen the Orange Cciunty Guild' .\ '59red Peacock Hill National I·lorse Show. Savor- for the John Tracy Clinic met today for luncheon .. ;. , 1;.µg the occasion. a re Mrs. Richard Marvin Jr. fleft) They \vitnessed the ptesentation of a $15,000 Check · .: -fRd Tracy Allen. for the clinic to ?.1rs. Spencer Tracy, president and-.· . · . ~ . J' : '-,t.o&,1 I . ~ .. -· •. '5. Funds Fro.s;f ,. : . . " . . Meeting .. './\ . ''llow S\veet it is" when a~l the fund s are !"'" :· .. ,' o-f red Ersham, James Florance and Sun1 ncr l\1ann corded and the ledger can be marked clo sed wit}\'. •pfficially relinquished their duties to the incom- a stamp of success. . . . . 1flg officers. • T·hat a nnounce1nent provided the frosting at Guiding the organization '''ill be l\lr!i. l\1oran a luncheon for members or the Orange Count;y , · •. . . . . v· Guild for the John Tracy Clinic when memb~r.s · 1 Jnd ass1 st1ng her \VIII be the l\1mes. 1'1arsh first gathered today to hear the resul\s of the sevent)i ' .: ,1}'ice president and membership ctij\ir1nan : John annual Pcacoc~ Hills National Horse Show . ' : -:''Stanley, second vice president in charge or ways rrrs. Spencer Tracy, president .and founder -~!. :-;11lr:td me~ns; Ri~hard Mai:vin , thi rd vice preside nt ti)~ clinic, was: guest ·of honor and presentin$ he'r · .... ~ .~nd . social_ chairman: \V1lbu r ~la\vley, sec~etary ; "'Ith a check .for $15,000 . \Vere the co-chairmen'· .. , Vill1am Hill, treasurer, and Florance. parhamen- of the 1970 horse show, Mrs. J. H. Friedman 8.J!t.' ;"' ·~ ----M·r!:-Douglas Moran. --------_.,,i_l!. _Ne~v-p.rovj~i.o..n.al_ .me1n?.ers _Yle.re-in.Lroduc:-___ _ The ·meeting began with .an ll::W a.m. soci , "d _dur1ng the .meeting 1ncl~d1ng t~e.Mmes. George ,. hour rn th e Disneyland.J{otel. . 'l'J":'l-;j ~1ggerman, Ronal~ Perk1n_s, .\Vllham Ba les Jr., . . . . ' l..:~~~1ch.ard Musson, Richard D1rr1cq. G. Tapley Tay-Follow1ng the luncheon, retiring, presiderl~~,;.·_.,,.Jor Jr., Eric R_oberts and Pat Carter. They will be- 1'1rs. E. C. Lovret and her board, the Mme_.s, . : if~~ their training with a visit to the John · Tracy ~1ichael .Jones, !\>Jorati, Roger Marsh, E. H. Riley..;-·;~' Clinic. . ' .. Bouti.q,ue , . . --·. ~ -~~ ., \ •• . . " ~ . • .. ~. OlfiliMI' n. ,.,. '•" \ .. J ' .. . GR~~:· f RY ARRANGED -Members of the newly formed support guild , for S~ .. '10,seph Hospital, Orange hope that as punch bowls are emptied they l :will ~J fjlled with funds 4,uring El Baile Erlcantado F'riday. Oct. 30. in the Bal- ' ) , boa ~Y. Cl'ub. Anticipating success are lfeft to right ) , th e Mines. E. Terrance Morap,rAl exander Bowie a~d Robert N. Dunphy . ' . • • Glamour Moods Mixed • . . ': . ., ...... ~ '!: • • .. -·' ""'' • • ' .,\~·'ill ·,p ., .,,. t ' ....... . c;' ,·; ;<, (: J_'.'. _i.>1 :;i.' I~· ':j . :r: .. ·, ··· '; '' _;~ ; 1. ,() r. (jv,\a·~!lcta.t . ;:·:~\t·e.nrn·a-; '~ . ~ ?:I ' . Betki:>ri~:~~ ·~~:~ ~: ..... .: ...... ,,;· . ' • , .. "Serendi pity" as dellned by· \V ebster is "the gift of finding valuable or agreeable lhings not sought ;or.,. The word is appropriate for the biennial funding event o[ Santa Ana-Newport Harbor Delta Gamma Alumna!!;, for valuabk! and agreeable things "''Ill be in abundance dur ing the holiday boutique sale schedl!led from, IO a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday. Nov.:;. ?\1rs. \Valter Gayner will open her Mesa Verde home for the benefit, which supports the Deve\opm"..nl Center for Blind Preschool Childttn at the Services !or the Bllnd, Santa Ana . . ;--, .. , .. .;,. '\ ··.'",'~A gour1net dinner, elaborate decorations and musi c in many mobds H ~l..,ve fused together to for1n an evening of enchantmen t \Vhen Las .. • t A'fotges de San Jose. ne\v ly fo r1ned fu nd-raising guild for St. Joseph Hospi- tal>:@range, hosts El Baile Encantado . .. I t' ·,• ' ~· ~The Balboa Bay Club wil l be the party setting on l<~riday. Oct. 30 . .andJbe music wi ll be created by the orchestra of Ronnie Brown. Tournedos ot ~~f with wine \viii provide the finishing touch to the evening, for \Vhich , · 111¥,k tie will be appropriate. ~ ,,_' .I' .' ... ~Mrs. Frederick Presco tt. \Vays and mean s chairman, is being as- , ... r·.:. · ~stBa' \vith preparations by the Mmes. RiChard Newqu is t and Sanford ..., ·.: ijepf>s. in vi tations: Robert Plumbo. food and bevera,1?es: William Reid , . .. 'Ock\ail parties; James Milliman, fa vors ; ... Briali Ewald. Ru ssell Behrens In~ David Johnson, decorations. and Jorge Luhan. publicity . '. , · Five members of Las Amigas de San Jose will open their homes for ' " . ; 'c'(y<~tail parties before the dinner dance, and will be assisted \vith host .dutifs by other guild members and their husbands. ::~~ Hosts and co-hosts wiJI be Dr. and Mrs. Newquist. assisted by Dr. A~~~1rs. Johnson, Mr. and 1.'lrs. Plumbo and Mr. and Mrs. George COult, 'B~!Mr. and Mrs. Milo Kens ru e, as sisted by Mr. and Mrs. Darwin Rein- 11!&!). Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schoeffler and Dr. a nd Mrs. Heppi. :... • ·¥ J.Others a re Mr. and Mrs. Al Sto all, assisted by Mr. and Mrs. John Stdy, Mr. and Mrs. James Stovall and M(., and Mrs. Richard Steffy ; Mrs. Richard Jimenez is .· chai rman of the eve n l. Assisting her are the Mmes. Lewis MacDonald, ·o avi d Snow, L. J'2an Ga.uthler. Donald Sutherland. Steven Ur· ry, John Coyne. Carl Schwartz and John Everett. , . . • ;. ·;J)r ... and Mrs. Prescott, assisted by Dr. and Mrs. Charles Ziegler. Dr. and Lti't: , 1 .} 1 ~ )tr ·.· Ewald. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Bowie and Mr. and Mrs. Ja01~s Gray, HOLfDAY HAPPINESS -Pl'ovkling uhpfflN ~ lor Lisa ·'Roblnson are Mrs. ,. 1' • ~fld1 Dr. and Mrs. Reid. assisted by Dr. and Mrs. E. Terrance Moran. Dr. gifts fpr happy holidays Will ~e tht. Strindipt•' (left), hostess and Mrs. ., , •fld'Mrs. Robert Ball and Or. and Mrs. Luhan. ity boutique sale, sponso red by; ~~a G8mmas ·chairmcln. ;', : l .. imited re~ervations slill are available by calling Mrs. Prescott, · of Santa Ana-Newport area.· MaKJng a choice , · · 642-.9980, or ~1rs. William llood, ptesident, 544-6398. ' ' '• -· •. . . . . ' . . ' --. ' .. Hurt • • ~ f :.Ta·ken Out::~~¢f <S·i·ving When C ~.~~t;ity •• !"' _;..' • I .. , ,;i• Begins at Home DEAR ANN LAllDERS: Tlle Se8"'1 I• uoon us. My malt br\ngt dally pleas for 'Vorthy Causes. Some Ire worthier than others. It's not easy to make a decision. The most effective mailings are oflet) done by high-powered. advertising agen- cies. The truly deserving charities often can't afford slick brochures. Frequently the brochures are ac- companied by wann lltUe not.es from close friends, which can be awfu lly herd to ignote. So what docs a person do! I like the Salvation Anny. the American ..Red Cross, the Gamp Fire Girl!!, Girl Scouts. BoySCOO\s. C'"T.:&natd'1-Jfou::e, lhe Lambs, Urban League, Portal House. National Council on Alcoholism. Visiting Nurses AssociaUon, United F u n d , Mothers for Peace, Dlaloaue. NaUonat -· ,, •• ~ • r-1. J • ' 1t\1 DEAR ANN LANDERS: ouf da.ighlcl',;, ''gone through that she would have learned trrespou\ble Ind Immature, benl on fl. A N N Ll\NDERS age I~. was B«lng a lot of a,.»riam boy.~~ ber lesson? No such thing . She is sneak· · 1tan1 1r•tlfk1tioa with no regard ltr tlile Linda insisted It was noth~ tatrklus, 1 ~ )hg around behind our backs seein g the conseqaencet. MOreover, sel', te your they were just good fri ends "'!.. Ole aau~ '~boy at every opportunity. Cod knows daqbter, m1y well bt a weapoa acalDst • ~· AssociaUon for Menlal. H~ Uiited .Negro College Fund, Japaneie-ArnefJcan Service Committee, American . Indian Center, Jnc. i ' ~ . I ~·ant to eliminate Cancer, '.Ile.rt Trouble. Muscular Dyst"'l'h , llr1111Ule P21ralyst.s and Birth DtfectS, Multiple erosis,-HemGJ>hl\ia,..-.A..c,.Lll.f~..1 is . Blindness and Kidney Oi.!ICase. I w1rit all lhe poor kids to go to camp. l,,,ant e.vcry crippled chUd lo walk aaalioi.I ~llttl everyone who needl a laWJerlG~iaYt • garbage. The day after TlJ!rj &ri~atfd, ! ~al they are doing. The girl has two parental autborllY· from high school Linda to{d rM (pra~.1 111ore years of high school ahead of her In addition lo Information 0111 blrtll co•· one. t.ically ln•hyste rlcs) that she 1$-pregnant .. ., lod I'm afraid she'll get pregnant again lrol Linda should 'get coullffllng. She's • But, dear Ann Lande rs, whO wlll 't;. k..: I called our doctor Immediately and tooli and ruin her life. We clln't lock her up. conru11ed, angry 1lrl who ·need1 &o leam CARE OF ME when I ain broke from glv· her to his office for an exam~. Tbf.h.,1·~at can we do? -BIG TROUBLE why she place1 so llttle value " lttrseH following day Linda had an~~ t ! • ~ DEAR TROUBLE: I never thought I'd nnd Hr femininity . ing ? -MR. AND MRS. AMERI CA , The ne1l evening the boy'"' par'tftu, ~.ttt: tbe day wbea I would advise a -DEAR. MR. AND MRS. AMERICA: If came lo see w. They wcrtr''~etY"SOffY''t ~liter ti -1nstrucf her l~ftar-old -llow ~·Ill yoU kl'IOW \\'hen lhe real lhing l'O• caa't take care of your11elf you will llboul whnl happened blfl • Tim ,..,,.,. '-dauzb'.tr In the methods of contrncepOon, c:mes along? Ask AM L3nders. Scod for be labl care of~ olhera -perhaps one honorable and he would tn•ry air •ut thl1 111 my advice Co yoo. Linda It un· her booklet "love or Sex a1~ How to Tell or tM orgnn lu:-ron11 to whom you liave--oaugll lFr:"""\Ve -were outraged" Wnd toi. nbtedl1"'havtnf"-&e1•af 'rel11t1on11 with he Dltrc;tnce.." ~en1s ln-eoln'lnd cO!llrlbult d. A3 for ll}C. f'm 1rnteh1l to be them Tim hcd bc'.lC'r n'Jl 3J>ow his face &.hit be IO yo• mJ11ht 111 wtll be rcnll!lllc. " k>ng, self·addrcased, stamped envelope n die &fvllq: eDd -and>'" Uoald bt, •rourM out place again. . t ~ .. f\&lor1llt1 doet•'t fl&ure here. These kids with your request In care of t~ DAJLY toe. "' Wouldn't /OU think 1iilcr liiO ,tJnda fW " 1lave DO iaterest la lbe.aubjecl. Tbe)' art PJLC1I', ~ • ·-----------·----,,----·· ---• lhif ii Women's Lib? v' , , I • ~ine ·Br~w$ fnem: Apa .rt . .~ . . . ' . I ~ •1 llBMA BOMBEClt tJ\e mom\nl." "Jtjl flO•boWllJ!g ' • · ' of with the 'sjiys and get out of , The U.S. Department your bait." Ap1cutlure aurv~yed fj\mi~~ Given a ll~Ue time, your to fln4 out how ·m.uch w~k hulbenii,wlll work up enough .men,dld around the hlu5I and ' empathy to call your bos8 and · ilbcovered a husbanCI pull In tell blm how he is drl v1n4 you 1 ·~ ho:w'1...-. • day •• (~ Ml« to the point of exba~lon. ~ ,aUtlaed lb· 'That Finally, 'Jn a dr~tic mo-m~, hive been the .day be ment, he wW think ol ways for you to cut down ind conserve your enero. Cancel your hair appointment. Freeie . things trim the gard~. Drop bridge club on Wednesday evening and eat at your' desk and get home a half hour earlier. AT WIT'S END And in one magnantmous could conceivably t a k e ' 1.t hours. ~YoU've .come a Jong w1y, baby ••• Wake up, bab~ ••• You aal~p, baby?" ·,. 1 • • APPRAl$ALS DIAMONDS GEMSTONES ESTATE JEWEL RY' •• • . ' . . getture, he will even offer to walked instead of drove his take 1 io:b off your hands "If South Co•i• Pl•r• car to the garbage can.") ' YotJ'.:e nol. feellng;well t~ay, lri1tol •• s • ., Diego fwy. StatisUcs bear out sWI .·I'll call Y.QUr mother for you." Coll• M••• 640·90&'• another fact. No matter how If he , h&an't seen your~~~~~~~~~~~ many hours a woman apends · mother jn quite a will le • that worldng ...at a job oulalde the ' home, Jflen still rack up 1.6 • D09rs Unlocked for Benefit Home Tour One of four homes to be open for a benefit tour, sponsored by the Puncb and Judy Guild of Costa Mesa is th& residence of Dr. and l\1rs. David Davis. The home repeats an unusual de sign of archi- tectural curves and circles. Ready for hostess duties for the bene- Horoscope ho;;:~:.:;.~;::~ among ,IMPQRTED TOYS meo ls, "I'm lettlng,Y<>u work & GIFTS fit, scheduled for Thursday, Oct. 29, are (left to right) Mrs. James Gorman and Mrs, Davis. Tickets, at $2.50, may be purchased from any guild member or at the ho1nes on the day of the tour. Proceeds \viii benefit Children's Hospital of Orange County. elaht hours a day · at a job, Cora, and' then come home, raise, three kiCls, de;, the laun- dry, make ' the beds, cook, bake, clean and use Saturdays and Sundays ·for your errand! • , . Wat more do you want from me?" Face it, women . A man can be Mr. Nice for· jUet so long. Sooner or laler, he ls going to Jower hLs average ·Jrom 1.6 hours to something lts.s. For tfloae of you \fho have never gone the emjlloym~nt route, let me lay it out for you. , Soon after you start 19' work, there will appear a~ im- agimry di viding line between v.•hal is "his" and what is "yours." (Remembe r how v.•ith the kids it was always .,. ·(L--. .,. ~~,..,..,T" -L ""f:'J'ifi~~~ ~-"!'/~ "MY son made the team" but ~ · "' -· ·· · ·· · f' 1'YOUR son got in a light." ti The same kid.) P . Around ~ Your huabnnd wilt star! dishes for you last night v.•hen "SHACKMAN" Doll House Furniture DOLL HOUSES DOLLS IMPORTED MINIATURES CUNNINGLEIGH SLIGH 209 MARINE-BALBOA ISLAND 675°5540 Leo: Enlarge Wardrobe eer1ng ¥ sayingthingslike."ldid your " w. you vtorked late" or "I took ·,, N!XT TO PORT PERQVACKV PLEDGING Pi Beta Phi on hosts v.·ere ri.tr. and ~lrs. your dog food out of tM car ~~~~~~~~===========~~ FRIDAY OCTOBER 23 CAP\ RICORN 1he UCLA camp us was Mi ss Josr,ph Veach. trunk and put it on your _ _:: __ Duties may appear to (Dec. 22.Jan . Le~Jie Kill!e, <laughter of J\Ir. She ,113s feted on her return porch." multiply . But this is because 19): Accent on gain through and Mr s. La\\•rcncc E. Kitt le \vith a dinner in tJie home ,of this is Collowed by a pitch opportunity .. is on ,horhon. partners, cooperative efforts. of Newport Beach. Miss Kittle Mr. and l\trs. James Wymore. for understanding in which he BJ SYDNEY OMARR J\talntain cOnfidenCe. ~fuse to If slngle, this could be time. is a graduate of Corona del co-hosted by Mr. and Mrs. offers to help any way he can. i\RlES.(March 2J·April 19): be ·discouraged by one who when you decide to end tha t J\lar High Schoo l. Leroy Bean. Guests included "You look tired. Forget about , ....... 1 sings the blues. Add to stale. Love blooms-whether the Messrs. and Mmes. Sam ironing my socks this v.•eek." Curtail s.,..... ... atiop. Deal with ward robe J\IISS SllERRY Ste,.ns has "ll d 'l ., l h t U I I · married or single. Give and Deluca. John Herman , Turner . you on wan o ear :· acts. ni atera action now VIRGO Aug. 2J..Sept. 22): Be 1 . been named rec ipient of the and Michael Herman. Lisa recite 'Evangeline' set \·mjght. be error. G;Un C<J!>PC!ra-discreet. Not wise to commil you a so receive. annual scholarship award Pr e-your alarm and get up early in ~ from family ll)embers. yoUrself to definite course. AQUARIUS (Ja_n. 2~ • Feb. sented by the \Vomen's Arch i-GUESTS of t.trs. Bernice ~---'·MOQey',il involved. Tike con-, Unknown t act 0 r s interfere 18): Do more hsten1ng than tecturat League of Orahge Jansen mother of aclor David iir"Vilive course.""--' w!Oi-i'Titelfigeiit-acliarc-xnow-tillking .• ~By -bcing:-obseJ'l'a~t. -.Cou_ruy . .A §!t~Qe.~l.J l the Un~-.... _Jpl)g_n~ dyr_ing_a_luau..in.Jhe -Party-Pltrn nee.I -T_.uaus. (April , 20-l\iay , this and play wailing game. you g~1n pJ! r L 1 n e ~ t 1n· ~erslty of Ca lifornia , BerKeley. f.fotion Pictures M 0 th er s • 20): ;Obtain hint 'from Aries Organizational dispute is in f~rmalion._ Accent pubhc rela-she also attended UCLA. Home. \Voodland Hills. '\'ere f\lembers or TOPS Harbor meslq:e. Take time ,to gain picture. _lions. Stn~e for gr ea le~ I-;NJOYING a fall holiday at the Mmes. Lee Ruiz and J\lillie Light e is will enjoy a adclili;onal information. Rumor LIBRA tSepl. 23-0ct. 22): harmony w!lh male, business the Santa Barbara Biltmore Hutchinson, both of Newport Halloween costume party at will not suffice. You wilt be Be flexible . Some niay claim partner. Hotel ,vere ~1r. and Mrs. Rod Beach, 6:30 p.m. Monday. Oct. 26. in called u~n to pro~ u c e you ,mu.11l do this or Jhat-:'"1ru~ ~ (Feb. l9-March 20 ): Earl Lippold of Balboa. They ~fusicians, dancers and leis Harper School, Costa fl1esa. author1t1t1ve source. Act ac-decision ,is in your hands. ·ae Light touch, soft-sell approach were enroute to northern flown in for the occasio n ad-l\trs. Charles Danziger may be coniingly. cool, calculating.' DQn't permit .vor~ best f?r.¥ou. Taking on California on vacation with ded to the glamour when a called at 646-9100 for in- GEMINI (May 21.June 2{1): others to force'j our hand. new respons1b1hty means· you friends. host of screen personaUties fonnatlon. Moderation should be key. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-NOv. 21): "".ft! have to bring to~ether appeared to autograph copies1-,:=========~I There is more to assignment. Aid comes from source v.•hich divergent . f~rces. Use innate MRS. L. A. HERMAN or of "The Cookbook of the situation than you may you thought \Vas In your past. sense of timing. Coata Mesa was honored' ~·ith Stars." Millie says, "Marsha presently perceive. Ask ques-Settle down to accomplish a bon voyage party in the Hunt loots raviShing as a tions and ·stick to established basic chores. Position is To 11>111 out mo•~ •b<m1 vo""'~u a"~ home of Mr. and Mrs. John blonde." 0 t h e ts attending ••t•ol09v, or<1er Sv<:l"ey Om1rr'' 50· "' · lo h d ' Fred M M Dinah routes. This will as s u re strong. You get important Pa~e booklet, 1~~ Tr111~ .a.tK1111 • u~r prior er eparture were c urray, Alt•olo-vv. Send bltl~da!e a"o 50 ce"t• .. A rd th SS s•·t d f B k GI F d . d ultimate success. backing from authorilies. 10 omerr sookt~t. "" DAILY PILOT. auva e wen am or a a er~ enn or a IJ e:e • .n.io, Gran<! Ce11!r11 Sl•lion. N~w . I th ea' 'bbe ~-Do th ' , __ .. _ CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Sl\GITIARIUS /Nov. 22· vor~. N.v . 10011. cruise o e r1 an. ~ ro Y· ....... ~· Pressure from one close to Dec. 21): You get head sta.rt '.YOU results in strained rela-on competition . Breaks come Uonship. Don't compound er· your way. Unorthodox ap- ror. Be receptive without proach brings ~st results. Be being a pushover. Take long· ready for change, travel . range view . . Draw upon va riety of cx- LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): perienees. Pulltrl1>n o"" Su11., U·S p.m. Ball Je<sey, the fried and tru• washable, no-iron fabric. Still the i1K1der, It'• so pretty in the new • • i J1j all ! new !JndiJe •U.DUATI C0l5n1111s D's_, DD's "k Ccm!or'tlblt Jn Your Cull'" Sandy'• ,Fluff. 'r· Shiff • -..%50 E. \1ttl Sl •. I • Cott• Mt1-H 11t'f.'.'. Sq\11 .. 11n11:A-r.i;,:0-54\'..,...itttr cti•l"ll. foll colorings. Choos• yours now! from $17.00 N 0 W come see the most exciting Furniture Store in Southern California. , ~~~'sHALF-SIZE SHOP 84 HUNTINGTON CENTER i8ii5 NEWPoij''B~Lvii:"'' ~-- .1----- j HUNTIN•TON llACH .INtxr t• hrlier Ires, ,111nlt1,•I Al .. : 114 OllAl'IOUAlll MALL PUllEllTOH You'll find fabulous furniture at aft ordable prices. FURNITURE INT-ERIORS • e COSTA MESA ' last 9 days Christmas portrait sale: now - 50% off Christmas portraits of you or your child now reduced V:i in our once'a-year portrait sale. Have all your family 's gift portraits taken this week. Choose an y size, finish, quantity. Ask about the special prices on life Co lor, too. Here .are a few savings. one black and while 8"x 10" portrait, reg. 10.00 5.00 three black and while 5"x7" portraits, reg. 24.00 12.00 pholo studio 726 may co south coast plaza, san diego fwy at bristol, co.!ta mesa, 546-9321 ·, ~-- • MAVCO . ., ·. --.. -. -------.. ·---' , ... Modern Masks Take Plastic Shapes \Vatter Einsel's pop art masks, incJUding·one \Vilh a hat, would befit an¥ goblin on Halloween night. The masks uliiize the conte1nporary materials of brass, y,:ood. and plexigla ss. These humorous masks as \veil as ancient ones stressing mystery and the oc· cult currently a re ·in a Face Coverin gs exhibit in the Museum of Contemporary Crafts in New York . Five Generations Mee t Five gene rations or native Californians met fo r the wedding of MW'iel Parrott and Lou Solton . Mrs. John ·Hudd leston. now of Reedley · (standirlif, left) the eldest. greets th e youngest. Jennifer Li sa Vogel of Sacramento; long with Mrs. s . E. Oli ver (standing. right) of Costa Mesa. fi.1rs. Chris Vogel of Sacramento (in brides1naid's dress) and ~rs. C.° E. Parro t.t of sacramln!O·i -~ ..... -~----~ Sorority Presents Pledges Diamond Presents, the an· nual formal pledge presen- tation of Alpha Delta Pi sorority, Zeta Alpha Chapter at California State College at Fullerton will take place Saturday. Oct. 24. in the Hyatt Charter House, Anaheim. fourteen pledges will . be presented to the school, co m- munity and alumnae. fl1iss Christy Scheller will preside , and Miss Marlou Stoehbauer. vice-president and pledge mis- tre ss. will serve as toastmis- tre ss. Formerly known as Delta Chi Delta. the group affiliated \Vith the national sorority in Eebruary, -1970.--Alpha Delta Pi. founded in 1851. is I h e oldest oollegia tc society for women. Senior C itizens Community Rccreatlon l Center at Orange County I Fairground s is the scene of 1 acti vity v.•hen Costa fl1esa: Senior Cit izens meet at II a.m. every Tuesday . -· ----------- Ask any kid. "Ask Andy" Is fun. Stt il Saturdays in the DAIL V PILOT. Rites Se t I Members And y's Fun l !liiiiii~ A spring wedding is being pla nned by Be rna di n e Gonza lez of Newport BC'ach and Lav.•rence Alan Lclmann of Balboa . f amily n1cmbers l~arned or the nev.·s during a champagne brunch gi~·en by l\t i s s Gonzalez' cousins. l\1r. and Mrs. Albert C. \Vallers. The bride-to-be. daughter of Mrs. Ceceli a Gonzalez of Indio and the late l\fr. George Gonza lez Jr .• is a graduate of ~alifornia State College at Fullerton and is a t-eacher in Garden Grove. Her fiance, son of fll r. and !lfrs. Delbert 111. Le!mann of Balboa, is a senior at Californi a Stale College at Long Beach where he is ma• joring in industrial tech- nol ogy. He is a graduate of Newport Harbo~ f!lgh Schoo l. Clowni ng At Party Valley TOPS Lcttuce·B· TOPS convene at 7:30 p.m. each Tuesday (or programs in Fountain Valley Elementary School. w.ow1 ··· y" ........ 11 whaf our cusa '"'en 1ay abotrt our •.••• • STE-AM CARPET CLEANING * A"'ahttl * Achel., , ... 'tft the 1~1 ! St9p ,.._.,.·Ifft"! * Lffff'I H millMI * Tt•ty the ffMtt c ... •littl · WHY STEAM BRIGHT? . l'erMMI Hf'vlce mMn• ._.,.11ty work. L•w ever~ ~ftl r .. Mnallift "le"" STEAM BRIGHT CARPET CLEANERS ~~~ • .:~~ ·642-9143 Check Y:our-Hor oscope Letour uper·~.;;:J~~l 1ivt tl'bir1h to your ht>irlooml in a modtrn new Mttinc- tk~ will i:onie alh·e 11•tth • fi~ and brilli•n<:eYOll ntvH' thou.rht pouiblt. t 'or Ill! unbeli..-ably 1o .. • prite. your rh!ri•hed diamond~ n 111 nsnain u hlllNIFt.11 u )VIit lo¥C. • Established 43 Ye1r1I . MUl'lflMOfOM C•NT!• •ttc11 ' •• ,""' "-'""'""' ••tell tn·SHI HAlllOll IHOP'l'IN• CINflll tM MftWr ''°"· Cf1M Mete Hl-t•t _o r1N MON .. THUltS, & l'ltl. 'TIL' l',M. DAILY PILOT JS New ~ey .Unl0cks Tragic Past ... ~ -\-or'--..... I)' JO .:ouoN His new meU»d i:f •Ir-ex-way we were tifou&ht up .. The °'""' •iw.""'...,. PJqratioo ••~ ditcovered dur~ people In h.ls therapy sessions.,. "Breaking Free" ls one book ins one ot several group had fonned varioul plc:tures ol Nathaniel Branden never pJan. iMr•PY sessions he conduct.I ned to write. each week. I Com) o s e d themselvei d,\lrinc the first Alter one momentous day in ~rimiii.Jy of youthful men few yean from the~arerits, hll private psychiatric prac· wit!\ com.rnon problems such pictures that distort healthy lice, he nnt home knowing i s passtvtiy, lack of ambltlOn, Images and left " en in· that all Other plans must be d·t--P r e·s a lo n and pro-sl<e neurotic adults, 1Crtam- temporarlly,, shelved and 'thflt .. aastinatlon, the Ir o,u p lng to aet out." this book had to be wriUen : represent~ ,. stored up . J*in • Same o( the quesUons were: about-what )e hld discovered ~ ~so)vei!l ·problems. . "When y~u were.a child, did that day. How can I, dere.prt41 burl~ your parents' manner ot Branden, who' believes . a (cellngs? HOW can J brea~ behaving ahd ol diallDC with lack of self.esteem is the ba.sl.i th{oughJ" the men, asked him. 'you give you the'lmPteasloi> or ' al1 neuroses, was guest One;taid. lhal he had 0 amnesla thot you were Uvlnc tn a :world speaker far the Newport-Costa .foe theJ1rst, 10-12 )"8IJ'I of his that was rational predictable Mesa Branch of ~ Ameflciin· life." 1 Intelligible? Or ~ World thai A89ocl~onof'Unlverslty One day B_r~ asked was bewllder1fi.g' con- Women durinc 1 luncheon in them a M:ries • o1 ~que!uons tradictory lncom.preheiislble the frvine Coast'CoUntry Club. about their early l)'Nfs, and unknowabie? ~ ' A gradual~ or UCLA w,ho noted, as he plied the queries "Wert you tau8:ht the lm- euneet hil MA al Ne~ Yori that so~e men began crying portance of learning to think, Unl~ef"Sit,, Branden is ex· and ~me had hands that were the fmportance of developing ecut1ve f dl~or of t ~ e shaking as .. they wrote tl)e your mind, the Importance of lnstltute of B I o c e n t r t c quesUons. The who~ room becoming 1 raOonal being" Psychology In Los Ang~\es. ~e-was filled with excltemen;; Did your parents provide yo~ has been associated with Miss tenseness and a I o-n Y • ·with intellectual stimulation Ayn Rand . author of "The Branden related. and convey th! idea that the Fount ainhead" and "Atlas ''There was no doubt that I use f 0 r 1 -d can be an ex- Shruggedl ' a~d currently is had disooyer~ a potent tool of citin~ ~leuas:;? engaged ln h1.s own r!Search therapeutic investigation ..• 1 "D'd f I f l work . felt that I had lifted the lid of l ~ou ee ree o e~press Branden began his talk by hell -1 ·had s~n more vividly your vte\\'S openl~, without asking how many or the and clearly than ever before rear of punishment . \\'omen were parents, the n ~ full ·magnitude of the PARENTS RESPECTFUL how m'any ha<l themselves ni ghtmare of most child· "Dld your parents treat Y~~ bee n children. Since his new parent r e I at ion s , the wit h respect? Were ~our boo k dea ls with child rearing. ni ghtmare that is seldom tl~oughts •. needs. and feelings he quipped that,· since all recogni zed because it is so given consideration? Was y~ur hands had been raised. he co1nmon. '' dignity as a hu{nan be1r.g wou ld not be leaving anyone Branden feels th at v.•e arc ~cknowl~dged? ~ere Your out of his remarks. not the helpless victims of the likes and dislikes treate:I seriously? Fashion Controversy Rages at Luncheon The psychologist then read from his book a case history of a woman who participated in the therapy leading to break-through. His book Is a collection ol dialogues, tape "reoorded during the therapy sessions. between himself and his cllenls who were asked the que stions. \Vho rules : Paris o r \Von1en's \Vear Daily? Is the midi the fashion industry's Ed sel? These questions will be answered when Alan Cartn al will show so1ne high fa shion lines. Mrs: ,. Clifford J o r d a n , Newport. Beach, and Mrs. Frederick Graze r, Corona de[ Mar. are hospitality chairmen. They will be assisted by Mrs. Charles Bonnett, Mrs. Ri chard Do!ring and Mrs. John Strong. Table decorations will be do- il-youtself jaek-o-lantern kit s. Brand<!'l'I feels his concept is important because It helps in- dividuals "learn more about the steps by which his personality and psychological mllke-up came to be formed and is valuable for "every parent who does not want to beco1nc or does not want to discusses current fashion con· troversles with me1nb!rs of the Woman's Auxiliary to the Orange County M e d i c a I Association. i'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiOiiiiiijJ The featured fashion \Y riteri from the Los Angeles Ti mes will address the group wh!n it ' meets Tuesday, Oct. 27, in lhel Airporte r Inn. Newport Beach. Following coffee at 10:30 will be the II a.m. meeting and a1 noon luncheon. I • Cartnal. a former-editor .of Fashion Week who now writes1 for th~ llome and \\test Sec· lions of the Times and the1 \Vall Stree t Journal, wi\1 bel accompanied by models \\'ho AYE. Vll lllKk Ht. C111I Mltl!W~y orEN TUESDAY ..... SATURDAY-10 ....... 5 , ..... The thing is watches ... The mood is a ntique! It's finely <.:rarted Ii-je\\el Timep1eef'~ trom Elgin. \\'altham . \\'11\nauer and Croton. Trad1t1onal styles jusl greal for ~ou r Ve ry modem and sra<.:cful t'ashion ]op~ 1\n up.to-date accessory for antiqu e wedd ing Set~. f:xclus1\'e s.!ytC!s.1 Never at such avant-garde . ' pr.ices. ' r e m a i7, a psycholoflcaf desllo}'tr. "Children who c-°°"" with demands 'go on striU' and iheir method ol ......,.. ding persists," he explained. SINGER . .. . . THE· BIGGEST -SALE·OF THE YEAR .. . . Special savings on more than 1*8 combinations of IL.119'!'~' sewing machines and cabinets ... aHSale+ Thon priced now! • _J FASHION MATE' ZIG-ZAG PORTABLE sewing: mac.hiAe by Singe1 in a carrying case. Sews straight. zig.zag. Mends, darns -and you can use It to make bullonholes, Joo! The Singer 1 to 36* ~it Plan helps you.have theSe . values now:""within yQyf budget. ' . S.ING'1ER Wllatl ntv1.for,tonwm>11 ~'ai·l'I NOERtodar /0 ' .. '. "' ~OSTA MW COSTA MU A ltlstol &-S1111!lower ?llOO H•rllor lll'o'f • , .S.0.lU3 'Kl f.llts ~ Cont Plart litrbtr 1Ctn!W " • KllllTtNa_TON l lACH _.~....., ., htcll -.. "1·100 ~111191911 IHCll Cllljtf' OUMN 6 AI DIN •aovt 11 SMIWl!iiil l .. f S'l'·lt.ir "Tiit Clly" "'°''' tf)I~ ,,._ Or1t1Vt C011t11l' l'i.r• ' DAl\.V PILOr ThwsdQ, Ot:lobtr 22, 1970 -----·---------~--• Hospi·tal Ills ~Q.iagr1osed' --j ~· ~---~ N~W YORK (UPI) -'°ver Medicine." • Dr. Pqe allO calls l~r _. a l!Jac-er, !1111Ch ¥ Ibey op. lry't9 .. tout ti I hoapltal bod 11le edltGr JM Ilia journal quf<t tn· i...,ltala, "NOiie plec!1te the doctors 41¥1 .. .,...ruJtY Of to a hurt)'! calls for oU>er dwJltl U 1111,temeftl ta aUU 1 loOI tin& nU," Dr. Pqe 111d. lf'hea you 'rt apt .to ..,.. hospitals ore to r<d""' holtlle caUN," he uld. ·· "II the -hu bed with a ·doctor dillJ'IO!lln& llll or attitudes ol patients tnitat«l ... i'The food Jnd . aurJic-1 , surly, the prtce a e em a hdl!lllllf. by all aortl of lhlnp. truc:kl wlili iq""" wheeb, the upeclalll( outrqlOOI. Stoc. The . bed Is a~ut a foot too He nixes young doctor• and pounding ate am pl~•. blit most journi'll&ta ilxl govem-hleh for comfort ,net '\afety, nurses who adqpt the blank most ot all the gtrlllh laugbier mef'Jt orficlals have been at saya the 9ocior campalgnine expreulon of a commercial in the hi.JI• at night still reip Pllns to blame doctOra and far m1nl rtfmtns 1n hoepltals. Clothes model lnltt.d of Ill supreme. 11W9e girl.I know 10 management, with 'little tnmo ~. l~ine H. Page, who's ea:weuion that radiates con· little but f.he:y know Jt so Uon ol 1ky-rocll:eUng labor and bka a patient, ta)'• he'• fidence, friendliness a n d fluently. material costs, alq with the aware Of the trfWntnt.s about wannlh. tt's bad for patients 'llftlls ebul~t exclusion of nKd for more and highly blab beda aavin8 nurses' who feel aJone and olten are the sick adds to the k>ntllneu specl1Uzed ten ices, t be r • 1llclll. frl&blenod . In 1 bolpltal -kl vibrating muat be 111 -~ 1'J"O" "8\lt J ltlll believe a foot H8 scolcU nurses who wake with fadgetry and pointless . aram to let the pMient lo OD loWtr would u ve mah y paUmts In the middle of the laugttter." the problema involved." ctU>es. vasUy decree• the nlFt to give them a Then there's the hospital If hospitals don't shape up need ror asslstanct and not re-hypnotic. He thinks they've food. When a bolpltal room on these scores, Dr. Pap HH qulN a patient lo shiMY down rel ated lo airline ho!tes141 co.u anything over '11 a day the day ho.spltall will bf run thl~bectPost to aet his feet on who find It ''such a pleasure:to t.he pau.nt ... glveo to ~ by unions and the feder.al the IJ'OUDd," Dr. Page says In serve you" - until you netd paring .bis repast wflh that of government. an editorial In ' 'Mod tr n something! ~ a bot~I. If it .dofm't mee.sure "This will almost compltte ~ Up,. the patient feels he's being the picture," he I aid• robbed. "Everythjnit will be under Arid that brlnp up hoJpltal control UC<!!L govemmeill bill•. •pondlna ll1d the naU.nal . Lutheran Auxiliary Feminine Team Captures Angling Crown Fall Fashions Shown "To many patients. the bill ii dtbt." CUSTOM-MADE DR·APERIES ' i ' It was Ladies' Day !or members of the Huntington Harbour Fishing Club during the International Light Tackle :tournament staged in San Diea:o. Aboard tM Polanace, Mrs. Earle Colee (left) land- ed an 184-J>OUnd mlirlln after a 21>-hour struggle which qualltled her team for the Ladies ' Division l\.~J P'-Rot f)~AJ.dl· UUl/ ... ,.._,-;-;-~,,.~-'~t• ;;,._,_;-~\ .::. ' ,.._ . _,. • ,.,.,~' ~ ·-!. --, · To avoid disappointment , ~rospe<Uve bridea aft reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white tlossy r.hot~ 1roph1 to the DAILY PILOT Women s De- partment one week belore the wedding. . " Pictuw received after that time will not be Uled. For en.e;a1ernent announcements it is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a blaci and white glossy picture, be 1ub- mitted six week• or more before the wedding date. II deadline la not met, only a story will be used. ' . . To help fill re~uitemehts on both wed- ding and engagement atories , lorms are ava1lable ih all of the IJAILY PILOT oUices . - Further ~esUons will be answered by \vomep's cUon staff member& at M2-4!'2l or fM.Hte. Perpetual Trophy. Also recelvin::: 'individual trophies are Mrs. J, L. ~fason (center) and ?dra. Harry Okuda. Mrs. Colee also scored most points, including 75 for 20-pound test line, to win the top tournament anglerette avrard. The Tee Tattler 1banksfPvlng baskets v.·ill fered by a stretch and sew dot the lables when the shop. Orange County Lutheran High Those Yiho have donated School Auxi llary's annual fall mo re than JOO hours of work luncheon takes place. in the high school thrift s hop The combined fashion &how y,·ill receii.:e service awards. and awards luncheon will be 1'.tn. Orvill~ Johnson is al noon Thursday, Nov. 11, in chairman of the eve nt . the Jolly ltoger resta urant, Assisting her are the !\Imes'. (Edllw'• Note: A (olumn •I worMn'• J. 11. Loo1iey, n1 Cl•H ·I, Mio Anaheim, Glen SY s U m, decorations; IOP 1011 Kort • will IPPllr t•cl> wttl! Fr1nklln, Mii. H.J. SWll'IMll. ,,. M••· Fifty-sir childten from th e \Villlam ~Wl'enct and Warren Ull OUI CONYINllN1 SHOP AT HOMI lilYICI Hut!aftH C•* I "2°1611 Sul• .... 547-6141 A W1rcfi d11t1•ft1 will till tt y1ur hlflll with • tl•ikfRt 11l11fi1~ of hit h "IYt lity lew ted f1brit1 fer you lo chot1I lrofll. N1 olillt)llitnl C1J11pl1l1 Jit6r.l1r 11rw- i11 -~phtl1t1iy -,1;,,, .. ,,., 111 tl\t DAILY PILDT. To ••1111rr M:ore1 1t1111r S. Pool1, 111 Mn. #lf{tll1 ...,_~ 1 _ _.......__ .,-1..-1, ~.ta M-• I .. llM W«k pJ11it mi ll""'" to P.O. Kttltr, "lfl C~ll (, fllo Mmft. F~ """'" &AIWRl~I '1\.:1-V\l "'''"" mu 1wo. COl11 Mt11. riw, mu11 bt ""'''r, Ni Sl\li'11•· 711 .... G. P•u• 1.lesa will prevlde a "-'rtoltt ReservaUom are available H ... C...-H._. ,._. tt(tlwed b'I' Mond••-1 Klrrn1n. E¥t1Yn E•rnall1w. fYI Cl••• 0 , ·~r 7771 .... ....... • 11 .. LAGUNA ••ACM '"' Mm.s. 11:u .. ,., •• J1o1Mrt Y1r•11w. ol seasonal sonas. A new look by callinc the high scMol of-_.. -•• 141 ltoblrl M1rtll\I', •• lflllll JOdc ll:Ul'P', follat, .... SE!LECTIYI!" NINI TOUllN.lMllHT _..":. __________ ~·ti_the~~lm~lt~f~abrl~c~si_w~ill'_be~~··':-_''~tc.::_:a~t~el9-~3~1~9!~.----~-~~~~~~~~==~========~ -A. Fl!gl\I, M". lcl~M.ly Stl>omtktr. l1. '5'~1 Mr1. Do~llCI HurlOul, 11111/ B Fllolll, Mrt. Sam Mirta. 7l1 Mrs. Jlt v• , mane Stn. 2'· C Fllfht, Mr~ •-• Wttlmort'~..O. '61 Mra. Ct"'-rlt'lt OrLon11, 2'1' ' l "YINE! COAST CJllSS CllO$S -Cl•n .... TIM Mmn. Ml~hHI P. 0'8rlt n, JOV.1 Aobtrl G~relncr, JI\~; Grr9q l lfur. Wlllltn) Mlr 1m1. l'<M•oe HMik. lit C"8st 8, lh• Ml'MI. WllHlrn Lt•I~•. 2'11'1; J1m11 T1yJO!', :n; MF5. Wolillf' lmllll, IW'l11 Coflnnt Frlnltlln. JIVH CllH C, tl'll Mrrt1. J. ll:tr l'"•ffttlrn. 1'; It. H. TIYlot, 29~; W1rr1n Meudlln, T. w. L1tl(n , ll\11; CltH 0. Ille Mmn. Aobtrl H1rllty, »1 J. M. Hlln"'lftel, H. JI. GOC11h11J, Y. Orvld Shltlclt, 32~~­Ml!'OAL llLAY -c11n .... th• Mfl'll1. LHur, 1S1 O'Btltn, 1'1 E. H. Ntwltl'ld, HS Juniors Mem~rs ol !he Jluntington Beach Jun ior lVomcn 's Club wlll partici pate in an Orange District CF\VC-J~1 Federation pa nel 1l f 130 a.m. on Tuesd:iy, Oct. 17, in the Communit y Methodist Church, Huntington Beach . Avco Savings terPaU . Mi11i4-ra-vel-eo-stume Headlines Flea Market TI1e Pl!l!I will focus on --r&ltrs(ion, parliamtnlary ~ Jersey knit wash and wear Other chainnen are lhe r travel shifts which fold in to a 1 J\1me.s. Helen Wild and Marie tiny carfylng case will be one Muller, Ii.Dena; Alice Burt end of the featured attractions at RoS! Meunier, better dtesits; Thrift Hanka, budget dreuu: the annual bazaar and rum-F.dltt\ Saunders, arts aM mage sale sponsortd by the needlework and Jessie Dungan Woman's Club of Laguna and Mias Margaret Beach. Stelnhaien, shots, hat.. and The shifts, prtctd at $4 will purses. be amonc new rnerdlandl.le on White elephants are under sale Saturday, Oct. 24, In the the direction of the Mmes. clubhouse beginning at t a.m. Ralph Bt!I, Fratik Burka and 'nle event is under the direc-o. w. Price, with cashier l tion of Mn. J. W. Lansdell, duties hand led by Mrs. Rutl'I ways and rt1eans chairman. Hull, Mn. Georgia Amer and ~ New and Uled jewelry will Miss JaJm Hull. f be aold by Mr1. Cllrrord Members are asked to bring L<iucks; book1 will be handled donations to the clubhouse by Mrs. L. J. Thomas, and the Friday whlle booths are being baked goods department will sel up. be run by Miss Nell Moorman.l;:;==========.11 Mrs. Grace Day and Mrs. Lela Flnk1t1, all of Leistu'e World. Lunch Served Card Players the beauty of it all by miry robe1on director of boauty & fa shion holiday magic, inc. A luncheon and card party lot•I ll1pr•••nt1ti•1 54~-1515 1; will take place at noon Mon- 1 day, Oct. 26, in the Lake Park · Clubhouse, Huntington Beach. "Po!I 11 Colorl" , . ....__. by the • Ew1ry 1111on h11 1h ll'lt11! " ..,_.....,,""" auxiliary tolin i nd h•ll••• 1111, Fill 1970 to tile Boys Club of Huntington ;1 no 11c~ptl111. A.1 th1 A.m1ri11 n Beach, the affair's proceed1 d11i9n1r1 ••• it : th• colon to ••~r will go toward the purchase of ''' ru1h, brown1, b1 i911, rid-a drinltlng fountain and soft hrown1, .uw:l on through r1d ·pu1pl••· drinks machine for the e.,.,.., on• ii .1br1nl. Thi f1bric1 clubhouse. ,,, f1bulou1-t111tur11 1114 tw11d1 Mn. Howard Balley is th 1t ''' t.11utlfwllv 1wit1d to th1 chainnan. A.uistin« her Is 111w rnlcli l1n9th. It f11 l1 Ut.1 ,fill Mrs. Mamie Seltzer and Mrs. iu1t to look •* th1~, •• I ~Id ''; Do R bertl ~• Tl-'-,_ c111tly 11 !ht A111•11c111 D11 19111n n U Co..o"-0· '-"'ewi are Show ill N1w Yor• t available by calling Mrs. ' ~ Slllter at ""°44. Now wh1r1 do1• your m1li1-up :;:===::::::::::::::::::;Int 1111 Tht tr•n1ition c111 Iii •• l. t rtdw1I •• you'd Ii•• if to bi. lul t tol1r ii 011 ih w1y l M1ny n1w lip ' L£T'S BE FRIEJINY •ncl 111il 1h1d11 1r1 fr•n1p•r1nl, f UL whl1h m••n• th1t the color 11 1off, • ' • ' ''J! you have new ncl.hbors 1ulitl1 ind t1t1lly fl•ll1rin9. the or know of anyol"lf' movlni: 1h•d1 th1t 111~1 lili1 lf20'1 ruby to our area, plcue fclJ us tld 111 th1 twbt h 1clu1lly iw1t • so that 11.·e may extent a 91l1t11'1l119 blu1h of color '" vo11r frlondly welcome and help u,.. Try It, ind I thinli you'll r.114 them to bcCome acquainted 11'1 lot1lly rithl for yow now. 1n. th~lr new sun-oundlnp. MM174 Y1ur 1y11, toe, rnu1t li1 1cc1n· tu.1t.d •• yow 91 inti 1111. Try th1 111w 1111udg1 1f11tl - rich brow11 ·~ deep plu m 1h1d11 1ppli14 ..,,, 1j1lida ind up, t•l1nJin9 1wt 1lon9 th. cr1111. You Clfl t ¥t n t•ptri· m111t with ti<l~I 111111 1111ud91 undor• flt•tfl your low1r l11h11. E•lt 11'! ltlu1h1r f1om 1ld1 1f no•• lo fem.I FAIR pl11. Prtclic1 until v•u'•• found f•1t, f1ir, f•ctui l, Thott y111r 1w11 lnt1rpr1t1IJ111 ol t1J1y'1 fflr11 w01J1 •Uflt •!! f1ct1" in 111w wey with colt r, e,.r1ti1• •• tllt OAILY PIL01 --- .dlt.fltl ll'•t• '"" diy, Gl11J11rou1, •l191nt -whit • jt..---------..J 91011 woy 11 f1t1 f1UI " ctdure and se~ion of F°" je:::ts. Conducting the panel 'Aili be Mrs. Frank Fedowitz, dlstrlc,, j>tes\4..ent. questions ..• 7 it i1 a 1ea1on full of que1tion1! ••. basically it i1 1n as.citing 1aason ' brin9l11g into being a new fashion dirn•n1ion .•• plu1 a lot of ft1hion freedom.,, corn• so•n iind let u1 1how it to you! 1'401 north ma in .,. 11nt• 1n1 1mpl• p1rkin9 in the re1r -----------------~~- Now you can use a savings account for paying your bills: Avro Savings' new MastcrPay accuunt. It pays 5% and your bills, too. 5% comp<llll1ded daily. 5~ from date of deposit to date of with- drawal. On every dollar in your account. E,·en on the money for paying bills. All you do is send !ls a deposit and , when your billa come in, just mail them to us. Phone bt1ls. Utility bills. All the bills you want 111 to pay. vVe'll do all the reit. Not without charge. But for a very nominal fee. And if you keep enough 'moiley in your MasterPay account, yo u'll come out, way ahead. We'll be paying you for the priyilege of l"'ying your bills. Drop by any Avco Savings office and open a :MmtcrPay account SOOll. When it isn't paying your bills, it's paying you. That's the interesting thing about it. ' A\co Sa~ ... L.u A"socitdol Bdl·M'aywmd-..62$0 Atlan!it A"mut • Cona ~foa -S:J!O ariRol St.• 1.olMtt:Ms-4925 Wibhirt llfvd. South 01tt: -4240 1 •·ctd y Bl"d. • Swdio City -124)7 \tcnl.W'a liW. • \'cntura lbdquuwn -2lO SoUtl )l;.tb. ~a.d • Maill 0Mc:c 2UOZ.CA..., U..U.,.,. Puk ,..._ _ _,, •• . . ---- --. --------------------~ -~-----· Iowa11 Wins Honors Nobel Peace Prize-Winner Receives Ne·ws APJZAPAN. Mexico /AP) -anything I have onty-iupplied Aplzapan is a former ranch The Nobel Peace Pri ze the spark." located six miles of dusty, laureate fl ashed a smile as Or. Borlaug. 56. s t i 11 bumpy road south or the Mex- sunny as the summer sky in describes himself as a farm ico City-1'oluca highwlly. Tl)e his native Iowa. boy from Iowa des pite the farm is O'A1led by Uie-l.1exican "Somebody must have made honors that have come his government which cooperates a mistake." Or. Norman \\•ay for helping develop new with the Ford and Rockefeller Ernest Borlaug quipped . '1 strains of grain. These honors Foundations in the lnterna- Then, growing serious. h . were capped Wettnesday by · tional Maize and W h e a t added: the 'announcement from Oslo Improvement Center. Maize is "This is an a\vard to a tea1n, that he was the 15t h American the name many countries use not to rfie persona lly. What I to Win the Nobel Peace Prize. to describe corn . have done I have done with a He received the ~news while The center carrie:t Out group or young . dedicated Qoing what he does every studies for the improvement scientists from more than 25 nlorning in 8 200-acre ex-or wheat, c0rn and potato pro- countries." perimental stalion _ working duction for underdeveloped He was in a wheat field. and in the fields looking at the countries. he pointed to associates from wheat and looking for new With Borlaug in the field Romania , Brazil and India. means lo .improv e food pro-were Dr. Nicolai Eustatiu of "Atany of them played an duction for hungry nations of Ro1nania. Juan Francisco active role," Borlaug said. ''If the world. ~'Sartori of Brazil, S. Rajaram =;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;~:;;;~;;;;;;;;:;:;~ and George Varughese or ) India. They were ~looking over some of the types of wheat produced at the s tat ion , developed in l.lexico and now being. used to increase food production in rvany countries. L~GUNA'S DISTRIBUTORS OF Stockwell-Imperial-Bondy-Wall Tex Albert Van Luit-James Seaman-Bob Mitchell Schumacher-Vinyls-Flocks-Foils-Murals SHELDON WELLS Benjamin Moore-Pratt & Lambert Paints 612 N. Coast Hwy.-494-7000-Laguna Beach BOAT CANYON SHOPPING CENTER "This." Borlaug sai d, ex- tending hi s arms over the field. "is what started the Green Revolution.''. To his associates he joked : "Well. we better start pro- ducing some superwheat." Borlaug and his wife. lhe former Margaret Gibson. have lived in Mexico 26 years. Thry have a married daughter in \Visconsin and a son in Arizona. KIDS LIKE UNCLELENJ ~~~~~~~ "Artistry in Moving" for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: 494-1025 580 Broadway . Quiclit As Bunny Beautiful Playboy bunny Ca rol applies a plaster- er's trov.1el le a curvey portion of the Playboy Plar.a Hotel in Miami which Playboy recently purchased for S13.5 million and is now sprucing up. Carol's curves need no such finishing touches. TV H111·t Car11ey • Sho1v People Ternied Best lhursd;u, October 22, 1970 OAlt. Y PJLOT 20'1; /flothball Dtie? . " 1f. Carriers to Go-Ouff; • • WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Navy may mothball three o! its front-line aircraft car· riers and its three remaining antisub1narine flattop!; during the post-Vietnam war demobilization . P en t·a go n sources said Wednesday. The cutback, paralleling a reduction in the A r m y ' s strel)gth from 16 to 13 combat divisions. would leave the Navy with a group of carriers that have the dual assignrncnt of conducting warfare both below and above the surface of the sea. Tootl1 Loss Figures Soar There was no formal reac· lion , however, to the possible red uction, reported earlier Wednesday by lbe New York Times. Under the plan, a dozen sub- n:iarine tracking planes and an equal number of helicopters \\'OU!d be p1aced aboard the Na\!y's big attack carriers. · Thts would eliminate the need for antisubmarine car- riers. such as the tntrepld and the Wasp. The antisub assign- ment-...11. t~e past has gone to older carriers, most of them incapable or -handling modern planes. The Navy already ha s de.commissioned three of its total or six antisub carriers. The Shangri-La. still--in service. has had cluty both as an antisub and attack carrier. Officials said any reduction y.·ould take place over a period or several years. Reducing the Na v y ' s strength prese nts a special problem. the officials pointed VISIT WESTBROOK YARDAGE 278 FOREST AYE. LAGUNA BEACH • BARGAIN BALCONY SAVE I ' out, be<:ause a large portion" its budget goes to suppOrt of.':11 fleet or 41 nuclear-powerid PolariS missile submarine~. ! It ls generally agreed lhft t.hcre can be no reduction bi strategic missiles unless an agreement is reached in lbe Strategle Arms Limitatiori Talks (SALT) being resumf! in lielsin ki this month by tW United States and Russia. ,• Defense Secretary Melvin PL Laird has said that unless an agreE»nenl is reached ti;e Un ited States vt'ill conside~ -a big increase in stratea!c weapons. ·~ OU'I'H COHS T ""&'"' ,."'"'~ "'"' ,, ' Burt Lancaster Lee M.1rVin In "'THE PROFESSIONALS" -2nd HIT- Truman Capote's "IN COLO BLOOD" OP" Nltlltly, 6:45 p .... M11tln" Sund11y at 1 :45 p.m. .AW:O~tllf "SOLDIER BWE" ltCHTtlCClOll a CANDICE BERGEN PITTRSTRAUSS DONALD PLEASEHCE ~ ... O'narch ay laza IN LAGUNA NIGUEL PLENTY OF FREE PARKING UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK EL ECO SHOP OF DECORATIVE ACCESSORIES APERTURE CAMERA ANO HI Fl NIP 'N TUCK INFANTS & CHILDREN'S WEAR T~e b•1I tellers i11 1own ot Your money beck. SAFEWAY SUPERMARKET WetcJ.. f11r our 1uptr 11ver1 NIGUEL MOTION PICTURE THEATRE ' "SOLDIER BLUE:" · Candis1 B.er9en & P1t•r Str1 u11 OPEN NIGHTLY lt:~S · P.M. MONARCH BAY BARBERS Un111u1I 9ifh from er11und 011 world . NIGUEL SHOP FOR GIRLS leek 111 school f11hion1 NIGUEL HAIR FASHIONS • MICHEL'S CLEANERS Wh•r• quelity counll LAGUNA TRAVEL SERVICE A:r -See -Reil . Touri MONARCH BAY DRUGS "Speci1li1h in th• lot! ed of ,., ... ;,e" MURIELS FASHIONS FOR M'LAOY for lhe littl1 pl•e1ure1 in vour lif1. FABRIQUE & BOUTIQUE Me ,:? -Midi? -Mini?. Mek1 :ti! SOUTH LAGUNA HARDWARE Mor• then j1nl en 01din 1rv h1rdw1re llor• H. GLADSTONE SHOP FOR MEN Q11i1t ele91nce in tre~itiontl ll)Ood t11le . LAGUNA FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN F11lurin9 Men'1 heir 1tylin9 & colorin9 W1 90 lo ell len9tlu to pl1111 l1r911I, lir1t en.J 1tron9•1I in Or1n9• C1111nlf Niguel Hair Fashions TELEPHONE 496-5728 OR 499-2221 No. 19 AT THE PLAZA Come to Monarcll Bay Plaza where each and every Merchant cares that you are complete- ly satisfied with your purchase and the ser· vi ce provided by his stall: At Monarch Bay, our desire · to assist and advise you , separates us from the normal "Shopping Ce n t e r." Please stop in and say "Hello." . SAVE $116 DOLLARS ON A FISHER STEREO fbhef JIO Tl .4M/FM 120 •ett .... ,... fl1hef XP•6i J WO' s,MkH 5,,,_ TOT.4L ,RICE $652.30 NOW ON DISPU.T $359.95 $219.90 HOW S.4YI Sll6. Genllt'd 40lt wlHt 1..,.. .& D111t C...r $55.00 Plt11 ... l11t Pl AC Certrhlltf: wltll dle11101HI StylllS. $16.00 SALE PRICE $546.30 1tlit sftMtfe·11•I IOOTX •. ' Jr l .. ,. .4'M/fM •tc:•~A .. no. N1W -$259:95 202 .4M/fM IK•i"r ,.111., fot l11•t , •• , -• , • , •• , •.••••• , •••••• , .. , •• JftgueQ gf,op tloft QUtQs HOLIDAY MERCHANDISE ARRIVING LAY-AWAY FOR CHRISTMAS NOW ~ !t_6!.~~ !_.O !._4 011d tffll• HOURS: MON.• SAT, 9:10 te l ilO 11 MONARCH IA Y ,LUA U.GUN.4 NIGUfL PHOMI 4ff,Jlff MONARCH BAY 01'.UGS 8pec/e/lsts ;n <he L.osi //ri of Serv1Ce Whe•lcha ir Rent•I Servica ~ Co""l'tc.l<- l'tr>tripoo11. SetVicc ~ "' O(" co.U.: :1-~~"( ~"" 99·3511 !>O\JIH IJQJ!.\'< 496-1~1 MONARCH BAY, PLAZA • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY AT CROWN VALLEY PARKWAY I I l ' • i j . i • • • • • • • • -. • • -~ , • • ' • ! • i=·-~~"Z~'"l'.f"$" ...... ·,l".:'""·~'"''"""'""'.,,..,.t-.··-:-.-.--.·.""'"--·-,,.. . .,.,,-.-·--...,..---.,--.,-,"""-·_,·..,,---~-~-,...:;----~:-i-.-..1 ':'-ri '"!"1r-T"tr;--:-•-. ' • ... DAILV PILOT "'"""'" .O<tobtt 22. 1970 'Medi~iJie Peril Told U.S. Warns Against Dia.beti.c Drug WASIDNGTON . (UPI) - 'l'bt ....,..,,.m IMOUn«d w~ tt will lldvile doc· Ion lo drutlc:lllY curb ""' of lolbutamlde, Ibo ....... widely pr<oerlbed drug !or di1bellcs, becaUle of 1ncllcatlona lt bas UW, 1ffecl ll1d m1y be con· nected with an Increase in heart disease. more effective than the diet lmpraoUcal, '' uM! Dr. John alone. , Jennlnp, auoci.ated FpA The same study concluded cornrnbaiOotr for med1c1l If· that patler.t1 taking faln. tolbulomide bad I aru• ... In· "Tbe FDA bu1lt\in lo - cldenct of fatal heart dileue tors will coAflrm tha,t tbe lb.an those on a diet alone, or a FDA, the American Medical diet coupled with insulin. As9odaUoa. and tM American f:ompare Our COMPEllllVE Gm Pri.ces! • • • ~,ING THIS AD ,OR A FREE CAR WASH WITH PILL-UP o• UN10N GAIOLINI II ..... Mi..1: ' 1be drug Is sold under the trade name orlnue. Tbe manufacturer. the Upjohn CO .• ol Kalamazoo, Mich., ~sti mates it is used by 800,000 diabtllcs In the United Slolla. Upjohn issued a statement Dllblt.e1 AuoclaUon concur saying news reports bl tbe with• flndlnc• or a 1pecial FDA action 11resulted In un· study croup tbat a com. necessarily frightening" some bination of tolbutamlde and or the tolbutamtde users. dklt 11 no more ef(ecUve lban dift alone," Je ...... i .... aaid. I "We do not 11£1e< that there ··~ ... Is an asaoctaUon between ad· "Moreover, the findlnp llJI· GL£NNEYRE .,IL---.:::::::::::.::_--=="!--- The Food and Drug AdministraUon 1 a I d its forthcoming bulletin to doctors was hued on a fl mlllion scientific study which con· eluded that tolbutamlde coup!· ed with. a diabetic diet is no mlnislrlllGO of lolbulomlde 1ea1 lhal diet ll1d tolbu\lmlde and the mort.Uty found in the may be leu effective, insofar (study) groUp," Upjobn sakl. u~deatb from heart disease 11 "There is no qoesUofi of the coocemtd, thin diet alone w effectiveness ·of toJbutamidt in lhlll diet and insulin com- lowering the high blond sucar bined," the statement said. of selected paUents with Heart disease Is a frequent diabetes. comPlicatian of diabetes . " .•• Mahy nbvalcians C9ft--Ortnase ill prescribed widely ' Laauna Car Wah 540 S. COAST HWY. WIUNA IEAtH·ll4-1922 COIN A"'CTION sider the studyfiConclusiori u for mlld diabetes mellitus both unexplained and ton· cases contracted d u r I n I I troverslal, particularly 1n the adulthood, a type ol the all· LAGUNA ~SO. COAST HIGHWAY light of other scie~llllc In· mtnl which accounts for p• -iures Are &Teed ed ... ,_ HOTEL 111 ll'Oll veitigations which nach Op--three-fourths of the esUmated :ac 1 'W posite conclusions." ' 3 million diabetics in the Roderick Oliphant, 7, a patienl at City of l:lope Medical Center. holds up an MOST MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED "The FDA plans to advise United States. empty picture frame to dramatize need for·paintings for the "Bo"1l of Hope" OPEN-DAILY, SUN. DAYS ANn HOLIDAY.$ J P.M. IATUllA't' Bring in Coins For Auctton. docton that the JnOlt widely The study results were first art auction to be held Oct. 31 at Hollywood Bowl. All proceeds from the bene--· u 1 e d di abet I c drug. dlscloeed list spring. FDA an-~fl~t_'w"'.il':l'_g~o~to~tb~e~C~it~y..'o~f_iH~O~PI"•'.:· _____________________ :!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~.,~-~~~·~·~-!!!!!~·"~·~·~·~·~"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ THE COIN CHEST J14 •LINNIYll LI.SUMA llACM 4f4·1111 tolbutamlde~ should 'be" used nounced then that il accepted - only in diabetics with adu1t the reasl.tl, but the American onset stable disease which Diabetes Association illued a cannot' be controlled by diet statement saying the data re· alone and for wbom insulin, quired more analytis. treatment is ·unacceptable er Dr. Henry E. Simmons, Kids to Shape Vp In Valley Sclwols EYES RIGHT .. IL LOUtl J. MAllUIL9 Motio• pf,tur11 .11111' TV h1vt b11n b11n'l1d 11 1 e11111 of •v•· 1trti11 end tir1d11111. Uncltt nor· fl'lol conditio"' "''"1119 pictur•1 '' 11et c11u1• 1•ri•u1 f11ti9ui of tli• eye. Hew•"''· tlrie wro119 ty,. of li9hli119 i11 • ll'lolib11 pl•· tur• hou1• or th1 holl'lt in the ct1• ef TV, film1 tfl•I ''' i•rky or •l'•tt•d or li1,lv light11d er 9ho1h 1111, UIOW 011 th• TV 011d 10119 p111iod1 of ) ce11c 11 11tr•• t i •• c111 pro· 4uce 1erlou1 ft· litu• of th• •Y•· l Co111ult y o u r ., ...... tri1t i11 '"' ,., •••• h• 11 y•11r ...,,, •11u1111c e •t•i1u! ..,.1trei11 •11' •uocl1t1d diffi. cultie1. M11lii119 1ur1 th11! ytur '''' ''' I 1-~--.lw-t~.._pr.o,9,Jl.,...U.....A-6t1L 9r4er ,f 111f·pr11er•1tie11. Your o,tom•lrilt ;, , ... one to , •• fer 11lf 1111ur•11e1 thet t ll i1 wt ll 1111d tho! '"'I' d1ftch will lit ceF11ct1d, Our offic• i1 eon· Ytlli1ntly loc1t•cl in fi•t l'oi11h Skoppint Conler. PhOnt 147-127 1 or clrop i11 while 1hop· pi119. Appoi11lmt11h 1101 1lwoy1 "''''''''I'· ~iiiii ... smL DAM & moN PINLEY Th.,• Is • fol<• wnldl e•plliM mlsed •m<11J""' 11 • c•ff cir ''W11Chln0 your motlllr-in-low drive 0¥91' 1 cllfl In your MW cir.' Tnl1 brings tG mind !flt . !Kini bit WO Mllcld In 11111 pepett kiffl'll et t Voocktd CllJ. 1~11 wtlo not111• 1t11 conOtllullry tti1t 1111 111w conv1r1lbl1 l'lad been 1tvl1n. In • m11ttr ol hOUtl tll• ICIM 1rrn of 1111 lfW Cllllid fhl llrl ndtd fl'IO- lorl1t 11111 Ml\llMd l'llm fl'lll 1111 cir II.cl betn f'ICO...,lld. Thia m1y 1l'lllldl 1usplclo111ly et • MPllY Mldlnt, bl.fl Ill••• Wll • tll!clll TM C•r WI$ , ... cov....i 1lrlght, WI minus • llW FIKQllrY Htms sucll " ""' tnlllM• tr•nsmlu ion, r1dl.ior, r1dlo, llM!er, P1tkk'>9 n11t11s. llP<1Jlglrl1, ellrome trlm ind Cln¥1$ k>P. We llfl"'lne 1n11 n. o;ntorl-lt own•r's emotions were PrOPt<IY mli• -"r11nllled, In t1ct t A. c1i"ur~11111 pouibllilY k "'-' 1111 !!Mlves ml~ letl comptlled to m1•• off wltfl tl'IO!IMr "e"' e1r to lllOI _.....,~~...ucio-lbe..Mb-ltU . ...,,. '""' ¥1ew mirror to r_..i tut !hi 1190!y ;tinecl ;,, tflllr llrsl tflorll You c1n·1 wlil wtltr1 ln111•ll"l(t h cC111Cerf!td . • • romorrow m1y bot loll 1111 1 lt! BYJION FENLEY IN· IUJIA.NC~, 902 Molll I" H11ntll!ltM ... eh, Pllottl ,,,._7US t lVI )'Oii Ille 11111•111(f !Mt ct1mn w!lll 1111111111 idfCl..,.N ln1urance. We 111Mi. com- mtfclll 1nd lnd111trLll cw1r1;t, teo. ChK k wttll us !Or 1 thorouvh IMl';'- 111 ol your l11tur1Mt proiir1m. REAL ESTATE • • • Ari Investment Worth lnvesti9atlng take a look at the REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT SERIES Are you searching high and lO\V, seeking just the right investment for your money? This series of free lectures on the real estate market, featuring top-rated experts in the invesment field, might be exaetly what you have been looking for. Plan now to attend the lectures to be held on Tuesday eve- nings at 7:30 o'clock in the College Center Bldg. of Golden West Colleize. Remember ••• there is no charge to you. Just sign up this Thursday and let the experts point the v.•ay to successful investin& through real estate. LECTURE TOPICS Oct. 27-Creallvlry In RMI Estate E1cllant,1lnt Jack Kistler and lob Stfffe Nov. l-Rec:Ot,1nblnt a Good Invest• ment-Don Olson MODERATOR-PAT McVAY CO.IPONSOID IT DAILY '!LOT -HUNTINGTON llACH . ,OUNTAIN VALLIY IOAllO OF RIAtTOltS - - COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT ' director of the FDA Bure.au of Drua:s,, said the decision to notify docton f o 11 owed meetings with the American Diabetes Association and the AMA Council on Druis. . 6 Writers Gain Honor At least till children in \he Fountain Valley School District will be e•pected to shape up this year-physically that is. about hall the children in that age bracltet in the distrlc{ . District officials hope that many boys and girls ages 11).14 vl'ill qualify under the stan· dards of the National Presidential Physical Fitness Sil: young writers have beeR Program. Last year the district qualified 668 children for the Presidential Award, for the thlrd highest total in California. Only the San Diego Unified School District (1.155) and the Los Angeles Unified School District (682) qualified more children in California. hooored by the Fountain The nu m b e r represents Valley School District as win-'jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ners In the district's Americanll Constitution CreaUve Writing Con teal. Top f:S'Sayistt in the district were Suzy Yamold, 11, 7th gradt at winnow Schoo1, and Cathy Burton. 13, 8th grade at Fountain Valley School. Biographical critique honors went to Cberyl Spittler, 12, 7th grade, Lamb School. and Rox- anne Scott, 13, Ith ifade, Nleblas School. 'Ille belt poetry was 1Ub- mitted by Linda Malupena, 12, 71h irade, Lamb School, .and )lldtael·-11"4allr-13,-.IUI fP'ade, Harper School. Puller Improves PORTSMOUTH, Va. (AP) - Lt. Gen. Lewis B. "Chesty" Puller, the nation's most decorated Marine, is reported "walking around with some assistance" and conlinuing to show Improvements from an ailment tbat hospitalized him Oct. I. (, Coi//ure NEW MANAGEMENT SPECIALS MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY ONLY ~ I FREE . ~ -·-ii·-........ RINSE ........... 1---· I WITH SHAMPOO -AND SET .• i SAVI -s•n.-SA~~ mmaimi . . 202 Ola Vl1to SAN CLIMINTI 492-8000 211 Broadway ARCADE CliNTlill LAGUNA llACH 494-6139 Today's Stocks Today MARINE HARDWARE YACH TIN G ACCESSORIES SONY e ELICTRONICS PIERCE·JIMSON e COMPASSES IEtlOIX HAND llAlllNG A MOUNTED ~ELS RITCHIE DANFOUITH Aa GUIDE AljlUA·MITU e INGINES •ULL AHO e HOI• CATS FINANCING AVAILAIL! MllJDIAN SAIOTS VOGUE WA Tll SKl.S DO!!~ :~·~ .................... ] 27 ·-· ]56 monster c .. tufft• ........ . A·hovnti119-will go! Dtmorii, mon1ttr1! Flame·rttord1nt rayons; fat• rna1k glows in tht dark. <hff4 guidance __ -,,:mick-a-matic camera , :ii'.!!;'Wil · ~wottDl1ney 699 58 )~~~ Productlene: ............ ~--""~ Pictura !hat,,. o fl!cly Mitliay with o nOMI for views! Carlriclgt -lood com111ra lakes real pial .. .,., polo shirts 137 -157 Such populorlty mini be d-sll'\ltdl IM!i1pensobl1 in •••ry boy's wardrobe; 100% tonon trtwneclc polo1 wilh lhort 111""" ••• -nderlul to -or, and six.h work• U1.....-1 fOf Mom I Fashion colors. chilJren's hall owe en pajamas Whof a niftyidool Pojomotlhot ton dovbla 01 hollowHn coitumu (ar 11ic• Y1rso); in 1oft, evddly . coll ans; fvll-wt, well·moOe, la 1011 long. A roft of styl• for boys and girls, lizes 3 to 6x.. 299 Cit a MW slant an anti,, .dig 1htir digging, watch lht old feam.spirit 01 they bvild roods, lvnMl1, briclge1. Clear pl attic woll1 l.i yov 'ri•w tht works I 12-u. "lini.nflie "•i•y gla11ware ..... 156 Bloomin' btouties, thot'1 .. nat they ore I FestiV'f doisy-sttaw" tumbltn; graetlvl maditrn shope, popvlar \2--ounc• 1111; thoosl oithor gold or oWKodo. pr•lt..P-hl. · 1--.fi vaporizer 491 Covnt an ii to got'""'"" up ond .toy thot way oll nlghtl Shvh off ovtomotkolly. ,,,.. .. , ... ., c6ol humidifier A cool on•! Can domp" •h• 11 97 atmo1pher• withovt b.if!V "h•t up". At Mett k'f Dltfftlflf c.....,_ numblegame 317 Atalanlorwords? Gi11t Nvmblt o tvmbl• ••• it figurfll Cran~rd·type gomo \llM nvmban, not words. 6-in<h gfaH ashtray 56~ tring .,...ighl to bear on o bvming problem. Heavy ptbbt.-tlfJllUrtcl glau oshtroys; 1loh hold d garltft1: MCVrtly, pr9Ylnfl bun11 en fvrnitvro. kitchen terry towels ,.. •• n 87~ ThWy b«Ml'5 ~ didiwiping do-to 1h•.,. Wllt•frn, no-- iron~-Nice eolor1. ,.,,,_. th..-lw.nket• lalflc pumpklM .. · .~ .. h 31' 10-lndo 7 6' 12• A fri9htl Spoo•y whit• skull, wi1ch'1 block cot or grinrMnv pvmpliln, on pain. .,.,, . ., .. snoopy..,.,.,. red baron-· 319 Cvm yov Rid Boron'"' ptlting our pup! NtYer ftor, Snoopy'U win in tht encl, (for kids of all ogftl) ....... ,,, Any dtsigni119 gvy or gal con malio somelhing of 1hi1! A millian mo1Yelo111 potterns at the m11h of its wheel1,., ytt it's simplt, and lah of lvnl po, ... ,,, nerf ball 99~· Jusl o little 10fti• that can't hvrt o thing I T<ns ii orov11J,,. it'• tun, and perfectly soft, tvtn illl th• hands of o smoll 1oddler. ,,., ... , nerf disc 99~ lndoo11 or o!,lf, o ta1s~pl llvt do"n't b• Ntrf-o\H, our no-risk di1c i1 all fun and no hotmi syntMlit loom so 1oft, it ton't hvrt anyone or ony!hiflg. t-..;,.< 1h•1•tf• ru1rake 299 Yow diog'• no brag? OM It • brook "'ith o $ho;ette rake. A 1-.....U-ploc.d droll• w1n mak• It look lib new otain. ., ..... ,.,.. wlftt•r•Ht twl .................. -12" ................... tt.l3" ... .................. _] ,.,. ~ ................. ]9., kJft9 .................... .32" I Thursday, Oc:t®tr 22, l <t1b DAILY PILOT 2a.• -----------------'"""""' •'' and .€lear .for ' Senate ,~ Hugh Scott · CamfaigD.s Loud By LEE l.JNI&R -Philadelphia lawyer bu golna DemocnUc opponent, SUitt any' free publicity ?" a ScoU likely will be more anU-scOtt votJng record. · Presl~ent was In Eurdpe, and House 1nnuence that can pay . PHILADELPHlA (AP) for him most. ls identity: Sen. W1lliam G. S.S., wboae aide Uts.. than pro.Sesler. Agnew strongly u r g e d Scott qulpped that ''When the oU Jn Jobs and projects and Tbe green bus flashes by and Former chairman of the Identity ll not mupt '"8ter Stiler has tried lo gain ex. Alto going 1trong for Scott Scott's re.election because "on PresJdcnt ls ~way' those w· 0 potver for the state, like m•k· 00 ils side, In red, while and Republican Nat Ion a I Com· than the four m:lnor.iPlrtY can-po!IUre by showing up at are Pre~dent Nixon and Vice most great issues of our tlme, . • ·1 il'<:t PhlladelphJa the site of the blue are the words· "The mittee, and nearly 28 years ln d1dates. . aatherlngs attended by Scott. President Splro T. Agnew, this Republicaa tetder has are not president are disposed lCTt BictnteMial CC!lebr•Uon. r most powerful senator ~e ever Coi;tgress, including 1$ in lhe Ses1er'1 c 1 mp at In la At a county fair Ses1er both of whom campaigned for voted faithfully, courageously to play." 5 1 had Scott of PeMsylvanla" House. Ooundering for 11<$: of cash to sought to get into a pleture the GOP t l ck et 1 n and skill fully , ann tn arm, Agnew had lhe lut word, es er pooh-poohs Scott'• N, 1.11 1 •• ~ Nth.I Puffing cabnly on his ever gtt h1I name before the with Scott. But the wily Pennsylvania, withUiisadmlnlstration." thouJh, caJUnc Scott a power u iwecute and 0 po 1 ca .,....y. 0 ng present pipe, Scott stands voters. •Republican, grinning as he Agnew 's early October visit But the vice president didn't "mother hen" to Sen ate predicts he'll be dumped br7 else. Just the message, loud solidly on lti.s record, boasts He .and Scott have appeared pushed back his glasses, Just didn 't exactly put a smile on leave without taking 1 swipe RepubliCl.DI. "Scme:Umes it Is GOP conservatives nm. year. and clear. about what he's done for the together only once, before a turned his back and walked Scott's face even though Scott at ScotL for blanket en. very difficult for a mother hen He makei muth of Seott'a age, Hugh Scott . Republican .state, and conlenda over and Maso a I c group 1 a away. got a considerable chunk o( dorsement of all Republicans, to realize ahe'a sitting on a caUlng him "an old man wbo leader of the U.S. Senate, ls over that ~ issue b ex-Philadelphia, 1 "If people only had a chance campaign cash, and poMibly including New York's Char~s bad eg,'r be said. hasn't cut the mustard." 10Jng all out in his campaign perlence versus anonymity. Since then Scott has refUMJd to see and hear Sesler we'd rei:ained some conservative Goodell, whom the vice presl-Scott erploits his Job as Sesler, an Erie lawyer who ' for a third si.s:-year tenn, even "I have proved I can deliver an almo5t dally Se 1 I 'r win walking away/' claims Republicans who had cam-dent lists as one of the minority leader, the hlgbelt has served 10 years In the tbougb_h~s....eiipec_ted to win for~ple," Scott ~~·-challenge to debate n Martin Hassner, a Sesler aide. paigned publicly about what "radicllbs" he wants to see post any Peruuylvan1an ever state senate, was 42 lut easily on Nov. 3. 1bls arjumeii'flW v&biiUy-iei~on. -What votes-SesJer-.-ill-g they-regard-u -his-too-liberal, defeated, -aclllevtt in the Senate. He spring. Scott will be 10 on Nov.• What the we a 11 h Y impaled Scott's handsome ''Wby abould we give ih1m. and they could be IUbatanUal, IOOM!times antiadmlnlstration It all happened whlle the claims he hi$ 1.-JOf of WfilTu -11. ~------~--------,-'----'------=..:...:.:..:_ _ _:.:.:::._:::::.::..:__:.=:::::_;::=::_::..:_=..:'._:.:::::..:.::.::::c:c::::::.::::..,.:.::::::::=:_::::.::=.:::::.:::::::::........: "Scottnumademanypro-' COP1'IOlff0 lt71 i., hdyS...., ... -~I t;io .. -....... . ~IQ;Y!f!~!§. ............... 32~ . ~~~~!,!~!0,!~! .......... 87~ f_H~!Y .... ~99.'!! .. ~~ .... 58~ GROUND BEEF lUCIY IOJllDID 53c fOI FLAVOI LL mr,\~.tlo'l3l~P, 79~ .. FRESH PORI SPARE RIBS ... ..,. __ 69f. GREATER TOTAL SAVINGS (HUCK ROAST.......... 5.!.tc llUT"'""""--··············· t:lw. ~·!!!!!!.~!! .. 98~ Prices are DiKoun;ed Except en ~~~..!!!!!!' ... $)3~ fQ;,.r';;':.~.7,~ :::..:_"' ... "' YOUNG TOM TURKEYS • ............................................ 39 .. USDA GUDIA FRESH FRYERS WMOU IODT CMICllJllS 28~ "'....... "' ILADI ... .._. ............. CUT --~ _ CHUCK ROAST ~:::r:~~ 4 5 ! RIB ROAST ':,~~.:: 7 3 c LUCKY ICMtDll lllf .LI. mises," Sesler says. "He has clalmed to be everybody's friend. He Utea to &o to ban- quets. Tired old men enjoy wch things." On specifics Sesler ha1 m1de little impact. He has taken a strong antiwar stance, _ and labels Scott a hawk for his • -. support of the Nixon Vietnam I and Cambodian Policies.. Scott '1 denies U. "The senator says he wants 1 swift end to the Vietnam war• but each time the Senate has voted to stop lh1s senseless slaughter. 'Scott has been op- posed," Se.•ler charges. But the Democrat, him.selt, lw shifted his posJUon. When he was picked by the state Democratic 'organisation 18l5t January, Se!ler said Vietnam was "too grave an issue" to be part of the political campaign. But thls primary opponent l ... was a dove and as speechmak~ ing lntenslfied Sesler moved to i rpat.cb him. Sco~l keeps remin-1 ding hlm about that. .. Thumbing Israel's Top .Sport j • TEL AVIV (UPII -Hltci>. · I h1k!ng outranks soccer u ; the nationa~ In Israel, at i least In the number who pla7 ! the game. ; Go anywhere. -to the Sinai ; Peninsula, the Golan Heights. ; the Jordan Valley-and some-: one, most likely a boy or ~ girl so!dier, will be thumbing I • ride aomt:where. ; The fact that the Israeli : :i;:edbut ~a~ w~~ ~o= S -:::K.y &yf.:;;.._;;;;;--~.. , -. . ·--= l1'•' '·-"~~-... '.IJ ~*It'\' • .I J,), Jl!!!W~~ --..--_BONELESS HAM~::::: •... •l'.l UNK SAUSAGE :::::::..~ .... 29• no dl.acount on bus travel like j the Am ~r I can service~an ~ keeps the geme thriving.~ just ha~ to Ununb it. I PORK & BEANSl~ll'.~~~ .. 19' ~ TOMATOEs:.-:m:~c: .. 2s c .,..-BAKEO BEANS::',":::::-23~ r WELCH'S. DRINK ;:~.,r __ 43• V-8 JUICE:.'\~~·-··-··-··········· 41' r SPAGHITTl O'S:::."l~\=.~8· ' MIKED NUTStl','\'."~ .................... 79' r NOODLESl':'.'~.~~ ..•.. 29e ~· •.. J:ir&yf. ~·~;.~~CE 56C 42.QUJllCE IOX ~ PEANUTS~o~~~~ .. --···'3c PEANUT BUnER :.-:~~:: ..•.• -... 93' MAYONNAISE~~~ .......••• 55', WESSON OIL:m'."m":'.'..~.~.--.71' CRISco= ...................... -91' r DRESSING:'::l.'l"n. ... -38' DILL PICKLESl:':'l:~ .... _ ....... 55' LOG CABIN SYRUPl'n.".:--···-71' ... Kif&f/.--. ~.!..~R 63c 6 PL-1.1.11·01.IY\. HILLS BROS. lr.:.' ..... 89' HILLS BROS.l.~ ..... '1" HILLS BROS. :mo;.. .. '2" 1HILLS BROS.:'~:'.._.'!" 1...-UJU INSTANJ:,':r' .... '1" BABY MEATSr.r ... 26' DINNOS::-.r:r.'.~'.18' r CHUN IUNG :!.~: ................... 89' ""' '"'°"' MrY,OM"1noew .. TOMATO SOUi' ::::UJ. ___ , __ 12• SALAD DRISSINGS :::._.39• --('l-laUICIUllT,111t,..., ().' ... Ki(Sf/.~ SOFT NUCOA 21c MAlt.11111 1 MU11C1. CAITOll l ... ···=••At .... ,.. . PACIFIC cOD=. ____ .65• FISH CAKES = ................... .33' CREAMED CHICICIN ::::... ..... .45' I ' U.DY LIE-DECOU Tm 2 7c 141 COUJllT IOU B~F STROGANOFF::t:: ......... 51' a4NQUET MEAT PIES::i .......... 19' MRS. SMITH'S PIES ::.·~ ............ 49' AP'1.l.(OUllMl1(11TAll,._.,rttWI .. . --ORANGE JUICE , ...................... 49' I GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ~~ .... 26' FISHSTICK$ :l':~~ ............... 69' REAL WHIP TOPPING::lt.~.~.--.51' ... t;y&yt.-.... ZEE TISSUE 36C TOtLlf -USOITID 4-650 COUNT IOUS MIXED FRUIT::::.':l~.~:'.: ••... 41 ' GREEN BEANS~:r::!~.---·31• HAWAIIAN PUNCH~ ............ .20' rraswm VEGETABLES:'C:~ .• 38' ru.a.m c-. rw 1 wun POTATOES:."l~".':l.~.~ ......... 29' SWANSON DINNERS :::.~.-....... 52' c-..fHUT,--.MUTUIAI' · SUNSHINE COOKIES l'.':t'~ ... 48' PANCAKE MIX ~':l.~.~.56' BREAD ....,.,.,,,..... 35' ,_1'#,M9l.LtAf,.,, ••••••• , __ . TOASTEM DANKA·l'~~.-.31' BREAKFAST ~;:,~·-··--·55' QUAUR OATS~~~ ...... 32' · MJI TEA BAGS::.~· ............. -. 91' 1111TOP 64-0UJllCllOml CA F·ooo''"""""'. 14• ~· T C*Cllll!IJOl.WI ...... . KAL KAN DOG FOOD ~:~:-... .23' <llCIU PAITI. PIT ltlW, lftf 111• r PURINA OOG FOOD::':u • .28' r LIVER OOG f000~ ....... 2i' SAFFOLA rt::.•c~~:Oll ....................... 33' ri'4 .CREMORA ~.~~~.·.~ ...... 65~ LAOY LEE ICE CREAMl\:.~ ......... 65' HlltJ1["' -"~" " ' -· . .!..f.1'..Dl-.~lllft.' LUCKY LAGER BEER $)49 'PACl-1• tL CAii ..................... -..... . ~~~~.Y!~S.K.~---$319 PICKLE CHIPS 29c UDY'SCNOKE NAMIUIGll. 1 S.01. JAi CASCADE:::~.~.~.-......... 40• r JOHNSON WAX:f.'::. •....... !l" TIDE DmRGENT:::~ .............. -'1"· r EASY OFF:':t~~ ........ 67• IVORY LIQUID ~ ................. 82' /OUK FORKEY BUYS IYllrDAF lllSCOVllf PllCfS Oii flUITS & VfflTAllln !!.n~ .. ~!!!.:::~ .. 11~. ,.;M;iliis 'f nssn POTATOES THl-•SUCTlllll U.S. 10= 37c Al &OW ..... , PIXlll NO. 1 ... .,..-SCOTCH GUARD 'I" fMllCPNnCTM.l•OLU• • .,..-TEXIZE 112Rl'::.°'=.~~ .. -..... 'I" GAIN DETERGENT :::~ ............. 82' ~ DRANo=:~~~;:_·~~~ ... 13• PERSONAL IVORY:l:~:ll' ....... 30' r PERFORM STARCHl.'Wm..31' BIZ PRE .. SOAK ~~~:::~ ............. 36c ,,. MIRACLE WHITE ~~ .. •111 lAVA HANO SOAP:!L ..... ___ 14' .r Van de Kamp's .- AN OUTSTANDING V ARIITT OF FRESH BAKERY GOODS ' (AT MOST lUClT SJOIU) 'mt11111m111•111'•11111t LUCIYIUID 1·LL PACUGI (lJ.Ol. Pll.4k)' MAY BUD ...:II:'.;~.. $) 29 ---lti ... ,, .. ..!..,_, __ MDZZARELLA'CffEESE 73• DANdU1COo'K;"tiiiii"''"' 63• ILlll ... : ......................... ,,. .. 4«..PIL KNUDSEN CREAM CHEESE. 39c MllSTT WI.-ru-.m. ... \UZ. .... ~JTAUAN ORT SAi.AME ~~ 1J.OlllCI llMIJllCI CllUI • <MUI Giii 93c $)4t $203 ,-o::..;L., •, LOW DISCOUNT PRICFS ON HOUSEWAHFS S 8lAIJTY lilOo I FONDUE SET Th ~1.~ •• , " •llftallt '"' ......... 11 t•e ta~tt. 1-4l f1H11 ,.t •ltll 114 n• M1tcki11 kmtr NH. 11 w1rt14 ul1ra. $297 PRISTEEN ::::' DIODO~NT ,..,._, .... _ ... _ .. I •lllSf" II ,.. Ultr S1"119111 ,_ . k••,. ,. • •k•" .. 99 c lllfl Nt•lrrltttllr ... uft It ._,=._. UL U 01. IW ... k6ft?.rl- BREATH OF MINT Alltlltldllh9""""''""' -'""r.lfl!liUt• ..... 49 c --...... "" klltll h In.a. llllJS. S.01. SUPER SIZE SCOPE MOUTHWASH ·-•1t111tdS..,. ............ ,. ... n1y ....... ,.._ llfttl 11111 .,.. "' .... , IH'l nit fer .... tt ttM Jt1 wt r•• 1114 lh fllJ llfl ..... it ""' _,., 24-0UllCI SIZE OUILOW MITDAr PllCI $139 Shop Any Day ••• Sa.ve ,Every Doy ••• With Lucky Low Discount Pricing Policy. Tum up in a car at the A11enby Brld'!e on the Jordan ~ River on a Friday afternoon , 11 nd JI so_Jdler named Oded, an : UZI submachine gun slunc : over his shoulder, wllJ hJt you ! up for a ride to Tel Aviv oo ; week'!nd leave. • Drive down the Jordm\,' Vallev north of Jericho --·I Israel's version of Death i Val'ey -and see how a~ soldier comes out of nowhere ~. from a side road, wavioi;c blli~ anns and yelling for a ride u ii yOUl'I ia the last car on earth. ~ Even the pretllelt of Israeli~ girl 10ldlen -miniskirts aret standard 1nny ilaue, by the _. way -thumb rJdes alone without fear. They doo 't wait· as long as tbelt male COUii-' lerpartl fO< I ride. "The only people who get raped around here are tb lourlsl&," said • young g!rl hitchhiker who claims modem record -five thwnbo ed trlpa between Ttl Aviv Jerusalem ln one night. The Jsraell technique dlff allghtly from the trad!Uonal closed finrt.-bunb up used !lie United Slates, although lh( ann poaitlon ia the same. In Israel you bold !lie open, palm facing oncomln traffic. If the car or true ian't aoin& to jjOp, join - fm,.rtlpo JUJd'tiMnb, polm u llalialHtyle, ""' hold hand In front of the windoble"I until tbe Jut mom~t Nolhlnc will ..,.k If tha doesn't. The JtllO'I -· no limits The momlng 1Ulh hour In Te Aviv flnda the ltrff!ts aw with hitchhtktn. Don'! stand idly at the bus stop, ii )')ti caft't thumb a ride: Miiitary pollceme 11.tpervlse the game at OM the busy ln-ns north Tel Aviv, llnlng up the 91Jklie porllclpanls Ind flagging the cars thermelftl. Not many motorists with a let.It the back teat vacant -by •. .,...p "hltchhlk And for a rider to set upon bl: Good Samaritan -wittanf of In 1-1. E~ naUonal se c: u r l t m :po il>lo lllt pme. Mill ptt:"''IU!tl are DOt supposed bitch will! oon-llraell ·I>. "'11-f can on the tht<ry the driv coold be 1 foreigner with than a pas.!tng interest in llOldlert'-Wilt, lts•-~;.:::J - loc1!lon aod -Jn lldblla. l • ' I ' I • r i l l ' I ' ' • ' ' • • • . • ' t • • I ' ! ' " • • • ' ' .... ' j . ' ' !' • • • ! -• . I .. '. . !'' I Who ' Writes The Edito _rials? . . It's • fair question, probably .one of the most frequentl.y_•1bd_...l>o_u.!_ the newspaper. And the an1wer at the D~IL Y PILOT is no one -no one person, that is . • Editorial writing is a team effort at the DAILY PILOT. It is tne art of phrasing thoughts so that the finished editorial represents the news• paper's opinions on news events and problems of the dey. The tdltoriels do not express the opinions of any one man. The newspaper speaks with one voice only efter meny have bnn heard. The voices are heard.-loudly and clearly -In 'he informal _at~s­ phere which wrrounds the weekly mnt'ings of the editorial board. Out of these meetings come the foundations on which DAILY PILOT editorials art built. At the head of the editorial board are Robett N. W..d, publisher: Thomas Knvil, editor; and Albert W. Bates, editorial page editor. Other board m'mbers are Thomas Murphine, m•naging editor; Richard Nall, assistant mJjnaging editor; L. Peter Krieg, Newport Beach city editor; and Alan Dlrkin, Huntington Beach-Fount1in Valley city editor. · As they discuss news of the WHk or of weeks ahead, the talk ranges over topics affecting each of the Orange Coast communities the DAILY PILOT serves as well as the state. the nation and the world. I • There Js a thre .. w1y· test of any topic proposed as the subject for an editorial : · I - 1. Is it a topic which merits edltori•.J ~omment? Thoueh they' call it "edit board'' for short and it mMts Jn 1 th irt-tlffv• atmosphere of Informality, .th• lob of the editorial board is serious-ind taken seriously by (left to right) Robert N. Weed, publisher;~Alan Oirkfn, Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley city editor; Thomas Murphine, managing editor; Richard Nall, assistant managing .ctitor (ht oversHs the Latuna Beach, Saddlebeck end San Clement•Capistrano ~ltlons); L. Peter Kri9g, Newport Beach city .ctltor; Albert W. Bates, edl· tori1I page editor; and Thomai KHvil, editor. 1 2. Will theCommintary serve ttrrntwspaptr's readers in-terms,---- of their particular interests? And Other Gooa Questions 3. Does the newspaper know enough about the topic to make .an intelligent, responsible comment? ' Oft,n the thirGquestion is the most difficult to answer. And som ... times the answer is ''r:t0.'' Even after considerable research and iurther discussion at a later .ctitorial board meeting, a topic can be dropped altogether because the newspaper still does not have sufficient knowl.ctge to make a meaningful editorial comment. Discussion in an editorial board muting can modify the conclusion, shift the emphasis or even reverse the position of the board member who was the original proponent of a certain position and posture the newspaper should assume on • given topic. But who actually writes the,tcfitorials for the DAILY PILOT? The editorial board calls on any man or woman on the staff -the one most qualified to write on the specific topic selected for comment. A reporter whose assignments have pl1c.d him closest to the facts surrounding the editorial topic may write the first draft. Most often the ofiginal draft is written by one of the senii r editors. And usually even • "first draft" represents several rewritings ty whom• •vtr Jlii'oduces it. It will bt review.cl as many a1-tftre.-timts -onc-e by Editorial P19e Editor Bates, again by Editor KHvil and, finally by Publisher Weed (where "the buck stops," is the saying goet) -before it finally reaches the publication stage. Each review usually brin9s some further editin9 11nd refinin9. Any member of the news team with knowledge to contribute on the subject is invited to put forth his best effort. Many voices blend into one. The editorial speaks in the single voice of the newspaper. Who wrote it? Th• DAILY PILOT did. Pa,. proof lo chlclCod ·1ncomposlnt room by Albert llalao !lilt), odilirial page editor, end Thomes KHvif, editor. It's last chance to correct typoo 9raphlcal errors, Wbat.,ls an editorial? An editorial is a statement-of the ne .... ·spa per's opinion on a topic it feels is of interes t or concern to its readers. ''The fire destroyed the building and three adjacent structures.'' That's a news story. ''The fire could have been prevented if the city council had con· demned the ancil'o:t hu!l·'i".:; ... " f"~rs an editorial. Why do yo u tndarlt c::· · ;~ for public office? !\1any people go to the polls without kno.,..·ing the candidates well enough to vote on them -or don't go to the ~\ls at all, for the same reason. We feel these readers are open to reasoned suggestions. \Ve know the candidates both personally ·and from their records-because we think this is part of our job. We share our special kno\\•ledge y,•ith our readers "''hen y,•e carefully exercise our privilege lo suggest that a given candidate is best qualiried for the job he seeks. \Ve also are careful to see that our editorial opi. nions, expressed on the editoria l page. do not influence our reporting of the cam· paign -or any other ne'ol'S -in our news columns . Do your editorial writers have rull frtedom· o' their convictions or does somebody tell them wbat to write?• No staff member is obliged to write an opinion he does not share. He is respected for his dissent. And dissent is frequent. though not bitter , among the writers, and editors who produce the DAILY PILOT editorials. Wby do yoa publish "editorials" which disagrff wllh your stated position! Often the comments or columnist! ~·hose i;\'ork appears on the editorial page are considered "editorials" by readers. The top of lhe editorial page contain ing the editorials is where the DAILY PILOT states its position. The rest of the page is turned over to readers' comments (let· ters a'nd Gloomy Gus) and to writers and cartoonists with whose views th.ii newspapef may or may not agree. These range frolJI the satirical political com· ment of Art Hoppe to the hard-nosed in· vestigation of Washington bureaucracy by Robert S. Allen and John A. Goldamith. Their comments are not editorial&. But they often counter·balance ideas ex· pressed in DAILY PILOT tditorials and, lhus. give our readers a more balanced diet or opinions on a given subject. Gloomy Gus •.. Is He One of Us? \\'°it1101't lttter-wrili119 readers I'd lose my voice. G.G. (Hi...,df) Gloomy Gus literally is the voice of the people. No staff member "writes"" the Gloomy Gus feature. All of Gus'S quotes are contributed by readers - many more than can be printed, in fact. That is not to say lhat none of the DAILY PILOT'S some 200 employes may not occasionally contribute a Gus quote. After all, they're subscribers too. lriilreview of'lnliil!Triil """..,'of an lm!IO'rttnt adlterl•l lllraly will-find Pvbll...., lllobo<t N-WHd and Ed.IJO[lal ,_ Editor Bates mffting under plaque on Bates' well which kHPI rtmlndint them the DAILY PILOT editorial pa .. hes high stand11rds to m1intain. Plaque is first place awerd in CaUforni1 N•wspaper Publi1her1 As1ociatlon competition for lffl. .. TUMILIWllP& •· MUn AND JEFF JUbGE PAllk•t l . I vOu KIN fAK~ f 1VA([1 . • "'J I WELLNOW-- 1'>1AT's Mlle~ B&TTEFl-- l'iN'T IT? By To111 K. Ryon By Al S1111th YfSSlR! I SU ~€ 00 .. !UT ! ~AVE. ONE OUE5T!ON~ Wl-IO DO I KWOCK ·o~F TO ~ET 1T? iY PERKINS ly Harold Le Douz ly Fronk Baginski .. ,_., ... , .. .. .... . ... ... ' 1..,,...pA==1L-=-v -=cR~os==sw""'"'o==Ro:-.-•• b-, .-. A. -.OW-fl 1 ACROSS l Blush t b Sheil breaths 1 11 Rtsltd 1.11 Worship IS lndlan f dlalect •111. F_l'iglitlt ss blfd C 17 Blutnost· • 2 words !19 Htart i 20 Allowance I tor wasle : 21 lm au t · ! 22 Dttoratt . 24 Edlbl t St t dS 2& Rocks , 27 Sltllatt · JO Suppo1l ! 32 f :;:ent ! JJ Coniferous I I rte • 34 vand1l ! 37 C111stell1tion ; 38 lnd!1n I staJ>Orl ( 39 Concern : .110 Each c 41 Play an ! inslrumrnt 1 42 Tror ica1 ; fru i 43 Respe ct ' ; 45 Custodian 49 CQmt alttrw ard 50 Fruit or blackthorn 52 Re strain 511 Glidt over snow 57 Part of U.S.· Canad ian bordt r: 2 WotdS ~o Stitt: Abbr il African antelo pe E.2 Aut horlztd person 63 Nethtrlands city !-t Frull S Troub1tsome ptts ons DOWN l Common contrac tion 2 Scent J Affection -t Music al compos ition 5 Lega l malltr & Chatte ls 1 Conct rnin;: 2 wotds 8 lndul;t in water spor t 9 Athletic group: Abbr . 10 Elected posilion f 411 Mal t litl t i 41Fttl1n.xit~ty I 2 .. S I h.-+-+-t--t- t 1...-1-1-1- !. ' • I l;rl-+-+-t-~ ! hr+--+-!- ! hr+-t- 1 hr+-+-+-+- 11 Used l Z Lovt: II. 13 Revolves 18 co,.munJty 23 Put on 25 Move In a cur ve 211 Go off hasttty. Informal 27 Sharp blow 28 R ipptd Z9 VJ•or.011Sly entr;ttic 30 Flu id 31 Cheese Jl Rtmedy 35 Impulse 3& Gaseous ch emica l 38 Oero;1lory suffix 10122n o 39 Ancient city of Arrlc a 41 Oeter111 ln1d 42 Ulss ·West 4-t Mlll'S nickna me -tS 51111 II bird -t& lnt erv en in t la;al 47 Wrote 48 Nourishing .. t ub1t1 nces 50 Catd g_ame 51 Uilasplr1lt 53 Metal bearln; roe ts 5-t Cotton wastt 5S Spects Sa·•· Clrte· Z words · 59 Light blow MISS PEACH STEVE Rora Ll'L ABNa SAUY •ANANAS A~~ ~ougg,i" GORDO ANIMAL CRACKERS . ----- lhund<V, Octolltr 22, 1'170 • / ------ DAIL V ,ILOT 1"1 ly Gus Arriola i ' By Peril Johillon : - , By Rover hllen . WH AT we N'el>, 15 A EiOOD MAS5 1iWJ:!>l'OJ!TAno/J al/Sill.I . .. c 1'1* tu.rt. ...... s,. ·: . By John Miles GCE. I HAP OTM&lt P&.ANf ... ly Mell By S.unllen and Over...-11 . ·-.::::::....--:-~• • • ' •• " THJ 5llANCll WOllO .. Mil.MUM ~.---i .11111<\~\'J ! 1 Vl"AR\~ ! h~Hf fOR. E~ fllPISIHNT Oll'tllMi\fl' ' r-·: • DENNIS THE MENACE 'Y.i..KHOW ~JN'~ IM IOl'lME • ~6T E6G JUG6LE~ Ji'f1Mf; l'(lRLI) . , \. zz DAILY PILOT Thursday, October 22, l 97J I •·••••111•1 IC)(~) ., .. Iii, .............. ('OJ I ., .. D !» (j) &l i...... (CJ JiOI · •'fiie l~tl)' WIJ To Co.'' PollOI t1f11M to 1a:tpl 1 m11rder ronles. sion rom an important fin1ncltr whwl~b.il.-story °' spllfned IDvt f1il1 · .. ., . ?f:" 8111 ,.._ (C) (60) Jtr17'Dunphy I :•~-:Cl llMIC """""k1 (C) (30) Tom :.. ~ sn,c1e1. 1 • R he Niu SMw (C) (90) Tent.-! ~ tNtlJ sdltdultd 11111st1: Tim Conway, ~ Pal Brown Jf ..• l ucie "'"''· Kayt Bal· • llfd and R111s f'tll!bfn. fJ Si1 O'ded MM: "lui* ·• ShlJtt" (dr11n1) '51-Dt'rid Briln. " _ AQti11 D1hl, 8111)' Slllllvln. Ntr'1 t tedU Md:lmblidp, 1'11111 Rtrmolld. ~ All tftlbitttfld mt~ sLICttfds in his 1111nc for wt1Hh, b11t low Ills wilt ind 1 1e1n. • ' • D w s..it <Cl 130) ; :: mn. flill~ (C) (30) ~ :; 8 tt T1bt 1 Diel (C) (60) f ..; @(I) Stw"TM (C) (60) m ...,_,. LM11 (C) (30) :· ~(i)CIS -(CJ (lO) t :OO to rlrr trw. C.ul BtlJ tnd Denn1 Mille 111est. U @CII (8 .. wittlltd (CJ (30) "Da rrln Ofl 1 Pede51.t1." S1m1ntba11 coulijn zaps D1r1ift onlo tho pedestal ol lht flmed Helmsman s!1t u1 in Glr.uct$1tr, Mau., 111d romps oil 'lllith, !he liber1ted s11m1J1. m David F1od S""' (C) (90) B.B. Kin~ M11111 Cass Elliot, William ZttlilrMlolf aunt. • 11>'9,K llli•& (C) (2 hi) ED 'Na P'llJM... (Cl (901 "Open T1111tre: Tiie Seroent." A pl11 by Je11-et111C11 ~on llallit. 11.>.ri&Mt r • .u, (30) 0 RAQUEL WELCH * "TllE BIGGEST BUNDLE .DF THF.M All" CBS THURSDAY MOVIE ti IS (j) tlS 111•"'7 Mlvle: IJ'I Ttlelllittt Site's a Rebel? · Hlstorleal Challenge 'l ndians'-Excellent Drama I ·-- • h. • • l -'I,· '• /~J/lJl I"', : "POPULAR PRICES . e.tif'G .......... • "HELLO DO.LL r• CMri .... S.. •s.. 141 , ...... At Orange Coast· <;ollege •• u11"'theplay11se11. 1•1lrr~~=~~~~~I B1 TOM TITUS r ot-.. o.IW f'lllll'11.tff I Ken "m,tto,1~ eul-u the coll ... eilucaled Indian Jolu) Grass, spewing bltternen lb the whi&e man's wordi. Tg,111 Arnold ii fine 11 lhe . op- poriunllUo journallsl N e d BunUlne, while Larry Cohen is· less impressive as Cody1s friend W j)d Bill Hickock. Wllliln the slbpe a I American hi41ory as legend\ a very real drama emerges lo ' c h a 11 e n g e traditional con· · ceptions • and 1cratch an in- "INDIANI" A p11, II'!' .t.rltlwr KIKl!I. dlr~ttO by Jolln FtrUM:c1. Ml dr.19n II'!' P111 Sc1rpello, 119Plll118 11'1' l ud Coak, m~· br Aldlll'd Pt111tt, co.,_ by $t1n 1-, d!orM9<11>11r by J.., G.vdOfo, prtHftl..:I br Ille Ori,_ Cull Collet• d•1m1 -••""-"' 1111119'11 lhr-h S.luro1r In Ille occ 1udltorh1m. TN• CAil lult1lo l lM •.. .. . . . • . MJ.tllel ll•-n s11n,.. ew11 .......... Al~•~ Gol'°" Wiid !1111 Hldr.lld< ••••••. ,,Urj-y Cohtn Ned lvnll!ftl .............. Tem A•nold J~M Grl)I .............. K"' Fallftle '"11ed 1'111 ............. A:u Sd•H'ff' St!lllw L.otln ........... P111I oa.... ·~ StAlllor DI-........... l lt;t G.<. .!On Stn11tor Mor9111. ...• , • . . . • Maner KOt'J'I G•1nll Dlllt• A .. xh , ...•... Din McWnl GttOlll""' . . •• .• . •.•• ... . . Pf\11 <>er1lr 01' Timi l"Te•lclenl ..... K1¥ln OOrem111o Flrll LICIY .....•.. ., .•. Cf\rllty 0WJff' Cf\ll'f JO"i911 ••.••••.••. RICl\ltd Rol1nd Two other roles worthy oC note are lhose or the dod- dering American president. played by Kevin Doremus, and the murderqu s ~e Geronimo, enacted al a ("" pitch by PhU OertJy. ~ - Technical effec~ en~ 3iSignmet\tJ in most cues, the OCC production grdtiy, meshing tiwether in a most parUcnlarly the mixed media "PAINT YOUR WAGON" -ALIO- Gln C~I Kl1111 D1:1'y "NORWOOD" IC) "ligut l111dlt If TMtl All" • GI Oldrlldl/M-... (C) 130) (1dvtnt111e) '67-Rotren W1tner, . . . i Cl) ltticiti• 34 (C) 1601 Riquet wekh, Godfrey tamhridRt, We_ar1 ng a transparent dress, American actress V1c-cision on the human con- science in Arlhur Kopil's rambling yet astute a n d cohesive play "Indians." effect utilized for s c e n e impressive ellM!mble behind changes. Films of latter day the considerable talents of westerns. with Indians dro p.. 1'1ichael Brown in the role-of ping like flies, overlap t h e Buffalo Bill Cody. pic~ure on stage which history Mo•ffy thr1 ~ld•y "WA&ON" .. 1:40 l i ~lltGrio De Sia, Ed111_1nt G. Rob·~ tor1a George poses for photographer in .-her Rome m Tt• Alvttltun (C) (JO) ~?:i1iu~to;:i:!~! •:~nerid~~r ,0! aRpabrt1n;,ent _ a 1 fte 1 r fibn is 11 hing heJr latest firlrnh, "The Last l C!)Tlltrl 41 tu &trllln 1301 •liled Americ•n 11npter In order e e, wit t oot a star oe Nama . Presented by the students of Orange Coast College in the \Vest Coast's flrst look at this modern morality play (South Coast Repertory offers a se- cond look next week), "In- dians" is a gradually gripping theatrical montage w h i c h Ughtens its hold on th e playgoer like a noose. ingly little effort the soul of Ferzacca's staging of the Brown captures with seem-has chosen to eclipse. !!~~~~~~~~~~~ the legeod.ary western hero slow rt1olion death scenes -CB ""'s hi, ti1 lo11"4 (C) (30) ti collect • hefty r1nsi:rn, only to . • tilld thlt 110n1 of his fri111ds ·w111 i I:~ D CINid cu... (30) 1111 it. ~ ' II TM flyi1111 N11n (C) (30) 8 Tk f•l:iliff (C) (60) : . ID 00 filC MIPtlr fi..s (Cl (30) 0 <m 00 m llFlfMI Ni lt.t '"k : flll Tltll frtlldi CMI (C) (30) (R) (~I (30) "YoLI G6tt1 Hive Soll'I." • ;~ht Spiu ch Twins."" Juli• Child p·,~r hires • bltck SKftl•fY ht : QI (I) Mr fl'llrill Mlltill (30) d !sn'I Wini ,Ind 1ets I Moct ·Allo c~ice h1 ,dixfll'l wanl ·eitllfr. : e ...... 11r LM111 t30J &> Mudllr• <t> 1101 : • Cl 1"' ~ Rt.-rt (Cl (JO) d) llllrip (30) : llE r .. Mrn .,. A.. 130) QP NM* l&Ol Z OJ UC &.111111 lllwi (C) (30) 1:10 d t£l@ gS tlMCY (C) (30) : 7:00 fJ CIS E"N11iftc Ntn (C) (JO) "Adam the TV Sbr." Vettrinauan Walt11 Croll~te. Adem Hudseln does • neh1•Grk inter· ~iew 1imtd 11 r1ve1tin1 his da~·IO· 0 m UC fil1htlt N11n (C) 130) .,. livin~nd ht dthM1atelp OIVMI l rinkley, frank MtGtt, .lohfl citier1CI:&. Chanctllor. D @ (}) m n. Odd C.up1t (Cl CJ Wlllt'I Mr UM! (C) (30) 130) "Tile Bu~.-ikup." rflil m<rYtS m @ (]) I LM lKJ" (30) out Mta11se of Oseafs h1ntovt1. CD Ital tit Clld: IC) (JGJ Alice Ghostley iuests as Mi'!li. @ (I) Drtllltl (C) (JO) ti N11fS (C) (3<1) Ba•h1 Ward. U) l'elitict . 70 (C) (J6J :i•r11nl Im Mn1c11t/r11iw'1 Desk (C) (30) Shr'rnr lUt3IS. ! l!J' Nldtt• Ta,1tils (30) Qt (I) Tr~ If C1t11111illllKll CC) llO:DO Q U (j) m Du11 M1rtin (C) '°• . (60) Gutsts art EnRelbtrt Humpe1-fli) Cltr1lt ttle llYlni W11i CC) (30) dintk, Palrlci1 Cfowlq, ~m Ot· &l ltutlo (30) 1 Luise, C111rle1 NtllOn Raitrr 1nd EI!) Si•pll•••le Mlril (SS) J;ick1t Vernon. m TUI Sir! (C) (30) 0 m firn (Cl (60) . . 0 fi..i} (i) m TIM h11rnortaJ (C) J:lO llG:t (j) fa~itr Affair (C) IJO) (60) ""Tlie Rainbow Butchtf." Vic IMlead ol com1~1 llom1 to.• surpr1H Morro" auesls as 1 $.IT!atl-!l:.w.11 P~•rtr. ~nde 8111 1oes dirt~ horn shtutf who holds Ben Richards ~11 otht:I ti catch • . tt11ll1 lo ~115011ei Colin Wilcox·HOfnt 1uest1 Wtshin(lon Oii b1arness. I! Cl1nc1 [v1ns. o Q) CtJ m rn, w•n 1c• (60! Louis Afmllron1. Charlie Ca"1s laun CrMne, Pi t Maril• 1uM1. o NYrD tt1 t3Gl fl TM s.illt (C) (60) l'Jl) SpttullliM (C) (60) 'TM New C.lhoh' R1d1uhsm." &El lilt lllHst11 (-JO) D @(ii m Mitt lilKtl• ttl (&!) "Jillr." Mall lincoln Glttrs p11 CE HtNKePt '" II l'af. M.r•n· thi1tric 111!11 IG his lormtr kw t, J1ll11 ltl (30) H1rris, !ht ~irnor's dau1h!tr. wtlG 10:30 ID lill Jrth111 Mttrl (C) (30) annGI 1d1ust to ht r bhndnt~~ Whtn Gove1nor ~lay Harris ind hi ml R1•i9ll Mlflkal (30) daufhltr tetuse lo accept lllt per" al) Aljul Tru rilirln (30) m1nentt GI th• blindntss 11sul11na flam 1 p!1ne 1cc1dent. Matt o!lers 11:00 1J Qt Cil News (C) hope of • full lift without "lhl I D OJ Li) m NtM (C) B11b111 reldGn iuesll as J1llr Har ri1, Jtffrer Lynn 11 Clay Har1is ind Tom Simr.o1 1s 01Vid Cunninctu<n Vinet [dll'trds stars. (Rtscltlduled l 8 MilliH $ Mtvifl: (CJ "'Slnlil11" (1dvtnlu11) '56--Al1n l •dd. Roi una Podtsll. Lloyd Nol•n. An 1c:tion •10Q' l!Gm the jun1les cl Cutia. O C.11 You To' Tllis! (C) 0 QI N..s (CJ D Thtalft 9: ~HoJ111i<.id1I" (hor· ror) '61-Glenn Corbett, P1111ci1 Brei.lin. Jean Carless. m Yew Dt.'.I SIJ (C) ID Mowil: "Strl,1:11 111 ttit hlWI~ (d11m1) '!13-Paol Muni, Joan lo1- 11n1. tD Trvtll 11 C.11111q11t11tu IC) (301 IE 111111ill llH• ICI t601 {1I (]) l'tlry M11t1 fEI l\Ntrt 111! (C) t30) '"S11 Cll1r1cters in Starcll of 1n Aulho1."I fID TIM Mwcltu (C) (R) Pi11ndello's dassic IS 1d1 pted bJ ii) Nelldtr1 34 (CJ Paul Av1l1 MIJll'. . . @BS.ledlll ,....._ (C) (lO) lll:lO~h~~~t~is.'rilll• (C) Cail Ill MM fwertl ~ I• A-(30) CJ !D @ m ,... •• , C111111 (Cl 7:55 al) Clllltit111 • S.CllllM• Woody Herman alld his hand. Jamu Coco, N1rty 81i!I ind Ril1 1:ta B 9 ("t) Jiflll MIOl11 Slit• (Cl Moreno. (60) Ni1htcluh i nd 1~din1 st11 Vicki Cu r mikes l\tf sKOnd 1uest 0 lhwit: "Tlrr1 Clllu lltr" (rty1- 1ppe1r1nce Gn lilt Jim Nabou Hour.I terr) '.(2-Brian Donlevy, At111 Com•dr hi1hli1hts incl11d1 Mb.s Cur.I l•dd, William Bel'ldil, Ve1Gnit1 Nabou. f11nk Sutton 1nd RGnn1e lo.kt. Schell in I skelch ll'ilh Miss c~rr I D .&) Diet CIW!ll (C) Cil!I Reinu PoMrayin1 1 sultry uloon 1irl 1~d and John Mills 1uest. thbou as ""S11te1nl Yukon." I Tht WMklJ com1dy h11u11, "lhe m Movil: '"rtll AdW111l•11" (dOCll· 8rothtr1·in -l1w,"' lind1 H11rr (Sut·I me11t1rrl 'SI-Anders No1bo11. ion) 111d Bianchi (~_r•n Morrow) 12:DO @(I)Dld: tnttt (C) pl1nnln1 an tlt1ant d1nnu tor !ht rich11t folks ln IGWA. Loomis {NI· 1;00. Mtvie: (C) "fif1 °"' ~Irita" bors) lffivu jusl ill limr lo loll!t (adventurt) '!!4-M1cdon1hi C.1ey, lhin1s up. Maureen O'H111. 0 ¥lr8'11il CraN• SM (Cl (60) Cu1sts: John Dl¥i4110fl, ~br 11111.an, Bob 81rklf, C.rl C.rtUGn, Kalhe1ine m All·Ni&'I Slllw: "INtM: 9' Lett Smilh Ind Dr • .ioJce lrol'ht11. I w.-.. .a... "T11tf " KeffM••," m T1 T1I 1111 Trwlil (C) (30) "5p.iltrs If 111111 f1111t." m wmi11Pt• 11 • ....., 1c1 (lO) 1:1s e c.m11•lllitf •lllkti• lllt4 1c) ~ I!) CnetiM .... rdl (C} (30) Z:JO l'I Ntwl/CM Ut T1lil Dtf (Cl .. ~ ::.:.o:A'"'vn:;M~E:M::D~V""l"'E-.s"' _- FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 • SF Fil1n Festival' Opens With 'Great White Hope' ' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - "Ibe 14th annual San Francisco Film Festival has opened at the rebuilt palace of fine arts With a touch of rain and lhc absence or any incident. Past openings of the festh•al have seen "'s tar l ets'' misbehaving in attempts to get a · llttle free publici ty, misplaced reels and other mishaps. Last year's [irsl night was marred \vhen an un· derground film groop toss ed pies at formally dressed guests and then made a movie of it in tribute to silent screen comics. Bu t a packed house of 1.000, who paid $50 a ticket. Wed· nesday night filled the Palace o( Fine Arts' new theater to vo'itncss the film version or ''The Great \Vhite lloJK',"' a OCC Reci tal 20th Century Fox-production-- based on the ~ most honored drama of the 1969 season. A little i-ain outsi de might have dampened spirits a bit. but no other dark clouds hovered over the opening. Fol lo win g the short l'eremony MC"d.by comic Bill Cosby and the showing of the well·received fil m, a party \vas held in another part of the huge palace. a unique relic or lhe 1915 Pan·American Ex- position here. The San Francisco Film Festival. the nation's oldest, \l'as estnblished in 1957 by Irv- ing ~1. Levin. Now the event is run undl'.'r the chairmanship of ~layor Joseph L. Alioto. but the men really respons ible for it arc Ch~irman Claude Jnrman, ex. chil d star who is now il5 ex- ecutive director. and Albert .Johnson, renowped rilm expert \1·ho tours the world !Q._gel the features. Un i nterrupted by in- termission, "Indians" sets an uneve n pace, then slowly solidifies its content until al the play's climax - a resplen- dent mosaic of sound and lighting -the inner torment of its spokes man. Buffalo Bill. and the agonizing pli ght of the red men he e nd e a vor e d honestly, if futi lely, to help is laid barc·upon the stage: The OCC pr·oductl on. directed with a strong and sure hand by John Ferzacca, rises several cuts above the average student "Show. The collegiate actors di s p 1 a y definite insight into their who believed himself thus and an effect which can be • f insists that "I'm doing what dangerous if· overused -is ill••• my country \Vanis," though he nevei:..! allowed to intrude on •• ~ is never sure of precisely what the continuity. It is, in fact. Tl EAT El he is doing. He presents a strengthened mightily by the ~ 1,., r.n ce•n -·• mixture of fervent Compassion-excellent · Jighllng effects of ~ ,cot!--. oe~ ..,., 61'>-t•• marred by gullibility born of Bud Cook ag ainst a con- naivete in his dealings with vertible b a c k d r o p im- the Indians. a man overly con-aginatively designed by Pete scious of his place in history. Scarpello. ' refUSifig -thr oughOUt-10 blame ''fndians'.--is 3 p1ay or liigll hi mself for his failure s. relevance in an era where Matchi ng Bro w n's such a qu ality is given performance with an equally ultimate attention. It con- powerful interpretation of the tinues tonight through Satur- proud and unmova ble Sitting daY only in the Orange Coast Bull is Alexander Golson, who College auditorium. voices the underlying Iheme of li=;:~~======~~~ill the play when he implores the American senators to "send us 1!'" Wll!@l·. I D O 1! food. clothing, horses and money so we can live like the Ythite man." lt is a sequence N[WPO llT I Eo\Clf • Oll.,l-8350 of uncomlortable truth which w.rtw M.ntr•• conveys a sil uation virtuall y unchanged today. Other performances tend to blend more smoothly into the BARBU STBEISAND 673-6260 Exclusiv.-Showing Phone 673-6260 lfhe's••llftlll, • • ........ whatWis~e. OCC Theater Group At Fullerton Festi1~al The Orange Coast Ex· mime theater. improVisatiooal perimental Theater of Orange sctnes ethnic d anci n g , Coast COilege-win perform ma · e up d!mons1rations,' Of Russ ian Songs Set This yea r'"s festival runs this weeke nd al the first an-strolling troobadors, ro c k through Nov.-I. Seventeen na· nual Fullerton Festival of groups and a contempor8.ry ' 1 ions are represented in the 23 Arts. dance ensemble. -Mo1. 1ltr11 S•t,- "DOLLY" .. 7 e11d 9:30 -AL!O l'LAYINO -.... .,., , .... , -· "Goodbye, Columbus" films. including such exotic Directed by OCC drama in· The experimental lheaterl'.============.::=========== contributors a.s Bolivia and structors Willi am Purkiss and was created in the fall of 1969 A recital or Russian songs "Yugoslav ia. John Ferzacca. the company by a group of students in-\vill perform continuously du r· terested in exploring new and will be presen ted at Orange li1ore thao 30 other events · th o-d t Sat different avenues of dramatic Coast College tonight by are also scheduled and these ~nagy ~n~"'' S:~d:;en at ~~ expression. The s tudent s Charles and Inna Gsovskaya include retrospective tributes Muckenthaler Cen ter, l l9 rehearse in -an old \Vorld War Berger. to directors Britain's Dnvid Buena Vista Drive. II barracks building on the The recital. open 10 lhc Lean. Satyajit Ray of Indian. Performn nces wi ll include Costa Mesa campus. public at no charge. will be Jo hn Cassavetes of the United ,-------p:=:::=;o:=;;;;='='::;;;::;~:;.;:=--:::-:::--·i given in ~1usic Studio No. l at States as well as sta rs I 11 a.m. Hosali nd Russell and Paul li1r. and ~1rs. Berger ;irr Ne\Yman. The person honored associate professors in the \l'ill always be on hand lo Literature and L a n g u a g c reminisce. Division at OCC. ~lrs. Berger Films to be shown tonight has also taught Russinn at incl ude the French-Algerian OCC. production '·Ramparts of Songs to •be prese nled in· Clay." directed by Jean.Louis elude "The L<i.rk." by Glinka, Berluccelli and France's "The "The Rose Enslaves the \\lild Child,·· directed by Fran· Nightingale" by R i ms k y -cois Truffa ut. Korsakov. Parasia"s ""Reverie ~lartin Ritt. who directed from The Fair at Sorotchinsk" "The Great White Hope." at- by-Moussorgsky , · ' A r a b tended Wednesday n i ght 's Melody" by Bo ro d i n , performance and was the sub- Slravinsky's "T,vo Poems of jeet of a retrospective today. Balmont'! and Rachmaninoff's -• "In .the Silence of the Night'' and Francesca's •·Aria from Paolo and Francesca." Now thru Tuesday EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY SHOWING "SOLDIER BLUE" ·•nd "RIDER ON THE RAIN" NOW SHOWING TWO GREAT ATTRACTIONS Held Over 3rd BIG WEEK , • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUNTAIN VAllEV DlllVf 1 ~1 Ul!Rr 11 Mwl I• Wtltl P'lr11111 i......,.. ,..., c ... 1e •• ._ oo "SOLDl•lt ILUI" lltl -.....is..1 >tits e "ltlOIA ON TM• A:AIN" ICf'I Kl-2411 .... c.,.. ,...,,, •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• l~ ~A80A ---LA HABRA ---~-Oii.Vi IN l"ll-1"2 U ..... U MllS1 S• Wl1~ ,,,_r c..,.11:, ,,.....,. "SDLDUi"lt ILUE" flt) 1M • "1111011: ON TMI lt.f.IN" 10'1 All C.llf' ,...,,, ..................................... ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ........................ ··•·••••··· UllMr 11 MllJI SI Wlfll 1'1rtnl ........ C.Mllc• ..... ~ "JOLDlllt •LUl "l(lt) -::e;1;•) ,..,_ "fllD•lt 0.. TMI A:AIM" lP) An C.IW' IMW ..................................... •. o o o • • I• o • •••••••• e I •• 0 e •••• e ••• I.• -.... hi. 1,00. lf,:IO , .M. loo!. l,J0.110, ~.f<OO. !GOO'"' ~ l,OO. l,10.~ "II), 1.lO ''"° -1..:r1U_...,,~1J1•;o1...S ICPll 1: ' EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT! •Great movie making. The Perrys' best" lilmt sl,erlliy theatrical lllffDl'llllllCIS I" _..,...,.... .. , .... ' • .... MOii. !in Fri. 7.00, 1:4S. 10,)0. -.W ary s.e.1..is.J,JO.s,15. 1.oo.1,4S. IO,JO of a mads-2,1s, 4;00. J,4S. 7cJO,f,\S houaawlfe a frank P•• • t fllm ...... ricnard benjamin carrie ~nodgress ·frank langella ' A-CNrw lottwood Hih ''llAll'IMlllH" ..oat, IAD 1 TNI UILY'' "FOi •'nw DOU.Aas MOii" "A llSTrunnil,-Ll:AIS" • • -- - ---. --·-------.---. ----- -·-·-. ,-:-.--. , 'll~levant' · · TV-Big · Failure Captive Celebratats 'David, Lisa' Cast List Real Sign for Dick; His Show's Renewed ThurllW. Gctobtr 22, 197 . By !\OBERT MVSEL Traveling Theater w h I ch NE\V YORK (UPI) ...., A performs in New York slum areas. Casting director ordered to look for someone to pliy Ute "The M·exican gi{l is never a wife Of an Anilo-SaJan Wall school teacher," she com· Street analyst wobld never plllned. "She's .. ah\'ays tbo think of Miriam Colon. And wldo\V of a man who wis killed! -this strikeS MISs COion. as wry-or the harlot-ln--thc-bar .. -1 she's a Mexican can't she ever ly am11Sing since she is mar· be a· nurse or a wife? Let's rled lo tust such a ~n. race it, there are scientists But she is also a Puerto who are Latin-Americans. Yet Rican and AliSS Colon says lllthough many nationalities Puerto Ricans never get the make up the fabric of the Caucasian hero in television country they · \\'On't admit scripts, only in erll life. them into the story. line. lf yOu·.-waJcb ~leyision yoµ . "l don't really blame the r know Jrtiiil Colpb'l.Oce evan if casting directors. They are her name~ UC~~ Y.d:b in handcuffed py the script. lf the final :&\qr ol Credits ~ the \VTilc.r calls for a blue-eyed Jng Off the 'acrten to make yeilOW•hllired gir l \Vhal can way for the comme~tals. She thty, do? Jf such a girl is is one of the most· seen ac-demanded to make the story tresses on the tube. 'rhe believable that's okay. I don't ~fenders, Dr. Kildare, Alfred want to play a Swedi1h girl. Hltchcoc~ Presents, B e n • That not my point. Casey, Dick Van Dyke. , Vou name it. She's been on 'But look at Los Angeles. it. HO\V many men there are But aJwaya as a Mexican. an married to Latin-American Indian, an Italian, a Greek, a girls and Puerto Ricans? How LaUn • American or even a many Latin-American girls Puerto Rican. • are teachers in Chicago or The other day she appeared married to b u s i n e s s m e n at the CBS-TV offices for a there?" preview of the ''Gunsmoke'.' Otherwise Miss Colon is ·episode which opfns the 16th very happy with her career. season of that most successful She can sing and dance and do . .. DAILY PILOT of all \\·estern series on ~pt. any number of dialects. She 1968 with-a-morning show that 14: There ate estitrla:te·s Jatnes-got· good notices in her only lasted for about eight months. Arness as Matt Dillon has" Broadway show. There are ln thesummerof196$hedida ' • 1 l f I f h Jh' ----- himself earned some $30 P en y o r o e s or er is three-limes-a-week talk show million out of the sho"'. television season. Once the in prime time. The episode is ti l 1 e d greasepaint is off and she gets "Actually, this isn't my first "Chato'' and Miss Colon ri1a·ys back to her Manhattan apart- . rene\val," Cavett cracked. "l 8 co-starring role (as a MtX· menl she becomes Mrs . thlnk they renewed the mom-ican, of course) rated of such George P. Edgar. . ing show every few days. I'd importance she ,vas sum· Why she asks, cant she be a bring in my contract and they moned back from a holiday in Mrs .. ~eorge P. ~gar on the would stamp it." Greece to enact it. It is, she telev1s1on screen. Cavett, v.ilose I o w -k e y says, a part of great emotion, humor and perceptive in-character and depth. There is terviev"s have won a loyal however a penalty for all Fiunev Sta1·s ALL .SEATS soe following, had his contract this-she dies. F • W ';The presiden~ of the renewed through 1971. At The tendency of television to HOLLV\VOOD <UP-1) ostest In est · • netv.·ork called yesterday to present, while ABC broadcasts type-cast anyone who doesn't Columbia Pictures will pro-B11y it. Sell it. ('ry the fattest response In the West a91lnst )'OlW tell me the news," he said. "I Monday night National Foot· conform to certain stereotypes duce "Gumshoe" star r in 8 own clock. Test Olmt·i·lint Ads, where the action Is, in SatwrdaY-1'..! asked hin1 to id en ti f Y ball League games, the show irks l\tiss Colon, 'vho is Albert rtnney in the t~tle role I DAILY PILOT. ' · himself." is seen four times a v.•eek. __ _::fo:un::d:e'...r..'.o'...f..'.th'.'.e'.-'.P.:u•:rt:o'....'.:R'.'.ic:••::_:fll:"':lng'.'.!..ln::'..'.Lo=n::d•:•:._· ---~=====""=============== Cavett had always gottenl-------- good critical reviews of his r;:=======:::::======================================:;i past shows. but they v.'ere both cancelled. It was touclt and go for a time with the present show after he succeeded Joey Bishop last Dec. 29. Some 20 statioris dropped the ABC late-night show when Bishop left ·and switched to movies. A fe\Y have returned and currently 131 stations car· ry the program. Another fact.or is th a t although he has made some progress in the ratings Cayett still consistently runs behind NBC's Johnnv Carson on "The Tonight Sho\Y11 and CBS' Merv Griffin. Cavett first joined ABC in STARS SydlltV Omtrr 11 on• of tht world'1 '!lr••f t 1trolottr1. H11 c:ol~m1t i1 on• of tht DAILY PILOTS t rttf fittifr••· PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT LllllAa'Vlll ··•a•n WiAi.IB". . ~' .,, t CALL·s4~3·102 -.... hc~-:::::'"u !,:~; ·~ Also e Liia Mloelll : "TILL ME THAT YOU LOVE ME. JUJtil'liJOON"' !$Pl • / FOR I W'-EK ONL YI / RATED "G" IT'S FOR EVERYBODY JUlllE ~OCK AND~WS HUDSON Call 644-0760 Ch1rlton Heston STARTS WEDNESDA' OCTOBER 28 it!) QARhiNGWill ;le lWlllDILI• .WV.• lllU.mfam ·~ and Garaldino Chlplin in "THE HAWAIIANS" !GPI "**** IT'S ALL SO FUNNY!" fMMIHll'T UTillQ I -N•w Y~~ Ofilt NfYlt ld81 MDonmt lllMGils Elliott Gould Donald Suthorl1nd M .., F. _ 1:00 a •:•s -sit. -1:00-J:Jo.,ioo.1:io.11100 -s ..... : -1 :JMi00 .. 1Jo~t100 ,:i;:".r;.;.;.· !MIT•• t•Nrta • A. ll:OSS HUNTER Produc:tion AIRPORT ·-' ..... 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Collage • bound to bl one of ch"ese. pineapple11ettuce * your beet friends. and a e.herry. / ,.. ****~******* .. ******* I ******************** Chili & !Onion Sandwich· l Beans 60' -1<Swamp witter 39C A heapjng bowl of i<Okeelonokoo Dorllng chili and beans «Onion and m8yonnalse served wit h crackers -tcsandwlch, served with~ ... just Wright -ttglass of ·swamp water.• for hungry appetites. -tc•(orange and Root Beer· -tr: combination.) *********<************ Bacon, lettuce "' Rith Boy's and tomato "' sandwich $4.95 on toast g~ ii J.P. Morgan'• Cal'load • . -fit Sliced ham and turkey pilld Bacon stnps, lettuce,-tc on a very Jong loaf Of bread tomato on t~ast iC wilh cheese, red ri99 toma~, with mayonnaise. -tr: crisp lettuce and apeclal - Carry Nation .. dre9slngs. Serve•4:-5. We r • crusaded for this -tc loan you Jim B6wle'a knlfl · all .p.merican favo rite.,. to divide It up. ~********************* / .. / ,. ... ,.. ., 1!1!11 iliilli• ....... ' I * * WILWRIGHT'S ** * ** CAMPAIGNH_EA9QUAllTEll81m111-· CAMPAIGN HEADQUARTIRS HunUntton 8-h . · ~ WHI COYlna -.. Wool l Ecilnflr • ...... 2658 E. Workm~n Aw. H.u"U"lllO!f ~~ . -Wost Covino **"'*FUN,FOOQ&ICECREAM**** (Now,.th1t's something to remember) -~ ~ °"""1M. tm .WI WlfPI'• lot C""" ......... All 111"'11..._. , ......... Ct. . , • .. ... . • '• . • .. ,. . • .. . .. .. • • ,. " .. " • .. • .f DAILY PILOT . • I t • .. Qyer r 1\ • t . -~-'..:Uproar Learning~· Drugs Astonishes Doctors: T -T ~. . • ~-• : By DELOS SMITll live llestntctlvtfy and ~ cident, that dnils" Which : ""' ....,. ....., ire•ivety thrwgh all their stimulate the central nervous •1,, : A .,.._..,." llDd wide'" held ~'days and far tn~ most or th,.ir sytJtem, such as the ampheta- 11 • ....... ...., Y night. They re e a s 11 y mines and methylpherrldate ~ · mtdical opinion holds il is · nd · seemed to pennlt the victims of . : sound practice lo medicate frus"8ted a rea~ •"ll'tlJ. : some over-..... acllve children Becmse almost anythlnc will '"minimal brain dysfuncUon" r•1' • ..., d1strfd lhtm, their 1tteaUon to· e1trdle r1dooa.l · ':'°"trol '•" :.~~. ~· Ille dnig spa lo ao ibor1 lbey!~~er tllelr pb)'llCal act)Vlty. ' ' \)' llMdl.tcable. • 1 There is no haid ~ientiOc v:1" : , There never · was .an)'.Ul1na Medically it is an •111ne1s, expUm-1ion how. a drijg that : secret about it. That Is why "minimal brain dysfunction'' stimulat~ everyone e I s e .,.. ' : doctors were astonished by the or "byperkinetic syndrome." calms the byperk.lnellc child n"1 • sudden clamor Clf indignation Tht beUef is that It Is due to but the theoretical explanation ~--.' «!linating-ie-.Qmlha,-Nei».~"\'en11aturtng of tbe is that it stimulates higher and "~·1 : which spread !o Congress JU:!d many control centers of the still immature brain centers • -:.t : other nonmedtea}. pl~ and brain. Though the brain Is into exercising normal control •I • keeps on sputtering. fulb: functioning (many of the over the secondary centers. ; '. "Speed" was belna prescrib-chldttn have nor'mal and even Ors._ C. KeWI Connors ot ~ • ed by duJy.quallhed pbYsicians suP,erior intelligence), its Ma 1 sac h u setts General : for a ,number or Omaha bullt·in system of controls i~ Hosplt41 In ..Boston. and Leon t cl)ildren. The fact came to oul or kilter. r.. r Eisenberg of.J:farvard Medical • · Hehl in the press, and up v.·enl' Heallh autborlties esUmate School Pl'Jl\'.eA · t be, e!· ~t sucl) emotional and unfounded Uw\ .i.t least 300,QOO American fec~ivem:ss ol lllmulant· tr:eat· 1 charges as: chlldren are handle~ in m~t. .BY t.he1M0s, ~~ad~ ~ Children were being "drug· varying . dtifeea by to h e ntabhshed in med1pal prac· , : t;ed into conformity ; '' '.'h~lnetic s~i-o(nel" The lice as "the tte_atment of '} · teachers were conspJring with nurhber beln~ tri1ted ~h an choice." • 1 , ~~on to "control" disrupti~e melhJiphenidate (trade ame One of the: physicia~.)who 1 • chUdish behavior with drugs Ritalin)'is not known t it ·Came to the defense Ot· the' : rathet than discipline; doctors tua to be substantial because Olnaha doctors was . E. L. : arid teachers were •Uoning any doctOr will prescrl~ one tinger of• Union Protestant : ~ abust by.children. or the otper drug u ·11 maiti!r Hbspital, aarksburg. W: Va. i : Privately, doctors were ot ~ as he p~blis an in a Jetter to the local > lli.s~ayed. It seemed that antiblc>µc f91' Infection. 11 _ ne~spaper Linger said: · pUbhc ' Cil~m over drug Untjl the lat! 30e. the~· fi'.85' "l know whereof J speak . . r11. ~ ~bust amona youths was being Utlfe physic!MJ·.C(JU]«f do •fol'> My wife and I have a child -.~•· ! dfrected at the wrong target the hyperkinetic c.hild. Utlly with the hvperkinetic syn· , ~ -themselves. Publicly, they the chUd outgrew, the dis er, drome and he now leads a ,.,·t ~ hastened to explain h o w presumably When all rain nearly normal lile with the me r,,, : ~"speed" os; another mind drug control centers ~mature~ fully; of. medication daily." "';~r ~ ·trntly benefits some overly bat -"!' then he was ~ Dr. Judith .L. Rappaport of • •!=11ve children when· properly paychoJOJical cripple and bad the National Jnstit~· of Child • ~-adm. inistered as ~dicine. missed'. out on an ,educ8tlon. Health and Human J)evelop·. ,..,r,· -·1 ~, ~These are children who in ,Jn the 30s medical Scientists. ment states that without the ',P -t_itreme Cilse.S .re .. OVNly IC· diacoye' .red,• "largely by ac-me•of these~~ drugs,, '. f .. .~. .... -... ·~· '' ". ... . ,.., . '! '• .. . , " ' " , ' : . -' , . ' . '. l .. ·' ..... I ' .... ,. '' . • • LED ZEPPELIN Ill Includl's : Immigrant Soni;. Friends, Cl'lebration Day, Since f\'e Seton Loving You, Out On Th~ Tiles, Gallows Doll', Tangerinl', Thars The Way. Bron-Y· Aur Stomp. llats Off to (Roy) llarpcr. 'GO YER YA·YA'S OUT'! THE ROUINCO STONIS IN CONCIRT Includes: Jum11in' Jack Flash, Carol, Stray C.at Blues. Love In Vain, J\'lidnii.:ht Rambler. S)'mpathy For The Devil. Uve With Me, Llttlc Queenie, Honky Tonk Women, Street Fighting ?.Ian. Now thru SUNDAY OCT. 25th ·44 EACH LIST $5.98 SPECIALLY PRICED CLOSE TO YOU CARPENTERS fUTURE BLUES CANNED H&AT LOOKING IN SAVOY BROWN Ust $4.98 .;. ___________ _... ___ "'"' * * * 8 TRACK : . CARTRIDGE ::. OR CASSETI£ •• ,.CHOOSE FROM DUR COMPLETE '.:-°1sELECTION OF TOP HITSI . ·. * Ust ·$6.98 * YOUll. CHOICE SALE $466 heh Umited to quantity on hand. * Choose From Oar Complete Stock of , ''TOP 30'' SINGLES ................. ONLY 68:. GRANT CITY --,ANAHEIM GRANT PLAZA UNTIN_GTON BEACH UMel• .. 5fwtl Ce ...... ...._,"' Ctr. lrMUmt et A.._ HHn: 1t ...... 19 .t , .•• D.n, HHnt t :JO •·•· t. t :Jt P·•· hftf S...., I ..,., .. ..... s..My 11 •·•· t9 6 I'••· ~ll '~~~~~,...~~ .... --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .... { ~t'' ' • . ' many c la:rtr!Wllli mlnlmal---W1th preCiston""tO avoli! ad-anything you can-do to keep and treat chtkiren tbb way?"~ZlegJW-LpllCll;to corwme a brain dysfunction would be diction and othtr side effects, him in school and avoid Dr. Edward F. Ziegler: a panel of scienUsts and prac- hospltalized, ~ unable lo at-This means the doctor must further psychological com· psychologist who ls director of ticlng doctors to • ln~ct tend schOol. keep close watch over the p,,. p:Ucatlons, you certain I y the federal gover~eot's new physicians ·~-educj\torl ~B ·Medic'at statistics show that tien·L during U)e entire period should do." agency for child Health ind what drugs can be used 1n 60 to ao perce11t of such af-of lreat.ment. Yet the controversy con-human development, entered \Vhat children to achl~ve fiicted ~ were· helped Tbls report wu unable to • linues. Dr. Carlos Carrillo the controversy by 9')'inl he specirlc, beneficial ends. either by~ methylpheqidate or find a pbysk:Wi oppoeed to the complained in 1 letter to the . was ' ''afrJ,id many tea~rs But .doctors feel • t h e y an amphetamine. There is no treatment, even among editor of the New York ·are utlliiing this as a way out a Ire ad y know . T h.e i r cui-e, but' liteir"h,n!>tJlsiveness psychoanalyUc psychiatrists Review of boob that 00e of its of d If f ICU It i e I in the . spokesmen at lhe hei@t of the and scatterbrain Activities, who are reputed (incOrrectly) nonmedical writers had term-clllSll"OOm." . . uproar e.mphaslzed that llefore which kept them in constant to oppose any approach to ed diagnosis of minimal brain Teachers,\ Ziegler s a i d . prescribing ' ' s P e e d ' • or trouble with ·other children, mind disorders WPicb 1s DOI. dysfunction and treabnent as sbwJd reaJlze u\al. befiiVioral methylphenidate. a do ctor parent.s-and-1eachers;-were purely-peychololicll. · " ntly -fa 1.b.i o o..a..b-1.e-problems of chlldre.o c-~e ~should _be . ~j!Jve ol ___J!is ... curbed. Dr. Mortimer Osfow ol New Quackery." Jn reply U>e writer from "the: kind of schoolroom diagnosis o( ·m:rruma liatn Di~is must be exact York s.ays the drugs Hre "the dismissed Canillo's argument that children have to adjust to dysfunction. The diagnostic before i drug ts prescribed, best thing you. can do~lor lbe and demanded to know "in rather than what is wrong criteria have been repeated in and then it must'be preacribed hyperkinetic c h 11 d; and whole interest is ll to di{lgDOSe with their brains." medical journals for years: KING SIZE SET Mattrwa and 2 Box Springs, Ortho-Pak and Double Bonus The lowest priced King in Ortho's value--packed mattre;::s,s ... O:.: selections. Durable tempered steel innerspring unit with sisal insulator covered with cotton felt and rich scroll quilted cover. THE CROWN KING Super~or cons~ruclion features especially designed and built to bring yoo the best insuppor1 and comfort . Onty Or1ho can bring you such a value because only Ort ho sells direct to you. Thars ""'::---why you save every day at eve rt ho! PRICE CLUDES: Mattress and 2 Box Springs, Plus: the Ortho-Pak and Double Bonus . Sleep In airy, cool, no-sag comfort on a matt~u with the proper sup1>9rt. 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I •• MODERN ···. . • SOFA BED ·. •· •• , A modern, lull alte conver11ble · "' 40111 priced tor the budge! minded •nd ideally dlllignld tor your 1p1re room or den, Av11lable In all sites. ll'Cktdn lol• led Double~ !138 You can only buy Ori/lo 11.-.0• 11 Orlllo Slore1 Ma il and phone orders •Cc.pied . Immediate delivery Cwllt!Me JtJO~ MAlTllQf LAKEWOOD 4433 Candlewood Dr. In Candlewood Shop< (Across from Lakewood Cenltrj ...... : 6J4-41J4 •WJ N DAii Y 10 'I• SA I I 0 6 •SUN 12 6 • IMM[OIA IE DHIVlRY • CRlOl I TE RM S AVAIL ABll • BANKAMf RICARD• MA~ If R CllAE I; ·LI ·- . . T.....,, October 22, 1970 , DAIL V ptl.AT JelJ Million Vjf<.-es Warm Up Att~c~ for LA Pistol Pete Gatliers Splinters ATLANTA (AP) -·What's this • , . a S2 mllUon benchwarmer! It may sound unusual, but that's exactly how Pistol Pete Matavich , the Atlanta Hawks' prize rook ie, started his National Basketball career. And, according to coach Richie Guerin, it may remain that way for a time. "I'm going to put the best players on ~-eourt," Guerin says. A-1aravich, the former college i;harpshooter from Louisiana State Uni· ve rsity, says learning to come off the bench is perhaps the biggest adjust· ment he's having to make i!l professional basketball. "This ls a position I've never been in before,'' he says. adding quickly, "but all I want to do is to help win a cham pionship. That's the only thing I've never accomplished in basketball." The boyish Maravich, who reportedly signed with .the Hawk s for S2 miJ. l lion, was the nation's No. 1 college scorer wit'h 3,867 pointa over 1 three-~r span. · He aVellaged 44.2 points per game. while at Louisiana State, but the Tigers never managed to win. the Southe&s~ ""Conference basketball crown. Maravich's professionaJ debut came last weekend as the Hawks dropped a 107-98 decision to the Milwaukee Buck.5 in the season opener for both teams. He entered the game in the second "quarter, wound up logging 22 minutes of game time, but appeared erratic as he finished with only seven points - three of 13 shots fro"! the floor -three rebounds and four assists. In Atlanta's second game Wednesday night against the San Francisco Warriors, Maravich played 19 minutes, hit three of 12 field goal attempts and ended the game with seven points. Guerin says he will continue using Maravich as an alternate for veterans Lou Hudson and Walt Hazza rd. Clay vs Quarry ' J ' "_Maddox Tells Lagunan Views on U pcom~gFight Some ,people opposed to the idea of draft-dodger Cassius Clay being permit· led .to fight Jerry Quarry in Atlanta (or anywhere) have written <>r wired their objections to Gf9rgia governor Lester Madd<>x. One such person is Garrett E. Fagan of La gun·a Beach. Fagan lent M'addox's response to this column so it could be shared with the public. Dear Mr. Fagan: I appreciate so\Very much being given the benefit of your views conceming the proposed fight wh ich would involve Clay. Further, I sincerely agree with your posi- tion regarding th is important matter. Being aware of the fact that State laWs do not grant the Governor, any other State official, nor any State agency the authority to permit or refuse to permit a boxing match, I am hel pless from a legal standpoint to prevent the fight. However, l was-told that Clay had realized his mistake and that he is now a different and very humble man. But, I want to assure you that until he makes public his position and pledges his readiness to be. inducted and serve his country -althoUgh I 4m legally bound from taking any action in this matter -I will continue to voice my opposition to him or any other man fighting for money at home and at the same time refusing to fight for his country. For additional information about my position, please read the attached release in reference to the proposed fight. Thanks. again , for letting me hear from you and rest assured that ·y will con· tinue to oppose those who will not stand up for America and never cease or weaken in my stand for what I believe to be Godly, good and American. . Lester Maddox The following is a statement made by Governor Lester Maddox in reference to Kings Cash In On Mickey, 4-2 . LOS ANGELES (AP ) -It was Larry Mrekey's 27th birthday Wednesday. and the Lo! Angeles Kings are celebrating. the pi-opose~ h~avyweight light for A;lan- t.a: "In clarification of my statement made in response to an inquiry about the pro- posed Clay-Frazier heavyweight bout, I wish to point out there is no Jaw in the State of Georgia which allows the Governor or any other state ofricial or agency to control boxing, sparring or wrestling matches. or other simil ar ex· hibitions. Exhibitions of this nature are controlled by local aulhoritics. "In the City of Atlanta, boxing, spar· ring and wrestling matches and similar -WHITE WASH ·----...:. -:w .. • e:chibitions are under the sole dir~ion, management, control and jurisdicl~f the Munici pal Buildings and Athletic Committee. This provision is set forth in Article Ill, Section 6-26 through 1).35 of the City of Atlanta Code. "The promoter: of the fight and others closely assoc iated \}lerewith made th- quiry of my office for lhe purpose of determining my attitude and position with regard to the proposed fight. I was assured by them that Clay is a changed man, an humble man and one with a total change of attitude. "Not knowing of the present status or the criminal charges made aga inst him. l expressed my belief in the capacity of in- dividuals to change. My expression was consistent with my past actions in re- questing early release for prisoners, and support for rehabilitation programs through penal reform. "Had all Americans who have fought and died for this country acted as Clay and refused to serve in the military forces, then Clay and other Americans ~'Ould not be free today to enjoy the freedom and heritage that is our&. "If Clay has not changed and still MINNEAPQLJs-sT. PAUL CAP) - RUMing back Dave Oaborn said it was a matter of confidence. Coach Bud Grant said It must be the on·eather. &th were talking lbout the jell Of Min· nesota's offense the past two weeks as L'. • Vikings stretched their National Foot- ball League·record to 4-1 going lnto..next Monday night's game at Metropolitan S~dium against the Los Angeles · Rams, also f.1:-- The Vikings, on successive weekends defeated the Chicago Bears 24--0 and the Dallu Cowboys 54-13. S . ? urp;r•~· '. Clay .S'1:oots Off Mouth ATLANTA (AP) -'"I'm the best, that's all, I'm the champ,'' said Muham- mad Ali . "Until I hit you on the chin," said Jerry · Quarry. ;'I've beaten them all - Liston, Pal· terson," said Ali. "You're fighting me now, baby," said Quarry. ,,All I want to say is ... I'll see you fi ght night. When you beat me, you'll be the greatest fighter in the world;" said Ali. . "'fhal's what rm trying to say," sai~ Quarry. '"Bring a slab." said Ali. "Ynu'\I need It.'" That was the way it went Wednesday as Ali. former world heavyweight cham· pion formerly known as Cassius Oay, and Quarry, current No. l contender in the heavyweight division, underwent simultaneous physical examinations for the is.round meetin g Monday night. Two Negro doctors admh1lstered the physical , prompting Ali to shout, "Soul doctors for a change." "You'll need more help than that," said Quarry. Ali, undereated champion who was stripped of his title because of a con· viction on charges o( re(using -to rePort for the draft, weighed 210 for his physical exam. He expects to be 208 for the fight, his first in"three and a half years. He weigh· ed 212 in t.farch, 1967, when he knocked out Zora Folley in his last ring ap- pearance. Quarry. a 26-year-0ld body punch~r, weighed 198 Wednesday. Quarry has 37 victories, four losses and four draws in his professional career. He has scored 23 knockouts. Cus D'Amato, who guided Floyd Pat- terson to the heavyweight tiUe. was on hand Wednesday. and said Ali's king layoff gives Quarry the edge in the bout. "While Clay has been ina ctive. Quarry has been fighting competitively for 10 years. That is the bi~ thing ,'' said D'Amato. Angel<> Dundee, Ali's trainer, coun- tered, "Ali has never been far out of shape. He has taken car.: <>f himself." The only major thing still to be decided about the rules of the fight are whethe r there can be a save by the bell. Ch8mpionship rules will ~ in effect, with a mandatory eight count on a knockdown but no three-knock down rule. Eight-Ounce glov~s will be used. The bout will be scored by the referee and two judges, none of whom will be an- nounced until fight night. Official weigh· in la set for 10 a.m. Monday. Scoring will be on the New York round system, with the lf>.point must provision to be W!Cd only in case of ·a draw. REYNOL DS TO JOIN ANGELS Mickey slammed home his third goal of the season at 8:27 of the third period to lift the Kings to a 4-2 National Hockey League victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins. refuses to serve In the military forces of The California Angels announced t h e Mickey's score broke a 2-2 tie and gave the revived Kings a J.1 record. A · 1967 auto accident almost ended Mickey's hockey ca reer. But he came back to play on the front lines with Mon- treal. and last year was the Canadlens' penalty killer and point man on the power pla y. Wednesday's Re.suits New York 3. Toronto 2 MiJillelO!a "3\ Monb'GJ I SL Lou.is 2. Calif6mia 2 (tie) On1y games aChedu.led. the United States. then he should not be purchase Wednesday of right hand allowed to fight for money in Atlanta , or pitcher Archie , Reynolds from the elsewhere in this country. Chicago "Cubs. "If Clay Is ready to publicly proclaim i Reynolds had a 7:3 record with Hawaii his readiness to fight for his coun try,--1ast season, on op~ from. lhe Cubs. In then now is the time for him to be heard. seven appearances with ctucago, he had Until he does this, or the conviction :''1 ().2 record with nine strikeouts in 15 in· atlainsl him is removed, the City of nings. Allanti;i should not permit the proposed Earlier in the day, General Manager fi ght , lest in doing so, Atlanta would raise Dick Walsh obtained catcher John Burns the prospect of an affront to every and cash from the Atlanta Braves for in- mother. father, wife, child and other fielder "Marty Perez. Burns was with relative who have had loved ones serye in Shreveport In the Te1as League last year the armed forces of this country, many of and Perez played at Hawall. whom paid the supreme uttlfice." ·- 11we•ve gained the confidence we· need the last couple of weeks," said Osborn, the team's leading rusher with 161 yards in 45 carries. . "The offense is alwa~ slow in starting. Against Dallas, we moved the ball on the groun;d better than we have all year. Our offensive line really gave us the holes against Dallas. lf they can handle those people they can handle anybody, The 54-poinl splurge was 'twice as many p~nta as the-Vikingucor.ed in-any other victory. "We'.re jtist getting into our cold weather offense," said. Grant. ·-when the weather· turM a Utt le cotder, our olferue ge:S a little better.'' - Mention of the weather might make tM Rams shudder a little bit. They came into Metropolitan Stadium Dec. 27 last year arter a fecord month or snowfaJr and J05t the \1.'estem Conference title, ~20, to the Vikings· in freezing lemperatures. The season's first major snow{all ha11 yet to hit the area, but Grant wouldn't mind a .little snow for the warmwea ther Rams.. • "We know what a rine team they are,'' said Gran t. "They're just an excellent football team and they present us with a GAIL GOODRICH TAKES IT AWAY ·FROM J IM WASHINGTON. 141·117 Laker-Blitz LA Running, Winning ' With Goodrich on Tea1n PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Jerry West scored 37 points and Wilt Chamberlain netted 26 and grabbed 22 rebounds, but it wasn't either of these two U!s Angeles stars who put a gleam in Lakers' coach Joe Mullaney's e,Yes. Mullaney ·wanted to talk about Gail Goodrich, the 6-foot-1 former UCLA all- American. Goodrich has given the Lakcrs a new dimension -speed and slick ball handling. The differenC'e Goodrich makes in the Los Angeles team was evident Wed· nesday night as he quarterbacked a 141 - 117 victory over the Philadelph ia 71iers. He scori?d 22 points 011 8 of 13 from tile field and 6 ·for 7 from the foul line. More important, he handed out 10 assists and made the Lakers R-U·N. Los Angeles lost the National Basket- ball Association championship last year to the New York Kn icks for one reason because its backoourt handled the ball as If it was a hot po4'to. Mullaney, realiiing his star-studde'd team needed direction and a steadying hand, traded 7-foot Mel Counts to Phoeni:c for Goodrich. '"That's what we wanted," said · Mullaney af~r. his team blew the 76ers ofJ the oourt With a .i I-point ~hird period. He referred ·to Goodrich, who took outlet passes · from Chamberlain and moved quickly upcourt before the 76ers e.ould s~t their defense. · "We got Goodrich to make th~· team, move and he's giving it to us," Mullaney said, In th at third period rally, \Yest scored 16 points. Happy Jlairston 15 and Chanlberlain 8, but.it was Goodrich who made the whole thing go. Los Angeles soared from a three-point half·lime lead to 19 at the end ·of three quarters , and led by as mu ch as 28 points in the final period. Does Goodrich feel the responsibility for making the Lakers move? "I am aware of my resporu.ibility to be somewhat of a quarterback." he said, ··sure, I'm looking for my points. but l think il's my job to make this club move. That·s been their trouble for the past five or six years. Too much one on one and standing around." Goodrich. who played three years with the Lakers before going lo Phoenix in the expansion draft two years ago, feels to win 1a championship, the Lakers have to run as did the great Boston Celtics' teams and last year's Knicks. "If we depend on one or two persons for most of the scoring ,.,.e're in trouble," Goodrich said . "We need more bRlance our offense, more offensive moves, moves without the ball. To win we need full-time participation." Ourirlg his two seasons with Phoenix, Goodrich averaged better than 20 paints per game and both ye.ars was among the NBA '!I assist leaders. Ayala Gets Kicks Out of Other.Thin.gs -& -& -tr LOI AHOELll ,HtLADIL,HI~ • ' ' . ' ' MeMlliil\ ' .. • W~\lllnflOn • ••• .. .,., 0 J.J ' ··~ I "' " LOS ANGELES (AP) -Aa the professional possibilities, said Thursday. University or Soutl\flrn California's pla~ "Oregon sure put. the ball Jn the air a kicker, Ron Ayala says, "l just don't lot," Ayala said of the Trojans' upcoming bave much ttme to get nervous." Saturday roe . "And they have an un- The reason Is simple: when lhe f>.9, l'r.t-believable array of ~ivers." pou:nd Ayala isn't prep.o1ring to boot a Ayala ill the leading USC tcarer wlth.34 fiercr--aoflt'.ll' kick-an extra point, he·g -point!..:. 22 extra-potnta and four-for-four bpsy making tackles, lnt~rcepllng paSM!s, o'\ field goals ranging from 2S ,to 36 or punting. yards. "I'd much rather play against a team He has also lnteree.pled five p.aues and that throws the ball than runs with It," returned them 74 yards, the longest for Ayala, a senior free ~ety with distinct 30, and ls credited with fO tackles, one fumble recovery and three I.brows knock· ed down. He ls averaging 37.2 on his 22 punta, the IOngest 47 yards. Ayala played quarterback at nearby Lakewood High and as a freshman at USC. ''This gives me an advantage in reading the offense." he said. "As R free safety, I'm able to watch the quarterback'• moves, his eyu, lt't helped me. I know." 11 be tntereat<d In a pro ~f •Deflnltely and I think T can be valuablfl.1bat's why I'm glpd l'Ve'beCn a IOrt of· jack-of·all·trades In foo~U.: .I c,n do a IOI of things besides kick the·boll ." One thing ·he doesn't do " ls worry. •1Playing defense keeps mt: involved with the gArne ," ~Y..ala said. ''You can sec a situation developing when It' appears you'll be called on to try (or a rtcld goal. "Just standing on the sidelines, you may be. thinking too hRrd about what's comina: up, or not thinking at all. That11 bad." ~·•In t l·U 1' H-< ' 'Jo) " ~= ' .. • ... ,..., ... ' .. • ' ... " , .. ' ... ' ,,_., .. , n J-I W -:: ' Ht!ttl 0 o.o • l'Otl91' ••• ·--7 1·• • """ ... • 1'rttvtnt ' .. • ..... , ~ t1 .,: WM< ,, f.10 ,, °""' ....... ""' H•["lerl 1111-U l'O '"'-. .. • Tot1i. JO •1-M UI Tot1i. JI 1 ... 11 111 '7 "'1 ,,_UT 72 » ,J ·-'" l'ou~ -J11111u.1p1111, ti.•t. < To111 OOVI• -LOI l,"19fH 16. ""llt dt!Oll18 lt. A11tflffnc• -10.ns. Wl'llntMl•'ft An.lh ' 0.11011 121. eostori 111 e1111mor• 111, Clncit111>tll !OS L.M ....... htt It !, "'llfM!llfl'-11, Arlftlr• 1~, S..11 l'ttn(lta 100 ktlllt 111, 1'11Hftl11 , .. major challeng~. The pllllosophles of bolh teams are the same. We feel It wlll be knock-down. dragged-out operation." Grant call~ •the Sf.point showing against the Cowboys ''a onct a year thing. It's. very deceiving in that tt's not going lo be t:18t easy for us, e!lpecially- wit.'.1 .our schedule. "We feel we've got the toughC$l course to follow in the next few weeks than anr body in our bus in es,,." The Viking:;,· tied with Detroit for the Central DiVlllion lead in the Nationil Conferenct, meet the Lions Nov. 1 1n Detroit and again.Nov. 15 in Mlnnesota. Laver Rolls;. Blind Golf er Scores Ace BARCELONA, Spain -Antoni Munoz, Spain's l~year-old Davis Cup player, defeated bis professional countryman.. Andres Gimeno, in the quarter-fina)J Wednesday of the Conde de Godo Open tcnn1 ~ tournament, 8~, 6-2, S.7, 6-1 . In other matcties, Rod Laver of Corona del Mar eliminated Graham Stilwell, Bri- tain, 6--0, 8~, 6-4. and Ken Rosewall, J. tralia, beat Patricio Rodriguez, Ghil$:. 1-4, f.3. 6-3. . • .· BIBMING HAM, Ala. -Blind goir champion Chl.rley Boswell of Birm· 1.ngham sank the fi rst hole-in-one of his 16-year links career Wednesday. • The ace came on the 141-yard 14th hole at Vestavia Country Club. Boswell used.i six iron ror the shot. With &sweli, at the time were his c .. ~ •. and caddy. • DUBLIN. Ireland -A running batife between fans took place at the Europe.q CUp of Soccer C h a m p i o n s match hi· valving Glasgow Celtic and Ire\anih Waterford Team Wednesday. Celtic wG:ri 7.(1. -... A crowd oi 48,000 turned out for th"e first. leg of the European Cup matcli. During the game fights broke out in Ule crowd and police reinforcements were called in. Some spectators wielded sticks. • ... SALT LAKE CITY -Former ml<l- dleweight boxing champion G e n. e Fullmer, 311, will be inducted into tbe Utah Sports Hall or Fame Nov. 4 at a banquet in Salt Lake Ci ty, sponsors of the banquet said Wtdnesday. Fullmer, who fought out or We!it Jordan, Utah, retired in June of 1964. Ail elder in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. he was called the ''fl.formon mauler." • CHERRY HILL, N.J. -A fire which swept through the stable area of Garden State racetrack Wednesday n i g h -t deslroyed at least 21 thoroughbred horses, track officials said. Police said the numbe r of animals kil._ ed could be as high a~ 4<1. The fire occurred on the third day of a new meeting. It was the secnnd fire in which horses were destroyed at the track in lwo years. · John Meda las, chief security officer at the track, said about 30 horses were led to safety at the height or the blaze in Barn 0. Track officials said they did not know immediately the names of horses ln·:o!ved. • WENDOVER. Utah -D e t r t1 I t motorcyclist Bob Leppan's left ann was mangled Wednesday when his cycle flip. ped end.nver-erid at abou t 270 miles an hour as he attempted to regain the world motorcycle speed record . Lappan suffered the injury' when the cycle spun out of control on Bonneville Sall Flats and its canopy popped. He was taken 80 miles to Tooele Valley Hospital for treatment, then transferred to a San francisco hospita l. Leppan was limed at 245 m.p.h. in 1966 and that had stood as the world record until \:.._._Thursday. when Cal Rayborn oC San Diego went 25S rrf.p.h .. The next day Leppan arrived at the salt flats and I ~., •··. · ·: to regain his title. SUFFERS MILD HEART ATTACJC 0 [1 Ml11 Grid CMch Jahn YGUl!it I "' ...... 1!11111!11!1 ...... 1111111 .......................... ""' ..... "'"""""""' ...... """""""""' .. ~·~·""'""'"'"" ..................................................... ,....~~ ..... ~~~~~--~~~-.~·._....--~~- lU DAILY PILOT Th"!day, 0<\obu 22, 1970 • Sailo1·s Face Monarch, St. Paul 4th.St1·aight Grid Teams Clash ·Challe11ge • •1• W • Newport Harbor Hlgh's football team IOts under fire for the sixth time this son Saturday night and the undefeated lora_o.L.coach...EmiLi.ohnson will ~ lng their fourth consecutive stiff . .,~lleoge from a title contender in the -.. Sumet League. ,, <('! Johnson's rifth rated team in CJF AAAA circles will be facing dangerous ~,('fa High at 4 Palma Stadium and vi&ry over the Saxons would provide " t!i! Bluejackets with a s0lid edge over the '.·fie ld of contenders ~·ith three games left. .. ""l \.(>3ra js locked up in a four-way lie ttw.ith a 2-1 league mark and a second loss would ' seriously jeopardize the Saxons' !i1Wances at any portion of the tille along J·,wllh CJF playoff consideration. ._ ~·1;.Johnson sees t..oara as a major -~"1bstacle and says he expeets his team to .~faced ~;th starting quarterback Mike J-lu ll along with 9.7 sprinter Steve Elkins. (. )l{hl:>'s missed the rtrst f~ve Loara games • J;Jecause of a knee injury. ,,;, "l think we'll be catching them at full strength for the first time. You can 't ask 1 for much more than a pair of 9.7 sprinters ..,·.ffld a quarterback who's a good passer .,Md outstanding n.JMer. "And they have fine receivers, too . . ~1 ''.'.Loara uses the sprintout somewhat -r ~ we do except they use lots of motion 1w{th it. That gives you problems. They ,d'On't do a great many things, just a few ':thiilgs extremely well. ""' ''7Herb (Hill) and I have been coaching ",.OOut the same length of time. He work-.·~ with a guy that was very instrumental ·~1n' my career -Steve Musseau at Orange .,.~oast College," said the Newport boss. ""Newport has shut out four of its five ••!)9lctims but Johnson says his team has ·:·&!!en lucky to do it. "We've been very fortunate. And you have to be to shut people out. And we Jvive to have that because we have a ltttty hard time scoring. "We've moved the baU pretty well but H's been a matter of getting the ball over _'the; goal line," remarks Johnson. ··-His team is coming off an extremely ":'lelensive outing against Marina, a game ot--•Jft which his secondary accounted for four ·rnierceptions and the line play was : ·.\!ic:tous at every front. ... _Newport's ability to contain Marina 's cwtside running game was attributed to hustle. ''We had to make the play inside '{ 'tttfd then release and get the outside posi- :!Jt was especially pleased with Grant , »elker's (defensive tackle) play. His ''Uetidership seemed to spark the defensive • ·M e," says Johnson. •• 11.Wewport will enter Ole game with the ~ i<One lineup as last week , with ruMing ·!lvlks Mike Easterling, Richie Simons 8od Dan Seals intact behind quarterback tin White. addleback Rated o. 17 in Nation . ddleback College has been rated the ~th best junior college football team in · , e nation , according to the JC Grid ire. The Gauchos (4-0 ) are lied with El ~/'Camino (4·1-0 ) for the No. 17 position. ! ~thwestern . Saddleback's foe Saturday : .., nlj:ht. is rated No. 16. : UTlJllerton is top rated. The Horn ets t 'ffave a 5-0 record. ·Bakersfield (5-0) is se- !~e'pd ~+ T11m ~. 'uHtrlo<'I ••• , 'll•~f'llltkl l . (!'lfbol •. Fl. 5'ott, 1(1n. J. "'""ltv •wi ... :::::" lllleletil ~ I. Mt••. Arlr. I N. E Ol<lellom1 lo, W111tv, Otl. 1t,;i.ve1! V•lltv : l:t,"'tol Basin, Wa i.II, ~ti ll:l'Tvltr. Tt•. ., 11,.~fd- .. , l!i:~t1rl Il l.....-, MIH. ~~ i L.:Sout~wa-~ ::: 11. StddltlHIC- 'I •' II. El Cimino .. ,,, lt .;l;1vll.., •.; 70., .. rtr. Wn~m ~~ "·•F•""'° ~J· n.1Ctw;.w1~, N.C, ltttl"4 ... ... ,.., ... ... .. , .... , . .., S.1·0 ... 1.0.t , ... .,. , ... ... .... ..... •·l.O , .. J·l•t .,. ,.., I'll. "' ,,. m '~ "' "' '" ·~ "' "' "' "' "' m m m no "' "' "' "' "' DAILY PILOT Slllf Pllolt "We don't dislike Mater Dei-wt hate 'em." That 5tatement by St. Paul coach Mari· jon AnciCh perhaps sums up the intense rivalry between Mater Dei's Monarchs _anq the s~~rcJsmen better than any other single item. · Tonight at Santa Ana Bowl they go at It again for the 12th straight year and the Santa Fe Springs bunch will be trying for their fourth straight win over Meter Dtl. The kickoff is set for 8. A Joss tonight for coach Bob Woods' Monarchs will just about wipe out any hopes of a championship year for fl.later Dei since it would make the Red and White 0.2 after losing to Bishop Amat. St. Paul's 4-1 crew· is ranked fourth in the CIF AAAA ratings while Mater Del dropped to seventh after holding second place prior to last week. The game has a slight twist this year with St. Paul augmenting its usual strong running attack with a superb ~ passer i.1 Jar.:ie Quirk. DEFENSIVE NUGGETS -A sampling of Marina's White. Other members of the airtight Marina re· ironclad defense is offered here as the; Vikings' sistance are Mark Rehling (74), Gene Taylor (21) Quirk, a junior, will operate from a shotgun formation in obvious passing situations. Bryan Kerns (33) brings down Newport's Alvin and Ron Schaefer (51 ). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- J\1ater Dei continues its trend of a ball· control running in game but there has Thin Marina Squad Strucli By Flu Bug A thin squad already depleted by in· jury\ Marina High School football forces have been hit by an additional setback. The Ou bug has bitten the Vikings with force and although coach Leon Wheeler Isn't complaining about his sit1.1atron, he takes cognizance of the fact Marina will not be at full strength for the second sLraight week against a Sunset League power. This time it's Ole Anaheim Colonists of Clare Van Hoorebeke who furnish the o~ position Friday night on the Westminster High field. "If the flu would leave us alone, I think we could have a practice," Wheeler says with some exaggeration. "We just can't seem to eradicate it from our squad. We have two or three kids out every day. "Th is is ~ big percentage of our squad when you compare it with a large group like Anaheim." Wheeler isn'l naming a probable starting lineup this week. "~1y problem starting lineup will be ... " he says with tongue in cheek. Joe Ventimiglia, the Viking's lop run- ner, was hampered by the flu last week and Wheeler says he ha sn't com pletely recovered yet. "It takes a while to bounce back." In the injury department, starling wingback Steve Hernandez is sidelined for the Anahei m game with chest bruises. Either llon Birdsall or Bryan Kerns, both juniors, will replace Hernandez. Other changes in the Marina lineup in· elude moving h1ark Howard from righ t tackle to center and bringing Nick Vorono back to the starting tackle. Dave Rilling, the starting center, was also hurt in the Nc"'JKlrl game . Wheeler feels Anaheim can do it with numbers if no other ~·ay. "They usually start off with power and if he CVaHoorebeke) can't get it that way, he will throw and go around the ends. ..They are just like Newport. They have a big aggressive team and have such an abundance of personnel they can lhrow and run with equal ability . .. And besides that." he adds as an afterthought, •·they only practice 10 hours a day." 3 Tough Losses Bonwell Stays Sea Kin~Brid Teani On Defense Haunted by Bad Breaks ~.~.~~~~~~~~~Co~ Eleven grimy looking gridders in prac· tice tags moved up to the line of scrim. mage with orders to score In four plays or face wind sprints at the conclusion of practice. On the third play an offensive tackle jumped out of his set and the fired up defenders smashed through to nail the quarterback. "Offside on the defense -he was drawn off by the defense," barked the taskmaster and the ball was moved up a yard to the one. "That's the way the refs wouJd say," snapped coach Dave Holland at his Corona de! Mar Sea Kings. The move by Holland seemed ap- propriate. For during the first haU of the 1970 campaign the Sea Kings have not been ·~ ROGER CARL.SO N .. ------· blessed with e team's normal amount of good fortune. Corona df71 Mar, despite good showings, is 1·4 for the year and on the surface ap= pears out of the championship race behind unbeaten Edison and Fountain Valley. Consider this regarding three o! Cd:.01's four losses : Against Sunset League leader Newport Harbor th e Sea Kings dropped a cinch touchdown flip in the end zone -by possibly the most talented end in the Irvine League. They ended up losing "'hen a 39-yard punt return and a 10-yard burst up the middle pr ovided Newport \Yith a 7·0 win in th1? last 58 seconds of Uic game. Next was Santa Ana and the Sea Kings missed tying the Saints, 21-21. by an eyelash as the t"·o-po int conversion pass play was missed by a fraction. however, ruled the play dead with the Barons in possession of the ball. ' "Things have to get better for Uf'. The kids have been playing good football ," says Holland. As for the costly error by the offi cial. Holland shakes his head and says, ''H~ just blew it." Fountain Valley coach Bruce Pickford confirms it was an erroneous call. "No doubt about it. he made a mistake. But I give him credit for sticking by it. It would have been a Jot easier for him to say he didn't blow the whistle. "He made the wrong call but he didn't compound it with two wrongs,'' says Pickford. But things could be worse for Holland . How'd he like lo be in Magnolia coach Marty Hicks' shoes? Magnolia hasn't scored in three Irvine losses. * * * When Estancia High meets Santa Ana· Valley Friday night the first Eagle touchdown of the night will give Estancia 131 Points for the season -equaling last year's total scoring output. Coach Phil Brown's outfit already has more wins than any other team in the six·year history of the school and the Eagles are heavily favored to make it five Friday against winless Valley. Estancia has allowed the opposition 36 points in fi ve games com pared to the following marks of the past : 1969 -140; 1968 -163; 1967 -108; 1966 -146 : 1965 -262. Readers' Hot Corner Dear Sirs: Lately I have been reading Phil Ross' articles on football games. especi<1 lly Fountain Valley High Schoo ls matches, as it is m.y alma mater. Being a student of journalism, I w~ll also say that they are wriltcn very nicely. Having met and interviewed coach Bruce Pi ckford, you probably agree that he is a very nice man and an excellent coach. !erence footbalr coaches are groundless according to Ray Shackleford of Golden West College. The Rustlers are preparing for Satur· day night's opening league encounter with Rio Hondo and"hls starting quarter- back will be Steve Griffith and not Tony Bonwell. Bonwell has taken over at a safety position on defense this season after a highly successful campaign as starting signal-caller last year. "If you check the statistics this season against last year you will find that we have had more offense in every game than we did a year ago," Shackleford says. "I see no reason for changing at this time." He does leave the door open, however. "If Griffith ls injured , the possibility is there that we will use Bonwell along with Rick Saeman (a freshman)." Quarterback isn't the blg problem for Golden West !his week. "Naturally, this is an Important game. But I ,don't consider Rio Hondo as being any better than East Los Angeles or Los Angeles City College," Shackleford says . "Jn fact, I think we have to beat them all. The only team that isn't ready to win Uie conference right now and they are improved over last year, is Cyptess." What does Shackleford think about the Rio Hondo offense ? "They have two real good kids doing most of their running. Both are small , real quick and have good speed." he says by way of comparison with the Rustlers' Charlie Buckland. "Charlie is more of a power type run- ner with deceptive speed once he gets in the open." The two backs in the Roadrunner at- tack are Dennis Tarango and Dan Lara. Both are freshmen and are graduates of El Rancho High School. Shackleford adds further : "Rio Jiondo is similar to us. They will run the ball if they can. If not, they will throw." Doing the throwing for the RoadruMers i! letterman Steve Culotti. The Rustlers will miss another let- terman this week. Greg Forsdick, a member of the defensive secondary, suf- fered a knee injury last week and had the injured member operated on this morn- inl!'.. He is out for the balance of the year. • ...,...rrr ; e'll Need .Team Effort, The la test setback for 11olland's luckless crew "'as to Fountain Valley , 26- 21. Fountain Valley scored the winning touchdO"'n when a Cdl\·I pitchoul found its way through the back's hands -bounced once -and into a Baron defender 's mitts. v.·hO was off to the races Un· molested for a 62-yard TD run . However, l would like to point out that he ha s several fine assistant coaches. in particular, Mr. James Cook. who has been with the school and Baron team since It started. Tom Alla nson, middle linebacker who saw only limited service last week because of ankle problems. is listed in the probable starting lineup again this "'eek. Says Gaucho G1·id Coach ; • . • ' : ; Saddleback College football coach : George Hartman figures that his team •~ wlll have to play Its best defensive game or the season against Southwestern Satur-• • :: day night. ~ The game matche~ t"•o unbeaten (4--0) . $ Mission COnference teams that :hare the •' No. 8 rank.Ing In the state. Sahlrday $ night 's tilt Is slated for 1'1ission Viejo :; HJgh. "We got our beat defensive effort lt1st .. week against Pslom,ar 1a 37·1~ win ), but Jt wi ll take that and more to beat Southwestern. ll'll take a total team ef· • ., !ort., '' says Hartman. • The GauchOI will be ra clng one or the < hlahest..scoring learns in the sllte. f Southwestern has rolled up 140 points, an "'., averaie of 35.0 per game. ~· "They Jleve a wcll·baJanetd attack. .. .;,'kv hive tho ability to throw Ole Jong :. :: OO'mb which ls naturally • tremendous : ~· probl~l'ld they have: a real go® run· ;..~ nina: attack W ao with rt," says the &id· ~ ~ ''..:iback coe.ch. ., .• The two key Ogures In I h e ::~ satilhwt!le:tn attack are quartrrbtck ' ·i· Dan Arana \\'bo has lhrown 10 touclldown t paw s and rullback lra Porter. a 6·3, 207· • nder who keys 1 bruising Apache - ground game. But the Gauchos have some cffensive weapons of their own. Namely Toby \'.'i·';ipte and Chr is: Hector. Tailback \Yhipple has rushed for &3 yards in 133 carries already this season. scoring four TDs. Opposing defenses have keyed on him all season with no success. 11ector. who lcssed only six pass:es against Palomar last week ( complellng four , '"'O for TDs), gives the Gauchos a balanced attack. The lwo defenses are the toughest in lhe confer ence. Southwestern has given \J 42 Poln ls this season, 29 In conference play. &,:dleback has also allowe9 juat 29 points in the two circuit games, 5(1 for the season. "This is undoubtedly the biggest same Of th e year for both teams. The winner will be in the driver's seal. But each team "'ill also have four more tough games .lefL." says Hartmanr The Gau cho coach reports the nonnal bumps and bruises suffered in the Palomar game wllh no major injuries. Chuck Lockwood has recovered from an ankle injury, but fre!hman 0 o u g Rothrock will agafn get the starting call al the offensive a:uard PoSltlon. Later in the fourth period I.he coup de grace was applled to Corona by an of- ficial who found it necessary to blow a play dead with his whistle before the ball reached a Fountain Valley punt receiver. The receiver called for a fair catch - the ball bounced off his shoulder pads and Corona recovered inside the Fountain Valley five-yard line. The qu ick whistle, Also Mr. James Coen, Mr. ~fartin Johnson and Mr. Stan Clark. Our Baron football tf!!am deserves the very best in coaching -and !hey hav e it. How about giving these gentlemen some credit in your paper? Perhaps in form of comments from them. or more favorably, photographs. Thank you for your time and effort, Sincerely yours, Louis J. Halley, !'VHS Otherv.·ise, Shackleford doesn't plan any further changes for the conference opener. Duarte, Flores Fight LOS ANGELES -Featherweights Mickey Duarte. fonnerly of Veneiuela. and Mexict1's Chu Chu Flores box the feature IO.rounder at the Olympic Auditorium tonig ht. Eagle Running Ace Retu~ns With top running back Jim Schultt ex· tstabllshed In 1966 and repeated In 1967 and the speed of their backs. They have a peeled to return. Estancia High's foOlball and '69. ood 1 1 couple of backs that are capable of shak- - . . "That should be a pretty g ncent ve ing free from tackles and going the team ~cks Its hrst w1nn~g season in lbe -ror us." says Brown. now in his-second-distance." schools history Friday night agalnst San· year at the Eagle helm. With the exception of SChultt, there ta Ana Valley at Newport Harbor High. \YUi the Eagles be down 111ainst a ttam aro no offensive or defensive lineup Schultz. a 145-pound junior, strained that comes into the game with an 0-S changes~ says the Eagle mentor. some muscles In his neck in the Cost.i record? '10vcrall our kids are pretty healthy. t>.!csa game. t\\'O >itccl<s ngo and sat out "We've played our sht1re of flat \Vc've had stx starters out at cne Ume. or last week's 16-0 victory over ti1agnolia. games," says Bro~'fl ... tthll'lk we should-another !ince the· Butna Park game. But !fe is the leading Eagle n1shcr with 329 start playin& some e:moUooal games." generally speaking we're in pretty good yards in 73 carries. a 4.5 average. Although santa Ana Villey is winless shape," he adds. . A victory by coac-h Phll Brown's Eagles and has only scored 30 points lhl!i season, Senior quarterback Curt Thomas pacts would gtve them five for the season and Bra~n doesn't take the Falcons Ugh11y. 11 wcll·balanced Eagle offensive ittac.k. insure Estancia of llS first \v\nning year. "They are-a teJm wllh outsltlndlng Thomas has hit Oil' 29 of 63 passes thus The besl previous record was 3·$-1 , 1pced and talenl. We fear their quickness far tor $60 yards. • been some doubt as to the aviilabllity of quarterback Bob Haupert. Haupert sustalned a charley horse ln the Amat game and doesn't appear to be totally sound. He is, however, slated to 5tart. Should the Monarchs-tum tf)· another signal caller it 'U be junior Billy Clough, .... sr SCOltES Ust-Mlltr Otl 53, SI. 1'1u1 0 1f¢..Mlltr Otl 21, SI. Ptul O IH I-SI. Paul ll, Meltr Dl!l 1 lff2-M1ler Dl!I n , SI. P1111 12 1~1tr Dtl 7, 51. Ptul o 1Kol-Mlltr Otl 14. SI. P•ul 0 lfU-MllN Dtl 2G, $1, ,1111 20 Ult ) 1"6-=Mtltr Del 20, St. l'IUI 1 1'61-51. P111t 7, Mtltr Otl J 196&-SI, P1ul !~. Mllfr Del 1 lH~I. Ptul '"-Miter Otl 7 Mlllf' Dtl lel dl ~ltl, 1·'-1 who connected on a 59-yard touchdown pass lo Jim Nanry last week. Ancich sc;ys his team will defense the Monarchs' trio of running backs DOn Roy, Rocky Simpson and Dennis Wo- jtkiewlcz with a reading okie defense (5-2 wi th :i rover). It's that threesome of runners that Woods will be counting on to get the Monarchs rolling offensively again.st St.Paul. In the past three years, St. Paul defenders have limited Mater Oei to a touchdown or less in each hassle. When Quirk isn't paSslng, St. Paul's bread 'n butter play is the smashes into the line from 200-pound jUnior fullback !Mark Medina. Medina doubles up as roverback for Ancich defensively. St. Paul took away Mater De.i's ball· control game last year, limiting the M ... narchs to 15 offensive plays in the se-- cc:-.d half. Mlllf' Del 115 Jim Ntnrv e 190 Mtrk Gillin T 165 01\t Buabtt (; 115 M1rl1 Mtlt C ltS PU HeHtrl\tn G 210 si.v1 K1mptr T 115 Ot~ N1nrv E 110 Bot> H1upt:rl 0 1'5 ltockv Simpson 8 190 Don A<w 8 110 Otnnl1 Wol!k;lewlu B SI. ,,,.. Rltk flwoOd Se<ln McGourtv Ror Mlramonlfl Jgl\n GtU Jot Ptrrv P1ut M•rtln M1rtc Tr1111 J1mlt Quirk Mlrlc Me.11"1 Tonv Smith Ern!t B~dllft Tritons Must Contain Brea Speed Whiz '" "' '" '" "' '" '" '" "' "' "' Considering his team is 0..5 for the year and the biggest starter on the team af. fensivr:1y or defensively checks in at 185 pounds, coach Hal Akins possesses a remarkably realistic attitude as he prepares his Artists for Brea Friday night. Laguna Beach and the Wildcats will met for the 36th consecutive year and the Artist coach is hopeful that his team can upset Brea and its 9.7 sprinter Tom Teeple. "They have this Teeple kid and he can really fly. He hasn't been been contained l . anyone and if he gets beyond the line of scrimmage it's goodbye. "I saw Brea beat San Clemente earlier and I was really impressed. I'm somewhat surprised that they've lost three -but they've played some pretty good teams," says Akiris. As for his own team, Akins says it's a case of backs Mike Sweeney (138), Walt Otlmer (150) and Mike Wiezbowski (180) find ing enough daylight in the line. Defensively the Artists have tried gap. stunting, zone trap, man·lo-man trap and heads up tactics but the most successful h:.s been the stunting from the Laguna 5= 3 setup. "\Ve've gone to some multiple type of· fense u5ing the same offensive plays but from different sets and we've moved the ball fairly well." says Akins, who's trying to get his miniature football players on the winning track. Two gridders are on the doubtful list for the Brea game. Halfback Sweeney sustained a shoulder injury and missed two days of practice. Should he be unable to perform reserve Robin Andrews (135) will take over. The other is Gary Irvin at linebacker and Akins admits that if he can't play he simply doesn 't now who khe can put In . Despite the thin squad (38) the Artists a two-platooning except for Bart Tabor and Wlezbowski. Tabor doubles up at defensive safety and the latter shifts hftween defensive tackle and end. Ai·ea Sports Calendar • ·. -~--..-·•_, •• ...,"'r'~ ... ~ .. Stiffest Test Griffins Haven't Surprised Vail No one tfam has really ex. plo\ted. any weaknesses, If there are any, in the Los Alamitos Griffins' fo ot b a t I team. Or so Edison football coach Bill Vail feels as he prepares . his unbeaten .cb.ai::gm JQr • perhaps their stiffest test' thus far -Saturday night's Irvine League confrontation w i t h coach Frank Doretti's Griffins at Huntington Beach High. "A lot of people have regarded them (Los Alamitos) as somewhat of a surprise," Vail asserts, "but they haven't 11urprised me at all. "I watched them in the CIF playoffs last year (the Griffins los t to Barstow in the AA finals) and they've looked good all along. He adds, "they're well coached and can hurt yo u in 8everal ways." Vail places special emphasis on the Griffin running attack. "(Mike) Hixson ( G r i I fin tailback) is one bf the many real threats for them. He'! one of the better runners around," Vail says. "U you have him romcred, you better have more than one ma n on him or else he's gone. "And," lhe Edison mentor continues, •·I've also been im· pressed by No. 32 (fullback Greg Stuck). He ran for a Jong score (31 ya rds) against Costa Mesa and I believe he also plays some at defen sive tackle.'' Vail figures the main reason the weaknesses haven·t been exploited by previous Griffin opponents is because Doretti's squad doesn't really have any weaknesses. ··we won't use any trickery to try and beat them (double reverses, end around!)," Vail says, "v.•e'll just have to pass and run well to do it.'' Vail has an ample pair of passers in quarterbacks Jerry Hinojosa and Mark Harmon white Hinojosa and tailback Jim Moxley, Edison's top ground gainer, spearhead the running. game. Although the offeose v.·as Sputtcry at times in running up 40 points against Sant.a Ana Valley last week. the Edison defense has continued to sparkle_ Despite the Chargers' defensive heroics as or late Vail warns, "they ( Los Alamitos) will be as tough a team as we 've played and they'll be hard to put down." We Deser ve Better Fate -Holland When a football team with a 1-4 season record is favored by 14 poiflts, watch out. That's the case for Corona del Mar 's Sea Kings Salurd'?' night as .J,hey host t h e ti1agnolia Se ntinels in an Irvine League encounter at Davidson Field ( N e w p o r t Jf arbor High). Coach Dave Hnlland is pleased with the Sea Ki ng squad this season and shows his app reciation by slating ; "I have never been happ ier with a bunch of kids who have played under extreme con- ditions sucQ as this team has faced this season. They've shown a Jot of heart and all I "·ant right no1v is for them to win some ball games. They deserve it." ·Holland feeJs the Sea Kings have played well enough t!l win in all four losses {by seven, two, eight and five poinls). The crowning blow came last week against Fountain Valley when the Sea Kings dropped a 26-21 decision and a penalty cost them a chance for a score late in the action. ··we outgained F o u n t a i n Valley and it was a hard one to Jose. But that's water under the bridge. ADDRESS THE llALl WITH HANDS FORWARD . HlustraJio'n #1 shows.the proper impact poSition. Nott that my hands are leading 'thi clubhead; m'I left arm is more or less continuous with the club. shaft. ~Yet many golfers incorrectly address the ball ·with the RIG HT arm more or less continuous with the clubshaft (illustration #2). · I suggest positiOning the hands just a:>out oppo. site the ball on wood shots. If you play the ball .farther back in your stance on itons shots, be s ure your hands are in the same forward position as with the woods. (illustration #3). ' ' • @.fl 1mN-'H..N.wo..S,...,8!11 37th Straight for CdM; Oilers, Diablos Triumph Corona del Mar's Sea Kines captured their 3 1 t h con· s~cutive waler polo victory \Ved nesday, swamping host Long Beach Millikan by an 11· 2 count in a non-league matchup. In other games involving area teams. free lance Mission Viejo, in its first year of polo, dumped visiting Tustin , 8-4. 11untington Beach's Oilers dropped host \.\1estern, 9·2, and the in v ad i n g Westminster Lions were victimized by the Anaheim Colonists, 10-4. in a pair of Sunset League affairs. The Sea Kings of coach Cliff Hooper not only captured their 37lh straight Y:in over a Lwo- season span, but the verdict over ti1illikan raised their 1970 mark to .14-0. Powerful Downey l' a me closest to upsetting. Corona nearly two weeks ago as the Sea Kings escaped with a ~ decision. soph divisions by 10·5 and 3·2 .ctlunts "'ilh Mark Nagelstad (31 and Scott Dale (2) l he high scorers for the winners in each contest. Westminster stayed close to perennialy tough Anaheim for mOsl of the first hair. being on the short end of a 5-2 score at the midway point. Despite the heroics of goalie Tom Burgoyne (10 saves). the Lions of roach Gerry Mannion. went down to defeat in league play for the first time. Art Lillis and 1\1 a r k Kenworthy had two goals each for the Lions. \Veslminsler won the jayvee title by forfeit and dropped tbe frosh·soph matchup. 4·3. as Westminster's S t eve Gold· stein. Mike Downey and John frankhouse tallied one time each. • . ,._, O<tobff 22. 1970 DAILY PILOT 17 MV Coaell · Assorted Miseries Cautious Abo ut Foe When Bob lllvner was beckoned to Mls!lon Viejo High School to coach the Diablos' football team it was an attempt lo get the Red and GOid off the dime and on the winning trail. No team In four years ef- (rustration had ever won two in a row -and no more than t'ft'O in any season. However, llivner and bis Diablos have their . first win tucked away after disposing of Tustin and some observers say Mission ViejO might well have started a five-game win streak. Crestview League leaders Orange and El l\1odena are behind them and now Mission Viejo faces a feisty Katella crew Utat was dup1ped last week by Orange, 41--0. But Hivner is ultra cautious about his team's foe Friday night. "\Ve're going to have to play better defe nse against Katella than 'we did against Tustin <Mission Viejo beat Tustin, 26- 131. I "Our offense is starting to jell but the defense really fell off a great deal. Linebacker Kevi n Marlin didn 't play and perhaps that was one or the keys to the breakdown," says ,Hivner. Martin is expected to be back in the lineup a t linebacker and offensive guard after missing the Tustin en· counter and three quarters of the El Modena loss (14-71 . The key to l\1ission Viejo's seco nd straight victory lies in the Dia blos' ability lo contain the sweep and passing ga 1ne according lo Hivner. "They're a ,, .. inged team with a lot of people in motion. They aren't similar to any team we've seen so far in style of play and they might be a little bigger than we are." he says. 'Hivner's also C'ognizant or the power..._ play the Knights like to use. Despite the win. llivncr says the Tustin game didn't provide the best overall team eff&rl. Hit Baron Gridders· ' The mldRason blahs, in the five games behind you the ferent sets at you . , form of bumps, bruises, and !iore leg!, backs and ankles "It's like Magnolia fn a assorted mL~eries. are laking start cropping up," he says. sense, _they never ru11 the th · t 11 th F 1a· Pickford dldn 't go into e1r o on e oun tn same ~et two games 1·n a -w. V II further detail ~on his team 's ··v 11 ~Y High football scene ac· Tbey have 8 strorig swe-' ind cording lo coach B r u c e woes. . . .. . . ...... , • Pickford as his team girds for Currently his Barons and blast game, opines P1ckf0fd . its encounterWilh-COstnresa~riv&I ~ison-are-d~~er.1 bave-not.ed~o1>11•--t1 Saturday night. ror the lrvi~e U!ague lead (3-lain Valley's apparent 1.:11;,(){ The game is at Westminster 01 and his . roe Saturday the passing game 1 but High. presents a familiar pattern. . • ~ "We've got a half dozen or "It's the same old problem. Pick!ord. shrugs lt off: 1 • so kids pretty beat up and Mesa has some big, strong "We prefer to controf-;1!'8 frankly I don't know 1£ they'll kid s that can pummel you ball. If they want to run a be ready or not. Perhaps three around. Jim Miller is 225, nine-man llne at us 1,we,'ll of thern won't, l'm just not tPatl Sweetland ~ighs 215 throw. I( you can average six sure. a~ ~nother ta7kle ts .over 200. yards per carry why thntW"dle "This happens to everyone Kim WoU 1s a fine bo~k ball?" · ~ .. at this stage of the year, with and they throw so many dtf· T~ Baron mentor is •happy Tritons Improve We Still Have ; Title Shot-Eads With El Modena's star run- ning back Max Ledesma hav- ing been lost for the season, San Clemente Tritons ' ·head rootball coach Tom Eads him In close suit. Cannavo, a 185-pounder, is the Orange Coast1area's ninth leading rusher "'ith 276 net yards in 61 tries. San Clemente lost a 14·8 thinks his team (1·2 in league l'lcartbreaker to Tustin in 1969 play) still has an outside crack and Eads feels the score will at the Crestview League litle. also be low this time around. Eads offers. ''there's no "Tustin hasn't given up that doubt Orange (lied for the many touchdowns," Ea d s Io op leadership wilh El says, "it just seems they've twtodena at 3-0) is definitely been the victims of some the learn to beat now witlt freak plays which have turned Ledesma out. I don't think into scores. Things like punt they'll lose two games. returns and all." "However, if Orange and El "If We can cut do\\'n on the with !he way quaf1tlrtfack Rick Power has come ' along the last two games ' 'after ret1ular Ken Shibata wasl•ln· jured. ..11 I Shibata is back and pf8yiflg defensive halfback , ''b•t:t t Pickford is sticking with Power as his starling QB. "There's no reason I o change now. We've won tirice with Power. Shibata will also see action there ," he says. Another item Pickford wor· ries about with l\fesa JS fhc ~1ustangs' variety of alt . .;1.ck'. "They always throw in spill' l'lipper dipper play -an e'nd around pitchout pass p~ or somel.hing, you know. And they can catch you wiu\ .~t stuff. "But fundamentally It's the power sweep, off tackle power and the blast -plus $0 dif· ferent sets." · Pre p Football. Frw1ll111<1t1 M1rln1 o D • • i-n Hwnl!IMllDn 8-(h, 11 • I "• .:...n Scorlll9• Hun11119ton eMCh-fOuC,.. -M -Huell ·~ .... '· Ttm Biker, AIOl\IO MHl<1n, (OIWe!'llonl -Wtl' 7, H1rtfy Hiii, Millin (I M J<i>! .. J, ~'"'• 10\IC-"I -lm11Nlll1, M1t1to~. Modena get knocked off a cou· penalties (the Tritons were pie of times and if we can win penalized for 70 yards against oor last four, we'll be in good Foothill for their lowest total shape.'' of the season in that category) 1'he Trilons will resume which have hurt us on some Mite• °"' , , , . '-12 lheir upward climb on t he good plays. I believe we 'll be 111•'-Am11 • ' • t-' Crestview ladder Friday night \ hard to be11t,'' Eads concludes. ~!~':. ~1 ico•ln~~ lD ~ G•rde•, v~ against the ·ruslin Tillers at --'--'--"'-"--"-=-'-'-=="---"=-------'-'-~ San Clemente. ~------------------~-, "'eek. dropping d e f e n d 1 n g ct .. champion Foothill, 14·6, after Huntingtor1 Seeks 11 Winners "Magnolia has also been getting some bad breaks and they are about ready to ex- plode. They move the ball well and then mistakes hurt them.'' Holland will make one switch in the offensive lineup for the Magnolia game. Al Watson will move in at left ,Suard in place of Tim Bandel. With their two biggest challengers (Costa Mesa and Estancia) out or the way already, the Sea Kings appear to have a fairly clear cut path to another Irvine League title. Only Santa Ana 'Valley, Edison and Fountain Valley remain on Corona's regul ar slale. Lefty Quarterback No Problem for Uni ov~;,~lr c;;,~,~~:~~~~· '': :c;~ sa;~e 02"'6 losin~ two in a row Ito Villa ;;::. Park and Orange) to open 1JO ci:'i;~i:s~u.1.i~:S~eally neededl RfAI "IPPIN'WlflftVN .~ that win. It feels good when tKL ~ ~I lhe kids tum in an all·rounrl good effort like that\ I IN J'2 OAllDN~ When Huntington Beach's Oilers and the Westminster Lions tangle in a matchup of ·winless elevens Friday night at Huntington. Oiler head foot- baJl coach Ken Moats will have one wish. He elaborates, ''my wish is to put 11 winners on the field at the same time. "We've been the big factor In our won-loss column 1 lhe Oilers sport an 0-3 Sunset mark and are 1·4 overall) so far. We get down into good position and blow the big play. ··1 feeJ we've progressed quite a bit offensively but a few mistakes. like penalties. have really hurt us," Moats adds. Moats thinks Westminster .js a good offensive team, "but," he says, "they've been hurting themselves de re n s iv e 1 y. They're similar to us in thal respect." Not especially happy with the prospect of facing the Sunset's I a r g est team (physically) in Westminster, Moats' chief goal at the mo- ment is to see his team put its first victory away since an opening 14-6 decision over La Habra. "I'm not looking ahead from this year at all,'' he says. "We·re just interested in win- ning another game and that's 1t :· Huntington's all-round ace, Garth Wise, will get the starting call at quarterback again. but may be used at taJlback if needed there. Junior Jim Martin, who engineered the early win aga:tnst La Habra . will be waiting in the wings if Wise shifts back to tailback. A doubUul performer Friday is v.•ide receiver Arnold Ruiz, normaJly a starter. The 160-pound s e n I o r dislocated an elbow two week." ago against Western and may see some action this week, although Whitney Plummer (16Sl will start at spHt end . r.toau Is glad to be playing a Friday night tiff w I t h Wrstmlnster. ''Tbcse Saturday g a me s have really disrupted our ~cUct schedule. "If I had a choice. Friday rilght games would be my first prefr:rence. Thursday nlghl tame~ my second and the Saturday night stuff last." he concludes. Keith Samuels is directing the offense and is one of the leading passers in the Irvine circuit this season. "He is throwing well• and v.·e're pleased with his performance," 1-lolland says. "He has a lapse now and then (f'ountain \·alley intercepted three last week l but overall, he is doing a fine jnb." Backup quarterbt1ek is Reed Johnson who has shown a lot or improvement this season but pa rt ic ipates generally in junior varsity games. The Sea Kings lost derensive end ti1ark Bear through injury but early season starter Greg Stevens is ready to lake over his old pla~ in the. defensive lineup. Coach Doug Burt•s Mission Viejo Diablos won their second contest of the season rrom the Tustin Tillers with Diablos Steve Lyle and Bob Sturgeon tossing in two goals apiece. The Diablos, ·who play at Laguna Beach Friday, also took charge in the junior varsity and Cee games, rollini;: to 8·4 and 12·5 verdicts there. Huntington Beach improved its overall record to 9-2 and 2·0 in the Sunset League as Oiler mentor Jack Green fie 1 d cleared his bench after his side roared to a 5-0 halftime edge. Clay Evans paced the "'in· ners with four goals, foll owed by mates Rick Henry (3) and Dave Herrera (2). 'the Oil City poloists s"·epl the junior varsity and frosh- University Trojans' head football mentor Jerry Redman doesn't think Alex Robledo. the Workman junior varsity's southpaw quarterback, will pose a major problem to the Trojan defense when the teams meet Saturday night at Tustin High. Redman states. "lhat left· hander l Robledo l actually sp rinls out more to the right side than he does to the left, so it 'II be nothing new. '·I guess the nlain reason he goes right iii because the coaches call the plays and that particular coach is probably a righthander himself,'' the former Foothill aide adds. The Trojans are in excellent physical condition after get- ting a bye in their schedule last week fol101ving a 28-6 set- back at the hands of the Webb Gauls. Says Redn1an, "lhe two UCI Polo Mac1iin e Crunches Titans, 15-3 week layoff gave us a good op- portunity to get back at full strength." Big tullback Dave Ong (195) was sufferin g from 1 bruised thigh. but he'll be ready to go Saturday, i lthough 160-pound Ed Call will start at fullback. The UC Irvine water polo Saturday's game with the The latter has previously express rolls on and on with Trojans is the first of two started at one of the halfba ck the USC Trojans next in line against SC. It is a home-and· spots in Redman 's fullhouse for a dunking Saturday mom-home series and the second orfen~. ing at II in the Anteater pool. game is Nov. 3 on the Trojan Guard Bob Gill (145) has UCJ won its 17th game of campus. been moved into Call'! eld the campaign wed n es da y A game with •the UCLA halfback position. afternoon with a ls-3 victory Bruins is scheduled In the Starting center Jim Davis over Cal State (Fullerton) in Bruin pool Nov. 7. This will be (170) will also be ready to go the winners• pool. The An-a rematch Or the final contest at full tilt after recuperating teaters are undefeated In cot-in thelJCI invitational tourney from some bruised ca J l in which the Anteaters won an li gaments. lege and university com· 8-6 decision. ln addition to the above petition. 1iiiiiij~jjjjji~~jj!!iiiiiif Fullerton is defending CCAA j I champion and one or the early favorites to repeat this year aft.er finis.bing as eo<hampion of t he · Claremont-Mudd tourney last weekend. Jim Bradburn and Ferdy Massimino each SC{lred three goals against Fullerton and continue to poce the Anteater ottack. Bradburn now hns 37 goals and MA!lllimino 34 for the t1eason. Other scorln~ found Mike Martin, Dale Jtahn and Tim tfarrison bittin& two apil'Ce with Mason Philpott, Jack Dickmann and Bob Searles each gettil)g one. ln 18 gnmes the Anteaters are averaging 12.1 points per outlng with the opposition scoring 4.2 per tilt. Tn 10 or the 18 gam~. UCl bas hll In dou· hie figurt!, INSTALLED CHAIN-LINK FENCING baeklield changes, University will shun lhe fullhouse on oc· casion lo deploy slot I and a pro I setups. Redman says these changes hav e been effected to come up with the right backfield com· bination. "We haven't been able to come up with the big play," he notes, adding, "offensive er· rors and poor execution or blocking assignments have held us down. "\Ve 've been inside the op· ponenls' 20-yard·line seven times in the last two games (losses to Webb and Banning! and haven 't scored any of those times." The ex-El Rancho High assistant has ultimate faith in : the Trilons' bread and bulter 1 -their sometimes brilliant running game. l "We ran the ball against 1 Foothill more than we had in the past," says Eads, "we j didn't pass loo much because1 we were mov ing the ball so well on the ground." San Clemente ro lled to 212 , net yards rushing wlth four principals sharing in the baJI. toting chores. Tailback Bob McNamara chalked up 61 net yards in 16 carries w it h quarterback Keith Gibson (14 for 59). fullback Ray Cannavo I 12 for 47) and slotback Clark Jarrett (rive for 42) following behind ~~ SPECIAL-for The Beginning Tennis Players BILL TILDEN TENNIS BALLS Can of 3-95c PENNSYLVANIA TENNIS BALLS While 7.50 Doz. Yellow 7.95 Doz. WILSON HEAVY DUTY TENNIS BALLS Doz. 8.35 CLOSE OUT CRESLAN SWEAT SHIRTS and SWEATERS Reg. 4.95-Sale 2.95 Reg. 3.95-Sale 1.95 WARM-UP ~UITS Reg. 24.95 -CLOSE-OUT 15.95 OPEN 9 to 6 EXTM I ' 90 ...OOF """ . o.,,,t5H II • WILSON-BANCROFT-DAVIS-DUNLOP TENNiS RACKETS 4.95 to 50.00 CONVERSE TENNIS SHOES Ladies 7.50 Mens 7.95 JACK PURCELL TENNIS SHOES Ladies 7.95 Mens 8.95 TENNIS DRESSES 13.95 to 27.95 MENS & BOYS TENNIS SHIRTS 4.25 to 12.00 TENNIS SHIRTS-HATS-VISORS RACKET STRINGING 4.00 lo 16.00 • • ...................... ~~ BIKES-PARTS-ACCESSORIES -TIRES-TUBES Closed ~ Sundays ., I I I • I DAIL \I PILOT Tlu11'Mt,u, Octobtf 22, 1970 Hunting Outlook . Few Areas ·Good .. For Bird Shoot · Trout Plant Deep Sea Fish Report · The, following s o u t her n Call!oml1 waters are sc:hedul· IMPERIAL BEA'CR-22 ang--31 anglers: 36 barracuda, ed !or stociing this week wjth let&; 46 tuna, 1 yellowtail. 182 bonito, 39 bass, 13 yeUow- catchlng'51ie rainbow trout OCEANSIDE-5.1 anglers : 92 tail. from Department of Fish and barracuda, 11 bonito, 172 bass, SAN DIEG0-98 anglers: Game hat•er'-•, 1 whl•-b 5 h !'but 215 tuna, i yellowtall. ... ,, '""' oe-sea ass, 8 1 · J\1ALIBU PJER-19 anglers: LOS ANGELES -Bouquet AtORRO BAY (Port Atorro) 24l rock ood , 3 bonito. Canyon Creek, Crystal Lake, -42 anglers: 72 albacore. SEAL BEACH--fi7 anglers : Puddings~one Reservoir, San (Vlrg'1 Landing)~ anglers : 28 barracuda, 228 bonito, 34 California's 1970.71 .general Jocal Forest ·Service offiet Gabriel Ri'tltr East and Weal .167 albacore. bass, 15 halibut. . New 1971 Car Show qua il and ~u"ar p·~·ldge ,_, h · Forks. SANTA 'ION!CA •• ang '--,1 ... ... ... ~,ore untmg. " -u . LONG BEACH (Pierpollll season, Oct. 31 through Jan 31, SAN BERNARDINO -Big lers: 44 halibut, 49 bass, 4 bo-LandlnJ)-39 anglers : 5 barra· Now thru October 25tft. Is going.to be a tough one on SAN DIEGO COUN1\Y -Bear LaJte, Colorado River al nilo, l barracuda. . cuda, 6 bass, 303 bonito, IS latest 1971 mod'"tls most of South.em California's 'Quall are plentiful on privale Needles, Deep Creek upper SAN CLEl\1.ENTE-92 ang. yellowtall, 1 tuna. tBtlmont on dis I• Ire• In our public hunling land, according coastal and interior vall!y section, Green Valley Lake, lers: 54P bonito, 47 bass. 13 fier )-33 anglers : 48 barracu· . P di~' d m•ll to Department of Fish and lands, but tires and high ii re Gregory Lake, Lytle Creek ba_rracuda, 5 ~-1._1_3 y~llow· ~ da, 249 boru.~t~. 2 ha libut. _Barge ov:;'so0d., .. \~"9. rr.odel; ----Game reparts..1rom..the-liekt.. hazard.h.a_...:e_compllcated-hun-Middle--and-Nort.h Forks-. -tail. • 19 anglers-. 3 barracuda-;-79-bo-----01 thelet•sf tkin~g ;0 In general, desert quail and ting in Cleveland National S'!NJ'A BA 'RB AR A -NEWPORT BEACH (Dav-nito, 14 perch. tPaciflc lAnd-0 b.I t H +·n ton . . •' ·. '." .. BAG OF SPRIG -Omer Long of Newport Beach bagged hi s limit of bull Sprig at a club near the ,~lton Sea last week. Helping Long find ~is down· ;:-:~4 ducks was his yellow lab Ember. Hunting at the ' Ha has been good on Saturdays but slow Wednes· days and Sundays. ·-- ~ ;: .. H4T'S IN-"' . ,.., .. , ~' ...... OUTDOORS? ,.'' by Jock Aot ... y .~ .• ;Fjshing remains \'ery good along the entire south coast for tta·ss~"-barracuda, bonito and yellowtail. There appears to be no end...in sight for the fa ntastic surface fishing anglers ha ve had f~;t'!le past four Wl?\_k!. "•'.'Qpe.rators at Dil vey's Locker, Art's Landing and San Cle-iitl>W are conlinuing to run their all day and half day surface .Q:i~!\I boats on a regular basis, and will continue to do so until tisiLiave the arta. , ;.~~e party boats fishing rock cod In deep water are doing v~well too, but the best bite, on the good eating rock fish , is N\dcome. San Diego boats are still getting into good working schools al;1)ij yeUowtail and yellowfin tuna. The bite on yellow s is still !J!tt'filrong at the Coronado Islands, and after the bite slows oow•. the boats are runn ing outside to pick up the breezing school$ of tuna.._ .N,o albacore have been reported taken during Uie pa st week, but'tllat does not mean they'rt nol around . Landings are nol running after the longfins because passen-8'!! loads are too small to cover the cost of running the boats WNe. Reporls of a few skipjack taken in the outside channels n'IMftfl there are fish out there. •; /llorro Ba11 A ngling llot ·~~.Jjbacore are being caught In good numben off the north· ~~stllne. Landings ope rating out of Morro Bly are bringing r.i£ikhes numbering more than 100 fish per day. ;:~ llJ)e albles are not very ·far off the beach and the stops are oe..idered very good. The sea remain1 calm, although during *later parts of Oclober and into Nove mber tbe wealher can Cliilge drastically overnight. .• •Albacore are averagjng better lhan Z9 pounds and some of .;e, ft.sh are hittinc lbe scales at more than 40 pounds. For more Information phone Vlrg's Flshln ' (805) 77Z..ZZll. /llarf.ln Up n11d Do11m The marlin picture brightens on weekends as more boats 1«111r the sea in search of the spike bills, but during the week ~Pl'Y~Iew boats are out and the catches are reduced to almost ~hmg . ,,. Vb:tarlin are still being caugh t off both ends of Catalina Is· ijJll4,;~and t_he bi!Uish are slilll favo ring llve ma ckerel as an en· ticet·lo strike. r· .• tOnly very few jig strikes have been reported and the count ir~tni>risingly down for "flyers·•. ~ ·)~arl in will be continually working in a northward direction for lhe next few weeks, and around the first part of November It.art their soulherly migration. Anglers consider this season to be rajier slow although more than 100 bill fish have been weighed in al the Balboa Angling Club. The San Diego Club reports thal the fish count is way down (rwn years in the past and the outlook for the remainder of the aeaHn is dim . ....... ~ Tr<>HI Flsl1h1g Good _.J'.rout fishing in tbe High Sierras ind at 111 lakes currently ~~~ng slate and commercial plants of rainbow troul 11 very .,-. •• Tbe Eastern Sierras will receive a bonus plant of ,brood ,.~.lrout from tbe Deparlmenl ol Fish and Game. ;'!.'l'1sh will weigh from two lo sis pounds and be released ia tilte hikes around MammGlb, Jane Lake Loop and Brklgepcirt. 1.':J'.i'bi1 stoekJng will produce some ni~ fish before the season ~ Nov. l5 in addltio• lo adding to lbe. excitement of next ~opening. ,.;-~ebuma, Big ik'ar, C1silas, and V1U Lakes are currently "'8ft!Vin1 wetkly tNul plants as are IOme of the loca l slream1. ~ stocking programs are rewarding anglers wilb lots of r>:· 1'!11!& rishlng for the ga me flgbliag bows. ~;.:•.,,v.ail Lake'• fishing Bonania 11 In full s~·ing and rishe.rmtD ill\,1inding fair-lo-iood action oa t.roul, bass, catfish and pan- iWiu Tbe maia attraclion Is tbe lrout planting program weekly lfi'tJI, whicb, ls producing lots of 1mlle1. ... .,, .. sass are active on surface plug1 and plastic wwms. catfish . .-:~ mackerel and night crawlers, aDd the panf11b art hlltin1 -'t'ffwarms and Ucut. "'· rwManager Dave Browi»ell says the lake bas !urned over wlll1 --M:lif.lp of the rteently Installed aere.atloa sy1tem •nd that fl1k- i1ii't11.roughout lite wlnte:r 1hould lte good. ... ., .$berwood wlll be ope:r throu1h the molrtll of October on :ttt•iends •.nd mlpt s11y open Into November If watu condl· "hotis permit It. Crappie •re bc!lnc caupt In 1ood numMr1 I\ _.lif.)lcture•que lake localed oU the Ventura f>'reeway, :" .;'~ Saturdn11 Shooting Besl ~ ~ fhe .word Is th11t duck hunting In the Southland is al Its best "'de. '.Saturdays and that Sundays and Wednesdays are very slow. ·-ltiWlu take new flights of birds from the north to make the tota l .itG\i'tnd and Wednesday shoots really successful. 11~ lack cl bad we1lhe.r and hunting prwure. in northtrn Mdx:entral Callfornla until Ut!s pasl week has fiven the wat er fowl no rca M>n to move south. Now thal the season is optn and the rains have started, ~~li€.n C1J1-Jook-1or lncrea!<d bird •oliYl!y on shooling ~· othtr than Saturday. Thb writ.er hunted I.he SaJton Sea Area last week with Omer Long or NewpOrt Stach and found hunting only fair as we had ,.i~ork for our Jlmi11 ot sprig. The only 1ood 1hot1 we had were *;ftw blrdi workJn& into the clubs ponds. chukar reproduction was ex...-Forest. For local information, C1chum·a Lake (county trout). ey's Locker)-39 anglers: 200 inJ)-00 anglers: 46 barracuda, •utomo 1 •s • un 1 ,9 tremely poor last spring as the contact a local olfice of the VENTURA -Casitas Lake, bonJto, 70 bass, 84 barracuda, 1 halibut, 64 calico bass, 279 Cent,~. Beech •t Ed in9er result of insuffici~nt early rain:1_:F.::_°""':.:::..;:Se::'..:"':·ce::·~----'-~P'.'iru~..'.La~k•:· _______ _'.:13'....!'.y~eU~o~w~la~U':.._l'~A:'.'d':'''~La~n~d~in~g~)~bo~nl~to'.'.:•_'63~roc~k~cod~. ___ ..:=:O&':::S::'":=D::••::9:;•::F::'::•::•w:::::•Y::·::H=.B. and the lack ·Of green feed necessary for a good nesting season. E1ceptions are the lower Colorado River and t h e Imperial-Coachella V a I I e y area which report e~cellent populations of desert quail this year. · Valley qua il are again abun- dant throughout most of Southern Celirornia's-. coastal counties, but most of the birds are on private property posted against public trespass. There are fair numbers of quail this year on natlonal focest land s on the north slopes of the San Gabriel Mountain s bordering Antelope Valley in Los Angeles County, but heavy brush and steep ter· rain make birds hard to get. T'he north·slope canyons of the San Bernardino Mountains bordering Lucerne Valley in San Bernardino County-have a fa ir number of hold-over adult quail but few young of·the- year. Hunting quail in the i r brushy habitat and chukar in their rugged, desert·mountain homelands ls always a tough and often fruS1rating sport that 1ets even more dirticult when the first fall rains scat· ter and secrete the birds. Most Southern California count ies have or d In a n c es which prohibit or strictly con· trol the discharge of firearms in specified areas. and that some national fore st lands are closed to entry during the season of high fire hazard. S!)e(ific information on the fire and firearms closure areas can be obtained only from the U.S. Forest Service and th e county sheriff:s department ol the county being hunted. t>.1aps of the na· tional forest lands may be ob- tained at any local offict of the U.S. Forest Service. While the quail season con- tinues through Jan. 31 in most of the state, ii ends Jan. 3 in the coastal counties north of San FranciSC{l and in Trini ty , Siskiyou, "Shasta, Modoc and Lassen Oiunties. The chukar season continues through Jan 31 statewide. The bag limit on quail is 10 per day and 10 in possession in the aggregate of all species. 11lC limit on chukar is six per day and six in possession. Legal shooting hours are from one-half hour before sunrise to one-half hour "fter £unset in the area being hunted. Following is the area·by- arca hunting forecast: MONO COUNTY -This was a poor nesting year for upland birds. Valley quail are thinly scattered, with ttie best populations in the \llalker- Cole ville area and around ranches in the White Moun· tains. INYO COUNTY -There fire good numbers of valley quai l along the OWens River and along brushy slreams in the Sierra foothills, Desert quail and chukar populations are low in Inyo, with very poor hunting in prospect. Sll\'er c.nyon in the While Mountains and the east slopes of the Sierra west of Aber· deen should offer ~om e chukar. SANTA BARBA.RA, VEN· TURA COUNTIES -Both counties had anoU~r good quail hatch this year but most of the birds are on private land closl!d to public hunting. Best public lands include Ball· inger and Quatal Canyons in the Cuyama area of Los Padres National f"oresl. Con· IRCl a local 1'~0re5l Service of~ lice for access information. LOS ANGELES COUNTY - The north·slope canyons of Angeles National Forest hold more valley quail now than they did during last yea r's poor season in lhis area . Tilere are fair numbers of mountain quall at the higher elcv111ions. All hunttng i~ in steep, brushy roun1y where the birds are difficuh to find and rlush. Fire has gulled "'°'111! of this country, Before himling, con· tact a local Forest Service stRtion for s pe ci f ic In· formatio~ ORANGE COUNTY -Quail are abundant but most Rrl!l on prlvale lilndl!. Public-hunting is confined almost tntlre\y to lhe south JK!rllon of the Tr11buco Distric t of Clevela nd National Forest. Inquire at a .-1 <n TIRF.S .- Limited· Quantity Polyester Cord GUARDIAN PREMIUM* BUY IN PAIRS 2tor 525 4 P1y Blockwoll S-20· 13 Whit•wolls Only $2.95 More flu•'"· h . '•• •f SI .31 por rlro (11·, 4t 6.t.S.14 2 '" 538 f78·14t7.35·1• [71·1.St7.3.S·15 6.50·13. 7.00.13. 6.IS· 1 S WHILE THEY LAST SPECIAL PURCHASE - SLIGHT BLEMISHES GLAS.BELT FASTRAK 2 for s42 2 for .$56 if iilfl1i·ll 'I f71·14t7.7S·14 ; G71·14t l .2.S·14 t; F71·1Sl7.7S·1& ; G71-lS/l .2.S·1.S ""' ..... l•. '•• 11.n .,,,..,,., ,.., rl'" Sl .JJ ~ •• oh• 2 for $60 1¥11H*A1 H71·14t l .SS·14 H71·1St l .SS·TS J71· 1.Stl.IS· 1 S ""' '*'· i.. Too ,_. 1itt Sl.t 3 •• SJ.Cl dooontl•t WHITEWALL ONL Y $2.9S MORE '$1itft·, ·~Pttr•nct blom11llu W!li~ll In"" WIY 1flt<I pol!Of'!l11ft<I. I••" •Ir• <•"'" Uolov.il ... ,, to <-•1 ••"•"'' EACH $22 95 UNIROYAL WIDE NO TIAOl·IN NllOID for $ F71·1417.75·14 - F71·1.S17.7S·1S H71·14tl . .S.S·14 G71·1411.2St14 G71·1Sll.25·15 H71·1S/l .SS·1S EACH $2~ 9S J71· 14tl .15· 14 J71·1511.1s.1s 9.00·15 EflCH $18 9S '"· l•. T•• "•'" $1.37 I• 12.11 ,.,1i•• EACH $16.95 EACH $19 95 I EAlH $22 95 Ph.11 Ftd. Ex. Tt1 l l.114 to 2.04 ptr 1lr1 dtpt11di111 Plu1 ftd, Ix, T11 $2.17 lo 2.23 ptr tlt• d•ptndin1 en 1i11 Plu1 Ftil. Ex. T11 $2.47 lo 2.10 p1r tir1· lltp1111Unw on 1i11 1~1. ;, •of ••••• ANO SAVE UNllOTAL COAST TO COAST LIPnlMI WAllANTY 11 .. , U•l••Y•' ,.,. M•t•• '"' tort, .,~., .................. ,.. ..... .r ""0 ADJ", l•ih t.r .., .••.•• """" """'" •• • ........ 1. • ..... ,. wo •111 10..,11 II or ., .... ••• 11 .......... '"" ,.,. . ............. ,;, ..... . ,..,,; ••••• to tho .,,,,. ... , ........... ;., .. . "'"'"" '"• '""""' u.1. .... 1 .... ;........ .. •• fr!u (..,, •oti.,,wit t od• io1!•0ol Mto w~i<~ oo· ,. • .; ... ,., ............. 1 lot l•ll lo,.ih, ,...4 .,. ........... ••""'· i•ll, .... '""""· "·2195 •••I•• 1111 "" lo1lal· lo>ol .. n-• •••••• '"' ,.,,. ., lot..•• ...... Id !hHO ., •••• '"'u ""' o• fall d•• •• mat.,l,il or ,..,~. Mtlf -··~·· d•<l•t .... • . 10,000 .. !!. ,,.,1.d. IY!tflClll 111, , •• ,..,, .. it. .. , Ctrl """''""""'· 14/7 Sprint Type FREE ro,.1911 Cert lllt'"lr ~'·"" 4 U:!~~~!'~Cis$99 $8 50 VALUE FRONT END ALIGNMENT with .... '"'" .... ' of twt ti,.. ..051 ""'ll1CAH CAU Sewiitp TiieStoies 'Where tJiere is more than meets the eye I GARDIN GROVE I HAWAIIAN GARDENS I HUNTINGTON BEACH 8601 WISTMIHSTIR l1t73 CA'RSON ST. 1t411 IU.OI llVD (6 ILO{~S (AST Cf IL\(11) (l(fWllN 'l()llj(ll & N0lWAll l IV. Mill NOlOI Of AD.I.Ml! 1934595 96.S.0227 S36·75?1 ANAHEIM I CORONA 1961 llOOtcHUllT 136 W 6111 ST , !Al l!HCOlN) ' ' 63S·117t 735-6010 SANTA ANA SANTA ANA I TUSTIN I WESTMINSTER I COSTA MESA· I SAN aEMENTE KJ.ltlOI AT IOlSA l211 W. WAINll AVt. 131 l. 111 STll£T WISTMINSTll AT CEOAlt NEWPORT BEACH 927 N. IL CAMINO llAt IWAlNll AT l•ISTOlJ (hi AHO "0" ST,) (l llOCIU (, O' i;()tO(N WlUI 139.3700 140-16-46 S44.f4lt 1934521 322 IAST 17th ST. 492·.SS43 641-4131 UH TOUI MAJOI CllDIT CAID I OPEN 8-8:30 DAILY I 8·5 SAT. ' • •• .Joataie Bowls The••• Over Hitting the campaign trail for her husband, Sen. Ed- ward Kennedy, Joan Kennedy stops off at a \Val- tham, Mass., bowling alley to greet women bowlers. \Vhile t h ere, she tries h e r skill al cand le pins. ap- proach ing t he foul line shoeless (left) and r eact ing with joy (right) after rolling a s t rike. Thursd.ly, Octobtr 22, 1970 QAIL Y PILOT !'P LEGAL NOTICE LEGA!. NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE "'* CllllTlfllCATI ~ IUSINISS. tl•Tl•"•'T•,U"I,!~ '"'''''' NOTICI TO ClfllDITOlflS ,,.,..._ fltCTITIOllS NAMI "' ......-SUfll ltlOlt c.ouat °" TMI TIVI WldlralttotcL..,_ c«tt,., IM 11 WI-,ICTITIOUS trf'4MI STATI Ofl CAllfl ORNIA ,011 NOTICI TO CltlOITOllJ ducllllt • bull-., 114 •lrlc"O<l-ct •• Sell' The: ~ltneo:I ..... Ctrtl.., ... h ,_ '"' COUNTY OP OltANOI IUfllllllOll COUlllT °' Tiii•--Cl-It• Callforni.) ltlMtf' tt.. tk lllloul Ob(ll,.. • 1111,1.,._t el Hit W•tl Lll\Qllrl ITATI Otl' CAl.1111'09:NIA lll'CNl ' flt!l'I -Ill' SAN CLEMfNTe TOWING A'ffftlll AN!lelm. (lllfOfllla, lilftdt4' 11\t Ne, A"'11• T ... COUWTT Oii' ou•• AND STOlll.AOe I/Id 111111 UICI lltlfl IS lldllloo.it """'Mme., CeAUtll ,..,_1 ltlllt ol NO•MAN CUUCLf. OtcffMoO, Me. A"7D1 ~ of tl\f lollowll'ltl NtMlfl. wf>I* Atener 1114 lilt! wl41Lr"' It Clll'rl-.cl 91 NOTICI! IS HEllLE8Y GtVfN lo IM (tllle o1 LfLANO G. IECKITTt ,..me ill fl;ll •rid II.ct of r11i..nc1 II 11 IM foll~llll "'-· w"°" ,.,...,. Ill fl/II crecl!ton al Ille ll:IOvt ,..l'l'>ld IHCl!ldefll OKQSH. t follows ! .... •II<• o1 r111de<Kt LI II follows: 11111 •U ... tlOlll llllYllll dlll!lt Mlln" ltlt NOTICf JS Hl!•flY GIVEN .. "-·· 111.rlne ~'Y C1tcae110. UO Cer~. "•Vl'N:lllC Ill'. "'mm!.,. Jr .. 70S Wtlt Nici llKtdffll •rt re<111lrtd 1-1111 ""'1!, trtct!io..1 ol 11'1• •tiov. 11M'lecl dlc:eRrlf .. Sin ClllYl"llll. C1lll. l1y, lllDOt, C1lllor11le '2661 wllh lilt ftKltu<Y YOllChf_r1, 111 tl\f llfflu lllel ell etrsonl PleYI"' ctelm1 -llllf lfOt DllM OclOOtr 1!, llJO 01tf11 Odober 11, 1t1'f. !If IM Cltrk ol t11t ltlovt f!'lllllH COllrl, or uhl Oee"°"" ert 'IQ\lltecl IO flit """"' ArllM ,,,_,., C:•lc:Hno •1vl'llOllCI P. 1te111tnl119, Jr. 10 llf'tl••'ll llltfn, wlltl tl\f l'lftllUtY wllll tN llfC•ut,.,. VO\ICl!tN, 111 !ht efflCt Stilt o1 C11lfornl1, Oren11 Countv1 Si.It Of C1llfornl1. Ortnoe Caunly~ YOIH:lltrt, IO tl\f UndttlltMd II tu OO'tlr of Ille Ctlrtr: ol 1111 elloY1 tnllttecl cwrt, On Oc'*" I), 1t10, bl!Ott ~. • Otl 10·ll·7G btlOtt ....... N~,.,., lll'Ubllc Or .. Suitt '· NewPOrl ' 8tfl:ll. C1Utornl1, to •r•Mnt "'""'· w1til ,,,. Nolll"I' lll'ubLlc: In •rid '°" ••Id $1111. 1 .. Ind for 111d Sll!t. HflOlllll'I' '"'''" ""°' Whldl It the 111(1 ol bu,l ... H of vouchers. lo ll'lt 11noer1l9...cl ,, lf\f PUIOlllllY •PPt•rld lllrllM Mll"I' C1le11110 RIYmond P. R1mm1111. Jr,, .__ to me lilt uncMrtlgMCI In •H ..... 11.,. H•l•ln111• of her, I I I•, n • y I . OSHM known lo 11'11 to bt th• person WhOH lo be 11\t PlflOll Wllolt n1m1 LI 1u1Hc:rlll-111 !he ••1•11 ol se!d ftC•<ltnl, wlll'lln lour 81t0WNS,IELO ANO SMITH, nime 11 iublc•lbt<I lo tilt wllll!n In· eel to 1 tht wlll'lln 1111trument 1na 111011th1 1frer 11\t first itubllc•tlon of this WUthlrt lloulf\1'1.-, LR A 11 ' 1 I 11n1rn1nt 1nd ''knowlldl td Pe '"!Wied ~•knowlecige<l 111 lllKUltd tllt 11mt, nollct. C1Hfat11!1 tM!1$, wt!ICll l1 !tit 111:¥ ltll 11m1• !OFFICIAL 5EALI 01lecl Octobllr t, 1t70 lllUllnotu al 1111 una.,.11nlod In 111 ISEALI W.l\dv L. Scllopftr Htlen M. Clrltlt l'l<!rltlnlnt to !ht 111111 ol 111f OOltOTHY JEA~ SYMMS Notary P..tlllc-C1tlfotnlt EllKUl•llr Wllllln tour ll'IOll!h1 allt4' 11\f ftr1t Not1ry Publlc·Ctllfornle Prlnc:IP•I Otllct of the WIM of I"' tbovt !Ion of 11111 110tiQ. D•"''' Caun1y Or1nte County 11ame-d 111<.o&nt Oiied DctolMr 21, 1t7G. Mv (Oltlll'lllllon EllllrM -M, COfl'lml1110n E•Plrts MUlllltlllY M, C:HOTIHlll • l lrltere 8 , aMkt ll OK. 1, 1172 Ml' t , 1'73 H, H, ll•ISMAN Admlnl1lr11tl• of tht ttl ~ Mlf\1111 H, Wl'lu Pvbllll'lecl Or1nte Co11! Dilly lll'ilol 12i De\'lf' l)r., Slllte 6 lf\f 1bD'Je 111mecl dectc1111 • tll7 WllNllfl aM,. October u. 22. .,, Incl Navtmbt• s. ,.__, affdl, c... ""' OINMAN. ••ow•u•1•Lo ANO SMt lllYlfl'I' Hlllt. Cllll. ttlll ltro 1'01-70 Tth 01•1 •11t1 I Y: • ....,, •. lmllll llllllr"" 111"-'1'$ 1"r ••~lrl:r .... WJllAltt .... ,.,.. Publlllttd Or1..,o Co•sl 01111 lll'Uot, LEGAL NOTIC E lll'ul>llshld Or•nM CNrl 0111'1' PllOI. Lii •..-.. Celil, ..... / Ocloblr U, fl, 2t lflO Novtmber S. Ocl*t' 1$, 22, 2' el!CI NOVtmOtr S, T .. 1 flUI •HIM lt7G 1tll6-10 P·l*t 1970 "10-1'1 AttlfMYt fer ............. rt. "ubtlslled °"'"" (NII 01llY C:EltTIJ'ICATE OJ' IUllNI JS, LEG.U. NO'l1CE Octobw 22, 2' 111d NWlft'l~tr fllC'TITIOUS HAMf 1'70 T~ uoder•llMCI -. ttrl!IY "" h co ... T ....... , <llKl1n9 I bUllneu If P.O. B"" Un (Mii lll'•lMSt NOT tCa Diii' lll'UILIC SALi ~. C1Hf .. under tho llcllllwt firm Cl!ltTlfllClllTI! Ofl IUSINEIS 111/ne ot COlllST OISTRlllUTOllS In.I 11111 PICTITIOUS fllltM NlllMll TO WNOM IT MAY CONCERN : lll<I firm Ii c~ ot ll\t follOWll\9 THE UNOEltStGNEO clQes llerllW Cll ltTIPICATI. OJ' IUSllot•lt LEGAL NOTICE L EGAL NO'l'lL . UGI, '" 9.7. Nollet 11 l\trebY tlven 11111 011 October ........ I I " "' -• • II • RI·" d ,.... PICTITIOW NAM • r -,.. ' ' person .......... l'l.llmt II u I .... ,. Ctr! ... I I ..... r P. • ... con<111ct1nt I ... • .......... , .... .,, lfll, et t :JO A.M. I Pl.lb ,.. Ml I W II tt rHldenct It e1 tollo--.: m4tdllnl"I & mlllllfldurlM bullMfl 11 \lllOtrt ...,. ' Y I tor.-•• htld 11 Slnlt ...... Towtne $fryl(e, U5 John w. Flldel, lf2S KIWll P'lltt, ~U02 SallmMC• Or., CllY of Mlqlon vi .. <lucllne • b\lllnt'H ., 2'11 L.,~ S0\1111 Slnl1 Fe, 5..,11 Ane, C:1 .. to stll tor Coslt /.Wu, C•llf. lo, Collll!'f' ot Df•lllH'• 51111 of CelllornJi, Street, NtwOW'I .. Kii. C1Ulomll_!!....rD; c•i.11 Ille lollawl11t collellr11. to wit: D•lld t-»7o ufl<lef Ille flctltloln flrm neme of Ille llctniou. firm neine of TH• _.... Ifft Ootl 1t1l1'1'1 Strltl No. '2tlZ1"9, John W. Fll<ltt MISSION MACHINE Ind MANUFAC-llENllllSSANCE •M llltl 111d l tfll .... Lle1111e No. OllAS" St1te ot C•llfomlt, 0,.11191 CounJy : TUltlNG COMPANY "11<1 11111 tllcl firm II composed of !ht lollowl111 -..t.--.. U ld colllltrll belnt htld lo 1e<ure en On Se-pt, JO. lfJO, before 1111, 1 Not1rv com-.d of 1111 klllowlnl Pll'ton, -. f\fmt In full Ind 111i.c1 of r"Jdtftal II .... obllt•llon 1rltl111 u~r I ttltll k'I-PullllC In llld tor 111<1 Sl1!1, penonell' ftllTll i nd td<ltlH Ii 61 lollowl, lo-wit: lollows• t11linenl 11<11rlty 19•te,....nt (aNldlllOftll 1ppea,.,<I Jalln w. FllOIS known to mt to ltlc:r-d p E~ 26502 $elllYI" D Din L. LtYln, 21.tf Ore1111 A...;, (11.1t1 Ml• conlr1c!l ,,.kl lrf Ge111r11 Mof0t1 be 111e perlOll wllole ,,.,,.. 11 tub1erlbt(I Mlt•kln Vleio. ce'ut net r.. Mew, Cell!, AectPllllCt (OfPOtlllon ., IMll•ecl H r!Y. to Ille within ln1rrum1nt •rid ICkl>OWlldt· WITNESS ll'IY hen4 1111 1Slh <llY I D•ltd Oct. 1$, 19711. Stld 1111bllc ll,lt It 10 be ainductt<I 1c-e<I ht tll*Cllled th• 11me. SePftll'lber, 1970 1 0 O.n L. LtYln • cordlnt lo lilt II~ al Ille $"It Of \OfflCllllL SElllLI ltld'ler<I p Erk Slllt of C1lll0<nl1, Or1nM COul'IW:1 •- Cellloml1. G1ner1I Molo<s lllcc~l.,1c;e MltY K. Hellrt STATE OF ClllLIF01tNIA On Oct. JS, 19711, belor1 me, I NollTY. Corpor1tlon r•1..-v11 111t rlel>I 1o bid Nol1ty Publlc·CtU~rnl1 COUNTY OF ORANGE Public In 1"11 !or ••l<I Slllt , "r"OCllflV !hit Nie. Prlnclpll Olllce In ON THIS lllh di' of Sep!etnb@r A 0 IPPll•ecl 01n L. LtYln known lo mt lo bt Tht coUlle<•t I• prei.entlv itort(I 1"11 Or1t11e Counl'f' ltltl before me Gene llen•Qn • NOta,Y 1111 Pl!flOll wllost n1m1 It 1ubletlbtd lo fNIY be lttn 11 6'S Soulh S1nll Fe, S1nl1 Mv Commli1!on E•Plres Pubi!c In Ind for u!d County I nd Sii~ Ille wthln ln•ll'\lmllll Ind 1ek110Wff08ed Alli, Cl. Nov, 7~, ltn r11ldlne lllereln cf.ul'I' commlftlolled i nd ht lllK\llld IM Ull'lt, - GENERAL MOT~S Publl!.hed Or1n1;e COIH OIOY Piiot, sworn pe,.,.,,,u, IP!Pffrld ltkh1r<1 p (SEAL) ACCi!PTANCE CORPORlllTION Oct. 1. J, lS. 22. 1910 11111-10 Erk, known 10 mei o bt tlle Plr'4n wtioif Mtry K. HtntY PubllthK O•tnM C.0.11 01llv Pllol, name 11 \\lbltrlbld lo 1111 wnhln In· Not1ry Publlc-Celllornl1 0< __ ._.,.;_'_n_._,_•_• _______ ,._.,_-_,. 1----~LE~G".'.A~L:'..,'.N~M''.'._'~!~C~E"..... ___ 1"'Y'"en', 11111 1e1t110W!tdttd to ,..,. 11111 11e ~~~~:·::~~:~• In t,o- 111Kulf'd IM YIM, IN WITNESS M' C:ornmlttlon E11plre1 ..,, , lll'·Jll54 WHEltEOF, I "-"' iltffilnf<o stl m1 h.lncl C ••• l,lc.' •••• ".'"... •M •ftlirld mv olflcl•I 1e1I lilt d1Y •nd NDY, ''· ltn 1 '•f , P ICTITIOUS NAMll ' Year In 11111 cotrllflclll llrst 1t;ove wrllten Pul>lhMd O!'Ul!ll COl'I 0111 Ill , P'-Hlll Tile 11ncler1l1iw<:1 <lo Ct•llf' they lrf' (OFFICIAL SEAL! • ?:~obtr' n. 2t '"" Novtmbe• 1~-~ Cl!ltTll'IClllTf OP I USINISS t-ucling e bullne1s 11 1901' Holly Gtne llen!<)ll PICTIT\OUS N.t.ME Strf'!I, Hunllnqton 6e1cr1, Cilllcrnll, Not1ry Public The undlt1ltMC1 do otr!llY Ill I~ can-\lnder lllt flc!l!lous llrl!I 1111111 ol S!1te of C1lll0t11!1 duc:U ... 1 buslneu 11 Ull N, El C1ml"" STEELCll:AFT encl thtl 1ald lirm II co"" Prlncl1>1I Ollltl In ltt1t. $In Cl.monll, t16n C1Utornle, Powel of Ille followllll H•-I, whole Or1111e...C111N11Y Nllll(lll'OllT -M•SA UtUPl•O ~. 11ndtr Ille: llcUlloul llrm lllmt of MoUltt n1me1 In lull and olic" ri.I residence i re My Commlulon E11111lrt1 OllTllllCT v-"'-:~ Vltl'l<ll"I 1n<l lll1I uHI firm II comPOstel of Herbel'l ROdt'. in•1 S•nll L11ele. lllue. n. 1m NOTIC• INVITU!I ••OS II\: 1111 followl111 11tr1G11 • ....,_ n1me In 11111 FD<1nt1ln Vil~. Ct. Linde Whitney, P11bllll'lecl Or1nH CN1t Diii' lll'llo!, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhet ~ ellll Pllct ol' relklfflct It 11 follows: 12'1 Ptkrs lllvt., MldWIY Cl!Y, Cl. Oct. I, I, IS. 21. lf10 lb-70 BOlrd o1 EOU<lllon of 1111 N~~ How1t<I Moffitt, UU Goodhve Ave., IC.enntth WhllfleY 1111 S. SPrKkltt, -Unlflld SdloOI Ol1tr\ct of 0.-•l'lff qpn1 Antl\tlm, (1111. tHO? Redondo Btlcll, Ce. •oger Whltnt'I LEGAL N OTICE C1Hfornle, wilt receive se..ltd 11141 w 0.lecl Oclobtr IJ. 1'10 2'21 Gibson Pt., ltl'OMdo Btldl, Ct . 2:00 P.M. 1111 !111 JOlll OtY o1 Odotlt How1r<1 Motlltt 01lld Sept, 2', 1t70 NOTIC• IN'VITIMO llDS lt7G el 1111 ol'llet Ill uld $CMo1 Dl1trkl Sit~ ol C1Utornl1, Or1ntt Cou"!\tl I Htrberl ltode Nollet 11 htrtbY ,1wn t111t tht lliMrd o1 IOC:alecl et 119 P1K1tlll4 AWftUI, Cos1: On Octoti.r 13. lt1'1, belor1 mt, 1 Lindi Wllllllf'Y Tru1tttt of 1111 (Old communll'f' Colltslt Miu, Cetllornl1, 11 wllldl time uld !DI LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Nollr' P11bllt Iii tncl ICH' Hid Sltle, Kenneth Whittle' Otilrl(t (II Ortlllt Counl'I', Ctlllomll , will will bt ~tlbllcl'I' i.hntd erld Aid for! Hr!iOnlllY 1-trld Howtra Molfllt ltoglr Wiii!"'" rtct lvt ietltd bias UP lo 11·00 1 m Fri-FOOD SEltVICE WAREHOUSE "' ,,,_ lo mt lo be I~ H r10n Wi'loSI Stile of C11Uorn1e, Or1111e Counl't: a1y, NOVf!mber '· 1'711, ., ,,;. P .. ~cii .. !lne ONE PREFABRIClllTEO WA~:l;.i nll!lt 11 IUbltrlbe<I kl lht wllllln I,._ On Septembtr '19, ltro belort mt, e DIP!, ot ul<I ICMOI Glllrlct IOCtle(I at ltEFlt tGERATOllL 1lruinenl Ind ld<l\0Wl-6Dt<I t.1 !~t,U!fd Nol1ry Publk 111 Ind lor 111(1 Slllt, 13711 lllGimf Avin\11!, COiii Meu, AU b!dl 1r1 lo bt In lctordl lht Utne. lllrlOlllllJ' ~..,.,.,.!!<I Herbtrt •oe1e, Lln01 C1IUornle, el wl!lth llmt 111d bids wHI Dfl Condtllons, I n I I r u c I I 1 n I , IOFFIC llllL SElllLJ Whitney, Kennell! Whllnev 1nd ll1111~r Pllblklv opened •nd reta r 0 r . Speclllc1110,.. which ere llOW on flle In J Milestone for Mankind Turt M, 01vl1 Whll"'" know11 lo me lo be 1~ Penon1 A.EROGRAPH -WITH ACCESSORIES , !he office of il'lt Purch11ll\'f Alen! Gt u l<I Noli•' P11bllc·C1lllornl1 whose ntm" t•e tublcrlbea 111 Ille within AU bllll ire ID be In icco•GlllCI with Scl'ICIOI Dl1trtC1, llS7 Pltctlllla Av""1"'· Prlntloel Olllce In ln1tr11mtnl end I Ckl\OWlldie<I lhtY ti· the lnil•uclloni llld C-lllo•'I ind C:oste M1s1. C1llfornl1. ' ~~''t'!n~":'~::,. EllP!ftt n,~~c't".:L'~';lLt SH<:lllc1Uoo1 wll!ch '" now on Ille 11\Ci Eacll bldaer 111u1t submit 1 bid dtlltltit" MIY ) 1971 JEAN L J08ST 11'15' Dfl 11,urecl In Ill• ofllct II, the 111 lht torm of • Ctrllf!td GI' u#lltt') lll'ubllll>td Or•111• coe1t 0,11, Pilot, N 1 ;. bll • c 1110 111 Pwrch111il9 A11tnl OI silo 9CllOOI <lltlrkt, check or 1 bid bond 1<1u11 to flwt Nfcefll Ocl bt 1• » ,. 1111 N \:f' , 0 try u c 1 r • Eich b!Oder """' w 11m11 wllll ll!t bid 1 (5%) ol IM 1moun1 of th• 1>1c1 .. 1n10. High Yielding Wheat Seeds Bring Nobel Prize By BRIAN S ULLIVAN NEW YORK (AP) -The new seeds developed b y Norman Borlaug may affect the well·being of more people in a shorter lime than any other technological advance in history. an American expert maintains. But what Borlaug's work Jias done is to buy mankind a little Ume, perhaps 10 or 15 years, to attack the world's real Problem o f overpopula~ tion. the expert said. If nothing is done. Borlaug's work will have been in vain, T hese a r e the views of a l eading authority on the Green Revolution, Lester R. Brown. senior fello\11 al the Overseas D evelopment C o u n c i I , a p rivate instit u te in Washington. Brown is the author of "The Seeds of Change: The Green Revolution and Development in the 1970s." The first pargraph or that book reads: ''Late in 1944, a group or rour young Ame r icans assembled in the hills outside ~texico City. Their mission was to export the United States' agr icultural revolution to Mexico. They believed that the application of science to agriculture could achieve the same results in the poor coun· tries as in the United Slates. Like Mao Tse-tung t h e y believed that the future of these countries \\'OUld be decided In the countryside." Borlaug was one of the four. Virtually unknown to the v.-·orld until no .... ._ he was awared the 1970 Nobel P eace Prize \Vednesday for his SUl'- cess in that 1nission. The Nobel winner developed h igh y ield y,·heat seeds. The principle was then a pplied to rice. B o r I a u g ' s high·yielding wheat seeds will double the yield or the traditional seeds they are replacing. primarily because of their response to fertilizer. A problem with o lder varieties was that a heavy dose of fertilizer would produce a heavy yield of seed but on a tall, thin stem that could not support the h eavier load. The plants would fall over and not survive. The seeds also are "widely adapted," and can grow as far north as Turkey and south to Pa r a g u a y • "Therefore.'' Brown said ''this b re a k • through in Mexico has Jed to a break-through in rood pro- duction in the world.'' In the mid·196Us. P a kistan \vith the help of the Agency for international Development brought in 42,000 tons of f\-tex- ican wheat~ Once harvested, ther e was enough seed to plant the entire country. This would have required 5 to 15 years other wise. As a result, \Vest Pakistan has nearly doubled cereal production in the lest five y ears and is exporting \~heat and rice. East Pakista11. w ithout proper irrigation, is Ulll'I Tt "'41111 Became It Is There Mt. Everest. the world 's tallest peak. will be chal- len ged again in t h e s prinit of 1971 by an interna· &.ional g r oup o r climbers. The International Hims· Jaya Expedit ion \viii attempt t o scale the heretofore u ncon q u e r ed s outh west !ace or th o. 29,0ia.foot mou~ taio. Group wlU Include climbers . from Aus tria, Great Britain, U.S., Norway, llaly, West Germany, France, Switzerland, lndta and Japan. unable lo participate. There have been dramatic advances in India in cer eal production. from 12 million tons in 1965 to 21 million tons in the spring of ttiis year. The seeds are now bei11g u s· ed also in Turkey, Afganistan and more recenUy in Tunisia, Morocco and Iran. '·There have been any number of second generation problems associated with the Green R evolution," Brow n said, "and there is a tendency to focus on them, but I think the best way t o assess the Green Revolution is to ask oneself what would conditio ns o r .., ' I ov1m r ·• PrlnclPtl Ollie• In ctll'lltr'i chKk C:.rlllltd check or bid· PIYl bll IP IM order ol 11\t NIWP04'1~• ltl'O l90$-7' 0 •111111 C:ounl'f' dff'• bond med~ PIYtblt 10 1111' oraer ot Unlflld School Oltlrlct. Ill Pl•fo"""liiif' be like iit the absence of the M' comm111lon E11111lr1s '"' coe11 commu11fl'I' Colt"' Olst•ld !land m1y bt r1<1ulrld et t11t <llsc"1!-f of, Green Revolu tion." Mlrch 1• 1"3 &oard ot Tru1t111 In 1n •mount"°' ~·Ille 011tr1c:1. In the ""'"' of l1l114"e "ft LEGAL N OTICE Publllhecl Orinat Coitl Dilly l"llol, ll'ltn five Pll'ctnl (!'!Ii.I ri.I tilt 1um bid 11 tnttr !n10 sud\ conlrllCI, 11'1• procefdl W- Condilions wou1d have been Oct. I, I. l!. 22• 1970 llOS.10 1 eu1r1ntee 11111 1111 blader w1n enter Into 111t dlKk wru be tortelled, "" In uott "' • •·prett t ' hi -h f A · NOTICI 0, PUSLIC HE Allll+G Ille Pl'OP<>Std Contrtd If 1111 ume 11 b:lfl<I, !ht full 111m tllertof will bt forlt!lodl y 1g In muc 0 Sia, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Iha! L EGAL NOTICE IWl•Old lo him. In"" even• ol f1Hure to to Olld S.:i-1 011lrlc1 ot 0r ..... c:lllJf)IV.' where in the mld-1960s famine ollbnr ""'''"" w!U be h•kf ll't """ Cl!Y 1n1.,. lftte wc:ll con1r1ct, 111e 111rocff<l1 of No bidder m11 wllhdr•w 1111 bid for_,• ed • · " B Cou11cll of 11\t Cl!\t ot COiii Mtsl on CEJITtFIC.t.TI: 0, SUS IN•SS 11\t cl\tclt Wiii be lllrftllld, or 111 lltt c;ne period of forl'f·llW fUl dlYI tlltr :,+,e· seem 1mm1nent. rown NDYflnbt• '· 1'70, •• Ille hOUr ol 7:311 FICTITIOUS NlllMI: of . bond. the full tum llleteGI wlU be d•le HI for"" -1"9 ""''°'· ~· said. Jn 1961), 2()() acres v,•ere 111.m .. Of' 11 llOOll llltrt1tler 11 1111ctlc1blr, Thi! unoerslgnld dot1 cerlllY ~ COii• lorteitecl IO llkl ''llOOI <llllrkl. , Tiie BIMrd al Educ1tlon ol !he N .... IOft. • • . In Ille Council Cll1111btr of lllt (11'1' H1U, OU<lln9 • 11111111111 II 1•111 Llltler Or.. No bl~r m1v w!llldrlw hit bicl IOt 1 Me .. Unllltd Sc/lool 0111•\r.I restrfh' 1111!!· planted With wheat and rice Ln 77 Fe!r Drive. Cosi. Mesi. C1Utornl1. on H11ftlinsllon 11e1cn. C1lllor .. 11, under ""' N rlod of lo11Y.five IOI d''' •tier the right to rel..::t •"' o• en blcb, ,..,.,..,.. Asia r ..... m Turkey lo .... ""'fal-1"" lltm: llcllllo111 Orm neme o4 EamcnM;n llllf ~, for the ~mo IM .. !ol. flfCIHlrlly ltttpl Ille lowul bid. 11111 ,,,. , . .'" , IJIC Ill'~ e<lll,..llCt 11t1t11l1llitl• • COll'IC>lll1 ~ncl that Hid tl•m 11 com-Tiii lloard ol Tr11'1tei rest •Ye• the w1lv1 1nv lnlor1111!11'f' ar lrrt•ulitttY IN Ph1hppmes excludtng China •r•I,..•• '"' of w11!c1t coole1 ,,, en 1;11 _.,, of 1111 1011ow1n9 "'"on, w-.e i>rtvll"e o1 rrlKlll\O '"' •nil 111 bid& 0< 1nv bid •Krlved. ...i• ~, d · 1970 lh · ln thf Offkr ol the Cll'I' Ck'11. n;tll'lt in lull tnd plact pf rt1l<knct 11 ., lo WllVI l n't lrr~ul1rllle1 or 1,._ Ditta Octobt1" U, lt70 an In e acreage was 1n NOTICE IS FUltTHER GIVEN 11111 ,, follaW1: f0tm1llllr1 In'"' bid or in"'' blddh... NEWPOltT-MESA '. excess or 40 million or one-""time end Pl~• l boYt mln!lonecl, lnY Jtll'ln E. Edmonwn. 11111 L!lllrr Or., Sl9iw<:i: NORMAN E. WATSON UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTlt ltT Ind 111 PlrlOlll lnlereslta rntY -•• Hu11t1n1ton BtKll, Ct!ll, SK.I''· lloard of Tru.tees. ol Or1"9t (ouflty, C11il0t11i. '• • tenth of the cropland. 11111 bt 11e1ra 11v the c11, council o1 the 011ec1 Ocrobf.r 21, 1t11 Ootft~ Nov. '· 1•111, 11 :00 e.m. 11v 0oro111y H•......, Fhlltr ~ Bu t among the proble m s of f~4~,~~'1 IM•• 1111 the •~n-STATE oF ~"!r1,~i:'::::' 0:~1;";t :,•:1,i. C01•t oi ii... ,:~;; 1111ub11;.:~~:.:-~':.'..1t 01nr '"""'~ s uccess, Brown noted, are flLEEN ,., PMINNEV ORANGE COUNTY: Oclcbtr 15 •rid October n. lt7G I "'2'11! · k . · CllY Clerk On Ocl-r 21 . 1110, btlo•r mt. • LEGAL NOTICE serious m ar eting p roble rTl!l. Publls1'tc1 O•t"9e C011l 0111v Plkll Notary Pubnc In 11111 for uld s111e,1-~-iii;(,O<;>;;;;;;;m;;;;---l!---~LE~~GAL~'::N~OTl~~CE~_:--~·-· In northern India schools October n. ltlO 1960-111 llll'llllllllY '"••rtd JOl'ln E. Edmonton NOTIC• Of INTl:NTION h ' known to me to bt lhf °'"°" wllo•e TO ll!Ll. ltl!AL lll'ltOPEltTY 111'-JIMJ ave been closed to store LEGAL NOTICE ""me Is •ui..crlbld 'lo lht w11111n In-NOTICE 1s HE lt EBV GIVEN 11111 on ClltTl,ICATf Oii' •u11Nl ll wheat. 11rutnrnl 1!111 l(~l\Owltdaed lie t~eculed lilt '°'" <111 af October, lf}O, the 8olra UNDl'lt ll'ICTITIGUI NAM• lll'·Hllt •he ume. ol Tru1ttts of tne 0<e1 n View Sc1'ool Tr.e under11entc1 <10 lltrebY c.rll{Y !IMlt Cl!•TIPlt:ATI! G, CGllPO•ATION ,Olt (OlflCltl $e~I) l Joi! I Ol1trlct ol Or1m1e County, C•llfornl1, they.4rl can<l11Cll11t bullntU 11 ta.!9nb In TllANSlllCTION Ofl SUltN•IS UNDElt ran ' 1 l dOP!e<I e Resolution <l«ltrlno Its lnltnl common 11 lJIO W. ll1lbo1 l lvd,, H ......... P'l(TtTIOUS NAME NOll•Y Pwt1llC·C•Ufor~1• 10 1111 •n lnter1sr In rt1t ··-·w. to wu, Bt1cn, C1lllornl1, wnder Ille llcllllciilll' THE UNOERSIGNEO CORPORATION PrlnclPll Offlct In i11 tlstmtnl lor ll"!el tnG utill!Y ntmt of Miiii TAI APAfl:TMENff •i fll dCN!t nerfbv ctrllfJ' llltl It 11 conductl"' 1 Orint1e Caunlv PUrPOHt. In lh1f <trltfn rtll pr-rtv 14. ffltl 11111 bu1lnu1 Is composed f1f tile 11111111111 loctltd et l~ N1WPOrt 81Yd,. MY Commlislo~ E~plrtt llOflll IO O<;ean VltW S<llool Dlstritl Siie following HrlOfll Whllll ... mff ellll Rejection Upset Judge Rules Nudist Can Be Policeman March 2, 1t7l • 0 11 -Costa M•U. C1lll0tnl1 undr•"" tlctlllou1 P bll!.h!!<I On c 1 0 11 PHO! No. M, locttN In 1111 vlclnll'f' ol Wrenllela PllCll al l"l!tldence Ire •1 o OWi. J 11'"' ntmt of C & 5 FULL MAIN· Oc ~ 22 2' 1111~ i;:• :. ' S ,; Drlvt end Got<1111 Weit Street, In lf\t (II' PETElt 0. ~CS, MO, J230 E. for~. TENANCE, CO .. 1ncl 11111 Ul<I flr111 11 ltk r • 1 OYtm r 1; ... 111 ot Hunll1t1I011 lle1th, (1lll0tnl1, e1 more St., W. CoYln1, C1llf. ' • ,orr1111111Cf o1 lht followl .... cOl"POrl llon, PI FllC11ltrly dflc:rlbtd In uld rtlolutlon. WILLIAM C. WALTERS, .. ': Wr ..+.ost prlndP•I 111111c1 ol Duttnr11 I• It LEG•• NOTlCE A lll'Ubltc ine1t1111 win bt l\ttd 11 nn C1llfoml1, Pe11C1tne, C1llf. lollOW5' nu Wlrllf,r lllWn.,., 11\t rttul1r l!ltttf"9 P!Ke EllZABl!TH H. WAL TEltS, tu W, 0, C I. E UNITED COfl:POllATION, Ill the B!Mrcl r11 Tnn11t1 ol 11\t Oce111 C1Ulo•nlt, P111<1et11, C1llf. ! • , ., 1•U Newport B,..<I,. C111t1 Mtu, lll'•Jlllll Vlew Sci-I Ol1lrlct, on Hovembe• 17, Wllnet1 -t11nd1 11111 h i ••~· lff C1llfor11l1, C T' C "' H• 1'70, 11 1:3a P.M .. 11 wllld'I time lffltd October-, lt70 ' I WITNESS 111 Plend 11111 1~111 dt1 el Od.. 11:• I I ATf GP I I s: p,._11 Jo aurd\lte u ld lnlereJT In reel P.,1, 0. Mies, Md. PICTITIGUS HAMii: lt70 Tht l•ndtnlt nell -. urflfy 11, I• con-PtoMrty wm bt received 111<1 consl~red. Wlll!t m C. w111rrs !CORlll'Oll:ATE SElllLI <llKllnt 1 bullnesi I I Hot Clift Or., Orel P•-llt wJI tllO bt rtctlw<I: tnd Ellrabtlll H. W1lter1 0. C lo E Unllt<I Car•. N-1 llelch, Cetlfornli , llrldtr ll\t lie· e<>nildltM 1t tllll llme. STATE OF c:AUli.OltNllll, BALTIMORE Md (AP) -• Do Jd Robert H, C•llfll tllloua firm ,..me ol MILtTA.ltY Tiit minimum kCtPltble llld far said COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES l 1,, ' . -m Is s l 0 n er na D. Pr .. latnl llolllRKETING SERVICE •n<I lh•I ul<I ln1tr11t In rul prooertv 11 $15.CIO. Tiit On 11111 hi d•Y of Oclobtr, lt10. ""-'• A nudist has the legal right to p b STATE OF ClllLIFORNJA, firm Is carnoostd of Ille lollowllll Pt•IOll. PUri:lllSt Price II P•v•blt }ft ctsll. me. I Not1ry lll'utlllc In Ind for 11\t. Hid . . h B I omerleau·s " are allega. COUNTY OF ORlllNGE, H. wllost "'""Iii 11111 ind •lltt tf ••lldenc• Cooltl ot ""'Re10tul11111 .,.. IYllllbltl I I CO\lftl' tnd Slllt, rnldlllll Iller.In, "'"' JOln l e a timore police lions" were not S bst t' I On ltilr 14th dlY of October. lt7G, btfor1 11 •• lcllow•· 1111 bu•lr'lfl•• 11111,, of tht School 01str1c1, comm1111onec1 and ,....,.n, Plf'IO<lllb'• - force . u an ia :'r:t 't:ry11~· = ~,.:a1s~Z •. p=1~1;,: N:!:,.. =~~~et~~i1orn2:' cu11 or., loc~1E~: 1&:\'::r"::' ,~;:.""'· ::1"::1oP~ir~1~111 M~~1·w~~r,w~= ·~~ A U.S. District Court judge enough for t urning away tlltrtln, cruly comm111ronea 1n<1 sworn, 011111 s.pi...,b.r let .,,o BOAltO OF TltUSTEES OF THE me to be tl\f Hr10111 Wl'loH n-•re has so ruled. nudists. Pl'IOlllllY toHerecl ltobtrt H. C1n111 JO/In F will ,' • o c E .t. N v 1 E w s c Ho o L subKrlbK to tht wltMn ln.t•umtrlf, Miii B known to mt to bt 11'11 pre1ldr11t ol !ht St tlt ol Ctlllo,:.,le, Ori ,,.t Count,' DISTltlCT ac:know!tcllecl to ,.... 11111 llllY l lltQllM A job application by John J, runs, who is married and a corpor111on "''' ••Kutld 111e w11111" 1... 0n Stlllt JO lt70 belart m1 • Not•,... OF OltANGE co u NT Y, 111t um•. Bruns I II, a 30-year-ld nudo.st. resident or Gle n Burn i e, 11rumtrt1 on bell111 of th• torPOl'tllon lll'ubllc In· 1nci tor 'u id 511" 'Pel'Mlll•llY c111LtFOAN1111 1n w11n111 wl'ltr!IGf, 1 haw•111re1111te ~ -,, 11\it'tln ,.......,, 1nd 1cknowlecl1e<1 10 ,.... I Pptt rtd John F Weller kllOWn 10 me 10 llv Geooree G. Lot•n m' h•nd •nd 1llL•e<I mw olllcl1I 19111 "' was rejected by the c ·t 14 belongs to the Pine T ree 11111 1uch co•lllll'tllon e•ecutld th• Hmt. be 111, "'""' wilote neme 11 sub1crlbld Clerk ol s1 ld Boo•<I 11•¥ 1nd .,. • ., In 11111 urtlflc•ll ftrlf i llo\ili 1 Y Association . I nc., a n Anne tn Wlln1u Wh•rtof, I hive htreun10 1tt 10 the wllllln 1n1tr\lment •nd •tknowltdo· Publhlltd Or1n111 Co11t 01ilY Pilot, wrllttn. months ago. mY ll111d 11111 tlfl•ecl ll'IY olll<l•I seal the ed he t•ttutK !ht iime October 22, H tncl No..-ltll'lbtr J, LE NORIA WALTEltS Chi.e r J udge Edward S. Arundel County nudist colony div 11111 ''''In th11 cer1111c1!1 l!rwt eboYe tSEALI · 100 Jf6.j·7il Notary Publ!c • C111tornl1 wrllltn. PrlnclPll Offlct 1" •I Northrop has ordered that \vhose membership includes a !SEALJ Reb• H. C•fltfll, LEGAL NOTICE Lot A"'''" Coun t, MARV K. HENfl.Y Not1ry Public, C1lllornl1 My Comlllll$lon ElltlrtJ Bruns be placed on the force veteran of 26 years on the Notiry Public. ca111or"11 Prlnclpat 0111ce In DK. 11, ,,73 Baltimore force. Prlnclp1! Ollke In Or•"9f Counl'I' ClllLTIPICAT• 01< IUSIHESS WILLIAM c. WALTfltS as a probationary officer Dr•nci• Caunl1 Mv CornmJ11!on E11plrr1 FICTITIOUS NAME .t.TT01tN•Y AT LAW ,I'•• wi!hin seven days. Authorities said the veteran Mv comm1111on E•~lr!1 , ,,. !~1• 0 1•· 1tn c 1 '"' "' 1 Tht unc1er11vnta 11o c1r1u, lheY i re "' •11110'"" st .. ""'· N• " B II. I' r ' NOY. ,., ,,.,, \I .... _ ••nee HI , 0 ' ton<lucll111 I bu:slneH ,, '°' "II" Jotnn .......... C•Mftr!Me t lltl The judge declared that the a 1more po iceman Ir st P~bllihed Or•1t1• co111 0111v 111111111, oc1. 1, 1. 1s, 12. 1170 1110.11 s1 .. costa MHt, c11lforn11, ulldfr Ille fie-T.W• • , d eclso'on not to ho're t he became a cop and t hen a Oc:lfitltr 1s, 22, n •nd Nove111ber s. tlllOIJI 11rm .... ,... ot eo.1111 wn1 M11... POJbllshM or1ntoe ca11t 0.111 •1101 nudl.st . 1t10 1t11-7ll LEGAL NOnCE 111nenc1 c:om•n1. '"" 11111 uld llrm 11 October u. 22, 2t •lld NcvenM,. '" department's top applicant_--'~~~----------11"'"--Li;;<:AiL'Nim1Ci"--"--'-'l---i.;~i'~;-c .. ;;;;,;,;;---·I ccwn1111lflf 01 111e fouow1111 MrlOllS. w11o1r 1t70 1tor-10 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO Cltl!DITO•I nlmH In lull t nd Pl~e1 tf retldlllCI 1r1,l---------,,,-,,,,--- bccause of his membership in LEGAL NOTICE su1111t:•101t cou1tT op THe •• fo11ow-. L E GAL NOTICE a n udist colony violated Bruns' p.JtMt STAT• 01111 t:111L1flo•N1A l'Oll Mkll1t1 J. Mcc11t1teY. '°' "'" Joenn t't ii I · h f f 1"·16<l'1 c••TIFIC:ATI! 0111' SUStNl!SS, THf COUNTY 01' OltANGI! St.. Coslt Mffl, C1. ft11'111et1 s.'l --7,c0=,cotC•O-:OC•:-":SCNC•C•Co=•=,.c1,-,,.c._.C;;-.. ,-,.. cons I u ona rig t 0 ree CERTlflClllf E OF DISCONTINUANCE lll'ICTITIOUS HAM• Ne. "'""" Withrow. 111S E. 711t No. s. L-ee1cn. AlttrnencMi Olfl(t E111lp .. etc. plliftfl'ff association. OF USI! lllN0/011: llllANOONM•NT The unoer•loMd doe1 cerlll'f' 111 11 «H'I-~011~:e,,• rsLO~:R~ii~TA:t~i::~o'~ ~ied lll-'1·1'7G "'· S.rell L. l 1'111olorril1, Otfmd1•" Th P U De rt I h d 0, J'ICTITIOUS NAMa ductlftt e binlnet1 11 202'f Ht•-ltlv(I., I 1'6111 e 0 ce pa men a THE UNOEltSIGNEO Goel ht bY Cot!• MIUI C1lllornl• Uf>Cler ""' lie-creditor• ot IM 1bov1 lllmed dKtcllnl ••ndlll s. w mrow By ¥Ir! ... of 1n en<\lllon lstllf'I ...... rejected Bruns' application for certify '"" •llKl!w Oc:lobt ' lt10 r:,.. tllloin tlrm ;..me ol v1Nco ltElllL TY end '"'' •II ~ ll1v1no cltlm1 •••ln1t 11'11 A.1lch11t J . Mec11i.1ce., OctoMr 1m lrf '"' ~rlor Cavrt,,c-. c11tt0 to do bualness Yf'der ·~ ll<lllloui 11\tt .. 14 11,.,.., 11 com-.ci ol ""' folfow. uld ltecedent 1rt reoulrld "' fll1 them, Sl1t1 ol Celllornle, Drltlft County: f'f' al Or•""· Sltlt ol C•lllol'!lll, UJMlll • employment b e C 8 U Se firm n•me of CAROUSEL PEllL$0NNEL 11111 Hl"IOfl, wllOlt lllmt In IUU 1nd 111111Ce wllll 11\t nectHIN YOl/Chers, In 1111 ol'llct On October 21, 1'111• tlefo,.,., mt, 1 ludtttmtnl enl1recl 111 le'19! ,,tft authorities feared p u b Ii c AGENCY,, 2(111)..t.1 w. Llncoln, Anelltlm, Ill rnl<Hncr 11 II lollows~ ol Ille ctri., , ... lbOul .,.u11111 (Wr!, Of ~~u:ubllc.~.r~ to~](~l~I Slt~f, AlFEll NANDEZ Oll'FICE l!OUllll'Ml!Nt . Clllfomle, w111<11 111111nen wa1 tormtrlY 111vmona o VlnctnU, •2s v11 Lido to ,,,_. them. wllll the necuwrr • 1 C~•llon 11 kldl,.._. crecll*r 1t1tf criticism felt he would have comOOsed o1 the 1<111ow1no NrlOll wholt Nord N-1 llNCh c111r ""° YOllCl!ff1. to 1111 unde<1ltlled •I 1•11 M<Clesl<e¥ & lt•nd•ll 5· wimrow, known 1111nst sA•lllH L. BAltTHOlDIM•·r'! ' name In furl n<I ' 0 .d Oct ll, lt7G ' ' Wf11Cllff Ol'lw, S11Ftt 709, Ntwoor1 8ttdl, to mt lo bt lllt ""°"" WllOse n1mes err hxlt"""' •11tor .r-1111 1 net ~ of dUficulty investigating in-follows, to wll~ Pl•<• of ruldenct h 11 11 • ..,~ 0_ Vlnc1nll C1Hlornl1 f14,IO, wlllcll Ii lht 111111c1 of tulltcrlbed lo 11111 wtltllft !nstnimenl· •nd 131,.111.3' KtveliY 11v1 1111 Mkl I.....,., decent ex p 0 sure and M111•1AN M. PAltkS, 2412 Wtll lt•n-Slit.I ol C1!1fornl1, or ..... Cou111'f'1 but lr'lflH ol 11\t 11ncMr1i911ed 111 •ll m111,r1 ldnawled1t<l llllY lllKWltd --· on the dill (II '"' IHU•nct of ..,.. Ill• (loll'I, lllnthelm, (•lltornll t2llM On Oct. 11, \'10. bttore ""'' t NOl•l'V Hr11l11lllll 1' lilt 11!1!1 ol 111<1 decedl11!, MIN K. Htnry, KUiian, I htvt ltvltd 11111111 111 ltW ... Ill, pornography Cases and \llOUJd Cert!ll,tle tor lrtnHcllon ol butlnen Publlc 111 Incl hlr Nld 511111 pco1rtoMllY wllllln lour months tUtr 1111 fltll !llllbllCI• ~~''T ~'g'~f-C~tlJorn!e 1111• 1NI lntwtsl at sel<I lllllllmlllli...-r be unable to car ry a weapon und4!r Ille 1bov• 11c11uou1 n11111. '"" 1f· •-'"' A11monc1 o. Vtn<entl -nown lo ~ fec1111:1;:.1cei2 lt7'D 0~1ri:,,;• ca1111fv' n In 1111 llll'Dlllrtv in 1111 C111t111Y of Qr1ne.. lld1v11 of publlctllon ~reol, irr on !Ut "" to be Ille 111rson Whole ... me II 1 r • I Ion E Ir S11t1 ~ C11llornl•, dttcrlbed I I ..,....., 24 houni a d ay -a depart· I" 111t 0111c1 o1 tilt cau"I" Cletk al 1ublcr1be<I to the wllllln ln11ru....,.1 •n<I =ober~-:~-"Wi" of ~:V c:;i';1,;; 11• es P1rc11 Ht. 1 -Lot JS end ...,111 HMf m e nt r egulalo'on Or•"" county, llf'llllr 111t orovl11on1 of 1c~nowled9ed M •~«llltd IM s1mo. 1,,•K"L.., nim1e1 Oee"'"' Publ11Md · O:..," COlll 0 ,111 Piiot o1 Lill 34. Tree! 1'1. 111 ltlt CllY ol;~'lot · Stcllon 1'66 of t~e Clv!I Collt. !OFFICIAL SEAL! "' •-• ' An1. COUlllY ol Of11111, Slllw OI Nor throp he ld that •• I f WITNESS "'' ll•nd !hit "" di' ol RElllll H, CANETTI W.t.LJWOJITH, S•IOIL & C:llAIL Oc!oblr 21, "' Ind NoYtmbtr 5. 12, C1Ulornl1, II jlflr ma, recol'Sld .-... , OC!obtr, lt10. No11ry Put.lie, C1lllornl1 1'11 WttlcllH DrlW, S.119 2" 1t111 lff,.Jt let, Pi tt t, Mlt~tll1n1CNt MIP1. ll'i "- Jtl.eralJy enforced , this rule M•rl•n M. P1rtr:s Prtnc111111 ot11c1 In ~~~.r~~4!.111:::'tn LEGAL NOTICE 0111c1 o1 "'' county J1Kor0tr °'IJ;I;' • WOUld prevent a mcmbc f Mll111 M. OOlll1I, Or1"'e Counl'I' • I Coun!Y, commcnly kllOWft It 1111 , r 0 At!Of'MY 11 Lew My Commlnlon Explr•'I AlfWlll~I fff ••tclllll' •icl'W Nt, 1-...H H1!1otrooe, S1nt1 Ane. Ctlltornllf, ,J !he police force fr 0 m U111ti1 BINI S1u1rt, S,,111 UM, StP1. U, H7J Publlilhed Or11111 Coest Dally lll'lkll, HOTIC:I! TO Cltl!OtTOllS Ptrul No. 1-SoultlWf'lllf1' i.{of l ot participating In any swimm ing :'.:='.11.::=:::-::W. c:i=:h':'s. 0;,~nt;, ~°::' N~=!o!.1~: ~k*' u, 21 ' "' •rid Nov""~1-io M:cKTL~E ;:J011~':tsMAiir =~uGN~ !~!r;,~ ~~~.'r1:~'!0:l::"•~ or water activity" Publlltlt<I o •• ,,.. ce111t Din, 111111o1. 1t1t 1wo-10 LEGAL NOTICE T1t11iNSFEllf:DJ1: ,,,,_n •• 261' Ore1191, c:11111 ~ H ald ' Oclober IS, n. 2' end NoY•mber S. Pur1u1nt to Sedlon1 '105 Ind 6107 Ill C1Ulornl1. " e S P 0 I I C e Com. lt70 1"2·10 LEGAL NOTICE "" C.Hfornl• u111torm commtre111 Code. Pt rett No, 1 -l.ott u, 1t, 1t l6tct" T..._ 1111 IN Mrttw llOltfltcl 11 tollowl: ol Trtcl 10:1$, 'MJ recorded In ...... A.. L E GAL N011CE LEGAL NO'l1CE , • ..,. NOTICI TO Cltl:DITOlll:S Tr1n1i.ror 11 tllOUI lo frllkt 1 lrtl'ISl~r fl•" <U, M!Ketl11110UI MllllJ. ~'t.t SUlll'l •IOlt C:OU•T 01' TH& to tl\f \ll'Mllrtltntd TElt•Y SOMODI lllNO 0..11111. _ .... ltllOW'l'I " nai,,.,. iu••1tlO• co·-T o• ,-,, l"•Jftfl C•1tTIPIClllTI! Ofl IUJIN•SI ITAT& 0' C:llll.lflOllf:NIA POlt JONAS It, JUSXA, Trtn1f1rw, In bull!, ell Hellot!OPI, Stnll Af'I, C11l~~t ...,. C:lltTlfllCA T• OP IUSIN•SI f'l(tlTtoUS tl.t.Mll TMI COUNT:Y 011' O•A•I 11f 1111 WPPllll. mtrdlln<llM er olllll' l"" T1111llltr' Wllll •II 11111 I 1111 STATI! 0" CALIPO•N1A POii fllCITIOUS NlllMf Tilt UMtrtllllH doff ~tr111Y ltlt It ~,._ .... 111.Ultl Ylfll«Y, tnd ....,1,......,,i of 111et c1rt1ln ltt1e111en!J. l'IWHll•"*"IS 1 111.« •'l~ TH• COUHTY OP OltANG• TM undersllllld dots ctrtlf'f' ht Is cot>-duc:lllll 1 bu1lnt11 11 21n 011P0nl, Sllile E1t11t o1 OLGA f , LINSTllLUM, Bffr S.r 8utlneu, k-11 Tiit G1fl!!ry, lllUrtfflllllett '""""''' bialoflalfll Ill Ml, A-41411 <111et1111 • bu1l1111s 11 1120 w. Octin n1, N1WPOrt ~Ith, C1llfomle, unOtr OKtlttd. 1n of wtilcll 11 1oc:1tecl 1t Ill I , l•tbol •n'fWlll •-'•lnt111. 101• • N~i1~•,.:: ... i;.~A~l~Ow1~r ::~IT~ON ft0nl, NewNFI 8t1cll, C1111arn11. Vlllltr 1111 llc:lllloul lfrll'I ... ~ at C:ENTRA· N<lTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN " lht BIYd .. ,._I'""'· COU!'llY of°""""''' NOTICE IS HERfBV GIVl!N_.M.Nt l fTT•ltt O I' 0 11 !he lldltlout nrm n1ine of ltAM IMPOllLT LIZEO 0''1CE SEltVICES end lllel Ulllllor1 ot Ille 111oYe ftlmed dectcltftl Cetl!anlll . ftkll'f', 20 NovM>bir 111', el ll:w'Wdlllll: •ITH·TN ••WILWN:::~=tlTllATIOH DlSTRlllUTOltS ttw:I 11'111 uld llrm 11 ulcl firm h <-.eel o1 11\t lollll*lnt !111! 111 PetWnt PleYlne Clll1n1 "llftll Ille Tiii ortttnt lllll'lt or ntmtt 111d A.M. t i Mlln Lobb'/', C:~i..,Jllll Eilllt of EDNA MAY LEE DI! Id cOtnP01tCI ol 11\t lollowl111 Hr-. wl'lole pto_, whMt n1me In hill 1n(I 111111<1 ol Mid dect.i.111 1r1 rtc1ulrM IO Ille lf\etn, butllllsl l<ldrffMI o1 Ille Tr1n11.,or en(I Civic Clllltll' Ori .... W11!, llY ol le NOTICE IJ NE E • ce11 • ....... ill full •nG lieet 01 rnldttlct 11 •• kllnc: I fol...... Wlll'I lilt l'IKISU"' VO\ld'le!'I, In 11'11 ofllu Trt~fH 1r1 n folloWs: Aftl, COWllY Ill Of•-Sl'9f of It llV GIVEN Th•t totlowt· rn • 1 ei • ri.1 ""'Clfrll ol ll'lol ebovf enlllltd C91.W1 1ir T f Bf\1111 MOKkll ll• E Ctllklnlll I wlM tlH 11 wllllc Mflon ti Mlrlorlt Ut Ct11 hi• flltd lllf't!n 1 lllfl· 111,.;.,1d Mthiyn Pll'ktr. ~ .. Nlltd Jttiet L. fr1tc11111n. 17111 BrDOkllllr1t, ,. Pf'Hlfll fllMI. wlltl 1111 111<1:e1;1,,. 111~ ~.. ,...._. 11~11, CtUf; 1111 hit~! lllcldll', for c1sll 111 AtwM !Ion for Pn!Oetto ol Witt ll'ICI for Letlt,, Ill 51 .. Cosll Mese, (tl!IOtnll No, ,,, FO\lftt1111 Vtlll'I', Cllll. YOUCl\trt. kl 1111 wlldftlhtl'lt<I 11 1111 ollk f Htrmin Pit"' 110 1!, .. ltlOI IMI., _., ol 1111 Unlltd lt11H. ell iiit' flllilllb Adm In lilrallon Wllll-lhe-Wlll-4111"'""" D11td October U, !t7G Dtlecl OCI. f, lt1t al 1111 tllorn"'" JOHN Ill', MCGINLEV, N....-1 lfKll, Cellf. 11111 11'11 l11lert1t .. Ille! ~ ...... ''11.....c• 10 wfl.lch 11 ""* ,.. f\lr""" Arnold Mth'Yn Perktr Jt111t L, Frltcrll'lln )1.0 WllJl!lrt loulfYlfd, S\lllt 111 .. Lei Trtfttl4trN Ttr" &omoal, 701 f . 7111 SI , In 1111 lflOY9 clfterlbtcl '"':c~ • :.•r:::;ur~,,, rll<I Ille! lllt 11..,. end Pll<t Sllle ol C:1Utornl1. Drellff C:lllntY! STATE OF CALl,OltNIA, AflMIM, Celltornl1 toODS, Wllldl 11 lilt .. nit AM, Call!, J-•• Jin1t1, 201 £'. mlldl lllll'tof es IMY bt ""9 er Ill ht Ml'nl t111 '-tn Mii !Or On Oct. U, lt7G, litlo.-. mt, 1 Motl,.,. O•AHGE COUNTY: .i.c1 If bu•lntu of lllt llfldtrallntcl In tll 1tll st linla An1, C1HI ulhlY M1d ntCVll.,., WHl't l!CCtlflil ~ HO'llll'lbtf' '· 1910. t' t ::IO •. m., In tllt Pllbll< In Ind for .. kl Siii•. ""*'lty On Oclobtr .. 1911. btfort me. I Nat•" """'" ""'''"•no to till ftltlt of Nici 11111 ~ lllU•lnHI"""" 11'111 tdd,_ '"'"' 4111111 Cottll. ~ou~'oo;" ,C: c~C."""1 ~. a ol .. 1c1 1POt•A<1 lllr110lcl M. lll'•rtr:er known to-. lll'utillc In 1nd for Mkl S111t. P1rton1!11 dtcecltnt, wt111111 twr "*'"" ttitr lflt \IHd .,,,. 1111 Tr1111tt.., wl!lltn "" ttlfff OetH •Is.ti•• Ane, C1111or11i., CIOmlr ,; c'ii: of Jeni•~ nc"o'n~h•1• Wttt. In lo be 1111 Pl!'Mll wlloll ntrne 11 11/0Krltl-lftflffftcl Jtnet I.. "•ltdn'll!'I MoWll 11 ,., tlrtl PUbllutlon ot !hit 1101ic.. Ytl,. 1111 11111. IO l•t" k/MJWl'I to Ille lJ. lt7G. 'it-:" ne, ,.,.11 I, I'd IO !flt wl?-ll'I lntlf'\lll'ltllf end lo be Ille --wlloM 111"'1 It 1>11bf.crlll-'Ollld Oelobtr 12. 1'10 Trellllll'N, 11'1: );-. JAMii A, MUSICK. •. Ot!H Oc:"• l~Tl~~HN 1ck11C1Wledtfd M Klllecl 1111 UIM. ed lo 11\t Wlllll" l11ttrument Incl IRW IH GUSTl!:N OHLSSON Tll• bulk tr1n11tf 11 to tie COrlWll'lll'ltltd Sllttlll • ( • tT (I k • (OFFl(llllL SEAl! K•llOwltdted ..... •JtlCll!lt tlll .. ,,... lllK\llat ol 1111 wm ., II UNIT•D C:ALlf'OltNIA tANK, Sll\tl Coi.rntr ot Of'tnot. ClllflntllL THOMAS M ~OH.I '' 11:,111 H, CIMttt IOlll(lll Still !flt 1bo\lf n1mtcl dtl.tclt~t Ana Main Otflu, 1011 Ne. Mtln Stre.t, IY C:. 111. •1nc1111. '1tliill , .. , w tcllff Orl • NOlarv PUllllC-C•llfornl1 Mary K. Henrv JOHH "· McOINL•T' S1nll Altl. (111,1n1Y ot °''"''' c1111oorn11. DtlMJf'f' •"fll'l S!lltt Htt M J1t "• l'rlnclPel Olflte tn Mallf'P' Pulltlt -(elUOf'"le )Mt Wlltlllrt I I••,. S111!41 llU 1111 or al!tlf' Now11111btt ,, ltl'O. H. M. ft l llMAM )4 "'1 r II ( t•-· Of1n11 C~ntv _ 'rlndMJ OllWn L.e\ ......... C1Uf11'111l1 ,_J Clllld Dl;lobllr It, ltJO """"'"'• AlftrM'r T:i'":r:., ~':.ffn 11 ..,1111 n .. 1 M1 C0111ml111!111 ea,bf1 Or1no1 Caunl'f' T•h 11111 •1u 1 T,,..., $orno111 -IU) Olwr Dr .. h lll I All 1 1"r I" I St11I, 14, lt13 My Com111!11loll E::111111tre1 Alt9rlllY tor l~Kv!tr Jon.I • Jutkl N""'"" IMcfil, (1111, 91M1 ,.°'":' lllllntt l'UOll\lltd Df•lllHI (Otll 011ty Pllol, Niw, ,._ 117:1 Publ1111M Qr11111t (Otlt DlllY lll'llol, Tt1t11f•rfft "'*'ltl'lod Onl!IH Cotti D1lfr"~ •• ,' ... ' ~,';' ,,o'~"o c.11111 0111, lll'llOI, October 1s. n. 2t •nd Nowmbtr s. l'ublltritoa Or1nM Cotti D•hr lll'llOt. 0t101:>1r u, n, n •nd Hovemllf:, J, Pub!l111ttt orine• Co11t 01nr 111111111 OctoW la. )f 11111 N~ ""' r • • ••• 970 ltSl-10 1t10 •111,.10 Oct. I, IS. 22, 2', 1'10 llS1•70 ltJO 1 ... 70 Ol;tolltr 22, lt70 !t61•10 tt10 - -· . ii • • ", Octoblr , 1970 Wednesday's Closing Pnces Complete_New York Stook_Excliange_List~ • DAILY PILOT illl ' • . . Meeting Se~ A meetlna will be held Mm. day (Oc~ 19) 11 Corona dei Mar, HlcJ! Scbool, L I t t I e 'll><aler, ot 7:30 p.m. to Jlc. quaJJ'fl county tesidents wAh the O:IUd Guidance Center, : The Pf'Oll'a.tn, "Opening tbe Door for Childr en ~ :A Cliallenp for the '70's,'' ·1111u be pr-ted by the . ,...,. fotSlonal staff of th< cent<r: 'Ill< Child Guidance c.nter aids emntlo!laDy dlsfui1*11 chlklten I hr o ugh re!er'1b from adlools, phyoicions, -.. munlty qcnc:i• and pei10oaJ nq ... ts. Bombs Stolen: In San Pedro SAN PEDRO (UPf) -0Mq..,, than 7\IO bombs U3ed by lifh· ermen to control ocwr ·~pis .,..... atolen Wednelday~ the loadinC dock of V.n!on War Surplus. · ; Olflc<n aald the llini'Jl1CIJ. Ioac bomb& cootalntd 1tiel fragments which tlsbeirden use to acare off 1tals wlina hauUnc In their aitch. .... : I Deltdlv.s aald the ~pi.. 1lves wer. apab&e of ~~ In( hole• lo ooncnte won.. TI1e bombl, vallied al '10. Wtte liken While tmalPfts unJoaded otbfr castS al' lie lion. I ·1:1ousES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR ~_LE HOUSES.FOR SALi-HOUSES FOR-SALE HOUSES FOR SALE :OW.rel 1000Gener•I 1000 General lOOOGeneral 1000 General 1000 General 1000 General 1000 ~;;;;;;;::;;;;;:;;;;T;;;;HE:;:_=RE=A=L~I;;;;== p=,;;;;;;;;;;;; ()·=11=;;;;;;;11Nmu£WpDriDoRTiiT HE1mi&HittTs ·1 ;:0~NL~Y;;;::;S2~6,900~1 4 BEDROOM HOUSES FOR SALE Newport Beech 1200 NEAR NEW DUPLEX Coron• del Mar 1250 I 675-3000 I The number to ceJI whether buying, selllne or leasing e!..incta .J~lt1 so. of 15th st VA No Down 2· BATH ESTATERS PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES Newly listed-Lot • 60 ; perfect for the lam-$30,700 lly who wants a spacious waterfront home. 4 That's right! Unbrl~ble in Th~ trtta, covered patio & the excellent care of thia home nµlkea this truly e~ joy.-.ble livlr:w. Located on quiet cui-d@-saC street • please call us right away on this good buy. AnxiOl.l!I own- er will even pay your clos- ing costs so you do not have. even one penny move-in ex. pense. Ne~·ly pajnttd Inside I: out wilh brick f.ittpLace. Back yard patio, dbie car gi'figi, aulomatic water aoftener. $1100 Down to lat TD. Full In mlnt cond. 3 Bdrms., 2 hath lower w/bll-lns, S""'ed- ish l:rpl., (Jlts. &,drapes. Up.. per 2 BR. I ha. Nice patio & 1undecll:. Priced at $55.500. Call: 673-3663 642-~~I Irvine Terrace •2 spaci>u.s 3 BR. Mme, ap. I prox. 1 yi-s. old. Qiuet area. I a:>xm Lot. Adult occupled. Lovely priv. patiO. SliiWI well • Aski"K \46,900. , WANT EVERYTHING? 4 bdrms., 31h baths, formal dn. rm. family rm., breakfast nn., laundry rm. ,with blt·in sewing center, lovely pool with loads of decking & covered lanai, fruit and sbade tree yard. co urtyard en· try, and even a bomb shelter. All for $65,950. Phone 646-7171 to inspect. SIMPLY MAGNIFIC.ENT Gracious adult living for two can be found in this spacious bungalow with Roman baths, 2 secluded patios & fire- place. AND an elegant garden tvalk to the pool and outdoor entertainment area. A special property to meet your special needs ..• only $481500. To inquire call 673·8550. "WIFE PLEASER" Read this ad completely and consider this five bedroom home on a quiet tree lined street in Newport Beach for only $44,950. This charmer has a secluded living room, spacious family room, and a modern sunny kitchen. Now for the wav of life; the back yard tit's l 71 feet across the back) has a fantastic patio, lanai, a lawn, a lawn volleyball area, and a pool. You must see this before you buy. Call 546-2313. SUPER HOUSE A roon1v 1900 SQ . ft. 'vith 3 Bedrooms. 3 baths, large separate Family Room and formal dining room. Near new lush car- peting -extra large landscaped yard with tons of concrete at a low, low. $32.· 500 -Only 10% down . Phone 673-8550 to inspect. THE TWINKLING LIGHTS will fascinate you. The l res h ocean breeze will refresh you, and the spacious well-engineered floor plan will please you. 4 Bedrooms. 21h: b a th s, walnut cabinets. tinted g I a s s and red brick patio, $57,500. A Lusk Harbor View Hills View home. Call 673-8550. FOR A MR. FIX-IT One bedroom livable cottage in Newport Heights on a 50xl27 toot lot. Rent or live in this until you are ready to build your dream home. Best location in the Heights for $19,950. Call for showing. 54&-2313. ALMOST ... EW CUSTOM DESIGNED . 4 BEDROOM + POOL Executive type home with Mission Tile roof. Top quality thruout. Formal Din- ing + Family Room + Spacious Mas- ter Bedroom + 3-Car Garage. On quiet street with Park and Schools close by. $69,950. 646-7111 BLUFfS DRIVE BY!! 2150 Vista Dorado (Eastbluff Drive to Vista Dorado ). DRIVE BY to see the love- ly location and CALL US to see the beautiful condition inside this roomy 3 bedroom 21h bath home -gold shag carpet and outstanding greenbelt view. Only $42,500 with excellent terms. Call 673-8550. NEWPORT HEIGHTS CUSTOM 4 Bedroom, 2 bath. 2000 so . ft. home. Situated in one of the most· prestigious neighborhoods. Completely refurbished and decorated throughout. Relax under the covered patio or soak up the sun by the pool. Beautiful minimum care land· sc aping makes the picture complete. Total living for only $46,950. 54&-23 13. EASTSIDE SPARKLER It sparkles with cleanliness, has ne'v kitchen, new bathroom, new carpets and drapes plus a beautifully landscaped yard and .Patio -alley entrance for boat or trader -$24,500 -See anytime ••. 646-7171. POOL HOME -$27,500 It sparkles from the new roof and paint job to t..b.e pool. Can't afford a pool - Try this on for size ..• 3 Bedrooms, covered patio, Solar heated pool. All in t op condition -Phone 6~7 171. UNIQUE Spanish. Republic Home. Yes a large five bedroom tri-level home in lovely Mesa Verde with a separate family room and dining room. lt has the lari!est yard in the Mesa Verde area, 45xl54x49x128x 104. U you're looking for a large home and a larJte yard this is it! Call now for 1n appointment I<> i n s p e c L $53,500. 546-2313. NEWPORT IEACH 1700 Newpo<t ll•d. "46-7171 CORON.A DEL MAR 132 M•r9u•rit• 671-1550 COSTA MESA 27f0 H•rbor ll'td. 546-21 ll INVESTMENTS 2784 H•rbor Blvd., Suitt 20 I, Coitt Mti• 546-21 16 Experience Eliminates Experiment Extra lge BR., 4 Ba., pwdr. rm. Lge . liv. rm. N".wport Beach, View. Large .& den; 3 car garage. Beaut. patio/garden, BR's. formal dining rm. deck· & dock. By App't. Jluge family rm. with cathe. dral beam ceilings, 2 fire. For Complete information plact>1 + BBQ._Paneling in on all homes.& lots, please call : tam. rm. Che~ kitchen 2 ~ baths. lath & plaster. cUs. CALL : BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR totn built Brick patio, Ter- 833 Dover Dr., Suite 31 N.8. 642-4620 raced rear yd, _ v.·on't last. ll ~~!!~~~~~!!!!~"!!~~~~~~~~!j Jiurry, Call 1n4l ~ ll·Gen~•-r•'--1 ___ l"'-000'-" Generel 1000 FOREST l-OLSON *TAYLOR VllESTCLIFF BEAMED CEILING Inc. Realton 19131 Brookhu.rst Ave. BEAUTY """'Ing'°" a.."'" Herc ls a 11parkling one year Continental Nichols Real Estate ~9521 • ) J k .NIOiOLS DIVORCE SALE '""" $23,000 Newport •• Fairview MU811 (enytlme) associated BROKERS-REALTORS 202S W Bolboci 673 -)66) *THE BLUFFS See this choice Bonita. model, l level hOme; 3 Br, 2 Ba, the uIUmatl' in gracious liv. ing. APP,I'OX 4 yrs )mg. Nt all schls. $43.500. 2)25 Vista Caudal. Ruth Seeley Realtor, ask f o r lofarge Tustin, 6134700 or fi15.-0666. CORONA BY OWNER DEL MAR WESTCLIFF AREA F1XER.UPPER < br. !rpk, bltns, "'''· drp" sprinklers, pool • sized yard. (Bii \\ ,, m .1111 Ill: II I\ I\ r f~ .. ,.,/ 2407 E. Coasi Hwy., CdM AN EASY WALK To all stores & markets. CdM duplex. t.o..·er l·BR. is a complete charmer! U~ per 2 BR. Never vacant. App't. only. , CURT DOSH, Realtor 642-6472 Eves. 673-3468 1730 W, Coast Highway Mod. pool home with 3 gen- 'erous size bdrms & great storage, $45,850 DOVER SHORES Brand NE\V &. beautiful 4 BR, den, fonna.I. din nn. old home that shows li~ a s \ • 1 model. Tltis 3 bodrm horn• pec1a ' Spacious S bedrm & family, 3 bath hOme on lge oorner lot. Owners say sell NOW: $29,000, Nr schools. You own land. VACANT. 1-===========tl LltUe ~wk for a .bf.'ach area. ONl y $31,500 I• OPEN 1·5 $108,IXXJ 410 ~torning Star Lane 1'0ur 25th Ye•r'1 WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO. Realtors NE\VPORT CENTER 2lll San Joaquin Hills Road 644-4910 LEISURE LIVING SPACIOUS THREE BDRJ\.I, T\\'O BAIB CONOOMIN- JUM with huge 12'x24' car- peted, l'nClosed and covered patio. Offering B/N Elect. OVt'n & range. fireplace ra- diant li'eat, BIN booksheives, huh carpeting and drapes. Detached double garage • professionally landscaped thru-out. Enjoy easy living on the badminton <."OUIU. shuffle board, putting green and pools Ylith 32 o t her ehannlng neighbors. $47.00 per mo. includes outsidt' mainrenanee and all eXterior painting. Relax and .live • Full price only $35,950. M . M. LA BORDE, Rltr. 646-0555 Eves: 646-4579 ONE OF THE FEW Beautiful aduJt occupied 3 b«lroom 3 bath home wilh upgraded ttPlil, drps, a pa. tio & sundeck &. a IUge c:or. ner Jot. It's near UCI "'ith pool, 1ennl1 courts and backs up to a }Ovely park. Asking $34,950 will show anytime • open evenings. features a huge master bednn suite, lovely garden 3 Bedroom F R E E D O b1 kitchen. 2 patios, upgraded HOME with huge 70xl 10 Joi shag crpts & cus1om drps. • block wan enclosed Oean The oversized lot has room sharp and easy to cW,.n, s100 · for a boat & trlr and is Down + $750 closing cost. beautifully !andscaped with $20 995 many exotic plantll. The 1 work is all done for you Exclusive with: here. Move in and start liv-N wporl ing, Just list~ • $3.5,950. e • COATS ,& WALLACE . REALTORS Open Evenings • 962-4454 • SPANISH IMNOR- 5 BR plus POOL •• Fairview "46-8811 (•nytime) Open Dai~ 328 Aliso Newport Heights Big and beautiful. Spanish corner ol Beacoo an::hes to carved wood dou-1 short block from ble-door entry. Tri -level Cliff Dr. charm. •luge master suite. By Owner $36,500 Step.down formal dining. Spacious 3 bedroom 2 bath, Separate family room. Large living room wtth fireplace breakfast area in all elec. large dining area overlook'. kitchen. 21,1, baths_ R~ tile Ing lovely secluded lanai, roof. Covered rose gardens. carpeting, drapes, built·in Trees. Sparkling pool. It's electric kitchen. Garage oll AAA -it's diHerent -So alley with electric eye open. hurry. Call <7141 962-5585. er. Nicely landscaped cor- FOREST E. OLSON ~·· 548-144' Submit offers _ A6king. , • $42,950 CUSTOM 4-PLEX Choice Newport ~ch area, 3 BR &. 2 B.R units -excd- Jent owner occupied & tax shelter property. $12,000 Down. • $75,000 3 bdrms. country kitchen. 642-1611 or 642-9996 Cheery· fireplace. E n j o y _....:.::..:=..:,:,"""'-~= backyarrl BBQ + Patio. TAX Sl!ELTER/'I'RJ-PLEX Store boat in backyard. al-2 br unils/lse bold land. Icy access. A best buy. Hur. $39,500 by owner. ry! 838-7494 aft 6 pm ·wkdys DIAL 645-0303 FOREST E. 01SON REALTORS Newport Heights 1210 RENT OR SELL _iii,,.,iiiiiliifaiiriiboiirii. ii€ii .• iil.iii0i I EARLY NE\\'PORT. 2~ BR .. LIDO WATERFRONT w/3 garages, on Jge. lot. APTS.·320 LIDO NORD Homey & livable but needs NOW REDUCED TO work. Asking $24,ooo • or rent at $1 75. $150,000-Xlnt Terms 6 Beautiful units. 6 car HIDEA\VAY. Charming, se- garages & utilily room with eluded honie; 3 BR., 1\-'.i ba., '!!!!!!!!!~~"!'!!"''!""!!!!!!!!!!!I 80 U. frontage on excellent bltn. kltch. w/BBQ. Lge. HOME & swimming beach. Units are frpl. & radiant heat; new INCOME newly furnished. paint, spic & spe.n! $32,500 • Bill Grundy, Realtor or rent at $250. TY.1> homes on a comer lot. 833 Dover Dr .• f'i.B. 642-4620 CALL 0 646·2414 One 3 beden • . . each I i::=~==i=-i--i:::-::1-i-i-i-i: I IJ • ~ with indivkiual fenced and I 1 ...... .. ,.,,.,.,.,.. ,..,.._ &th ,._ LOWEST PRICE ; ... n cently redecorated and in PACESETTER with large IOI, Nt•r Nrwporl roi l Offir r e~cellcnt condition. Live in 3 bednn & family rm, ready Oil(' & lei your tenant make to move into at $34,950. the payml'ntil. -Call now? CrplS, drps, full bltns, $28,lllO Only $39.500. loan is assumable. Owner C I h moving north. must sell. 0 eswort Y Don't '""' "' th;, lovely home. Call Heritage Rcal- lors 54().ll51. Open Evenings & Co. REALTOR Newport Beach Ottice NO DOWN! Newport Shores 1220 Large Family Home 3 BR. & family rm. Near oommun. clubhouse. Needs some painting & some clean- ing. Submit your offer on asking price <>f $29,850. MORGAN REALTY 67).6642 675-6459 lnc. Realton 10'18 Bayside Drive 19131 Brookhunt Avo. * TAYLOR 615-4!130 $23,950 4 Bel. + Family Rm. Owner desperate. Book shelv- es in cozy den. natural Palos Verdes stone fircplatt, din. ing rm, huge family room, built.in. Park like yard. S.10.1720 Dover Shores 1227 --"-""-H-'ngt'-o_n_s._"-"--1 SUPER SWAP RENTING??? 4 BR + DR t FR $21,!IOO }lJLL PRICE. PAY· HOTEL LOBBY? BOAT SLIP MENT $153 includes ALL. \Veil. aln1os1 ! Th ls 3 bdrm .. subject to 6.5 annual per-DR .. executive home has a Owner will trade all this • CE"nlage rate loan. Two 65 ft. liv. rm. Loe. on quiet for GOOD lot or Land. Brand TARBELL 295S Harbor ,,.,,. PANORAMIC VIEW Perfect f o r entertaining, Spanish. con!emp, Court & atrium, 5 BR. 5 ba. 5000 sq fl. hr celling, 4-car gar, $169,000. 548-1249 COATS story, 3 bedroom home with cul de sac. $69.950 new 1i,·aterfront home \\ith • & double garage. Gas built-OPEN FRIDAY 1-5 36' boat slip. VACANT. Im. DUPLEX · WALLACE ins, deep pile carpets v.·ith 2242 DONNIE RD .. N.B. mediate pos.scstion possible. Universitv P•rk 1237 REALTORS matching drapes. 2"' baths. 1 '0ur 25th Year" Valued at $84,500. Bring Submit your dov.'n paymont WESLEY N. what you have and lets BARGAIN HUNTING? "" •141 H \\"ith garages. $26,500. ---ro TAYLO 0 lradc. URRY! See this neat, clean 4 BR... (Op E • ) • R C We lls-McCardle, Rllrs, en ven•nv• W lk & L , DIAL 645-0303 21> ba. townhO"se Mth i"" lllii:i:C:~:::::ii:i:i:i:=:'I a er ee Realtors 18lO Newport Blvd., C.M. the r ight amount of patio NE\VPORT CENTER FOREST E. OLSON 1.,.!!!!!!!!!!!"548-""'7'"7'"29 ... !!!!!!!!!!~ I &. lawn; It leaves lots of time Rentals/Leases Reallors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road REALTORS I' for tennis, golf & swimming. * r.fesa Verde Harbor Es. 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adan1s 644-4910 2299 1-larbor, c .r.t $27, 900 45 Acres or parks &: recrea- tates • clean. vacant. 4 & I .."54~5-~'4~9~1~0!'.P<:'."~'1•"_.l_!l9;o oo~P'.!'':' l"'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I """':~~=:~~~-· I Huge Family Rm. tional facil. for use by both famlly. Lse $260 Incl gar. Everyone Qualifies GOLDEN DAYS " B<"drooms. entry hall, d in~ children &: adulti'I. OY.11er dener. And jey,•eled nights are yours ing rm, built-Ins, central anxious to join family out * Back Bay 5 bednn, dining. v .. hen you buy this homey floor plan. No down GI or of state. Only $32.900 • &. ii family & brklst rms. $325. Assume lhis low lntcrest loan ReaJty Company 1hrce bedroom bungaJow. ntA t<'nns. 54()..1720 can be sold 1vilh small do·.11n and save. Spacious and IRVINE TERRACE Optlon to buy @ $34,750 or It's unusual, functional and Tarbell 2955 Harbor payment. best orfcr. roomy, cozy f.ireplaCl' qu iet Immaculate four bedroom channing -$2500 ""·ill ban. • d h•11 * ProfessiOnal offices -$84 den, plush crptg. au· bltns, home with pool size yanl. die. Has lormal dining area, SEE YOUR REALTOR re I 10 SJOO, near WestcliH. 2 ba!hs & 1i,·alk 10 beach. A Beautifully landscaped. large llving room with fire. FOR YOUR BIG FREE ~·ondcrful buy at $29.950. Family room with ""'et bar, place. excdlent potential. NEWCOMERS KIT Call ~;).8424 , hide.away den/office, break. fast spncc In kilchen & high beamed ceilings in llving room & master bedroom. $65,IXX>. PAut-WBtl'll CARNAHAN &&ALTY CO, NEAR THE BEACH 675-3210 642-1235 Great lota11on for this 3 bed-l oii~=~:O~:o;:-:~-l·===::ii:i:i:i:i:i:i:i:~ l093 Baker, C.~f. room home situat~on al'-Ei quisite Linda Isle J L" • EASTSIDE FHA·VA Country • Sl}'le Lot ,y j th Plu1h carpets, lush decor. oy~s 1v1n9 . LOADS OF TREES, Farm. immaculale condition. AU Relax I: enJOy hie around this Large l~'O Bdnn. home with like kitchen with gas range, the amenities of the very poobea1~1~~~:e~tC:us~mtil~:~. :~:Fr!"s1:::n~~-~:~ washer and refrigerator in-finrst or Bayfront homes. duded. WHY RENT? No Just vacated. immediate oc-4 bedroom, 1% bath, detach-carpet1. Copper plumbing Money Down Gl's or $800 cupancy • call for further ed garage, on a quiet cul-throughout. Kitchen range, rnA. CAU.. ME. details. de·lillC street in Back Bay relrlgerator. J>O"'er mower, Costa Mesa 1100 JUST REDUCED Now $36,950 .-2000-aq. ft, 4 bednn, family & dining. Large covered patio. drps, shag CJl>IS, block wall & wrought iron gale. Excel· Jent location near park, school & shopping. Now Va. cant • make offer; Call Her- ilage Rl'altors 540.1151. Open Evenings. Walker & lee PETE BARRETI ~,a.u~~ill show anytime -:'c~ot~~~. w:=e~ncPa: REALTY 642-5200 and gl'BPl' arbor. Large rear '!!!!!!!!!~~~~~!:"'!!!•I REALTY Univ. Park Center, Irvine Call Anytime 833-0820 SEE US ••• For a f.ine seleclion of homes olll'red for sale in Unfversity Park &. Turtle Rock -Per- haps we have the righl one for YOU! ("I li1 li'l 1l'!ld. -- -l11'1illur MARVELOUS VIEW 20(11 Bayside Dr. Be au t. shake roof I-sty. 3 Br. 4 ha. waterfront home xln~ sy,im- ming beach. Ne~·Jy redccor. $175,000 SHOWN BY APPI'. Bill Grundy, Realtor ~ Dovei4 Dr., N.B. 642-4620 * PANORAMIC VIEW Luxury Ocean Blvd. Duplex. Overlooking Jetty &: Harbor. By Owner: 673-8866 * Lido ,Isle 1351 SALESMAN WANTED We have an <>pening for a creative & ·knowledgeable person who would like the freedom of a smalll'r office & the advantages of a prime location, dealing in finer properties. bowan~ loCl.'8012 Ja. 11eoltoa 3416 Via Lido 675-4562 REDUCED Immac. 5 BR., family rm. 45 f .. lot strut lo street,. By app' l. only. $9.l750 LIDO REAL TY INC. 3377 Via Lido 673-7300 Huntington Beach 1400 BEACH PROPERTY 3 BR-ONLY $18,500 \Vow! HR.rd to bclleve. l>fod. ern 3 Bedroom 2 full baths famlly size dining, latesi push button built·ins. Large corner lot with boat gate. Enormous covered patio. Low, low down, Vacant. Fast possession. Won't last. Hur- ry & eau 1n41 962-5585. FOREST E. OLSON Inc. Realtors 19131 Brookhurst Ave, Hun!ington Beach $21,500 FULL PRICE 3 Extra large bednn~. dining area in ltitchen. like new hardwood floors, clean & neat doll houSl'. \Vhat a buy! No down Vl'ls, JO\\' down 10 11nyoTll'. llEAL ESTATE HUNTINGTON BEACH OFC. 894-5311 Open 7 days . 8:30 lo fl::tl GI NO DOWN Sharp 4 bedrm, l-1( ha, elE't' !tit.. lovely crpts & d11>s. Jge cor~r 101. Submit any terms. 847·8507 Eves. 96&-1178 mjh§li!:W 2790 Harbor mvd. at Adams 1• -----(Mll'dMINthlltiJt 1.rea. Alll'y acress for boat Unh.'t!rshy Park XLNT view across from golf 11>•110<• 1-:::::::;:;::::;=::;:::j ~ 141-!llO yard w;1h ""'rtoo 1ru;1 WHERE ELSE 1'! w.,t.rn Bank Bldg. 54!>-M65 Open 'Iii 9 Pr.t LEASE OllEGE REALTY or traill'r sturage. Full price Day 833-0101 Nights cpurse, very lge modified 2 BLUFF VIEW $7500 DOWN Great view! Immaculate 4 bedroom, oversize garage, extra car or boat apace. $47,500 • $7500 Down. 644-2430 BE A WINNER Near nt'W, 3 king size bed-l~i:i:::ii:i:•lliiOi:i::=iii-i:i::=i":=i-=:=l':=itll:I only $25,000. ~Ionliccllo condo. Where else BR, 3 ha, 17X24 tam. nn mu, 21~ ~lb, bltns, 2 lrplcs, __ M. M . le BORDE, Rltr. can you r;et a beautifuJ 3 BR, w/.beam cel11ng, lge liv rm, ~ h Com 1 1 1y 2 Ba home ~·Uh carefree Eastbluff 1242 formal din'g rm, bltn bbq in '""'' ~"'. '" ...,. WALK TO BEACH -E"'· -decorated with NE\V car-POOL for only $22,750? See kit, bltn rnnge &. oven, per.41, dble ··arage. $300 Per Near new 3 King si7.e bed-'$1££tJ.!F l!1is anytime. e BLUFFS e detach gar. open house. by mo. rms, 2'Ai baths, extra Jge Jiv. ,.-... -,., CALL (9 '''· 1 414 11E XTRAORDINAIRE''. owner. 1-5 pm Sundays. Lachenmyer Realty ing rm .. 2 fireplaces, bltns, 9•,. ~.Mii 3 Bdrm., family rm., 2~ ba. 84(i..6754 alt 6 pm Call 646-3928 or 545-3483 redecorated. new crpts, dble LEASE -ue,..k.... On a pine scented greenbelt. 2 On An R-1 lot ...,~~~~~~~!!!!!!I garage. Consider trade, va. •EAL TY Beaut. ~luded pa 11 o s. Lo 1 ho REPOSSESSIONS cant. s49,950. Unique Spanish Condomin· Nt•r Newport Po11 orrlt• $48,SOO u::: t, re:. ~tro11~~B.~~ 1 --h Rlty jum, 3 bedrmi, gold shag e OP AILY IS e BOYD REALTY ~ Spa.rk1ing clean homes. !!Orne ~ enmyer carpets, arched flreplact, EN D • tion. Illness. owner mim. newly painted .r. carpeted. 2, can &'6-3928 <>r !>15-3483 Wl\llcd patio and all electric 'TD aold! Assume 6%% VA 3629 E. CoMt Hwy .. Cdl\t liquidate at $22,500, Submit ... 4. i 5 bdrm1. Some \\>i.th kltchl'll. Vacant, owner enx. loan. $148 Per mo, Redecor. • 67~5930 • all l<"rms. pools. ntA-VA conv. te.nm. ·-------k>us. S32S nlOnth Cal.so one 3 Br. W/\Y cpts, drps. Im-======'==:01 KRAFT REALTY trom $17,IXX) 10 $40.<XXI. HARBOR VIEW at S300 mo.) med. posses&Jon! Only $22,· Corona del Mar 1150 842-1418 962-6424 Collln1 & \V11tts lnc. 4 BR., 2~ ba. \Valnut p1u1l'led 950. 1984 Federal Ave. · 8843 Adi.ms Ave. 962-5523 ffl.lll. rm.: din. rm .. frplc. Call: Patrick \Vood 545-2300 LAST 2 DUPLEXES BETTER THAN NEWI With The W1nneni, You'll 2 DUPLEXES Anxious out of tO"'" owner! • Bill Haven. Realtor Reduced -Pticed lo Sell This s;:,1i1:11n9 Pool (H&F) • )lks<i"\i~c '.Reali[ 546 -5990 $65,IXXI. CALL: &1;1·7662. 2llJ E. Coast, CdM 67J.3211 Wtek. Only. $68.500. So. of 4 rm + Family Rm learn more Yt'ith our indi-2 JlJt, per untl. OMC 10 vldualli:ed on·~job train. ' beach. You own tb(I land! ll'cl program. Yo11'U «'*Trl $42.500 Each more and •'Ork with rxclt-George Williamson lnc. pleL'81'1t people. Cheek Realtor • oot. can toct.y •• 5-16-2316 673-4150 645-1564 Eves. NEWPORT HEIGHTS O THE REAL ·"-ESTATERS . ·r QITALITY HOME Jvan Wtll1 ~ Som new -4 BR 3(Q) Sci. II ., 4 bedroom, 21' 3 BA, famU~ rm & P'-"'dr rm'. bath. Ltase · lea$«! optiOn or Courtyard 1100I. V 1 E \V , snle. 1108.!100, ""' J. w.,d, ruir.. JEAN SMITH RLTR 646-.Jf~. O~n Dl!lly. 1 ' ESTATE SALE Prln1r &wide locat)On f'l('ar SA Country Oub. 3 Bedrm, l\td\.l·d nn. txlra lg lo1 I; )1lnt, &.-.Ira 2 ear ga·r. Sell FHA • VA or con\-tnUonal $25,0CK), Coste Mes• Investment 541-7711 OAit.Y PILOT WANT ADS! IT'S Be~cl'I house lime. Big· tt•I RlecUon ever! See tht lf'C:tion DOWI DtJ.f>.i-A·l.tNF.S. 642-5678 1400 E. 17rh, C.~T 646-3255 Dial &t2--5678 &. chsrp ti. --------·-------'"--~ H1Vy. ShoN walk to beach. Custom fe11.~ure1! Best attal CAPTAIN BLIGH lst & Goldenrod. Fir1e home Und r rirlctdl!! iJ going 10 mlu clmslng nb. Ii rental. Crpl<"d, self clean. HAFFDAL REAL TY bils In l"c fitlds be.low thil Ing ove.ll!I, larite rooms. 142-4405 COl.Y 3 br ho~·._°" e1111.ie. Shown at ynur convenk!nce, $47,SOO J\ted ocean viC!w 1ot. Tree Call 6#02fi6. 7!\ yr ot<t. 2 atory, ~ IQ. lined CUI -""-.... ..... LOW DOWN It. I Rooma ~ Gome Room. IC h 0 0 I 1. $27,500. Oa¥s !l6M816. ••• '192 E &'2-112'2 BUYI thl1 better n'nnw 2 bed· '"°"" : ves · · room view hom". ?-.IU!IT s=F=1=J.~TH=1=s~w=EE1<=-' Open House D•ily 1-5 Lca.se.;oP,lon! S.S.IXX> Down:' 4 BR/3 Be.. Owner Anxiou1! 306i To.ylor \\'y. Ncwly/dcc.""Or. 328 roppy OPEN DAIL\' Agt: MS.1070, 962-7524 (lee "1"27'°'.:'JOO"°"';=R=••c-l~io-r.,..,..~,,...-lunlvcrslty Rl"all.)' 6~10 OJI. Dlft'Ctoryl "* • Call 642-5678 l rharge it. 3001 E. Coit~t Hwy .• Cd~1 &turdt,y -DIMl;,..A·LINES! . ' 11• HC -u ... , Hu _.. .. I - 1J ' $1 • -1 ... -. •• .. •• ...... --·:.. . . • '• .-' , ... ~ • '"' .. •• ph " '" m< '" '" HUi o~ ""' • 1\101 "" tor. Bo ... 847- s~ .( "' be! ""' '"· PL La ... w . "' "' '" "" bii .~ °' 11 ,., •• '"°' Gt Fa ow "'· bo ,,. 12' '"' Or BU .... Ya "'' i;p: ro m GI " NE m' wt ,,, •• do OR j~ M '" '"' PY 13 OU .. an '" In m .. m fa L s. I 4 I 12 ' I .. .. '· ! HOUSES l'OR SALi HOUSES fOlt SALE RENTALS -Pumlshod .. RENTALS -Unfumlthod ThundaJ, Oct.obtr 22, 1970 DAILY PtLOT 3 !; ltlNTAL' RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS ""N r ALS -Uofumlshod Aph. Fumtohecl Apte. Pumlohecl Apia. Fumlshed A"ta. Unfuml1hod ~...,--__;.;:"-'-'-"'..;.;..'--II -'-=-'-"-"""""'---- -Cororte dtt Mer 3250 H'"'tlnfton Boe d! -HunllntfOft Boed! -Le9un1 81~ C"Ol Co·:o M'!s 5100 I ==:;:::==::;::=======:::::1 ~'ft";B;';E;-:A;:CH~~":;:. 41'1'T;". 'i: --? +z 1705 l--'==.;..;.;=;c.;..-1 Ntwport Boed! l200 G-r•I Huntl'!!!"!' Bo.ch 1400 L•-e Bo.h EASY LIVING $139per11111. pays All Ju51 assume the low 5~ % Jl('r annum VA Join _ extra wide c mer lot, boat gale, Ii piny c.rea. beauti.tu! atulg carpets, 3 Ja.n:e bcdrm1, family room, modem .1.11 to. rnom>w kltcbe11 + a POOL. 1''\111 prlee $26.400 • no 00M1 vets or low down to a~ne. REAL ESTAE HUNTINGTON BEACH Ol"C. -5311 Ope.n 1 dayg 8:30 to 8:30 Top Selling 38"droom2bathhonlf9.onty LRG 2 BR oceanfront hit. $33.000. S u n n Y breakfast 'Frplc, WViler $250. Adulll room buill·in kitchen· fire.. only, 6?J..aS. t plaee: Dining atta ~'living Coron• del M.r tt.SO room, o~n to gene.rvug dz. e,d Yard. ..../Olah . REAL ESTATE * 2 BR • CH.ARM! Homey UtUe Jum. Doll· House •. Beam ceilings. -Oceanside of hwy. Walk to everything. Lesse. S 19 0 . Shown by appl 613-5.il3. 1190 Glen.l'le)Tt. St. 494-9413 54>-0316 Lido 1111 2351 EMERALD BAY WINTER fumta!s. ' BR, 2 Juat listed! Attr, tl'lt.dilio~ bath, trplc, FA hi., $285, 4 3 BR. 3 Ba., sep, liv. rm., BR & den. 3~ BA, $450, din, rm. & tam. rm. fi13.2559. 213: &-285.3 716 Emerald Bay $15,000 3 'BR. 3 Ba. oH-wate,r home ShoWJ'I by app't. Furnished -$450 Mo. 8 111 Grundy, R••ltor Bill Grundy, Rltr. 642-4620 833 Dover Dr., NB 642-4620 OFRCE! FOUR blocks from beach, l BR. 2 BA, den. Sacrifice for r-.tonth ol Septem~ ls!, 2nd, quick sale. 448 ltlyrtle, 3rd place wlnnen l:l~Ung. Laguna Be a c h . Call ion Beach/Fountain Valley Anaheim. 774-8331 for in- Board of Realtors. Clients formalion, or open house \\'ailing -llst now! Sat & Sun. Belboo ltlend 1010 SO. Baylront; 4 Br. 3% ba, waterfront home &:: 2 br. . 1 ba_ garag1' apt. Dock. Bill Grundy Rltr. 642-4620 847-8507 642-012'7 43l.s769 l °F"AB=ULO~~u~s~Ocec--an-•v~ie-w Laguna Be•ch 2705 m I.' 'Ip ,.-, lOOxlOO w/util.. & L /S I • 1\,1'"41jf , . paving under way. $27,500; ease • e Furnished • ,f;,.'91.,., ... • $5,000 dn w/good terms on Lovely Beach Condo ., 1LW.n balance. Bkr. 494-8100 or Avail Now for lease thnl 497-1021 eves. J une or longer, 2 BR, 2 BA, 59UEAKY C~N l========I upper w;th living, dmlng ·I bedroom beauty yau won 't S•n Juan kitchen areas main floor ov. believe in prestige neighbor-Caplstr•no 172S erlookiJig beautiful po o I. hood with step sa.ver kilch. Large 2 car port plus 1tor- en, 20 x 30 patio, FlRE-4 ACRE estate land ar horse age & complete laundry fa- PLACE, and Jots of goodies. ranch, nice view, ajd. other clllties. All beauttfuUy & Landscaped like a garden parcels. $48.000: Sl5.000 dn. completely furnished linens and only $:?8,000 VA or FllA. will release clear bldg. !iite china, etc. ii desired. OnlY for 100% financing. Bkr. Walker & Lee 491-1210 or 493-1706 eves. 100 slePs to private beach. Tennis court & 2nd pool al. s'o on property with gorg- Realtors Apartments for eous landscaping thru-out. '1682 &linger Sale 1980 Easy acee&11 to super mkt, l --"-""~"'="'="°'C--5_140c.._ ---------· I shopping, etc. $325 monht, $25,000 WATERFRONT-Three l br winter basis. Wi.11 consider 4 Bedroom z bath, large fenc. units w/dcclt. $63.000. Pri~ lease • purchase or outright ed 60xUO lot, modern kllch. ciples only. Owner 673-2662 sale. Adul!s prele!Ted. Refs. en with bltns, 18x14 family aft 6 pm. 499-2152 AM or 837-0791 any. room, w/w crptg & drps, · time. big covered pauo, ciase to RENTALS • s~"".--,,,.,b-~.-•• ~ Houses Furnished ...., mo. r, crp .... , rps. shopping & schools, S2500 Pvt beach. 3 Arch Bay. Down, no 2nd. General 2000 549-0206. ,, lllage Real Est;1 te ''2-4471 ( ::::.1 546-1101 • By owner, 4 br, 21h ba., lge corner lot, 847-1047, 17321 Gurney Ln. Fountain V•lley 1410 OWNER, We1t:mont home, 4 br, 2 ba, lrplc, unfinished lxlnus rm, lge fenced lot. JoilA appraisal S27 ,400. $25, 700 assume FHA 5\~ t;!. l<.<an, $158 pymnts. 536-6701. * Crackling Logs IN FIREPLACE add to charm of this 1 Br, home surrounded by trees & park like landscaping, Ganfener included. n65. C & S Speody RENTALS 541161 RENTALS Houses Unfurnished General 3000 1 BR hOme tot/pet ok •• $110 Z BR gar, tot/pet ok •. Sl05 3 BR, 4 kids/pet ok ••.• $150 ·4 BR, rumpus rm kids/pets ............. $175 4 BR dtachd rumpus rm kids/pets ck ••..••.. $195 3 BR horse ranch la/opt $225 STAR*LET 77~7330 *CUDDLE UP LANDLORDS!! cozy rottap nr betch, beam ceiJlqp, frp&c, llC\'e 'A ret:rlg, 2 BR, 1 ba, $220 Vacancy Problmia Ended1~mo~·~.,....~-"-"-----1 FREE supply or qu&lltled 2 BR. Fl'e9h paint, new cpts, tenanta at no coet to )'OU. S.' or hW)'. No pet s. Ask for LEE or OLA $200/mo. 432 Fernleal. 213: B32-6600 761 ... 767 """'--~---~-·l'2~B~R.~T~.~,~.m-.r-m-.~,~B~1"'~.~,, Huge Corner Lot ooean. . on La'"''"'· s235 P CJ Mo., ulll. included S A OUS 3 Br, 2 f?, Stove, Scenic Propel'liell 67!.-5726 crpta,. dllPI. patio, fenced "'""""""""'"'=77,.-,,,-I yard room for boat ()l' trail· 2 BR. Jlon1e. $19$/mo. See er. KIDDIES & PETS OK. Set.sun 9--5. $210, 621 J~mlrll?, CdM C & S Speedy 2 BR, la ha, w/stove.. & RENTALS 541161 ,.frig. pario. Adu!U. 1195 VERY CLEAN & spacious 3 per mo. (213' 78G--9n2 dll,)'I. bedhn hOme with lge ytrd, Hunti~on Be•ch 3400 sprlnklen, bltns, atone frplc1-===;;..;:;..:c=;....;= for $240 per mo, Families 3 BR. 2\oi ba condo. 2 Qlym. only. Agent 546-4141. plo-slze pools. ~I 642--S473 or 548-4179 lt1rs. Clark. /) n 11 3 Bdnna., rfirtftaCl'~ exc. l l~ ~ UOR o1..a lo(uin·ta -Nermo6a :a;,::t"~1c:~~.'~;'!,~~ ~~r;rit~OUSE • Casual estate. living . .Enter La Quinta Her-Mtssl: ~TY. L~%073t ~ • ~ Ii 'mo'\'• lush green almosp~ere & stroll tree-:r.tT IL"'"°' neor W!-lined walk ways to your apl 985 So. Coast Hwy., Latuna 2 BR. 1% BA STUDIO ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED DELUXE baci>ef0< •Pt• TOIVNROUSE, $145/mo, 1 BR. Unf. $ISO .-fur n, $180 cle,iu'I, carport, ldry. Util. O Heated pool.Adulta only 2 Bil Unf. $17S -Fum. $210 rum. 497~1056 or 4!M-58tO ~ • ""l.'"-Adl lo 11ho"ll'lln11 3 Spac. fir .. plans, decor. furnishings: live Sen Clomtnt• 4710 " ORLEAN•• wS APTS.. wi thin romantic setting w/fun or privacy. Terraced ·pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ's w/ BACH. apt, btlght, cheertul, seculded sea ting compl. w/Ramada & Foun· pool, ' h1"'. bob, 195. In•" ADULTS ONLY tain. utl;, C&ll 492-4543 eve,s, 2 & 3 BR. Avail. Private Pt· * Color co·ord. kit w / ind irect l;ghting. Dan• Point 4740 tio, pool. tndiv. laundry tac. * Oelu11:e re ng• I ovens * Plu1h sheg crptg. 1--------~· -(N•·. Orange'Co. Airport; Tua. * Bo nus storege space * CJ, .... carport SINGLE, TV, heAted pool, 2 tin at lltb SI; nr. Westclltt), * Sculptured marble pulllna~ beths blk. from bch.. $35. wk. • $135 • * Ele_ja nt recreation room. mo. Dana Marina tnn, 34lll 1741 Tutln, Coeta Meta FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY Cou! Hwy., Dane Pt Mg>'. Mn. Thompoon ..,,_ Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego RENTALS Frwy .• Goldenwest Colle2e. Cost• Mes• 3100 3 Bedroom Continental San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. on ---------·I Townhouse-$190. FUIJ.ER Apts. Unlumlsl>td • * .. * El Puerto Mu • Apt1. LEASE/OPTiON. 5~% REALTY M&-0814. Beach 3 blks. to Holt; w. on Holt to •.• Assumable .. Ranch style ADULTS only, 2 br, 2 ha. LaQuinta Hermosa 714: 847·5441 charmer ""th 3 lar~e Fully crptd, drps. $195 mo.1 =========~=========! ~s, family rm, overs1z. incl uUI. 536-45"6. I· ed hv1ng rm, modem bltnslo;;==°""'""'"°":c-=o-7c 10.neral itOOO Newport Be•ch 4200 & 2 sparkling baths Priced SPACIOUS 4 Bt l\lr. Bch ~ IMMACULATE API'S! f<lr Immediate s'aie at schls. Luxury living w/bltn WINTER rental by the ADULT and $31.~submit on lease op-et.:. 1 Yr lSt>. $250. 968-545.1 ""'From $35 Wk. beach, perlect apts for FAMILY Section Gener•I 5000 .VEN DOME * * .. • 1·2 Bodroom Apts. S130 up Incl. utlllUe1 Also turn. Pool & Recreation area, Qulef Environment Off street parking, No pets. 1959-1961 Maple Ave. Costa Mesa t1on terms. Call 545-8U4 CONDOMINI UM-2 Br, LwrurySingleApts.Complete mature Individual. Nice, 1 Close to shopping, Park South Coast Realtors. cai'pets, drapes, ·--i, bit-ald vi hou BR, garage. No children. + Spacious 3 BR's l .ba .,., Quiet Adult Llul_ ,...... m ser ce, sews.res $135, mo Call alt 6 or wK· • Swim """"!, puti-n .,. • ··• ins, (213) 430-5506 or 431-U52 !Ir.ens, all utll, heated pool, t"-"' o·~~ 2 BR. Shag cpts, bltns, beaul, * $95 * $22a-3 BR., crpts, drps, lrpl, fncd yrd, Child/pcl ok. Broker.~. 943 Sunset {off Monrovia) 2 BR, garage. stove & retrig102'"B"R".-,.eo"nd=o.-Frp=71c-. -;R"'ed"eo-. avail. Relerences required. PooJ, Adults. No pets, Lfla.se 646-9666 anytime $180. ~1~8 e,ves. bllllards, restaurant, cock-eOOs. G13-26TI. * Frpl, lndiv/lndry fac'll Jndscpd. $170 mo incl all tails. 1 BR. Near· Beach, year 1845 Aneheim Ave. lil Ad··' nf ta VILLAGE INN lease. No pets, lmmed oc-COSTA .. :EsA 642-2824 ~A~ ~t.y, no~ Laguna Beach 494-9436 cupancy, $135. :48-78401"'""!!!!'""!!!!!!!!!!!!'""'""'1 BALBOA INN be""' 5. 7 PM. APARTMENT HARBOR GREENS Balboa 61>-8740 OCEANFRONT' 2 BR. RENTAL GARDE>< & Sl'UD!O APTS Duplex. very attractive. Baeh. 1, 2, 3 P"''•. from $1l0. MOVING TO HONG Fountain Volley 3410 APARTMENT ~7s· Adult" C'1 3 l AIL:f~O,:.~PAREAS ;!~.~',;"'•"°"Way, CM. KONG?? RENTAL ~--------' ~· Let the Property 1.1anage-* SPANISH 3 BR, fam ily 2 Br. Completely redec. New FURN. OR UNFURN. --::jt 3 BR·21h BA * rnent Division of Sooth room, 2 Bath. 2 yea.rs old. $70.00 & UP shag crpls, 50' to bch. EnCJ ASK FOR BONNIE Like a home,. l!DJ sq ft, new Coast Realtors solve your $265/mo, * Call 962-1408 ALL SIZES • ALL AREAS patio. No student $200 mo. 832.·7800 shag crphl, re-dec'd, elect problems. For appointment 5 BR, 2 BA, frplc, bltns. $265 FURN. OR UNFURN. 'Iii June 15, 615--3345. blt·ins. $195. 546-ll.52 a.ft 6 1: call 545-842-1. mo, bt &: lid! ASK FOR BONNIE FURNISHED 2 BR apt. all day wk ends. 4 BR. + lam. rm. 2Fn 111-===C=a!=l ="'=·=5623=== 832·7800 S145/mo. 9331,S W. Balboa. RENTAL FINDERS BRAND NEW dlx 2 BR baths. CpU, drps, bltns. 1· ---------Yearly. C".a.ll l-ltr. De.via. Frn To Landlords triplex apts. Priv pe.tlos, Cov. patio, Nr. schools. $275 L•gun• Beach 3705 ---------SJS..0038 shag crptl, gill'. $175. 353 Mo. Owner 645-0128 * El\fERALD BA y • _c_._•t_•_M_._ •• ____ 41_00_ I ~.'"1'B"'R,_.-...,=1"'. -..,.-.. -•v1ewc--, 645.0111 Woodland Pl (nr Tustin Ii: 4 BR. 2 ba, referel'la's, 3 2 &: den or 3 BR, 2 BA REl\1ARKABLY sgl adult, $140. 4J5W.1tftl,CW• Mete1 20th) 64Z-4ro5 children, prefer teeM, 1 pet. $300 mo. 494-8413 UNBELIEVABLY 833.-35.'li or 644-06.17 eves NEW DELUXE 2 BR 2~B~R-un7f7• 'llS,;=-, -,-B~R~u-"~f.1 $220 mo. 4:45--8:30 PM, 7871==='====== EXTRAORDINARI Ly SU'Olmo. ON OCEAN, 2 Ba. Bit-In range, dshwhr, $130. Crpts. drps, bltn1. Joann, C.l\f. Capistrano Be•ch 3730 BEAUTfrUL Lovely Bachelor Apt. shag crpts, drps, garg. From Pool. No chUdren, no pets. UNFURNISHED, 2 bedroom PE . Val D'isere Garden Apts 1,,,=,-Ca=-11=64,_>_1265 _ _,-~ I $175. Nr. S Coast Plaza. 325 • J E. 17lh Pl, C.M. house Eastside Costa Mesa RMANENT 2 br, lge hv Adults, no pets COZY 3 BR oceanfront, 54G-1973 or Ms..2321 S48-Z73S $165 Phone 646.2148 ' rm w/trplc, ocean vu Dana Putting g"""· "'aterfall & winter, $225, Adult.sonly. · · Pt harbor, patio, Adults, no &73-8088 NE\V 2 BDRM. Beam ceil· 3 BR, l 'it ba. lge fenced pets, SIGO. mo. 496-5462 strt>am, Dowers everywhere, -ON•*rnjf;~;c;:;*o;1e;::j:C:Co~1!_!t!e_M~1'.!1!• __ __:5~1~0D ings, wood paneling. All rec yard, gar. Mesa Verde· I========= 45' pool, rec. rOOm, billiards, * ON THE BEACH! l Br. features. $165. Adu.Its, no $1,95. 548-8124 or 540-0190 Dena Point 3740 BBQ's, Sauna, furn.-unfurn" drps, crpts. frpl c. Ye,ar\y or like Living In Your pets. Call now S4G-007J. 3 BR, 2 ba condo, 2 car gar, Single!, l BR, l BR+ deli, winter. 962-2.141. • OWN HOME ,., 11 e 387 w, Bay Streel e patio; pool & cluhhse avail. YACHTSMAN'S PARADISE 2 BR. From SUS, See ii! Yrly $150, l BR apt, Why pay $175 for an apt? • $215/mo. 540-6339. 3 BR Spanish Villa, Ocean-2000 Parsons Rd., 64Z-8670. Utilities paid when \\'e can rent you one * TOWNHOUSE * 3 B 2 ba bl 'ncl "'" L-front. Dana Point Jiarbor. Between Harbor & Newport * 304 33rd St. * for $140. 2 BR., newly clee, 2 BR l" BA ......... d-r, • tns 1 v.-siu· "A""/mo. 4~2128. 2 Blk N 19 h Vd I · ' 711 ' ~ ''"'• .,. ... .,........ ~~ • . l · Cfll rp, enc palm, '"'" d I $170 134 E $2Zl/mo, Immed avai1 ,l~~:i:~~~~~~~·1 ;;;;;;;;;;;f;f;;;.;;;;;1 OCEANFRONT, Ulil. Paid patio. A uts. . · 3 BR .. ~ M grnds · 2 Pools! Adults only. • ... lody Ln ·-1768 54Q...ll51 or 557-1648. Duple••• Unfum. -75 . ......, o., yearly ... e . .....,.. 2--BEDROOM cabin at Stonemal;\ Lake in northern Arizona near Flagstaff. Completely furnished except for linens $75.00 per week plus cleaning deposit For further details call 64&-3730 after 5 pm .·. • ., HAR·BOR l'A':b="'='=="'=al~ty====64=>=3850=1~2283~~F~ou,,"~ta~in~W'..:a!::'.y~E,.,.~·-~-·I NEW 2 Br lwr dplx, ~t11. bor, turn W. on \Vil.son). ~r Belore the fireplace & enjoy Mesa Del Mer 3105 DUPLEX 2 bedroom Clean di..,.., bltns, lg patio. gar. the privacy ct this 2 Br. [ ;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;[ &. quiet,' Ideal for 'mature Coron• del M•r 4'250 DUPLEX, 2 bedroom. Clean We!tclift area. $17 s, ·•· ....... hild TOWNl{OUSE & quiet, Ideal for mature 54,_ .... home. Stove, crpts, drps. COUe-: Wlu..,.,.t c re.n or ROOMS SlOO mo. Apls Sl25 le witho 1 hild -"~~"-==~~~-~ Orange COunty 1600 RENT e A e HOME 1--------BUILT • IN EVERYTHING, range, Mn, dishwasher, vacuum s y a t" m, water softener, a Ione fireplace, sprinklen, outside lighls & covered patio. HUGE J bed. rm 2 bath + rumpus room. GI can buy no down & &ell· er p<iys all closing costs. NEAR DISNEYLAND, lm- mo.culate 3 bedrm. 2 bath, with camper • boat • trlr storage + extra large gar. sge & lot. Only $24,750 No do"'" GI , DREA~JY 4 bcdrm, 2 balh just a short walk td beach. Ankle deep shag carpeting, custom drps, take over GI Joan "'ilh only $3850 down pymnt. Lotsa' hOUSe for only $32,,.,, $9 & Pets v.·eicome. $16.5 $325 p M nth pets, References exchanged. •. coup u c ren or * i\.10DERN 2 BR. crpts, 5.00 UP er 0 $150 lb ls & h 2217 Harbor nCa; \Vilson mo. CROWN OF TIIE SEA pets. References exchanged. I d AIL SIZES • AU. AREAS C & S Speedy Yes, it's sharp, •hMi>. 3 bed-mon ' t -last mont ?.1otel, 2600 Coa."lt l:lwy, Cd.M. ..,""' month, Isl It last month drps, GE . kitchen, enc ose FU OR UNFURN RENTALS_S48-ll68 plua security cbarge In ad· Furnl.Bhed BACHELOR apt. 6'73-885l 615-492'7 "i.JU garage, near bus $145 RN. ' ~-~~o---'"-=-~""-~· I room, 2 bath near schools & ~. Drive by 753 Scctt 1 Adult • No pets • Heated ~~~· -~~· ---1 plu1 seeurlty charge in ad-Adulta '120 E 2Dth ' . ASK FOR JOO! * 3 BR·$185 * shopping. Place, C.M. Cali 548-3036 for pool • Near shopoing BACK Bay -Xlnt loce.tion."'1 vance. Drive by 753 Scott 3 BR 2 BA • lk .· cl tf; ___ 83~2-·77800~---EASTSIDE. Newly decorated. Ed Riddl• Re•ltor appointment to see. !!!!!!!!l!!l!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!i!!!!l!!!!!!• I br. turn, heated pool, adult, Place, C.M. Call 548-3036 for / • • wa~n A~! • * 1 BR-$130 * 3 BR. Fenced yard, Chlldren ............ -........ 1 .. 1 ............ 1 1 BR. $135/mo. Crpts, clrps, ~~ls, $13S. Al30 2 br, u 1~··~'°.,.'-;n•,m"'•,.,nt,.,t"o"'"'=· ;c-:--p:,m~tlP.er·s .. 541).0~: LARGE l BR. Single story \\"elcomt!. CALI.. TODAY! RENTALS all elec. laundry rm •1 ~=-=-~~-=~• * LRG 2 BR APT * MI 6-6922 or 548-9457, Quiet East~ide location, Gar-* BLUE BEACON * Aph. Furnltlttd carport. No pets. Ask about 1 BR 1$1901 or 2 BR 1$~) w/w crpts, drpa, disposal, prv NR new 2 Br, ll,i be., Hge. HURRY! * 645--0111 * Mes• Verde 31101·~---..:...·--;.;_=;.;_--1 our discount plan. 741·B W. Harbor view. New 'furn., patkl, adults, no pets. See to * BLUE BE·ACON * ~r•I 4000 _1"'s_1h_S-;1~. _642-'7""ll~58-~~-paint & cptg, No children. appreciate. Avail Nov 1. ~~/'i&ifi. ~d~·w:n· * ENJOY LIFE •3 BR, 2 ba, fam rm, 2 Acapulco Apta, attractive, 2530 Seaview. 673-2823. Sl55. 2047 Charle St. 642-7958. * 64>-0111 * frplcs, covered patio, blt.ns. Just For Pool, Util pajd, Ganfen 2 BR. crpls & drps, pool, So. 548-6030 or 646-1841. BEAUTIFUL home, 3 BR, IN THIS A'ITRACTIVE 3 Br. Avail Nov. 1. $250 mo/lse, 1 BR Crpts drps patio . 2 Bath home, stove, refrig, Call 847_7004_ living. Adults, no pets. of l:lwy. Adults, no pela. 0 NOW RENTING 0 •love.· $1lO/~o. Ad'.·•11, .,.; huge family room, full ain-d 2 ·~ 1..:=-"'--'"-------1s· I Ad It 1 BR. $145 & $150 $185 lease. 673-8713. Me,11a Verde Area.. NEW Du-.... ing room, 3 baths. $425 mo, CI111C ;ss s;:.r;· _,, 3200 1ng e u s 1800 Wallace Ave, C.M. plexcs, 2 &:: 3 BR, bltns, encl pts. 548-4059 aft 4 pm. Bkr. 540-1720. RENTALS ""1161 Newport Beach WALK To shopping center 1 Balbo.I 4300 gar, patios, wshr I dryer 2 BR. 1613 Santa Ana Ave. ;rt9' South Bay Club Is a v.·hole BR, newly dee, Jots of PENINSULA POINT hoOkup. Also 1rg 2 & 3 BR $150/mo. Crpts, drJ>s, stove/ RENT • A • HOME BEACON BAY new way of life designed privacy. Adu1t1;, no pets. Deluxe 2 BR. 2 BA, carport. in 4-plexes, 546-1034 ref. 54U572 or KI 2-7279. !o"'Ei'IALE Roommate, no $95. & UP BAYFRONT just for single people, Il's $126.50. Key at 2260 Jl,faple To desirable adults. Yrly. VILLA MESA APTS. 1 & 2 BR apls, No pets, DO children, no pets, share lrg Nev.'. Carp_ & drapes; vie...,. fun living with warm, dy. _S_t.°"A,;p~t~E".°'_.,.,~~-· """""""'"' 1 $225, 675-2494 or after 5, 2 BR, Prfv patio. Hid pool. children. ALL SIZES • ALL AREAS f the 1· ba 2 Car namic neighbors. It's a -:-* 64"5848 * house, Laguna Be a ch. 0 en •re Y. gar. * NASSAU Palms. 2 BR. eves & \\'k-ends, 675-1358. 2 car encl'd gar. Children 1r FURN. OR UNF'URN. 3 BR 2 b ~ · ·1 · 1 -.ooo Clubhouse w ft h 494--5563 aft 5 PM. ., a. "'""'qu1s1 e in er. .,,...,. apt. Furn & Unf. Pool, ping-1544 Miramar Drive. ~come, no pcta please! 3 BR. 21,i BA, sharp, crpb. ASK FOR JODI All util. paid. """" Per health club, MU.,.,, swim. BBQ h d I ~-il $19 2 f.fA LE OCC s tudents 132 7800 _,.,, pong, • s a Y awns. 2 Br. "'ICll monthly, ye.,.ly S165 mo. 719 W. Wilson. drps, '-' .......... Ava now. J • -·nth. IT'ing ~1 ... -. room, bil-177 E 22nd St 642 •m ~-54"879 R.nt•lt to Sh•re 2005 rent/share hse/apt. C.i\.f. ""' ....,., ,......,, · · _.,,.,..., basis. 315 E. Bay SI. Inq. _64_6;.,·1'5'""'1'°'. ~===-=--_m~o~.'""°~..,_._,,.,-...--~c-I 0 CE S RED nd f 4 * 2 BR•$125 * 675 605. 0 0 Iianb, Indoor goll driving l BR ' -cl Pool ~ ba UR FA l -a or H.B. area. 962-4853 a t >, a t I ,,_._ . ....r. osels. . Apt C 673-1521 or S<IS-Tm. e THE SEVIIJ.E e LG FJ 2 br, 11,1. studio the t ta --. range, enni cow .... , pro Shuff leboard . Ne •1 II n. I ~"' drps bltns No pet. so are cus om carpe ~•-m_·-~-~===-NIFTY 2 BR ]O\\'Cr, Stove, shop and resident tennis pro. BACHELOR Apt, furn, Bal Lrg 2 BR, l oa w gar. ~·.-• • · · and drapes, Decors tor red-FEr>.1ALE ROOr>.IMATE, refrig, patio, BRING TIU: ._ IUUIEIEn ca.,-. Single, 1 & 2 Bedroom lux-cpt/drps. Util pd. 1884 Penin, nr ocean, lge suodck, $155 (adults) cpts, drps, S150. ~5270 or 833-3S40 for Spanish or Medill taslf'. $70 mo. KIDDIES, ~~~~~~----1 ury apartments with all the f.'onrovia Ave, Of $125 mo. 842-8148 fncd yd w/patlo. Wtr pd· E-SIDE Jg 1 Br, cpts, dJl>s, lnl.maculale tri-level 4 bed· So. Bay Club, N.B. *BLUE BEACON* 3 BR: 2* _ba.;F new modem conveniences avall· *WINTER RATES * ='========I gardnr. 2619-L Santa Ana b:tns, patio. gar. Alilts, no rm 3 bath "f.1eridlth Gar· .. 646-0956* * 64~0111 * cjting; patio. aces able. Furnished and unlurn. 1 BR. furn $125. Bachelor's lido Isle 4351 Ave. 636-4120 pets. $135. &t&-1762. dm'a"ke' H4o"m•0'1';,,Se, 11~~~tno;v; NON Drinker. non smoker -* BUDGET SAVER poo REALTOR. 54s..6966 ishP.d, Sll5. Adults, no pets. See DELUXE Be ch A ts F LRG 2 Br. Newly dee. 2 BR, redecorated, encl )"al"tl, woman to share home & Mgr.2l3SElden,No.6CM. a P • urn. Adults, only, no pets. gar. Close lo shop's & face fast. pool with same, 540-2286. CHILDREN ' SMALL PET * 2 BR. l BA, new cpl, drps, MODELS OPEN DAILY A1'TR, Room&--Attr Rates. Stove' rel r I g' gar. St.50/mo Nr Harbor & schools. n45, 54S-1751. Larwin Re•lty, Inc. WELCOME. 2 Br. Bltn privacy, gar avail. Nr bch. Start $30 wk. Sea Lark =~~~-Nord. ~.~a~·.Call Eves & wknds, •-::::9=62=-6=918==e:=n=y=tl=m::•=:: Newport Budw 2200 stove, & rclrig. Crpta, drps.1 =''=15=·="'-=pe=t='·="'='=~=OO=:=..I lO A.M. • 9 P .r>.r.. Motel, 2301 Npt. Blvd, CM ~~· 1· -~-------$130. 3?20 RENTS FROM 64&-7445. NOV l~une 15 rental on LRG 2 & 3 Br. Crpts, drps, Newport Be•ch 5200 S•nta Ana 1620 YRS n?nlAI. Lido Sands. Z br, C & S Spffdy Newport Shores $l50 to $3SO ~1,~,,.~,~B~R.~~C~rp-11,--drps-, bay, co.mp!. furn . 2 Br, 1 encl patio, kids welcome. PARK NEWPORT~ free 2 ba, convrt. den. pool &. RENTALS 54&-1161 2 BR Ir DE.°"', 2 BA wndeck. Ba. patio, frpl: Call collect 1998 Apt 1 Maple Ave. llvg overlkg the water. 7 Below VA Appr•isal paddle lennis priv. Blk from NO PETS S250 mo NEWPORT BEACH Broker. SliH980 213: 654-3016 aft 6 p.m. £42-6344 pools, 1 tennls cl3 rno,ooo •I hr homo, lot• of goodle" ""''""· $375. 642-3337. * 2 BR-$135 * * 213, 5.14-0009 * $29,000 by owner. 54~ ON THE BEACH SEPARATE 'B Bu·-•ow 880 Irvine Ave. e BEAUT. Bach &: 1 Br. Balbu l1l•nd 4355 * DELUXE 1 &:: 2 BR. ~~ ..... ""1 orm2 nBr75. Alto'° 114,~: r '15"' · apt. $29.50 wkly It up. GardeD Apts. Bll·ins, priv. .DAu• v L-un• Be•ch 1705 Nice 2 BR winter rental, $225/ Garage, stove, refrlg, 01>!11, [ ,U;;;;n;;IY;;t;;r;;si;;ty;;;;P;;o;;r;;k;;;;;;;;32;;37;;j Irvine & 16th l"urn., inc ulll. 5<16-tM51 DELUXE oUc, suite, grnd. patio, heated pool, frpl c. Townhouses. Elec. ~l prl. -• mo. Near Jell)'. Good beach. drps. Child ok. CALL NOW! floor, has own entrance and Adults n.c5 mo. 54fr5163 pat, or bal SUbtrn prka, pol Dick Be .... Real '" 962-2421 * BLUE BEACON * (71~) 645-0SSO FURN BKhelor & 1 Br. W t !ill Dr t _....,_ maid se.r rnta:, drp•. , ... , $1000 DOWN ... v DON'T DELAYI E f ' II • I esc · s . ....,.....,ss, FOR lease, Monticello -r ..., ~fagnlticent OC'C!an vlflw tot 2 BR/2 BA: Cmplt turn/Mod/ * 645-0111 * CALL US TODAY I xcep 1°"1 Y nice 450 sq. ft. wl!h pvt. panel Twnlm. 2 BR, 2 ba, Adults, N, of Fashion !al at Jam- small but level SS,950 Bkr. Hse, w/gar. ThnJ 6/15, $225/ TRADER'S PARADISE 5 SQUJH BAY CLUB 2l lO Newport Blvd, CM olfc. Desk space & recept, 143 Morristown Lil, 545-0112, boree II: San JoaqUin Hills 497.1210 or 497-1021 eve11• mo. C&ll fill.2648. ~ ttmea-5 buckl 3 BR., mo, to mo, •••••• S350 NOW RENTING! 2 Br furn, $185. mo on le-Me, Inc air· 540-4801 Rd. 644-1000 for 1"8.&lng ID-~ _BR./2\ltfobath,,3 BR ........ ~ APARTMENTS good '°"· Reo, room, hoated ~,,_.;:...!'W., """"·· drapc .. 1,,--BR,~l,..B"'A,..,..,.bl"°tn"-=-'"'.-~-u"'. ~'°--·-----~-• Gener•I 2000GeMr•I 2000Chner•I 1 i "1 E i 11 1 ~ I I HUBGO I' ...... 1 ...... 1 ...... I ...... ' I ....... · I GLARN 1 •.· h'~l-.. 1-1.-.. 1--1 A thisefer's life! ~e's leacJ. ).......&.. -L. -'·'--'·--' ing a dog's lif1t.. His aeditor1 ...--------..,,ora -his footsteps..• T 0 0 M 1 N J· ' 10-~:r. I I I I I' I' J ·1"~~ .:i~h~:~~~=dd . _ _ • . _ \"Cit develop from step No,. 3 b.low. ... PJINl.NUMBERE D l[lllRS V IN lHeSE SQUARE! • e g'1f:~~~ '111 " 1 10 I I I I · I I I I 2000 SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN <;i.ASSIRCATION 9000 M:ase op n •••••• _, • • • pool_ No children. 64&-5824 ~ ;J;IOV ·-... ~ ~.-2 BR. Unflll'l1, Ol>t5, drps, 3 BR.. 2 Ba. tnhou!e •••• $340 =~~~=--~-' nice patio, $135/mo, Also 2 Uo 1 blt $160 2 BR. 1 ba. house •••••• $250 live whe1'9 the. fun Isl l Br. $125-pool, spac. Adults. lMMAC. 2 BR apt, bit-in Br, furn. upstairs $145/mo. pa , poo. ns, . Idea.I for Bachelor, 1993 kltch, new crpts, drps, No No pets. 673--TI78 Sea_cliH Mlll'I01' Apt&, 1525 • red h·.11 Church. 54S-9633. ~~~~no P"ta, $225 yrly. 1 BR. uni. USO/mo. Pool. ~=",! d~:S:ta!'k PALM MESA APTS 1 Bedroom back apl S60 per ..,,-,,-.,,.--,,,-,;;c--,-I Elec & wtr pd. Adlts, no ... • month. 54&-2313 ask for Tor· On the Bey with Dock petl. MESA MANOR. "11 * BA YFRONT * REALTY Univ. Park Center, INine Call Anytime 833-0820 ry. 5 Room APT. * 3 BR., 2 Bath. Wilson Ave, CM. 54S-7405 LUXURY Apts, St.,rf.. 1 BR FURN. $l49.50 I :l;-";;B:;;R-;;;FU°'RN=•1"'1so=1mo..,-. "'i..,""'l $.125 yearly. 673-7228 2 BR, 1\~ BA, sh,,,.,., crpts, fnn •t $365. * '41·2202 Bachelon Furnished -r • from Sl40. utll. Pool, gar, disposal. ---------i drp11, apProx 1200 sq tt. 2 BR itudlo condo, 21,i ba, FOR Rentals in Vnivenil;y Park &: TurUe Rocle, Call; mo.Imo. OK Adults. no pets. 642-2383. Huntington S.•dw 4400 ~~now. n60 mu . ' lrplc, wuh/dryer, pool, O POOL -----'----~ ;;;:;;;-~;;-:;-;;;:;;;--;;;;;;;:;.l.::~·~~;;,.-;c:=;-::::-;.-.-saunaJ,.~'Dover Shor •• e SAUNA N•wport Be•ch 4200 NE\V l Br. at Bc:ht QUIET LR.G 2 Br. Garden Apt. Newport, Adlta $275. 9\181: e JACUZZI --'-'--'-""-'=--"-' $"150, bal of mo FnEE. Look Patio. ' Newly ·dee. Central 9()8...3597 'I :,iii 'I ', \Iii 1$1 Mtsa Dr. Cost& Mesa OOUN'rn.Y CLUB & )'OU'il rentl l Pvt ht. Car. Bll111. Adul11. p40,2 ~~B~R.-.,,,,-1-.d~, -drp~ •• -.~bl-!no-,' l'!!!~P~h~-~!!!$46.~'l'-~~~·ILuxury g~~l~~t1, offering ~~=~s,1&.13:;.-A 14th. Q~~ Br. 1% Ba, gar A: ~~ar d~ e~l ---I \rnll1ir nnlT FURNITURE comp!, privacy, beaut, Ind. 2 BR. Pool. Adult•. pool, cpts/drps. Adults wkndt. ntn I 5Cpg A W'lpanilleled recrea-BeauUQulet! Ulil I 11 c I only. no pet!. &t2-800. LARGE ddxe 2 BR. 2 BA, lit Wntttn Bink Bkic. * DIRF.CT TO TENANT 2~1:lr. DtUvery 1oor. PurchaAe Opllon Complct• 1 BR Apt u Low a1 $22/mo. JO.Day Mlnlmwn ABOVE: I.he log & 11mog, 3 * WIDE VARu:rY Univel"lrity Parle Dey mtttl Nithls E11t Bluff 3242 Br, i ".ea. klt.fam rm. CUSTOM FURNITURE R•rden(lr, $350 yr lse. RENTAL &IM430 SIT W. lSth Sf., et.!. $48.$481 Coron• del Mar 325' HOLIDAY PLAZA --------~1DELUXE Spadollll 1 BR LARGE .t UR. 3 BA. split furn apt $135. 2 BR + den level. Spanish d1?cor. $375. $Ifill. Heated pool. Ample lmme,d . occupancy, parking. No c.hlldttn. no 646-G911. G.t2~1m pets. 1965 Pomon11.. a.1. llonal faciJltie111 in a country $200/mo. 17676 Cll.mel'Oll. CLEAN 3 OR. :z be, nr Banr d bl DIW club 11.t.mosphen!. F\mJ ot 842-612! 4: }~airvlew, Avall new, ~ts,6 ~: Ad:;, 1ntu1i Unf. RModel1 opcn 45 10 :09 1 I.RC room, single houAe, children OK, $160. $1~1882 OK. 642-4387, &U-lm pm, enta from$! 10 · pvt patio, all utll pd. SPAR.KL.ING 2 Br 2 Ba LlOO We deslrable 1 BR. OAK\VOOD GARDEN $100/mo. Older couple or w/alr oond, encl '.--i 4 "-Id I , -Ifv APARTMENTS .ina:ies only. Rell. 5.36--33t6 a, ___ •. .._.. ~7"-a ... l' • fl c. ~"' • nn . J100 16th s1., NO 2 BR furn, downtown l!B, no IC!'· Lvn • w .......... w ~ 'Valk to 1tioP11. Quiet 6-1.2-8110 children, no pe:ts, •3 BR Condo. l\ti Ba. Opts. tena.nl. l.M. $175, ~- BA YCLIFF MOTEL * 136-7396 * """' 54•~.w!.12.hr. pool Near 3 B•. 2 Bo. un1. B11"'· ~ I e;..:;m;o;;tAiit:'Uiir;o:--1,goo:~ .. ~~,,... drr,'I. s2501mo. .. Ca11 * 1.0\V WEEKLY RATES .. BACHELOR Apt. UlII pd. SPACIOUS 2 br, 2 ba. :\tlool ~1-7573, a.ft 5 96S.a«i8, Kl ~-TV' Id -1 ·NEAR OCEAN! -- --.:: ~ ..... ' .-.----~.-=-·! tcmn, s, ma aerv ce. LINDBORO co. 536--25'79 erpls, drp1,· ultns. $ ... J:" 2 tn. J DJ\, crp1 Cl;(frp'd. Heated Pool. 417-C Ford Rd., C.M. WC~!-l!ff r.rea. Adults, Sl"r.. 646-:i2G5 IT'S Beach house •lime. Big· M"S Dench hou~ tin1e. Bl~· IDQ, 64.2-t~S4_s _____ 1 BAOIELOR, rurn + utO, ittSt telccOon ever! See the l{f:&t selection ever! See Ule f CR. 2 ba, nu c:rpl, r-.Int. $137.50. 1525 Placentia, aak DAILY Pl.LOT ClauUlod DAIL\' PILOT Claultied SLndedc, pr. $250/)'l'f.y .... a.bout our dlJ1COUnl 54~SS2 tee.Hon l'kl#I ted!on l'I01'1 l blk ta ocean, 675--Tm 1 ..:;.;;~;.;;...;....;;."""'""""""~~..;;;;;."'-.;;...;;__ __ _ ••• ' " I . l I. I ' , c E • Thursday, Octobtr 22, 1970 riiiiUr-::.:....~~"'TiRliE~NnTAADLsr=.:"--"""':....::'rii ............................. IREAt ·ESTATE ........_ BUSINESS .... I FINANCIAL ANNOUNCllMENTS •nd NOTICIS SlltVICE DIRECTORY SIRVICI DIRECTORY~. Aph. Unfumhhed 1' 1r * 1r 1t Gener•I hby1lttlnt 4550 Gordenlnp Office Rtnf•I 6070 Bu1lne11 Lost 6401 8 ~AB=Y.:..s"rr=..,,~"--nJc<o-. -c-1•-an AL'S GARDCNlNG "'° 5200 Huntington a.oeh SotOO NEWLY dtc. Cold medalUon 2 Br 2 Ba, cld. bl. Ins, pat, Huntington Granada encl pr, JJ.75. 5CS-3t08 1 BR. From Sl.35 3 BR. 2 BA, cots, drpc, bltn, 2 BR, 2 BA. From m,S reirl.r. \Vinter $275. 115 34th Stp FAMILY SECTION for 1..::St:... 64:.:;2-$24=':::·.;:"'-:.:...;n::c":.:..---1 childnn under s. • 3 BR, 2 ba, frplc, encl Just South of Warner gatQe, $230. GU Hilaria. on Golden Wtst, H.B. 5404)93 (7)4) 147-11Q I lrvlne 5238 ON BEACH! NOW LEASING! ., 2 BR uni. fu.m 1225 New. family a.nd adults unlt1 O 2 BR Fum, From $2:85 wilh total recrratlon club C. rpets-drapes..dishwa.sher and pre-school. l , 2, Ii: 3 heated pool-sauna-tennis bdnaa from $150. Nr. shop. rec room-ocean Views plng, golf, achools. Just p~Uo ample parking, south of San Dleao Fwy. on Security guards. CUiver °'·Irvine, 1133"'33. HUNTINGTON PARK WEST APARTMENTS PACIFIC Owned and Man.pd by 'l1l OCEAi'l AVE .. fl.D. The Irvine Compe.ny CTI4) 536-1487 I~~~~~!!'!!~!!'!!~~ IOfc. open 10 am-6 pm Daily 1: Managed by 5240 * VIEW 2 Br. crpts, drpg, bltns, lrg pool.. $165/mo. 673-3690. EHt Bluff 5242 WJLI.IAM WALTERS C'O. CASA def SOL Channing, casual, new apts at the beach. 1 BR. From ns2 2 BR, J:o"'rom $215 NEWPORT BEACH 21661 Brookhurst St, HB VIII• Gr•n•d• Apts. (7141 962-6653 $150 FumlGhecf. F1ve bed· - rooms & den, wltll balconlea HERITAGE APTS abcve 1.: patio beleiW, Grae-AVAILABLE NOW! to11s llvi~ &: qull't surround-17401 Keelson Ln, H.B. ings for family with children. Lrg Attrac 2 Br. $145--$159 Near C.Orona del l\tar High Kids ok, All extra:". fool. School. Flrcplaoe, \lo'et bar Pvt patio area. Rec btd"g. &: bullt·ln kitchen appllanc.1 --=-"::,'-833S;::;;' ,;o~r ;.84:.:l~-7;,466::..._ es. hllght cons.Ider unfurn-./ FRESH·AIR !shed or furniture purchase. \Valk 3 blks to Beach! 835 At.fIGOS WAY 644-2991 Beaut. ·big 2 br, apt.s , wJw Coldwell, Banker &: Co. c:rpta, drpl.~bllni except l\1anaging Agent refrlg. $150 &: $155. 1 chUd ok. No s.ngls/pets. SJ6.1ID 0 NEW DELUXE e NEW 1 Br at Bcht QUIET $130, bal of mo FREE. Look & you'll rent!! P v I deck/patios. 204-A 14th. 673-1784, 536--1319. ,.,.., DESK SPACE Opportunltlet 6300 LOsr ln \'le, ot WU11>n il Mme. Good almO&l)herl! &:: for Gardening&:: small land· • BRANCH MANAGER Newport Blvd., 1 ha1 1 y ml. Ftooed back yard. scapina: 1ttYlct1 call 540.!198 305 No. El Camino Reel Service to boat owners Long black dog. Arwwt.n to Take to park twice v.'ftkly. Serving Newport, CdM, C~ San Clement• Beach, l{untington Harbour "Taylor Hue" 548-&llM ·II 50e hourly. 2 child r en ta 1hlesa, Dover Shore"' •92-4420 area, General ma~ent found plrase contaet. We $25/wk. 189 Costa rttesa St, \\'es lclllf. • NEWPORT BEACll Civic & supervisiOn guggested, _m_l_u_hl_m_,______ ,:C;;-';:;1;,· ==---,,~--= Proleu. Garden ?.taint. Ct'nter. 300 ft 10 1000 ft. S300 per week to start + HEARTBROKEN tamUy lost LICf!NSED child care my Pruning, trtt work, sprnklt Answeri"" &: St-<:retarla1. profits. $15,000 investment our shago blk & brwn home, ages 1 to 5, Mon. thru serv, aeration, fer t 11 ii e , 675r-1601 required. Additional lnlot· Yorkshire te?Tler. male, Fr1. Lunches & snacks in. pest, dlse trol. L.A\V Office !lpa<.-e, prime mation &. for exchange of Vic: 600 blk, Victoria. St, eluded. Vicinity of Baker & Cleanup s. Wh•ddy• W•nt? Whoddy• Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR locat\On In Newport Bdi, references, write Daily Pilot '°'CM"".~R_w,,.d_. &l'-0--"1"95"9~-~· I ="'=rl~•.,-to~lo.,. ~-~-~~--. AL'S-1.andscapl.o&. T .f wtlull ieivlees. Stttetarlal Box M·200T, 330 W. Bay St., LOSI" 3 mo. old n1a1e RELIABLE, exp'd. Fel'lt'l!d removal. Yard remodeifu.$:. service avail. &6-1550. Costa Mesa. • Gennan Shepherd. Brown &: yard, craltl & creative ac· Trash hauling lot cleaiiup: •DELUXE ait-cond oHlce in AVAIL. Jmmed to person of black. Sun. 10/11." Blk flea tivitles. Hot lu11Ch & snacks, Repair sprnkltta. 67~11fi6. CompUter Cen!er B l d a:, executive caliber y,•ho is collar. Vic Wilaon St. C.M. Weekdays. Nr Perey SchoOl, CLE.AN UP SPECJAIJ$T NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Spocl•I R•t• 5 line• -5 tlmu -5 bucks •Ulel -AD MUIT INCl UDI Crpts, dni.~s. Up to 3600 &q. sales oriented, Exclusive answen1 to Kone. 645-J06l H.B. 962-&lM Ne~!ence l repair. Mawine ft. 646-7'25 or 5'6-,6080. terTitocy w/stro!'.I&: p~lit LO~ white t.1altese terTler. BABYSITTING for l he & ed~i1ia:. Reas. 5t8-6955. ~ •--·-1 potential. This is a.n e.xciting Name "Tony," "'-eight 8 lbs, mother who cartfl, my r.1esa ~J.MW &<J. t. · ( M F llERRING'S Complete OFFICES, $6Q.$9().$1.80, marketing concep . r • owner Teddy N e w so m . Verde Estates home. enc· Gardening Service. Minor 1-Wll•I yw 11ne t. tr.... ...Wllott ,.. 1Nt1t .. trfft,. S-YOUll ...... .,.,., _..,_ 4-1 llllel If M wtnltlflt, '4110THIH l'Oll L\le -TilADll ONLYI Cast a ... lesa. 646-2!30 Allan, 213/937--1900. i41 S. 642-3949 Oakwood G&l'den ed yard, luneb, n.c. Ages landscap~ " c 1 e 1 nu p , 1 To Pl1e. YfNr' Trad.r's Paradise Ad PHONE 642-5671 l..aBrea, L.A. 90036. Apts. l..S. 5-16-3592. 962-4914 CORONA DEL MAR OUT Of Work? Want .I -RI~.,-,-.. -,-,..,-, -,-mos,--T-•_m_p_l• RBABARYVSITTIN<i.i'M'iNrc;-;;m;;;y-;ho;;;m;;;;,,: 1-~~~--,---=c:'I . 5 RM suite, stor & pkg. 2 ba, mature men, wo en r I , .B. Pleue help me reu. rates. lnfanta pre.I'd. LAWN Care. cleanups, trash · 10.211 acres. Close to bl& lake &. river. Fish, hunt, ca.mp. Blwn hi.way 40 &. 50. Nr Reno, Nev, Trade tor car camper or '! 540-2333. Trade: lst 'I'D's (4) $6.000, (6J S2n,OOO (6) $25,000, all or part for Nev.'J)Ort proper. ty or??? 557·9700 or 499-4206 Horse bam, 4 ital.la, hay &: tack rm, 5 paddock!, riding u-ena, fncd, 1 % ac, rnch sty I hm. Trd for income or T Wally l\1cCoy 675-0ll6 O\VNER. Granada HUl1 2 sty \.'iew hOme, like new, $57,750 val. 4 Br. 3 Ba. tam. nn. For Duplex or Hme NB or CdM. &M-071, ·646-04l9. Patio roof malerial or • '! '11.'anled: trade for portraits or paintings by prominent professional artist. Ideal for Christmas. 497.1050 Recreation . S, Lake Tahoe %. acre, all improvements, incl sewers.. $2000 F.q., 1% loan, Trd tor local RE or '! Jack llammond Bkr 540-1151 170 ac. befraut. N. San TraD1ego llOO sq ft ., gnd flr. 673-6757 couples. 1 branch o 33 fj im. RE w ARD • ..:N:;·;:";;:· ;:area:::;·=6ll-=::71B2;::===-Whaulltmog.tr F.,..-v... ~· ••~ · County, ee & rJear. de J,"1' DOWNTOWN H.B. Por&.tions ha! mov into~~~''....-=~~~=-_ es s • · .... ..,.. .. all or part Css;;<I .per ac. Remodeled ofc or shop, blk to Calif. One of 3 large profit I.L os T YELLO\V PARA· Brick, Maaonry, 847 -5802 val.) for clear tlshing boat oct'an Llndborg Co 536-2579 businesses in USA. KEET! Balboa Island area. etc 6560 JAPANESE Landscaping & or ?? 557·9700 or 499-006. EX~IVE suite : H.-bor Permanent for those ,vlJ:> Not banded. Chldtn's pet. gardening service•. Call for Santa Barb, 12 units furn'd frontage nr Newport Blvd apply the~ves. I~. tor 675-2543 Brick, block. stone. Patios, free estimate. 548-7958 ot tsl Vista for clear.free home for lease. l,OOO + sq IL tnie &. legitimate tnfo to ..;..;'-"'=--~---'--e ntrance ways, No job too 546-0724. to $100,000 Capis, San Clem, N.B Ph: 642..ll&l<f for appL tremendoUs success 548-0203. LOST: Irish Seller fem. Ap-small. 646-7825, Ref furn . NEW Lawns, re-seed. Coml1.l l.'..e.g:, Nt:v.'Pt. CdM. 21J.. · \VILL sell 5% shares in 1rg prox 1 yr old. Has red Dea lawn care. Clean up by job 222-4300 I n4-67l-54l!li. lnduitrial deli restaurant. \Vllshire & =~~ f r~~~~s:t,:14iic. C1rpentering 6590 or mo. Free est. For info 8 Units good rental area. Property 6080 Fairfax are.a. Grou sales CARPENTRY 897.2417 or 846-0932, ' . shd exceed S300,000 per yr. LOST, Old English Sheep SJB.~ Equity; income P.I·l BLDG b nd 54&-0902 aJI 7 PM do5, female, blk & wht, no MINOR REPAIRS. No Job GEN. C l eanup-Tre e &.. $13,500.Forhouse,commer. •. ra ncw,.l.C~cC0~=-'=-~~=-1 c J Sprlnk1erServ.Rotottll ." ciat or hoJ'St> ranch. modern, spacious & comfy. ORANGE JULIUS-Sacrifice. ta , l blu eye, l brwn eye. Too Small. ab Mt in gar-New laWllll. Sprayini. Reu. 1 OWNER 675-6259 See ii, 1392 Talberl, HB. Franchise paid. Owf\e r Rcwa.rd, 673--1267 ages .t other cabinets. 646-5848. . I co:m;;"";aJT.;;o.;;;pro;;e;::ll=o:;a~y~84~7-~33~1.1~:~<~v~'>~84~&-4~73~1 n1oving north. Full price KEYS lost 10117 vie of 5'5.8175 if no answer leave Commercial income proper. S'l500 Gross $2'5,000-comider Begonia, Cdt.f.. If found, msg at 646-2372. H. O. Japanese Gardener, Exp. tY. lree & cliear: next to Commerci•I 6085 offers, 646-9987 or 64S-4{)47. please call 67a-8531 A~"='~'~"'°-="~==~~~ General• ';;:"'1..,"P· •H&ull>W Scars Val. $65,000 For un. . 1 ~---------~REDECORATING• n-· & ~ its, h>use or beaCh prop . ./ STORE Bldg for sale 681). U?li'USUAL o~portun1ty • At. LOST: l\lale Siamese cat. . vraigtl EXP. Japanese Gardtmr.:'. OWNER 6'l5-625a 698 \V. 19th SI. BeUlel tracti_ve boutique .• N.B. ocean Vic. 28th block in Newport cons!. OOd jobs & repair. Gen, cleanup. Haullna: trees. . . To11.i?rs corner. 54&-1768 agt. location. Established 3 :yrs, Beach. Re .... •ard. 675-3784. Exp., refs. Odd hrs. & free Land,f.o1· units; view; 700 fl. Xlnt lease. }'.take offer. WHT Short-haired domesttc est. 673-4280 or 673-444j ?ttalnL yard 646--0619. frontage. Can divide to 9 Industrial Rental 6090 67>3653 or 531-5363, cal, Vic: Elden Ave, C.M. REPAIRS * . ALTERA· GARDENING A: Land!ca':: lots. San Juan Capo, Sl35-l\fl:;;=::.:.:::.:.:.:.:::.::.::..__:::.::1,=°'::::::.::;-:--;;;:;:;:-u,;;: 646-3806 aft 6p TIONS * CABINETS. Any ing Pruning·Trlmmi~· • Val· $100-~ ..., For Im· 28 000 SQ FT bld COIN laundry -0:-Sta Mesa m. me ~,.Jo. Rerovatirc 54s-5J>9 aft f ' ~.... ' · · new g. area ~ full pnce IVV proved or D's. 494-4653 11.•Jlge. ~verhead door. $285 · 54~3641 · --""-'-"""='=""'=='~· c,"~8-6_TI_3_·, IYOUli.G ambiDJus newlywed mo 2950 Graee CM .1---_;;_=-'='----1 Penon•l1 6405 ROOFING nttds wkly lawn care .. Canyon Lake, l lot trom wa-1 >16-680~~~7.'--c=--·~--11 ;:--~-;-:-=--;;-;;,;. ---------7 "17 ter, $4200 ·equity. wanti: 6320 * FULLY LICENSED * &. All 1-lome Improvements. Reas., exper. J ohn. 55 -, home income <Ir lot Al· FOR Lse-5300 sq ft prime Money to Loan Rewwncd Hindu Spiritualist Free Est. 5.16-1059 t1ambra. area ' ware h s e space-all/part. 1 TD L Advice <ln all matters. CUSTO~f cabinets, remodel· 557:7653 ~5l.lnd,_ hlr. Bulla.rd st oan Love, ~faniage, Business ing & additions. State lic'd Have 2.(1 units. TTadc for Reatllngs given 7 days a contr. 548-6514, 646-5119 G•ner41 S.rvl.ce• Mn 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for Jc.:ise. Incl spac. muter suite, din rm & dbl gnrage, auto door opener avall. Pool Ii Rec. .,., .. e FROM $265 e 165 Amigos Way, NB BEACHBLUFF APTS M' HOUSEBOAT, Xlnt, Ll\'e 2 BR, 2 Ba. pool, paUo, F/ll, aboard, slip avail, WU! take dshwhr. 8231 Elli!. car or l!maller boat In trade . b .1 2600 Sq. rt. w/officC', lrg rear 8% INTEREsr y,•.-ek, 9 A~t -9 Pl\f REPAIR. Remodel & patios. moreunitsorsumi , door i 295 mo. Eves 2 d TD Loan 312N.EICamtno Real, Letthe Swededoit. Fortin Co., J.lealto~ &16-0681: dy &lS-5033. 124o n San Clemente 4!»-7853 or 67l-S417 lill.C Westchfl Drive Logan SI. Sp No. L. C.l\f. 492-9136, 492-0076 Newport Beach 642-5000 NE\V bid · Terms based on equity. CUSTOM WOODWORK TIIINGS your husband Mes not have time to do! Maint· repalr! Moist anythi.n1 . 54>-0820 GARAGE doors and opera.tors serviced and in- sta1led. E. Harrtso11 , 129, Governor St. 64&-8505. Managed by WlLllA?tI WALTERS CO. TNHSE • 2 br, 2'~ ba, bltns, frplc, patio, encl gar. 752 Amfgi» Way, 675;-5033 Corona del M•r 5250 842-8477 or 847-3957 fo~· equity. I -~'--'=-"'-'-'--:...-~-I * 54&.2434 * e SPACIOUS 3 br, 2 bil. lge fenced yard, eocl gar. Cou· What do you bl.ff to trade? pie w/2 children, no pets. Ll!!t It berw -ln ~ $185. 842--4549. County's ~ read = NEW! Never Lived·ln: 2 & 3 !.DC poll -aM make a BDRl\1S. Nr. Beach. Agt: * 645-1070 * * IN ·" & 1 . g., 1368 lo 2300 JI, 642 2171 545-0611 SIR \Val!er Now Introducing Jl'urniture & Cabinets CO operatcu c eaning Nr Baker & r~aJrview, 1 yr ~. the All New Method! 548-4235 ;).004-4 agency in new shopping lease. Sullivan, 548-2176 Serving Harbor area 21 yrs, Correclive Haircutting or 64 center. Will trade ..,.uity for Sattl•r Mortgage Co.. '°"' Cutting the hair at the crown home. real estate or ??? Lots 6100 336 E. 11th Streett foJloy,•ing the swirl, con· C•ment, Concrete 6600 543-4102; 962·9125. touring the whole head. Al· CONCRETF;, All types. Free BOAT & Household repairs. General Handyman. U- ficient & reasonable * * * 51;4 ACRES Mortgages, taining lhat s mo o the r est. Say,'ing, breaking, haul· _ 1 Trull D-·'s 6••5 natural flow. You are next! ing & Skiploading. Service & Pl 1 .... · S9Q "" "":" N NEED typing done? , \Ve ' 673--1245 an cu 1n Avocad05 1-..:.;..;cc...;:...:.;.:c;__-' -.u. ewport Blvd., CM . quality. 548-8668 Bob. can do. Speedy, aceurale, e Sl.10 • 2 BR, crpts, drps. Exclusive esta1e area 1F YOU ha\'e $2700 & desire MASSAGE SPECIAL CEMENT \"o·• of all kind•. b"-, dshwshr, -~1e. A1t ··ALS t<ENTALS · T • reasonable, 6'6-4238. ._.,, ..... ..--r<.i:" hi I "'Ith guarded gate monthly incm for S yrs, 6 Dollar'.!! Free est. ~by 4 pm._847-3727 Apt1. Unfurnished Apts. Unfumlshed Privarc rood secured by 151 mtg. call He & She Health Club 636"·0374 H•ndy Man 642·2'51 Ort• .. NEW lrg 2 Br. Dshwhr, Rooms for Ront 5995 On property 1ob -c:':::'·..:"c.5-83<13:..:c'<'------l Sepani.te walk In Sauna's for =o°'E~co=RA°'"T=I;;V;E;=:,C~O",N"'C"R"E=,°"·E Home h1aintena~ pa"· JSan Di-~-· at Sant• An• 5620 ---------·I fabulous home,,.,, -A"'. Refurbishing "'" ~ .. -.. -.T -Ladies & Gentlemen 847·7879 DRIVES • \VALKS. PATIO __ c;•:.::.,• _ _:_=--'-~I ON TEN ACRES Edinger). $165. 842.-7062. ALL NEW PLEASANT room tor lady Crop management available ANNOUNCEMENTS 174~ Beach Blvc:. (corner CALL DON, &t2--a:il4 RAIN gutters i nstal~e.d . l • 2 BR. Furn I: Untunl e QUIET 2 br, 1%. be. crpts, PARK PLAZA In C.M. near Park. Heated $4.5,000 • Attractive terms and NOTICES o! Slater! H.B. Rainy selllJOll here -~ FlttplaOil I priY patiol I -'-I nd k Pool Call 646--0669 * CONCRETE v.-ork: patios , Free et1t. Reas! 968-2208 Pooh.Tmmb:.Coninne• "'t< .. • garage, ge su ec · For Adults · · Found (FrHAds) 6400 *MASSAGE* dfV\\·aya, etc. Li c e nsed . 900 Sea t...M, CdM 6"-2b11 ~;:;160:;,;53&-8739::=,_::.::;· ___ ~-l BR. $137 e 2 BR $167 *S15 per week·UP wJkil· SAIJNA * \VHlRLPOOL PhilllJ)s Cemenl 548-6380 (MacArthur nr Cofst ffWJ) NEW 2 BR, 2 ba, (rplc, cpts, 3824 South Flov.·er St, SA cheM. S30 per .,.,.~k·UP FOUND, a )'<lung, black Lovely Girls, Plush facilities. ~tORE Concrete patio for Hauling 6730 I drps, bltns. nr bch, $175 mo. , ,:;•:;"'~'"'· ~M=O'l'E~::L.7"54:::S-c.:9755::=':c· -I pregnant she cat, vie lris & "-n 7 day,, noon·mldnight. CORONA DEL MAR 646-0841, 54.8-0131 !n~~~. ~~ ~~is~!s~ p~ i ~IATURE working: person: Dahlia CdM. Would like to ;;;; \V, Coast Hwy, Newport ~i~~. ~:~~ts~-=ng. YARD, garage clean up· and NEVI 3 Br. 3 Ba. lower du· 1 1r; 2 BR New apts. Frplc's, no drinking or smoklng;.Cl\f Realtors give 10 good home if owner Beach. 548-3608 general hauling. llave big plex. Closed palJo. C.Ov, car· Near Ocean! Patio. Adulli. 1 ==='=7=14=)::54=5-=3'l=14=== area.* 6f6..Q}l0 ''Our 25th Y••r docs not claim. 675-4235 ffl CEMEN':' \VORK, no job too truck. very reasonable Free --~--·-- n. ·rwl 1 d ~ LINDBORG CO. ~2579 1· 1-:;;;;::::::::;;:;::=====l In the Harbor A""••" , ,:_•,::P~mC,..-------*MAN , W/concern fo r small, reasonable. Free est. 646-1346 Marnatha age. ix;auti y an scai--i. 5,. ... " I· ' 1: future of our country & in--Estim. H. StuO iCk, 5'1S-8615 Complete blt·ir ... Year lease ----------I ~T;:;•;:;:•1"1•::__ ____ _;;.-'-~"' Room & Bo•rd 5996 673-4400 fo'OUND h1on. A.l\1.; vie. 1rres1 in y,·orklng w/boys. T.N.T. Lawn Service · at $325 per mo. O:intact DOWNING APT$ Ne\vport & Victoria, Costa No Pay: Bu t lots of CUSTO~I CONCRETE Garage Cllean·ups, hauling & . 0 Fountain V•lley 5410 !IOME for elderly. bright & e IVANTED LOTS Mesa. Blk .. med . size male .,.. .. ~""ol , , 1., s f a, 1.,0 ,. PATIO.DRIVES-ETC. light moving. 54 8-5863 , ,, , 671-&0SO CORNER of WILLIAMS &: '"heertu1 surroundings. Love. · dog, re se m b I e s lge. •~'''"'" Free estimate. 67>5516 531 3729 •• . ALL NEW ALLIANCE.S1S0.$190.2BR. "" to build .l\.pt's. C k 642 4 550 S.1&-3182* -._ •.•. •n~& VALLEY PARK 2BA.1200sq.ft,.soundproof, Jy ocean view. priv. roon1s. CASH 54~;68:poo. -. SHARE ~,-Al~MB=1'-'T°'IO"'u"s~co"u",-.,....,bo-y-,I Fl A heat, pvt patio. Adults. For, lnfonnation 4924089 \\'ritt de!a.ils to: Daily P ilot I~:;>,.:::::.·=---,--~ Contractors 6620 have truck 'lli'ill haul move, 14-8-,-. ~2~1._,-.. ~~S~tud~l,-a-pt. For FAMILIES with pre-Box M·2004 2211 W Balboa BLK poodle wired collar GAS EXPENSE clear ..,,'t'ed11, exp. dep. Free Clesm. 714 Go Id P n r od. schaol children onl y. Mgr • 16507 Alliance Mlac. Rentals 5999 Blvd, N.B.' • . studded w/silver, chain, N<!t'<l ride to Costa ?.lcsa from My Way, quality home, ·::•::.l ·.;:833-66:::_~"::.·-----2 &: 3 BR and 2 BR Studio or phOnc Qv.•ner 64&550l :.:.;;.:.;;:c..:;==;:.._-_;:.:c..:c1;;77.c::~-~---I flea collar. Vic: Btwn 17th Laguna. \Vorking hrs. 8 to repair. Walls, ceiling. floors -!~~£~ l.se. ~7573. $160 to$215 ----------1LRG Dbl garage Jor stor. R--1_ Lot C~ta :\'lesa, can & 18th & Pomona. Contacl 5. Call 642-4321 {ext 270) l'lc. No job loo small. YARD/Gar, Cleanup. 17256 South Euclid, FV Laguna B•aeh 5705 elc. Weather proof. Alley ~ui~ 40 ~~· Phil Sullivan, Animal Sheller. Orartge days, 49-1.5739 after 5. I ;54;"'~14::94;:·=~~~~-· I ~,.:;::~=. ~1:a7~· LRG Upper 2 Br, crpts, drps, {Just South o( Warner) access. lst & la.st $40 mo. e !or 761. 1-'0UND Bro"''Tl & Black tiger NON-VERBAL ROOM Additions. I&: 2 story refrig:, range. a:ar. Mat. (714 ) 540-4715 OCEAN VIEW • Lrg 1 BR HB. 536-6801 eves. 1 ·.......i t Vi l\l . ENCOUNTER & gar. call Gen. Contractor TRASH & Garage cle~p, adlts. S17S mo lse. 704 apts. Furn or unJum. Crpts, FOR RENT • Weekends & l'.A_c_r_•c;•.::9c;• _____ 6::2~DD::I tr~~.caNpt. ic~~ne: for lowest price 642..2988. 7 days. $10 a load. Free est. Narcissus drps, blt·lns, Patm. walking Eves. Spacious hall avail. 10 Ac. SJ. Calif. SlO dn, SlO 646-9071. * $~~~~~~ * Additions * Relnodellng Anytime, 548-5031. Near Ocean & Sl'lop'g Santa Ana 5610 distance to town. 100 OW for ttcp. teas or what ha\'e mo. $995 FJP. L. Shewfelf, B~LA~CK=-,~,m-al~,--P-"_P_P_Y __ :...:=.::.:c:.::::_::__. j Gerwick & Son, Lie. l\10VING, Ga.J"aie clean.up Ii: Bni.nd new 2 BR. 2 BA Dr .. Laruna Bch. 494-5-193 you. For info. 646-1724 326 \V. 3rd St, LA \\'/flea collar found on SWINGERS! New Orange 67J.0041 * 54S.2170 lite hauling, Reasonable. 326 l\targuerite. 5'18-'1983 VILLA MARSEILLES DELUXE 2 BR, 2 BA, view, LARGE roon1, suitable for 213:623-5101. Country Club Dr, C:\1, l\lon--Co. Gulde. Free in lo OCSG, GEN'L remodelini: &. mainL Free estimates. 645--1602. 2 BR apt, Cd.'1. $16j, no pets BRAND NEW elec eye garage, ldry. storage. 1502 Orange Ave., For Acreage in Oi·ange Co. day. 54&-1397 ~~.-Ot9~x 2lll, Anaheim No job too sm al l .1 ________ _ or children. SPACIOUS 497-1056 or 4!H-5810 Costa Mesa. Call: 646-5310 IP''°o'°R°'T"'AB~L;-:E~ra-d"•·o....,.fo-,"nd.,-,o"o ..:::.,:.~=~----°"L=k=''='='"'="red==· =675-&183==== I Houucl•inln11 6735 673-4171 after 4 pm 1 • 2 Bd A 1 R N d 1• blk hO I "" • .,., l ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. • • rm. P 1. 1 B · en • ,, s P REAL ESTATE Sllttttn 11\tlt fy beach in Laguna. Phone. 542-7217 or write to 2 BR. cpll!, drps, Frplc I.:. Adult Living bch, Jdry facll. Adults. $175 Gen•r•l '199-404S P .O. Box 1223 Co'la M•sa. Carpet Cleaning 6625 ARE you not satislied w/ aara.ie, S200 mo. Furn. & Unfurn. up. 494--4488, 830-4237. _::=:::.:::.-----1 ..,,.,,.~C~•~ll~&l~2-6560~"-.--1 fi)ui;;D;~~~~:;-c;,;;i; l ..'.:.~~~rfi.~'.".-'=:!!:...-1 the way )'ilur carpets, ~ •615-3TI7• C"-~-'=,.;c"='"--;.--I como p~rty 6000 4;;;0 C z fOUND: Young pure white MIMI F & M Cleaning Service. .. ·nd I k• T '"· Dlshwa.sher . color coordlnat. OCEANFRONT, prlv. beach. n • -....-A · oned i\1obi!e Hon1es. fem. cat near Knott's Berry • Carpets cleaned, Holiday • V.'l ov.•s 00 • ry un: 2 BR. 2 Ba. Ocean Gide of ed appliances • plush shag Studio apt. Mature adult on-W b I H Povcd frontage, Next to $50 Farm 968-8152 . . the 2 inonths are up. special. Certi·Foemer, new Dutch way. Call Dutch J-L .. y. Nicely decorated. carpet • chOice of 2 color l,;l';,·;;1:;:150~>:••;;·_;•~94~-4::;653::;== •st •y ncome omes Jl.1lllion development SAC • 1 ,.:..~~·..:.c:-.c,...:..---,-~ method, dries in 2 hrs. Free Maint, &>rvice & you will l\torgan Realty 673..fi642 achemes .. 2 baths • stall TRIPLEX • $57,500 for s 19 o o / Per ' ac~ LARGE blark puppy lound Announcements 6410 est. 536-2247 or 536-3508. see the difference. 537-UM UNIQUE tree level apt 2 br sOOv.·ers • Mirro"ed ward· San Cltm•nte 5710 Best Eastside Costa l\1esa Jo. TERMS: 714: 682-1351 · College Park area. before SAM or aft 3PM. nr bc:h w/pool. S225/prL robe doors • Indirect light· I :.=..::..:=="'---~-' catlo~; "~~i;tesTwi,~h an, in. GOV 'T Land, S5 LC're \VrHc· ~Mn COTTON T-shirt fabric $1.49/ Diamond Carpet Cleaning HOUSE OF CLEAN ' "-. '!l Dahl'·. S49--00lO. . . kl he b kl 1 NEW 3 br, cptg/drps, nr heh. come . IM>o> us 111 cot·. , ~ ... P k ll" .N · KITTEN found vie of Rive.r yd . Like at old C.M. Knitting, Autumn Special DOES EVERYTHINA ..... ·• ...,, 1ng 1ll le n • rea as Woodland Pl l 8 ild ...... 11.. ac age <H o A"· A · • K·t·ts -A N 400" •20. --Est. v ... h "rl 1 1 _ .. $215. mo. 232 Victoria Apt • ace. u er "o wh ••d 'Ave. ~.· .. & 52nd Sl. N.B. Ca.11 to idcn· menca .• " ' .. u .. ..-· "' ,..,...., Co ·1 R Cl-·•·-UNIQUE, lge. pvt. new 3 lHU" • uge P va e en-.-.:u .... , .. A"" ' ... ., .. Tustin. Orange. 637-6120. R.epair·lnslall. 645-1317. mm & e!I. e ........ 2 ba bl Ir. drp$ patio • plush landscaping • C. San Clemente. 492-3651 '" ..... ...,a. Bernardino. Ca. tifY. 548-63-17 '642 L824 ~·~ ... ' 54~";~pls ' brick Bar-B.Q's. Jarge heat. 6D6D GERi\1AN Shepherd, bla<"k SERVICE DIRECTORY STEAM J et carpet cleaning. -V v•.,,..,.,.,.. ed pools & lanai. ;cR;.:•:.;•:.;t•:.;l;;.1_W;;.,:•:.;nt;.:od;.::__5;_990...:..; Bualness Rental Resort Property 6205 y,•/fa"''"· found H.B. Owner By ClarKare, nation-wide \VINDO\VS & y,•alls wastitd. UPPER 2 Br, 2 b!l attract. & •101 So. Brt'stol St. .d t'f ~n6 Babysitting 6550 seivice. Frtt est. 6424055 clean, 613 Narclssua Ave, -.. FREE HARB01; BLVD. fro n I , CABIN & 5 VI F.\V ACRES. 1 en 1 Y. . Fl.rs. stripped,' sealed .& CdM. 675-5720 (~ htl. N. ot So. Coas Plau) · 19 x 31 w I restroon1 , 2110 All utll. avail. Unbelievable FOt?ND sm. bi:ov.•n pup 1:"c: l\1ESA Verde mother desires C•rpet Laylnt & , \\'axed. r~~e est. day Cir Santi An• VICE Harbor Bl\'d, CM. SDI mo. at only s4700 \\"Ith klw do11.•n Fairview & Wilson. For info babysitting. permanent, 7 Rerlr 6626 -"-'~•h_t_. _67_~_3090_. ___ _ Huntington BNch 5400 PHONE: 557-1200 RENTALS~ER year's lease. 543--0783. 01 S650 &: easy mo. paymis. call 5-1~7370 days/wk. Can pick up & -Bay & Beach Janitorial ~!'""--~"!!\'"".!!!!!~ 16443 i\1agnolia, \Vestminsler. of $45. l,B;.R;.O~l;:VN~ . ...:;:,.::m-a71•--pu-p-py-.-·i17h c1::'c:""c:ho:::::m::•:..· :.°';:;6-_:2986=---• EXPERT • Crpl&, windows. tloors etc. 2 BR. unfum. 1 Br furn. Did you ever think of swa~ OWNERS & Store/oUlce 14'x50'. ln shpg Bob Roht-rts Real Estate some lllhlle. r.Iesa Verde CHILD CARE carpe* '.,.!.°!~a*tlons Res. & Comm'!. 646-1~)1. Crp11, drps, bllns. 2 Ba. 733 Ing that White Elephant in MANAGERS cntr nr SD IN')'. $135 mo. 171~) s.57-3169 area. ~'1629 ;iv~• Lake. 536-3700, 53"",.-0'175 the attic for somethlna: ~ C1ll 541-1169 <194--0216. Any a.ac. any time, 11uper-I -~~='===.,...,=~-2 \V0i\1EN, e(ficient, "1kfy d , -th Trade ==""o=""o'-'.C.,~-· I BIK E Found l\tesa Verde vised activities. 6n.2289 CARPET LAYING preferred. C.ltt. area. CM1 2 BR. l~ BA, crpr.s, rps. can use . 4 •1 e rs EXECUTIVE 4:i, wldo'lli'l!r, SfORE for ltase 2400 sq rt, Out of St•t• Prop. 6208 area. Chvner ident ily. C.A. Page-642·2070 Eves. MB-1227. bltm, 1 blk to beach. Pan.d~ column in the Dai· desires unturnlshed 2 BR. Balboa hie, Xlnt J se. llAWAJJ Tv h , 1 , .. =0-=7=4SO=.====== EXPll\10TliER, v.·ill bab)'&it. EXPERT l -~,~1,"",.~a=c-an~l,-g°'•~---.,._-,.,,1 $15S/mo. 8-12-4085 Iy Pilot Want Ada. view apt or small hou1e to 63S-l253 -"O acres soul o ltty home. Nr Bri8lol. &: """•• .... li;e. year round. lmmed. OC· ='="=======:I Kona iri lfa..,, .. iifln Ocean Baktr St's &. Sono ra school. CARPET lNSfALLATION Carpet&, "111indows, flootll, ~c. Fount•ln Valley 5410 Fount•ln V•iley :J-ounlain~ M.Oil•,.,.,._ Sty!• Lunrr l_, __ ,_ Atlalt Lhlq FaniJsbetl a tJaltmdabtd . , ... ·-... e s ... ~ . ,,..,.. ,.,.,, -~c-.,­........ Ull"" ' 5410 cupy. i\tr. Flynn. Day, Office Rentil 6070 View Es1atf's, $8,000 or bestl~L~•::•;_t _____ __;640=1 ~16-16!12 &.REPAIR. 646-4191. Res & Commc'L 5'18-4ll1 213 J 58 3· 80 5 I , eves ::::;::::;:-:::::;-:-;::-;:-::;:-::-=:l.'.0'.'.:":'.:"'.'.·..:96:::2:::-40~7''-. ----LOST male Chihuahua fa11on :\"t"v-"oo"n-te-.• ~1,-,-,"'~-b-k-)'d~.· I Electric.I ---~"4o --..:21c:!::_l_:430-~21.:;6S:::... -----SUPER-DELUXE QUALIT'I' color, vk, o( Bush~rd & \1•arm n1rR l!1. Reos. 358 3 BR. 2 ha, unlurn apt or 1·2.J ~m .. up to 3,000 SQ.1 ,M::::;o~u::n:;la~;!!n_:&~D'.!0~1:!e!:;rt~6!;2~1~01 .;G=arl=i•=ld;.iR;';"'"::="'=·=-=·="=""=.!;':;:'";;m:i;;llo~o;·,;C;:,.M=. ;;64:2--0829=~· = 1· ELECTRICIAN • PJumb-h~. for Adult cpl k 2 fl. 0U1ce s111tes. lmmerl. OC·r er. lnalllllatlon &. repairs, ffiONfNG, J\ty homr, $l•llit'. tttnage chlld~n. Newport cupancy. OMLngc C n t y. BIG Bcur lake Rancho, 21,~ ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS No job too gmall. 545-4614. Dresrniakln& & AllcraJions. Ironing 67~ Illa: or compargble atta in Airport lrvine Commerc. a.:-. u"OOded, 11r lake, 111il. •nd NOTICES-ind NOTICES ELF.CTRICIAN. Small jobs, _54~>-=:764~l·======:I N.B. or C.M. S250 max, Complex, adj. Airporter $2ri,000 rerms 213:286-28.18 maintenance & rep a Ir s .... '11.X>Uld llke frplc. 6~ aft Hotel &: Restauninl, banks, Announcem•nts 6410 Announcements '410 Llc'd &:: Bonded. 548-5203 6 a, v.•knd1. San Dieeo & N'pL f\t.'Ys. BUSINESS a nd MAID SERVICE All DOMESTICS e LANDLORDS e UNCROIVDED PARKING FINANCIAL -LOWEST RA TES 1''REE RENTAL SERVtCE Owner/mrr. 2172 DuPont Dr., BUsiness Broker. 53U9S2 Rh. 8. Ne1vport Stach, Opportunities 6300 Rooms for Rent .5'95 83J..322l Courtesy to Broken GOING busines~ for &ale. 1.;..c;.;;;.;.,;;...;c...=c.:..-"-"';.:. * DELUXE 1-room otflct. Smalt coffee shop BED In •rt studio, prlv. Adj11cen1 to Airport•r Inn & Downtown San!a Ana 1oca: cloaet It dni&Kr. Dttk \.Op Onnae Olt)'. Airport . tion. $4000. F.P. Tern11 f.\•all. Priv. entrance <aemll ·Carp., drapes. mus1c, air· 11 vatl. 08$1 511·3722. e\'C aharf: bath, Sta Wk plus rond .. etc. Sl2S l\fonth ~~3. dep01lt. Klt It l1undry prlv. 83J.0101 OR 833-014·11-'-C:.C""'------ ~~I. ~~ .. 1c. Sl\td•" DESK SPACE LAGUNA Sesch: B 11u1. 222 Forest Ave nue ki~tie bdrm A ba, kitchen L B h prlv. Prlvale: home. ldPal egune eec for >"OUOll ~·· $25 wk for 2, 4!H·946& $20 for l perJOn. ?d ust Uke BEAUTIFUL olllces, air, ""::.;:":.· .:.:•!M;.;,c-<1;:10:;1 __ _,_,. __ 1 c1u1>ftt. panel~. Faclnli R06M: W /pvt tn\1'81\Ce 4' Beaeh Bh'd. Ca.JI MZ..2525 ar ~alh In qul1tl area. Nr n.11 owner (2131 EX 4-0013 F•Jrvtew 6 Baker. 54Q.(l6(}8 co11tct. TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAii. Y PILOT WANT AD NOW OPEN New Ml~helob Bar Plush mod•rn w ith Polyne1l•n 1tmo1phere •nd dKor. * "TltE GREEM UNTERN" 1930 Placentia, C.M • * * * * GRAND .OPENING PARTY Saturday, October 2 4 Buffet Lunch 5 pm to 8 pm * FIMn 6645 FHI llko • oa-1 CARPE:I' VINYL 1'1LE Have a ~lAJD in )'out home lJC CONTR. FREE EST. tn lh"e In for as low u $16 * S.W.1262 * S350 pc.r mo. Se:rvicu re.n- dered at our office or In: Gardening 6680 yuur home. Plen.se Call. (213l 26&-6250 Collecl . JAPANESE Ga rd t n l n; ~LOCA='~L,_;,G~irl-"w-'an=~=cto'-cl-•an-1 SC!rvlce. Neat '11.'0rk. Cltanup apta &: prlv. homes. Gd ref'1 yd, malnt. !16&.2Xl3 &. ttaa. ntt1! 642--1224. Complete Y •rd (ire I JI~1 Mq-4837 Palntint, $2.5011R. LandcceJltn.c, Peperhentl'!_ ~ clean~. ptlntlni. e1c. E>c· ptr. relk\ble. John 64&-9543. PAINTING: 1nter. & Exler\ GARDENING \'cry reuoneble. 64S-01J8 art 6 P~t By Expulenced Jat¥1JK'.sc * 548-0223 ~ * PAPERHANGER ... i,:xp~·=m=.-,~.-pa-,.'"-'-,.=-c=.-,.,~.-.,.-,,· IPrafc~,lonal. 646''449 compleie >.! .,ry1,., Rella. * PAPERHANOINC# k ntal. f'rff est. 6-12-4389 Ir PATNTING. * fl8S.14%i £X inter "'"" 837-S AIN" yri. CSL ,.... 'OR . '"· price AIN" c.n &16-4 OU S!O 'ree E:XPE . ,, •• Mo; Inter. PAIN Int. f ree Paii:t Ro -* I All . Plun P! Plwn I DP..AJ slow 24 hl PlU Pool POC """' "''" o..., Rocr LEE of : ""' """' BEFt G"y ,,.. s.w QUAi wan .:.lte: On EU ! all ,., .. • 0: I All Neat Tile *' Cust j ... Q . ,,.,, rep: • p Tre Al• A~ ~pr1 a!r 67> Bi Upl ~ czy CU1 Ne &I> JOI Jot ~ £l!! in< '"' 4!4 Jot I AID tit! Ho DA; "' .. , = Joi , I "" I •' m< I • ' • • n • : s • Thu~day. Cktobtr 22, 1970 DAILY PILOT j1$ JOU a IMPLOYM&NT MIRCHANDISI POR MIRCHANDlll POR MERC:HANDISE FOR 1t1ERcHAHl>1ll POil 1 ' Jobe ~ Wtim. 7100 J1lll1 Men, Worn. 7100 Jo~• ¥tn.-Wora. 7100 Jobo Men. Wom. 7100 SAL'& AND TRADI SALE ~D TRADE SAL& ANO TRADE SALi AND TRADI JOIS & IMPLOYMINT JOIS & IMj'LOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMINT l ltVICI DlltlCTORY :.f"tint, 6l50 MAID-Experienced, 25 or TELEPHONE CO!,J...ECTOR Furnltur9 '°® G1r ... Sale toll Pianos & Or91n1 8130 Mltcelleneous l600 EXTERJOR.olNTERIOR ·• . DELIVER over. Full time work. 3151 Some exp,.ln Ctcdit It Colle<:-. DUE lo relOca.don, mu11t sell GARAGE Ale Fri. Sat & -- - .. P.-porhe09l09 on'l 'h< underbid! C...!Om ' TELEPHONE Harbor Blvd. C.M. • Uon, top oomm .. plan, btne. hOuoeful ol btaul Mediter· Sun. v .. iou. hou .. hold o~ri 1HEY GO • * AUCTION * ~'Qrk. full,y pr. Finc111 tlta, eood working cond, Mr. ranean furniture.. ·2 Spanish fumilW"e'lr: mlic item!, all Hammond o!!'~~~ FRIDAY, 7:30 P.M. pr.lets. Free e1t./color con-DIRECTORIES MAKE full tinl&--~·aat• .pt· ~tottenan 492.-4l?C, kirc,slu bdrm tif:ts. &' In aood cond & rcas priced. Re" $2170: Now $l5i95 OCTOBER 2ird ultlng. Local 'refll. Lk , M · lth l 1. Um~. Be • diatributor ol T"' "VISION -mm• .... '-'-velvet tofa le loveeeat, • Drew muter bdrm tulle tn kond 1 4-.,_ .~ -1 en or women over 18 w cars, s a 1on "Ur@ ...,...anic Jood aup-~ .... • ... 11:1.Q lncl almost new (21 1tudlo w/fuJJ rylh,ym, pere., le• , •. ,,.~ w/ ,_ ~·-1m ' rui, .,............,, "":o·•.o11u. wagons or light true" ... Applro Friday, Oct"-rplement·,·· ''""'" .. ~-now cutlnc for 13 wttks ol dgam•,aet. bl•ck1 Naup~ coucl>ts, l w/cow.r "-11, ... W""l.I arno14 ,., ....... IT-Exl palntiJl&, Sllte le: ci. """' v-• • .......... TV oommerc1a..ls,. !.A.G. en um. H ·back vclvtt GI'. T Medll rta 1 Y licensed. 30 yn ex" a.II ber 23rd, 8 :30 to 4 p.m. at ocation nearest mt>tica. Mr. Llln, 67J..a212 INC. 8J!>..350l dl!ecntor chltn, coffe e bolster. 3 9"12 nip, l 6x9 GulbranRNn0 2wl0711,,!. mo old Color TV~, J:.~~ w=: .. you -=="'""'==-~=-! tab! 1 od mode Al. rua:, &: 1 black lt>alher ot· .,.... ..... Blll !or free est. 60--0238 if . MANAGEMENT * TR IMME R OR. 1 e e com s. 1 toman. AJ90 box Sprlnp &: w I piano. ryth)"m, perc., ~ tcP. chcstl, tewing ma. Mans, 646-5268. 430 W. COLLINS, ORANGE UPHOLSTER.ER to work on ess ltuln 4 mo old. Pvt pyt leslie chines, student desks, COl'net No Waating 223 N. CRESCINT WAY, ANAHEIM Good r!a~~:~~Musr be boat Interiors &: ca~vu ~l~litt~~lce. 2131943•2386• ~~~51~~i·c::i~:.s ·:~ Baldwin 48HR 8 mo old units, nice twin Ir: full IUe ( +·WALLPAPER* 2221 S, ANNE ST., SANTA ANA rruuTled. Millluy Complet. covers. Perm. job, tr1nge l~="°"===-~~-dreaser w/mlrror. dinette Now .$2095 ' mattre6SC!s. Divans, cedu \\then you ca.ii "Mac" 3321 W. 1st ST., SANTA ANA e~. Call Ann, MS.mo, West. be:nelits. REDECORATING Dini nJt set w/4 chalrs, iae blond Full COtl.!Kllc w/1tll exlras chesti, dttaaer1, coffee tA· S.1444 646-lnll,=====·=====-======'=='-== LAKE ARROWHEAD room ~I oonal1ting o( round b Hammond o.,.an NIOO blea. Like .new Wurlltur or. cliU Per10nnel Aaency, 2043 MARINA Cn4.l 377-"u.I black table, 4 Captains uUet, drapes A J..pc sec-& la Wuh. I.NT. or EXTERIOR J c. M W 71 L---~--WestC:llH Dr., N.B. ===-=""'.,-.,,~="-=,-! ..u.-i-with ~d , •• _,.,, 2 tional. mo Cibola Ave., Reg $1770 • Now $1195 can d apinet P nod.I tt ~ .. ·-•G. , -. 11 ••. IM· o.,. Aen, om. 00 Joua Min. Wom. 7100 ~~;:,:._..::::!..:..=;~~-THE DAILY .. , ... •• •"' ""'"' w1--.. · 1 ... 1,, dy••-ule en, eyers. itove, ne et1 '"A.&n&.... """" CJ. MOTHER'S Hel~r: Mature PILOT extra leaves m. Antique ~1esa del Mar. ~7-3998 ....... -.... ...... Jot I I Liq ..... tED S L F ?!.!any otMrs New ~ .s 0 new carpet _.... 1:-1 e r v ce.,, rec ALL MODELS k>oking for woman. Unlvers ty Pk. Tur· bu an opening for an experi-pine drop leaf ta.bit $45, Lge DINE'T"I'E &el : 2 extensions All trom '»40% oU tor ~ clote-0ttt I; much stimatea. 646-0210 worl!: llhould contact t.A.G. ELECTRONIC tle Rock area. 2:»5:30. enced, journalist In ltg wo. maple bangine shelf with & 6 chain "°· Rocke.r S20. If.....,., want a REAL DEAL more! IMEDIATE Est. on quality INC for information on -INSPECTOR-Mon-Fri. $2 per hr. 83.l-3139 men's departmenl Applicant spooo rack $%5, Frtnch 2 chairs &: ottoman $50. J--WINDY'S AUCTION in~r & exter p&lnting. Apts, ~e:g po1itions Offered aft 6. must be able to report ~~ coffee table S20. Stroller $5. Car seat $5. ~!r.~;d . nome1 or ju1t a room. Jack, Y Comi:-n,y. Ph : Experienced in sub-assembly, MECHANIC • Auto, Newport write clearl,y. understand e 1 or wttkends Tollet seat $1.50. Infant seat ORGAN STUDIOS 831-6925, (213) 430-2866. 835-3501 wiring, circuit board and Bch presUa:e Joe. service cucntlals of photography &I=-=-=~· =-----$1.50. Portable heater ST. in CORONA DEL MAR COME BROWSE AROUND AINTING -Ext.-Int. 18 ASS 1 ST A l"{"f Manager, lotal a y 1 t em inspection station. No major repaln, layout. Top company bene-FURNITURE returned from Steel i;helf, wood~rain finish 2075'4 Newport Blvd. yri.~ exper. Jns. Lie. Free sporting a:oods. Experience· checkout of comm~rclal pro-will have to wie a new tune· fits, good salary, attractive display studies, modet horn. s,s. 15 lb: bowling ball & bag 2854 E. Co&a:t J-lwy, 673-8930 Behind Tony's Bid& Mat'la rst. Accoust. Ce ti Ing s . rcqul~. Over 20, K·Matt ducts. Able 10 instruct olh· up machine; smog lie la new quarters. Apply In writ· es, deooratora caootllation. $7.50. 905 Park Ave., Laguna , • STOP • Costa Mesa * 646..aG86 963-9126 Sporting Goodi;, 2200 era, Should have knowledae pref. S&lary open, Write ing only, citina: experience. $panilh • Medlterra.Man Beach. 494-9822 COAST 1'.IUSIC OPEN DAILY 9 to• ·oR Your painting needs in-Harbor, CM of in-process and receiving Daily Pilot Box M·2006, 330 background & educadon to R D FURNITURE HOUSE&. Patio Sale: Comp\ EXPANSION SALE ROLAWAY bed no. 3 aeet. Ler. & exte:r. ai, lowest A Receptionist I Typisl Al-inspection. W. Bay St. Costa Mesa . 1'.·largaret Greenman, Per. 1144 Newport 81., C.M. 6-pc Bdrm set incl box . Fabulous Buys! couch, 12' cost $1000. cuatom prices, Paul 557.7455, 557-3618 traclive 1 atrl, 23-30 pref'd, MEN It v.vmen wanted for aonne l Manager, Box 1560. evt:Y nite 't1J 9 springs It mattress PJ; NEAR NE\V spinet &. con. will u.c. for $3.5. Needs AJNTING, neat It reliable. for be:autlfuJ Bayfront ~office pleasant telephone work. Costa Mesa. Calif. SD. W~ .. S..t. 6: SUn.. 'tll 6 Stereo5; Tables; Bed 1 : • sole pianos , ••. from $395 reupholstertn&:. Pole lamp Call John for me est. wk/ends only. 6t2-5735 \VeU qualilied individ· S2/hr+bonuses. Apply Im· TRUCK DRIVER. familiar LEAVING at.a.le, ~ to Chain, & many misc item.s. GRANDS refinished a re. $10. "Breathing" naugahyde &16-4871 or 847--028 Apt. Oeaning: Woman. n@t(I. uals snould tend thl:ir mediately or phone M&-5501. with Loi Alll'tlea & <>rana:e sell my beaut!. J\tediter· Very che.ap, Some free to built, aS lo as •••.•.•• S895 chairs & huge footstool ~ OU SUPPLY THE PAINT ed, exper. Own transp. re.ume to: Trans World Vacations, 1869 County. Must operate ranean furn ., klnr bdrm. you. J98jl lnvemess Ui, ORGANS exciting selection match S35. TelepOOne table 510 Per Aversge Room Pen;one.I ref's. 642-1224.. GATES ~ewport, SUite: F, CM. forklift and secure own set, !iv. rm., Spanish game Hu n tinaton Continentals. for the° beginner as well $10. Silver chafing dish, Free &st. S5T-8638. S40-TMS BABYSJTIER: loving care LEARJET CORP. •NEED 5 women or husbt.nd. loads. Class II license re· set, coff~ tables, den furn.. (t ake 2nd left off as the accompllahed organ. comp. $15. Lamps $5. Sew. 1 10 Id . NB h 186.ll Von Karman Ave., & wife teams to market tbe quired. (n4J SS74040. picturM, lamps, etc. Please Brookhurst, main enlra.nce) isl .. Would You Believe" ing machine '35. Ca.mer& " EXPERT painting -Interior or mo 0 in my m. Irvine, Calif. 92664 fabulous Slim Gym. Ex-call 114/ 968-9951. oo projector $35. 546-3634 & Exterior. Free estimates. wkd)'ll7:J0.5:30.645-:1189aft trenlf!IY hi !ncme. Full or TRUCK mechanic. Must1 =~~~:::.;=:_ __ TEAKW D, bookcase , •.•..••.• : •.••..• from $150 STOP & SWAP-"~" 6 Equal oppoMunity employer have own .tools It dleH:I ex-SOLD Home: din!no room tables, lamps, radial sa,,v. "EX"TRA BONUS .. Full trans.. B & J Painting 49?.+7iru. '"°'·====---=-·~1!1"i0ii ... ~ilii ... iiiiiii[ _!P~l·~tim~o.c.:8J;.~:!:111_717:.____ ·~ 54" ~•1 1 M ·•• p . u· .,._ BABYSl'M'ER. responsible, E per, Apply in pe:rson, 1343 \\'/hutch; lamp, coUee table roof ridge, kitchen table & istorized new ·splnet organ o-v.w ~ams atn ng . .x:rv. a.wrox: 2 days/2 nighta wk. 1crow Secretary ~ Lo&an. C.M. console stereo, hi fi. scroll, chain. col.or TV. 6871 Via with automatic rhythm, 2073 Newport. Blvd., C.M. I Inter. &. Exler. Special rates Harbor View area. 644-12Z2 l-2Yts, e.xper. Type 60, SH newport -TRUCK spray palnter. Paint entry cab. chest drawers, Corona Dr. fnt. Slater & THIS WEEK ONLY .• $995 (next to Tony's Bldg Mall lo~=o=n~ap~"~·~646-"'5~~-~ BABYSITIER. !Ive-in, Call 80, Xln•t benefita. personn~ trucks A trailers. Appl y in sofa. poker table et c . Goldenwest) HB. Sat Oct. Open Sundays u..s Used furn;&.S~; Retrla;'s; I PAINTING & Paperhallging. Mr. or r.1rs •• Dees. n4; MISS EXEC AGENCY pcniOn 1343 J.opn, C.1'.t. 673-7784 24th. 842-6808 Daily UI 6 -Fri! til 9 ~ Int: It. Ext. Reasonable. 842-4332 or 213/432-8781 uo w. c.oa..st Hwy, NB agency USED • CAR NEAR new yellow quilt chalr GOLF clubs, car. furn .• skis, COAST MUSIC • "l f We do~;1 hav~ ;hat ~ free estimate 546-3820 · 646-3939 SSO. marcle Iron Sl5, wht. books, dishes. v I 0 \In , NE\VPORT It. HARBOR want, v.·e get it or you BEEUNE Fashions se 1 l Also Fet" Posit.ions Profe11lonal Service SALESMAN lounge chair St~. end tables clarinet, .,.,•aaher/dryer & Costa Mesa * 642-2851 • 8' REGULATION sil.e Pool Painting, themselves when you ""'""""""'""""""""""'! for the employer Col. $10 ea .. rnoaa.ie pie. $10 many misc. items. 2816 ALLEN ORGANS Table. Brunswick make. R I ••-display them. Need 3 style-FL o• pt u·me. T·"· on!•-& and the •pplicant leae student preferred, 21 846-9553 · "--k c M CM d l M $100. 6' Admiral at•-, • l--•"'po'---'------'-conscious women in this ' iuu: '" or older. Part time. ~c.c=· ------...,,,. e, · · esa e ar The n\usic!an'a choice for .......... ~ PATCH PLASTERING area. Part time or full time. make dellv. $2.90 hr prolit 833 Dover Dr., N.B. MARCUS 8' sofa, never used, quilted tract) bOme, !lchool, church. Ex· walnut finish, $100. 'M Hon.- " Call l"'33-9S!< ,116 pm to start. MG-5745 642-3170 fioral_ Scotchguarded. $125. GARAGE SALE cl"·o·vely In So. Calli. at rla -65, $125. All Xlnt Cbnd. All types. Free estimates · * FULL TIME help, female, MOTORS Matchlna: loveseat $'15. • Refriaerators, TV, dishwllllh. -GOULD >'US IC co. 536-801' can -Blue Dolphin PT o• full tlm• clm, liquor 530-833! ' 1'.ton-Fri. approx. 3 to 8 PJ\t. store. C.M. 2100.Harbor Blvd. ,er. 540-1769 Since 19U 8 ?.DI movie projector $20, 8 P°lbf 6l90 WAITRES.SES, exp.-0v. 25. Call Mn. Pennington * M&-9921 * Coell Meu. KINDLE dining furniture, I llOO :!>45 No. Main, S.A, mm Bell&: Howell movie , um "I COOKS. 3355 Via Lido, N.B.833--0600 ~~e,c-=Ex"-t""20J=7--~-l ---....;.-"----==========! breakfront, 6 chaln. table. App lances * 547.-0681 * camera SlO. Gelger couoter· GIRL f ,...._,, . ,..._ PUNCH Ptts& Operator. Fruitwood f lsh Ex 11 $3S.sma.llboa.t$3Sflrm.. PA,.tlMBING REPAm. or ............ aUon ..,..,pt. Must be able to make own School•lnlfrudlon 7600 -nd. ,,A,, ...;!.'.! ' ce ent GE auto washer $40. ABC Baldwin No job too •mall BOYS' SUPERVISORS Good hlnd..,.;tlng ""'· type .. t.up•. Exper. in •beet --=~ gu dcyor $30. Both •ood PIANOS & ORGANS 531 ' 1294 • 64.2-3128 • 50 wpm. Startilli sal $300. m~tal work & or marine IT'S YOUR MOVE MEDITERRAN E~ C.Olfee cond, Deliv. 847-8115, New & U!led LIQUIDATION SALE I HOME REPAIRS Earn $~Sl75 per week. for 35 hr wk. 546-437o hrdwe. 770 W. 17th St., C.M. table & 2 matching com-546-8672 WARD'S BALD\\'lN STUDIO Early American Furn!~ Plurnblng-electrical. $7.50 Hr. Work 28 hours a week. Ages GffiL wanted with CoU«" Apply 8· 30-4 PM INDUSTRY CAREERS modes w/carved doors S~ I ""•""'R"°E"F"R.J=G"E"R~A~TO=R~S-oe-1819 Newport. C.M. &42-8484 Comp! llv rm RI, dinette 642-2755 or 642-0506 lS.35 years l'.lld. Need large Shop-~r. Arphy'a Coffee IRE-"'C:!'.E:<PT..:::.'.::,.c:,c:":.:a::et:..· yo-u-n,--.irl-I E'a. Cabinet $25. 6'1&-7335. AU sizes-AU co Io rs -A 11 OPEN SUN DAY sr', bedrm sets, pole lamp A D•·"NS Pl d' 0 · · Sedan or Station Wagon, SU. ....,...., B, Harbor C.M. k s 9 ~2 30 A TOP dollar for us ed ReMOhtl.bl•: AF'TI::RNOONS many misc house bold Items. ,.vu ugge . ra1n1ng tl'.I wor un. :....,.. : . P-fu . Call Kon R•as ~ ~24Zl slow'! Expertly cleaned $9. pe.rvlse Boys age 12-16 years HAIR STYLI ST with ply 2221 Fairview Rd, c .M. AIRLINE & TRAVEL rn1ture, antiques, bric-a· ** ~78Jl * * • ~ 24 hr serv. SJ0.3854 old, This is not a selling ~ clientele needed Casa de brae. l'.lriental rugs, oil pain· KENMORE delux coppertone,,, _,T.::•;.;l•;.;•.;;l•;.;l"on"-____ 12;..0_S MAGNIFlCENT Navajo rua. sltion! Contact Mr. Waller. Currie, Town and CounlJ')' RENTAL to share Y,./fa.mily tings. Call Ml-3445. ·1 approx 9'x:l3', 14500. PLUMBING REPAIRS H in exch for lite hskp1. Must v.'8.sher &. elec dryer. Perl 17 .. ~-able TV ~ .• eo•· & Install. 545-6688 stein. (213) 860;5783 between .B. ask for Dwayne or have car 893-764.0.. t> OPERATIONS AGENT EXECUTIVE desk $185. cond, USO both. 644-5368. TV,'RwCA•, 2l" l lOO•-. wr Displayed at Hiatt'1 Indian 10 AM-1 PM. J im. 968-4321 e TIC~ SALES -lfardY,.ood-Oark fini8h Xlnt Crafts, 31808 Camino ~RESTAURANT HELP~ ~• od *MAYTAG 5ervice man has * c.o ""'"" .... J Pool Service 6910 **Ca.Tipu1 Secur ity HOTEL MAID, ..... rmanent '" '"" co . Like new. 64frl724 ,,__.....,. .. C&plstrano, San uan .. ~ Female, part time. over 21. •RESERVATIONS washers, dryen In match. 9• ,._ year-round position. e AIR FREIGHT..cARGo 2 NEW modern di n sets sets, best guu. 5.11-8637. Capistrano, Tl4./4 ~· •---------·• Guard-Female PO OL serv ice -H un t Ten month9 position. Grad- BchJNewp<>rt area. $28.50, uate & trained to work with ehcmicals Incl. 846-1646 younc people. * •~ .. 1196 * C&.11a.ft1:30, 54.5-1686. · · Cameras & ~n:-nEST & J 1 "" e COMMUNICATIONS custom BOia, 2 loun'g e .,, • .,,,~ en n n1s·1 HOMEWORKERS WANTED R .E . Sale1 646-0033 e TRAVEL AGENT chain. Call : 546-6807. Antiques llTO 1_.:E:.:qt:u.:.!ip:om:.:•::•;;1 ___ 1::3::;;00 Sta.rliMr wheel chair $55, (En·-Io-Ad•-,.on). Full or pt time. 67~7414 -~-------Slid ,_ m . tent 8'x8' WI. posture rest\ .. ,. ~· Al II Sch I p Ill :PM?-1 . e pro~tor .,,., oh Rush stamped, self.ad· SALESClosen..We need men r ne 001 ac c Office Furniture IOTO FINAL Goina: Out of Scn!en $5. vibrator table $50, J nny d ressed envelope . & \.\-'Omen to expand our 610 E . 17th. Santa Ana I.;;."";.:_;...:::.:.:;:::;~_:= Bu11ines!'i Sale? Ba.rgain&+ no Roberts goll clubs '30, LANGDON WORLD I business in this atta. Sales 54~6596 Re:fin'd 34xGO wood desks rea1. cfler refused. Furn, 646.-72111 53&-211410 a.m.·5 p.m. Daryl. Roofing 6950 LEE ROOFING CO: Roofing of all types, recover , Apply Personnel OUice 1601-16th St., Newp•t Bch. TRADERS. P.O. Box exi>er l'.lnly. Opportuni!y to TRAIN TO BE A $69.50 • Retln'd wood ~ C'!~ &lass, bric-a-brac. 9 x 12 FOR tale, pr!. pty, rneta1 1 ll27-A21, Redondo &ach. earn lge Income il qualified. rotary chain:, $29.50 e We rug. pictures, 36 x 21" Sporting Goods 8500 desk, calculator, cop y• NEWPORT-MESA \ repairs, roof coating!. Lie & UNIFIED SCHOOL DIST. Calif. 90218 213/ 937..4900, 741 s. LaBrea, "Heavy E"ulpment have the largest selecOon portable electric s 1 g n • SHOTGUNS machine, office chaln &. set ~ . $3.40 HOUR L.n. 90036 OPERATOR of used offiee furn in thi:s changeable letten $25. Cen--12 is. Hi&;gins auto. $79, 20 ol pipe dies & cuttrr. Pt. time eves. No exp, nee. SALES-Need 5 men & 5 area. tury House Antiques, 2134 ga. Stevens single S2'l. Both 557-8929. I bonded ,;"" '"'· ""''222 &ashier Receptionist. BFJF'ORE you buy, call T. A od F V_, J\fc M-'---n..-•· Newport Blvd, C.M just We train. M/Have 6 mo's women to demonstrate pprov or •1S ......... """u .. _ nd 2•·t s Xlnt cond. SURFBOARD 1'.1JNK jacket, new, beioe SLIM "Y JET BATH ' • I bulldo 1800 No·-Blvd. '-"'Yo ui t. "' 1 Guy Roofing Co. Recover h t '"" ""'""'· S<S.95!111 Must ave au omo- residency in Orange County. ...., M &: . ....:am o ope.rate zer:t, ·.---· 7'4", xlnt cond $55. 842-4526 pearl color, size lO. Won tni ~MEN & WOMEN Mary Lou Good, 9fi8..2US drag lines, cranes. scrapers, 642-3450 ART Glau, cranberry glass. cOntest. will sacrltlce. Call : ~.,-~ I d 1 h 1 cut glas11, castor aets, old LAST Year's Skis with bin-531 ~ M •-~ .,1• St..Vlng 6'60 * NEEDED *-·.:;~~::;"e,· ---~--oa ers, renc en, e c. dings. Fisher Su--Jass -;r .. om, rs, no/\;'""• ...v ; t·ye 8 pen'80Ce Sal · .,.... Home study prepares you Offioe E I I IOI I ehlna, old piclum & many ..-.·& pm , I I . r 547-7781 * 547-7782 SALE • Earn Christmas qu pmen misc. it!!m&. 9859 Ellis St., RSL & SL. Hart Javelin SSL I ==-=,.,...-==~~=~ QUALITY You·ve always wanted. Dressmaking • .:..!terations. Key Say, 1763 Orange Ave., CM. 64.>1292 HSKPRS Emplyr pay• fee. money part time. Sarah for resident training at our F.V. Cail 968-723T. Head SL 67~218 alt 5 • AKAi Tape Deck : v=rge en 'Ya ~en-F1 rid H. hi ·d • • • • : VERY e}(quillile 18K rold SURFBOARD 6'10" Rick ary Open: call Jeny "-All B 1 nd .1.... Coventry hiring now. No in-mOdem facilities In Miami, SANSUI No. 2000; 2 2', ,.~B E. 16th, S.A. ~~t.U: ~; ~training. Is ~pe~·.~:iu~!8'~e:-:I:i~ , bract>let oth~r nea1 things. roundlall, very good con-~Jm':~~~ J~:2 ~ 646 9303 -~--" H c · 544-4563 aft. 9 dition. 545-0623. Erwin. • "''~ ••vy on•b'U<Uon .,:;;;:;;~~====i========J MARLIN J0.30, hnnd new S.C:'y-Dlctaphone School 1' C1?tPI. 1203, 501 N. S.wl-Machines 8120 Miscellaneous l600 w/cue. $00. Elec gUitar & To $500 Go den ir., suite 206, S.A.. ··• amp $30. CUh only . E U ROPEAN dressmaking all custom fitted . Very 1 --=~====--rctiOnable. 673-1849 •· e Dressmaking· AlteratiOns Designed to suit you. Call Jo * 64.6-6446 CARRIER XJ.n't co. Lc:ive:ly ofc's. VtTY Calir.. 91105 or <area} n4/ ""' SPECIAL *POOL TABLE UI & acces. 548-1439. Boys , _ ~. pleasant YJOrking cond1. 541.7521. 1970 Singer Touch-o.matic, Gel. Cond. $65. 20" bike, 1C_A_R_P_ET--1.-,....--, -ha-.. --,haa- ~ Work for l very nice man. TIFFANY LAMPS Be t al 1 $3T SO w/train-whl11. Xlnt Cond. d al d' · · -'-Top benefits, Call Miss Eliz. J\.fake you r ow:i Tiffany _ 54.;~~ nut COIUO e, · _lc_J8"._....,_;..c_786=.-----' ~~~ :an :_ct,~ Alterations -642·5845 Nrat, accurate, 20 ye.an exp. WANTED abeth, 557-6122, Abigail Ab-shade. Next class starts Oct.I========= CLARKE Hard'\.\o'OOd Floor 827-8740 for the • bot Personnel Agency, 230 22nd. Sign up now. l12 Rlr ~arati• Sale I022 Musical Sander DU-8, us&d l'.lnly I ·G°'E"=ri°'i"N~G-marriod--.~,~14~K" W. Warner, Suite ru, Santa chester St CM 642-3069 I I 1125 twice. Cost $500 11 e w, Tile, Ceremic 6914 DAILY PILOT IR.VINE PERSONNEL Ana. ==~;;. .. _· ;;.·~. --JFURNITURE. appHanoe" "' ruments Saerlfice$200.962-7562. •ngagom.,tAweddlngrinc --'--""'-----I"""!!!!!!!!!""'"'"""'"""""' PIANO Lessons in your kitchen supples used 2 REALISTIC li-1isc &. stands, aet, 3 dlamonda, $1 TS .' *Verne, The Tile Man* DanaCapPo~:~uan SERVICES•AGENCY * SECRETARY * home. Beginners and ad-carpet. Corner ot i..to 45th at Bogen 85 watt amp (5 mic •LE TRAPPEUR akl boots. I "'64"2-<4=7"8". ==--o==-- Cust. work. Install & repairs. Capistrano Beach. (1'ormerly Abilities Unlim.) EXPERIENCED vanced . All ages. 64fr1J68 Seashore NB Oct 24 &. 25 impull), Vox (Phantom) 12 J\lens size 9· S30 RUMMAGE SALE - i\'o job too sml. Plaster Contact Mr. Seay at Permanent, 25 hour and 35 * OIL & ACRYLIC * 10 a.m. ' ' · strg elec guitar ALMOST 67~2652 spotl&On of "Sail of Sabota" patching. Leaking shower DAILY PILOT M.T.S.T. OPERATOR hoUr, 5 day week position PA,INTING L~SSONS BROWN 11'.'ffi.l couch, good NEW, 2 Jennlngs 15" spkrs SKIS, poles, boota. Mens le ~·:e~UbehindPoltOf· repair. 847-1957/846-0206. 1 Yr. M.T.S.T. exper, pret'd. available Newport Beach. L ECOLE D ARTE cone!. $40, g~n antique in cab, Silvtrtone amp & v.~ ~':Issi,~ bead 1,,=,:=,,='------0 ' e Ceramic Tile Work or San Oemente oUice TRISH hOPKINS Top salary. Write Box M. IN C.M. 644-1409 lamp table $10, 4x8 pool 15 .. spkr in cab. 642-3293 S...7 ata 1 · · USED carpet &: )'.led , 68 . Plastering, Reas. Frtt' 305 N. ~=ino Real 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) C.M. 2.D52 Daily Pilot, 330 W, Bay, BEGINNERS Piano leiS!JOns. table. balls. cul!s & racks 1 _P_M-.·.-.=--~~~--* DUPONT 501 GO Id yards. Good. Lite beige . lie--~"~':.· _:536-~24~26~--.l;;;w;mn;:;~;;';;i;;;;~;;;;:;;; I 642-1470 Co~la ?l-1csa. S.l2 yrs. Exper. teacher. aft $35, aft. 5 646-!m6. e Drum Set e carpeting, fine condition, $2 nylon pile. $I. 50/)'d. ------... -·.~ .. --CHEVRON station needs I ~!!!!!~""""""'•"""""" SECRETARY 6 pm, 968-1421, H.B. WE have sold -ewrythinK Xlnt cond. * 968-3448 yrd incld'g pad. 642 - 5583 ~z.6521 . TrH Service 6980 ~~ga w/~~';;!'r:1 ;~P~ If YOU wear clothes well. SH 90. Typing liO. Call Lo-MERCHANblSE FOR must go -fi8hing tackle, Sonola Accordlen Persian Carpets Always Lee's TN"t' Service Juan Capo. we wan t you to model for rainc. 645-2770, Wtstcliff Per. SALE AND TRADE furn., etc. 202 29th St., NB. Full u , $200. 962-5618 * 545-8002 * P'or an ad to 11ell UOWlll. the clock, dial 6C-56'1a. A~tl~ pruning & removal.l"°'oc~H=IR"°O=P~R~A~C~T=o=Rc-~F QR ·OUTLET. sonnel Agency, 2043 West. sprR.Ylng, tree s ca p 1 n g. . . cl!U Dr .. N.B. Furniture IOOO Furniture IOOO Furniture 8000 Furniture 8000Purnlture IOOO 11tiratinJ:. Lk'd & i n s. or Physical Therapist LADY 10 prepare 2 lite SECURITY GUARD, perm, :1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~iiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiiii~iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~---ii~~I 61:>-5750 for Therapy Center in C.M. mealr, some li te housekeep. full time, day, S"60 mG, DBL bed $35: Triple dre'Sser , Bob' S 642..0450 to am-5 pm. lng in exchange for free Employe benefits. Write w/mirror S25: Sofa IL love· DISPOSAL SALE of $25,000 WORTH OF ! T:a 798 ur1ery COASTAL AGENCY room Balboa. ls. 3 blks from 9.:lx p.1095 Dally Pilot, Lag seat S250: 3 itack stools $15; A member of 1''erry. can 548-8619 Bch. All Xlnt mnd. 549-1587. Upholstery 6990 Snclllng & Snelling 111<', MAIDS For Apt/Type situa· s ER v I c E Sta. help: FR. Prov dble bed, mattress -:--The World'& Lar9est fions. Exp pref. Re,sponslble Mechanic &: driv eway &: box spring, nite table. Gd CZ\'KOSKJ'S CCsy-kos-k,y) Professional Adil.Ii. Muat be ovr/'JS. Ap-salesman, 1 D time, 1 pt rond, $55. Eves 546-lO!W Cu11om Upholstery. 1831 Em,,loyment Service ply in pe~. Jamalca Inn lime. Boyd's Arco 490 E. COMPLETE Colonial double Newport Blvd, CM. 2790 Harbor Bl CM 54Q.6055 Hotel 2101 E. Coast Hwy, 17th C.M. bed outfit, $35. Call 64~2344 &ll--1454. Harbor Blvd: at Adams CdM . Blw: lG-2 PM. SEWING pow~ machine l~V='od=, ~Th="="o=°'""'S.'-1~. ~-~ JOIS & EMPLOYMENT .. •COACH-woridng with MAIDS. motel. Exp'd only. operatol'S, expe rienced -NEED HELP? Look for it JM· W 1 boya ages 8 lo 18. Must have Apply In pe:rson, Costa 1.fesa swim \\'e&r. 4001 F, Birch in the Service Directory .:.rz anted, Men 000 basketba..11 t!xper .. college ()r Inn, 34'05 Hubor Blvd. St., N.B. nr OC airport. clwificatlorw. EXJ'ERT houscclng, main-aemi-ret.ired. Call 642-3372 =,;;=~~~-;;~~~~==~~~~~::=~~~~~ij===::. ~. painting, practical be twn. 1-9 PM. ,, if '' nunlng. '"' cl•anlng. COCKTAIL & food woll""· ('li'll'V1 STAR GA'ZER:1<~ 49\1652 Apply In person al Rancho ~.,,,, Br CLAY l. San Joaquin Gol.f Course 11,; ~ L __ ,,_ l/>-"'" •M2J Cul ., ..... J1 Y-Doi.,Ad;.q....iw utr. vrti. Jeb Wanted, Cantine., _, ver Rd. Mi" AcCMdi"f to th• Slor1. ocf n~MO Women 7020 N.B. ' ~21 .:if,4 To dewlap l'l'\el~ for Frida y, • • ~ COOK. housekttper, 111 e 11.n.n reod.,....aa, ¥ >6'11QIO,.,,..,... '""" AlD£S • for conval~scenoe, nun\~ duliH. 4 dAyl a f6TA.UlUI .~~Zok31-., ..... "'~ _,,. tMtfrly care or fa.m1ly cara. Wttk. sun. noon tl'.I Thurs AH H -,,.... ~ 1toinemalwt, 547·6681 noon. Live in. $68 per "'k. NA~• I~ ~~ ' ~~ =-~ , D.\)'WORK . Loe. rtl's .. own 673-l'i28. r...l1. . 'l"°"" ~AT " .. = 2 ,· -•t '""""'""°;..,,.-~~-~ I h1.11-'9.ao s ,...._.. ..... • ".!:·"!l·~--~l~ij traMi' Call ~ aft. 4 DENTAL R@ceptlooist. Mu111 6C.. J6~ " . F p:WI, S.nla Ana have dental expe:r. 30-4S. GCltliHI 7T.U J7 5oMt .• •7Ctwd IMITT.UM uu•29·, @ "'.-.r JI I "*11.. 38 C... 61 tv Hor,.>t-&! ,,,...._ ·~ J9 N~ 69Weli.,.. Jeb Wanttcl, J1J14t 19 10 T,., ..O Chllnc:• 10~. ofC. :n ·Men &.•Women 7030 DENTAL a ft•i atant. ():.£-7·10.U llN-tw "1t1r11oon.11tw 71Try $7~ -.c.....,;;...;;:...c;.;;;....;,_....;,.;..o Orthl'ldontic. Experienced, ..11 .74 12c..m,;. .. 21,,.,..,. 1~ Md 1..,_.. ..,. 13 '*""• .tJ ~ 71 S.oru1 REFINED middle aae couple lli<' ~; Call 548-2291. CAHCll 1• ~ .... A46t4 7• ,,.. CM1HCllN ~enced 11.pt. ma.naa:ers EARN ING Chrtltmas money ~JUHl JI 1!111.•tv '5nu,.,,. 7SWJoo ore.»~ w' k /Utf U 16 ~ • "'6 11ri-il 76 ""-""" ' r nowledge l'.11 compltl«' Is fun l easy w/Sareh ~.S 11 u.o ,., lffil*llllCI 77A • JJM-"- rnechan.ical maintenatlCe: It Coventry, no exp, no l.nvelt. '22-~ 111~ MIO! 7t e. .~~, ~ I 67'212'1 J6.Q I•~ ffl)fllol 79Gwr --•• -serv et. -~2583. SJ0..1407, SU-9066 Lao 201"• ......... ;,on,,;u IOT---ERIEN ,,_ ~~ ~-i::.Ar . €ED &e•mslreMI ~JUl'f l) 1220..'t u~ 12._ff... JAlll ... Jobe Men.Wom. 7100 to start at once, pl. time, Aui.11 lJY-'f :.IY"'-4' S3Gtolef!.ll ,,i.N I U d .k ~ l'l•ll'"ll'l'IOI• ~... M J..,.._ 1'iC'T'RESSES &: MODELS. UlS "I reu m er .-'l·l'-lt-31 l!ll""'' S$V'cu tSMt~ 12·!S.1 11n lS-25 11ttklng: personal wfdresa m1.kina It alt. Ref. :v. .d . .JO.ss· l 2' Rorhtt s.,,.. u You ............ er ' for motion pie-Call 67.,..,:l'll';:::-.,-~,,-~ v1100 ·t7 J~i.1 ~Y.,:'IL ,,,...,...., ltlCB ....... _ :-AUi Jl U ltnul~ 511 l: IA H1lp IU " !~l'f!l .t TV lt'.nd plr.tul'f! Gt In netc:I of 4tl'llltt7 You'll ,· ·new. ,. ltAclc*ll'I ; J'Hlrlme to Nt'\.\o'•Tll l & find the rlghJ cne In the stn. tl I ao v-.tt11~ 90u,.,.._.~~~ n AMoc.. P.O. Box 117, D Servtet Directory Of tht J~~~ --~Good @AdTtnt ()t>/,°.:t:i ll,.t,..to :roe Ca. 837-9267 Cwlrled Section. 1----====:;s~~=============~~--- USED FURNITURE Retum from Rentals -Many from Modtl Homes Nothing over 3 Yel!rl old -mostly . only 1 to 2 years old. FANTASTIC SAVINGS en LIVING ROOMS -DINETTIS-BEDROOM FURNnURE MOTELS-HOTELS MATTRESS & BOX SPRINGS sm G.E. TV's -RIFRIGERATORS & RANGES. All 9uallty -High Fa5lliot1 Items., 1 DAY ONL y • I I I • • I OCTOBER 24th 7 HOURS • • • • • • 11 AM to 6 PM. THE USED FURNITURE FACTORY .. 1BB5. ~ARIOR BOULEVARD COSTA Ml~A 54B·9457 I . - • . . •4/r, • t l c I I , 'w&Ri~·R~iL~Y~PijlL~OrT"Jl~--,"""=='::~T~hu~nd~~~·~~~·~·~~·;2121.il9~7~0 l~~i AND T RADE FR EE T 0 y 0 U _r RAN __ s_PO-'---RT"'"A'-'T..;.I DN=-1-'-TRAN=:..:S.;..PO;:.R;;.T;;.A:..:T.:.:I O;.;.N'--1-T.:.:R.;;.A.;;.N;.;S;...PO;:.R;:.T;:;A:..:T:..:I DN::.:...-1 _TRAN'--'-"'"S'-P;:.OR;.:.T;.;.A:..:T..cl O:..:N.:._.i;T;.;.R::.A:..:N;:.S POc..:;;.R:..:T:..:AT.:.:1;.:o:..:N_ ,T :.;R:;::A::.:N:..:S.;..PO:..:R:;;T~A:.:.T:..:10.;..Nc....... I ~T~R;::AN:;::S::..P;:.OR;;.T;;.A;;.Tl"'O'-N=t illoo;Ah:ft&&jY~a~ch~hj'm;;IM~DOO; j ,-:;.;~l~la;H;;°"';:;°'~;;;9~2;:00 I Moblla HomH 9200 Trucks _ tSOO Imported AulOI -Imported A•I<>• 9600 Imported A•tos Mlsc1ll1neou1 l600 ON~ &hon halred ~l'llan, 1;.;;=c:;;;:::.;=:.:..--'=' I v.'hil~ female, l yn. two REMODELING SAU:: short ha_tred ~rsialtt • l Couch: chair, coUtt table & P>'+ !...tiger females -6 end tabl.rs, lamps, drapes, rnoe:. 545-4910 10/2-t curtains. pl&ltlc OOYo-crs, SCRAM-LETS :n:t?111Jlf:l 1J1[t~-J ~iw'.:i,..53'..':1El;..,~w,,'ti:"~ $TRIX£ POWER AUSTIN HEALEY FIAT • MGB ANSWERS Mobile l.iYing ~':'.•;=;.:;'·~.·~~''c!.i:, Woha•••-.•tockot :<ow '68 Austin America LEASE '68 MGB GT artificial Christmas tree • G. SHORT hair pointer 6 hOt v."Bter lank. •mall ap-month." old male fncd yd pl lance1 • Western light fix. nds gd. hoow. 548--08J3 or ture, spreads. mlkf:>llaneous 83&-4493 10122 odds & end11., Call 6t2-&'68 LOVABLE intelligent puppy, after 4 & \\'t'Ckend" brindle colOI', pt shepherd, RESTAURANT fixtures &. xlnt for kind, lovable child. DaJ"l'lqe -Bough -Goarl -ft.1otkln -ocx:;GJNC Bh·d, Al\Ahelm. Owner, Sp 1970 GltC Camper trucks. ,11 VW BUG t.oc:d 1 O\\'llc r. "'in~ 1o1.<beels at HS Best ~I Buy now, beat the price Sedun. Automa tic. Excell~nl radl9. (UOA-714 1 l--~,x.i;=-~co=L~UMB=~lA--1 Ml~. Abo Qunper combin-condition, tXlX 416J Priced ON LY $1895 A chbeler's life· "He'1 l~adlnc a doi:'s Ille Hu cred. JN IRVINE AGRICULTURAL !Ion are DOGGING hia foot. PRESERVE-BEAUTIFUL! wt•~ ~;e:•tlo. ••rn.. ·-DNivERsITT"'-'° .. u. $895 . $49.00 DON BURNS C.M.-Newport area IDN7968J Per Month Porsche Audi, LTD. N Ew • DI•, 54:>8242 * OLDSMOBILE AT t:J631 """"''' Blvd. 6.16- 9215 BILL YATES Ju" S. ol G0<dOO Gnwc t'•Y. Motor Homes 28.iO llarbor Blvd. NEW VACATIONEER '°' CO.la Me,. 54¥6'0 VOLKSWAGEN etjulpm<'nt, bldg demollOon ~3929 10122 WHY NOT sale. Booths, fixture•. bars, TO go00 homes -3 beautiful TAKE A CRUISE?? steps." bar equipment, \\'alk-in box-7 n10nth old kittens, Good For Lease Or ,.5• delicalessen cas e . personaJities. fi46-5645. Charter display &helving. cocktail 10/fl LOW WINTER RATES! tables, etc. Sat & Sun. Oct. LOVELY yng_ female blk & 40' \V heeler Cruiser: Sleeps 8. 24 & 2Z:I, 1045 86.ylide Dr. v.•ht ca t w/l11t gr, eyes. nds Make appt. NOW! OWNER: 1,,:N;;.•::,·~~--~~--I friend1y family. 546-7n Wkday1 5.19-8978 Eves" wk- PLAID davenport. like new: 10/22 ='~""~"~"'=·-143_,L_=~­ Gfls trplc log; Cblld'• Md; l'""'"'R,-"ot~d.,.-ca_t_and__,-,.kl=tt::en=. 28' CHRIS N.•in 283's. '66, AllSOl'tt'd aarden tools. smoke gray v.>itb whl. Dbl planked. bend.ix radar, 1 -;.....,..~;;';·::====='I markings, Hsbrk good S.S. Fathometer. vapor 1; "'/children. 962-5973 10/22 detector, holding tank. 1,M=I"'=· _W;;.:•;;nl;.;ed:.::_ _ _;16::.:.100 ll'itEE to qual. home Great RDF, Cl~an, 200 hn, $8950. LGE, cl~an Abalone pearls. Dane mlx male f1'1t'd yd. ALSO Catalina mooring, IV 6 .., •~•. ~ ,,93 10122 Av a Ion Harbor, $2500. TI>e Golden aves, l ,,..,.....,.,.., ~ 838-3 Princess St., Sausalito, Ca. LAST of litter runt darling 8 791' IJ30-.3875. 9C96S Phone. 415/~1019 wks old puppy, Come SCi' 17' BOSTON \\'haler 100 & 6 SMALL paint spray V.'8.nled. 646-7326 . 10/23 hp, Xtra tanks, bait tank, I deck, rail. cover. trlr, eltt:· Reasona.b e! BEAUT. 10 wks old orang~ tronic equip. S2500, 642.-4!MS. t --,,,,.c*...,:".=,~,,·,,,Tl~6=*=--I striped kitten to ad. home. 'IWO 14' bo I . h r Wanted: 1 CB Walkie 54s--0813 l0/23 motors & tr::S. ~~st ~II Talkie, any channel. 3 Pt. Siamese ltitten 7 wks one $275, $475. 642-2098. 1-::===";::1-l;;'::::"==== I old days 833-6801 aft 5 ===='===="'== 1-6<&-4637 10123 Sallboall 9010 FREE TO YOU PUPPIES6wkoJd cutles blk UNBELIEVABLE! w/wht markings tree to gd home 642-3939 10/23 COLUMBIA 22 1 FEMA1$ cal loo kitt~n 1 Was $3liOO • • • • • • • • now S2995 blk and wht kitten. Call aft. CORONADO 25 6 675-2526 10122 Was $6500 ••••••• , Now $5995 LAPWORTH 24 INBOARD GENTI.E 1 yr old cat Was s:;soo •••••••• Now $4995 declawed & shots to kind nlOROUG!lBRED 26 home only. 548-4531 10/:M \V "'100 N as .,.., . . .. .. . . ow $4500 FREE long haired kittens box trained, 8 v.·ks old. 642-5536 nl124 PETS and LIVESTOCK ERICSON' 2.l Wa.s $41))) ........ Now $3595 All Beautiful! f.111l!t see! J\fust sell!! $300 000 '71, 19', You', iru<pecHon in. * 1969 PICKUP *i.;:::========:::==I 32852 Valle Road I v1ted, Scott 1, 914 N , C e '67 Austin H~aley 3000 low San Juan Capistr1tno •111.rbol' Santa Ana lean, gd, COnd. Must $ell il ' 837-4800/4934511/499-2261 ' · · No longer required by com. m eag~ .• one owner, RECREATION ,B_l-'cy:...c_l•_• ____ ms...::c i pany. """" oHu. -"" '" *** 499-2623 ••• ~ ,. Vic.1T~·!:APl>DI 1-------1 "THINK" BOY 'S Slingray $18: 3 1pd. g\V'" BMW . bo)''S $25: 10 1pd $-15. ~1isc. CENTER ~~:... 334 Del ""· CM. Sanla "!. E. ~,,. LEASE 12.a'•fi L=========l ·10 TOYOTA HI LUX PICK· ,.J ~~ Mini Bi kas 9275 UP U-Jactory w'""nl>. '71 YW BUG NEW 124 CPE. DEMO SPACE RENTALS FROM $81.50 IN ADULT PARK -PETS ALLOWED- MODELS ON DISPLAY -EXAMPLE- BRANO NEW DOUBLE WIDES Total Electric (Gas Available} 2 br., l bath, compl, ""'h carpet, drapes &: appliances. Lg, awnings, both sides & lull 1kirting-Tax &: licrl'lse-Complt"lely set-up $9999 ----'--''------=·! Can't tell this one from a ONLY $2795 BONANZA 4 hp, good con-new one. Priced to sell. $1899 See dilion, '!';.2_J>IO • Lk , 215VlV. Chick lven;on $49,00 "FRIEDLANDER" Irle., 445 E. Coast Hwy., N.B. p f\f th BONANZA minibike, 3~i hp. ~ -t 53 54 er on 1 l 750 I U.CH ILVD. .,,~ex . or . AT IH-. Jtl Good c::onditlon. $50. -• • 644-0860 • • ... EL CAMINO -4 SPD • BILL y A TES 893-1"'6 • 537-6824 Motorcycln 9300 n.n.n.nn THINK HONDA .. "FRIEDLANDER11 SfEREO. NEW.USED·SERV. •AIT 3'"'' 963--0353 • VOLKSWAGEN ~ 32852 Valle Road Jeeps 9510 San J uan Capistrano '67 SPYDER &1M800/49'45U/499-2'61 1968 SCOUT VS, 4-whl drive, I----"-="""""'"---I 4-spcl, lOx.15 Gates tires. Authorizl'd Dir. Super Sharp. 4 speed, dlr. Xlra clean. 646-6433 Sales e Service e Parts (TQC 5;)8 1 \Vilt take car i11 ---------IAll ?tfodels to Choose From trade or finance prlvate par- 1----------IServl.ce Monday 'till 7:00 PM ty, 5464052 or 494-6811 . Recreat'n Vehicles 9515 Sat 'till Noon !="======'== VISIT OUR BIG COAST IMPORTS1 __ J _A _G _U_A_R __ RECREATION ot Orange Cou"I> inc. JAGUAR CENTER ~ W. Pacific C.oast Hwy WE ARE THE .. ,...,. • 54&4529 HEADQUARTERS SHO\VCASE DEALER l----------1 Th<' only authorized JAGUAR FOR DATSUN dea1et' in the entire Harbor El Dorado Campers. •----------• Area. l\fini Homes, Chassis t.1ounts Complet1;; OPEt '68 Opel Wa9on ft,•11Ho. hC'alcr, 4 SJ>Kd ! f\VP~1 1061 Engine is in box.j must be assembled. $699 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32&.l2 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano &37.4800/ 493-4511 /499-2261 e '70 OPEL GT: BE1JER1 THAN NE\V! LO r,.1(. ,. * Pvt Pt)': 61:>6197 .. * PORSCHE '69 911 ·s· Demo! 5700 actual miles. ri speed trans., mas wheels. Al\1/FM. Speelal factor~· equipped. Yellow v.i th blaclt irlrrior. 1•3012'14). BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN. 328j2 Valle Road San Juan Cspislral'IO Sli-4800/ 493-4511/499-2261. ABANDONED, adorable yng female salt & pepper rol- ored sm shaggy dog. Very affectionate. Will arrange to haVe spayed. Also her pup. p~11. G wks, father is Cocker. 2113 National, O f 10/24 I A.:\1 lookini: for gd. home & children to play w/ I'm a small blk/tan mixf!d female brt'ed puppy.Wonderful disp. hclp me find a home. 6'il--5547 _10121 .2 ets,...General --YACHTS ROYALE ),NC. 2912 W. Coasl Hwy, 66--0810 SEE THE FABULOUS '30X55 CORNELL AND 1'iANY-OTHE'R- P.10DELS INCLUDING SINGLE-WIDES ·FINANCING AV All.ABLE- and Ba1boa r.1otor Homes. '68 Datsun -CHOOSE.LR.OM __ w SIIELLS TO COMPLEfEL y agon SALES 9 c SERVICE '66 12 oupe DESPERATE 3 adorable, ALL NEW 16' playful kittel'l!I. grey/wht CHINCHILLAS: Emergency illness forces •sacrifice of SELF-CONTAINED MODELS Lo\\' mileage, automatic. Red PARTS On,, 011•ncr. ITAX :189): male, orange/wht fem, HOBIE CATS w id e-11triped male-beaut! 2!H prime animals & equip!. c.u 53&-mt $210.00 to $9895 00 11•ith black inlerior. Excel- Try Before You Buy With Our lent condition, Pri<.'e!:l lo st'.11 . BAUER $3595 8~!CK DON BURNS Reasonable Rental Seivice I \V AH 1911 THEODORE $1395 10 wks box trained. 846-50651 :=:======== ALL COLORS 1 ~-----.....:';;;.0/.c22_ II Cats 1120 FREE DEMOS 14151 JEFFREY RD., OWNER moving to apL nct111.:.=-----_,;:::; Prictt. trom Sll95. Winter IRVINE '70 Honda 450 COSTA MESA Po'5che Audi. LTD. gd home fncd yd for "Bebe" ABYSSINIAN kittens. l 3 Racing 11tarl11 1100n! ~~ Ml, SO, OF" Lo\v, lo1v mile:!!. Like nc1v. <ilr. Complete \\'ilh camping trailer. #908,1·12 Will take 1J ad c or financ.-e Private per. ty. Call 546-40;'>2 or 494-6811, ROBINS FORD 234 E. 17th Street 13631 Harbor Blvd . 6.16-233:: lovable fem. blk lab mix wkll, housebroken. CAP'N EDS SANTA ANA F0.\VY. 2060 Hurbor Blvd. 543-7765 Jus'I S, of Ga rden Grove F1vy. _ _;.;.;_:,:;::.._ __ I '6 7 PORSCHE pup 3 mos. 892-9086 • , ,,=,,....:*c,6'6-::.:;.::81:::28:..::•,,___ CALL COLLECT 83&-4493 10124 1 SILKY Sealpoint Siamese 2200 W. C11t. Hwy. NB 645.2244 ___ 7:_1:.:4-:::8'.:32::·::8::58'.'.:5'.._ __ WATCH dog. Accustomed to ready to '°' $25 ea. PACIFIC Catamaran no. 368 kids & other pets, very 673-4310. w/lrlr, fully eq u i pped . gentle. Owner moving to Harken bl1X!k8, trapeze & Hawaii. 5 4 8-0 8 13 or Dogs 8125 cover. Phone 673-3872 83(;.4493 10124 .:;;;= ____ _::::; LOOKING for a gd. home, 2 ALL PUPPIES yr. old grey/wht nice male Presen!i; cat to older people. not Pureb~s. Shaggies, l\lixed. SABOT sailing & rov.·ing dinghies must sell comp. stock \\·hole.sale pri ce s . 645-1:;67 PREVIEW 3 NEW CONT EM PO children. Please ca 11 AKC Afghans. B.i.sscts, Shep. HOBIE CAT 14. 9 !\Io's old. ~19U 10/24 herds, Collies, Dachshunds. Xlnt cond . Have COMMUNITIES FRIENDLY Siamese cat, Lots ol Shaggies Pros. -·--' M ti $ 3-RAIL motorcycle trlr Sl15. H I h C ~·· Ca mov.,...-i ust 9e 95 0 • LAGUNA HIL'S Cl'Ofis-eyed, v•ear's Oea ool.-ea I ert. .._ • .,...1t rds, 644-643.1 or nite SJG.-5092. ""' '63 Honda 305, like new. Jar. Vic: 32nd St.. N.B. ()pen 7 days, 6624 Westmins.-•-~--------CONTEMPQ.LAGUNA HILLS S390. '69 Yamaha 250 ~9556, 402 Clubhouse. Alt. ter Blvd., Westminster. s:r;K .~· sloop, si.ps 4• 23301 RIDGE ROUTE DR, Enduro. also like new $495. 5, 10/23 192-2276 1 e ' s1i ... , titove, main, jib LAGUNA HILLS Pvt pty must seU fi73--7436. genoa, slip incl. 543-1127 n..esJ' dul FREE Ure..,,'OOd -have dead CHIHUAHUAS, male, Cham-. .,_. ige a t community, BL.ACK CYCLE JACKETS: tree. you cut -take v.'OOd . pion stlX!k, show tJUality. LI OO 14 N_o. 28:;, xlnt. l\.lany Beautiful surroundings, all Sl.2.50 1961 .Harbor Blvd, 32122 Virginia Way. So. Fawn wfgreen eyes. Short-xtras. $7l.J. Aflt"r 6 pm. luxury appointment-; puttir.g CM. Laguna. 4~3723 Call Sun, haired $35 ea. without * 642"1214 * . green, hobb)' shop', mu~h * •:>1S--Ol i3• * Mon or 'I\Jes. 10/22 ,papers & stud priv. $75. more. ~ LIKE NC\\', '69 Hodaka Are "WACKY " Lovable yg adult with papers & 11(1 strings. 1 Power Cruisers 9020 CALL S.'I0-3900 100 $300 Firm. Bolh slrec! & female Shepherd nibc med. is one year, 1 is 5 mos. Stud e GREEN RIVER dirt equipped, 609~~ Iris bred nds new home fncd yd I ~':.."'°=vire"='':.."":c":::·,.:54&-:..· :..c3634::.:.~-28' DONZI, custm made. 2 CONTEMPO GREEN RIVER Cdl\-f aft 6 PM. '-~brk. Gd ••l"h .1 ..... loves RARE Blue Dobie, male, 2 yrs old, Just completely 4901 GREEN RIVER DR. 1 --7'=~~~~--,. ' ~ h w·• 1 I k' d bo e '70 Sui:uki 125 e children 894-1593 10/23 yr. trained. Prefer couple or over a ''"· o • in at, <DRONA Ir he d -' 4 Near new. Anxious to sell, family. 20051 Cypress, rear, ga ey, a • ... ps • great Family .section & exclusive 1 Yr. old. Lab Retriever & h fishing booL Speeds over 50 dul make offer. 67S.0367 "-'" ShorthairM Poinler , ~'~·'~· ~H,;g~~~·-~~=-a t section, frwys-close to uc1111 1 ; 200 mi ran"e. Expensive •hoppt·n boo! I •-I '68 BULTACO 256 cc. Gd for mix, Shots &. lie. Nds gd l\IALTESE quality AKC pu"-·-e g, SC , 01.11 O rec-~ and go,.gous $6000 to linen-,.,.0 .. slreet or dirt. Extras. $59",, home .,.,., 74:,2 10/23 pies, maJe & female. From " "· .,,.,,.. cing. WW consider trade. CALL 1311374 540-5198. . I Sl5<l. Early Christmas for 673-5022 • -EXQUISITELY beautL ul 4 one )l>U love. 714: ~21126 e SANTA ANA 1962/Gj()..BSA Chopper. nlD. puppy, black w/..,,·hite GOLDEN CONTEMPO SANTA ANA $475 spots, deer ttt1sured pet, S -..1 408'.l W FIRST ST SA * ~8-8056 • lovt'S children. 494-0615 10/23 RETRIEVERS pewv-Skl Boats 9030 • ·• · · AKC ** TI4/S32"588 Family community. abun-* YAMAHA 100. D i rt. 8 KTJTENS V&I)'ing in age 19701)hiti Jet,~. l mo old. dance of recreation for child-Fixed·up. l\·1a ny cxu·as. from 2 month!! to 7 months • SKYE Terrier male, l~i $.J,650. ren, nr, gd. schools. shop-* 673-6787 * & are pure white and 1 years old, AKC. 4!&4309 aflf'r .1 pm ping. priv. club house for 0•6~,~,u~zu=·K:::.,:c.:.7::50co:..:'-So-v-.,-, black. ~ 10/24$50 7c:·'""'==,,-,--...,:"cc'°':;:';::81 1968 CHRYSLER 14', 35 hp adulls. Enclum. Xlnt cond. l\lusl FREE kittens, 2 solid black, • LOVABLE female Pek-Chrysler eng. rovers & trlr, CALL 839-3880 sell. $a50. 646-7353 1 pure grey with grttn eyes, ingese pups S15. A·I rond. Sac $!JO. &Mi--0647. Buy the mobile hom e .70 SUZUKI 50CC. I-fas only l grey &. orang"e. 548--0813 or ~t of your choice, move 72nii's. Still on fact. warT. 836-4493, 10/22 2 FEMALE miniature poodle Ma rine Equip. 9035 in ,~o0 any one of our $200. Wkrlys aft 6. 548-9857. 2 YR old male mixed Peke-puppies. 7 weeks old. $201-----'--'-'---"~ PEN" par ks. . HARLEY Sportster lr<1me. Cocker. Loves kids. Hse-e -=""h". c;""-~':;,:";' =~=~I SHIPS \VlfEELS 5· ma". NOW RENTING.". •~ ~ horn := -long springer front t"nd . tra .. ....., to ......... e. • SPRINGERS p AN I EL paid SSrJ(). now S450. 3' mag. 492-7!111, ask for Ken, 54;)..2338 10/22 PUPS AKC. Ch•mpo·o· Lo·-. paid $·150. now $225. Bronze • I " "" Tripe W ide Cornell '70 HONDA TRAIL 90 BEAUT IFUL Geiman ** 54S.16a5 ** 3' paid $T;i0. now $123. 1 -.,-7"'-.;:.:.:.:::=-~=--v J •• 11 Hillcrest • Flamingo • -· $28" 962 Shepherd fc1nale 13 mo a1 •OUS "" s. compasses. ...., m1. ;,, . ·9960 Good I 1 'Id ' T ood LAB. Retriever Pups antique n11.utlcal pieces. 411 Paramount • Universal v.· c 11 ren. 0 g AKC Regis. -champ line Barrington • Broadmoor • '6.<J BSA 650cc home. 531-1010 10/24 Xmas joy. &W--050S Kings Rd . Continental • Slar Xlnt rond. Sacrifice $950. Costa f\lesa &12-0010 MINI HOME Kamp King Chassis Mount f'uUy self • contained with popout "'" """· dual .~ '63 VW G~IA cond. Sun deck on '71 Chev. $ Convertible. Reecnt engine Van, pov.·er brakes, radio, ai.m DA1SUN mt'ICI overhaul. hard lo find mo- heater. Beautiful blue & .. del. Radio, hcat~r. 4 speed, white. A reaJ winner. "•lust clc. i;eU thi~ \\'eek. Stock 782. "Leader In The Beach Cities" $ l 099 s.,;., 6259. ZIMMERMAN $7995 2845 HA!l.BOR BLVD. CHICK IVERSON UNIVERSITY 546410 vw DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND 549-3001 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 llARBOR BLVD. OLDS 28:'10 1-larbor Blvd. Coi;ta 11.tesa 546-6750 '6 7 Land Cruiser 4 Wheel drive, hardtop with roll bar & \\'inch. (UZH464) $2499 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837-4800/ 4934511/ 499-2'261 Campers 9S20 'SUNDAYS 18835 Beach Blvd. Huntifvton Beach M2·TI81 or 5'!0-0442 '70 DATSUN -1 Door Sedan, used (603AVA) dlr. \Vill take trade or fin- ance priva1e party. Ca I J 54&4052 or 494-681.1 . '67 Datsun COSTA MESA MERCEDES BENZ 01an9e County's Larqest Selection New & Used Mercedes Benz Jim Slemon.s Imps. Warner & Main St. Sant.:i Ana 546·4114 Wagon ~1ERCEDES 220 s. 1 011·ner. Aulomatic. (UDE 5911 Sacri-Low mileage. Like fOC\\', flee! \Viii take trade or fin-Auto trans. air-rond. Am· ance private party. Call F"m. lthr uphol. Pe-rf rond. 5464052 or 4!M-6811 . 106 Coral Ave. Balboa Isl. "CHASSIS MOUNT" '"•''u•. 121• "· '"'" "" '66 DATSUN PICKUP contained, sleeps 6. mounted MG on l 1on new '70 Chev .• aulo. Radio, healer. dlr. 4 ~pecc1.l---------- lrans .• air, PS. PB. A real fTYJS20l \Viii 1ake <.'fir in LEASE beauty. r.tust sacrifice. Stock trade or financ.-e private ""·TIS. Se•ial No. 24411, party, "'6-4"'2 °' <>1-68.11. '71 YW BUG UNIY$8E99RS51TY • '67 DATSUN"''°". auto ONLY lrans, 24,000 n1i, good lircs $49 tu50. 6'&-0&17. .00 OLDS 21150 Harbor Blvd . C<>sla Mesa · :i.!&6750 New '71 Datsun e ·ro DATSU N Pick-Up. Like new Rt"blt eng, r&h, <I spd. 673-32·14 FERRARI 16()(1 OHC. Pickup with camp. FERRARI Per l\tont~ AT BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 912 COUPE Hard top,"5 i;pd trans., am/ fin. Beuu1iful !an color, $3995 BY OWNER '64 'C' Coupe Slrong cng1nl', <RSP 81 2 Priced ro S<'ll. $2595 DON BURNS Porsche Audi, LTD. 136.11 Harbor Blvd. 636-23.1..1 Just S. of Gjtrdcn Grove 1-·1vy. '60 PO RSC! IE Cabriolet, 1601 super, with hard top. Nev. engine, ne1v clutch, nev. tires, new paint. AM/F.11.1. just like new, can be seer at 2089 Harbor Blvd., 01 , phone 645-1982, 9am to 6prn '67 PORSCHE 912, MINT cond. 46,000 n1i. Lemon yel1011•. nc1v radiaJ. $§,100. 6~4-:>290. '64 PORSCHE 356 SC COUPE Balboa blue, chrome wheels, radial tires, concourse co dltion. Lie_ XOG997 S3099 CHICK IVERSON vw S\9-30.1.1 Ex!. fi6 or 61' 1970 HA RBOR BLVD. COSTA l\1ES/, PORSCHE 912 i m ma c. rerords A!\!/Fl\1' K o n ! s , chrome. rims Bursch ex. prv. party, !'i"17-7!KXI. 'fi&..911:.·, SPD. XL.NT COND. LO l\11, REDUCED * * Call 642-620.f * * COLLI.E & Gcnnan Shepherd 1 -,~lA~Lc:Ec;c:SA:.M=O:.YEO=..:. :=1::,-10-5-. RADIOS, anchors, I i ne, General e Hillcreat ~2-9ill. _,_ Jree to ~ ho"'" pumps. wlnches, other misc CH ··o H ~ 1~ 4 I 6,.. ~3 5""" 1D"iz4" e BEST OFFER e marine hardware. All nt'W. AP MAN ' Ohua ""' cy. 494-0593 Sacrifice. Pvt pty. 962-4981 MOBILE HOMES Xlnl.~-~2Slm f'r. Sale price $2099 dlr. Newport Imports L1d. Qr. (& 43827.0 "'ill take car in ange County•a only s uthor- lrade. \Viii finance privalc iz~ de11lcr_ '6;'! PORSCHE.,SC ~1ANY --------.. XTRAS! B11rga1n, $2750. ...--------~ ** 892-1840 ** J2Sj2 V:\1!"' Road San J uan Capistrano 837-1800/ 493-451 v 499-2261 I WK. old bluish·gray w/wht AKC 1. . G aft7pm & wknds 12331 Beach Blvd G G markings kitten to ad home. reg. 1 mi ennan * 7ltf530.293ci' * · · '70 YAMAHA 250 Enduro. 22 Schnauzers, 4 males. 2 548--0813. 836-4493 101 fom·'·•. 6 ••'·· okl. 6'6-81"' I\' T L' 1 S725. Xlnt rond. Low milH, NED. ~ home for She~-' •" "" ~ &o.t Slip Moorl--9036 ant 0 ive n 548-8825. •" ~~· AKC 1uun im! l ··• COSTA MESA mix male sweet d isp. fncd ttg c P s ong-'66 BSA .ll.1K JI ..... _ ~IJ. 83&449.1. 10m haittd Doxies. Xlnt temper, SLTP a val.I, nncst in Nv.,prt. Local spaces available now! party. Call 546-4052 or SALES-SERVICE-PARTS 494-6811 . 3100 \V, Coast Hwy. , . Ncv.1>0rt Beach Gr> Chevy ~an w:'poP top, SU..9405 5-10-]j64 sleeps 4, fwly equtpPf'd. A tho ---• F , ~--• $950. 494.2145 u r1a:u erran IA: ... er • THINK --.66=PO'°"RSCl.,..:.l::_E_9_cl2c__I "~6'' ~,..~ixi. chrm whls, AM1r·M. $.1200. 673-2266 a ft 6. "FRIEDLANDER"' Imported Ca" ~ :tu $75, 832-6986 or 830-3400 for narrow-beam sailboat If you are serious about buy. Semi-Chopped + Chrome YOUNG , attracti\'e, Vt'ry AKC ft.L-p 26' to 34'. Ph. Kingsley ing a mobile home .•• Now'11 Call alter S 67J.-139j gentle male cat. 1..1 8-3927. lo'VU9rman ups 613-8711 the time to see l0/22 6 wk!!. SfiO. 54().8638. alt 5 '67 YA.11.IAHA 100 Dirt Bike l~=,,--~-,,-,,--'.".'.:;I ========= 40' SLI P. pvt residence. BAY HARBOR Exµ. Ch.i.m. Fork brace FREE puppies-Shortha.ired. Hones ll30 choi~ harbor 1~. Storage MOBILE HOMES S150. ~7!11 '=="======'==!·67 l30 GT 2+2, air, ek-c Dune Buggies 9515 windo1\·11. 1'tust sell! Priv. ----"="---__;;cl pr1y. 714: 546-9-144 or 714: Corvuir Dune Buggy $400 5+1.3417 1136-6070 FIAT good natured. 541-375 0.1'-'.:;.;:;::: ____ _,;=: or limited aCttss only. $100 1425. Baker St. (at 1-farbor)· 10/22. .SHOW GELDING per mo. 675-3399 Costa l\1esa 540-9470 2 A.Ur\VHITE k:itlt"ns, l AQHA Registered 4 yr old BOAT slip up to 50• Al!!O side 17 \\'IDE MOBILE llOP.1E Allto Service & Parts -AUSTIN HEALEY I /A T gray with white marking!!. 8 gt>lding • Over 6 mo. pro!. tie for sallboat up to 2"'. & CABANA AUSTIN AMERICA ""'eeks. f>tS-8082 • 10/n-training, Shov.·n at haller & ~1608 ~ft 5 pm Ne.v.'port. Pen.In_, area DARLING calico k i I t en II ""'estern pleasure. Very cl11.s-DOCK space for 20' -30' M il, Full price $3995 sales, Serv:lee, Parts v.• /personallly. 11y. Sla:lO, CaU ~().5630 day1 32'-40' p>wer. Nr Arches. (8117091) ~ V\V PARTS Immediate Delivery OUtO #port lt.d VW Entlne. Good Cond. e 4J.t2.0.M3 e r,1&-,524'2 10/22 or 6.13-3394 \\'etkends or &l2-4&!4 * Olr, ~;,.8242 * Chnssi11, 1'r1:1rn;missinn.o; k All Modeb Author\i{'(f sate11 e Service evenings. Ask for Dick, BOOy parts. 642-Q.143 DEMO S BEAUT. lovable litllP. ora~ 1..:~;;:;:7'.:;:..:::;..=:::::.,_.-'1 •PVT dock for up lo 28' Triple Wide Cornell ALE 1J7!>0 IEACH (HWY, ttt 893-7566 • 537-6824 NEW-USED-SE RV. • MG Sales. Service. Parts hnmediatc Dcli11ery, AU .l\fodcls J1rtllµorr Jl111µorts klll(!n free to good home. AQHA Registered motor boat on channel. Continental e Puramount 1970 Flat 124 Sports Cpc, ~3148 10122 fl!Ue, 2 )TS. old. Jet hlack • 673-2662 11.ft 6 pm Banington e Universal Trucks 9500 Jtadlo, heater, special ex-3100 \V, Coast llwy., N.B. 2 MALE kitlel'lli 8 \\'ks old, 1 \\'~U bred • Sire G{l.upho -------"---F111mingo • GeneraJ 196!: FORD. VS, automatic N\ust, pin sttipi.ng, radial 642-94© ~1764 blonde. 1 dark long haired. Bars. ?ilus1 sell. Mklng S500, ----------1 Bioadmoor • Stnr transmiulon, J)OY.-ct steer· Un!11, :ow mllel'I. '65 f\.IG M'dg 54&-()272 10/22 tenns. Call 540-5630 days or &o.t Renta ls 9031 1llllett~t e cambrtdge lnR", power bra.kes, air con-3UXI W. Cout HWy., N.8. $2795 1 et, reblt eng, CO 2 I -•-6 &n.3394 "A:ttkends or evf'n. ----'-"""----'-'·I I" HAP MAN dltioning wlth ll 1 way &'2.sta5 540-1714 9625 Garden Grove'Blvd. many nu features, needs CALI kilt..., om~ I•-. ·-·-fo• D<C. k. Rent A San .. --~ 537 S>mo body wk. "'''" $150 .,its, adorable MMi045 aft. ·-e~ AlWI> • lirV'llilT MOBILE HOMES C.mptr Cn.ilscr. Just 1 h e-'67 S •+ =·~=~~~-'Cat=l~Co=Uc:oct;.;1 l'.lr ~t off. Day fi.IS.12iSJEv l 10122 PALAMINO ""'' ' ""· ea1 2;. ,1 .. ., '· '"'"' ..,,,,. m; N. II""''· '-"· '""' '°' !he cycl• """'" pr1 e '69 124 Sport Cpe. 646-5!1' r"ru., r ... ~~ 6 ~k< ot<I. REG .<IN FOALl. Aft 3:~; r>ed. $30 per day, ..,,·kdyS; $40 * 714/5.11-8105 * Dir. :,J0-96-10 or 540-3510 4 h'()Ccd, n~ color 1. red. '"""'."""" ,.,.~ """ ,.,..."~ P''da wknd -k. ~ 1967· l\IG B-GT ""lll'.lw, Low M>Y01 iom _,....,,.,,..,., Y s: -per w PERFE CT '49 CHE VY PANEL •l.'ili BEL\ J~ U::!!sons inti. 968-4340. Tnit'k IM'>•m $l l 95 4 ~peed. Nev.· pa l111, A txau. mileage. $\87j. Fine con- AOORABLE kit~ !rer to TRANSPORTATION =========;112 x 57 in fk.-c !i1ar adull 0 •....., 1)'' cXL\V 23."il rl ltion. 833--0.t.49. $tOC.d ~. sa..a1Z7 ]0/22 I :.;.;....;;.:..:;.:..:.;....;c;.;..;.:..:c;.;.._ BNt Charter 9039 p11rk. No pe ts. Ideal loc•· 191H FORD pick·up. Xlnl DON BURNS $2495 :s7 J\1GA! ,J\1 INT CONO. DARLJSG }~ ldttt ns. Bo.ts & Y~htl 9000 ---------·• t.ion in Cos1a Alea. Pb. cond ition. Call after 6. DON BURNS ~1u111 &c. Keep c&lHng! s.ts.m 10122 32' '1'wlrHttt!" Chris t'nft &16-8612. • S.1;..J337 • P orsche Audi, LTD. * * 557-3120 * • 'a1·-IL0--.,-----968---m-~-I B~rd~'·m!~·:m":rl~ Sips e * ~Jux boat BOUGHT a house, .11.tUST '69 Chevy ~ir'ton P.U. 13631 Harbor Blvfl, 6J6.2333 Porsche Audi L TO ·~ i\1G, i\fecllanlc'.t Speelal! 10/22 SloiJS. 67>2318 =*=.,..===";";·,;13Mtl3';=::*=, I SEU. 2 br holTlf! on P'\'t pty, must .ell Just S. of G8rdcn Grove Fwy, 13631 lhtrbOr Blvd 636-® Needs crank shah S150. TABBY twirw 7 wks. aid Pf'Oo ple kr\~. J.M-7308 10122 TREE 411'1 -You t.ul a"'8.Y· ~7337 10122 YOUNG etillco cat operated on, LibftotJ' f..m'1 10/24. Fl I L ti SO Ne..,,'J>OM Bay 17x35 S90 mo. * M!l-3!m * HEALEY '55 C~a!!tsic-. Ex. Just s . of Garden G°rovC! F'A'Y. ~2498 '10 O IJ~ r boa1. 120 HP, _.l.._"9~-"-·"'""--'---·I Full priC(! S3SOO or otfer. 'tH FORD W\ndow Van-Slick cond. Nu red paint. chrome .69 Fl.AT .85(1 SPIDER C T1 ':>2 i!-:1G-TD. Completely reblt II • N drive eng, frbgls, AIRLINE Pilot 0 ff er Jn g I ;;67;;>--0:,.:::;33::1...,..~-~-=-~hlft, 6 t)'I. ninny extras, w/\\·hetls. ~Just Set"~ S900, 1 XI 1 nd , _ · • ni'n cng perfecl ''Ody 962-0224 $2850, doek.._Vl'l.11. 6-lMOl&. tUgtlt 1MtrocUon. Private IT'S Bl!'ach hou&e Um~. Bllf' Xlnt cond. Trad@. 646-2698 i ,:•13-;.:.;l;,6<1';:;:;'=;,';..' 1;,:.;P::M'.--~-I Pl~lll<.~irt;I, $JJ!l.~119Y Pvi or ~l. · e 44' lfOUSEBOAT, Xln t, thn1 A.T.R. \'our plluW? or gest selection ever! Sre the Tum thoo:e \Vhlte Elephant& '62 Att.STIN 'lt'11.lcy r.tnrk fl Ply: \i•kdyi 833-lGll/Ext DAILY PILOT Dli\ff; _A live aboard, Slip Ava!l. n1h1t, Reuonable. r•11111 DAILY PILOT CluilfiN lnto ca'l'l lhru • D..0, Pilot 3000, Restorrd. l\lutl 11ell. \60.l Nile Ii w k ttn d a : • IJNES cost )'OU j ust pen. ---*-'--'--'--*---.~tl68;.;;:,_;;48;,;ltl,;..______ le'C't1on now! ' Dim.,..Unt adll \\lilt aac.. 1'lake. ofr. 6.™989 673-9309 nles a day, ,_;.;_,;...;.;,,; ____ _ The #1-selli ,• im111~ ~ Now--40% more po.,, for 90% of your job~ • Big Selection • Friendly ~ Auto Cenftr 13161 Hubo, Bl~. Garden Grove ... -Open 7 Days ... 'Til 9 p.m. 839-7ooO I s I• d• Li c J_ I I " ,, " I 'F "' Jui • A " ,., M "' -.... m RE ,. " s On '61 -.. -· p 1,36: '"" ' r "' •• [ p (JG; Ju• ~ l I , "'' E l I H a. In 3 ' ' r •, l, -I D ' TRANSPORTATION \TRANSPORTATION TRANSPJIRTATION •mparted Auto1 9600 I rnporttd Autos: HOO I m~rttcl ~vtot HOO PORSCHE I TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN '70 911 'T' '68 Corona Demo. 3~00 actual mile!. 5 4 Door, automatic. radio, sP<--ed trans., At.1/Frtt, maiJ: heater. (VH!f 37!1) wheel.!!, emerald ~n wllh $1199 blt1ck interior. I #1011Ci!:!). BILL YATES BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Rond ~2 Valle Road San J uan Capistrano Sttn Juan CapiSll'&JlO 837-48001493-4511/499-2261 l:37-4800/ 493-t5U/ 499-2261 '69 vw Sedan Radio. (\'NZ280~ $1775 TRANSPORTATION '66 vw Sedan Radio. CRUF081) $1045 V.W. Harbour V.W. '70 TOYOTA'S. ,, "°'"' !mm"'~·· doUv • .,,: Harbour '63 PORSCHE COUPE He.rdtop, gleaming nietalltc silver, with brand new in- 1~rlor, chrome wheels, ra- dial tires, AM/Fl\t radlo, Lie. PX\\-"982. $2399 CHICK IVERSON YW 549-3031 Ex1. 60 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA Laguna Beach 187U BEACH BL., 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH NEW YW BUG $55.89 pr. month 900 So. Cit. Highway $147.71 down Includes 494-7503 * 540-3100 lox & Lie. Opon End '68 VW Bus. Blue finish with TRIUMPH white interior. Air condltion- ---------1 Ing, Heavy duty rear tires, a '68 TR 250 re.uy good '"Y '""· u,. 146 BEL. Chick Iverson '68 912 Targa c._ yollow. 6 oyl., m•g Jn<,, 445 E, Cout Hwy., trP< """"· rad~. ,k; ra,k, N,B, 61~ E•L 53 or M. ' 5 speed. Low .mileage. Tape !On1!E'au boot + con\·ert top. dttk. £700 AhJJ Prlced to l • 13CM)2) • '63 VW SUNROOF, XJn•t "'"· $2195 "'""· 170083>.ms $4995 DON BURNS DON BURNS '66 YW BUG Porsche Audi, l TD. c .,. . • Porsche Aud i, LTD. 136.11 Harbor Blvd. 6J&.2J33 ompe~1 ion_ oranae w 1th 13631 Harbor Blvd, 63G-2333 .Just S. or Garden Grove F'wy, black tntenor. UOH144 Jus1 S. of Garden Grove F11'Y. SACRIFICE, ,67 TR • 4A $1099 • "63 PORSCHE -reblt '"'" reblt "'' '''"' gd <0od, CHICK IVERSON AM/FM. new tires, ski $1600. 673-2629, aft 5:30 & YW rack. $23j(). 64&-5432. wknds. 168 PORSCHE 912, S.spd. ~''9~T~R~-3~,~Gd~-,,-.~;,,.,-, -,,...,~, . ~tag y,•hls, Al'l/F~f. like body \YOrk. $225. C a 11 new. 644-2432 49 ~1284 afl S. 549-3031 E~. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD • COSTA MESA -----------1~9~70~-=-,-,T~n.,.·,-m-p"'"h--I * '66 VW: Re b I I Ieng. RENAULT Clean 3 mo. old Nu/t!rM, Riff. $950. Call '64 RENAULT, xln't cond . 536-7294 aft 5 Pl\I Aft S. 673-68l9 18n1 BEACH BL. 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH LEASE '71 VW BUG ONLY $49.00 Per Month AT BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32S52 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837-4800/493-4511/ 499-2261 '68 YW Bug Needs soap &: water. (YXR 794) $1199 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 328.52 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837-4800/493-4511/ 499-2261 TRANSPORTATION tor used can &: trucks ju.d call us for free estimate. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask for Sales Mana.ctr 1l21l Beach BJvd. H@tington Beach 8'7-fi087 Kt 9-1131 LATE MODEL CADILLACS WANTED .& ANY OTHER LATE ?>10DEL GENERAL MOTORS CAR SEE CHUCK TRAPP OR BILL l\IAC CRACKEN Nabers Cadillac 26.;.J HARBOR BLVD., Costa l\!esa 540-9100 Open Sunday WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR . CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harilor Blvd. Co~ta l\!esa w .. 1200 ll\1PORTS \VANTED Oran~ Counties TOPS BUYER BILL ~IAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. H. Beach. Ph. 847-SSS.'i LEASE A NE\V 1971 PINTO $50.00 mo. 9810 Thursday, Octobtt 22, 1970 DAILY PlLOT TRANSl'ORTATI0=11--'-T'-'ll~A~N=s~P"'o~R=TA~T~1To=N-~T~RA=Nr.Slib'llT ATION TRANSl'ORTATION l--'-...;.;.""---"-'...;..~-1~-~~~~~ t90e Uted C1rs '900 UMd Coro 9900 Utttd Cars -CADILLAC COMET CADILLAC 1964 COMET automatic, 8 '67 COUPE OeVILLE cylinder 4 dr sedan, Radio, Full powtr, lactOI')' air, padd. Heater. A t1ne economy & ed top, leather Interior, 11er. transportation car. Priced oo AM·FM radio, Ult steer-well below blue book at 1,. whorl, pov.·cr door locks, SJTh, Cl.I.I &!'/'-4239, El Turo. twU"ht eentinel, auto dim· ""'· Vtey low mileage CONTINENTAL (Tfm67l ":.,J. SALE $311.l PRICE 1966 LINCOLN Cootlnental - Orange County'• Larscst Lile blue. Good C?nd, Iota o! Sel~tton of QualHy CadJUacs cxlraa. $2000. 6ls-526l Naben Cadillac CORVETTE FORD OLDliMOl!JILE '64 FORD WAGON '67 OLDS. 1 owner, Xln1 C'Orwt. 60,000 rnl. !-'act air, pa/pb, r&h. Sl340 lo blue book. Idea\ second car. Au tornnllc, 614511H or 644-&IJJ ~~r Must be s(!fn. {OrtT-I o.-.62,.-.0,,-t.0=s~J"e"u"ire.,.-;v'"~~."'2,...d,-r.1 $795 No"· tires, tnl.111, 11hoc.ks, etc. 1-"'ull PYJr. 893-1061 aft II DON BURNS ,:·at.OS F-85 Dix wagon. Porsche Audi, l TD. P S, R.&1-f, t.1ichelin Radlalt. 13631 Harbor Blvd. 636.2333 new brakes, 26,<XXI mi. Xlnt Just S. of G11J'den Grove ~'Y. cond, $1600. 546-2399. TOP DOLLAR 01 "' '66 ""· '"'" /Jr, Po"-er, $1300 2600 HARBOR BLVD., ' Costa ?>1esa • Corvette '70 for s.t0-9100 Open Sunday Sting Ray CLEAN USED CARS * 543-4059 art 4 pm * Ac "" FACTORY 0 -A d B e CADILL -AIR CONDITlONING .;x-e n y ro,vn COUPE DE .Vl~LE Sho\\TOOmfreshtastbackwith THEODORE Cloth & leather interior, fUU removfable panela 350 v.a ROBINS FORD PcYMOUTH '63 Plymouth Wagon po\\'Pr. factory air condition-engine. Flnlshtd In ipark· 2)60 Harbor BJvd. ing, Al\1-F~1 radio, tllt·lt-Je. linr Ermine white w/plush Costa Mesa Radio, automatic, p ower steering wheel, power door metallic blue vinyl interior. 64U'.l010 steering, power windows, ~%~iw~~~31crulse Ct1ntrol, All option.!. incl. powl!r steer., '66 fAIRLANE WAGON air conditioning. (HFX814) SALE $3555 PRICE brakes; t'lectrlc v.·lndow1. $799 • Hydro auto trans, Slereo Orange County's Largt'st fJlUltlplex & just 7800 care. Automalie, !)ll\\-er steering, BILL y ATES Selection of Quality Cadillacs fully driven miles. (756ASQI ail' cond. stereo tape, dlr. Nabers Cadillac SALE $5555 PRICE tTAY '"'Will "''"' in VOLKSWAGEN """" llARBOR BLVD trade or llnance private par. 32352 ValJt Rood -·· Nabers Cadillac w '"''"'.,, .,,..,"· • Costa Mesa San Juan Capistrano 540.9100 Open Sunday 2llOO HARBOR BLVD. FORD Country Squire ·~ 837-4800/493-45J V 499.2261 • C.d. '64 Cpe. do Ville COSTA l\1ESA \Vgn, 10..pass, Xlnt cond, 1966 PLYMOl.l'rn c-..-. III. OPEN SUNDAY loaded w/xtras, pwr brks-~ .... ¥ FACTORY 1-.,..,.~=====~-1 steering • \\'indo\YS·scata. Sta. Wag. full pwr, alr·xlnt AIR CONDITION ING '64 CORVmE Neiv lires, lo\\·ner, blu book cond. Real!! 842-6808 Full leather interior_ Cruise "377·•, 4 speed, AM / Fl\f, price, see to appreciate. Aft '67 BARRACUDA 2 dr sedan, control; lilt wheel. Automa-Brand new v.•ide ovals com-7pm/wknds. 54s.ro96 6 cyl, RIH. auto, lo mi. tic dimmer. Full po\\·er. An pletely origlnaJ. all th.ls Vet I•~==='"'°"'=== $1200. 675-3577 "xceptionaJ value. (I\Vt.673) needs is a ne\\· home. osc ATTENTION BUYERS !==========! SALE $1111 PRICE 779. Let us help you find a Nabers Cadiltac $1399 ~~1::s ":i~0~.r~~~~.' PONTIAC 2600 HARBOR BLVD. ' COSTA f.fESA OPEN SUNDAY CHICK IVERSON cau oow 6424m •Pont. '67 9 P~" W•g. Auto. Refe rral Service FACTORY VW AIR CONDITIONING '65 ~luslang Convrt-V8, 4 Dix. Catalina Station \\'agon, ·66 FLEE1WOOD, full pwr, 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 barrt"I auto., pis, ne1v Xlnt al, nu tires. only 47,00() 1970 HARBOR BLVD. glass-belts. A-1 mech. $950 V-8 engine, power steer., mi·s, $2700, 675-7470, COSTA MESA finn. '65 Gaia.'l:ie 500 2-dr power brakes, A41o. trans., .,._,,,, 1=~==~~~~-HT "~2 Fro nd rad., htr., wrno tires, tilt .• with or \\1thoul tape. $500 or , bst orr. 41ZE. Balboa, N.B. '68 -R-10, auto. R-H. good -cond., below \\'hOil'sale, 35 mi. gal. 847-7928 '66 TR·4A '61 V\V Sunroof, gd. cond. $325. Call after 6 pm '66 vw Sedan (36 mo.) RENT A N_EW 1971 PINTO $4 DAY ,,,__==~~~=~ CORVETI'E '69 fastback. · ..., eng. nt e "'heel, electric re-.r \Ylndow, '61 CADILLAC: F ULL Loaded! .Auto. &: air. Like damage, mt'Ch !Ound. Best etc. (TSA-m) PO\VER XLNT COND, $400 new. ?\ew Goodytoar E.605. oHer. 962--0Z2,1 or 962-86Zl. SALE $2111 PRICE . -· RENAULT R 10, 1967. auto. rad. low mi. Good cond, 1 owner, ~as 495-5196 eves. Roadster. British r a c in gi.~---"-""""--7 __ _ g1·een. \YRD006J '68 V\V Bug Auto.Stick R&H. $1595 4 sl ht/ts. Undercoat. Ex. DON BURNS ,:~ "'.:: :'.:.'. :'.~rm. Porsche Audi, LTD. sunroof. $600. 499-3650 10-4. 13631 Harbor Blvd. 636-2333 31*>6 8th, S. Lag. Radio. IZBW123l $1135 AND 4¢ MILE PUT A LITILE KICK IN YOUR ** 675-3623 ** Pvt ply. $4000. 673-1616 ·54 GALAXIE fl(XJ 2 dr HT Orange County'11 Largest '63 DE VILLE, blk, leather '56 VEITE 283 Aqu1. wlblk int. Auto, lilt-Selection of Quality Cadillacs Inter, Al\11FM stereo, all $900 Immac 213 -592-2928 away steering \vhl. r&h, Mabers Cadillac extras, good cond, 644-2871 · · ps/pb. 61,000 orig mL Xlnt , .. cond $800 or be$t oUer. :!600 ifARBOR BLVD .• CAMARO DODGE !Mif-9915. Costa h-fesa '63 FtJ,.CON 2 dr. 6 cyl stick 540-9100 · Open Sunday SAAB Jus! S. of Garden Grove Fwy. ·59 VW, red, AMIFM, Chrm. 1---------\\'hl11. super clean. $1550. Harbour V.W. LIFE! THEODORE ROBINS FORO 2060 !IARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 64UXl10 shift, clean. $350 Call '61 PONTIAC Le Mans. '67 CAMARO SS-RS blk vinyl '68 DODGE RT 646--0968 ' · Whl~e wt turquoise interior, Authorized Dealer Sales e Service e Parts Sonet C.Oupes in Stock Orange County•s Ne"·est Dlr. ---------I 6T:>-t1228 eves. top, wine"COlor, 427 cu in nt FULL POWER + factory air, bucket seats, auto., po .... ·er VOLKSWAGEN . ., vw ... '"" ""'"'· 18711 BEACH BL., 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH L-88, 56S hP. alum eng, Low '11111?11, Mint liquidate LINCOLN sir&'. xlnt mechanical con- selectric turbo-hydro, 4-S6 Immediately. 1st $2099 buys, ---------·I dition. Very clean inside & _ , COAST IMPORTS • of Orange County Inc. 1200 \V. Pacific Coa1t Hwy, 642-0406 • 546-4529 SUNBEAM '66 Sunbeam Roadster New paint new top, new tires. <Stil34 I Only $1295 DON BURNS Porsche Audi, L TO. J,W31 Harbor Blvd. 63S.:!333 Just S. or Garden Grove Fwy. l!l§!YJO!TIA)i '71 COROLLAS HERE NOW Wagons. 2 Ors. Coupes Automatics & 4 SPf'eds DEAN LEWIS 1966 H1t.rbor, C.l\f. 646·9303 '62 V.W Convertible Radio. fSKU891) $475 Harbour V.W. 18711 BEACH BL., 8424435 HUNTINGTON BEACH '70 VW CAl\lPER -Pop top. 3,000 mi. $3400 firm. 646-5901 OT STh-0251 IOW IN COSTA MESA '71 HONDA s::. e Alllt COOLlD ,lltOHT IHGINI e ,lltONT WHlll. OltlVI e l'OWlllt ASllSTI O SlLfl. AOJUJTIMO flllOMT Dl$C ........ , e MA)(tMUM lflllD 11 MPH e UI' TO 4' MILIS fllllt GALI.ON e lllOUll•l'ASSINOlll, 1 Ollt. ~ SIOAH Phn 11• N"" Cir "'°'"'''"" lM.al Tr•M. Tu a l.k.....ii UNIVERSITY 01.0Sll:'OllU Good cond. 21,000 mi's. $2800, ~131 ·so VW. Re:bullt engirwi. :PotA?t1MOTH VETERAN! 1 $275. 4~2 '64 VW-Good cond, new clutch. Clean $795. 644.1425 alter 6 pm '68 vw Sedan Radio. (WAK020) $1590 WANTED ·61 V\V camper, fac rblt eng, perfect mech cond, $750 or bes! offer. 673-1882 aft 6. '6-1 V\Y Bus. Engine rebull! and guarantee. CI u t c h transmission, Tlre1 In ex- crllent shape. Special at $1199, See 83130. C h I c k Iverson rnc .. 445 E. Coast Hwy., N.B. 673-0900 Ext. S3 or $4. ---~~~~~~-1 '66 VW BUG posi, traction bars, Koni-X'EU35t 1966 LINCOLN Continental: out! $750. 16985 Edgewater ?.fed!terranean green. Radio, Used CAre "'hite wall 1ires (XEW493) l--~------- shock, tuned headers, ex-CHICK IVERSON Litelblu. Gd. Canel. Lots of ~"n~.28~untington Harbour, haust FEi0-15 Goodyears, YW Extras. S2000. 675-5263 .,..,......., Ansen Sprints, Al\1/FM/PS, '70 GTO. 455cu in, 370 HP, 9900 $1195 WE BUY DON BURNS CARS new car cone!. S7000 invest. 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 MUSTANG Ram Air, 4 spttd clost' Avail 11-4-70, Dave \Villiams 1970 HARBOR BLVD, ratio, llAl-t~trac Cposl) 3:31. Porsche Audi , LTD. """"' ~ 13631 1-larbor Blvd, 636-2333 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 ~ ~~11--.-----. '69 OODGE GT, xlnt cond. PIS. Ride &: Handlin< Pkg, '67 RS 3~ J V o t PS t d t auto I tram, AM I Ft.1 \V/O . . ..., cu. p s, auto, -u, au o, · an au op. cordova top, con!IOle, hood air, FM, di&e brk~. S1300 or Musi sell, lo mi. $2250. tires P/S, P/Dlsc brks, lach etc. ALL BLACK $3395. JUst S. of Garden Grove F\vy, VOLVO VOLVO CLEARANCE! €J r~~~~~ • 19ti6 Harbor, C.~1. L.l"U"Ll'l.I' ~ THINI ~VOMO' Be1t. eves: 494-2156. 549-1244 sport deck. 639-8473. 646-4665 '70 COUGAR, lo mi's, must ,69 CAMARO RS. Orang•, •66 DODGE Dart 270 ~-dr '65 ~1USl'ANG-Xlnt cond. -:=-:,-,L-=,-,-:A-=-cN~S=-1 sell, \\'ill sacrifice, pis, VS 4-pd p I I r '67 E M RIH, air, aft 6 pm & PIS. P/B, Air. Nil tires. sedan, 6 cyl, RIH, auto, · s • o yg ass U"CS, wknds: 67,_7980. $2'/00. * 67J.58ll xlnt cond, must s e 11, $675/make oUer. 842-3215. Sacrific:t'! 1725. 675-5655. .67 MUST G VS, automatic, a.Ir cond., ========='1 ----------I ,~==~~-~== AN 3-flpd, 21!9. po'ver steering, vinyl top. BUCK -----1 CHEVROLET '6' DART V·• ""'°· R&H, Mu•t ,.ll, hst oil". 670-75'!2 dtr. <• 288<7') Will lak• W/\V $1500/best or le r. trade or finance private par-e BUICK '61 RIVIERA ---------1 642-6723 or 642-3415 aft 3. ty. 546-4052 or 49-1-6811. FACTORY '65 Impala 1970 CHALLENCER-Alr, '"'' 1--0_L_D_S_M_O_Bl_LE __ 1'"' PONTIAC Sl•'~" w,..n AIR CONDITIONING c pwr, 383 eftg, vinyl lop.~ • OLDSMOBILE ,68 $1 00. 327 W. Wilson, C.M. Full po\\-er, vinyl top, st.rato pe. ml. Sac S2950. 67S-&114. CUTLASS ,,5,, _o_r=fice~·==.,,...==,,,--I bucket seats, chrome sport Automatic. po\\·er iteering & VAN -1969 Sporlll.man VS, Autumn gold with black vi nyl 63 PONTrAC Le-MANS wheels! Al\t / FM stereo, brakes Exttllent condllion auto, air, Nu wide·bcl!ed inler1or, VS, automatic, Ml· floor shift, like new rower door locks, tilt & tele-· · tire!I lo ml •""""' 646-7353 S500 •~:mo r~=-.. -~-~•.-·~~ -scoplc steering wheel. Load. ed w/exlras. <XDLS.S41 ,$895 tires, power steering, under e '57 Pontiac • SALE $3111 PRICE FORD 24,!IOO mu.,, IWDUIJ31 CloM, 1250 968-1078 SALE $2333 PRICE Orange County•s Largest Srlectlon of Quality Cadlllacs 196Z Ford station wagon. R& Nabers Cadillac Nabers Cad1'llac H, automatic. Mechanics 2600 JIARBOR BLVD., Special. Phone 968-5%14 after ,.._ 2fiOD HARBOR BLVD., .....,,.ta Mesa Costa l\1esa . .&> P.M. 540-9100 Open Sunday 540-9100 -1969 LTD Country Squire, 9 opon Sonday '65 Impala SS •"'· Ale, PSIPB, '"'o, Lo miles. Like new $2925. (714) Yellow with black Interior. 541-4782. '5'-=-6 =eu='1=c =K-' Sacrifice'. Must sell irnmedi· alely! $150 full price. (\VBJ. 5S61 dlr. Call 494-7744, '66 2-dr sport cpe. pis. r&h. lo ml tires. X1nt cond. Lo blue book. 644-6599. '70 SPORT WAGON -Like ne\v, ps/pb, air. $3500. 545-9~19 or 644-0637 • Cad. '69 Sed. de Ville FACTORY AIR CONDTTIONl~G Full power, vinyl top. Luxur. Automatic. dlr. Power stttr-L6=7-0F=o"R"D'°,"'H'"•-•"'--,du"°'1y,,..,s"""'"-c, Ing, VS. ?>1ust sell! S995 full Vaa 6 cyl Sl 300 prlce. (RRG 775). Ca I I * 57J437'.z af.t. 5 * 494-TI44. '69 CAMARO ,~~~,. eo'""" 4 d' d''""'· 962-5.115 VS, air cond., power 11t~ring. ,=~~-~=-,-..,~­ dlr. CUYB 9'12) Will take 70 ~heteau Club Wgn trade or finance privat par-Like new • '675-1340 ty. 546-4052 or 1!M-6811. 1970 FORD Maverick. Xlnt '64 CHEV. 2 Dr. Impala, blg Cond, autottran11, Pwr/S, motor, low mUeage, pis, 3.000 ml. $2500. 642-0346 Aft 6 lop cond. S950, 962-8986 afl 3: 3{I pm. AJI day sun. Did you ever think of swap. Ing that White Elephant in '64 CliEVY 5-pass coupe -the attic ror something you recently o'h~u.le-d, gd tlrt?s, Call use? Try the Tn.ders A-1 mech. Orii owner $600 Paradise (!()]umn tn the Dal- 646--0647. ly P Uot Want Ads. '67 El Camino, new cond. '66 Cutlass 2 Door llardtop Coupe, Auto- matJc. pov.-er steering, dlo, heak>r. (SLU524) $999 DILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837-4800/ 4934511 /49!1-:!:!6i 1068 OLD's 98: 4 Dr, v\nylflop fabric/Int, &ir, P/S eats, AM/FM, tilt/whl. $2400. PH: 8 am-5 pm. 673-7022 '69 CUTLASS Sllprt?me, vinyl ht. 2 Dr, air, pis, pfb. auto. Best ntrer. eves & V.'kndS, 673-8118. RAMBLER '66 770 Wagon Excellenl buy! Good condi- tion. $695 STUDEBAKER '61 STUDEBAKER Sta Wgn - 6 cyl stick, new brakes, runs good. Sl65. 646-2698 T·BIRD '67 Thunderbird, Landau top, 4 dr, low mil, has "very. thing, good tires. $2000. 494-4105 or 494-8486, 1001 clolh & leather interior, Dual comfort aeats. Stereo multiplex, power door locks, tilt &: telescoplc wheel, twi- light sentinel, po,• .. er trunk opener, etc., etc, ({)65AGC) SALE $4999 PRICE Orange County'1 Largest Selection of Quality Cadillacs PB/PS, bucket 11eat11 , New Cars 9800New Cari 9800 New Cart 9100 Nabers Cadillac 2600 HARBOR BLVD., Costa Mesa 54Cl-9100 ()pen Sunday 8 C•d. '66 Cpo. do Vlllo FACTORY - 4-speed. Big motor. 675-36221-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;•I aft 6. I: '70 CHEVELLE 454 An"n 1971 MAVERICK HAD A PRICE t.fags, Xlnt cond. Must Sell· ii°~~:"" -""'' otr. I NCR EASE OF $200 '66 El Camino V8, auto, R/H, custm int. Mii.kc ofier. lf.05 AtToyo, Lag Bch. 494-8813 '64 CHEVY 327, gd cond, $495 «" Best-offer:Call Darryl a 642-2834 AIR CONDITIONING ruu pov.-cr, all leather inter. lor, tilt &: telescopic wheel. '65 VW lint ·11.a. cMWY. •I AM I FM, light dimmer. BUG 89l-"'6 • ..,,~ (SBB714) • to ,_ from. "FRIEDLANDER" * 1970 GOLD EL CAMINO 1-fust 11eli $2700., leaving coun. try, 49Ui698 aft 3:00 pm. NEW-USID-SERV. Take your pick, only_ .. American m11.11 w1de tJ~s. SALE $2333 PRICE • 1961 CHEV Nomad Win· "348", pslpb. Call 64 .... 2038 custom metall!C paint w h ~ Orana;e Councy'1 Largest beautilul lace work. YPU. Selcclion Quality Cadillacs 1965 OIEVY Be!Alr G-pas1 90L • '68 VOLVO 122-S • C station wagon-ps/pb, auto. Seven.J other customlzed Like new. $1400 or trade. Nabers adillac pxl cond, $950. ~19 . VW to choole frort1 833-7272 2fiOO HARBbR BLVD., '61 CHEV StaUon Wagon Top CHICK IVERSON C:O.la Mosa of lho line: Nomad. M"'l Race Ca rs, Rods 9620 5'10-9100 OJ>@n Sunday See to Appreciate. 54S-0078 VW '41 OiEV Pickup •si C...d, e C•d. '67 Convertible '62 CHEVY • 4 door Impala 549-30.11 Ext. 615 er 67 Isky cam, e A r.t HTD. No FACTORY $400 or best offer. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. mlleagc. 571-B Plummer, AtR CONDmONtNC 544-3417 '83 VW CaJnper. Xlnt cond. Ct.t Full po1~:er, pluah full leather =========·II (;otna: ln $ervlce-Must aeU. Interior, stereo, Ult wheel, CHRYSLER Asklna-.~. MM925 Autos, Wanttd 9700 door locks light sentinel, "·10-vw""'""=ro=p".ro=p-c.m--.. -, __ ;_...;;.=.;;...--'.;.;... etc., etc, (\7CU074) '62 IMPERIAL 6,!IOO ml. Skit ltnt • rad~, WE PAY TOP OOIJ.AR SALE $2181 PRICE $3350, 837-8900 Oya 494-1163 FOR TOP USED CARS Orange County's IA~ E If your car ls exln c.lean, Selccllon or Quality Cadlllrtc1 "'"' .,. "' tint. N b C • "66 vw BUG • BAUER BUICK a •n adlllac WE STILL HAVE 65 1970 MAVERICKS IN STOCK SAVE· SAVE· SAVE 2150 HAllOl llVD. COSTA MESA 54G-9640 Xlnt oond. $1050 or bt&t offtr. 234 &. lTth St. 2600 HARBOP. BLVD., Full power, dlr. E:il:ctllfnt condlHon. Only 80,000 mUe:t. (YBT321) Take trode or will lln1nce pr1va1e pa r t y. ~ or 494-68ll. ~ eve, or wknd1 Co.ta ?otesa 54&--T165 54().9:100 Open Sunday . " . ,.;._ .. , .. i l • • • • ; • • • , I • DAILY PILOT T-. Octobtt 22, 1910 Joe BeJotli j T & M MOTORS AVTHORIZED e SALES e SERVICE e PARTS WE HAVE THE BEST SELECTION OF BMW's IN ORANGE COUNTY • 1600'1 ' • 2002 • 2500 • 2800 • 2800 cs • All Colors • Al Models • Immediate . Delivery "ALMOST TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE" CAR AND DRIVER .. 11. thom "tho most spec- tacular b.rg1in1 In the entire spectrum of im- ported u"." When profHSion1I critics get th1t enthusiastic, it's time to take 1 tfft drive. Only you behind the wheel can truly rM11ure the performance of this l1te1t triumph from Ger· m1ny'1 ,famed Bav1ri1n Moto" Works • • • builders of fine urs for 53 yurs. Drive the in· com,.rable new BMW today. --. "67 FIAT WAGON s599 SP9ci•I l vic:k V/6 '" ir1e. Radie, •••fer, autometic. f~VT-5601 '68VW Redio, heater, 1un,Oof. Real Slie1p! '68 FIAT 150 Spider, 2 cit., n•w top, r1dio; h•1f1r, vltr1 1h1rpl IWTI-6161 s.i395 51199 :!~ c~~~~~~!~ .. '•· ~195 dio, h••t•r. '4-1p1..d, fin• m1ck1nic1I I. co nd. IYXU-9851 '66 SIMCA Radio, h•1t1r, whit• wilt•, f1,1lly f1ctory •qu ipp•d. (CSJ-O!J) '70 VW CAMPER I IOV AC/DC outl•h , r•f•r .• w1llc through •••Ii, b•1utiful $1mp•rl low mil••· IJ1981Nl '68 TRIUMPH Spilfir• Mk 111 with • r•mov1bl• h•rdlop, wir• wh1,l1, ov1rdriv1. IZNJ-2941 $AVE TWO TO CHOOSE FROM Two '49 8MW"1 2002 111d 1600. 4·1p11d. fu lly 1Jquipp1d. R1di1I tit11, priced 10 low, you would11't M li•v• it. (#J647} (%4970) $AVE PLUS A LARGE SELECTION DF VW BUSES, ALL COLORS DOMESTIC TRADES AT WHOLESALE PRICES We have • f ln•ncing plan to fit your budoet Including 100% f ;n•nci"I (0.A.C.) Wiil t•k• -yciur c•r;n-tra-de-),--i ld-for--..rnotl ~come In •nd talk with one of our experMncecf cou~ cilors. AVTHf)RIZED e SALES e SERVICE .• PARTS J<» BeJotti j TIM MOTORS OPEN SUNDAYS 8081 G_.11 Grove loulevard 1/J a. E. af lead Blvd. 534-2284 892-5551 z 0 M el .., " e~ " . • 0 =s z -• 0 ·ut u • marcuJ rJl/oforj 2100 HARBOR BLVD. . 645-G466 '61 COMET '67 "FORD RANGER P.U. I ft. L1d,:l 1p1.0 with over• dri .. 1, r1dio, h1•l1r, f111hly p1i11t.d. Thi1 °pidf11p i1 1 r••i j•w•I. t 110-IQOJ $1799 '65 FORD WAGON F•clory •ir conditio11in9, r1- dio, h1•t.r, 4-door. IUON. 441 l $1095 marcuJ BAUER BUICK • IN COSTA MESA "Specializing • Ill Quality" DRASTIC SAVINGS ON THE ENTIRE USED CAR INVENTOR·Y '66 CHEVELLE M 1Hbu~ 2 cir. H.T .. v.e, 1uto., P.S., r•dio, ~11t1r •. IYPW. 837) I ELLY I LUE IOOI 51475 z ~ ·-------m '65 FORD Otor.,.< Foi•I,,. 2 d•. H.T. Y-1, .,,,. ;.I m1tic, r1dio, h1•l1r, power 1 1t111in9. ( PIZ848) • '64 FORD I; ECONOUNE I Aufo,.•tl1 ~!~i11io11, 111w p1i11t, M W tire1., Thi1 $It i1 imm•c11l•t1! !OOS-461) $1399 Z '67 SIMCA 4-door. Nice little cir! IVOL- 049), $595 '65 FORD MUSTANG Co11v, Y-1, •utom1tic tr11u· MILLY ILUl IOOK 51055 '68 PLYMOUTH G.T.X. 2 dr. H.T. VI, •ulom1tic, t'·· r1dio, h11l1r, vinyl roof, tc. !WIB8521 JllLLY ILUI IOOX 52020 mittion, r1dio, h11fet. fYCT· ------ '69 TORINO 9•71 $895 '65 CHEVY MALIBU S.S. Cpe. 4-~pe.d, r1dio, h11!1r, -~ 11ew p1111t. A r11I b.•11ty! INQZ-59JI -$1395 • '60 RAMBLER Cl WAGON Ill A11tom•lic tr1 n1mi11ion, ,.,_ A dio, h1ot11, 6 1,000 •cluil M mil••· Ori9in1I p1int, lug- -g•g• rick. Mu1t 111 thi1 cir! i. IFYC-IS595 OUR $695 = ->-WEEK END ; 1 .. i!!!IS!!lllPE~C""IA_.LS __ i '65 Olds 442 6• Co11v. 4-1p11d, bl.lck1t 1e1h Z r•dio, h1•fer . .!_!298_l_I ' z '67 P~moulh 2 dr. •~lom1lic tra111mi11io11. .. A 111.,l l lt:UZV-126 ) 8= ~~~ .~~~,, ~~~., redio, h11t1r, (746-USKll ' '66 Chevrolet e 4~eor, 1utom1tic tr•111mi1· Ill 1ion, eir coricHtioni11g, lo1d· 111. ISAA-5141 . ,_ : 4 11,. A:.~!.!0,~~"''""1";011 .. rid'~. h••f•r. lRSS.fSOl ' Spoil roof. \I.a, 1uto., RI H, power 1t1ering, f•ctory •ir. !XOP8 70) KILLY SLUE IOOK S2710 '68 DODGE Coronet 440 4 dr. 11d. \I.I, •ulo., R&H , pow1r 1t11 ri119, f1 elorv 1ir. !UF071J) KILLY ILUI IOOK 51960 '70 LTD WAGON Country Squi1•. V-t , •11to., RIH, pow•r 1t11tin9 I b11k11, fief, 1ir, '4 11•l1r. IP2 lll MILLY ILUI IOOK $4421 . BAUER BUICK IN COSTA . m MESA oforj 234 E·. 17th St. m _. COSTA MESA a rcu., 2100 HARBOR ILVD. 548-7765 645-0466 BILL JOiES' FREE! . FREE! B.J. SPORTSCAR CENTER 2133 HARBOR COSTA MESA -·- If you own an im- ported car and need service, come see us at B I Sports Cars. All new serv· ice and parts facil~ lies. We service 4LL imported cars. * • * ••••••••• PLUS We Now Have A Complete BODY & PAINT SHOP To Serve You Better • F.REE! ·II ii FR.EE! FREE! FREE! FREE! 4 MAG WHEELS Plus AM Radio With Purchase Of Every New FIAT ANCHOR . MOTORS ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST TRANSPORTATION CENTER All Mokos & Models ( . No Reesonable Offer Refused On Over 100 C1r1 2150 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA • . 546·3050 OPEN 7 DAYS 9 A.M. e 9 P.M. SI HAIL.A UPANOL WE CARRY OUR 0 Everyone of ege and employed can. buy • cu at ANCHOR MOTORS • • Even if you hive no credit e E • Z Budget Terms e WHkly, s.m;.weokly & Monthly Payments • Divorced -No red tape ~~ :~ .~~~~~,. • 5599 He•+1r. CYNJ 308 ) ______________ :~~Ford Fairlane $149 Y-1. !ON O 148)) '55 Dodge Vi ·To11 Picku p. V-1, 4-1p11cl. !H454401 '64 Opel Sta tion W1gon. R.dio & Ht•l1r, COWL 2211 '65 llillrd V-1, A11lom1tic, R&H . P.S,, F•tlory Air 1907 IOFl '62 Cadillac Auto., RIH, P.S., P.I. (Q\ID 99111 '65 Pontiac Temp••* 2 Dr. R1dio & H••t1r. IROI 2S4l '63 Corvair 4 1p1ad, r•dio I he•f1r, IPRX 7601 DO PAYMENT 0 PROBLEM HERE WE DO NOT REQUIRE A SPECIFIC DOWN PAYMENT No Reasonable Offer Refused on Over 100 Cars! '63 Corvair R1d io & H11fet. Fully f1ctory Equipp1d. I IOR 0951 '65 Ford Fairlane Fully F•cfory Equipp1d. INQO 905 1 '61 Mercury A11tom1tie, radio & H1•ter. IJXW J9f1 )1 '66 Pontiac T1mp11t \I.I, lt1 die l H1•t1r, ' '64 Chrysler Y-1, Autom•tic, Air Co11d ition1d. fHKJ9911 B. J. SPORTSCAR CENTER NOW CAN ·OFFER YOU ONE STOP SERVICE FOR ALL YOUR AUTO NEEDS ~~I '60 Valiant -·- BILL JONES' • B.J. SPORTSCAR .CENTER 20133, HARBOR COSTA MESA 540-4491 Corner Of Harbor & Elm .-S'ervice Entr•nc• ·On Elm al auto sport lid 9625 Gerclen Grove Blvd. ' GARDEN GROVE • 537-7777 • Sales • Senice • Parts F•ctory Equippff. IQEX 542 1 '64 Chevy Impala 2 Dr. H.T. Automatic, R1dio, H11!1r. IFNE 175) '64 FORD Country Squire W1go11. Autom1tic R•dio, H1•t1r. IVWW 024) ' Call & Inquire •bout our Hi·Perfonnence Center 3 Spoocls & 4 Spoocls. ANCHOR -MOTORS · 2150 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA • 546-3050 OPEN 7 DAYS 9 A.M. e 9 P.lt\ I < • 7