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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-10-30 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17
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·1xon s qme;
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Presideµt,
Murphy.Rap ·
Unruly Mob
After being the target of rocks, bricks,
bottles, eggs. 'red flags and other missiles
hurled at his limousine in San Jose,
President Nixon promised to "take off
the gloves" at a political rally tonight in
Anaheim and respond to s u c h
"vicioUsness."
After his arrival at San Clemente, the
President said the 900 a n ti w a r
demonstrat.ors were ''radical, a n t i •
democratic elements" who threatened
freedom of speech and assembly in
America.
"This was no outburst by a single In·
di vi dual," said the President at the
Western White House. "This was the ac·
tion of an unruly mob that represents the
worst in America."
The glass-Ulp limousine containing the
President, Sen. George Murphy and Gov.
Rooald Reagan was blitzed while he left a
GOP rally as the President neared the
end of a 5,SOO..mile, cross.country cam·
pajgn tour.
The San Jose violence was raled the
most serious aimed at any President in
this country since the assassination of
President John F. Kennedy in 196.1.
Partisan Republicans had given the
President a wann reception at the rall y.
It got hotter outside. Nixon emerged and
climbed atop the .hood of his limowine in
the glare of photo floodlights.
Facing his opponents l)S they shrieked
obKenities, Nixon thrust his jaw forward
(See NIXON, Pqe Z)
New Yo rk Hit
By New Wave
Of Bo mbings
NEW YORK (UPI) -Three homemade
ptpebombs exploded within 10 minutes o(
each other early today, damaging two
armories and a police station.
1Tbere were no lnjUfies in the ex~
plosions, whk:h occurred shortly after one
of the armories recfived a warning
telephone call. f
Police spokesmen said the bla.11ts were
"very closely associated'' and it was
"highly unlikely" that three bombing at~
tacks could be planted coincidentally by
cHJferent groups or unassociated per30ns
tn. such a brief time. The FBI was called ,
in almost immediately.
One guard, a Vietnam veteran who
~Cfped just before one of the armory
blasts, said the explosion sounded ''like
an a1mm mortar."
The first bomb went on at 3:12 a.m.
EST at the U.S. Naval Reserve Center In
Whitesto11e, Queens. Three minutes later,
a teCOnd explosion went of( in a motorcy.
cle precinct headquarters in the Bronx.
At 3:2l •a.m., the th ird blast went off at
the U.S. Army ~rve Center in the
(lee ill>MBS, I'll< ll
• ees Ill
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DAILY r1LOT tllft lllltN
PRES ID ENT, SENATOR ARRIVE IN ORANGE COUNTY '~"ER ARDUOUS JOU RNE Y
Murphy'• lrlllh Up 0.or Bumpy Road to S•n -~ Mr •. Nlxon Enda·Run•fO.y • 0-t In Own HouN · ·
Ullt T~
' PRESIDENT (IN SIDANI LEAVES SAN JOSE CIVIC AUDITORIUM AFTER SPEICH
Alt Elli""'ted .. P-tora Huot ... , tt.cko ....i Obaultitl• •t Mr. Nl-'a Aute.
• • ' ' .. •
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~ • 's ·1s
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DAILY PILOT
* * * 10' * * *.
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 30, :1970 I
VOL. A JtO, .. 4 llCTtofill, • rANI
New York Hit
By-New Waye
-.
Of Bo1nhings
M~rphy Fumin.g
' . . ' ' ' ~r :Violen ce~ ._ ~
By JOANNE REYNOUll
Of .. DIHp ...... "'" •
' .iJ I ' ' ... i· . I'
-Air Force Cloe from San JOIO lo El Toro MCAS.
On the eve of bil giant . rally In
• Anaheim, George Murphy aald he 11 ·~
da'mn 'mad" about \he vk>lerice President
Nixon fa~.in San Jose, but con~ed It
can't hurt his re-election chances.
!Ill Irlah ct.mper ap, the. II-nor.aid
senator7brar.ded the demclm0'1W1
"wild-eyed, tough, ADii'>' revoJutionartes"'
and ,.id "I thlnk,the r1og1eocier1"CIUlbfto
h< JdenUlled and ilolated.
NiJ:on la slated to appear tonight at the.
Anaheim ConvutiOn Center 09 behalf at
the Republican sen1tor. 'l1le President
was the target of rock arid bottle throw·
"I'm ao mad and Iner>' about whit the
President of the United Stalel WU sub-~ted-!Ouni .. J,..-uiat 1-llnd-"'1Jf·-
1Jcutt to contalh myself,'' he iaid
_ Ina: delllOflstratora Thursday· night when
he made a similar appe:arlDOe ln San
J ....
In.El Toro he was aaked by newsmen ,«
he h<ileved the vlolene< helped his cam-
palgJi. Murphy replied, "I doll~_ ... ""-
It .could hurt any: These are Ille tldllir~
have been working·agalmt/'
•
"This was as vicioua • croWd u I'ye
ever teen in my life. I'm ashamed ol
what bas happened in our slate," Murphy
told newsmen after flying with Nllon
Ni.Xon, Family
Routed by Fire
' .
In Clemente .
By JOHN VALTERZA
of Ille Deltr r1.1tt Steff .
A log fire lighted to smooth over the
anxiety caused by a howH:ng mob in San
Jose ignKed.• smouldering· blaze at the
W.lllenl 'Wbite1 ·ll<>ule late Thuroday,
routing the; first 1Family. from ·bed· and
causing considerabLe smoke damage to •
haU'of ·the-Sj>anlah villa. .
·Prtsi.deot Nixon . WU not in . .danger
from the smouldering fire.. Tbe blue wu
detected by a smoke-aniffmg device
within the wall of the aecond-floor de.n,
knowledgeable aource1 reportetl tadly.
But the nnol:e, 1'M'b1i fri>in many
celllnf .... 11 In the -· promptaol the chief u:ecutive to spend the rest of the
night In the IUOlt• -ICl'Oll the driveway of hfa hDme.
The sowus 1ave thiJ account of the
lire -the RCOOd bltze to ~pt at llJe
Presidential compowtl 'lince the Nllont
nlOVed to.San C&emade : ·
,At about •IO :IO : P·l"' l\w: P,reaideDI'< valet. Manqlo SancheJ., lit the. fire in the-
ee<ond-lloor lir<place which is alknml.
The hhrlh'I>egU..· It t1ie ·..c.rid flooi'.
There .11 no ntePlice at that .. ln the
dliillif ----. ·-' . -. An hour later, the Presidenl len the·
fireplace to retire ln hia bedroom 1botit
100 teet away, • :
·Fifteen ililnulel·1ater·t11e;-e--
ln the -...U touc:llod olf m olonro II the IOClirlty bmdqa..un 11(,tlle<_.
pound llild>apois pbaaedttlle realdlnco to•
check the alarm. · · .
•Pina Soncbez, MM10I0'1 wtlt and Mn.
Nison'1 bud nlold, -the pboK
in the kltdlon Md then went to Ille den to
1r·1at1pte. '
'Ille -IJreldy WU ll1lln( with
smoke. ,
An lilrm went out to SU Clemente
and Clmp Ptadletoa Ore lllltloM. Sant
Clemeoto Vol'811een ...,..t io1o tlle
(loo rm,.""' II
' I
He said his oppoMnt, Rep. John 1""'
ney, "hasn't taken too much· trCl1ble 1o
oppooe this sort of thing" and added tt\ft
!Uch incident! make him 'thklk tbe natlOn
Is "on the verge of1tnclpient revo1utJoa' ~'
-The lalelt slate poll shows 11\0
Democrat :widen~ his lead CWJr ,
Murphy .. 'Ille -lncUiilbent" ,.,.; ttalls'-~
.ev~. per"'1\alle l!'ilnla, 43-41, rol1lplliiJ
to only two points a week ago.
With !oar days· left'<ll!. the° campal'F,
the war of •words .be~D:,fhe.two 1!1111 '.
and their supporten.ls)ntenslfying. l
.Jn San ->Jose, Nlxon,:in ;elfect callld ·
Tunney a liar for "reporling w~
tlfAt 'the , rideraI government . pluned 1o
shut don the ·-~ .Oeoler. In ·
SUMyvale and lay off 3,oo01workers after the eiection. ..... • _,. • ..
"Anyone · who checked. and a
C.Ongressman of the Unl~~states hn the
same rights to check· 1as a ·Senator er'
anybOdy'ea., would have foond there-bu
never been any intent.ien of lolinl Amel
Laboratory,'' rNlxon aaid. 1
••tt'·hu-'never been dis:cussed. lt l9 not
going to be c!Oeed ·and ·anyone; who made'
(See MURl'llY,. i'qe· Zl
Weadler ,
Niglit and ......... -roe nturu
to' ilie. coait lhil · weelamd. ~ctrop.
ping the high reading to A •loo(
the beaches and 10 degrees hi&her
a little ·further lnland, • INSIDE TODAY
The Fracl1'rtd FOui.r of im
-iK Logwna-Beoch~CO?N-tlp ...
mzt ifftk, rtiiri'Jv '"OftlW ,.,.
S'!\fth Coad Comm1111ity ·H• tar. Stt t0da11'1 WHktndcr. ~C>
tion . ,
•
.......... 14 =-... -' •• .,,, n·•
...... """ M -... ............. t+11 ·-. --=-~ --"'
•
J DAil Y PILOT s ftldl1, Octllb<r lO, 1910 .. I S
""'"Pagel I ..
~IXON ATIACKED .•.
lllld Ounc up both anm. With l>Js flnpn, cloves off and spell< to Udl kind ol
he fonned "V" symboll for the crowd. behavior In a fortbrlal>t way. Fmdom of
7he mob grew wilder. speech and f!Oedoni of uaembly canoot
•1111 motor<ade w11 mobbed for about Wit wbc people Who ptaceftllly .lttend ~~ pratJ!enUal llmo\l!l!Pe and other ralllea are attacked with nytnr rock.I.
~ were. hlt rtpeatedly by arge 'TOiilifitit lm w lOl5CUii
r;icb. Several persons including a Secret what America mu.st do td end the wave of
~ice agent and •. t e 1 _e ~ i 1 ion violence and terrorism by the radical, an--
cameraman suffered nunor lnjur1es. tJ.democratic elements in our society."
-White House aides and guests of the The crowd bad gathered by the Ume '
~t riding In a bus behind his Nilon entered San Jose Civic Auditorium
ijmousine huddled in aeats and aisles as to plead for support tor Murphy and
roeD and ~tUea •fn:Uhed four windows. Reagan tn tbelr racet a a: a I n 1 t
Newsmen ln another bt1s were 1plattered Democratic challengers John V. Tunney
~ glass from Uve smashed windows. an4 Jeu Unruh. Slgm in the crowd de-
;.One youth whipped a large belt from nounced • him as a "faclJt" and
~waist and lashed the top of a car con-"warmonger" and several hundred f4inlnc H. Jl Haldeman, Ni.Ion's ctuef of persons chanted "one, two, three, four ,
ataff. • we don't wanL your f-war."
,,"It was just like Caracas," said Rote Inskle Nixon told an audience ol 1bout
)Jlary Woods, the President's. l~·time 1,000 ~that he had been suct'essful
DU'IODa1 se.cretary, who was. sitting nut in winding down the Vietnam confiJd and
to ooe of the smashed windows. She repeated his promise to end the war in
nlerred ., .. attack on Nixon. tlloo vi.. lllCb a fuhion u to lain a 1eneratton of
Pmlden~ ., v._..1a. .,.... ror the ,,.11oo.
-..M"1>hY termed the mob '"wfld-<}'ed, Americana ,..,. flaJttlng In Vietnam,
~d :'[Ydentir;edvolutionod .. ~1 :~ .. ,":' b 0 be aaid1 "IO that t.hoee young men who
• .. , 1 an ....., IKU. ~ outside shoutlng 'their obscene
I bave been careful to J1:4>lnt ~ ~t alogans won't have So fight Jn Vietnam or ~ are the actlom of a vwlent few. It ~ere elJe."
lo lmporlant
0
that all Amerlc:ana keep thlJ · Durtn, the ,peec1i aome of the ' ~~ve, the Pruident Aki. dtntonltratorl charatd at a door of tht
• But the time bll come to take the auditorium but were blocked ~Y pollct.
1f * * Otl l>Ja way out the Pruldeot paiued to I~ an Indian chief In lull re1alla and Frot11 P.,e J thenliiiaid ffiwthe pariJni rot wbere
several hundred police officers held the
FIRE crowd about eo Y!¥'ds away.
• • • A few eggs splaUered within about five
estate OL1 two pumper• to fipt a h1ua
Which' -on a much smaller scale -
rt!lembled the devastating fir! w b I c h
litruck the commanlty clubhoule ruly
tbia year. Jt· WU 0: llmilar const.ruct.ion •.
;.The fire, tbe clulic smouldering varieo
ty, had built up within the M>foot·thiclr:
W'alll of the den and smoke wu pouring
from several vents in the ctlllnp of the Wmc of the four.aided residence.
·Heat had built up considerably
throu1hout the wall section, sources said,
and amoke puffed through 1eam1 llong
several beams in the rOugh-plute:r cell·
iap of the home.
-President Nixon emerged from the
liOule about 10 minutes after flrefightera
aniwd. He chatted with several of his
Secret Service qenta In the patio u elec>
tric fans sucked smoke from the house.
'Ibe. P.resident wu wearing pajamas
•d a bathrobe.
• The blue was an unusual and lenH
dimu: to a harrowing day of cam·
paignin& and unrtst for the President.
rJt wu tbe aecood fire at the compound
lbil year.
the first erupted In an ABC generating
truck on an evening last spring when the
President wu addressing the nation on
h Vietnam war. A atack of paper cups
9nd rags cauaht fire, nearly destroyinl
the backup generator truck. A crash
kuci: on constl'nt ttandby for the
"1<fdenl'• ballcopten waa Ultd to H· lil>&Utlh that f(n. •
uary Reports ,,
He'll ·Make His
HOme in Algiers
,_ "'" -CAIRO -SeU...u.d federal fU1itlve
Dr. Timothy Leary ls floally 1otnr ., ....
Ue dawn and get reliaJon.
So be 'tella Al Ahram, the siml-<ifficial
government newspaper o( Egypl
Tbe world'a best-known advocate of
LSD and marijuana, who tsc&ped Sepl
13 while serving a tenn of up to 10 years
for weed poaeession ln Or&nie County,
~ya he will Uve permanently in Algiers.
·•He sakl TbU?'9dly he would aneak back
IQto the U.S. In disguise to attend a Nov.
3 New Haven, Conn. rally for Black
Panther leader Bobby Seale, wbo is ac-
,;Uaed of murder. \
· -Leary fled the mlnimQm...1ecurity Los
,~ Men's Colony at San Luis Oblapo
esUmat.ea he will get a total of 38
behind bars on various counts if
t In America again.
• O&ancea are, it wouldn't •be b:I a
Ji'W'"um oecurfty facility either.
' DAILY PILOT ......., __ ..., __
--h_ • .., C........ S.CI isa
oUMoi c;oAS1' l'IJM..lSHlHG COMJ'M't
yatQa: of where ~ stood. 'n>en the Preli·
dent climbed on the hood of hlJ car, rail-
ed his arms in the familiar V fashion
and gave them his tradiUonal campaign
salute. 'lbe shouting and obacen!Ues ap-
peared to increue. ' Ju his car moved out of the parking lot
through a road cleared through the
· crowd, the missiles begao filling.
Tb< Pmiden\'s Umou1lne, with a
pollce etcOrl and !railed by a convertible
with Secret Service agents In it. lurched
forward. One agent tumbled from the
convertible. Several others wer.e hit with
rocb but none were seriously injured.
A rock ainubed into a window of the
"control" car containing Haldeman and it
stopped abruptly causing 1everal minor
collisions in the motorcade.
The Preaident'• limousine bu bullet
resistant glass and the miaslles bounced
harmle111ly off it. Its sunroof-type top
also 11 made of glus and wu cloltd and
covered at'the time.
Gov, Reagan called the display "in·
tolerable behavior" and said: "I e1pnss
my contempt oa behalf of the cltiuns o[
California ...
Quips by Finch
Spice Up Stamp
Ceremony Fun
Humor, much of it unintended, spiced ihe day'i evenf&in San Clemente-during
the elaborate ceremonies marking the
firot-day isaue of four major postage
atamps.
Among the calculated quips which
came forth, however, are a palr from
iu&ve Presidentiaf AdYiser Robert Finch.
Relating a story he slid came from a
beleaguered California public works of·
ficial being roasted ln a controversy.over
aolid waste pollution, Finch Wd, "He
asked me to relate to you, Mr.
Postmaster General, if he could package
up all the solid wute in the state and
send If f~lass mall in hopes half of
It would be lost."
At a luncheon later in the day Finch
announced the distribution of lhe latest
political wristwatch.
"It's the Martha MiU!hell watch," he
said with straight face, "You don't have
to look at it for the time, It tells you .·•
One other Washington emissary popped
a funny which prol>Jbly will give him a
few nightmares because he didn 't mean
to do it.
After citing PresideJ:lt Ni1on's great
strides in fii'bLing pollution he said a huge
antipollution measure was signed last
February by "Oink Nixon."
Shortly bef<ft that, zeal over leading
the flag salute threw a few-hundred folks
off balance for a momenl as a local uWi·
ty official led the pledge with "1 pledge
allegiance to the Uaited States of
Ar.1erica."
.•. Leaving the audlence chanting "lo
the n ... n .. , o ... " until everybody
fell Into step.
· Qualltg Retained
Head Start Cut
·in Pu-pifs-_Seen
WASHINGTON (UPI) -When a
money shortaae forces court.ailment of
the popular Head Start program for
preschool children, the administration
wants local officials to maintain the high
quality of their programs by reducing
I.heir pupil load, lt was learned Thursday.
The admlnlstraUon's policy in the face
or certain budget reductions was disclos·
ed in a letter from Dr. Ed,,.·ard F. Zigler,
director of the Office or Child Develop-
tnent or the Office of Economic Op-
portunity to all local Head Start ad·
mlnbtrators.
million short In Head Start money.
Any differences in the House and
Senate bills would have to be reconciled
by a conference committee, but there
would be no chance of the committee in·
creasing appropriations for Head St.art.
"Many grantees will want to reduce the
level of servlte provided because of these
.: declsiom rather than reduce the number
of children served,'' the Jetter said.
Boy, 9, Slain
In Philadelphia
Teen Gang War
PlflLADELPHJA (UPI) -A 9-year-old
boy was shot to death in what police said
was an execi..:tion-style teen-age gang
slaying on the pavement sidewalk.outside
a schoolyard-playground Thursday night.
) DAll.Y PILOT tttff Pi.i.
'l'M DAMNED MAD'
Candid1te Murphy
From Page 1
MURPHY ...
that kind of charge did so with knowledge
that il was false."
And Thursday, Tunney's father, former
heavyweight champion Gene Tunney,
became a major isslle in Murphy's cam·
paign:
The Senator charged that Gene Tunney,
as a fellow board member of Technicolor,
voted to approve the contract which pro-
vided Murphy $20,000 a year. hall the
rent on a Washington apartment and an
air travel car In exchange for consulting
work. The contract was terminated last
June.
John Tunney has charged continually
this was a conflict of interest and denied
his father was present when the board
approved the Contract
Murphy Thursday called the ex-boxer a
liar and released a document purporting
to prove his contention.
A copy of what was described as
partial minutes of the Feb. 10, 1965
meeting was made available to newsmen
in San Jose and it showed that the elder
Tunney wu present and voted for the
contract.
Meanwhile, 73-year-<ild Gene Tunney
told newsmen, ••1 just don't remember"
being at the meeting. He said he was on
14 bolJ"<ls In 22 yean and "I couldn't
remember everything."
John Tunney condemned Murphy for
••attempting to bring my father into this
campaian in the closing moments" and
vowed "be isn't going to get away with
It."
During• madhouse news conference at
Los Angeles International A i r p o r t ,
Murphy said he was raising Gene Tunney
as a campaign issue for the first time
because 36-year-old _Johll_ was attempting
to trade on his father's bo1ing reputation
to win votes.
The Senator said some of John Tun·
ney'• campaign literature bills bis father
In letters the same size as the
Congress.man, so it's hard to know which
one you're voting for -old Gene or
young John.
"Nothing upsets me more," Murphy
said in a prepared statement, ••than to
see my long-time friend, Gene Tunney, a
great athlete, revered across this coun ..
try, involved in this unfortunate situation.
"But It has become necessary because
John Tunney, his son, and more recently
Gene Tunney himself, have attempted to
deny that Gene Tunney not only waa
present but also approved of my con-
sultlng contract.
"This is just not true and both John
and Grene Tu11ney .kno wit is not true."
Murphy said he was upset because
Gene Tunney waited unUI his soo's Senate
race to object to the Senator's contract.
Biography of O'Hara
NEW YORK (UPI) -Random House
has commissioned Matthew J, Bruccoll,
an authority on Ernest Hemingway and
F. Scott Fitzgerald. to write a 300,QOO.
word biography of the late John O'Hara.
"This should not be permitted. Our
policy from the beginning has been to in-
sure that children enrolled in Head Start
receive the highest quality service po.ssi·
ble.
In the previous fiscal year OEO spent '326 million on Head Start. The Nixon
AdministraUot. requested ~9 million
this year and even if that amount ls
granted, OEO says because of rising
costs It would be still $11.6 million short
of allowing the program to continue at its
present level.
The Senate Appropriations Committee
has approved the administration's $119
million request and the full Senate will
act on the measure after COngress
Reconvenes No. 16.
The House, however. has approved an
OEO budget that does not specify how
much Head Start would get. but OEO of·
ficlals say it would leave them $17.7
Josh by Patron
In Dark Spurs
Call to Police
Just like people boarding airliners, peo-
ple waiting in the checkout line at the
supermarket can make u n w i s e
wisecracks if they choose the wrong
time.
customers were cloaked Jn darkness
when lights went out at the Safeway, 2202 nairview Road, Costa Mesa, at 6:23 p.m.
utsday.
Smart remarks began -as they
always do -and one man said he was
going to pull a •tkkup, leadtn( another to
slip but and call police. .
Clerk Patricia R. Craft told Officer
Jack Koch ahe and everyone else con-
.sldered the holdup comment just a josh
after the patrolman arrived.
The man who made the comment had
left.
"They just ran up to the boy and shot
him,'' said Detective Edward Kessner of
the homicide squad.
Miles Wheeler, the victim, was shot at
close range in the abdomen.
"We don't know why. they picked out
this kid. We don't have him listed as a
gang mem_ber," Kessner said. The police
de!)llrtment here keeps lists of all known
gang members.
Members of the 21st and Norris Street
gang were sought in the slaying. Kessner
uid the killers "went into the area of the
25th and Diamond gang" where the vie·
tim was standing on the pavement talk·
ing with some other boys.
"When they saw the 21st and Norris
Street gang members all these kids ran.
This kid started to run too but thi;y ran
up and got him before he could get
away," Kessner said.
Wheeler is not the youngest gang war
victim here. Last summer Antoinette
Williams, 7, was hit by a bullet between
the eyes when she was caught in the
crossfire of two warring gangs as she sat
on the front steps of her home, coloring
in her coloring book.
From Page 1
BOMBS ...
Jamaica section of Queens.
Be.fore the fi rst e1ploslon, a woman
caller told a guard at the armory, "You'd
better get out of the annory because a
bomb is going off in five miJlutes. Go out
the front door am 1et at least 50 fet(
away,'' according to police.
The caller did not claim credit for the
bombings or suggest that any particular
group was responsible for the attacks.
The bombs, which one police in-
vestigator dtscribed as "sophisticated,"
were all placed on-windowsills of the
buildings.
An accurate repro'duction of
an exceptionally fine Queen
Anne double bonnet seer•·
fery. Formed of walnut end
yew wood veneers end sol id
p • c en and available in two
finishes . It is 36" wide and
81 1/J" high.
2 Wicrows
'
Get Million
ln-ftamages---
NE'V YORK (UPI) -Two widows
from Call'fornia and Massachusetts
became millionaires Thursday when1 a
federal C9urt trial jury awarded them
damages from a rental car company and
a driver believed to be a record for ac·
cidental death.
Tbe jury deliberated six hours before
awarding the widow of Raymond Wren
antl her 4-year-0ld child of Compton,
Calif., $1 5 million and the widow of
Giibert Rousseau and her four children of !
West Concord, J.1ass., $1 million. Coon·
ting interest, the awards came to more
than $3 million.
Wren, 29, Rousseau, 34, and William
Taggart, 38 of West Concord, were all
passengers in a rented Avis car driven by
Frank Hertl, 25, of New York. All four '
men were employes of lntemalional
Business Machines and students at tbe
company's school.
Wren and Rousseau were killed and
Taggart and Hertl injured when the car
went off the road and struck a tree in
Poughkeepsie, N.Y., May 12, 1967. The
jury felurned its verdict against Avis Car
Rental Co. and Hertl. ·Taggart was
awarded $20,000 in damages.
During the tria~ ~which lasted a week,
Avis attorneys contended that the ac-
cident occurred because the automobile
occupants had been "drinking .ex-
cessively" and therefore had assumed
the risk of the driver's condition. The
defendants' counsel countered that drink·
ing bad not been excessive and Hertl bad
been driving too fast for existing ru.d
conditions.
Convicted Rapist
Takes 'Own Life
A teenaged Anaheim rapist sent to
Atascadero State Hospital for therapy
that might have given him a new life in
society chose instead to end it by banging
himself there.
Nolification has been made of the
suicide of patient Richard G. Bancroft,
19, to Orange County Superior Court
Judge James F. Judge by hospital of.
licials.
Judge Judge committed him to the cen-
tral California facility as a mentally
disordered sex offender. after ·a 20-year-
old Pico Rivera girl testified he raped her
at knifepoltt.
The victim was allegedly guiding her to
the candy machine in the Fullerton sta-
tion where he work!d when she was drag-
ged Into a back room an<l assaulted.
l\fovic Hits the Spot
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -"The Great
Train Robbery" is ·now playing at the
Ohio Penitentiary.
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lo\iort H. WM4
'1•1111nt .,,,.. PWlllW.O
Joe~ l . CUTI.., Vb rr.ldml w.4 ~I...,...
lliom•t K•••ll Horse1nan Slain • I
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M6lltllflt t:l!IO!'
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Stulb Ortntt COWllY £dl!or -CO.fl -..: US w.t a., St!Wt ~ S!Ndl; nn w..1 .,.,. .....,.,.
........... S.dl: !ft l'-1 -'-Hllllll'lftM 9Mdi: 1117J IMd\ .... ._.
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Fighting Brothers' Feud Ends
PALAT!NEJ Ill. (UPI! -Tb< bitter
feud between George Jayne, 47, and his
brother Sllu, 631 among the top
~ ln the Chlcaso area -Is over.
George WU alaln by a single stwt
Wednesday fired through the ba,.ment
window of hls $100,000 home as he sat
playing bridge with his family.
George Jayne'• wife Thursday offered
• m :wi:rttward.
Police Aid they were Sttkir\g a man
aboUt 30 Lo SS years old, drlvlng a red
Oldsmobile with a black vlnyl top near
Ja;rnt'I home tn Inverness, 1 Chicago
oubtlrb. Palatine polk:e,. wbo patrol
ltlvernea. 'ffOl'ked on the cue with the
Winoll Bureau of lnveslJ&•tlon.
'll1t story ol George and Silas Joynt
was a bitter one of murder, 1ttempted
murder. barn burning and horse pollon-
ing. Each accused the other of trying to
kill him, cltlng rivalry In the breeding
and development of jumpin& horses.
George Jayne hlid survived at least one
otbtt au.empt on b1a We, on J1111e 14,
·'
1965, a bomb wired to the Ignition of his
car killed Cheri Rude, 22, an ~employe of-
Jayne's stables. MW Rude earlier had
worked for Silas, but police said George
was the target of the bomb.
George Jayne accused Silas of trying to
kill him. Silas WU brought to trial •lid
found lnnoctnt.
On Jan. 19, 1969, Silas shot and killtd a
man be said fired three ahot.s lnt.o lhe rront of h~ house. The shooting was ruled
justifiible hcsi.icide.
At least two other Incidents -ln which
mooey wu reportedly paid to arrange for
the ldllln' or George -were under In-
vestigation.
·Jayne's widow, Marian. 43, told
newsmen the family was offerinc a
$25,000 reward for information "leading
to t he arrest and capture ol t h o 1 e
responsfblr:. ••
Police said tfiey found en empty betr
can with flngCrprlnts and tire tracks
QU1$1de George Ja.yntfs home, and knew
the first three numbers of the car they
were seeking.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
'ltd 11111 '"'
NIWPORT BEACH
17'27 Wnt<llff Dr., 642·2050
OPIN FRIDAY 'Tll 9
INTERIORS
Profeuton•I Int.tor
Detlgntrs Av1ll1blo-AID-N51D
, . ..
LAGUNA BEACH
345 North Cotlt Hwy. 494-4551
OPEN FRIDAY 'TI L 9
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Hu iingion -Beaeh N.Y. Steeb EDIIION
VOC. 63 , NO. 260, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PA&ES ORAN&E COUNTY, CAUFORNI~·
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.IXOll 0 a e
Tough Talk
Expected
In Anaheim
After being the target of rocks, brick!,
bottles, eggs, red flags and other m:::siles
hurled al his limousine in San Jose,
President Nlxon promised to "take off
the gloves" at a political Tally tonight in
Anaheim" and respond to s u c h
"viciousness."
After his arrival at San Clemfnte, the
President aald the 900 a n t I w 1 r
demonstrators _were "radical, • n ti ·
democratic elements" who threatened
freedom of speech and auen\bly In
America.
"This was no outburst by a single in-
dividual," said the President at the
Western White House. j'This Wu the IC-
tion of an unruly mob that represents the
worst in America."
The glass-top limousine containing the
President, Sen. George Murphy and Gov.
Ronald Reagan was blitzed while he left a
GOP rally as the President neared the
end of a 5,500-mlle, cross.eountry cam-
paign to,r.
The San Jose viol~ was rated the
mosl serious aimed at any President in
this country sintt the assall.!ination of
President John F. Kennedy in 191.1.
Partisan Republicans had given tht
President a warm reception at the rally.
lt got hotter oulside. Nixon emerted and
climbed atop the hood of his limp*' in
tho gbn " ..... -.itta.. ' . '
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PRESIDENT, SENATOR ARRIVE IN ORANGE COUNTY AFTER AROUOUS JOURNEY
Murphy's Irish Up Over Bumpy Rood to Sen Jose; Mr. Nixon E"!l1 Rutged O.y • Gvut In Own HouM
~.U~'i ·~
Register Chief · Blaze &uts President
UNRUH LAUGHS UP 'SHOE-IN' CAMPAIGN IN HUNTINGTON BEACH
Near Sign.11 011'1 Fleld, Jeq Employs His Unique Telephone
Facing 'bis opponent. as thoy~
obscenities, Nixon thnalt bis 1-fGnnrd
and OWJi up both anns. W!tll lill on...,
he lomied "V" oymboll for flll <Mid.
The mob .,.,., wilder. R. C. Boiles
From His Clemente Bed Succumbs at 91
Vnruh Raps Signal Oil
His motorcade was mobbed for about
five The presidential limouline and other
vehicles were hit rtpeatedly by large
rocks. Several persons including a· Secret Raymond Cyrus Hoiles, president. of
Service agent and a t e 1 e v i s i o n Freedom Newspapers and co-publisher By JOHN VALTERZA ty, had built up within the t~loot·thlck
ca .. u!l•red minor ln1'uries 01 tM oaitr '"1111 ltalf walls of the den and smoke wu ..... -i ... meram 5 "' • of . the '-'Santa Ana Re'"ner, died today A I r· 1· h ed to th th r-.... Wh'le H i 'de d m~ .. -of the JY"• og ire ig t smoo over e r·om several v•••-111· "· ceil111' •• ol the
In Stop at Huntington
1 ome 1 s an a-~i.a after a brief illAess. He was 91. ,,. anxiety caused by a howling mob In San ' ~·..., uu:: &""
President riding in a bus behind his C rd th h' h .. ~ l S Jose 1'gn1'led a smouldering blaze at the wing of the four-sided residence. limousine huddled in seats and aisles as a use o ea , w 1c occ.., •cu a an-
rocks and botlles smashed foor windowi. ta Ana Community HOlipital, was not Im-Western White House late Thursday, Heat had built up co n 11 d' er 1 b 1 y
Newsmen in another bus were aplattered mediately announced . Touting the First Family from bed and throughout the \Vall St :tioo, IOU1'Cel uid,
with glass from five smashed windoW!. Holies was known for hiJ lrank and causing conside~·able. smoke damage to and smoke puffed through seam. alq
Jess Unruh brought his campaign for charts, now a ·hallmark of his campaign, One youth whipped I larp ~It from sori'letimes controversial statements on l:.alf of the Spanish villa. several beams in the rough-plaster ceU.
governor to HuntingtorrBeach-Thursda,v--.~-..lhow. why Sig;nat-Oil-E?o:;-e_., ~-aftd-la11bed U. ~-Ofa, car. coh,._iasues-oHhe--day; voiced-in the Registe r Pr!si~e~t ~ixor:i w1s not_ in ~anger ings_oLthe borne.
afternoon. il od in H Be h ta! 1 .. ..-H R Halde N h f r rrom the smoulde1'lnf'flll::Tl1£b~ President Nix.on emerged from the He did it to attack the oil interesb MaJor o pr ucers untington ac ' n.... . . man, JXon s c ie o and other publications in his JO.news· cM:t~ted by a smoke-sniUing device house about 10 minutes after firefighter1
wldch he claims control Gov. Ronald was giving money to Reagan 's campaign. staff. paper group. • within the wall of the second-noor den, arrived. He chatted with aev.eral of hill
Re!llgan. UntUh said, ·1'Sig,ial Oil receives a "It was(: ~o';:::::.~·~)Wd Rose The Register, hi swnmariting his ca· kn
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1edthgeable sok urces r~ported1 today. Secret Service agenU in the patio u elec--
Tbe Democrat used his easel and $390,520 yearly tax bj'eak on this property reer, said : "His life wa! an editorial, u e smo e, pouring rom many tric fans sucked smoke from the house.
Beach Employes
Agree to Talk
Pay Raise Tertns
The pay dispute between Huntington
Beach firemen, policemen and the city
council will remain in Ute talking stage -
for the moment at leasl
Both public safety groups had threaten-
ed court action if the council did not sub-
mit to arbitralion or mediation over the
salary issue, but today indicated they
might be willing to simply talk about It
more.
"This thing is moving a bit slow.er
than we anticipated," Andy Vanderlaan,
president of the Firemen's Association,
said this morning. "Because we're trying
to use all available means to do it pro-
perly."
''The city's labor relations attorney
(Herbert Moss) sent us a letter sug4
gesUng further negot!aUons," Vanderl!!n
said. .,Our attorneys are working from
th1t angle now."
Brander Castle, assistant city ad-
ministrator, said city negotiators would
mef:t with police and fire spokesmen
whenever they liked.
.. The city council hasn't closed the door
on these guys," he aaid. ~
Policemen have asked for binding
arbitratiOn to reach a salary aireement.
A police spokesman said today nothing
will be decided until Monday.
because of a bill Reag an signed in 1967." and 901 properly it seems, ahould be his ceiling vents in the hou9e, prompted the The President was wearing pajamu
He was referring to I e g is I at ion School Di~._.-'ct obituary. In life he devoted his energies chief executive to spend the rest of the and a bathrobe. u J. · 1 think f th night in the guest house across the The blaze was an unusual and tense sponsored by the late Sen. George Miller to encouragmg peop e to or em· driveway of his home. climax to a harrowing day of Clm· (D-Martlnez) whi ch prohibited local ·~Ives, and .ti? resist the l!OCiallstlc prac.. • d L ' . B k ~.: . . • d tlca of poliUcal government. The sources gave this ace@unt of the palgning and unrest for the Presi en
gove;nments from levying a property tax ac s VYern e "In death, be leaves a legacy of mil-fire -the second blaze to erupt It the It was the second fire at the compound
on ?11 royalties. . . . Hons of words suggesling to all who will Presidential compound since the Nixons this year·
Bil! Wood~, co~muruty relations office r Another elementary achool district baa Hsten that human beings can enjoy hap. moved to San Clemente: The first erupted in an ABC generating
for S1gna~ Oil, said he really bad no reply stamped approval on the et-cent tu: pier, more 'prtillperous lives in a volu.. At about io:30 p.m. the President's truck on an evening last spring wh:Cn the
to Unruh s charges. override sought by the Huntington Beach tary society in .which no man uses force valet, Manolo Sanchez, lit the fire in the President was addressing the nation on
"It would take a lot or time and Union High School District Nov. 3. er threat ol. force against. his neighbor." second-noor fireplace which is all-metal. the Vietnam war. A stack of paper cups
resear:-;h just to f~ out what he's' talking Trustees of the Huntington Beach City He Is survived by his wife, Mable; ·two The hearth begins at the second floor. and rags caught fire, nearly destroying
about, Woods said. (elementary) School Distticts gave their sons C. H. Hoiles co-publisher of the There is no firtP,lace at that spot tn the the backup generator truck. A cr1~h '-'Besides, wasn't he speaker o( the support Tuesday night to the hifb school Register, and • HarrY H. Hoiles, publisher dining room below. truck on constant standby for lM
house in 1967? Dkin't he have con-tax election. of the Gazette-Telegraph, Co 1o·r1 d <t An hour tater, the President left the President's helicopters was ijSf!d, to ~J:·
siderable powers then?" Their approval made It unanimous Springs, Colo., and a daughter, Mary fireplace to retire in his bedroom about Unguish that fire.
Unruh also char-1 that Signal Oil had among the five elementary diltricts _ Jane HardJe, of. Marysville, Calif. 100 teet away, .
contributed $2,600 to Reagan's campaign, Fountain Valley, Ocean View, Fifteen minutes later the smoke sensor
''and probably much more." Westminster, Seal Beach and now Hun-in the common wall'touched off an ala.ml' '·~. ~~; 1knodo:.ililll.thal dont's ,tru1 ~o.'w' Wwoodhere' ~~J<lri·ct" ~~~-:-1.._within the high llCbool Biography of .O'Hara al the •ecurily headquarters ol lhe com·
au ....,, .......,-.i po~ and agef!ols phon~d the residence lo he gets his figures." 1 , On Nov. 3 voten will decide whether to NEW YORK (UPI) -Ranetom' House' check the aJarm.
Unruh had led newamen around Hun· raiae the high school tax rate to $2.C» per has commisslo~ ~alt.hew J. Bructoli, Pina Sanchez, Manolo's· wife ·and ·Mrs.
tington Beach, showing them the oU der· SHiii aseeaed vaJuaUon from its current 1n authority on Ernest Hemingway and Nixon's he·ad 'mlid. answered the phone
ricks along Pacific Coul Highway Owned fl.311. An election 1ooo would drop t b 1 F. Scolt Fitzgerald, to wrlle a 300,IJOO. In the kllchen and then mt to' the 'den to
by Sl&nal Oil. · district's rate to 15 oentl. word bioirapby of the late John O'Hara. ir:1estigate. .
Cof C Oppose_S_ Propo:sal
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Huntington Directors Nix Full-time Mayor Post
The house already . was filling with
moke.
An alarm .vent ·out to Su Clemente
and Camp Pendleton fire staU011s. San
Clemente volunteers roared into the
Wte---0.1 two pumpers to fight 1.~ blaze
which -on a much smaller acale -
resembled the de\'lltl.tinr; fire w h I c h
itruck the community clubhou1e early
this year. It was 0: similar construction ..
The fire , ~cl1111ic smouldering variei-
Movie. Hits the Spot'
' COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -"The Great
Train Robbery '' is now playing at the
Ohio Penitentiary.
er .. , •.
Nlibt and mornini IOfl mum.
Wthe coutthWwffbnd,~
ping the high reading lo • alolig
the beaches and 10 degrees hiaher
a little further inland. By ALAN DIR&I!i
OI "-o.wr ..... _,-
Directors of the Huntiniton B e a c h
Clamber of Commerce-.today stand op.
posed lo the proposal to make the'llllOY·
or's job a full-time, elective posjtio'n.
•mendmenl N wblcb would tlP!ea ,..
C[Ulnment, for council candidate., ......i.
ment L willcb would allow tho city to per. form public worn contracta cootlnl ...
tbal1 f!O;llt!O Without aeeklng bldl I D d
ameodmenl M whicb would brtn& the dty
charter In line with the lalesl daclllons on the sale of gueraJ obllptlon boada.
]lr<lliooltloos with the·m<pt!on cf·propo-INSmE TODAY altiona I, 4, 5, ud II, which they O[>pOIO. s , Citi'
The directors recommended a "No"
vote to chamber members on charter
amendment K -·the· amendment th a t
would make the mayor's poat elective. The chamber director• endorted Prop.
P.rlJpoolli\Jn.l ,woo)d ,requlre lhe aover· , eDIOl zeDS, ,Thi F~actured FoUi" of 1970
n«' ,to 'submit the~ltate budget withfn 'JO i""Laguna Btach cof'M :up.a.gaia
·c11ya of the legill1ttve· 1eS1iona aDcl for Q ".... Cel b · '•· next totek, railing monq for
the leglalature.10 adopt 'the bud(el by :.,(;t e rBtiOll South Coal! Community Hotpl-
Juoe 15. t.al. See toda~'s Wt:ektndtr uc>
-Pl'OIJOlltlon 4 aulhorllel the le,W.ture More tlian 300 oenlor dtlzw ol~Hun-tlon.-
to make approprtaUons for Public schools tington· Beach will celebrate ·the elghth ... t!M
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The city councU granted 8.25 percent
pay raises to both groups.last Sep\er!lber.
Policemen, however, had asked for 11
percent while firtmt:n wanted an 11 to 13.S
per«nt increase.
Publi c safety workers were upset
because lhe'y felt the council hadn't
followed the rules for salary negotiations.
Councilmen set the 8.25 perecnt pay boost
The amendment alJO would rt-establish
city department. and boards so t h • y
would be control~ by COUJICil ordinance
and allow c:ouncilmen lo set their salaries
by ordinAnce after a Public hearing.
Ollllon B, the call for a 9<:rent tu over·
ride by the Huntington Beach-Union Hlib
School lllatrlct. The reqlJelt:'ll,.-ni..
the dale from IJ.31 1o 11.oa b<Jl II the
measure faflJ tht rate would droo nest
July lo SI et11ts, the JealslaUve lnlnlmum,
school officials point out.
~~~ ti°':J:;:&e of tbe budpt b~ if anniversari' or their club al 10 a.m., Mon-c.....,.ll ': :::=..'= ~
Pt~~m"'thft-UnfTfrstty-t;Y~~tbe..clubbot1w, 17lb-Stree and-t-~=;;;.~>o•;;;,.':::'_,"!u!!-' -!~;.;,:;;..~=-~"~--_ or California re1ents conduct their meet· , Durang1• venueth · t tar the ~ u .,.,,.. , .. ,.
~thout sendh1g City Administrator Doyle
Uer back for more talks. Miller had
commended approv•l of the ortainal
Uoe and fire request&.
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The directors agreed on the chamber'•
stand on Tuesday's ballot propositions at
a closed-door meeUng Thursday evening.
The board ft!Commended approval of
the olhet munlclpal charier revllloos -
The dittctors •l!o bock Propoa[tkm A,
lhe --lo creale an~ Counly rapid trwlt dlttrlct ud all Ibo atat.
Jn~~bHc ng e pas Y group DMtll Mttim ' ,,.. ~111m , .. ,.
• lion 'II would permit use · of up ~ed fuhion 1hows, dlMen and -==' ,.,. 1.,1; +==-.,:
to 25 wcent ot aa• taxes for public maas tooJ 1k pep rl din the Huntington Beacb 4th of """ ......,. ~: ::_ ._.. n.i: tr1rwt l)'lteml al)d for pollution mearch u y ar1 e. · _ . ._ . ~,..,. , ... ...-. ..
Ind contrOI if voters in the area coo-Members Will celetirite Uietr , » =:.: . ...., ... ,.: Wut1,•ar .,...
cerned ...,.nt, nlverlll')' .,Jib 1 birthday IW\Cbeon.
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~ J DAILY PILOI H frld11, Octobtr 30, l970
Program 'En~iching'
Beach Dis trict Consi de rs Gifted Class
IJ :r.y (ll)YJIU
Of NllY ,lltl '"ff
Should sch ls create a special at-
mosphere for Uie mentally gifted child?
It11 a ticklish question with no simple ..,....,._
Two elementary scbOol districts in.
Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley
offer meotally gifted programs -one
does not.
Tbe Huntington Beach City Scboo1
D i s t r i c t has been criUclzed by some
pa.rents for its lack of a mentally gifted
program.
Tbe FOllllloin Valley ud ~~ V_,,
-dlllrlcll .... ~ T.lr ....
gr11111, but both are llllll teeUq,
searching for the ideal arrangement.
The ; desire for such a program has
been ~derscored b;Y the California Board
of Education and the st.ate Legislatture,
whic h offers state mooey to school
districts with special setups for mentally
gifted students.
State autboriUes pay •too for each
mentally atfi.d chlla IdtnUfied by a
diltricl Of th.It amount. $40 pays for the
\illlll'I MlellillOIUon !ltlllllel, wbllo llO
bu1I niaterltll -u ~. lllm llrlpo
and ot.Mr Html.
State; law defines a mentally Sifted
child $1 ode with an I.Q. of 132 or tugher.
Exceptions are made for cu1turallt
deprived children who still demonstrate
unusual shcola!Uc ability.
It takes a series of tests and an in·
tervlew by a school psychologist before a
chil d can be declared "mentally lifted.,.
This ls what the MO pays for.
Budg!3t Cut Curtails
Menially gifted programs, acciirding to
state officials, must not merely be an in~
creased load of nonna! classwork, but a~
tuaUy different, in-<iepth studies, whicb
allow the gifted children to explore lheit'
own abilities to the fullest.
Before receiving any state fw>ds, each
district must prove its program ~ be
different.
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Head Start Program Fountain Valley offers wbat It terms an
"enrichment" p('Oll'am. Mentally gifted
children are given special projecls to
work with for about ~ minutes (tbe
minimum allowed) each week. WASHING TON (UPI) -When a
money shortage. forees courtailment or
the popular Head Start program for
prescl>ool children, !be admlnlstratlnn
wants local officials to maintain the high
quality of their program,s by reducing
their pupil load, it was learned Thursday.
The adminlstraUon'1 policy in the face
of certain budget reductions was diJclos--
ed in a letter from Dr. Edward F. Zigler,
director of the Office of Child Develop-
ment of the Office of Economic Op-
portunity to 1111 loclll Head Start ad·
ntinistrators.
"Many grantees will want to reduce the
level of service provided beclllle of lhese
decisions rather than reduce the number
of chlldren served," the letter saJd.
"'!llis· ohou1d not be permitled. Our
DAILY PILOT Stitt! '°"'"
f'ladat1 I.male
Not all bikes offered at Hunt·
ington Beach Police Auction
Nov. 7 will come equipped
with Paula Tooman, but a
wide variety of bicycles will
go on sale starting at 10 'a .m.
in the police parking lot, 5th
.street and Orange Avenue.
DAILY PILOT
Oil.I.HG!: COAST f'UILIM'lllllG COMl'AMY
Rolt•rt H. w,M
Prt11d101t 1r.d Pubtlllltr
J1ck R. Curley
Vitt Preld.,t t rA CMr!iOrtl Mll\lllll'
Thom•• Kttvll
EOllor
lhom11 A. Murphln1
M1,..111111 Edi.tr
Al1n Dirlr.ift
Wat Or•nff CMIY t:dlttl'
Alb1rf W. 11!11
~-EdlJor _
H111ti ... 1• "-' Office
1717$ l t t ch l o11l1Ttrd
M1ilin1 Mir111t P.O. 1 111: 7t0, t2641
Ott.r OHlcea
L1t1mt ll•cl1t m For..t ..,_,.,.,
Co•l1 MIMI: U0 W•I I t '( Slr"I ~ klldu nn """' ••U•• ~ Ifft Cllmtnte: &I Nortll ~ Ql'!la'll RMI
-
policy from the beginning bu been to In-
sure lhal cblldreii enrolled In Head Start
receive the higbeat quality service pOlli·
tile.
In the previoUJ filcal year OEO spent
$321 mUlion on Head start. The Nixon
AdmlniltraUor. requested $S39 million
this year and even if that amo'.unt is
granted, OEO says because of rillng
coats It would be sUll llU mllllnn abort
of allowing the program io continue at Its
present level.
The Senate Appropriations Committee
haS approved the admln.lltration's SSH
milllnn request and the lull Senate will
act OD the measure after Concreu
Reconveoes No. 18.
'lbe Houae, however, bu approved an
OEO buclp t thlt doel not speclly bow
much Head Start would get, but OEO of.
flclala aay 11 would leave them 117.7
milllell !hort In Head Start mooey.
Any dllierences In the House and
Senate bills would have to be roconclled
by a conference committee, but there
would be no chance of the cornm!ttee In-
creasing 1pproprl1Uons for Head Start.
Zigler told the local admlnla:trators that
the first cuta should oome in Head Start
summer programt.
Survey to Start
On Huntington
Homes Monday
A "sidewalk survey" is to be made of
housing in HunUngton Beach.
Beginning Monday, four men from the
city buildtng department will 10 from lot
to lot noting the condition of homes in the
city.
Jere Murphy, a member of the plan·
ning department, said today that the
purpose of the survey is to determine in·
formation and statistics to incorporale in
the housing element of the master plan.
The walking surveyors will look at all
houses in the city, beginning in the
downtown area. The check ll expected to
last six to eight months.
"The survey will be made from the
sidewalk," Murphy e.xplained. "We won't
go onto private property."
The team will collect information on
such things as the age and condition of
homes, whether they are single family or
multiple, and the state of lhe landscaping
and number of on-site parking spaces.
Murphy said the data will enable the
planners to determine whether there is
enough housing in the city for those who
wish to live in Huntington Beach and
whether the housing is adequate and in
good repair.
Murphy said the team would not issue
citations if faulty housing is found.
"The idea Ls to get a total, overall
housing picture," he said. "We want to
know whether there Is a housing problem
in Huntington Beach or not. If there Is
one, it will ~ up to the planning com·
mission and city councU to decide what
should be done about it."
Breakfast Slated
By Beach DeMolay
The Huntington Beach Chapter of
DeMolay will bold its semi·annual "Fann
Style Breakfast" from a a.m. to noon,
Sunday, at the Masonic Temple, Lake
and Palm streets.
Breakfast price is $1 with proceeds
going toward the installation of new of·
ficers in the DeMolay.
"Our children band.le their projects in
learning centers," Bill Barnes, ad-
ministrator for educational services for
the Fountain Valley School District, es:·
plalns.
"In the learning center they con-
centrate on such subjects as literature
during the time of westward movement
In the U.S., or art in the classical period.
or journalism," Barnes said.
The gifted students don't just learn
about these thirJgs, but study each sub-
ject in much greater detail than could bl
allowed ln the average classroom.
The Ocean View District offers twe
separate mentally gifted programs. Like
Fountain Valley, Ocean View bas an
enrichment program, which allows glfted
students to . spend some time con·
centrating on projects.
"We also have two segregated gifted
cl uses," Norm Ginsburg, directot ' of
personnel services explained.
"The segregated classes c o v e r
academic subjects such as math,
reading, science. They meet during the
morning at Rancho View and Robinwood
achool.s,11 Glnsburg said.
Jn the afternoon the gifted students
mingle with other students for such sub-
jects as art, music and physical educa·
tJon.
The Huntington Beach City School
District doesn 't offer either type of pr~
gram and receives no state funds.
"We don 't have enough gifted children
Identified," Miss Betty Funkhouser,
ass.istant superintendent, e 1 p 1 a i n e d .
Trustees have also been traditionally op-
posed to fuoding ar seeking slate fuod.s
on such special programs.
The district, with an enrollment of 6,393
children has identified seven as mentally
girted.
By comparison, Fouatain Valley bas
an enrollment of 10.139 children and
with the gifted and apply the best tech·
niques to all of our children."
Both districts expect to have more
children in the gifted program by the end
of the year.
Miss Funkhouser said Huntington
Beach would have to double its number of
Identified gifted children before a pro-
gram would be considered.
"But we a~ approeching the size
where we have to think about lt," she
said. "However, I want to be sure we
have a good program U we get one. I
don't want to fake it."
Cost is still the worry for some
districts. Even though Ule state pays a
substantial amount for the program.
districts normally have to chip in some or
their own money.
Fountain Valley is spending $70,560 of
its own money this year. while Ocean
View spent $24 ,947 during the past year.
The districts have bad various mentally
gifted programs four and eight years,
respectively.
"Most districts actually save some
money because materials bought for the
mentally gifted program can be used for
the average classroom as well," said
Fountain Valley's Barnes.
Ocean View's Ginsburg said the men-
tally gifted programs also serve "as
beacons to guide us to better programs
for the average class. We can experiment
with the gifted and apply the best technl-
qoes to all of our cblldren." ,
Most educators agree that complete
separation of the mentally gifted child
from so-called average students Is un-
desirable.
Programs in Fountain Valley and
Ocean View are designed for separation
only at certain intervals.
Indications are that their programs wilt
continue to expand.
"Mentally gifted programs are simply
the ultimate in good teaching which i5
made possible through extra money and
time," Ginsburg observed.
Schoolmen Say 'No Soap'
To $88,000 Shower Cost
The d""'lht 11 Dwyer lnlennedl•le Dwyer bu bwl without shower .. d
School Isn't over yeL locker equipment for its physical educa·
Olftclals of the Hunlln&ton S.1ch City tion program since 1967 when the school
SChoOI DI.strict looked af a proposal for gym was condemned.
shower faciUUes T\lesday night, but failed The school. which is one of two Inter· to buy It. The.y felt an $88,000 price \Ag for 1 mediate schools in the district servtna
modular ph)'lital educ.aUon facility was eth, 7th and Ith graders, is 35 years old.
lllirl1ltl . ---'Trustees agreed_to_stud)' the._~ol'et
"We hope to abandon Dwyer by the sltuatlon turther, and asktd admuustra·
end of. the 1971-73 or 11?3-74 school year," tor a to tome up with more proposals.
Charles Palmu1 ~puty dlstritt auper. "This Is a sorry siluatlon. Wt have to
tntendent upltmea; "A modular build· do 1emtthlng.·• Trustee tv'an Llggttt sa id.
·tng would be ptrm111ent. l think we can "Yes, but we have to work fn 1 cost
tind aomethinJ temporary for teas mon· achedule for 1 three to four-year basis," ~·" Trustee Steve Holden added.
~
NIXON ••.
MAty Woodl, !be Pmldent'1 !°"'·time
personal secretazy, wbo wu 11tttnc nut
to one of the smashed windows. She
referred to an attack on Nixon, tben Vice
~~ In Venuutls.
Murj,i,y -termed the mob "wild.eyed,
tough, angry rtv.olutlonories" \ w b o
•'should be identified 1t1d isolated. '
\
"I have been careful to point out that
these are the JICtions of a violent few. lt
is important °'at all Americans keep this
perspective," pie President said .
"Bµt the time bas come to take the
gloves off and speak. to this kind of
behavior in a forthright way. Freedom of
speech and freedom of usembly cannot
exist w1&en people who peacefully attend
rallies are attacked with flying rocks.
GARY FOX PORTRAYS DR. JEKYLL IN SPOOK SHOW
In Huntlneton Ba•ch, • Monstrous Und•rt•klng
• •Monster Do~tor~
'Dr. Jekyll' on Job at School
Ever since Dr. Jekyll opened his office
in a dark room of the Wintersburg High
School campus, his patient supply has
been dwindllng.
The cause, according to the frustrated
M. D. (Monster Doctor) seems to be that
no one is interested ln a decent head
transplant any more.
And his other surgical specialties -
the shrinking of beads and making of
monsters -don't even pay the office
bills, but they sure create a lot of at·
tention.
The wayward doctor, played by student
Gary Fox, has been practicing his
therapeutic operations for the past two
da ys in a "Sppok Spectacular" for
Hallowe'.en-minded students attending the
Wintersburg continuation campus.
The entire show, which encompasses an
8-minute spine.chilling tour through the
blackened Room 10, was produced en-
tirely by the school's trainable mentally
retarded students.
Their teacher, Larry 1.echiel, says the
''Spectacular" was a work-experience
project for the handicapped ~tudents dur-
ing which they were responsible for n:iak·
ing their own backdrops, masks, signs
and other spooky appurtenances.
"We haven't had any adverse reaction
from the students," laughed Larry, "but
one of the parents who went through
there got so scared she screamed bloody
murder."
At the entrance, the thrill seekers are
confronted with a swishing white repll~'
of Great Caesar's ghost followed ifll·
mediately with a macabre dance by the
Bones Family, Including Big Daddy
Bones, his wife Bleach Bones, and their
offspring. little Short Ribs.
A further poke into the gloomy, black·
lighted interior sho~s the visitor the
House of No Returt:nd lone50me Dr.
Jekyll performing his one and only
patient, The Great' rba.
But if you want to get to the really
good stuff, you 've got to screw up your
courage and cross Werewoll Forest and
Spider Gulch.
~ then do )'OU get to sff the Grt1t
Pumpkin pop out of a box, the Mummy
Who Refused To Die, and a generous
treat of Witches Gourmet .
Just when things get so spooky that
teeth begin to clatter aocl knees to wag-
gle, the Good Witch Trick or Treat drops
some candy in your clammy hand.
They've scared the wits out of you, and
Winterb urg's kids consider that entirely
appropriate on Halloween.
A n accurate reproduction of
an exceptio nall y fine Queen
A nne double bonnet aec re·
*ary. Formed of walnut and
yew wood veneers a nd sol id
p e c a n a nd available in two
fini sh es. It is 36 " w i de and
81 1/i " high. \
''Tonight at Anaheim I will discuss
what America must do to end the wave of
violence and terrorism by the radical, an·
ti-<iemocratic elements in our society."
The crowd bad gathered by the time
Nixon entered San Joee Civic Auditorium
to plead for support for Murphy and
~agan in their races a I a I n 1 t
Democratic challeneen John V. Tunney
and Jess Unruh. Signs in the crowd de-
nounced him as a "fad.st" and
"warmonger" and several bundrtd
persons chanted "one, two, three, four,
we don't want your f-war."
Inside, Nixon told an audience of about
8,00l persons that he had been successful
in winding down the Vietnam conflict and
repeated his promise to end the war in
such a fashion as to gain a generation of
peace for the nation.
Americans were fighting in Vietnam,
he said, "so that those young men who
are outside shou~g their obsctne
slogans won't have ~J f.igbt in Vietnam or
anywhere else."
During the ~ ..... of the
demonstrators charged at a door of tbe
auditorium. but w~ blocked by police.
On his way out the Prellldtnt pallJed to
greet an Indian chief In full regllla ud
then beaded into the parting lot where
several hundred police olllcen held the
crowd about 60 yards away.
A few eggs splattered within about five
yards of where be stood. Then the Presi-
dent climbed on the hood of his car, rail-
ed his arms in the faml11ar V faahioa
and gave them his tradiUonal campaign
salute. The shouting and obscenities ap-
peared to increase.
As his car moved out of the parking lot
through a road cleared through the
o-owd, the mmues began falling.
The President's limousine, with a
police escort and trailed by a convertible:
with Secret Service agents in it, lurched
forward. One agent tumbled from the
convertible. Several other1 wen hit with
rocks but none were seriously injured.
A rock smashed into a window of the
''control~' car containing Haldeman and It
stopped abrupUy causing severlll minor
collisions in the motorcade.
The President's limousine has bullet
resistant glm and-the-missiles bounced
harmlessly off 11. !Is sunroof-type lop
al.so ls made of glass and was closed and
covered at the time .
Gov. Reagan called the disp1ay ''in·
tolerable behavior" and said: "I express
my contempt on behalf of the cllizenl or
California."
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
7td11111 "
NEWPORT IEAC H
1727 Weetcllff Dr., 642-2050
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
ProfeQfonal Interior
Doalgn•ra Av1llobl~I D-NSI D.
LAGUNA llACH
3-45 North CoHI Hwy. 4f4.&lfl
OP I N FRIDAY 'TIL '
..... , ... ,,.. ....... 0...,. cMit, .... ,261
-·
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l
11
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.,
I
I ' '
I
11
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frldq, -JO, 1970
S-e • ·. urphy ':alankety-hlanl('
New Bomb
Wave Hit,s
New York
NEW YORK (UPI) -Thr .. homemade
pipebombs exploded within 10 minutes of
each other early today, damaging &VfO
armories and a police sfalion.
There were no injuries in-the er•
t>losiom, whkh occurred shortly alter one
of the armories received a warning
telephone call.
Police spokesmen said the blasts were
"very closely associated" and. It was
"highly unlikeJy" that three bombln& at·
tacks could be planted roincldentally by
different group11 or unassociated peraons
in such a brief time. The FBI was called
in almost immediately.
One guard, a Vietnam veteran who
escaped just before one of the armory
blasts, said the explosion sounded "like
an 81mm mortar."
The first bomb went of! at 3:12 a.m.
EST at the U.S. NavaJ Reserve Center in
•<Whitestone, Queens. Three minutes later,
a second explosion Went off in a motorcy.
cle precinct headqu'arters in the Brons.
At 3:22 a.m., the third blast went off at
the U.S. Army Reserve Center in the
Jamaica section of Queens.
Before the first explosion, a woman
caller told a guard at the armory, "You'd
better get out of the armory because •
bomb is going off in five minutes. Go out
the front door and get at least 50 feet
away," according lo police.
Professor's Plea
On Jail Term
In Riot Spurned
Professor Stuart Silvers' appeal of a
municipal cOurt conviction on charges
stemming from his part in Cal State
Fullerton riots has been rejected by the
Orange County Superior Court appellate
bench. ·
Presiding Judge Raymond Thompson
1tated that his three-judge court bas
refused to consider Silvers' claim that a
_ 60-day_jaiLlenn he drew for participation
1n the riots is unlawful and anreaaonable.
Silvers, 32, of 114 7th St, Seal Beach
has not yet put in his jail time. The
philosophy professor is currenUy on
vacation In Yugoslavia.
Silvers indicated In his last court ape
pearance tha\ rejection by the Orange
County appellate bench would not end his
challenge of the sentence and he would
take tbe Issue to a higher appellate court.
Slivers was identified as a ringleader
In Cal State disturbances last March and
was prosecuted for unlawful auembly
and disturbing the peace after a strife-
tom appearance by Gov. Ronald Reagan
on the Fullerton campus.
He successfully challenged a contempt
citation issued by authorities after he
allegedly violated the tenns of a Superior
Court restraining order Issued after the
first disturbance.
UPI,.....
'PRESIDENT (IN SEDAN) LEAVES SAN JOSE CIVIC AUDITORIUM AFTER SPEECH
An E1tlm11ted 900 Protestors Hurl E911, Rocks 11nd Ob1cenltle1 11t Mr. Nixon'• Auto
'Captain Bligh~
Judge Orders Punishment by Whip
An Orange County Superior Court judge
has become known overnight as "Captain
Bligh" for his decision to restore the cat
o'nine tails to tbe county's balls of
justice.
But JIJdce William Murray's fame and
nickname may be only fleeting. For the
jurist wu asked today by a concerned
Sheriff James Musick to amend the
eyebrow raislllg sentence be imposed
Thursday on a willing prisoner.
Judge Murray ordered 15 strokes wiUi
the cat for probaUon violator Bruce Dar·
ryl Howell on condition that Howell pass
a fitness tesl And he gave the strapping
six-foot, 200-pouod defendant a week to
reconsider bis decision to accept tbe long·
rejected fonn of punisbmenl
It seemed at one point that Howell
would get lbe cat in Judge Murray's
courtroom. Bailiff Jess Hardy went off in
search of a whip but Judge Murray
decided on the one-week delay before
punishment could be admlntstered to
Howell.
Howell, 21, of Milwaukee, Wis., is serv·
Ing four months in Orange County jail for
a check writing offense. He Is aceused of
violating terms of his probaUon by
assault on a fellow prisoner.
Howell agreed to the corporal punish-
ment when It was pointed out that a state
prison term might be the alternative. "I
wanted it"to hurt so that you remember It
but I don't want any damage," be was
told by Judge Murray.
Judg:e Murray was not available for
comment today. But court oUlclals ex·
pect that he will comply with Sheriff
Muslck's request for modification of a
sentence that called ror 15 lashes and IO
more days in the county jail
LA Judge Orders Halt
To Rafferty's Material
Max Rafferty's workers In Orange
County have been ordered to bait
distribution of literature which allegedly
defames opponent Wilson Riles and links
t the state superintendent of public lmtruc·
Uon.'1 appooent with the Commwllst move-
ment.
Tbe ban, part of a statewide temporary
...tiallling order, was signed Thursday
by Los Angeles County Superior Court
. Judge John A. Shidler. Judge Shidler
Ordered both parties to attend a bearing
ocheduled for Nov. IZ •
Riles, acting through c a m p 1 1 g n
* * *
manager Marlon Joseph, accuaes Raf·
ferty of unlawfully and unethically link·
Ing him with Black Muslim leader
Malcotm X In poster. and pampblet.t
distributed by Rafferty workers in
California.
Heavy circulation of the UteratW"e Is
being achieved in Orange C'.ounty, San
Dieso and Bakersfield, Riles' workers
allege.
The deputy superintendent of public in--
structlon also alleges that Rafferty
literature consistently implies his COD·
necti"on with C'.ommuniat sources and the
lnternatlonal C'.ommunist movement and
routd be damaging to bb electlnn
chances.
Deputy Faces
New Theft
Indictments
Former Orange aherlft's d e p u t 1
Frederick B. Irvine has been indicted by
the Orange County Grand Jury on further
charges of receiving stolen property, car
theft and burglaries committed prior to
. the charges on whlch he DOW faces
Superior Court action.
Irvine, 42, of La Habra, was one of two
de!Juties arrested last Sepl 7.0 in the golf
shop oC the Mission Viejo Country Club.
Fellow officers who booked the palr
allegecD.y found them in possession of
stolen goUing equipment and several
cases of Uquor.
;..,iine felony counts are now contained in
the dossier on Irvine. He may appear
later today in Superior Court to oHer his
plea to charges contained in the in-
dictment.
Deputy •Artlnlr Duncan, 34, cl' H11n-
tington Beach, committed suicide earlier
this mOiith after beihg ordered to-appear
on grand the(l and burglnry charg'" In
Santa Ana Municipal Court
Duncan, obviously dimeaed at the
Ume of his court arraignment, hung
himself in the garage of his home at 4M2
Maul ctrcte.
Irvine and Duncan were employed dur-
ing their off duty hours as security
guards by the Mi!.slon Viejo Company.
They were working In that capacity when
arrested Inside the golf shop.
Duncan sun-e:ndered on confrontation
but Irvine led his fellow officers on a wftd
car chase that ended In Riverside. County
with his arreirt alter his repeated threats
to commit suicide.
Investigators stated today that they are
still probing several other burglaries in
the area patrolled by the two former
deputies.
Judge Thompson's appellate bench .is •
expected to coru;ider in the next few
days an almost identlcal appeal by CaJ
State student David MacKowiat, 26, of
Corona. · Riles Charges Rilea names as defendants Max Ralf er·
ty, campaJ&'J aide Robert 'I'l.rt.Ue, t be
South Bay Cltir.ens for QmslituUonal
Government and "Rafferty workers one
through 500."
Two or the charges listed in the grand
jury indictment accuse Irvine of the theft
of heaters owned by the Mission Vjejo CO.
and Anaheim PlumbiJli.
The young militant is challenging a
ten-day jail sentence imposed for his role
in the March 3 riot.
Faithful She's Not;
Actress Divorced
LONDON (AP) -Marianne FoHlrl1ill
was divorced today by her American bul-
band on grounds of the 23-year-old ac-
tress-singer's admJtted adultery with pop
star MJclt Jagger of the Rolllllg SU!oes.
Jagger agreed to l>'I)' 14811 court costs
to ber husband, John Dunbar, rT, ID
artist and writer.
Sine. the case came up originally In
divorce court Miss Failhfull bu found a
new boy friend but she remains bit
lriendly terms with Jagger. Her name ii
now romantically linked wttb that of an
Irish Peer, Lord Rossmore.
Boy, 8, Takes
Bad LSD Trip
BERKELEY (UPI) -Pollce Al
they discovered an J.year-old boy
on a scrumlng, 1houtlng "bid
trip.'' who told them he tW tuea
LSD on five occaslom.
Arter the youngsttt waa di.
covered Tuesday, be wu taken to
Herrick Memorial HOIJ>llal !or ob-
servation. Doetor1 said he went Into
a state of terror. shook violently
and breathed In gasps. T1M:y oDI
his pulse rate jumped to 120.
The b9J' Is now being h•ld In ju·
venile hall while authoriti es a r e
ronducting an investigation of his
famil y.
Olltcor> arrested Richard Flett
A.cret, 20, Wednesday on cbar1e.1
ol rumlshin11 a 'dangeroua ~·
Acree denied having given the boy
an LSD t.tbleL
Pupils Coached
In State Tests
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Willon Riles.
candidate !or state superintendent of
public Instruction, ~ cbruied that
cbildren t.tklng 1tetewide reeding tests
were "c:oacbed on tbe IDSWtf'I."
Be told a ..,,. conleronce that at the
'l'ulardlol Elementary School ' In Clrmel
there WU •'maolpulatkm of test ICOf'eS'1
and "apparent tamperlna with tbe tests
and coaching."
Be Aid the lcbool'a prillclpal now ...... a !or lneumbent ouperintendenl Mu
Rafferty.
llallerty -tlrla ...... reported that
lhe multi cl statewide reading t.sts
lhowed I atoad)' but DOI startling lm·
--..... the put llvt yean. Rlla, on lave as deputy wperln·
tendeo~ a1JO rliltribllttd the text of a
nen nport by Loa Aogtleo televilinn
atatlon KNXT that said When Loa Angeles
llnt sraden ... "belnC prepar"1I to
talo I ntW dtyilide reeding teot last
IJ!flng, they ...,.. c:oecbod dlroctly on
what would be on tbt eumlnation.11
"In tome CUM tbt adual tnt form
ltaelf, or a llCllmlle cl I~ wu lho!m to
the ch1ldron and uled frr clulroom dritl
and ttud)r lrefon lbe teat wu 1lven krr
the .-rd," tlle report Olld.
Rllet a1JO said lie had obtained an
order w-, lnlm a Loa Angeles
court ll'llPlnl llaUerty'• rHlectlon
campaign orpnbatlon from distributing
literature cut~ "smears on my
character ll!ld palrlotlsm.
"I i-Dr. Jlallerty belleftt In law
and order and WW foDow the court
order."
Riles, in a Loi Ancelet appurance,
Aid that, II elected, he will order I
muter plan for early educaUon, com·
parable to the muter plan !or hlghtr
odDcatla
Pendleton Sets
Marine Auction
More than 700 mrplus military Items -
most of them rolling stock -will go on
the auction block Wednesday at Camp
Pendleton.
The public and r.iembers or he
military are welcome to bid on lhe tons
of surplus merchandiae at the. redistrlbu.
tion and disposal section or the marine
base.
The merchandise Win Include 30, liX·ton
semi ~allers, 103 quar.er·ton cargo
trailers, a rour-wheel~ive Scout velrlcle,
a generator set, a wrecker. several
pickup trucil, other heavy trucks and a
forklift.
Bidders must regtster at I a.m. the day or the auction. A registration number and
a "paddle" bidding device will be 8.!Sign-
ed to each bidder for use at the auctlon
starting at I a.m.
Inspection of the JIOO"• will be beld
before the aucUon begins. A government'
auctlrmeor will handle the bidding. eo ..
firmatkm of btd awarda will be made to
the purchaser In peraon or by mall
A phone mnnber lor lnlonnatlou on the
sale ~ 72MIQ7,
Old NY Buildings
Will Be Preserved
NEW YORK (AP) -The locades ol
five of the earliest cut iron bulldh>g1 In
the city will be cardully dismauUed and
preserved under an U11USUJ1 demollUon
contract awarded by the city.
The 122-year-<>ld bulldlngs, deolguod by
an:hltoct James Bozardul and detlt1Mted
landmarks last February, must be tom
down to 1111ke way !or the Wasbington
Street nuewal po)trd.
•
Leary Reports
He'll Make His
Home in Algiers
From Wire Servlce1
CAIRO -Self-exiled federal fugitive
Dr. Timothy Ltary is finally going to set-
tle down and (et religion.
So he tells Al Abram, the seml-offlclal
government newspaper of Egypt.
The world 's best-known advocate or
LSD and marijuana, who escaped Sept.
13 while aervlng a term of up to 10 years
for weed po~ession in Orange County,
says he will live permanenUj in Algiers.
He said Thursday he woutlt sneak back
Into the U.S. Jn disguise to attend a Nov.
3 New Haven, CoM. rally for Blick
Panther leader Bobby Seale, who is ac-
eu5ed of murder.
Leary lied the minimum security Loa
Padres Men's Colony at San Luis Obispo
and estimates be will get a total of 31
yean behind bars on various counts U
·caught 1n America again.
Clances are, It wouldn't be ln a
minimum security l•clllty either.
M'-· E . anne xerc1ses
To Start Monday
A company from Iha Clmp Pendltton-
bued Ith Marine Ampblblout Brifade
w1U launch a four-day training eurctae
at San Clemente Island Monday.
The maneuvers will lnYOlve lntelu,ence
and submarine operations against a Oe-
tJtioua "Insurgent torce" on the llland. _
The rompany will work from the au!>.
marine USS Medregal to combo! the
"insurgents who arc using the. bland 11 a
~ and trai ning area," 1pok...,..
San Jose
I I I
Violence
Draws Ire
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of ... !Miff '"" ..... _ou the eve of his twit rally In
Allabelm, George Murpby said. be Is " -
ctamu mad" about the violence Prelldeut
Nb:OD laced ID Sau Joee, but conceded It
can't burfbb rHlectlon chancU.
Nllou Is llated to appear toulgbl al tbe
Anaheim Convention Center on behalf ol.
the Republican aeuator. Tbe Praldenl
WU the target of r<:cl: and bolUe thmJ.
Ing d.._traton Thursday nlgbt wben
be made a 11mllar appearaoce ln San
J ....
"Tbl.9 was as vldoua a crowd u I've
ever aeen in my life. I'm ashamed of
what bu happened In our st.tte," Murphy
" told newsmen after flying witb NI.Jon
abo&nl Atr F-Onejrom Sau Joae 10
El Tor. MCAS. -
m. Irish temper up, the II-year-old
senator branded the demonstratcn
"wild~, tough, angry revoluUonarles"
and said "I think the rlngleadm Olllht to
be ldeutlfled and laolated.
"f'm 10 mad and angry about what tbl
President of the United Statea was 1Ubo
jected to In Sau J ... that I find It di!·
flcult to contain m}'Jelf,'' be said
In El Toro he wu asked by newsmen If
he believed tbe violence helped bb cam-
palp. Murphy replied, "I dOD'I ... bow
it could burl any. Theae an tlle tlrlup I
have been working against.,.
He Aid bb -~ Rep. John Tun-ney, "hasn't taken too much trouble to
oppose this sort of thing" and added that
such incldenta make him think the naUon
is "on tbe verse of tndplent revolution."
The teleat state poll abows the
Democrat widening his lead over
Murphy. Tbe Incumbent DOW trails by
seven percentage points, 46-41, compared
to only two points a week ago.
Wlth four days left in the campaign,
the war of wordl between the two men
and their aupportera Is luteDrrilylng.
In Sau Jooe, Nlion. In died called
Twurey 1 liar !or reporting Wednetday
that the federal govertllllOl1t plauned to
1hut don the Ames Rtseardl Cent.r In
Sunnyvale and tey oU 1,000 worien·alter
the electloG.
"AnyoM I who dieckerl,,; M4 , I
Congressman of the 1llrlted St.ties has lhe
same rights to check u a Senator or ~-. 'lftlllld haveioond 6-has n8'er bet• any lDtentlon ot1 ll!llar .~
Laboratory," Nlxcm laJd. ··
"It bu uever been dilcuaed. 1111 not
going to be cl!lfed and anyone who made
that kind of charge did so with lmowiqe
tlat It Wll falae."
And Thursday, Tunney'• fslher, former
heavyweight champion Gene TUnney,
became a major Issue In Murphy'• cam· .
palgn.
The Senator cbarpd that Gene Tunney,
11 a fellow board member of Technicolor,
voted to approve the contr1ct wblch prO-
vtded Murphy !20,000 a year, hall the
rent on a Wahington apartment and an
air travel car in u:change for consulting
work. 1be contract was terminated lut
June.
Death Recalls
Bitter Tragedy
One Year Ago
DALLAS (UPI) -A year ago, one of
Mrt. Beverly Jean Hope's belt friends
was raped on her kitchen Ooor by an ex·
convict who poured Ugh\er Ould over her
with the Idea of burlng her alive.
Wben the rapist left his victim aloDe to
fmd a match, she leaped up nude and fled
next door lo a neighbor's home.
. The friend, now recovettd, tried to
telephone Mrl. Hope two or three tlmet
Tuesdly about a lunch date and got no
•nswer. Made apprehemlve by her own
ordeal, she telephoned MrJ. Hope's hus.
bahd, Grover, at hi.s office and urged him
to go home and see whether anything had
happened to bb wile.
Hope, a well-to-do contractor went
llome, and the moment he entered the
front door found a trail of hJs wife'•
underwear le1ding across the living
room.
In one ol his two llXll' bedrooms, Hope
found his SI-year-old 1'ile, lying nearly
naked In • pool cl blood.
"She wu be.at up real bad. •. thm was
blood all over the bedroom," "9m1clde
detectlve Otaries Dhorlty aa1d. "It a~
peared to be a NI crime. an attempted
rape, beca-there WAI nothing milling
from the house and no alpo ol farted..,.
try."
Dhorlty said Mn. Hope had been dnd
an hour or 1 ... "'1en ber husband found
her. Police had no suspects.
John L. Abron, 29, who wu coavlcted
of rapine Mn. Hope'I friend WU not a
IUl)led. He b ,ln jail, ""tenced to die In
the electric charr.
Pakistani Divorce
Upheld in 'England
LONDON (AP) -A Paklrtanl doctor'•
"taiaq" divorce wa1 ruled valid today ln
Engtand. "Talaq" b the Moslem style
whk:h involv• aaylna: ''l d!vorce you" --·
. ---
I
H OAJLV PILOT 3
Mad
DAf\.T PILOT Slilll ...
'l'M DAMNED MAD' · ··
Candldat. Murphy
Some Voters
•
Not Given
Vote Samples
With elecUon day four days 1way, some ·
O:ange County residents bftve not recelv·
ed their sample ballots.
A spokesman for the county Reglstrv
of Voten today offered advice to voters ,
who find themselves in that situation.
"'Ibey can call our office at 834-5050,.1
and we will give them the address of ~
thetr polling plsce. Al far u the aampla !
ballots go, we malled them all out a wee!(!
qo. If a voter would like one, there are 4. ~
few left lhat may be picked up at the OC:".
flee of the rqlstrar, lllt E. Cbestuul St.,
Santa Ana," tbe repreaentatlve ·said.
Olllclala 1 llJiln ;Uw rqlstrar'a olll ..
uld they naa some ~ with "Jax
" cl U... ll!Dple ballnts ., , tbO ~
-.;;;r-atiliillted-.Jiete --.. . :· 1~wu...,,:
The spo-.n ~ recommended lhil:
county, reaJdenta wbO have move\f ..
recently be sure to check With their of.i~
flee. ; '?
"If they moved before Sept. JO, aril):
dldn'l r<celve a aample ballot, they ori&Jrt:
to check wtth. us, to find out what !bet'~
new poWn1 place ii. ~ -':
"Anyone who moved. within the co:%~
after SepL JO Ill eliglble to return to ;
old polllllg ptace. ·!
"Wt have plenty of telephone operatori:
on band to answer questions '° that &n7!
voter who doesn't know where to go to ·
vote or who has a quesUon about hllZ'
ballot can cab us," lhe aa1d. .. , ,
-<
$9.5 Million Losses ·.
.
On Airfield Claimed · .
WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon '
wasted more than $9.5 million in a crash
program lo build an airfield in South
Vietnam In 1966, the General Accounting
Office bu cb a r ge d in a report to
Congress.
1be money was wasted in the con·
1trucUon of a lighter plane base at Tuy
Hoa, the report said. It quoted the
Defense Department as saying it
departed from normal construction pro-
cedures because the base was urgently:
needed during the American buildup in:
Vietnam. Pushed to compleUoo with in a:.
year, the project cost $5Z million, •
She's Prepared
To Lose Race
WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) -Ell-
ubeth Kreshtool respects tradiUon.
Therefore she's busy preparing her
loser's 1peeeh for election Right.
Mrs. Kreshtool Is the substitute
DemocraUc candidate for the Dela~
ware Leg:Wature in a district where
Republlcans have won for the last
114 years -since the p&rty wa1
lormed.
She accepted the oomlnaUon Jul
week after the orl(Jna1 candidate
puUed out, but ooly altH being ,..
sured lhe would lose.
Right '"11 obe won the eJldone. ment of the Procrastinators Society
of America, which tent her a tele-
gram. She quickly took a dtU' off,
apparenUy fearing 'her campalsn
would pent too soon.
Tbtn she selected a campaign
m'\niv,tr wh09e last candld1te. lost
by 34.000 votes. Alter he diAp-
p"ared, her bmband, one arm In a
rllnR, r..epped In to let out JOme
m"re tl"ck. Now 1hc'1 ready for that speech.
tn a ton~c.tn-che~k try 1t her po-
lltlcal ••ledictory ahe lntooa: ''TM
'N, rad io and tht preq: won't hli'l'I
Krelhtool to kick •l'OIJ!'d a.,
more."
f -· ·-· a a s
4 DAILY PiLDT
tc...... ..... """',....-a
Alert guards intercepted • 1[!;•
being smuggled from the Sal\ •
County Jail Wedoesday before it
reached its destination. The chief
of security guard for the women's
section of the jail opened the letter
and read: "Dear cook and all kit-
chen be!p. After all the griping we
have done in the· past we thought
we ought to thank you for today's
~,.,~ meal. It sure was good. Please
don't stop now.u The letter was
oigned by 19 fem•le inmates. • Brvce F!eynolds, sentenced to 2S
years tn prison for his part in the
$7.3 million Great Train Robbery,
hopes to speed up his release by
returning the "few thousand'" he
has left of his share, the London
Daily Mirror said Thunday. The
paper said the 39-year-old convict
got $428,000 from the 1963 holdup,
and that what's left is in a Melli·
can bank. The paper said Reynolds
hoped' this would make a gQOd im-
press ion.on the pa.role board, which
LS to take up his case in 1977.
0
The folks at the casUe Haven
Convalescent Center in Illinois,
saved 'thtir pennies, :nickels and
dimes ·to amass '8, wbicb they
gave to a staff memJ;>er to p~as~
a pumpkin for Hal1oween. The
staffer approached Earl Wemer,
w~o .grows and sells vegetables at
his home; Werner refused to ·ac--
cept payment and gave the center
a pumpkin -one weighing 119
pounds.
0
Ruinors of ro~ance between
British Princess Anne and Crown
Prince C•rl Gust•v of Sweden
aren1t new to Buckingham Pal8ce,
a ioyal spokesman said today.
''Prince cart Gustav bas been men-
tioned before -as bas'about every
marriageable prince in Europe,"
he said. Suzy, society columnist of
the New York Daily News, today
reported "exciting rumors" flying
around the palaCe because Queen
Elizabeth II was inviting her :111-
year-<>ld dauglher to a luncheon
she is giving for the 24-year-old
bachelor prince. Suzy added that
Anne has been Invited to stock·
holm nnt spring ''when Carl Gus-
tav officially comes of age," but
the pa!ace spokesman said that was news to him. c
J•mes Clartce, Allegheny Coun-
. ty's chiel clerk, has taken all be
can from the pigeOns. He i5 trying
a new weapOn. · Sitting on the out·
aide ledp:e above the prothonotary's
around-floor office in the City·
County Bui'ding will be two imi·
talion owls. Sports buffs told Clarke
th?y'll scare away hundreds of pi·
aeons 'who have made life miser·
able for pedestrians and Clarke.
The· situation got so bad, Clarke
said, that 11when we bad a painter
touching up the prothonotary sign
•.• somebody had lo bold an um-
brella over bis bead."
f')
Georg• Hi1rrl1on of the Beatles
says Vice President Sr:iro T. Ag..
new'1 criticism of rock music lY·
rics. including some used by the
British group. is of no interest to
him. "I don't know the· man. I
dont care what be thinks," Harri·
son told newsmen at Kennedy Air·
port Wednesday. Harrison, accom-
panied by bis wife. Patti, flew
from London on a business trip.
•• 5 ..-. . . 0 J. $ C(i
•
F1:day; OCtobfr JO, 1970 '
Heav11 Attaem -
Ijull in · Vietnam
Broke·
SAIGON (AP) -Nortb Vletz~
lroopl lhau...d the lull In the
war in Vietnam today wltb heavy att.c
on two allied posltioos. Four Americana,
three SootJI Vietnamese and 11 North
Vjetnamese were killed, and 2 1
Americana and 12 South Vietnamese were -U.S. offlclaJ1 bad been anticipating a
~ In enemy llClivity to "grab
beadliDH" just before the U.S. coo-...-1ooa1 elecllons nert Tue.day. They
Slid the North Vtetnamese hoped to 'In·,
f1uence Amerlcaa. voters agalost can-
didsta backed by the N h o a
Administration. .. ,
Ill the bUvleit ·-ul~ North Vie~
umese troops moving under cover of a mor:tar. barrage attacked Landing 2one
Oasis, a U.S. artillery base In the central
bigbJaNls defended also by .South Viet·
-forces.
· Tbe base 16 mUet southwest of Pleiku
WU bit by 40 mortar rounds that pinned
down the defenders. North Vietna.mne
sappers followed up w:lth a ground
assault firing rocket grenades and
....Wt rifles.
1be U.S. Command said t b re e
Americana were killed and 21 wounded in
the five-hour, predawn battJe, and some
or the 11'tillery was slightly dsmaged.
Field r<pOt1s Aid three South Viet·
name.e troops aho were killed and 11
wounded. The North Vietnamese lost 14 men. tome of them cut down by
American helicopter •mahips, •
Other North · v ..... ._. troops 28
miles north of Saigcm made a sim.illr at·
tack ... troops or the U.S. 11th Al'Jll9led
cavalry Reglmtllt In alibi bivouac 28
* * * Cambodia Drive
Stalled by Lack
Of Troops' Pay
TAING KAUK. Cambodia (AP)
Cambodia'• bigest offensive, cocked and
ready for more than a week, was ltalled
today by .... uaexpected mag. The troops
-not been paid. Cambodiaa officers aafd the problem
Isn't that the tuk force that they claim
numbers m<re than· JD,000 would refUll to flgbt uaJas psl<L
"But we think the men ought to have
90me money In their pockets before they
1ttack," Aid I lllaff offi"" 1t Taiag
Kaut beldquar18'S, U miles north of
Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital.
Ill fact, Lt. O>I. Utt.aye Suon Alme,
commander of one of the brigades otnmg
along Highway 6, says bis men are am-
IO<ls to get out lll1CI tight the North Viel·
namese, pay or no pay.
Senior Cambodian otncers believe the
soldiers will Ught better if paid becaU!e
that will make life easier for thelr wives
and ~dren, who share the bivouacs and
enemy mortar attacks.
Cambodian soldiers receive no rations
from the governmenl 'Ibey are paid well
by Asian standards lll1CI must find their
own food. A private receives about 1,700
rlels a monlh, the equlval~t of '33.
M a resuJt of tbe pay mag, aeveral
senior Cambodian officers have been
dispatched to Phnom Penh to pick up
large quantities of cub. 1'ley are ex-
pected back Saturday or Sunday.
Bonn Loses 125th
Starfighter Plane
BONN (UPI) -The West Gennsn air
force lost its 125th FlOG Starflghter to-
day. The supersonic aircraft crashed
near the Bavarian town of HilU:lrth, the
defense ministry said.
The pilol or the AmericaJHteeJcned
plane parachuted to safety.
by -.Re .S
mllM rort" ol SaJion. Oae IJld
two N6ftb Vietlllmele were killed and m
~were wounded In~.........,.
club, lind a former Viet Coq "'""'8 u
a scout wilb the Americans also WU
wounded. Field reports Aid · ...,.
armored personnel canien Wert damac·
ed.
1be attacks were tbe heaviest gmmd
asuulla an U.S. positions ¢nee last. Ju)y
21, wllea U .Amerlcans and II North Viet·
twne1e were· tilled bear Fire Bue RJ~ coni. In the aortbem part of the C<lllJIUy,
Since tbea South Vletnameoe ba ... have
COIM Glider heavy ahelllng, lll1CI there ,
~e been numerous 'sharp ground
clubel involving govef"nmeot &roopi. But
actlV!ty Involving U.S. forces bas been
mostly light.
Informed sources said the North Viet·
namese were aided Jn usembllng for-the
attacks by the cortallment of American
air operations this week due to storms
and hard rains lashing South Vietnam.
The U.S . Command reported only 819
American fighter-bomber strikes betwttn
8 a.m. Thursday and 8 a.m. today.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Command, in a
rush to meet President Nixon's latest
cutback of 40,000 American troops by
Dec. 31, announced the deactivation of
four more Army units and the return to
the United States or a flltb uni~ a total
cut in American strengtb•of about 2,000 men. Four of the units are · beijcopter
companies with about 100 aircraft. Some
of the helicopters already bav.e be e n
transferred lo the South Vietnamese air
roree.
Current U.S. strength in Vietnam Is m.,100 men, aod tbls is to be reduced to
3«,000 UDder Nixon's fifth phase of troop
cutback!.
Meanwb.Ue in Cambodia. ·government
troops bunted today along the Mekong
River across from Phnom Penh for Viel
Cong troops who ambushed a river Con·
voy bringinA: home: several hundred Cam~
bodian soldiers from combat training in
Vietnam. The fire from the bank killed 13
Cambodian soldiers and wounded SO.
* * * Floods Curklil
Viet Fighting
In Da Nang Area
SAIGON (UPI) -Torrential monsoon
rains: sent the Da Nang Rivet oit a ram-
page today, halting the war in that aria
and causing heavy Joss of civilian life.
But the holviert figbtlng In montba broke
out In the central highlands, the Mekong
Delta lll1CI Cambodia.
Phnom Penh dispatches Aid govern-
ment troops today launched an am·
phibiaus assault acroa the Melr;lrlg River
to root out CommurUat concentrations
near Moat Kraus. 12 miles aoutheest of
Phnom Peiib, where the Communista am-
bushed a government convoy 'l'Jnnday
nWit and killed 14 men.
Reports from the ft.Id said a force ol
1,500 Cambodians made at least three
landings from World War Il vintage land·
ing barges along a strttch of riverbank
running 10 to 20 miles southeast o( Phnom
Penh. One attempted landing was driven
back by ·heavy Communist fire. •
It was one of the largest operaUons
mounted by government forces on the
perimeter of Phnom Penh, and officials
said government troops, thwarted in their
attempts to land, crossed elsewhere and
were moving along the riverbanks. Air
support was called in and a spokesman
said indlcaUons were lhe Communists
suffered heavy 106SeS.
The rains: in the Da Nang area where
20 inches of rain fell during a 26-!rtrr
period sent water tm to lo( feet deep roll·
ing acroas some highways.
Rainstorms Sw~eep East
West Basks in Sun But Dakotas Blanketed by Snot()
2'entper9tllru .... """ "'""'· ·-.. ...
All•nt• .. • . ..
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f!i.tlf Md '"'"'1111 "*'" ~"" -!ltl'IY I fro 12 knol1 In •II.,,_. ~' .,.. ~y. HI"' too.' ,._
lOS AHOflf$ (UPIJ -Ti. N ..
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'""" ...... frk • -"'-"'"' '""· M lor1lllfM ......,Nd rain ""1oYt>ll-
"'' 1'Ple -'-_,Ion of ttle CMllrY
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f"•lr ... "*" -''""" '""' "" ... .,.,. ~ " nw .._ SWiii.
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ltc:W llltll tiit •·""-l.f ll'le o.lwt•t .,,. tht tMtr Mltllnlt9'
k!af!ol W J:ll JJll. .fJ Y•lley,
SATVADAY Al"'-"' cMI., -ltlW we1 trwldl ,.1,... f!lftt 1:0 •.Mo "' " "" """ ll'ltlfll, ""'"''"',. -,, .. , ""' t:t• '""" 2.1 ~ .. Ifft lrltt COl!lle'11btt " ...
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•
Amman Center
Hit by Figh\ing
\ By Uwlll<I Pnu -possibility o( ~ming Tel wu ra1'ed dur-\
Arsb ,_..mu lll1CI JorUalla lroopl ing the war and was rejected by the late
llMI .... Prl-•
·Tricia Nixon, while 'OD a cam·
paigo swing to North Dalcota
in support of Rep. Thomas
Kleppe, was made an honor·
ary princess of the Chippewa
Indian -tribe of North Dakota.
She is wearing. the beaded me-
dallion presented to~her at the
Turtle Mountain Indian Reser-
vation.
fooaht "th holvy IDICblaecuno in Egyptian President Gama! Abdel N....,.,
dot(n:town Amman~, y, kllllnl two who was .... ,ing to negotiate peace --W... Egypt pi< new Jcrda· "' j;j;f°~, ""°"'Iii 1 ... than u hours between the guerrillas and the JOl<lsnian
before the figbtiq', .-W·tb inaU&aUn& lut government. \ ·
trionth'1 civil war. ' Th~ -editor of Al Ahram, Mohamed
The ' ftchtinC with 50 e a I i be r Hassanein Heikal, said in an article in the
madlineguns centerod around the post of· flee in downtown Amman. lt continued newspaper today Israel would launch an
for It minutes and according to Palesti· Offensive against Egypt.
nlan aoun:es one perrllla and one Jorda· "'OUr troops will face an attempt to
nlmt secw1ty man were tilled. sound their very depths which may prove
Tbe, liUh n.-n.. Cll110 iftu King ~'66'-. to be the severest experience we have HUIKin named a new 17·man cabinet headed by Wasfi Tel, a veteran poUticw passed through ~ far," he said. '"The
known for his tougtmess and rightist test bu not slarted yet. but jl on the way
views. and its front will be wider and more com-
In Cairo, the IODllalficial .._per Al prehensfve tban we think. It will be 1 test
Ahram sakt Tel wu the "real power" of political, ' economic, military and
behind the mill~ cabloet of .Brig. ps•.-..1naical confrontation.•• Mohamed Daoud. ..i-appoiatment ,_~
touched off the civil war. It said Tel also In the United Nations, the United w~ t;be "moving power" behind the States proposed the cease-fire expiring
cabtoet or Ahmed Tou.ka.n.whicb took of· Nov. 5 be extended 'for another 90 days.
fice after Daoud migoed. Jn making the proposal to the General
According to the newspaper, the Assembly, U.S. Ambassador Charles W. Yost also suggested the United Nations
help restore confidence between Israel
Reagan Clings to Margin and Egypt so that "serious discusstons
which will permit rapid progress toward
a settlement" can be resumed.
Yost said "we pledge ourselves to do
everything possible to help get such talks
started and lo promote their &U<ftlsful
conclusion." As Tunney Spurts Ahead * * * Grafting Drains· SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -One week berore the election, Gov. Ronald Reagan
aintinUed to bold a big lead over
Assemblyman J... Unruh, while Rep.
John Tanoey appeared to be pulling away
from Seo. George Murphy, the California
Poll reported today.
Pollster ·Mervin D. Field also reported
that the Max Rafferty.W'dson Riles race
for state scbool 111perintendent is a toss-
up, while Evtlle Younger continues to
cling to a narrow lead in the fight for the
attorney general's job.
Field said that a three-day cross-sec-
tion aurvey completed· Tuesday night
showed Reagan with 49 percent and
Unruh with YT pircent. 1bt re.st were
undecided or supporting other candidates.
The figures are identical to those of
last May, lltbough Reagan bad widened
his margin ln between.
The poll showed' I b a.t. while ReaglO
main tams • his bqe margin amcmg
Republicans (llM), lt II tlle fact that be
only traill Unnill 51-25 UDODi Democrats
that may brlni him ~-
°''Hll (Uarub'•) poor ...,.... ia tbll
campaign bas been due primarily to hls
inability to muster snytbing like the full
poteotJal votlag atreagtb of t b e
.Jlemocratk Party-ia Calllomla," Field
asserted.
Tunney lead3 Murphy 4M1 In the U.S.
Senate race. Since Murphy held a 45-tl
lead laat May, successive polls have
showed the scales swlnglilg slowly but
-dily toward Tunney.
In the race for scbool tuperintendent, the pol) reported that It called "ooe or the most dramatic lhlfts in voter opinion
ever measured by the California Poll in a
quarter century • • ... ·
It gives challeqer Riles a 43-42 edge
over Rafferty. Only last August. Rafferty
led 54-29. The poll IQUeSted that an en--
dorsemenl by San Franclsc:o State
College President S. L Hayakawa was a
major boost to Hiler' campaign.
In the attorney general's race, Los
Angeles Di!trlcl ·Attorney Younger led
Deputy Attorney G<nerll Owles O'Brien
41-35, but here the heavy undecided vote
obviously will be a big factor. Younger
led 46--31 three weeks ago.
In the race for the four other major
posts and one . controvenial proposition
the poll found the following :
-Ll Gov. Ed J\elnec:ke bolds bis lead
Marxist Claims
He'll Rule Chile
By Coalition
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -Sllvador
Allende declared Thul'lday be 'trill never
lead his country down the road to com-
munism a.s presldent of Qrlle. He take•
office Tuesday.
Allende. a SociaJist.Marxist, told a
--news ·conrerence-tus· govemment·wtu re-
flect the common porpo1e._of.hLI 1i1·partY
Popular Unily coalition. Chile's wtll~
ganized Communist party is regarded as
the dominant force in Popalar Unity .
The a.year-old president~ltet. rock-
ing back and rcrtb ln 1 higt>.back<d red
leather chair, scolded 1 Pangmyan re-porter ....,. asked him K Chile wu
"'marchlng towanf commanism.''
"My government will reprtsent the
f~ that make up Popular Unity, plus
the workers, farmers and amaU l>uainess
men of Chile." Allende said.
Allende dJd admit, however, that lh6
12,000 Po,Pl:Jlar Action Commlltets his
coalition set up during the election ctm.
Pillin would conUnue to exist u 1'j>olltl·
cal education school8." Tbe CommunlslS
conlrol m08l of these c:ommlttea .
Allende announced he would nallonal-tse foreign.owned companies "within the
framework of the law" and not "with 1
motive of revenge." N1UonalluUoo wp
one of his cunpatsn promises.
An.r hls lllluguraJ he will natlonallze
the large copper, iron ore and nitrite
mining operaUons, then later "the coun.
try wUI be lnfonned or what other
m...,..,u.. we an (OlnC to n1Uonaliu,"
bl uld.
-
over llemocr•t Alfnd Alquia~ 48-,10.
-In the race for aeaetary of atate.
Democrat EdmlUld G. Brown Jr, Judi
Republican J a m e 1 Flourooy, C-3:9.
Brown led ~ three ...W ago.
-Incumbent Controller Hou Ito ft
Flournoy leads Democrat R o a a I d
Cameron by a hefty 4$-21 margin.
-Treasurer Ivy Baker Priest leads
Democrat Milton Gordon, 56-31.
Proposition 18, which authoriles the uae
of up to 25 percent of gas tax revenue,,
for public transportation and air polluUon
control, Jed 52-21 percent
* * * Students 'Elect'
Reagan, Tunney
l1i School Vote
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) A
statewide poll of IOIDe 30,000 high school
students bu given Gov. Ronald Reagan a
narrow victory over Jess Unruh.
Len Apcar, 17, governor of 1be Jun:ior
Statesman Foundation or Palo Alto, said
' lburaday Reqsn received 4'.I perunt
of the t.en-age votes and Unruh 41.1 per·
cent. The poll was taken from ao
Northern and Southern California schools.
Apcar, a San c.&rlos High Scbool terllor,
Aid the poll Indicated that high school
students are not as liberal or ndical u
some of their leaders think.
r "They vote a )9t like their pamrta," be __
sald, "but ~re maybe not as con-
servative as their parents: -but they're
mt that liberal."
Apcar said only 8.7 percent voted for
Ricardo Romo, the Paace and Freedom
Party candidate for governor, and only
3.4 percent favored Amert ca ft
Independent Porty candidate William
Shearer.
Lebanon Coffer;
No Money. Left
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Premier
Saeb Salam has warned Lebanon the
state treasury has been plundered by
graft and now is empty.
"We came to power to find that the
state treasury is totally empty," Salam
said in a tek!vision interview Thursday.
He was ·appointed premier Oct. 5 and
formed a .. government of experts" e.ijh1
days" later.
Salam cited what newspapers today
called "yet another scandal'' during the
administration of former Premier Rashid
Karami, who was also finance rnini3ter.
Salam ~id a prison under construction
easf of Beirut will cost fl million by the
time it ls fmished as against 1n orlgiall
estimate of $2 mUUon.,
During parliamentary debate on his
government's policy statement last week.
charges were made that three scandals
jnvolved the commwlications: sector .of
the economy.
They were said to involve deals with
three French companies. Twice: this week
Ambassador Bernard du FoumJer of
Frince has expressed his government's
dissatisfaction with the way lbe alkga-
tions have been "unduly dramatir.ed."
The treasury was robbed of million.. of
dollars in the three deals, asserted the
former minister of communications,
Michel Murr.
Salam declared on television Chat
despite the empty treasury, there wu no
need to panic.
"Lebanoo.'1 over.all financial situation
IJ sound, .. he claimed.
' Salam bas ordered the formation of a
ministerial committee to investigate the
allegations of graft.
Beatk Vi1lu ' . •
Former BeaUe George Harrison, following a recent visiting Lrend by
his ex·group mates Paul McCartney, John Lennon and Ringo Starr,
is in the U.S. to discuss plans for the release of bis new album. All
the Beatles have visited here In recent week s in support of lndJvld-
ual business -
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•
DAILY PILOT
R aid ,Net.s
B,ig(;ang
Settlemeat 'Near'I
GM -Talks Hit 'Blackout~
U.S.~ Russia\
Heating Up
Over Plane
WASHINGTON (Al') -The
Uniled States, dbplaying ils
fll'!t publlc diplomatic irri-
taUon over the Soviet refusal
to release a U.S. Anny plane
and Its h igh ·rawkl n g
pa51engers, tias c h a r g e d
Moscow with violating U.S.-
Russlan consular agreements.
Ali<r elghl days of talklog ta
restrai n ed, aplbnistic
language, the State Depart-
ment Thursday called for the
immediate release of the
passengers who include two
· American generals.
A statement h&@ded to
Soviet Ambassadcr Anatoly F.
DOOrynin said, "There is M
justification for any further
delay by the Soviet Union ."
. -
Of Rebels ~ . '
NE\\' YORK (UPI) -police I
seized Thurl(lay two, ball:i:!\
•P!lll leade~ of the ·largest
coalition of Negro street gangs
in Chicago as they aOel~Y
wefe preparing to . jbin Black
Panther leader E J·d r 1 d 'I fJ
Cleaver in Algeria_. ,
cago detectives j9ibed in
raid on. a ,two-~oom
at the Hotel Croydon on
Manhattan's fashionable east
side. Arrested Yiert Jett Fort. ,
28, wanted on cNuges of at-
tempted murder and ag-
gravated kidnwing, a ft d
Chester Evans~ Jr., 26, wanted ·
on double murder, bond j~
pii>g and narcotics charges.
Fort was identified by
Chlcago offtcers as piesident
of tbe "top 21 •r. of the'
Blackstone Nation', the con-
glomerate which includes the
Blackstooo Rangers, of wlii<:h
Fort was founder. 'Evans was ·
saio .also to be a mtmber 6f
the ruling group, ·They wer e
held wlthoot bail peodh\g ar-
rival of warrii'its froin Illinois. ·
.Arrested With them were
Pam . Valenzuela, 19, and Ul'I TelW"'-
Janice Conners, 18, who was G ' • trailed 1rom aucago to 'New 1inuaen S Target.
York Wednesday night and led Oiicago detectives to the Rafael Viera, 22 t a~quitted in June in.the death of
Croydon. Sbe was asleep at one Detroit policeman and the wounding of another.
the time of the raid. but ~tiss saict1'harsday-that two recent attempts have been
Valuepzela and the two made on his life by gunmen in the streets of Ne\v
tugiUves were smoking mari-York. Clarence Fuller, co-defendant in the Detroit
juana in the living room. case.A was stabb.ed to dealh; \Vednesday.
1be girls were held in $4,500 ---'---------'-----"-----
bail each en· charges -cf
"hindering prosecution" and
possession of marijuana. Race Riots Shut Schools
•
.Who ·C.res?
Meanwhile, the Soviets con·
tinued to portray the plane's
landing iri Russ.ia across the
Turkish bOrder as a OOstile act
and linked it to alleited reccn-
riaissmte Oights from U.S.
bases.
A commentary in the Soviet
news agency Tass said the in·
cident "has again drawn the
attention of the world public to
the serious and constant threat or oeace," from "400 large and
2.000 small American· war
bases on foreign territories."
Police said they ·tound no
weapons bu~· did fmd . papers·
indicating Fort_ and . Eyans
were . planning-· to leave for
Algeria. whkb is becomihg a
refuge for American revolu-
tionaries. Police said Fort
planned to use the aitas of the
Rev. Lawrence Jordan.
TRENroN, N.J . (AP) -Ci-jured and 32 arrested.
ty·schools were or®,red closed At the height of t b e
today 1n an· attempt to cool off disturbatK:eS 'Iburaday, Mayor
racial Clashes isparked by im· Arthur H. Holland declared a
plementation of a pupil busing "local disaster emergency"
plan. and ordered a 9 ·p.m. to dawn
Forty persons had been in· -cilrfew.
Ne ethef • ,.. .. ,,,., 111 the
w•rld c•ret' •kwt .,.,., co111m11•
nity lik• your •om11111njty d•ilv
n•wip•p•r-dM1. lt't ihe DAILY
PILOT.
The American bases, Tass
said. are "situated in the im -
mediate vicinity of the Soviet
Union and other Socialist
countries and are widely used
for espionage and other hostile
activities."
The United States maintains
the small white plane new into
Soviet territory accidentally.
~~ ·the generals. an
Amtrican major . anif a
Turidlh colonel were. oo board
for what the U.S .. says was a
tour of TurkiSh border in·
stalliUons.
Six Kent
·1ndictees
Mis sing
Nurse Wins
Air Force
Skirmislt,
. SEAITLE. Wash:' (UPI) -
capt. Susan R. Struck, an un-
married pregnant _nurse, will ~
remain in the Air Force at
least until Nov. IO pending full
hearing of her Case before a
three-judge panel. '
Judge Eugene Wrightof the
9th Circuit Court of Appeall
issued a t empo r ary
restraining ~rder Thursday
preventing the Air Force from·
discharging the nurse.
Wright issUed..bis order afle.r
a lower court judge had tum·
ed. down Capt Struclt'1 pleas.
The apj>eals . judge gave
Capt. Struclt's attorneys until
Nov. 5 to file mctionS and the
KENT, OhiQ (UPI) Air -Force UnUl "Nciv. 10 to re-.
Authorities said Thursday they ply, and ordered th~ hearing
were unab1e to locate six of 25 before the three-judge panel.
persons indicted by a ~ial Mike Rosen of fhe American
grand jury in connection with Civil Liberties Union 58.id he
last spring's disturbances at wants the three ju~es to
Kent state University. order a c®rt bearing to test
Nil)eteen persons have ~n. the e-0nstitutionality cf the Air
taken in custody but six others Force regulation under which
bav~ not. been located, despite Capt. Struck wis to be
the fact detectives "passed the dis$arged:
word" they are wanted. Wright issued his order after
It also was learned the.' U~S. DisiriCt Judge.Willi8m N
grand jury may return more Goodwin refused. ·
indi.ctments _in ccnnection with Capt. Struck was to have
"' month-long investigation of been diScharged at midnight
the Kent State dlstrubanc"', Wednesday but her attornef!
wbich were climued May 4 obtained a 24-hour stay from a
wben four students wtre shot federal judge in Tacoma
to death by Ohio National Goodwin's nillng bad lilted
~n. that atay.
•
. . .
GOOD AS GOLD,GIFTS
Waich in $20 gold.piece, $2.000.
$1 O gold piece watch. $1,200.
$2.50 gold piece ring. $180.
Liberty Head charm, $215.
Cuff links of $2.50 gold piece, $250.
. CfMlr~ Ac~h 111¥11~ , A!Mrluli E~PA»
ll•nkAlfltrlurd Rd Mll1ter °*'9t. to..
SL.A.VICK'S
J eweJers Since 1917
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BE.(CH -6<14-1310
.
"n. U.NCM)f"T ......
REMOTE •to11-1~-~
IPfC.lALI
eo.p.ct~~
--TV, j' CablNI. • gnir.d ...-w-
Cokw MOeNild ..
Sihlef cotor .... r11.rT-..c... -
' .Jn ~ •. ~
.. · Newl197l zerlit~:llaridcr~ted quality 16'."· Color ~o.rtable with Zenith's
... o, ·. exclusive . .. SPACE .COM.MAND9
·fOrooly
Zenith haiideraftld. q._allty for unrivaled dependability
• z.-A1C..'..:'A"'°"'9lc ,_ ....... C..
"91 -.ieeuOnititllr line hlnet color TY
instanUy -Mn perfecU JOUf \JHf' ti-.
• z ....... .....,.,.._ ,...._ o..h -
eomt>ine• famolllli Zenith handei"al19d o..
pend.ability with excl\Jrtg solMkl•le ~
•111Cn. tuNno avtorNlic.altr.
• ............. Pk._. T___..,, grelltlf Die. • ..,. Coe•• •re 19911al9 lof hue, co1c11
M• brigtllneu with reddel'" reltl, bt!QMef , M¥et and ~. •nd •~ placed lligh 1>"
;t""'!I ~ lllOl'e briltiatnt blUiM. 1'le * * giiiea1er~11ience.
SPACE COMMAND• 100 REMOTE CONTROL
Just pren the button on ltle 1m1ll contriJI unit yoa hold tn your
hand to change VHF chanl'lels and tum aet on or of!. Ooe but·
lonctoes ii ari! No need'° IUfPI TV otf lll'lrNlllt)' at let!
BUY. NOW! LIMITED QUANTITIES!
TV and
APPLIANCE
IN HA.DOI CINTll
JJ•. HAI.IOI 11.n.
COSTA MW. l•tTIJ1
Opew .M-f ood Friiloy -t:JO
...... declared b<wtltl...r. Th<.r==/;:========~=;;;;;~~¥==:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;==~::::::::::=====:::::~::==========::~
executiooo -led bJ that of
Witeh Probe
Evidence F ourul in. ~~m
the · 11ldJan woma• -began, . ' Ghoose One of the Many
·DANVERS, IWs. (AP) -ArdJeoloclsta have uncovered
new evidence linked to the
wlf4:1!craf.t lly!teria for which
20 rsons were executed. in l l----n~eii:6YSilem liill02.
and'. in: all It ,pe~ Wert r ,,/.ast& South~,,.. c,.,,.,,., ,.,,.., h'l"Red'-and-one pieSRd 1o,1-.:i.-~vv~ · ,,,_,,, ~r~.
:&:;0;,.";"eatJ> • pile ~1 · ()fflces to Serve You:
. Art Llnkletter Shows You
aNew_Way_to Beat Inflation
· · ... Just Join
Coast & Southern Fed6rat
Olfersc.Y.auih.ese __
Highest Prevailing Rates: · ~lc h a rd Tras.k , i.
N9!theastem Un l v er sit y
graduate history student, and
ar_cheologist Roland Robbins
say they discovered the fou11·
datilW of the home ol the
Rev. Samuel Parris.
It was P11'111' I-year-old
dmchter Elizabeth and an 11·
yar-<>111 -who, excited by talts of wllchcnl\ lold by
an Jnd1an woman, SCTftn'led
aod sbi\>er..t. •v<l'JI nigbl aod
The archeolb(i1ts-Unc0vered
cellar wans abcut a rdot below
the surface of e fi~ wb,ere
Parris'· honle was believed to
haft stqod, . . .
Further di....... aided b &&...... _y
stul}ent . vOhmteen. unearthed
a pewter spooo, a oobl dated
!Sit aod a fragmem of
chinaware bearing the iiHle1a
of Parris and bis wife.
Y ·OTI FOR
. . IEVERLY LANGSTON
NIWPOIT·MIU SCHOOL IOAID
I. l11lclt11t-N1wport·M
0
11• SchMI D11trlct Sit1c1 1961
2. P.T.A. lnvol¥ttl'ltftt-9 Yttn-lotrcl So11or 1 School I M11t
H1th School, • 1t Membtr of P1r111t Corp., Co1t1 M111 Hi9h School Si11c:1
..., l11Ctpti111. • -
4, vtc1-P,..1!cl111t Co(ft M111 Hit~ locut•r Ch1b. QI.,_ hnr ....... •1 .,..... M.. t.M..
'tMAIN Ofl'ICE:tthl Hiii, Loe Anoe•• 923-1351 ,..
WILIHIAI el GRAMERCY PLACE:393S Wlllh1,. BtYd.,'L.A.. 311-1265
LA. CMC CINTJ.R: 2nd &. BroadWQ • 121-11G2
*HUNT1NCITCHI HACH: 91 Huntlrigtot\"Ctnttr·• (71'4) 807·1047 . : '
IAMTA-LOAll'lllMCIA°'*"':
1905 N. MUI St.• (71'4} 547.ft57
'6IMTA MotCA: 711WllltllrtBlvd.•3ll&07a * ..... PIDll_O: 10fl • PlcHk: • 131-1341 'WaT CO-. Ealtllnd~C11'.•S31-210t
*PANORAMA CITY:..,, van~ awd.. an.11i1
1rTAllZANA: 11751 v.ntura Bouteward • MM114
*LOllll l lACH: 3rd l locUlt '•37·7411
,*O,. ~ -9 am to l Pll Diiiy Hoen-! 1111to4 p11
ASSETS OVER $JOO MIWON
•
&he InsldelS. Oob .
.
With 1 $2~ balanco In your aavlngo
occ:i>unt,~ 1r'o ellglblt ID -
•member, SUbltan11al 11vlng1 •r.
IVlllablo-pur<hulog many lte...
• 1ne1ui:t1ng aulDmoblleo, fUmiMe, ·
• eppllon_ J_l(Y. Pluo l!IOlrf
• free aemces -money Ordtflt
· . Nfe depc>Jft boxea. etc.
COMP0UN~' DAILY ANlfPAtD OUARTUILY.~
. 5.00"'·5.13"-
Paaaboolc; No Minimum.
5.25 "•·5.39"°
lllrw Monill Clfllflc:ot8; No Mlrilmum.
5.75%-5.92.">'-
on .. v.., cert1flcata; SI flllJ Minimum.
e.00%.6.18'/o ' T"?"YMr Ce!lmcote; $5,000 Minimum.
• EftKtM AMwJ Elm/nga
• INSURAN~ TO $2Q,OOO
.
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! :.
; .. .. ..
:
.. ..
• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
NO -on Amendment I(
Shall the charier be pmtndtd to provide for an e:ltcti~
mayor, 1ot1d lhat oil deJ>Qftm~ntr, boards cmd commW1mu
be eslablishtd by ordinance. and requiring comptmaticm
/or councilmen be se t by public he:oring and ordinanct1
That is the triple-barreled question that will be put
to Huntington Beach voters under Charter Amendment
K Tuesday. It's an unfortunate mouthful, not only be-
cause the syntax is diUicult to digest. but because it
combines three issues worthy of separate consideration.
TakinJ! them in reverse. we -believe city councilmen
v.rho presently receive a $175 salary and blanket expens•
es of $125 a month, are underpaid. Simply put, the re-
muneration does not match the service. There must be ~reater &>mpensation if citizens of high caliber are to
be expectea to continue to seek public office.
Support could be given therefore to this part of the
question which theoretically would result in a reason-
able increase.
The second point -that all city departments,
boards and commissions be established by ordinance -
also has meril The object is to give the council, the
city's elected representatives, power to reorganize de-
partments, perhaps by combining some and aplilting
others, for ireater efficiency. ·
PresenUy, several departments are provided for
by the city charter and the council may not restructure
them. We recognize that these provisions were made to
keep politics in city hall to a minimum and guarantee
consistent government, but we consider the present
situation too rigid and that the council should be abla
to maneuver the municipal machine with flexibility.
lt is the call for an elective mayor which we
must quehion. The proposal to have a mayor working
for the city and its citizens full time is well intentioned,
and it bas meritorious qualities. But it may prove dan-
gerous. II has been charged that ii would undermine the
council-city administrator form of government, but an
even bigger weakness lies in the possibility that an in·
competent demagogue might wage an expensive cam·
palgn and win 1election. The city could have a mayor
who would be at loggerheads with the council and who
would thu s create a deep division Ln the community.
For this reason, mainly, the DAILY PILOT recom·
mends a 11No" vote.on amendment K.
YES . on Proposition B
The DAILY PILOT, along with numerous West
Orange County organizations and associations, has al·
ready endorsed the 69-cent tax override sought by the
Huntington Beach Union High School District.
It is Proposition B on the ballot and is a vital issue
if the schools are to continue offering a pro~r range of
programs taught by well qualified teachers.
DaHarb Is the Choice
The Huntington Beach City School District is •I"
proachlng a critical pe riod In Its growth. Not only are
more elementary schools needed, but thousands of new
residents are clamoring for better educational pro-
grams in the traditionally conservative district.
Such things as a mentally gifted program, more
help for slow readers, educationally handicapped pro-
grams, teachers' aides and better school equipment -
all of which are offered by neighboring districts -are
needed in the city school district.
The DAILY PILOT recommends that on Nov. 3
voters put Louis DaHarb, an airline pilot, on the dis.
trict•s board of trustees. DaHarb's campaign has
stressed the need for new educational programs and he
bas shown an awareness of the state and federal funds
available to finance such changes.
I
\
..
<SJI \•• /V\AtJ i..b•,.....:a
H .SPGOK OF THE YEAR
A Season of
Recol1.ection,
Premonition
VCI Student Speaks Out Agalast Campus ViOlence
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
'We Are Oppressed by the Radicals'
The human memory Is like autumn, a
sea.son ol bof,h recollection and premoru.
&ion. Jt is als6 like autumn in that It is a
harvest. The reward of the gNlt!n and
growing years is the golden sheaf of
mefuofies-one is 1efrwith in the Indian
tiummer years of life.
Your own memory crop is bountiful if
you can look back aod remember when-
THERE REALI. Y wasn 't much need
for an alann clock .. because there was · · •
always a rooster , : ,
somewhere in the •. ~
_neighborhood to an-·--rs'
nounce the dawn. ( /'.!..!i\ Many a tanner · ~-~ ·
made pin money by ... .,,
hilching up his team
of horses and charg-
ing Sunday motor· .
jst& SS to haul their stranded cars out of
mudholes.
Everybody in America seemed to start
munching raisins all at once after word
was spread that they put more iron in
)'our system .
During the flapper era of the 1920's,
women for the first time began to invade
men's barbershops, thereby riling the old·
timers and forcing barbers to hide their
copies of the lurid Police Gazelle.
TUE NATION RAD more pot·bellicd
11toves ttian pot-bellied people.
Sometimes the lights in a movie house
were flashed Oft an(I the film stopped SCI
the manager could come out and an-
nounce, "The show will not continue
unless you k.ids in the front row quit
shooting beans al the piano player."
The best horseshoe pitcher in a small
town was looked up to -even I.bough he
always seemed too busy lo find steady
l'l'Otk.
P.1any a man who lived a long Ure died
in the same bed and same room be was
born in. Neither babies nor dogs were expecled
to subsist on canned foods.
What's all the russ over non-de-
nominational lnvocaUons in Hunt·
ington Beach? No amount of pray•
ing will help that city council
-D. T.
nit ........ ......,. ,....,,. """"' ..
-nir ... " .. .....-.....
,_ .... "'" " ........ .... Dl6lr ,_
YOU COULD become a locaJ ce:lebrily
if by .some lucky chance you had met
heavyweight champion John L. Sullivan
in a bar and shaken hands with him.
After the birth of their sixth clu1d,
falher and mother had 10 decide whet.her
it Woul dbe cheaper to get a cow or go
on buying milk from the store.
You could tell a gangster by his black
hat and dark shirts and the fact he
always hung around cheap night clubs.
It was a senUmenllil day for MOtber
when she got a new gas stove and threw
away the old wood-and<0al-buming iron
monster that had been in the kitchen long
years.
To th e Editor :
1, as a student of UCJ, am tired of the
speeches, the protests. the riots , the bom-
bings and the kidnapings in the name of
the "opPressed people."
I say we, as the general pubUc, are op.
pressed by the radical minority. Radicals
are acting as guerrillas, causing so-called
••spon taneou.s" riots and bomblnga. 1bey
are inviting backlash, which will curtail
our freedom s, achieving, in the end, just
the opposite of what they set out to do.
These radicals only make Ufe more dif·
ficul t instead of being constructive.
At.L AMERICANS lose if such actions
conlinue.
I am not a poliUcal actlvist. I am a
white, middle-class college student. I am
part of the "silent majority." But 1 can-
not remain silent while life, property and
freedom are at stake.
Last year on the Irvine campus, two
student strikes were held. Steven Shapiro
u·as lauded and Angela Davis spoke.
\Vlndows and buildings were covered wilt.
anli·war, anti-establishment slogans.
111'.any rallies were held.
TITTS YEAR, within three weeks of the
. start of school, one of the Chicago Seven
KIDS GOT A thrill out of soaping the attempted lo enhance revolutionary spirit
linoleum.covered floor of a big, ol<f.. in local radicals. Since, a university car
fashioned bathroom and seeing. how far t and the Slanrord Research Institute have
theY, could slide across It on their soaped been bombed, and now the university
bellies. Bank of America has been burned out.
Jn most of America a fellow had to What or \\•ho is next?
think real hard to find a re1.90n for I persona!Jy do not favor repression
staying up alter ml~lght. . any more than any other person. But in
Before taking off 1n a~ airplane, the the light of recent deveklpments,
pilot first had to wind up its propeller. especially the increase in violence In the
The favorite pinup girls of World War ti last few weeks, I feel that the time has
soldie rs was Faye Emerson and Belly come to put pressure on the radicals _
Grable. they must not be allowed to hide within
KIDS WHEN digging a backyard cave
always conjured up the dream or going
all the way throUgh the earth and
wondered if the first person they met on
the other sjde woukl speak Chinese.
Every child also hoped to be the first to
catch any new diJease that appeartd in
his class.
'l1le most popular air condiUoner in hot
weather was a cardbolrd fan. •
1be key word of the American credo
was opportunity -not security.
Those were the days -remember?
the university system where they have
free reign to import infl ammatory ultra·
left leaders or organize rallies, which.
directly or indirectly, influence and con-
done terrorist activities.
IRA BA.'<TER
Lefral, Illegal Drugs
To the Editor:
Are you worried about your school-age
children? Afra id they may be lured into
trying some of that narcotic everyone is
talking about : marijuana? You can pre-
vent this!
Laws That Kill Jobs Observe your chlld very closely. If he Is
depressed. give him one of your diet pills,
that shoul d pep him up. This may,
however, make him nervous. If this oc-
curs, well . your tranquilizers that ha,•e
kept you calm for all these years should Fiscal and mooetary restraint aimed at
controlling inflation a.re genera\ly regard·
ed as principal reasons for rising
unemployment in recent months. No
doubt, any succe5sful effort to curb in-
flalkln "·Ill bring some adjustments arid
even hardships which make people tend
to for get that ronUnued lnOatlon wlll
bring far greater adjustmtnll ind far
t;reater hardships. Howr:ver, all of the
blame for rising unemployment should
not go to current anti-inflationary
mt.a1ures. The maze or laws and restric-
tions that have beromc part of aovem-~l are among the greatest Job kllltt1.
Quotes
Loeeb)'I E. Haatea. Pltasaot 11111 -
.. ,, each famlly would 10lve Its own
pn>blom> f111t and lhen work hand In
band wltb hiUow Americans to make this
1 better pfic:e to Uve, we would see
mlnrcln every dly like the Apollo IS
r-·--.~--,.,.-•. ,,.--~· '
. ' ' Guee& Edl ...... l \. . .., ' . . •
THE PUBLICATION, Pocllic Business,
reports oa the latest job-kllliag move in
congress. It tells oC "A new concept of
federal m.lnlmum wage fWng. •. " that
haa been ollered in COngress. By 1172,
I.be proposal would set wage minimums
at $2.50 on hour from the present 11.50.
Tile ~ alJO oontainl other bullt·ln
restriCUons and regutationt. The end
result of these would be the f\D'lhtr nar--
rowlng of job opportunity for unskilled
and part.time worwa.
COUN11..ESS authorities have shown,
"1th faclt and flgurts, that f!Vtty timt
there ts 1 boost In UM! minimum waat,
~ Wl<lllpioyment jwnpo -cemln groupo. And the ttalollllC Impact of a
minimum wagelincn.,. lddo lud to the
fires ol infiatlon and dots mucb to olftet
or cancel out l'Oulnt otltmpll to ..At1'11
in01Uoo.
recoYll'1·'' ,.....
,
B11 Geo"!Je--
Deor George:
I have enjoyed your household
hint column and wonder ii You
could tell me some way to make
use of those li11y piecu of left~vtt
balh soap? ..
HOUSEWIFE
Dear llou1eWife:
Yes! Small slivers of bar soap
may be melted down and, using
cardboard milk cartons, molded
Into attractJve, v a r I co Io r e d
candles! What a conver$8ll0'1
piece!
(Yeoll , • , particularly when you
try to light lh<'m. 1 wtsh I would
aet more of the UOUS<hold Hlnt
column'• mall by mistake. • •• II
mal"' my whole dAy.)
(Send your problems to O<orge,
the nation's Oftly e.xpe:rt o n
•blolutely evtrythlng.)
Mailbox
LtZttrt from rtadtr1 ore toelcom.e:.
Normally writer• ihould conuey their
mes.sages in SOO word.! or less. The:
right to cmukn.te: letter• to fit $J>GCe
or eliminate libel reserocd. All ltt-
ttr1 must include signa.tur1 and moif..
ing address, but names ma11 be: urltho
held on re:quest t/ tu/ficient f"taaon
is apparent. Poe:tf"y will not be: pub-
lished.
calm him down.
IF BE SBOUW develop a phobia
against your pills, or if his desire is to
use drugs socially, take him to a cocktail
party. Give him a martiru. That should
keep him happy.
Now your child Is going in the right
direction. He's not at a pot party or on
the street, he's probably at a cocktail
party with a lampshade on his bead.
Whert he says his friends are smoking
their intoxicants, it is time for the
clincher; offer him one of your cigaret·
tes. He won't like lt at first, but tell hlin
how long it took you to get used to it, and
show him ways to hold it that look smart.
Show him how to blow smoke rings.
YOU ARE AIMOST there. Now you
must tell your children to beware the
"friendly stranger" who may offer him
an innocent looking cigarette, which is
••marijuana, the killer drug !" Explain
that it is a powerful narcoUc in which
lurks murder, death and Insanity.
Then. to wrap It up, show him films of
a heroin addict going through cold·t.urkey
\Yithdrawal and assure him this is where
smoking naraitlcs will get him.
JAMES R. BUTLER
Proposition 18
To the Editor:
Last week you presented the DAILY
PILOT'S position on the propositions a~
peartng on the Nov. 3 Ballot.
1 believe these to be sincere and honest
opinions. I don't believe that your study
of Proposition 18 was quite extensive
enough.
Th e Automobile Club's basic vl~int
ts for smog control and research and
rapid transit, but we are against the pro-
posed method or financing and in·
adequate controls.
A.L.wm
Mana1er South Los Angeles District Office
Automobile Club of
Southern California
Reuae Groeer11 Bags
To the Editor:
AJ our contribution to the fight against
mounting trash and untold waste or our .
precious natural resources, we sboppera:
can take our used grocery bags back to
the market each week for our new orders
until they are no longer reusable.
For other typu of atorts, we can
refuse all unnecel!Ar)' wrappings and
double up on bags whenever possible.
MRS. VICTOR WASB!N
People PoliHtlon
To the Editor:
The proposed new city of Irv!,,. which
I! estJmated to bring an added 7$,000
{eventually 450,000) Increase In popul•
tlon Into this area ts An excellent ex:ample
of people pollution And I can 't understand
why there baSD't bcoa • D1&111ive pn>test
from the people who Uve along the
Orange Coast.
My family moved to Costa Mesa from
Los Angeles 11 years ago to get aw ay
from the crowded condJtions there, we
have enjoyed the "elbow room" and com-
paratively clean air here, but there will
soon be no di!fereiice between the two.
The whole concept of the new city is
repulalve and disgusting.
DOROTHY ZUBWALT
Who Can We Belle..e
To the Editor:
Just recently a history teacher at our
school abowed me two issues of Life
magazine. I didn't thinl< anything of ii un-
til I realized that 'both issues contained
the same picture illustraUng two dif-
ferent storles!
One issue was dated Oct. 17, 1969, and
the caption beneath the picture stated
that It was taken at the scene of a stu·
dent riot at Princeton University. It
showed a good example of poUce brutali·
ty.
The other issue was an earlier iuue of
Lile -December 8. 1968. The very same
picture was printedi the only difference
being that it was enlarged. This was
surprising enough, but what even further
surprised me was the fact that the cap-
tion beneath this picture stated that it
was not a student riot at Princeton, but a
picture of the Chicago riots!
COINCIDENCE? I don't think so. How
disappointing to learn that a magazine
will find a good example of something (In
this case, police brutality) and use it in
two different instances. Magazines make
up a large part of the news media, and
when these occurrences happen, who can
we beli eve?
I only hope that Life magazine, and all
other magazines will start presenting the
real facts, so we can once more put our
faith in them as a means of finding out
what is going on in our world today.
DEBI MILHOLLAND
High School Student
No Traiultlon Pl•1t
To the Editor:
As I read basingly disturbing
uriemployment figures l find It appalling
that the Nixon administration and
memben or Congress did not have a
transition plan ready to put into effect
immediately when defense contracts
were cut back.
Many areas, too numerous to menUon,
could have been part oil the pro-
gram .. .low<0st housing, t r a n 1 l t
systems, hospitals, child care centers,
training centers .•• to name but a few.
We might add another program -
"cure the incurables by 1t75." With that
kind or goal we hit lhe moon In a lhort
time.
It'• not too late to remind condidoies!
KEN JOHNSON
A1•llUt B•rke
To the Editor:
As a five.year aublcrlber to the DAILY
PILar I was more-than • IJtUe dill~·
pointed in your bacl<lng of 10th Aaembly
District candidate and incumben~ R~
Burke-I can u-Ill< PIUl'l"s
stind: "All things beinl equal we'll en-
dorse a Republican." I don't feel,
howevu, that anything or anyone la:
equal In thls case.
Although Mr: Burke was pretenl, he
just dldn't vote ca many bills, lncludi.ns
J) Governor Reagan's but requiring an
unrelated male adult living In a welf•re
homo to pay his ...., w~: new did he v•
I.
for 2) equal pay for men and women !or
equal work.
BE om VOTE• again.st AB 79 an anti-
smog bill to control lead in gasoline. He
lost 59-3 and introduced oil company sup.
ported amendments to cripple the bill.
Mr. Burke worked 12 years for an oil
company so is it any wonder that he said
in his Bob Burke Reports from
Sacramento, July 1970 (p. 3) "There is no
hard evidence that lead ct>ntamination I !
from burning of gasoline containing
tetraethyl lead will ever reach dangerous
levels."
Your own newspaper carried the report
that anti-poDutlon groups have given Bob
Burke a rating of "bad" all across the
board for his stand. It aeems to me that
seems to indicate, he is working NOT for
hls constituents who sent him to
Sacramento, but for the oil companies. ~
ON THE OTHER side or the coin yc.;,
wrote that Y01J were not impressed witfl
Mr. Lloyd Nocker's record of qualifica· 1
lions. If the fact that Mr. Nocker is 9
well-respected attorney 1 Who Was e I
former Orange County Deputy DistriCt
Attorney, former U.S. Army co~
terintelligence agent and former u.f.
Navy investigator does not impress yoo
with at least Mr. Nocker's unini· ·;I
peachable character, then I doubt th!t
you have done any investigation at ad. I
Also, Mr. Nocker has spent houis
researching our pollution problems and E
indeed well qualified to speak in thk
area. His past record should at least gi-k
the voter the confidence that Mr. NockOr
is qualified to speak about enforcing Hi!
law, making our courts cost the taxpayli
less, etc. •
Indeed, in this case nothing is equal <i'
even comparable and I challenge you ii
print this. ;
(MRS.) JOAN S. PAUL
'
Grant Same Respeet ·
To the Editor : ,
Huntington Beach City Councilman .(!
I
Coen has asked the clergymen giving tb£ '
invocation at council meetings to refraih I
from using the name of Our Lord anlt
Saviour, Jesus Christ, beca\lle Jt offenr'N
him, yet he introduced the,. issue d:
fluoridation of our public wafer systedl
without regard for those who consider tie
use of nuorldated water to be contrary fb
their religious principles. -t
SINCE BE demands respect aod cod.
slderation for his religion, he sbou1'f
grant the same respect for others. ct
doesn't he know that there are: several
religious groups thnt bold these views? •
The only honorable course for him _,
follow under the circumstances is to rt-
quest the city councU to reconsider and to
reverse theJr action on thh issue. •
PAUL! MO$'
Friday, October 30, 1970
Tiu 1dilorial m• of tlu Vailp I
Pilot te:elcf to Inform attd tCim-
uloU reader1 b~ presmthtg thb
mwipaper'1 opinions and c~ '
mtntary on topici of interes t •
and significance, b11 prooidbia a ,
fontm for th• e:zpre:1sion of • our readers' opinion.s. _and b11 l
preH11Hng tht dlvtrtt vitw-
pointl of fn/ormed obstmr1
and ipoktsmtn on topics of tht
cfoy.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
c:
)
Wb
broo1
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baunr
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the s
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brav.
Hunt
Sp<
Junie
M,., .
child
joine
and
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most
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mitt.
Biss,
Willi
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PJfl' Four
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GuU
can
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SPOOKY PARTl .E~S . Tl -NGLE -SPINES
A~haunling We Go
While witches are tuning up their
broom.sticks, skeletOf!S are limberin& their
bones and ghosts are slipping into their
haunting attire, Huntington V a 11 e y
residents -young and old -are defyin&
the spooks at area parties. · ··
Costumed youngsters displayed their
bravery when the;.· paraded through the
HWltington Center Mall yesterday.
Sponsored by the Hlllltlngton Beach
Junior Woman~ Club and organized b)'
Mrs. Robert Wakeman, youth chairman,
children between the ages of 3 and 1%
joined the 7 p.m. march for fun, prizes
and excitement.
TJie prizes; provided by m a I t
merchants, were awarded irt three age
brackets for the funitiest, scariest 1and
most elaborate costumes.
Assisting~. Wakeman was her com·
mittee comprl.sed of the Mmes. William
Biss, Karl Hammer, Ray Hopkins and
William Lokken.
A different approach · to coslume ·
P.t!!fties will ... be laken by m.emben o(
Fountain Va1ley's Beta Gamma Chapter,
Epsilon Sigma AJpha, International.
They will celebrate. the Year or the
Fiery Horse tonight at 8 in the Hun-
tington Beach Mme of Mrs. William
Guthrie, and the Oriental theme. will be
carried out in decorations and menu.
Traditional Halloween decorations were
seleeted when members o{ Delta Beta
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi and
thcir husbands donned costumes for a
party hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Eckmlln, Huntington bbeaeh.
Mrs. Steve Vida, social chairman, and
her committee members, the Mmes. Ken
Sutton, Eckman, Richard Sherrod and
Steve Stultz, arranged for hors d'
oeuvres, games and a prize for the most
unusual costume to entertain the group
duriD& their annual October social event.
Eerie sounds of b"ones
rattling; witches
moeni11g ip the derk-
chilled . Dell.a Beta
Epsilon . members
at their party.
Begging for mercy
from Mrs. Keith Eck-
man (right) are Mrs.
~on Lurvey (left) end
Mrs. Riclierd
Freudenthal.
BEA ANDERSON. Editor
'rllln', °''""a. tm 1 • M '"" n
'
'
Celebrating HellowMn with an Orientel theme party
ere (et left, left lo right) Mrs. William Hewston and Mrs.
William Guthrie. Joining e pore.de ere (above, left to
rightj Henry H. Duke Jr., and Pal and Bill W akemen •.
Love Might Not B.e Lovelier the Second Time . Aroupd
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Will you
please tell my idiot sister (age 32, hus-
band killed in Vietnam) that just because
a guy bas been married and fathered a
child does not mean he is straight.
_Eyerybody in town~ms to ~~~i!__
&Jag -except my sister. Now She say11
ANN LANDERS ~
BY are planning to get manied. Get band wu killed. 1'11e tried to tdl her
t HIS: He ls Rwlng her wedding dress, what ~ is getting into . but 5!1e .~nsi~ 1
reJecoratlng her apartment and will bake am mistaken and swears the~ sex hfe
Uj' slx·Uer wedding cake himself. Sis is very good." Can this be possible? What Ats it will not be a large wedding (her are the chances for a successful mar-
h'lfband has been dead le!I than six rlage with a h o m o s el U I I ?· -
rni'ithS) but B already has asked five or SLEEPLESS NIGHTS
~ "ehu1111" to itand up !or him. Every DEAR SLEEPLESS: Mmlaie loday b
q or his .. chums" is three feet off the riaQ evm wldl a in•• whe 'ls straight.
ground. They don't walk, they fly. Most women who marry ltomosenals (8
Sis ls a lovely girl, but I believe she 11 •PP9renU, AC-DC) are a little odd
not to pleceo mentally when her hus-..... Tllen .. loolilod u1mpln ol -
., ...
• -... -.... -ked, bot .... overwbtlmln1 inajoilty fall. h nearly an
case1 the husband tlres of lbe ma&-
qoerade and drlfta beck to tbe kind of 1er
ltt lik" bell -aDd It's wttti Ute boys, aot
die glrla. . '
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a ll-
year-old girl with a 9-year-old problem.
My sister. When my friends come over
she hangs around and acll Uke 1he is one
of our crowd wbldi Ille ii Doi. U I w~
·"her to leave 111 alone I have to· lmodt her
down or pay ber oll. When I go
oomeplace I mll!I take this grimy lltUe
pest along. I keep telling my mother It's
not ralr but she aays, "Your sister bu
the same rights as you."
Souldn't a f.year-old be playing with
klda ·her own age? When 1 teU her this
she says kids her own age are boring.
Can you help me? -GOING 'MAD
DE~R MAD: An elder 1bler'1 lrleado
are 1lwa11 more Interesting, especially If
tbe 1l1ter 11 IZ 11d tbe 11utmy lltde
pest" It t. Your mother aboald aot •llow >'°"' ldd 111 to tnfUct IMim:lf " you. Sa~ lljaslke makes slbllag1 luite e•cll
•lttef. The f..yeu-old Uoa1d be ea-
__, ... It ClllUvalt Ir-el lier 1W1.
I
11 Ille ii permitted to llnc ...... with
yoa 1be won't mU:e the effort. Dow.WI
columJJ to ,.... motlier. It mtpt belp.
DEAR ANN LANDW: A lal I went
to school with (mallJ years ago) movod
to this city eight mOntbs ago. we . were
never close friends but 1 try to be cqr·
dial. The problem : Whenever wt meet
(and we seem tO meet quite often) t'm
never sure how she will greet me. One ·
day she falls•on my neck and shOwers me
with bugs and kisses. The next. day she
treats me as if I bad bubonic plague.
How do I deal witb 90meone who ls so
unpredictable? Any advice? -BLOW
HOT, BLOW COLD ,
DIWI BLOW1 .Vlpredldailllit1 ii -
. .
. -
of the prfndpll .,.,plomt "' --
llilleSI. The c:onlialttJ Of ,.... frtnd'I
greetillp• bave nothlq to do with yoa -
tbey are a barometer tf Its 1llM)d. ti ..,
she's up sbe'U be effnhre. U .-e•1 llnl
you'll gel tbe 11maD Wlo. UllderttMdlDt :
tbla should make yoa ltn reac:Uve.
Give In or Jose him ••• when a IUY
gives you this llnc, look out! For Ups oa
bow to handle the super 1ex salesman.
check Ann Landers. Read her booklet.
"N.ecking and Petting -What Ate the
Limits?" Send your request to Ann
Landers in care or the DAILY Pn.OT.
encloolog 50 cents in coin and a loal.
it.amped. ..U·addraaed envelopt. _
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JI DAil V PILOT Fridiy, -JD, 1970
An Appropriate · B·urial· Horoscope . '
J aurus: Set, the Pace • '
SATURDA·Y
OCTOBER 31
romanlic aur1. bltloos. ROad may appear ._
LEO (July 23-Aug. %2): obstacle-filled. In re a I i t y ,
Team up with Caacer-bom ta. many ara paving way for your
9·1 l1DNIY OMAJUl dlvidual. Put !inlshing touches progreSJ. Show enUntsiasm. Break down barriers to com-
AJUFJI (March 11.·April lf): on lorig-range project Check municaUoo. Be cleU and land, real estate values. One · You rioocbet between the COil: who j 1 ultra-eonservaUve precist. -~---•-~tile t ,.._ CAPRICORN (Dec. 11-Jan.
YalJ.llJWU auu unUIUI .• _, needs reassurance. Give it. 19): You get what you go after·
Is to find middle p:oond. Ap-vmGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): -obtain hint from Sag\llariu
pUes apeclally tn flnandll Your relations with brothers, mes.sage. Make change!. Get
agreementa: wttb mate listen are hlghllgbted. You ready for journey, Plan ahead
hnsiom plltDer • mar take short journey jn con-for fine entertainment. Break
• neetion with relaUves. Be in-out of emotional rut.
TAUIWS (April JO.May II): ' dependent, but avoid ar-AQUARIUS (Jan. JO.Feb. ' """ -
Include family memben In rogance. IS): Money due from oc· T k G. • / !lpOCial entmalnment, projed, IJBRA (Sept. ~. 22): cupational efforts ;, made a eS ave
unique acttv1ty. Let otben call Huncb related to. money pays available. You have in-\
the shob, set pace. You ga1n ~f ~.be confident. Be a,, vestment opportunity. Consult . Mrs. Doug,. Mo,aan; of
most by being aUenUvt -and ci!scnmtnatl~g ·!i~opper .. 'Gen· Professional superior. Not.wise Costa Mesa will ~ in-
a shrewd observer. ume bargain 1s available. to try going it alone stalled as Pr.eside~t'. Of
GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Don't jump at f~rt offer. PISC& (Feb. l&-J\.farch 20): the Sant~ Ana Chapter
Yoo may be lmaglnlng ·that ~ Unusual approa~ .1s a pro-You fllaY !eel alone in 1 of American Gold S~r
dividual Js talking bebbJd your fitable one at this time. crowd. B! perceptive, ,but Moth~rs Tuesday,_Nqv.
back. You would be intelligenl SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): · dan't brood. You will discover 3, dupng cerem9me110
to evaluate facta u they emt. Cycle rem.~ In 1 favora~Je. another side of individual who · the San!a Ana Ameri-
Suspicioo and rumor lhou1d be Lunar position emphasizes . plays lmportant role. Avoid can .Legion Hall:
thrown aside. new starts, ~ d d e d in-self-pit)'. Face facb as they
CANCER (June :It.July 12): dependence. Begin a !'"'Jed· exist.
YourepeculaUveventare1 Encour ag e contacts,chal· To fllld Clllt wllo'• fuckY for YDU"' mw gain. EnJnv nd.lement i ...... es. What appears set· money and ._,, o~r SY<I""' o.n.rr'1 ., ~.. d bookld, "St<:ret Hlnt1 for Men and of discovery. App 11 e • back boomerangs to your a • w-... s1nc1 blnhc1111 and YI ""''
_.... 11 In ......... _ with tag lo Om1rr AalrolOIY Sec: ... 11. HM DAIL.Y .......,....a y _,.,.. van e. . Pti..or, Box 3UJ, Gr1nc1 cm1r11 s11-childrea, membln of opp01ite SAGITrARlUS (Nov. 22.-tJon. New York. N.Y. 10011.
sex. You are stMTOUnded by Dec. 21): ACCi!nt your am·
Decks Shuffled
Club Bids for Deal
Souvenirs
Displayed
A conecuon of memorabilia
from the past 10 years of
Children's Thea ter Guild prtr
ductions will be displayed in
area libraries during the
month of November.
Auctioneer
Sells Gift
Treasures and gifts for auc-
tion will abound at the annual
potluck or Laguna Beach
Panhcllenic on \Vednesday,
Nov. 4, in the Laguna Hills
Trailer Park Clubhouse.
J\1embers will arrive at noon
with gifts t.o benefit the
Panhellenlc Scholarship Fund
and American Field Service.
Invited to tout the "death of the midi" are residents in and around Glen Ellyn,
DL A window o! a dre" shop, appn>pri-
ately draped in blaclc and decorated with
.. ,_
lhlstles and mandrake roots displays a
mannequin wearing a midi In a wooden
colfin. Signs in the shop say the "Midi
Is the Edsel of 1970."
Pick a partner -or one will
be provided -and join the
Fountaia Valley Wom~'s Club
bridge toomament which will
be£i,n .Monday, Nov. 2, and
continue: through February.
Players will meet once
every two weeks in members'
hmnes, according to Mn. Will
Romine, bridge chairman.
. Couples meet for an evening
of bridge the first Saturday of
each month, and the club and
Fountain Valley Parks and
Recreation Deparbnent co-
sponlOr du plicate bridge each
Saturday evening in the com-
munity center. Play, directed
by Mrs. Helen Creed, is open
to the public and there is a
charge of $1.50 per person.
New day and evening bridge
groups now sre being fonned,
and infonnallon may be ob-
tained by calling Mrs. Ro-
maine.
Included in the displays will
be set designs, props, bead·
pieces, costumes, posters, pro-
grams, scripts, music and
phot.ographs from the Newport
guild's productions.
The guild, a nonprofit
organization, was foun<IOO. to
produce children's plays and
educate children in all facets
of the theater.
Cha.inn.an for the Iunc:IJeon..
auction is Mrs. L. T.-Rosser
assisted. by the Mmes. Carl
Nash, Robert S. Bnmside and
Herbert Dewitz.
A short business meeting
conducted by J\1rs. J. M. Shea
Jr. will precede the auction.
All members or nationa l
Greek sororities are invited
an d may caJI J\frs. William
Beatty !or reservations.
Chapter
Honors
Official . .
H09Cll'faa the V e n e r 1 b I •
llllpb Pea wllla • teatlmoolal
-loatght will be
the A. P. Glallnlnl Lodge, Soos
of Italy.
The-~ In esteem at
Peca '1 three years u leader
of the Costa Meaa chap!..-,
will begin al 7 p.m. In Iba
Costa lleaa Country Club.
~ tbe state olflclals at.-t.odlnc the afla1r will be the
Grand Venerable and Mn.
Pet.er DeSantlt. Clv1c
r e p r e • e ntatives at the
testimooW will be Costa Mesa
Mayor and Mn. Rober! M •
Wilson, Vice Mayor and Mn.
Willard T1 Jordan, Councilman
and Mra. Alvtn L. Pinkley, Mr.
and Mn. Nicholas J. Ziener, ·
Judge Calvin Schmidt and the
Rev. Thomes NevlL
Juniors
Cut Cake
Mrs. Curt Burnett will host
the monthly board meeting of
the club at 8 p.m. Monday,
Nov. 2.
Twenty-four candles will dol
the blrtbday cate..u members
of the Jtmlor Woman's Club of
Laguna Beach celebrate on
Uoesdaf, Nov. I.
Mrs. Carl ~us, president,
btvltes former members and
St. Andrew's Mother-daughter Dinner a Bell-ringer
coonllnaton to attend the A bell-ringing evening Is planned for mothers and 4aughters o! from the funding event wDl be the World Student Christian Fed-
btrtbday puty in tbe Woman'• St. Andrew's Presbyteria n Church. The annual Thank Offering eration, national missions and the Christian Education program.
Clubhome at 7:30 p.m. dinner, themed Harves t Delight, will be presented at 6:15 p.m. Giving the call for support of this worthwhile project are (left to
Durfni a brief program 1t Wednesday, Nov. 4, in the church's Fellowship Hall. Benefiting right) Dee Fowler, Jamie Styli and Nancy Collier. theannualeven~achectfor~~~~-'-'~~--'~~~'--'--'-"-'-..::..:::.::::.:::.:'C.:::=c:...:::::::.::::.:''--....i.~:.:'....::.:.:...:c::::::::::..::.:::::::..::;'.::.:.:::...::.::::::'....=:.::~~~~~~-
ll,000 will be preoented to an
official of South Coast Qim-
munity Hospital IS fulfullment
of a three-year pledge.
Five new chairmen have
been named to direct ac-
Uv!Ues including the Mmes.
Robert Johnson and Ray
FrlIISOl1, youth; Lewis LaBon-ta. bealth, and Harry Bilhell
and Donald Hodges, con-
aervaUon.
Author Speaks
On Rose Theme
& FASHION I (\
TRADE FAIR! ~aliDIS~~~:
s.1as ~ ~ !~~'"~~!W 1.E~!m~r~~~o1
Or1nge County Fairground • LILIES • SEASHELLS
11twport 11¥11. ot Fair Dr, Cella -I ORIENT AL
IK OR =::.~i:.~ I FISO GARDENS
• ____ ..;.;,_ lM ..... ___ _. o,_. Tlllt. • flrt. lt• • Sal.411'11. U ..
IMf N..,.,. 111111., Cltll -. ..,..... '41o1111
Chapters Activities
Rituals Predominate
t.1embers of the Beta Alpha fund-raising party on Tuesday,
Pi Chilpter of Beta Sigma Phi Nov. 3. Mrs. Guy Hammer,
will convene ln the home of wayS and means chairman, is · planning the 8 p.m. gathering
J\t r s • K e I l h K I e P P e • wbich will raise funds to assisl
Westminster at 8 p.m. Tues· a needy family durjng the
day, Nov. 3. Ch ristmas season.
A welcome ritual wiU be ex· The chapter marked Us
tended lo Mrs. O a t f I e I d birthday with a meeting in the
\Vhltney and a rltual or j1?\l.·e1s Huntington Beach home or
will be celebrated for JI.tr&. ~lrs. Bob Ross. ~trs. David
Thomas Stevenson. M r s • Ballard received the welcome
Philip Peoples 'fflll present a rilual and ltfrs. Jobn Bower
program on Verse Mating. served as co-hostess, llld the
Gamma Alpha NU Oiapter program was prtSenled by
members will gather for a J\..frs. Dave Person.
YOGA is ....
-,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!
~~. ~~--·~···~--~···~~~ SWAP MEET --.
MRY SATURDAY t1lld SUNDAY
NEW-WOMEN'S CLASS
CALL FOR INFO
YOGA CENTER
.., I , llllt JI, C"I• Mtt• .....
,.
f . OIANM COUNT1' fAll GROUNDS
M r1lr Dr., Cott• MeMi
ANTIQUE DAY
1st SUNDAY EVERY MONTH
•
.
Gourmet's Touch
Stirs Up Brunch
01nelettes will be made lo order for
guests attending a brunch sponsored by the
\Vomen's Auxiliary to the Orange County ~
Branch of the Arthritis Foundation Sunday,
Nov. 8.
Mrs. James Evans will open her New·
port Beach home for the event, which also
will feature winter fashions by the Beach-
comber Shop.
Preparing the orders will be Gary Har-
rell, a Newport Beach gourmet chef who
specializes in omelettes.
. M~sic will~ p~vided by Christian Eric,
gwtar1st who smgs m five languages.
Proceeds will be given to the Arthritis
Foundation for research and to help Orange
County's 125,000 arthritis patients.
Indians on Agenda
Jim Whitecloud, vice preoi-
dent of the Los Angeles Indian
Center, will discuss the
American Indian for members
of the Patience W r i g h t
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution at noon
on Tuesday, Nov. 3.
DAR has provided educa·
tioosl assistance to Indian
J")Uth and aids SL Mary's
School for Indian gir1s In
Springfield, S.D. and Bac:one
College, Bacone, Ok1a. and
provides scholarships from the
general Indian fund.
Members are asked to bring
gifts for children in DAR·
operated schools in Soutll
Carolina and Alabama. The
meeting will take 11Iace 1n
Rote.I Laguna.
lfosts will be the Mmes.
James TrJttipo, Lee Cillds,
Ruth Johnson and Robert Hull.
C.libr1ti1t9 011r
G rind Opt"i"f
10% Off Our
Already Low Prie••
-Tliro119h Now. Ith
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Eo~niain Valley
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voe. 63 , 'NQ; 260, 4 SECTIONS , ]. PAGES
• IXOll ·o
EDITION
01\ANGE COUNTY, 'CALIFORNI.(
' a
Tough Talk
Expected
\
In Anaheim
After bemglhe target of rocks, briCks,
bottles, eg~. red flags and other missiles
hurled at his limousine in San Jose,
President Nixon promised ta "take off
the gloves" at a political rally tonight in
Anaheim and respond to s u c b
.. viciousness."
After his arrival at San Clemente, tht!!
President said the 900 a n t I w a r
demonstrawrs were "radical, anti•
democratic elements" who threatened
freedom of speech and assembly in
America.
"This was no outburst by a single in-
dividual," said the President at the
Western White House. "This was the ac..
tion of an unruly mob that repre.aents the
worst in America."
The gl;m-top limousine: containing the
President, Sen. George Murphy aDd Gov.
Ronald Reagan was blitzed while he left 1
GOP rally as the President neared the
end of a 5,500-mlle, <:ross-country c~
paign tour.
The San JOSe violenct!! was rated the
most serious aimed at any President in
this country since the assassination of
President John F. Kennedy in 198.1.
•
T~y'• Flna_I_
NJY. Steeb
-t
DAILY PUT._"""'
Partisan Republicans had given tht
President a wann reception at the rally.
lt got hotter outside. Nixon emt!!rged and
climbed atop ~e hood of his limousine in .
~ glare of photo Qondli1hb. ,
PRESIDENT SENATOR ARRIVE IN ORANGE COUNTY AFTER ARDUOUS JOURNEY
Murphy's lrllh Up 'ovor Bumpy Rood to San Josi; Mr. Nixon Ends Ruepd Day a GUOll In Own HeuM
-" UNRUH LAUGH$jUP 'SHOE-IN' CAMPAIGN IN HUNTINGTON BEACH
Ne•r Sig.,. '011'1 Field, Jei1 Empley1 Hl1'Unlque Telephone
.. Unru~ Raps Signal Oil
ln Stop .at Huntington
Jess Unruh brought! his campaign for
governor to Huntington Beach 'lbursday
afternoon.
He did it to attac)\ the oil Interests
which he claims control Gov. Ronald
Reagan.
The Democrat used his easel and'
Beach Employes
Agree to Talk
Pay Raise Terms
'Ibe pay dispute bety.ieen Huntington
BeJJCh firemen, :policemen and the city
council will remain in the talking stage....:.
for the moment at least.
Both public safety groups had threaten·
ed court action if the council did not sub-
mit to arbitration ~r mediation over the
salary issue, but today indicated they
might be willing to simply talk about it
more_
charts, now a hallmark of his campaign,
to show why Signal Oil Co., one of the
major oil producers in Huntington Beach,
was.giving money to Reagan's campaign.
Unruh said, "Signal Oil receives a
$390,520 yearly ta:: break on this property
because of a Bill Reagan signed in 1967."
He was referring to le gis l'!ti o n
sponsored by the late Sen. George Miller
(D-Martinez), which prohibited local
governments from levying a property tu
on oil royalties.
Bill Woods, commwiity relations officer
for Signal Oil, said he really had no reply
to Unruh's charges.
"It would take a Jot of time and
research just to find out what he's talking
about," Woods said.
"Besides, wasn't he speaker of the
house in 1967? Didn't he have con-
siderable powers then?"
Unruh also charged that Signal Oil had
contributed $2,500 to Reagan 's campaign ,
.. and probably much more."
"I don't know if that's true," Woods
said, "but I doubt it. I don't know where
he gets• his figures."
Unruh hid led newsmen around Hun-
tington Beach, showing them the-oil der-
ricks along Pacilic Coast Highway owned by Signal Oil.
Facing biS oppomg IS !be)' lbrlWd
obscenitie.s.._ N"11on thrust hi.s jaw fornnl ...
and nung up both arms. With his tlngepr1'
he formed "V" symbols for the crowd.
The mob grtw wildtr.
His motorcade was mobbed for about
fi ve The presidential limousine and otbei'
vehicles . were hit repeatedly by large
At:ks. Several persona including a Secret
Service agent and a telev isi on
cameraman suffered minor injuries.
White House aides and guests of. the
President riding in a bus behind his
JimoUsine huddled in seats and aisles as
rocks and bottles smashed four windows.
Newsmen in another bus were splattered
wilh glass from five smashed windows.
One youth whipped a large . belt from
his waist and lashed the top of a car con-
taining H. R. Haldeman, Nixon's chief of
staff.
"It was jast like Caracas," said Rose
(See NIXON, Pase !)
School District
Backs Override
Another elementary school district hu
stamped approval on the 69-cent tax
-0verride sought by the Huntington Beach
Union High School District Nov. 3.
Trustees of the Huntington Beach City
(elementary) School Districts gave their
support Tuesday night to the high school
tax election.
Their approval mad! it unanimous
among the five elementary districts -
Fountain Valley, Ocean V l t!! w,
We!tmlnster, Se'al Beach and now Hun-
tington Beach -within the high 1chool
district boundaries.
On Nov. 3 voters will decide whether to
raist!! tbe high IChool tax rate to $2.08 per
$100 assessed valuaUcin from its current
$1 .39. An election Jon would drop the
district's rate to 15 cents.
•
Regist~r Chief ·
R. C. Boiles
Succumbs at 91
. '·
Raymond Cyrus Hoiles, president ol
Freedom Newspapers and 00.publisher
of the Santa Ana ·Register, died tod_ay
after a brief il111ess. He was 91.
Cause of .death, which occurred at San-
ta Ana Community Hospital, ~as not Im·
mediately announced.
Hailes was. inPwn for his frank and
sometimes controvenlal statement!' on
in.tes of~· day; voiced in the R~lister
and other publi~ations in ,his 26-news-
paper groop.
The Register, ia sum.marizing hls ca·
reer, said: ''His life was tin· editorial,
and so, properly it seems, should be' hi!
obltllary. In life he devoted his energies
to encouraging people to think for them·
selves and ta resist the socialistic prac..
Oces of political government.
"In death, he leaves a legacy of mil·
lions of words suggesting to au who will
Usten that human beings can enjoy ha~
pier,. more prosperous Jives in a volUJ1.o
tary .society in ·which na man uses force
or threat of force .against his neighbor.'~
He b: survived. by his wife, Mable ; two sons, C. H. Hoiles, CG-publisher -0f the
Register, and Harry H. Holies, publisher
of the Gazette-Telegraph, Co 1 -0 rad o
Springs, Colo., and a daughter, Mary
Jane Hardie, of Marysville, Calif.
Biography of O'Hara
NEW YORK (UPI) -~dom House
ha1 commissioned Matthew J. Bruccoll.
an auth-Orlty on t'mest Hemlogway and
F. Scott .Fitzgerald, to write a 300,000-
word biography of tbe late Jahn O'Hara.
''This thing is moving a bit slower
than ..ye anticipated," Andy Vanderlaan,
president of the Firemen's Association,
said this morriing ... Bec1use we're trying
to use all available means to do it pro-
perly."
"The city's labor relations attorney
(Herbert Moss) sent ua a letter sug-
gesUng further negotiations," Vanderlaan
said. "Our attorneys are working from
that angle now."
Cof C Opposes Proposal
:Brander Caslle, assistant city ad-
ministrator, said city negotiators would
meet with police and ftre spokesmen
whenever they liked.
"The city ('Otlncil hun't closed the door
on these guys," he said.
Policemen have -asked for binding
arbitration to reach a salary agrttment.
A poLice spokesman said today nothing
will be decided until Monday.
Tbe city council ·granted 8.25 percent
pay raiBes to both groups last September.
J>oUcemen , however, had asked for 11
pereent while firemen wanted an 11 to 13.5
percent increase. ,
Public safety workers were upset
because they felt the coundl hadn't
followro the rules for salary negotiationa.
Councilmen set lhe 8.25 percent pay boost
without sendlJtg City Administra tor Doyle
Miller blck for more talks. Miller bad
r=llUllellded approval or the original
police and tire request&.
• •
Huntington Directors Nix Full-time Mayor Post
By ALAN DIRXJN
Of tlle o.lff' ,,_. Si.ff
Directors of the Huntington B e a c h
Chamber ot Commerce today stand op.
polled to the proposal to make the may·
or's job a fu1J.time1 elective position.
The directors recommended a "No"
vote to chamber members on charter
amendmt!!nt K -the amendment th a t
would make tbe mayor's post elective.
The amendment also would re-e!tablish
city departments and boards so t h e y
would be contrlilJed by council ordinance
and allow councilmen lo set their salaries
by ordinance after a public hearing.
The directors agreed on the chamber's
stand on Tut!!srla.y's ballot proposjtlons al
a closed-door meet.Ing t1Jursday e\/t!!nlng.
The board recommended approval of
the other municipal chart.er: revWona -
amendment N which would tighltl r~
quirements for councif candidates, amend-
ment L which would allow lhe city to per-
form public works cmtracta: costing Jeu
than $10,000 without seeking bids an d
•meodm<nl M which W011ld bring ihe city
charter in line with the latest deaclslons
on the sale of ....,..1 obligation boods.
The chamber directors t!!ndorsed Prop.
osltlon B, lhe call for 1 a.cent tu over·
ride by the Huntington Bt!!•ch Union High
School District. The request I! to rahe
the dale from $1.3' to $2.011 bul il the
measure fails the rltt!! wwld drop next
July·to 15 centl, lht!! letJ,llatlve minimum,
school officials point out
The directon 11so back ~!lion A,
the musurt!! to create an Orqe County
rapid :ruait di.strict ud all tbt -· . .
• •
propositions with the uception m Pl'OI»'
alt.ions 3, 4, 5, and 18, which tht!!y oppose.
Fropoaltlon i would require 'lhe a:ov@r·
nor to subniit .the state budget within 10
d1y1 ,of the lepstat!ve ses,Jons and for
the legislature to adopt the budgl!I by
June 15.
· PrOpcisttion •~authorizes Uie legislature·
to make aPl'fopriaUooi for piiblfc IChoo1s
.prior to the pauaae of Ill<! buclcft .bill If
·!he .bill la deJaye<i .
· Proposition $ requires that UrUversity
of CalifornJa regenlt conduct their meet-
' lngs In public.
Propol1tlon ta would pennlt UR of up
to 2S perce:rit of g(s ta.Jes for public mass
tr1n1it aystems and for pollution mean:h
and control , U voters in tbe area COD""
ceraed couent.
Bfuze ,_RDut8 . President
From His Clemente Bed
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of tM Daltr """ ltall A log fire lighted to Sll)OOtb over the
anxiety caused by a howling mqb in San
Jo~ ignited a smouldering b14ze at the
Western White House 1-.te ,Thursday,
routing the .First Fainily from bed 8!'d
CJusing con~iderable smoke damage lo
l.alf of the Spanish villa.
President Nixon was not •in dangt!!r
from the smouldering. fire'. The blaze ·.,.as
detected by a smoke-sniffing device
within the wall• of the second·floor Cren,
knowledgeable sources reported today.
Bul lhe srnake, pouring from many
Ct!!iling vents in the hou se, prompted the
chief executive to1 spend the rest of the
night in the guest house across the
driveway of his home.
The sources gave this account of the ·
fire -the second blaze ta erupt at the
Preside'ntial compound since the Nlxoos
moved 'to San Clefnente:
At about 10·~30 . p.m, the President's
valet, Manolo Sanchez, lit the fire in the
second·Ooor 'firepllci whiCh is all-metal
The hearth ,begins .at the &ecOOd . noor.'
There is no fireplaCe at that spot in the
dining room beloW. ·
An hour later, the President · left the
firepla ce to retire In his bedroom about
100 1eet away.
Fifteen. mlsultes litter ,the smok~ sen&Or
in the com.moo wall touched•off an alarm
at the security headqUarters of the com··
pound and agents phoned the residence to
check the ·alarm.
Pina Sanchez,,Manolo1s wife and Mn •.
Nixon 's bead maid, answertd the phone
in the kitchen and then went to the.den to
tr·1ntlgate. ' ·
The house already· wu fillinc ·wllh
1moke. ,
An alarm .vent out to San Clemente
and Camp Pendlt!!ton fire 1taliot1s. San --
Clt!!menlt!! volunteers roared •into ' the
estate 0.1 two pumpt!!rs' to Light •\blaze
which -on • much smaller scale ~
re!embled the devastating fire w h I c &
struck the community clubhouse early
this year. It wast<>-" 1imllar construction.
The fire , the classic smouldering vari~
I Senior Citizens.
set f.elebration . . .
ty, bad built up withln the two.foolAhlck
walls of the den anchinoke wu pouring
from several vents In tbe ceillnp of tbe
' ' wing of the four-aided residence.
Heat bad built up con1lderabl1
throughout the wall tcotiao, soun:eo aid.
and 11110ke pufre<I 1hrougb ...,,,. along
sevt!!ral beam1 in, the rough-plaster cell-
inp of the home.
President Nixon emerged from the
house about 10 minutes after flrefi&hters ·
arrived. ,He chatted with sevtral of hll
Secret Service agent.s In the patio u e1ec·
tric fans sucked amoke from the houae. •
The President was wearing pajamu
anli a bathrobe.
The blaze was an unusual and tense
climax to a ·harrowing day of .c:am-
paigning and unrest for the President.
It was the second fire at the compowwl
this year. ·
The first erupted in an ABC generating
truck On an evening. last spring·whm the
PreSident was addressing .the nation on
the Vietnam war. A stack of paper cup!
and rags caught' fire, nUrly destroying·
the backup generator truck. A crash
truck on constant standby for the
-President'• ht!!licopters was \lsed to e1;4 •
tinguisb that fire. "
Movie Hits the Spot .
COLUMBUS, Ohloo(UPI) -"The Great
Train Robbery" Ls now. pll)'ine at· the
Ohlo Peniten~ary;
Oru11e
We•tller
Night•and morning ·foe rel111'111'
to lhe cout this wee-. drop.
ping the high rtldlng to 61 alont
the beaches alfd 10 degrees higher
a ijttle further inland. ·
INSIDE TOD"-Y
More· lhan ,300• ~rilor cf~ ·of •Ii""' tllistoo Beach W!ii celObtate: ihe · eiJhlh
anniv'ersarjt cf tbttr Club at-iO a:in:, MOO.
,day, ,in .the clu9house., l,7th., Street' ¥<f 1
.orange Avenue. ·
, The fractured Follit! of 1910
in Laguna Brach come up aoain
nett wuk, ·railing morw11 fOf'
SoKth.· Coast .Communitv •Ho.pi.
taL. Ste todau'i Weekender 1eoo
tion..
...... ,II C•llfllille I ·=:.':.: ~.
( ........ U. I C"91111W '141 --. . • ..,....,. n·:a • .,..,.. """"' '14
Dw1ng 1he pas! year lhe group
sponsored fashion atxiws, dinners and
look par\ in the Hunllngton Beach 4th of
JQIY Parade. .•
Memb<n will cclebrale !heir . an-
niver11117 11lth a birtbdly IW\cheon. . . '
.r
I
._.. . ,_ .
o.e.. Nellcn t • .. ,..,..1 ,,..... • ,..,... 1•1s -.. A• L..->111n II -. Mm • 9"Tlet " --
•
9-h 1 .. ,.
IMdl Mtffllttt 1 .. U ·-. -..... -. .._...._ll•lt --.. WI I fir .,..
•
•
•"!"'I!':!"'!-~'!""'"'!'"~..,...":'"--..... -..-.,...""",--....,.,.. ..... -.,........, .... -.,..,.,,..,.,...., .... .,..,,....,.,.._..,,,. ___ ~---~----------------·----- --r
J OAILV PILOT Friday, October JO, lt70 ,,..... r-.e J
Program NIXON ..•
Mary Woods, .t& PraaldeDl'1 lolli·tlmo
personal secrtlal'J, who wu llttlns nnl
-to one of the amashed windows. She
referred to an attack on Ni.ion, lben Vice
J>~~ 1!) VentZ'llla. Beach District Considers Gifted Class
;1 Murphy termed the mob "wlld-eyed,
II)' TERRY CX>VILLt
Of t11e Dlllr Pu.t Staff .
Should scbOQls create a special at·
mospbere for, the mentally gifted child?
It's • ticklish question wilh no simple
answ.r.
Two elementary school districts in
Huntington Beach a{ld Fountain Valley
offer mentally gifted programs -one
does not.
The Hunlingtoo Beach City Sc:bool
D i s t r i c t has been criticlled by some
parents !or Jts lick el o mtntally gilled
program.
Tbe Fountain Vall'1 1114 Oce .. Vllw
achoel dlatflcll an eJPlll4lnl u..tl 1!16-
1'11111, but both an otlll Iatln&.
&elrching for the ideal arrancement.
The desire for such a program has
been undenoortd by tile Colllornla Board
of Education and the state Legislatture,
which offen state money to acbool
districts with apecial set.ups for mentally
gilled aludents.
State authorities pay SlOO for each
mentally glltod cblld lden!lfied by 1
district. Of Illa~ amoomt, ltO pays for the
••• ldiallrkaliOll \Ila~) ....
boiya -~ -.. i.o.u. !Ilm llrtpl
auolllot-.
51!'14. lalf .jje'filles a meotolly p,~d
' child 'U t)ne with an J.Q. of 132 or higher.
Exceptl0n. are made •for culturall1
deprived children who still demonstrate
unusual abcolaatlc ability.
It takes a series of tests and an in•
tervlew by a school psychologist before a
chlld can be declared "mtntally gifted.11
This la ,what the $40 pa)" for.
tough, angry revolutionories'' w b o
''ahoutd be identified and isolated."
"( have been cartfiil to point oul that
these are the actions of a violent few. It
Ls important that all Americans keep this
perspective," the President Jaid.
"But the time has come to take the
gloves off and speak to this kind of
behavior in a forthrl&ht way. Freedom ol
1peech and freedom of assembly cannot
exist ,.f}>en people who peacefully attend
rallies are attacked with flying rocks.
Budget Cut Curtails
Head Start Program
Mentally gifted programs, according to
state officials, must not merely be an in·
creased load of normal classwork, but ac-
tually different, in-depth studies, which ·
allow the gifted children to explore their
own abiliUea to the fullest.
1 Befor« receiving any at.ate fUnda, each
dlitrict .must prove Jta program Will be
different. ·
Fountain Valley offers. what it *erms an
''enrichment'' program. Mentally . gifted
children . ..-e given special projects te
work with for about 200 minutes (the
minimum allowed) each week.
"Tonight at Anaheim I will discuss
what America must do to end the wavt of
violence and terrorism by the radical, an-
ti-democratic elements in our society."
The crowd had gathered by the time Nil:~ entered San Jose <;:lvlc Auditorium
to plead for support for Murphy and
Reagan in their races a 1 a I 11 a t
Democratic challengera John V. Tunney
and jeas Unruh. Signs in the Cf9wd de-
nounce(! him as a "facist"1 and
"warmonger" and • several b\Dtred
persons ,chanted •·one, two, tbree,i"four,
we don't want your f-war."
WASHINGTON (UPI) -ivhen a
money shortage forces couitailment ol.
the popular Head Start progam for
preacbool children, the admlnlllratlon
wanta Iocal officials to malnlaln the hllh
qualitj'-of lhelt --by rtduclnC their pupil load, it wu learned Thursday.
The admlnlBtraUon '• policy In the face
of certain budget reductiona was dlaclol-o
ed in a letter from Dr. Edward F. Zigler,
director el the Office of Child Develop-
ment of tile Office of E<onomlc Op-
portunity to all local Head Start ad-
ministrators.
"Many granlees will want to reduce the
level of service provided becaUle of thele
decisions rather than reduce the number
of children served," the letter aa..ld.
"Thls should not be pennltted. our
DAILY PILOT Stiff P ... 19
Flcuhy I.Mile
Not all bikes offered at Hunt·
ington Beach Police Auction
Nov. 7 will come equipped
with Paula Tooman, but a
wide variety of bicycles will
go on sale starting at 10 a.m.
in the police parking lot, 5th
Street and Orange A venue.
f
DAILY PILOT
Oll.l.HG~ (OAST P-UILISHING COMP.AMY
Robtrt N. W114
Pmldll'll •nd Puatltl'W
J•ek R. C11rl1y
Vitt Pmld1nt ,r,4 Qemlrtl,,.,.....
Thom•• IC:11vll
Edllor
Thomtt A. MurpJ..lnt
M•n•oln!I' Edlilt
Al111 Dirki11
w~t ortflll' COU"tr wrw
Albert W. l1t1s
Awti0t:1•19 Editor
H11tlJ11tn .... otRc.
1717$ lttch hul"'1r4
M1ili111 Aicfrut; P.O. lox 790, •2MI
OtW Otfkel
Lttunl lndlt m ~or.t A...,. Cotl9 M .. t UI W"I l•r t ir.t
NfWMrt .. 1ch: 2211 w.t .. "'°' """""' $e11 Cltlnll'ltt: a5 Nol11I It CUlllM bll
·-.
policy from the beainnln& baa been to In·
sure that children enrolled In Head Start
r<eelve the blibell quality service poui·
ble.
In the previous fllcal yeor OEO spent
'321 million on Head Start. The Nixon
Admlnlatratlo!, r<queited -1331 mllllon
this year and even if that amount is
graoted, OEO aaya. because bf riling
COiia JI would be otlll $11.6 mllllon abort
of allowln& the program Io continue at Its
. pl'ellllt level.
Tbe senate Approprlatlons Commltloe
baa approved the admlnlllration '• $339
million r<quut anc1 the full senate will
act on the meuure alter Con&r<as
Reconvenes No. 16.
nae Hou.ae, however, baa approyed an
OEO bud¢ lllat doel not apecliy how
much Head Start would ge~ but OEO of.
flciall AY It would leave them $17.7
million abort In Head Slart money.
Jury diflerences In tile Houae and
senate bll11 would have to be nconclled
by a conference commltloe, but there
would be no chance of the committee ln-creuin& approprtatlona 'for Head Start.
Zl&ler !old tile local admlnlltratora that
the flnt cull lhould """" In Head Start
IUIDJMr program1.
Survey to Start
On Huntington
Homes Monday
A "sidewalk mrvey" 1& to be made of
housing in Huntington Beach.
Beginning Monday, fotq men from the
f:itY building department Will co from lot
to lot noting the condlti~n of homes in the
city.
Jere Murphy, a member of the plan-
ning department, said today that the ·
purpose of the survey is to de~rmine in-
formation and staUstlcs to incorporate in
the housing element of the master plan. Ttie walklng surveyors will look at all
houses in the city, beginning in the
downtown area. The check is expected to
last ail to eight months.
"The survey will be made from the
sidewalk," Murphy erplalned, "We won't
gG onto private property."
The team will collect. information on
such things as the age and condition of
homes, whether they are single family or
multiple, and the state of the landJcaping
and number of on-site parking spaces.
Murphy said the data will enable the
planners to determine whether there is
enough housing in the city for those who
wish to Uve in Huntington Beach and
whether the housing is adequate and in
good repair.
Murphy said the team would not issue
citatioo.s if faulty housing is found.
"The idea ls to get a tot.al, overall
housing picture," he said. "We want to
know whether there Is a housing problem
in Huntington Beach er not. If there is
cne, it will be up to the planning com-
mission and city council to decide what
should be done about It."
Breakfast Slated
By ~ach DeMolay
The Huntington Beach Chapter cf
DeMolay will bald its semi-annual "Farm
Style Breakfast" from 8 a.m. to noon,
Sunday, at the Masonic Temple, Lake
and Palm streets.
Breakfast price is $1 with proceeds
going toward the inat.allation of new of·
flcers jn the DeMolay.
"Our children handle their projects In
learning centers," Bill Barnes, ad-
ministrator for educaUonal services for
the Fountain Valley School District, ex·
plaina.
"In the learning center they con-
centrate on such subjects as literature
during the time of westward movement
In the U.S .. or art in the classical period.
or journalism," Barnes said.
The gllted aludents don 't just learn
about these things, but study each sub-
ject in much greater detail than could be
allowed in the average classroom.
1be Ocean View District offers twe
separate mentally gifted programs. Like
Fountain Valier, Ocean · View bas an
emichment program, which allows &ifted
students to spend some time con·
centrating on projects.
"We also have two segregated gifted
classes," Norm Ginsburg, director of
personnel services explained.
"The segregated dauu c o v er
academic subjects such as math,
reading, science. They meet during the
morning at Rancho View and Roblnwood
achools," Ginsburg said.
In the afternoon the gifted students
mingle with other students for auch sub-
jects as art,, music and physical educa·
tion.
The HunUngton Beach City School
District doesn't offer either type of pr<r
gram and receives no state funds.
"We don't have enough gifted children
tdentlfied," Mias Betty Funkhouser,
assistant superintendent, e x p I a I n e d ,
Trustees have also been traditionally o~
posed to funding or seeking state funds
on such special programs.:
The district, with an enrollment or e,m
children has identified seven as mentally
gifted.
By comparison, Fouxtaln Valley has
an enrollment of 10, 139 children a n d
with the gifted and apply the best tech-
niques to all of our children."
Both districts expect to have more
children in the gifted program by the end
of the year.
Miss Funkhouser said Huntington
Beach wollid have to double its number of
Identified gifted children before a pro-
gram would be considered.
"But we are approzching the size
where we have to think about it," she
said. "However, 1 want to be sure 'We
have a good program if we get one. I
don't want to fake It."
Cost is still the worry for some
districts. Even though the slate pays a
substantial amount for the program,
districts normally have to chip In some of
their awn money.
Fountain Valley ls spending S'lfl,500 of
its own money this year, while Ocean
View spent $24,947 during the past year.
The districts have bad various mentally
gifted programs four and eight years,
respectively.
"Most districts actually save some
money because materials bought for the
mentally gifted program can be used for
the average classroom as; well," said
Fountain Valley's Barnes.
Ocean View's Ginsburg said the men-
tally gifted programs also serve "as
beacons to guide us to better programs
for the average class. We can experiment
with the gifted and apply the beat tecbnJ•
qUes Co all of our children."
Most educ·ators agree that complete
separation of the mentally gifted child
from so.called average students is UO·
, -desirable.
Programs in Fountain Valley and
Ocean View are designed for separation
only at certain intervals.
Indications are tha( their programs will
continue to expand.
"Mentally gifted programs are simpl1
the ultimate in. good teaching which is
made possible through extra money and
lime"' Ginsburg observed.
Schoolmen Say 'No Soap'
To $88,000 Shower Cost
GARY FOX PORTRAYS DR . jEKYLL IN SPOOK SHOW
In Huntington Beech, • Mon1trou1 Undertaking ,
>
•Monster Do~t~r"
'Dr~ Jekyll' on Job at School
Ever since Dr. Jekyll opened his office
in a dark room cf the Wintersburg-High
School campus, his patient supply has
been dwindling.
The cause, according to the frustrated
M. D. (Monster Doctor) seems to be that
no one ii interested in a decent head
transplant any more.
And his other surgical specialties -
the shrinking of heads and making cf
monsters -don't even pay the office
' bills, but they sure create a lot of at-
tention.
The wayward doctor. played by student
Gary Fox, has been practicing his
therapeutic operations for the past two
days in a "Sppok Spectacular" for
Halloween-minded students attending the
Wintersburg continuation campus.
The entire show, which encompasses an
8·minute spine-clillllng tour through the
blackened Room 10, was produced en-
tirely by the school's trainable mentally
retarded students. _
Their teacher, Larry Zechiel, says the
"Spectacular" was a work-experience
project for the handicap~ students dur-
ing which they were res·ponsible for n:kk·
ing their own backdrops, masks, signs
and other spooky appurtenances. .
"We haven't had any adverse reaction
from the students," laughed Larry, "hut
one of the parents who went through
there gOt so scared she screamed bloody
murder."
At the entrance, the thrill seekers are
confronted with a swishing white replica
of Great Caesar's ghost followed im·
mediately wiijl a macabre dance by .the
Bones Family, including Big Daddy
Bones, his wife Bleach Bones, and their
offspring , little Short Ribs.
A further poke into the gloomy, black·
li~hted interior shows the visitor the
House of No Return and lonesome Dr.
Jekyll perfcrming on his one and only
patient, The Great Zorba. But if you want to get to the really
good stuff, you've got to screw up your
courage and cross Werewolf Forest and
Spider Gulch. _,.
Only then do you get to see the Great'
Pumpkin pop out of a box, the MllmQlY ..:..
Who Refused To Die, and a generous
treat of Witches Gourmet. ·· ·
Just when things get so spooky that
teeth begin to clatter and knees to wag·
gle, the GoOd Witch Trick or Treat drops
some candy in your clammy hand.
They've scared the wits out of you, and
Winterburg's kids consider that entirely
appropriate on Halloween.
An accurate reproduction of
an exceptionally fine Queen
~n.ne double bonnet secre-
~ary. Formed of wolnut and
yew wood veneers and solid
pecan and available in two
finishes. It is 36" wide end
81 1/z .. high.
(
Inside, Nb:on told an audience of about
8,000 persons that·he had been succeaful
in winding down the Vietnam conflict and
repeated his promise to end the war In
such a fashion as to gain a generaUon of
peace for the nation.
Americans were fi&bling In Vietnam,
he said, "so that thOH young men who
are outside shouting their oblcene:
alogana won't have to fight in Vietnam or
anywhere else."
During the lpeech aome ol Ille
demonstrators charged at a door of the
auditorium but were blqcked by police.
On his way out the President pa. to
greet an Indian chief in full regalia and
then headed into the parking lot wbere
several hundred police officers held the
crowd about eo yard! away.
A ~w egp splattered within about five
yards of where he stood. Then the Presi-
dent climbed on the hood of his car, rail-
ed his arms in the f.amlliar V fuhion
and gave them his traditional campaip
saMe. The shouting and obscenities ap-
peared to increase.
As his car moved out of the parking lot
through a road cleared throush the
crowd, the missiles began falling.
The President'• limousine, with a
police escor t and trailed by a convertible
with Secret Service agents in it, lurched
forward. One agent tumbled from the
convertible. Several others were bit with
rocks but none were aeriously Jnjured.
A rock smashed into a window of the
"control" car containing Haldeman and it
stopped abrupUy causing several minor
collisions in the motorcade.
The' President's lUnousine ha~ bullet
resistant glasa and tbe missiles bounced
h~lessly off it. Its sunroof-type top
al!o is made of glass and was cloeed ed
covered at the time. ·
Gov. Reagan called the display "In-
tolerable behavior" and said: "I express
my ·contempt on behalf of the citizena of
California."
The clrou&ht at Dwyer lnlermedlalt
School Isn't over yel.
Dwyer has betn without lhower and
locker equipment for its physical educ•·
lion program since 1967 when the school
gym was condemned.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
, Officials of the Hunti,ngton Beach Cl~
School District looked at a proposal !or
showtr faclllUes Tuesday night, but failed
to buy It. They felt an 118,000 price leg !or a
modulu physical ed•caUon flclllly was
too much.
"We hope to abandon Dwytr by the
end of the 1972-73 or lt73-74 schoo1 ft!&r,"
Charles P•lrner deputy dlstrJct super.
lntendent explained. "A modular build·
Ing would be penn1nent. I lhlnk "' can
find aomething temporary for ltu mono
~.''
The school, which ls cne of two inter-
media~ schools in the district serving
8th, 7th and 8th gr;aders. la 35 years old.
Trustees agreed' to study the shower
sltuatJon fUrther, and asktd admWstra·
tor.i to come up with more proposals.
"This Is a sorry situation. We have to
do something.'' Trustee Ivan Ll1gett said.
"Yes, but we have to work In a cost
schedule for a three to four-year buiJ,"
Tnl8Ioe Slev1 Holden added.
'
7al11111 "
NIWPORT BEACH
1727 Wo1tcllff Dr., 642·2050
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
Professlonal Interior
0.1ignor1 Av1ll1bl,._AID-NSID
•
• LAGUNA BEACH
345 North Cont Hwy. 494-6551
OPIN fRIDAY 'TIL f
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YOL:. Ill', NO. 260, ~ SECTIONS, 31 PAGES ORANGE COUNT.Y, ~IJFORNIA
•
FRIDAY. OCTOB ER 30. '1970 ' .
••
' • • •
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• IXOll a •
0 oves' e
;
Board Hopefuls
.Discuss Issues
"
' By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of ftle Dlllr Plllt Stiff
Communlcation, accountability of teach-
S'I and administrators, scbQol finance,
~ pHdO, teacher strike!, state
adopli!d textbooks and the Y<IUch<r "l''"
tem. .d. fUJtding education were issued
diocillied Thursday night by foor ol the
five candidates seeking eJection next
Tnnday to lht Newport-Mesa ochool
board.
Mn,1 George Hollingsworth, president
of the Orange Coast League of Women
Voteni, moderated the two-bout session
attended by about 150 persona.
Orie candidate, Joe Duffy, told 'organi-
zers of the meet-the-candidates session a
previous commitment barred his appear-
ing ...
The program was joilltly sponsored by
the American Associltion of University
Women's 'Newport.Costa · Mesa Chapter,
the LWV'" and ihe Hirbor Area. Parent-
Teecber: ~oo -ci>uncil.
. ~ fiye c"f!dldates seek. ~ repmient TnSeie Alea 2 on 'the ·aeven-member
aod the new board member will serve
the 11n!aJ:pired portion ol her term ualil
June 1973.
Duffy was offered the opportunity to
tape his 10-minute apeech at 6:30 p.m.
Tbunday for pnsentation with talks by
the other Candidates. Mrs. Gillette White
ol'MUW said, "bul apparently he couh!o'I
make it."
RESPOND TO QUmIONS
Each of the other four candidates, CaJ ..
vin C. Buck, Richard D. 'Hanchett, Mrs.
BJverly Langston and Mrs. Carolyn Kim·
me, delivered prepared remark.<1 a • d
later responded to written questions from
the audience.
Mrs. Kimme hit the isolation of people
from their schools. "lnfonnation goes
out to parents," she said , ~t lit~e ~ets
back to the schools."
Mrs. Kimme called ror "economies in
budget" spendlng more for instruction
and Jess for administration, noting "we
C811~t go on increasing the tax load. She
cited consolidated purchasing as one
means of lowering the cost of education.. I DAILY ,IL.OT l llff l'Mtto
HeoiJrott-M• -' »n:·J:lla-Lllly ....... ·Jut J-
Consideration must be · a:iven to o u r
product, she said, lht children who grad-
uate from our tchools. '"They mu.t bl
al>lt lo· -.,,.... le find !of,,...tlon
and how to evaluite it, not just facta."
she said.
r PRESIDENT, SENATOR ARR'IVE IN ORANGE COUNTY AFT&R ARDUOUS JOURNEY
Mu'!'hy'a trlah Up Ovor lumpy Rood le San Jose; Mr. Nixon Enda Rugged Day a Guoat In Own· Houao
DAILY 1'1LOT ..... Pllllll
THE COP ON 'CAMPUS
Nowport PD'• Blackburn
Cop on Campus
Program Sfu.ted
At Two Sclwols ..
student. at Newport Beaql's two blih
ICbools and two intermediate sChoola can
loot forward to seeing a policeman once
a week as of Monday.
Officer Dennis Blacl<bum wilt S]lelld 1
day on each campus working in the new
Cop oo Campus program.
a>UNIEL F A1WRE Nixon, Family
Routed by Fire
In Oemente
•
NOiin( that ol the IO to 15 per<eJlt of
Newport.Meaa'a hJih school grad> who
IO oa to community cOJleges "few con-
tinue on to four ye.ar colleges'' she blam-
ed a "counseling failure" for the fact
that a large -11umber of district alumni
"face failure at age 20." The district
can't adequateJy ~provide career counsel· By JOHN VALTERZA
Ing wjth a ratio of from 350 to 500 stu• °' fM Dalff ~•i.t It.ff
dents per counselor, she said. A log fire lighted to smooth over the
Mrs. Langston, who has been endorsed ani:iety caused by a howling mob In San
by the Newport.Mesa Education Aaocia· Jose ignited • smouldering blaze at the
t.lon's Representative Council, urged reali· Western White House late Thursday,
zatioll that '"the mind Ls not a warehouse routing the First Family from bed and
for facts but an instrument to be used.'' causing considerable smoke damage to
Schools. should prepare students with llalf of the Spanish villa.
"sizable skills"· to assure confidence, she Preslclent Nixon was not in danger
laid. from the smouJdering fire. The blaze was
With such preparation graduates "will detected by • smoke-sniffing device
not be defeated by the first stumbling within the wall of the second·floor den,
blocks they encounter.'' k t d bl She commended the district fo r inno-now e gea e sources reported today.
v-ative programs fucluding the Open Court But the smoke, pouring from many
Reading, IPI Math and modular achedul-ceiling venls in the house, prompted the
htg, the latter having become very popu-chief executive to spend the rest of the
Jar with atudents in pilot schools, she night In the guest hou~ across the
said. driveway of his home.
NEW METHODS The sources gave this account of the
Yet, she noted, "not all programs will fire -the second blaze to erupt at the
be great, but we must proceed trying Presidential compound since the Nii:ons
new methods. moved to San Clemente:
"I don't advocate throwlng out the At about 10:30 p.m. the President's
three Rs," Mrs. Langston said. ''but they valet, Manolo Sanchez, lit the fire in the
must be made applicable to life." second.floor fireplace which Ls all-metal.
Further, she suggested that teaching The hearth begins at the second floor.
the words "Truth", "Loyalty" and "Hon-There is no fireplace at that spot in the
«'' doesn't guarantee the students will dining room below:-
usim.il.ate the values they represent. The An hour later, the Pm:ident left the
examples available to students -teach-r· I to e1· in hi •·•-~ .. 1 en and 1dmiaistr1tor1 ~help form val-irep ace r rre 1 ucwuum auuu. 100 feet away. ue;i~.11~i-z.. LanptOn called for a Fifteen mhlutes later the smeke sen110r
hel her In the common wall touched off an alarm parent.corps-to. p teat 1, a commun-ity career corps to assist students with · at the security headquarters of the com·
vocaUonal choices and greater Involve--pound and agenll phoned the residence to
ment of parerts in school programming. check the alarm.
Hanchett. the father of five , who at· Pina Sanchez, Manolo's wife and Mrs.
tend or have attended Newport·Mesa Ni.Ion's head maid, answered the phone
(See CANDIDATES, Pa1el ) lllee FIRE, P•I• l)
• • . ·-
Terrorists · to Disrupt
Anaheim Rally-Murphy
By JACK BROBACK
Of ,,.. O.llr 'llel ll•ll
Senator George Murphy said today that
he had been told there will be terrorist
activity tonight in Anaheim where he wlll
appear at the convention center w i t h
President Nixon and Governor Reagan.
The Senator made Ule remark in· an-
swer to a question at a press conference.
He said he had been told 8ttemptS
would be made to disrupt the meeting
torilght by several groups.
He said security forces were taking
every precaution and an Anaheim police.-
man Jn the hallway verified that his de·
partment had been alerted for trouble to-
night.
Senator Murphy called the Disneyland
Hotel press conference to ei:press h l,s
shock and anger al "the un believable
riot which took place at the rally I a s t
night i11 San Jose.
"The President of" the United State!.
the governor of lhe number one state
and the United States Senat'or had their
Jives endangered by howling mobs of radi-
cal terrorlsts numbering well over 1,000.11
The Senator said, "This frlghtfU! dem-
onstration obviously was a preplaMed at-
tack, led by experts. Even ~ cadence
of lhe· chanted obscenities had the hall·
mark of careful preparation.
"We can no longer put this off as some
chilish prank or students' complaints.
This now must be recognized for ei:actly
what It is-a revolutionary movement to
deslroy this nation."
The Senator said Thursday nigbt'1
demonstration showed the strength of ~
revql~tloparies and was an example of
what they can accomplish and how close
they can come tb the destruction of, the
leaders of our country.
He 'said eggs, rocks, bricks ·and other
missiles were .lhro~n at th~ Presi4ept'1
·car.
Freedom Papers' Hoiles
Succumbs m Santa Ana
ltlymond CYrus Hoiles, president of ta Ana Community. H<8pital,. wa ·not 'im-
Freedom Newspapers and co-publisher Mediately announced.
of the Santa Ana Register, died today Hoiles was known for hill' fr"'1k and
after a brief illness. He was 91. sometimes controversial statements on
Cause of death, which occurred at San-, issues of the day, voiced In the Reglster
· and other publications in hJs 20-new1-
'ro~g~: rralK
Expectetl
lnAnaheini
· After helng th• target of n>eb, bricli;;
boW.,, egp, red flap and olllet m_lulli!
hurled at bli Umoua!oe In San J ... ,
President Ni.Ion Promised to ''take off
the glove!'' at 1 pol!t!cal rally lobfabl In
Anaheim and· reipond ~. 1 u c II
''vkiousnesl.'' •
Alt.er hi. arrtv11 ·11 San ClementO, t!irJ
President Aid the 900 a n t l w a i;
d~monatrators were "radical, a n t I ~
democratic elmnentl'" wbo threate..i ·
freedom of apeecb , and uaembly In
America. · ·
"This was no outburst by a single Jn..
dlvidual,'' said the President at the
Westem White House. "This wu the ao-
tlon of an µnruly mob that repreaanta I.bl
worst in America."
The glus-top limousine containing Ule
President, Sen. George Murphy and Gov. ·
Ronald Reagan was blttzed while be left~
GOP rally as the President· neared tM
end of a 5,~mile, crou-country cam-
paign tour.
~ San Jose violence wa.s. ra~ ,U.
· inoat , "rloul •tnied al any Preatdeol lit
this counlzy aince Ille uaus~tloo al
Preoident John ~-Kennedy In 1963.
PartiUin Republicanl had given the
Pmident 1 Wll'dl•..-plilll al the rally.
It ... l>otlor --~ ... "" cttmbed'llop'lllt -·ot-bis·I--.111
the 11Me of plicito llondlllbtl" .
Facing '1s opeonents· • they~m.,,,.....,._
-tia, Nlloa tbnlat bis jaw forward
llld 011111 dp botll anna. Wjlb bJa nq..._
be lormeil "V" .,mboli for dit crmld.
The mob crew wilder.
Hl.s motorcade ... mobbed for abGUI
five The presldenUal llmoulllnt ud other
veb!cles were bit repeatadly by Lltp
rocks. Several persons.taclgd!DI .a lecrtt
Service agent and a televt1 fO a
cameraman sUffered mtnor lnjurim.
·While HQllae aides and guesla 'ol Illa
President riding in 1 bus behlftd tdl
llmoualne huddled In aeats and llalea u
rocks and bottles mWhed lour wtndowS.
Newsmen in another bus were tplatterld
with glass from five smashed windowL •
One youth whipped a larg~ belt fnnll
his waist and lashed the top o( a car con--
taining H. R. Haldeman, Nilon'a chief Of
ataff.
''Jt was just like Caracas," said Boil
Maiy Wooda, the Presidenl'a· long-~
personal secretary, wbo was litUng ned
to one of the mwhed willdowa. She
referred to an attack on N"wm, then Vice
President, In Venezuela. .
' Murphy termed the mob. "wild~,
tough, arigry reVoluUorioriea" w '& o
••should be identified and Isolated."
"I have been. ~ful to !"inl but ~
these are the.actions of -.,ylOlent few; U
Is lmpor'8Jll thal all Amerltana keep thtl
perspective,'' the P.resident aaid.
"But the time tiia collie to tall< the
gloves o(f and apeak to thia kind ~of
bebavloc jn 1 forthricht W•Y. Freedom of .
apeedl ud freedom ol, aaembly -exlal whoa -" 'Wllo pucefully altond
nllies are attacked with flying rocks.
°'Tonlghl ,at ~Im I will dlsi;uaa
what America must do to end the wave of
violence and terrorism b1 the radical, u-
ti-democraUC elements lri·OW' society~"
The Cn>Wd bad p-by the !fme
Nixon entered Sin Joie Civic Audltoi;b!m
(See NIXON, Pap l )
-· ....... ' Cont -"I'll be there to lectui'e at the request
of the teacheni, for eoume)jng and jllll
general rap aesaiona, '1 said the .U.year-
old. policeman. -B adli am Cu r bs Rout~ Fight-paper g[OUp. ,
-nie Registe~r--;-tn-summarizing his-~•---1---
reer, said: "His life was an editorial,
'!'lie program Is being Instituted this
year following studlea made by the
Newport Police Department'• community
relallons officer, Ed Cibbarelll. uBoth tbe
odJool d~trict and · the deportment
neognlzed the need for I prosralll like
lhll, 10 I Wllll requested to mill! I ttudy
ol lht existing _.... in othel:
diltricts/' he Aid.
When Police Chief James· Glavaa
brouihl lht result. of the study in the
IChool board last spring, he suggested
that an o(ficer with a teaching certificate
be used as the lmtructor of a youth and
the law course. The course ouUined by
Glavaa was modeled after ~ used by
the Lo9 Angeles Sheriff's office.
Due to funding and manpower restric-
t\ons:, the program has evolved to the one
which will begtn Monday, Clbbarelli said.
"It has two purposes," he noted. "Of.
fict!f BlacktMlm will be teaching the kids
about criminal justice and what we (th&
police) do rotative lo It. Bui he wilt also
be carryin& an undtrst.ndln& of the kids
Mo;jr; to aur pooplL"
• • \
and so, properly it seems, should be hil
obituary. In life he ·devoted h!s1 enertfe1
Won 't Introduce Any Mor e Free way L~gislation to encouragine people to think for them·
!elves and <to resltt the socialiaUc: prac-
tices. of political goverrunent. . . . . .
"lo death, he leave's a legacy of mU-
lloM of 'Words suagtsting to all· who wilt
listen that •human btina:s Can 8*' hip-
pier, roore pr'Q!'per'Ods' ltYes· in a r~
Ury S-OC!elY In' "'1leh no man ~ forte
or threat <J. 1oree iaP,trt.1t hil nQbbor."
.
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of .. D91ff '"" ""'
Ammblyman Robert E. Badham (fl.
Newport Beach) said today he probably
will not introduce any new anU·lreeway
measure in the next legillative se.Bion.
~adham, whose cootroYersial bill to
ktfi the Newport Beach.segment of the
Paclffc Coiol F"""ay died lo commi~
tee earlier this year, uid, however, he
would most likely support treew,y re-
opening k!glslation planned for lntroduc·
tion by Slate Sen. James D. Whetm~e
(0.Carden Grove).
Whetmore la reportedly preparing a
bill that would allow 'the Slate Highway
Commission to' reopen route studies to consider a spedftc' alternate to an adopt·
ed routo. Under .,.-policy, lll!l ·ownrnluie
• •
cannot formally guarantee It lfill ·eon--
aider o n•l y specific alternatts when it
agrees to reconsideration of an adopted
route between any two pclnt.s. •
Badham qualified his support of ~
lel\slaUon1 polnt.ing ollt that he has yet
to see -even a 'draft of the Whetmore
measure.
However, he indicated he luliy expects
to be m Sacramento for the next assemb.
ly session:
He is running for re-tlection Tue11day
against a little-known Democratic chal-
lenger, David .\Sher, In the 71st Asse~·
bly district. The tau.er ls a clear underdog
In the GOP-heavy d!Jtrict.
Badham said he Is surpr~ tbat Whit·.
more Ls plan•Jng to lnln>duce the fn:e-
way ~1h1laUon, pointing out that he w'as
"" al Illa leadlq -ll·ot .bla .tBacl-
' :
ham~) freeway blll.
He said, however1 .he would appport
"an)t legislation~ that wpuld '10lve lhis •
freeway mess.
i'ObviOusly," Badham ••id, "the. {ree-.
-way haa been pUt In the wrong place ind ·
must be moved."
The route or the pJanned coa!!,tal .Jree-
way Ui the he·art· o( decade-long contro-
versx. Newport Beach interests are com·
pl ain ing that the ro0te, as pJa1'ited, would
di vide their city In half. ·
He Is atlrvlvod by lila ..Ue, lllablt; two
ms, C. H, .Hotles, co-pullliatllr> of the
Register. and Harry H. ifoilet,· pubUaher
of the Gazette-Telegraph, C o I or I'd o
·Springs,.Colo., and a daughter. Mary
Jane Hardie, of Marysvillt, Calif.
Since the route has been adopted, Mw-
ever, the State Highway CommlUJon )las
T<fosect ·to coiis;der any changes without· NEW YOllK' (UPI) -Random -
the consent of the cit,y of Costa Mesa • has commilliontd Matth'ew J. BruccoU,
Costa Mesa has conUnually opposed •~Y · an 11uthority...on 'Emell Hemlnp11 and
reopening because It rears the 1Upcr· F. Scott Fitzgerald, to write.. a 300,0(M).
,(See lWllWI, Pip l). )<Ord ~IPbl. ol lbe !al& JaliA O'Hara.
'· •
Weadaer •
Ni&hl and morninc fOf retuma
to the c:oul this ...tend, dn>p-
'ping the high reading to II alOlll
the buches ~nd 10 degrees hlllh<t
Lli1tle further inland. ._
INSmE TODAY :
Tllo 1ract•red FolU.1 of 19Tli
(n Log'4oo B"""h com< up IJlioln
mzt tottk_, nri.rino '"°"'II for
South COGll Comm•nlfll HOfpj•
tal. ·sec todar'• W1r1cmdfr 1ec-
11 ... ..;.. a· ,_ . -' c.....,,.. ,, .. _,.. . ,_ u --..... ' ..._.. ,.. . ,...,. '"" -" .... u..n 11 --. """ . ..,.... ,, -. -
'
..
/ . ,. \ .... :
• -· • •
I
J DAIL V PILOT N
5 Hopefuls
Seek School
-Board Seats
...
Five candidates -thret men and two
wamen -art vyina; for a vacant seat
on the Board of Trwtees of the Newport.
Mell UnUied School District.
The specta1 election will be conducted
Tuesday In conjunction with the general
election. 'Ille spoclal vole wu ...-tta-
t.d by the resiCJ>alloa from the bolrd last June of Mn. Ellzobeth Lilly, ooo of
the original seven tuntees of the untfitd
ecbool system covering b o th Newport .
Beach and Costa Mesa.
Mrs. Lilly represented Trustee Ar e a
2 which lies 90Uth of Baker Street be-tWeen 'NeWport Bqu.levard ind FairView &aa 111 Com Mesa.
Eno thoUP ... --will ,..,. resent that specific area, all a ,000 votel'I
within the school district are eligible to
cast ballots In the s:pecial election. •
School tum ... plonned II that way m
1915 when the Newport.Mesa diirtrict waa
formed. The idea is to guarantee repre-
sentation on the school board from all
sections of the district and, at the same
time. to avoid old time. eastern ward
politics by Ji:avlng candidates f a c e all
voters instead of just those within thtir
specific trustee area. Trustees must live
within the district they r<pi.,.nt.
'nit candidate eamertng the most votes
Tuesday (only a plurality Is required for
victory) will nu the unexpired Portion of
Mn. Lilly's term, which runs unW June
ll'IS. 'Ille five candid.oles Include Calvin C.
Buck, Joe DuffY, Mn. &verly LonpfA>n,
Jlldlard -and Mn. Clrolyn Kio>-....
Tbursday, the DAILY Pll.01' ~ lnlormadon abcNt two ol the candidates.
Fl'OMP .. el
CANDIDATES •••
ocbooil, uried'lmprovad communications
aad --,._.ibllJty and aCCOWJ!o· IJWty to improve school.
"Alool with addlUonal no~blllty,
we lhould evaluate teacher• more fairly,''
Hanchett said. "Many perfonn very well,
-they could lal<e the euy way out llind be paid the same.'" He urpd lncor·
ptntlon of an lncenUve pay plu "such ii the Oranae School district ii trying," a!thou&h be noted be ii not "aplmt 1 ....
are."
Buck eharpd that aehoolJ ara produc·
lq lflduatea ''wbo can't spell, ,..d,
*lit, add « subtract.." hued on bil
-..viUo111 .. a COlllUltlni ensi-.
IJNDIPLOYMENT
· Nolfnl tllat unemployment Ii a aerioua
E ID Oranfe County leavtnr m1111 with only "a• a weet unem-
check" Buck called for a look
Ii ways of co11trollli1R education costs.
~ noted the Newport-Mesa general fund
tnereued 13 percent over last year, and
admlnlatratJve colts had grown 11 per-
~ while there waa only a 130 studeit
~Dment tnen:ue.
4111tls ls especially shocking when tat·
,.,,... ara out walking the streell," be
llld.
Calling for a return to the "primary
JOle « teachlna:," Buck aaid he would
eurcise his leadership role u a board
~mber to "eliminate empire building
and admlnlstraUve playground!." He
Cited attempts to buy an aircraft carrier
for use as a school, and adimlnlJtraUve
pay hikes following the adoption of this
year's budget as examples. A $1 ,500 in·
<rea!e to 133,000 for Supt William CUn-
nlngham "WIS transfered out of teacher's
ll!lllarles, Buck charged.
None of the candidates IUPPorted the ~cher system plan put forth by Gover·
nQr Reagan.
Similarly, none expressed support for
· illng teacher stTll<es, although
Kimme noted, lf teachers truly en·
the working condiUons of profes.-
llonals, they probably wouldn't want to
strike. "I look at strikes by tu.chers as
a Symptom," she said, that the teaching
Cvironment needs a cloler look by the tiOanl.
DAILY PILOT
ORAHGI COAST l'Ull.llHIMG COMl'ANY . •obort N, WeM • l'ro.Jdent ond l'lillll11hu . .
Jeck •· Curloy .. Vl<e l'r•ktlnl oNI 0Mo!'1I ,,,,_Mttr , , TI.011101 K ..... 11 .
ldltof
' I Th1111111 A. Murphl10 • • Ment~ll\lil EGl~r
" l. r1to, Krlot . . Ntwfl(lorl ktcn C11W Efftet .. .. ---' I 2211 Wort lolt.oo loulo.,1rd
' M1 ili111 ~•r•••= r.o. a.. 111s,' t2••J ' ' •, --' .. C.t. M-1 »II W..t .. W S'"'9
..... a.di; 122 Fortr.t A""""'
""",_... 9-fl: U'UJ lllldl ~lf'd .. lift C ......... ; • ktll II Cllrllnll R ... -.
• ' • • • I •
1
I
t ,
•
'
SEEKS SCHOOL SEAT
C..,.,ld1te Kimmi
Businesswoman
Vies for Seat
On School Board
Buaines8woman Clrolyn Kimme of 457
Elmburat Lane, Colla Mesa, ii another
of the five candidates for the vacancy
on the Newport.Mm llCbool board.
A native of Long Beach, Mrs. Kimme
hu lived ln the area five years, and for
three years bu operated a computer Jl"O"
grammlng oervtce. She baa three eblld-
ren, Ernest Jr., II, attending Oakmont
private oebool ·In CJruie, &th, 11, In
Colli Mesa 11111> School, and Karl, 3, a
prwehooler.
Amoag her quallllcaUons for the board,
Mn. Kimme lisll her computer pl'Of?lm·
ming exper1encu a.nd a ma1ter of arts
degree In mathemaUc1, as well u teach-
inl experience and being a Girl Seoul
leader. ·
Mrs. Kimme ii concerned t b a t the
''school board needa to use techniques
developed by the bwlne.ts community in
order to sample public reaction to Its
palici• and Innovations." •
The candidate commenda: the district
for "~g that they must use inno-
vating teaching methods in order to teach
the vast body of knowledge requli.d by
YOunf people today."
-ti --ti '--ti
Newport-Mesa
Council Backs
3 Candi.dates '
Three candidates have been endorsed
by the Newport-Mesa Education Aeo-
ciaUon Repruentative Council.
Mrs. Beverly i.an,ston, candidate for
the Newport-Mesa Unified School Dis.
lrict board or education has been given
the teacher association nod over four
others seeking to fill the unexpired term
of Mrs. Ellzlbeth Lilly on the 1eveir
member board.
Bart Hike, executive secretary Of the
N-MEA said teachen have been eir
couraged to support Mrs. Lang!t.on'1
candidacy, u well.
The 1,000 member affiliate of Calif·
ornia Teachers Aasociation and tht
~atJonal Education A&sociation also
ll'ges election of Wilson Riles as State
Superintendent of Public Instruction,
and Democrat John Tunney. for U.S.
)enate.
Harbison Parker
Services -slated
Memorial services will be held Satur·
day for Orange Coast College profe550r,
Harbison Parker, who died Wednesday.
Dr. Parker, $7, was stricken with a
heart attack and died at Hoag. Memorial
Hospital.
He had been an English in11t.ructor at
OCC since 1956. He earned his BA, MA
and PhD at UC Berkeley.
He leaves hi• wife, Charlene, of the
family home, 3S3 Ramona Way, Costa
Mesa, a son, Harbison H. Parker and a
daughter, Carol C. Parker, both of C.Osta
Mesa ; a 1ist.er, Mnl. Pauline Gratner, cf
Fullerton. and three grandchildren.
Services will be held at 11 a.m. at Baltz
Cost.a M~ Chapel.
The family suggests those wishing to
make memorial conlribulions, please
confribUte to-the Dr. Harbbon Parker
Memorial Fund, Scholarship FoundaUon
of Orange Coast College.
Newport Resident's
Winter Garb Stolen
When Maurice R. Koean, of Newport
Btaeb, went to cet bis wlnt<r clotlles out
of storage, he found that II could be a
cold winter this year.
KCJ1an, 211, of tlO Irvine Ave ., told
police be bad llol<d 11,IOO worth of
clothes in a suitcase and trunk in the
store room of hla apartment building.
When be went tq, 1et the clothes on
Thursday. the luggage, and the clothes,
WIS gone .
Spurned by Tydings
BALTIMORE (UPf) -sen. '\Joseph D.
Tydtncs (0.Md.), llY' be has been asktd
to join the "Operation Alert Board" o!
the American Security Council, 1 new PolllJcal acUoit ... ...,. .
RUNNING FOR BOARD
C1ndldlle H1nclllll
Hughes Engineer
Runs For Vacant
District Seat
Hughes Aircraft project engineer Rich-
ard D. Hanchett of 811 St. CI a Ir St.,
Costa' Mesa, la one of five candidates
TUM!ng for the single vacucy on the
Newport.Mesa school board.
The 42-year-old candidate has lived in
the area for nine years and iJI the father
of five ehiklr111, Donald, 20; Robert, II,
a student at Orange Coa11t College; Rich·
ard D. Jr., at Cal State Long Beach;
George T., IS, a sophomore at Meu High
Schoo~ and Kathryn L., 10, In the fifth
grade at Sonora elementary school.
Hanchett recently completed his bache-
lor'• degree In e11glneering. He Is a for·
mer Scoutmaster.
He would look for "system impleme,,..
tatlon of a computerized data system" to
eval~ate students and penoMel, com·
murucate to school personnel and parenbi,
and provide data "in usable format to
those with a need to know."
Hanchett is concerned about poor com·
municaUons between parents, teachers.
counselors, principals, studenl3 and oth-
ers. He believes "principals and teachers
should be given more responsibility and
made accountable. Thls includes training
In narcotic detection, and immediate sus-.
pension of lhOSe studeJ'lts involved. •1
The candidate is critical of "impl~
mentaUon of flexible scheduling before.
the system Wis evaluated; poor methods
cf personnel evaluation, and the reteir
\ion cf "dead wood", radicals and others
because of the lengthy procedure re·
quired to fire employes.
·Hanchett decries what he says 11 a
"lack of adequate teaching of reliponsi~
bility, respectability, trust and loyalty."
He commends the district for adequate
future building plans, its ability to raise
money. implementation of special pr.r
jects and the dedication of the school
board members.
From Pag~ I
BADHAM •••
highway will wind up running through Its
city llmlts.
The Whetmore bill. which has Costa
Mesa's blessings, would oller safeguards
against that happening.
The cootroversy has become so heated
In Newport Beach that a citizens' group
Is currently circulating petitions to force
a refen!ndum on rescinding the already.
signed agreement en a portion ol the
route throu gh their city.
The stale has obtained a signed COl'I·
tract on the route easterly from Bayside
Drive to the Corona de! Mar city limit!.
Wally Koch, president of the Citizens'
Coordinating Committee that launched
the petition drive last month, said today
his group will meet next week to take
a count of the number of signatures they
have on their petitions.
' The group needs 4.,300 signatures, a
figure representing 15 percent of the elig.
lble voters, to force the initiative refer·
endum .
'me CCC is simultaneou sly ·circulatlng
a second petition that calls for a Charter
amendment referendum that ln the future
would require a citywide vote before any
freeway ap;rccments could be signed by
!hi' City Council.
Koch said he could not give any flli!Ures
on the number of si~atures already ob-
tained pending the tabulation esssion but
salt1 the respanse "has been exception·
al.''
taine:d pending the tabulation session but
In Sacramen&o -hid first indicated he
would. introduce subsequent legislation in
the next assembly session, said today
ht feels be could not do so effectively. •·r have been pretty much rendered
sterile on this issue." he said. ''I don't
foresee my Introduci ng a bill at all. I've
tried. I've gQne about as far as I can."
Blackout Hits
Mesa, Newport
A trantforme.r failure near the cOsta
1'1esa·Newport Beach city limit plunged a
major section or both cities into d•rkness
Thuraday night.
Sou~m California Edison Compiny
1p0ktsman Bob Burbank said the 6:23
p.m. blackout cause was located near
IGth Street and Sea Gull Lant ln Newoort
Beich.
Work.men r(!stored poW!f at '1:02 p.m .•
and the Ughts came on again all ovtr that
parl GI Ille world.
VIES FOR POST
C1nclld1te L1nt1aten
Mesa Housewife
One of Five
1V ying for Seat
Housewife and former architectural
designer Mrs. Beverly K. Lant;ston, 901
Sonora Road, Costa Mesa, la running for
the alngle, vacancy on the Newport·
Mesa school board.
A resident of the area ror 11 years,
Mr1. Lan&ston bas two children attend· Lnc Costa Meaa Hl1h School, Cathy, 11
and Alan, 15.
Mrl. Langston cites among her qual·
UicaUon.s for the post "the ability and
earnest dellre to implement the wishes ot the community, knowledge of which
[ gained through active participation ln
1chool and other community crganlta·
tlons."
She voices no complaints about the
district~ but indicates she has sugges--
tions for further improvement. "I'd like
to see a better means of using cummun·
lty volunteers ln the school1 to relleve
teachers of some responsibilities," Mrs.
Langston said.
Further, she seeks a "lay committee
of businessmen to aid students in mak·
ing vocational choices, a~ Improved
communication and parent involvement
In the IChools."
Mn. Langston commends the di1trlct
tor realizing "how out-dated and lnef·
fective the old methods really are" and
!or having "begun to revitallz.e cur pro-
grams." The district has successfu11y
related curriculum to "life lnvolye·
· ment, without throwing out the basics
>f education," the 39--jear old candidate
says.
Returned to Russia .
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The State
Department says fragments of a Russian
satellite that fell on parts of the Midwest
last month will be returned to the Soviet
Union.
·NIXON •.• .
to pleod for 111pl>Orl for Murplty and
Rt.qan In the.IT racet a g a I n 1 t
Democratic challengers John v. Tunney
and Jess Unruh. Signs In the crowd de-
nounced him as • ''fad.It" and
"wvmoqger" and aeveral bundrtd
petam chanted "one1 tWo, Une: .. tow:
we dOll't want your f-war."
" · ~e. Nixon told an audlence ol about
J8,0QO persons that be hiad been 1uoceuf\d
In winding down the Vietnam eonfUc! and
repeated hi.s proin.i&e to end the waf ln
iUCb a fashion u to gain • generailoa o!
peace for the naUon.
Americans were fighting in Vietnam,
he said, "so that ~ young men who
are outside sboUUng their obscene
slogans won't have tolJMht in Vietnam or
anywhere else."
Ourlnl the speech some Oi the
demonstrators charged at a door of the
auditorium but were bloeked by polioe.
On his way out the President paused to
greet an Indian chief in full regalia and
then headed into the parking lilt where
sev.eril hundred poUce o!fi<:<r1 beld the
crowd about 60 ya rds away.
A few eggs splattered within about five
yards of where he stood. Then the Presi·
dent climbed on the hood of hi• car, rais:·
ed bis arms in the familiar V fashlon
and gave them his trad.iUonal campalgn
From Page l
FIRE ...
in the kitchen and then went to the den to
ir-,estigate.
The house already was filling with
smoke.
An alarm went out to Sa.1 Clemente
and Camp Pendleton fire ataUou. San
Clemente volunteers roared into the
estate od two pumper1 to fight a blue
which -on a1 much smaller scale -
resembled the devutatln& fire w h I c b
struck the community clubhouse early
this year. It wu o: 1imilar conltntcUon.
The fire, the classic smouldering varie-
ty, had built up within the two-foot..UUck
walls of the den and smoke wu pourln&
from several vents in the ceilings of the
wing of the four-sided residence.
Heat had built up conalderab"ly
throughout the 11ali £~ ·tion, sourcel aaid,
and smoke puffed through 1e1m1 along
several beams in the roua:h-plaster cell·
ings of the home.
President Nixon emerged from the
hou1e about 10 minutes after firefighters
arrived. He chatted with several of htr
Secret Service agent& In the patio as elec-
tric fans sucked smoke from the house.
The President was wearinc pajamas
antl a bathrobe.
The blau was an unwual and tense
climax to a harrowing day of CIJJl.
J>l.iCninl and W)r"est for the Pruident.
· lt was the mecond fire at the Compound this year. '
The first erupted in an ABC generating
truck on an evening la1t spring when the
President was addressipg the nation on
the Vietnam war. A stack of paper cups
and rags caught fire, nearly destroying
the backup generator truck. A crash
truck on constant standby for the
President's helicopters was used to ex·
llngul!h that fire.
An accurate raproauction of
an exce ptionally fine Queen
Anne double bonnet secre-
~ary. Formed of walnut and
yew wood veneers and solid
p e c a n and available in two
finishes. It is 36" w i a e and
8 l1h " high,
lllute. '!Ila lhouUnc and oboctnltleo ap-
peared to lnrrea1e. '
As b1s car moved out of the parkin& lot
thl'1)ugh a road c,leared through the
crowd, the missiles bqan falllnc.
'l't!iie-Prelldeut'a· · ltnwwfne, wttla a:
pilllce eaeorrand lralletl by a eaa ... u1111
with Secret service agents In It. lurcllld
forward. OnLagent tw:nbled from the
convertible. Several ethers were hit wtUt
rocks: but none were seMously injured.
A rock 1mashed into a window of tht
"control" car containing Haldeman and It
stopped abruptly causing teVeral minor
collisions in tM motorcade.
The President's limousine has bullet
resistant glass and the mllliles bounced
hannlessly off it. lts sunroof.type tQ9
also is made of glaas and wu clOMd arid
covered 1l the time.
Gov. Reagan called the dl~lay ''in-
tolerable behavior" and aaid : 'I express
my contempt on behalf of the cltil.enl of
California."
Newport Beach
Child Beater
Gets .Jail Term
Child beater Michael Leroy Shear has
been ordered to serve six months to 15
years in state prison for an 'assault that
Jed to the death of his ~year-old 1tept0n
in the bathtub of Shear1s Newport Beacb
home.
Shear, 24., formerly of 2327 Mar1aret
St., and now of Ontario, was sentenced
Thursday by Superior Court Judge JamU
F. Judge just one month after be rectiv·
ed a state prilon term cf up to 10 years
for the auboequenl beaUnl of bis nalural
son.
Shear had pleaded guilty In Oraap
County to feduoed ebargea of fnvollllllary
manalaughler. The San B e r n a r d I n o
Superior Court and local aentenoa will
run concurrenUy.
Shear was booted for murder after a
long investigation into circumstance1 IUr·
rounding the death on May 31, 11111, of).
year-old Patrick Tudor. ,...,
The little boy died in the bathtub and
. Shear's account of his death led Newport
Beach police to press their inquiries into
the incident.
It had been thought that injuries on the
child's body were inflicted by firemen
who unsuccessfully fought to revive him.
Shear was Jater arrested in San
Bernardino after docton at an Ontario
hospital drew the attention of police. to tn.
juries suffered by S.moatb.ald Erle
Shear.
The chlld Is llill receivlnc holpilal
treatment for injuries llJffered in what
the proteCUtton deaerlbed u a seriea ol
beatings.
Judge Henry M. Busch ordered a
prison of up to ten year1 for Shear after
lht· defendant pleaded, guilty to two
countl of lllfllellnr corporal punlabment
on a child. .
Movil Hits the Spot
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -''The Gmt
Traill Robbery" ts new playing at the
Ohio Penll<nillry.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
1td11111 ~
NIWPORT C~ACH
1727 Woatcllfl Dr,, 642·2050
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
Prohtslonal Interior
Doaltfyon Av11l1blo-AID-NSID
LAGUNA IEACH
~45 North Coaat Hwy. 494 6551
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
..... T .. ,,_ ...... 0,... C...ry Mf.12,J
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Frid•!· Oelobff :lO, 1970 DAILY PILOT S
.. Raid'!Neu
. : 1:!,ig <rang
. Of Rebels~
GM Talks Hit 'Blackout"
U.S., Russia
Heating Up
Over. Plane
" NEW YORK (UPI) -'POU..
.. ~'lbUl'lday two·J111i!.J111P-
'Pitjg leaden of the\;!arsesl
coalition of Negro street gangs
In Olicago u Ibey .a!!eiodl:Y were "preparing. to Joli Blad<
Panther !ta®" EI d t 'i.d I )I
Cleaver in Algeria:. · .
Qlicqo detecUV.S Jo\ntd ill
the .raid on I two-bedroom
. suite ..,at the Hbtel Croydon on Manhattan's !Ashlonable east ,.
side: Arrested •ere Jeff Fort.
26, wanted oa.cha{I~ of at·.,
tempted mutder and ag•
fiavated kldllaping, ·and
CheSter Ev~,_jr., 26, wa.oted
on double mui'der, bond 1um-
WASHlNGTON (AP) -Tlie ping and Dal'CQ!ics c~arges.
United States, displaying Its Fort was ' Identified by
first -·hli · · Chicago officefS ·.s _president . ~ c diplomatic . ini-of U>e. "to1f -2t". Of· the .
talion over the Soviet refusal · Blaclutooe Nation · the-con--
to release ·• U.S. Army "plane · i;lorrierate which btcludes the
and its hlgh-rantl·ng BlaCUtone ~.~··°' Whlcb
paaeng'ers, has c h a r g e d · F~rt. was founCler. Evan! was ·
Moscow with violating U.S.· 8llO a~ to ~.a member ~f . the· ruling gr-yup_ :Ther w e r e Russi~ ~nsular agreements. held wltbout l>ail -Pending &?'-
After eight days of.talking ia rival of warrants from Illinois. -·
re s t ·r a l n e d , optimistic Arrested with' them were
language, the Stele Depart· Pa~. Valenzuela, . l~. and
ment Thursday called for the Janice Conners,. 18; who was
\1 .. 1 TllHl!tll
Gunmen's-Target?·· . . trailed from Chicago to New immediate rel~ · o~ tJ:ie Yqrk Wednesday night and led
passengers who lnclu~ tw.o Chicago detectives to . the
American generals. ,Crpydon, She was aileep al
A statement handed lo the. time of the ta.id; hi.ft. Miss
Soviet Ambassador Anitoly F. Valuenzela and the · t. w 0
Dobrynln said "There ls no !li~Uv~ w~ .smoking mari-. . • Juana m the lmag TOOJll.
ju&tif1calion for. any fw:!her Tbe girls were held-in $4,500
_ Ra!ael Viera, 22, ~cqujtled ih June in the death of
one Detroit poUcetnan and the ·wounding oI another,
said Thursday that two-recent attempts have been
made on his life by gunmen in the streets of New
York. Clarence Fu11er, cCKlefendant in 'the Detr6it
·case, .was stahl?ed to deat)l _Wedn~sday. ·
delay by tJ:>e .Soviet UrJ!on. bail eacb on · charges· -of
Race .Riots Shut Schools . Meanwhile, the Soviets coi; "hindering prosecution" and tinu~ i:<> portray the plane s · possession of marijuana.
Jand'!lg in Russia acro:is _ t~ Police said they fOOnd ·no-Turki~h ~r ~s a hostile act weapons but did· fmd pai)en an~ linked It to alle~ed recon-iQdicating Port ind Evins . TRENTON, N,J. (AP)"-Cl· jured·and Ji arrested.
naiManct: . flights Jr"!'l U.S. ·were planning -to leave for ty schools were·Oniered closed At' -Ole tieight •. of the. ·Who C.res7
bases. . Algeria, which is beComing a today in an attempt to cool Ott _disturbance:!. Thursday; Mayor No· •...:... .;,.;,.,e'" '" tho
A commentary In ~e Sov~et refuge for Amer1C;An reyolu-racial clashes flparked by im· Arthur H. Holland declared a world ••r••'offiit.yow coM111u·
w n~ws a~.ency Ta.s_s said the in· tionaries. Police said. Fort plemeplation of a pupil _busµtg "local disaster emergency" nifv like your com1nu11ify tl•ilY c1dent. has again drawn. the planned to use Ole alias o\ the pJa _and Ordered a 9 p.m. to dawn n,••'''"' 41•••· !~'•th• DAIL'(
' . , •
TM IANCROFT
Qt55W
REMOTE CONT~
• ~CIAL!
attentJ~n of the world pubh!'.= to Rev; Lawrence Jordan. Fon~ty perso"• had been in-curfew. 'l lLOT.
the 11er1ous and constant threat -'-;::~~~;;;~·~~;;;;;,;,~;;;;===::;::==::::!~;::==::;=::;=::;=::;=::;=::;=::;~ of -peace," from "400 large and Ii.
2,000 small America-.. war .
bases on rorergn te1Titories.·· . Nurse Wins
The American bases. Ta!iS
said. are "situated in the im-
mtdiate vicinity 01 the Soviet Air Force
Urlion and other Socialist
countries and ·are widely used '·
ror espionage and olher hostile . Sk:r· m: .,h
activities." " . "" The United States maintai11S · · . . .
!he,small while plane llew Into sEATl'LE, Walb. (UPI) ~ · s.M· tenllory accidentally. ea\>t. S!ls;ln R. 'SJruclt, an un·
Besides ~ .Jenerals, an. m~ pregnant rw.rse, will
Amertcan ~JOS" . ~ "i :• "mQJ: In the Alr 'Force at
Turkish colonel-were an bOard ,JJ~t.until N.ov. 10 ~full
for. what t1ie t?.S. says was ~. ~~earing of 6et Case 'be"foTC a
tour, of TurkJSh border-lii~. ~-jOOge -pitnet .... • -· ·
stallallons. ; Judge Eug~.Wrigbt ot lhe
~ CiJ:cuit Court o( Appe-11
•,
'~ . ~-.
Compaetblo~
porl.tlle COIOf T'I.
' Clibil'IM M ,...;'*9' I
:.1c~ ..... I
' ecilof llCC:liNd ...
SiM<-COt(lit' '"" ··rxrl~ --
~ -x:... • . ··~ ' • '.. . . ·; !fr!• ••. ~. ., ' -' . . • . . Rew '197:1 Z~nith-;hafJIJ~rated quality . . . . . . - ... , .~o:: • ' • . • • •
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Six Kent
'lndictees
Missing
i.~ued· a . .t e m.p or a.r y
restra~ng ofa.~r T,bursdl)y
preventing the.Air Force from
discharging the'·ilUrSe ..
_Wright iss~ his-order after
a lower cour.t judge had tum·
ed down Capt. StrUck's pleas.
The appeals . judge cave
Capt. Struck·, attorneys until
Nov. 5 to fl.le 'motioiis and the
Air Force until NOv. t'o to re-
p\y, and ordered the hearing
~fore the three-ju,dge i>aJlel.
·. ··1· ·&".Color .. ~~a~le with Zenith's
.... ' excrus1ve0 • . ' SP~CE tOMMINP~ · • $]· .9 .. · 888 :
· for qnly . . . · ~
'
KENT. Ohio (UPL) .
Authorities said.Thursday they .
were unable to locate six of %5
perso~ indicted by a special
~and jury in connectioh with
Jast sprine's disturbances at
Kent State University.
Nineteen persons have been
taken in custocJy but srx. others
have not been located, despite
the fact detectives "passed the
word" they are wanted.
It also was learned the
grand jury may return more
indictments in connection with
its month-Jong trivestlgatlon of
the Kent State , distnibancl'\:,
which were climaxe:«f May 4
when four sWdents were shot
to ·death by Ohio N•tional
Guardsmen.
Mike Ro~o of the American
Civil Liberties Union said he
·wants the t~ ,judges to
order a. court bearing to test
U\e.ConstituUonaJ.ity Of the Air
Force regulation Uitder 'which
Capt. Stru~· was · lo be
discharged.
Wright jssued.h.is order <1ft~r
U.S. District Judge William N.
Goodwin refused.
Capt. Struck was to have
beeh di~rpd af .midnight
Wednesday bUt her attorneys
obtained 'a ~!.hour slay trotD a
ledelal 'judge in Tacoma.
Goodwin's ruling had lifted
that ~stay.
· Witeh Pr.ohe ' ' '
• in
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GOD.0.AS GOLD·GIFTS
Watch in· $.20 gold piece, ·$2,000.
$10 gold piece watch, $1,200.
S2.50 gold piece ring. $180.
Libjlfty Head charm, $215. .
Cuff links of $2.50 gold piei:e, $250.
.Ch.ii•g.t 'A(£0Ul'ITI ln't'lttd.
Al'l'!Ulun fJ1preu lll'lk.lll*'lcil•d ,,,.., Mtstw Ctl•l'OI· flOt.
SLAVICK'S :
Jc'A·elen Since 1917
-18 FASHION ISLAND ·
NEWPORT. BEACH -644-1310 ,
. ..
Zenith handcnfted qiiallt'.y •or un~ivaled dipendabilltJ '
. • .ZMllR AFC-AukwlloOc f'lnt•Nltl"f CO.· .
trol -ol.clronic•llY line h,inH color Tv -
111St1n1ty -ow!n P.,lecta yollf. UHf lino-·
lvttirlg "'*""•'~·
I ltfllth H.dcl'llftH '°"*-' C...... -
com bines ·l•molis '28'1ith ~'*' de-
' l)endabiliLt "'illt· e•C•lklf aoU~•• .o..
. YlM!CttS. • .
• I etiliie• ~ ... T~ onta111• o:c: -•· ..... eonrrO.. •re •oarate lor hw,CIOlat'
tur• tirigtrtna. with redder reos, br•ghtior • • leYlll and voitl"I•· arid, ff9 pll!UO liligtl O"
gr-.,.ct."'°'• brillil'!I( bltlel. . the Ml lor ~alef eotl'l'tftierice. ·
SPACE COMMAHOI' 100 REMOTE CONmOL
Just pren the button on·the sm1H ~trol unit YOU·h0f4 in your
hand to ,change VHF Chftnnels end turn aet on Of olf. One bl;tt·
Ion does It atll.No need~ turn TV~ manually at~!·
BUY NOW! ~MITED QUANTITIES!
TY ·ana
APPLIANCE
IN HAllOI :c1NTU
21H .HAllOl,ILft. ,
COSTA M~A . '"' 7111
..
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Evidence FQund Sak in
D6NVERS, Mass. (AP) -
A~ have unc'overed
new evidence linked to the
witchcraft hyst~rla for' whleh
20 peraons were executed in
near'by SiJem in 1192.
Opeo MOllday aocl FmNy ""'" t :JO werededaredbew!Ji:hed.The~====::;;:;:~;:;;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;;:;;=:;~;:;;:;;;;;;~~;:::;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;:::;::;::;:;:;::;:;:~;:;:;;:;:;::;:;:;;:;:;::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
executions -led by that of
the Indian womu -begaz:i,
and in an lt persons ~e
hanged and ·one pressed to
death beneath -· 1 'pile of Richard Tra sk, a
NOrtbeist.em U n iv er s I t y millstones.
· graduate history student. and
•rdteoloelst Roland Robbins
siy."they discovered the foua·
daUons ol the home ol the
ReY. Samuel Parris.
The a 'J'f'eologigts uncovereil
cellar wans about a root below
the surface of 1 field where
Parris' home was believed to
hl9e stOod. '
• ~ cflgin(, aided . b7
student yoaunteen, unewthed a pewler"lpOOll,' II i>iln doted .
IW and II fragment of
chinaware beariDC the fnltfah
of Panis and his· Wife
i,
It was Panis' f.year-old
daugllt<r EqMbodl 111kl' an 11·
~·-""°· OJ<<ited by Illes.of wlldleroft told by
an lndlltl woman, scrtamed
ancl' ll>l.\o!nd every nipt and
Ptld Poll1bl ~iiiliit
~vo11 FOi
IEVERLY LANGSTON ·
JillWPOltT·MUA SCHOOL IOAlD
I, 111:.,;1:1.11t-N••po1t·M•t• Sthool Dillrict Si11c• t•SI
'2. P.T.A. hlW'OIW'l!'t'lllll'-' y,,,._,.,,, s .... ,. Sch.ol l M1t•
Hlth School, •
J. M9t11btr of P•r•"' Corp., Coit• M••• Hith Stllitol Si11c•
lh l11c1pti•"· 4. Vite0Pr.thl111t CM+• M"' Hith loMt.t Clul..
-~ 9"'1 ..._ "' ...,.. .... C.M. '
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Choose One of the Many
Coast & Southern Federal
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WILIHIM • QIWIERCY l'UCl!:3133Wllll!llo
Blvct .. L.A.•-.1205 ,
LA.>CMC'tmnlll: 2nd &:BioHwtY • 921-110!
•tMmMGl'OM Wctt: it Huntfngton O..•
(71'1 •7·1047 '
Ulfl'A ANA LOAll art\'IC'I: AOlllCY: . fllOS N. M111n -. .. m•> w ... ...r ·
•MNTA •ClllCA: 711 'Mllttl" Bf¥d. • -.074'
*Ull ....0: 10ll I Pldft; • 1314341 •Wl9Tccmia. E'Oollond ~·cv. • :m-22111
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ocooun1, ,._.,. olffllble lo boc:Ome
·. • member.Subetlntill erdng1 •re
IVllllll>le-pulO!Nlalngmony l!oma ,
tnctudJna.1u1Gmob1les. fumflurt,
•l'P!lanca. Jewelry.,Plua ininr-·
fret. Mrvk:n -money Ordt,.,
sari d1po1lt boxes. etc.
AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS ~ i .-~~ . _........__ ~
COAST
·Coast & Southern Feoeraf
Off9rs . You These ..
·Highest Prevaiiing Rattm: · ... ,.. . . ' ' '
COll'°"NDlO DAILY oUID)~D QllAllTlliLY,• ' ..
5.00%·5.13"9 . . .
Puel>ook;NoMlnlmum.:
5.250/t-5,399/o .
T1lrN MOllJ!I Ctnlllolto; No li!lnh!Mn)I;
5.75%-5.929/o '• ..
on.v.., C111111coto; l1,11DO ""'*"""' .
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• T'flu'Y-Cetltllcolr, $11,000 Minimum. ..
INSURANCE.TO $2Q,000
•
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• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Ch oice: Mrs. Langston
Coste Mesa and Newport Beach Wien will find
on their ballots next Tuesday a eboice among ftve can--
dldates who seek to replace Mrs. Elizabeth IJlly 11 re-
presentative from Trustee Area 2 on the Newport Mesa
Unified School District Board of TruJtees.
The district was divided into trustee areas when it
was unified . Trustee Area 2 is, rou.gbly, the triangular
area bounded by Baker Street on the -north and Fair·
view Road and Ne\\'J)Ort Boulevard on the east and
west.
The DAILY PILOT commends all five of the can·
didates who have made them.aelves available for this
important community position. Each of the five h•s
something to offer and each !1 obvloully willing to sac·
riflce personal time for the benefit of ftllow citizens
and the corrununtty's children .
After studying quaIWcatlons and atlltlldu of the
candidates, the DAl_L Y PILOT recommendJ Mn. Bev·
erly Langston be elected to llll the vacancy on
the school board.
A resident of the community for 11 yean, she ahowa
an unusual grasp of the over·all operation of the local
ochool system and an ·Independent thoughtful attitude
toward the cllltrict'• problems and aueu. A llouaewife
and fonner architectural designer, she 11 the mother
of two children enrolled in the district. Since she would
be replacing a woman on the board, her election would
maintain a 5-2 •. male-female ratio among the trustees.
lt had been feared that within the seven-person
composition of the board schisms would develop among
trustees who reside in the two cities -in other words,
that-the Costa -Mesa trustees would line up against the
Newport trustees and vice veraa. Fortunately for the
good of the district, this has not occurred; the trustees,
8.lmost without exception, have operated with. one idea
In mind -what is belt for the entire district. not what
is good for cblldren of one of tht two communlt111.
In this area, Mrs. Langston promilu to continue
. '
thla tradition. She has pledged that, allhollJh hoc CbD·
drtn happen to be enrolled In Costa Mesa Hi&h School,
her range of Interest extends to every child In the di ..
trict. '
Mrs. Langston also presents an air of amiability,
a desire to cooperate with fellow trustees without re--
llnqulsbing her convictions. Jn abort, she seems to offer:
a good balance to the six members already serving on
the board.
Next Tuesday, for the Newport~A1esa Board of
Trustees: Mrs. Beverly Langston.
Extraol'dinary Singers
An extraordinary Harbor Area singing group makes:
its first concert appearance of the season in a couple
of weeks.
For a change, it's going to be before the home folks.
Sandwiched between their international summer
tour and a hoped-for aepearance hail way across the
United States next spr1ng, the special assortment of
young men and women will be appearing regularly
througboot Southern California. ·
Actually. the first fall appearance of the heralded
Corona del Mar High School Madrigal Singers will be
tomorrow, when they appear with the William Hall
Chorale at a rally in the Anaheim Convention Center.
They sing· again Nov. 5 at a music festival at Costa
Mesa High School.
Then, their first solo concert will be Nov . 19 at their
O\VD schoo;.
Jn March, they have been asked to sing at the na·
tional conference of merican Chorale Directors As·
socfation. They ar at good.
Under the le direction of Donald Haneke they
have evolved · to a major cultural attraction. '
Tune in sometime, if you can get tickets.
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..,;, .. 111\Au i:t::i.1~
. N SPOOK OF THE YEAR
VCI S t tldent S peaks Out A gainst Campus Violence
Radical Minority Is Inviting Backlash From :eublic
To the Editor:
I, as a student of UCI, am tired of the
speeches. the protest!, the riots, the bom-
bings and the kJdnaptn11 in the name of
the "oppressed people."
I say we; as lfle general public, are op-
pressed by the radical minority. Radie11lt
are acting as guerrillas, causing so-called
••spontaneom" riots _and bombings. They
are inviting backlash, which will curt.all
our freedoms, achievlll(, In the end, jlllt
the opposite of what they ,.1 out to do.
These radicals only make life mcu-dif-
ficult Instead of being conatruclive.
AU. ~CANS Jose jf sUch actions
continue.
J am not a poUUcal activilt. J am a
white, midd1e-class college student. J 1m
part or the "silent mtjority." But I can-
not remain silent while life, property and
freedom are at stake.
Last year on the Irvine campus, two
1tudent alrikes were beJd. Steven Shapiro
was lauded and Angela Davis spoke.
Windows and buildings were covered with
anti-war. anU-establlslunent slogans.
?i.1any rallies were held.
TIDS YEAR, within three weeka of the
It-art of tchool, one of the Chic.ago Seven
attempted to enhance revolutionary spirit
In local radicals. Since, a university car
and the Stanford Research ln!titute have
been bombed, and now the univenlty
Bank of America has been burned oot.
What or who b next?
1 personaUy do not favor represaion
any more than any other person. But in
the light of recent developl}lents.
especially the increase in violence In the
last few weeks. I feel that the time has
come to put pressure on the radicals -
they must not be allowed to bide within
the university system where they have
free reign ta import innammatocy ullra-
left leaders or organize rallies, which,
directly or indirectly. innuence and con·
done terrorist activities.
IRA BAXTER
Nur 1e1 Praised
To the Editor:
This an acclamation to nurses tn
general and to those :serving in Hoa1
Memorial Hospital, ln Newpart Beach. In
particular.
I've been hospitalized several times in
several places and have always reeelved
wonderful care in each: But never have I
seen the dedication to the welfare of pa·
tients given like 1he nurses at Hoag
Hospital
I was in Intensive care for four days
there rectntly and each crew or nul'SH
was equally concerned for every patient
In the crew's care.
•
I SAW THE~f give kindness, un-
derstanding and patience to everyone -
even those ~·ho were demanding without
cause.
I was transrr:rrtd lo two other wards
.---B11 Georwe ---.
Dear George:
My faUltr Ill alway• giving me
advice about th! boys I go out with
-about bad company, and the
wrong kln<I of boys. and all sorts ol
"helpful hints." One lli1ng Interests
me: How do fathers know about $0
many things boys might try to do
wrong?
LOUISE
Dear Loui!t:
1be answer ls obvious. We
fathers read 1 lot ..
(For ID$tant SOlutlons to ute'•
Problems, write to Gtorae. Just
add W11ler.)
... ~·
before betni released from the hoaplta1
and I received the same good service and
cbeerfulneta from all the nurses In each
ward. Far too many people art afraid to
go to a hospital. I want all or them to
rud this and be auured Ibey will be .)Veil
taken care of.
I salute all nurset but I give special
credit to thooe serving Hoag Hoopltal.
IosraUtud<-
TllYRA TOMLINSON
f4fll, lllqlll ......
To the Editor:
Are you worried about your .achool-age
children? Afraid they may be lured into
lr)ibw IOme of that nll'COtic everyone is
talking about: marijuana? You can pre-
vent this!
Observe your child very closely. U he is
depr~. give him one or your diet pills,
that should pep him up. This may,
however, make him nervous. If this oc·
curs, wen, your tranquillzen that have
kept you ca1m for all these years should
calm blm down.
IF BE SHOULD develop a phobia
against your pilla, or if his desire is to
UH drugs IOCially, like him to a cocktail
party. Give him a martini. That should
keep bim happy.
Now your child II going ln the right
direction. He'1 not at a pot party or on
the llteet, be'1 probably at a c;aci.tail
party with • lampshade on hi1 head.
When he says hls friends are SlllQklng
their intoxicants, it is time for the
clincher ; offer him one or your cigaret-
tes. He won't lite it at first, but tell him
how lon1 it took you to get used to ii. and
show him ways to hold it that look smart.
Show him how to blow smoke rings.
YOU ARE AU.tOST there. Now you
must tell your children to beware the
"friendly stranger" who may offer him
an innocent looking cigarette. which is
"marijuana, the killer drug!" Explain
tbal it la a powerful narcotic In which
lurks murder, death and insanity.
Then, to wrap U up, show him films of
a heroin addict 1oin1 throuch cold-turkey
withdrawal and UIUl'e him thil la where
amokiq urcollca will get him.
JAMES R. BUTLER
Propolitlon J 8
To the Editor :
Last week you prettnted the DAILY
PILOT'S J>09itlon on the propositions ap-
pearing on the Nov. 3 Ballol
I believe these to be sincere and honest
opinions. I doii't believe that your study
of Proposition II w11 quite extensh·e
e:nouah.
'I'lMi Automobile Club's basic viey,-paint
ii for smog control and research and
rapid transit, but we are againlt the pro-
poeed method ol. finaocin& and lrt-
adequato controb.
A. L. wrrr
Manager
South Loo Allt•les Diatrlct Office Automol>lle Club or
Soutll<rn caJHomia
W•• C'-We Belleee
To Ule EdHor:
Just recently a blatory leacber at our
school showed me two I-of Life
mafulne. I didnl think anything of It un· t'll realized that both tasuea conta.lntd
the' ume pklun illuatratlng two d!I·
ferent storltsl
One iulle .... -Oct. 17, 1161. and
the captJon benulb Ule picture staled
that 1t WU t.atea• lbe ICtM Of a lht·
dent riot at -on Unlvenlty. JI
-a Sood aample ol police brutali· ty. .
The --•u an euller Issue of
r . °""" '
Mailbox
'
l~etters from readers are welcome.
Nonnally writers should convey their
nlessage.s i11 300 wofm or le11. The
rig/it to cundense letttt1 to fit apace
or eliminate libel reserwd. AU let-
ters mwt include lignatxre and mail-
ing address, but names may be with-
held on request if .Ujfkient reason
is apparent. Poetry will not be pub-
lished.
Lire -Dtttmber I, 1968. The very same
picture was printed, the only difference
l;>eing that it was enlarged. 'Ibis was
Surprising enough, but what even further
surprised me was the fact that the ca~
lion beneath this picture stated that it
\\.'as not a student riot at Princeton, but a
picture of the Chicago riots!
COINCIDENCE? I don't think so. How'
disappointing to learn that a mag&line
will find a good example of something (in
th.is case, police brutality) and use it ln
two different instances. Magazines make
up a large part of the news media, and
when these occurrence:1 happen, wbo can
we believe?
I only bope that Life magazine, and all
other magazines will start presenting the
real facts, so we can once more put our
faith in them as a means or finding out
what is goin6 on in our world today.
DEBJ MILHOLLAND
Iligb School Student
No T r ansition Plan
To the Editor:
As I read increasingly disturbing
unemployment figures I find it appalling
that the Nixon administralion and
memben of Congress did not have a
transition plan ready to put into effect
immediately when defense contracts
were cut back.
Many areas, too numerous to mention,
could have been part of the pro-
gram .•• low-cost housing, t r a n s i t
systems, hospitals, child care centers,
training centerS ... to name but a rew.
We might add another program -
"cure the Incurables by 1975. '' With that
kind ol goal we hit the moon in 1 sho rt
time.
Jl's not loo late to remind candldates!
KEN JOHNSON
Reuse Grocery Ba91
To the E<litor:
As our contribution to the fight against
mounting trash and ·untold waste of our
precious natural resaurces. we shoppers
can take our used grocery bap back to
the market each week for our new orders
Until they are no longer reusable.
For other types of atortr, we: can
refuse all unncceauy wrappings and
double up on bl&I wl)eMVer pol.!lible.
MRS. VICTOR WASBIN
People PollutlOtl
To the Editor:
Th< propooed new cilY or Irvine which
is estimated lo bring an added 75,000
leventually 450,000) lncrtase In popula~
Uon Into 1hi11 1re..i Is an excellent examp le
of people polluUOn and I can't understand
y,·hy there bun'l been a massive protest
lrom the peopit who Uve along the
Orange Coast.
My family movtd to Colli Mesi from
Los Angeles 11 years .ago to get a9.•ay
from tbe crowded condltJoas lbcrt, we
have enjoyed the Helbaw room" and com.
paratively clean air here, but there will
soon be no difference between the two.
The whole roncept of the new city is
repulsive and disgusting.
DOROTHY ZUBWAL T
A9alt11t F r eeway
To the Editor:
With interest t read your freeway
editorial of Oct. 14, and I very much en-
darse the solution of rompromiR, in tbe
ca5e of two conflicting positions; ·u
usually fair, but I cannoti iub8cribe to
your thinking u set forth.
There is an alternative, and that is
some form of mass tran.sportaUOn ..
Someday, we will have to come to this,
anyway. Looking back over the last two
deca.des. you will note that every im·
provement in our highway system, every
additional road, every additional access,
has only brought relief for a brief period.
THEN l'ttORE people find they can live
one place and work another because of
the: new roads, and the freeways and
highways become ~ clogged again, The
same story will be repeated again if the
Newport Freeway is installed.
It is apparent that the time has come,
when we na klnger can afford the luxury
of one occupant per one car. The pollu·
lion, the constant continual burial of
more land under a b!anket of asphalt,
and the man hours wasted in using the
highways, is too big a price to pay.
YOUR ENUMERATED proposal, and I
quote, "1. That the Costa Mesa City
Counci l go on record .•• that if Newport
can produce a precise Pacific Coast
Freewa;· route that doesn't adversely af.
feet Costa Mesa. Costa Mesa will suppo rt
it to the hilt." Why not put It the other
way around and say if Costa Mesa fiilds a
route that doesn't adversely affect
Newport Beach, Newport Beach will suir
port it to the hill ?
ONE OTHER remark -I can't for the
life of me understand why Costa Mesa
wouldn't welcome a dozen mo re
freeways. Each street vies with the next
ta get more ugly signs up. I know of na
street that has any trees or landscaping.
Each building is obviously or the cheapest
construction, On Newport Blvd., 1
beautiful crop of weeds Is always on
display. There Is no center of town, and
single family residerres, mobile hames,
induslry and commerce are all in·
1ermlxed. What do they have to lose?
LUCILLE HARRISON
Freemau Referendum
Tq the Editor :
The DAILY PtLOT's posillon
(editorial, Oct. 14) that a free.way is the
answe.r to this area's internal traffic pro-
blems ls so ridiculous as to defy a r•
tional reply . However, the accompanyina
article by Chamber or Commerce presl.
dent and attorney Charles R. Curry, 1t.-
tempting to present a case against the
freeway referendwn, needs tome serious
refutallan. Jf Mr. CUrry prepared his
briefs with as m u c h carelessness and
lack or thought as that article repre~
ted, hi~ tow office would now be 1af.ber.
ing cob-webs.
THE t>ERVASfVE implication of Mr.
Curry 's re1narks, to y,•hlch I take \'lolcnt
exception, ls that our local electorate Is
comJ)OSed or a ctUcclion of dummies
unable to count above 10. In Newport
Beach especially, the majority of voters
are lnfonned. lnle111gent ond quite as
able: to interpret the results of comple1
stud!!! u are the councilmen
•
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themselves. That will remain true until
the council is composed entirely of social
scientists, PhD's in city planning, high·
~·ay engineers, and, oh yes, attorneys,
1'-1r. Curry states Oat-out that the
referendum procesa "eliminates the oj>-
portunity for thorough and competent
study of all the problems involved and
places the matter in an emotional area.·~
That is patently untrue. Nothing ln law,
code or precedent prevents the council or
any other city agency from making a
study of any important question, at any
depth necessary, whether or not a
mer.ndum is impsiding. Indeed they
should be required to do '°• and to then
submit a summary of their findings to
the electorate for either acceptaoce, or
rejection.
MIL CUIUlY's most thoughtless mo-
ment occurred when he posed the ques-
tion, "Are we going to settle other issues
by referendwn such as tax rates, a
policeman's eatary, or the location of a
street sign? Where do we stop? Once you
have opened Pandora's Box, how da you
close the lid?." Even my teenage son saw
through that one. Decisions as to t a x
rates, policemen's salaries and place.
rnent of street signs can, If later found to
be unwise, be rescinded. But how, Mr.
Curry, do you N!scind a freeway after it
has been built and destroyed your city?
The reference to Pandora's Box is
particularly significant, in that in my opi.
nion it will be an ugly, -destructive
freeway that pops out when that bax is
opened, not the right of the citizenry to
vote on issues that vllally affect thelt
Jives. The protecuUon rests.
ROBERT D. RIES
Appreciation
Ta the Editor:
In a letter dated April 27, 1970, ad·
dressed to the city council or Newport
Beach, Southern California Edison Co.,
and the DAILY PILOT, this QSOCiation
complained about the power poles that
we-re placed across Balboa Bay Bridge.
Too often when complaints are
registered and the matter is corrected
there is no acknowledgement of same.
This letter is written to call attention to
the fact that the: power poles have been
rem:>ved and to express our appreciation
to all parties concerned.
MORGAN ST ANLEV
Presidmt
Irvine Terrace Homeowners Association
New1pa per SahJage
To the Editor:
Even though I'm rather late in getting
around ta it, the news item you ran a
couple of weeks ago titled "Apathy Hit in
Newspaper Salvage Drive" with quotes
by Jacob F. Mynderae. the Newport
Beach city general 9el'Vices diredor
oeems still Iimeey and ilaportant eoouih
for comment.
Mr. Mynderse bu olated he b dlap-
pointed •Ith the poor public mponae to
hts efperlmental collecUon project in /:er.
tain specilled att11 during the lint
month.
MY FEELING on that is that he has
not given it nearly enough time or
publicity. With all the talk going on .now .
In neW!papers and on televlalon
regarding: ecology and our mountains or
trash, this lm;>0rtant matter should be
stressed over and over again.
This post spring, a couple of YOUlll men
had a wondttful Idea in forming the
short-lived Ecoloo· Ltague and sent out
notices • that they would c o J l e ~ t
pewspa_pers. I duut\111)' saved them, my
husband bwJdltd and put them at the . .
curb, as did mosl of the people on our
s'.~eel.
We .,..·ere just amazed at the resultant
nearly empty lrashbarrels, and felt 9.'e
"·ere doing a smal: bil to help a giant
problem. Instead or two containers each
trash collection day, we ended up with
one half full. I! that situation is
multiplied by thousands all over the city,
the impact is overwhelming!
AFTER ABOUT a mooth, the Ecology
League coUectioos suddenly stopped. But
in the meantime we have gotten uaed to
saving and bundling newspapers, and
they are sitting in our garage. My bus·
band says he is gelling fed up with the
piling up, and he's not going to do it
much longer.
J have tried every way possible to find
out where we migbt take those papers for
collection. I called Mr. l\-1ynderse to as~
i! there was any collection point in hlf
111pecified areas, and be said no, it migh$
upset his "test" and suggested I call th'
YMCA. I talked to Mrs. Fox there, an4
she said they only colleet bottles anc(
cans. .
Surely some club, college, or organiza~
tions must have the colleclion ot
newspapers as their project. If not, WH~
not? Does anyone else have ideas on thti
subject? In the meantime, HELP! '
MRS. WILLJAM C. HOLME~
' •
'Satle the B a ck Bag' ;
To the Editor: •
1 am a student at Costa Mesa High an•
am not alone in feeling concerned about
what couJd become of the "Back..Say!
area.
Where could we go to hike if this last
place were developed? Where could w6
go to run our dogs if this last place weri
bulldozed over? Where could we go to
ride our borses when the trails are aU
parking lots ~d housing tracts? •
AND WHERE can we go to watch wild
animals, ducks and bobcats, frogs and
butterflies in their natural surroundings?
Yes, where? Where can we go to gef
away from the noise, the people and th!
problems? Can we ever relax and enjoy.1
Please help us save the "Back Bay ,
from its destruction by informing th!
public. Please? 1
JEANNE SCHNACKENBERQ
Luxur l o111 Estancia
To the Editor:
•
Estancia High School must be the mosj
luxurious high school within many mUc!i
I wonder if lhe dollar difference in cost oj
construction between practical and luXof
urious ctuld have been used to improv•
quallty of education. ~
R. J. GUY
---Friday, October SO, 1970
Th< edlloria1 pog• of Ill< Dailu
Piiot seekl to inform and 1tlm-
ulate reackrl by prestnting lhil
new.spaptr'I opinions and com-
mtntaTJI on topi~ of interest
and significance, by pTOVlding a
for1Lm. for the expressiC1'TI of
our rtader1' opinions. and by
presenting tht divert• view-
points of fn/onMd obst1'11f1'r
and rpoke:mtn on topict of the c1ou.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
• t
•
•
I
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I I I
BEA AND ERSON, Editor
'r"-•• °"""" Mt 1'11 JI , ... II
Art ' Qbiects
-Go on Block
H&ndcrafted items with · a professional touch will be offered _
when the Junior Ebell Club o! Newport Beach opens the doors to its
La Bo.utique Unique at 10 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 12.
.Assembled in the Newport Beach Tennis 0lub \Vil! be a variety
of items inCIUdii'lg stitchety, decoupage. Christmas Ornaments, gour-
met foods, \vall hangings and objects d'art, all with price tags from
25 cents to $15.
Members have been hard at work planning and preparing bouti-
que· items for the past six months under the direction of Mrs. A. L.
Hastings, ways and means chairman.
Professionals in various areas of the arts donated their skills
to the workshops, including Mrs . Norm Stevens, decoupage; Mrs.
John Zemke, stitchery, and Mrs. William Wright, decorative acces.
sories.
An original oil painting by Palm Desert artist M·rs. Lou Houston
will be given to one fortunate patron. ·
Assisting with preparations are tl)e Mmes. Vincent Wood, goul'-
met foods; HarJow Ric.h~rdson, silent auction; Garry Short, set-up,
and James Murar, tea tables.
A silent auction will take place from 1 to 2 p.m. where all unsold
items ~ill be offered at nearly cost. Tickets for the boutique are $1.50
and are available from Ebel! members or will be sold at the door.
~ ' . • I• .A
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Proceeds from the sale will be given to tbe Youth Problem
Cent.er, Youth Employment Service, Mardan School, Parent Kid
Association and Boys and Girls Clubs, and also w41 be used for fine
arts scholarships f nd to finance crafts for convalescent homes.
SPE.CIAL ORDER ,.-Preparing a special statuette with hh like-
ness for Harry Babbitt is Mrs. A. L. Hastings, ways and means
chairman for the Junior Ebel! Cl ub of Newport Beach. Similar
objects wili be offered during tlie club's La Boutique Unique
Thursday, Nov. 12, in the Newport Beach Tennis Club. Hours will
··1 be from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
,
An chors Aweigh for an Evening of Fun
Lido Isle Players and their guests will travel by
boat to the Balboa Bay Club for an "adjustment o!
their attitudes" .and prime rib dinner before return-
ing to the ·island and the opening production of the
comedy-mystery, ·"catch Me If You Can ," Tuesday,
Nov. ·11. Arriving' fo'r the 6:30 p.m. social hour are
(le!t to right) Mr. and Mrs. Arnold•Dovey and Mrs. E~ Terrance Moran. ,
•
so1i ta's Helpe rs Fill Stockings With Care I
-Plenty of items for stocking .sluile1'1 as well as liott. The patio will ·be the sale setting from NI a.m.
Christmas gifts will be available when the Mesa to 2 p.m. and tickets will. be $1. MalriDg their pur-
Circle of the Florence Crittentori Home of Orange chases are •(left to right) the Mmes. Ronald Taylor,
County sponsors a Boutique Benefit Saturday, Elliott and Donald'OeHaan.
· Nov, 14, al lhe Costa Mesa bome of ~Mrs. Jack El·
Love Might Not Be Lo~erie r the Seco.nd Time. Around
'
DEAR ANN LANDERS : WID you
pleue tell my ldlol slsttt <age 32, hus-
band !tilled in Vietnam) lhal just becauoc
a guy has been married and fathered a
child does not mean be is straight
Everybody in town seems lo know B ls
a fag -except my sister. Now she says
..,Miey are planning to get married. Get
111HIS: He 5 aewtng her wedding dress,
redecorating her apartment and will bake
b: sll·tier wedding cake himself. Sis
ys it will not be a large wedding .(her
and has been dead less than six
nths) but B already has asked five of
s .. cburm" to stand up ror him. Every
ol hls "dnuns'' is three feet oU the
. They doo't walk, Ibey fly.
Sis is a lovely girl, but I believe she
-.cnt to II*-DWllalll'." wben her h,,,.
1. 1
ANN LAND ERS ~
band was killed. I've tried to tell her
what the la gelling Into hilt the lnslsls I
am inistaken and swears their "sex life
is very good." Can this bf: possible? What
are the chances for a successful mar·
rlage with a homo set \lal ? -
SLEEPLESS NIGlfl'S ·
DEAR SLEEPL~' Marriage loday lo
rltty mm wlQi a man wbo ·11 stralabt.
MOit wome• who marry ltomose1uh (B
ls appar<oUy AC.DC) are a little tdd
abo. 1'era AA ilolaled, ... mp111 II ....
•
mll'Tlaftl w•lda bave worked, but Ute
..... ~ .. Jq 1UJorll1 fall. Iii _., all
cnes ' the ba1bud lires of tile ma.
q11<1'11de ud drifts hack 1o 111e killd or ...
be Ukts best -aid lt'1 WIUI Ute boys, eot
ihfl &Iris. . .
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am • 11-
yf:&l'Old glrl with a f:year.(}ld problem.
My sister. When my frkmds come: over
she hangs around and acts like she is one
ol our aowd wbic:lnbe Ja.rJOI. U 1 WIDI
b<r-lo 1-ua alono-I have lo llilock h<r
down· or pay her ' or!. When I .IO
IOlllqlac:e I 1111111 tab lbll grimy bttle
pell aionf. I ktep telling my mother 11'1
not fair but *t.e aays, "Your· sister bas ·
the.same rights as you."
Souldn't a f.year .. ld he playing with
kids her .own age! When I tell her !hi!
she 1ays kids 'her own age are boring.
Can you help me? -GOING MAD
DEAR MAO: .Am elder 1l1ter'1 trieads
are 1lwQ1 more mtere1ttag, espectalty ti
tbe sllttr ii ll ud lk "irlmy lllU.
pest" "I. Yoar motlter Poalcl ..C allow
,.., kkl 111 &o tnflkl herself 01 y011.
Saeli bijullce mabl ..ibip ute eack
-· Tllo f.yurold ....... be ...
-· te <llUYale -II Iler 100.
·'
11 lh 111 p<n11111ed'fll w. . ...-wt11! •f' ... prbpqlal,.,,.,...,. II -· wl
you 1be won't make die effort. Sbow tll1I Utneu. Tbe eorcUalHr of -,.,. Irked'•
colama fll yew..-. ll·mlPI llelp. -ireelllip --... fll do wllli yoa -
DEAR ANN LANDERS' A pl'l ·wtnl
lo scbool wilh (many )'<111'1 ago) moved
to this city eight months ago. We were
never close friends but I try to be cor·
dial. The problem: Whenever we meet
(and we seem to meet qulte often} I'm
never sure how she will creet ~e. One
day she falls on my neck and &bowers me
with hugs and kisses. The next day she
treats me as ii J had bubonic plague.
How do I deal with someone who ta ao
unprediclable? Any advice? -BLOW
HOT. BLOW COLD ,
DEAR BLOW' UapredlclabDJl7. II -
•
Ibey' on·a--of ......... u
she's 1p lbe'll be effntvt. U slle'1' \IOWll
yoa'U get tllt mall ~llo. U'llkp'++lt.,
thlJ should make. )'Oii less reacUft.
Give in or Jose him ••• when ,a py
gives you thls line, look out! For tips on
how to bandle the super sex aaJmnan.
check Ann" Landers. Jt.ead her booklet,
'<Necl<ing and Petllng -Whit Are the
Limits!" Send yout "<!uesl lo Am
Landera •ln care pl the DAILY PILOT,
enclosing 50 cents tn coin and a ~
alamped. 1tU-ac!dreaed euoe!op<.
• l
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' IJ DAILY PILOT ••dll. 0c.-JO, l t70
An Appropriate Burial
llMted lo tout the "death of the midi"
ani mldents In and around Glen Ellyn,
Ill A window ol a ma,. 1bojl, approprl·
ately draped In black and deco'raled with
..
thlJll11 and IDllDdralte mots, displays a
mannequin wearing a midi tn a wooden coffin .. Signs in the shop say the ''Midi
is the EdJel of 19'10."
Horoscope •
Taurus: Set the Pace
SATURDAY
OCTOBER 31
By SIDNEY OMARR
ARIES (Matti> 21-Aprll 19):
You ricochet between the eon·
venllonal and tile unusual. Key
Is to find middle ground. Ap-
plies especially Ill Onandal
qreemeiU witb mate ,
bollnm partner.
TAURUS (April II-Moy 20):
Include family memben in
apeclal entertalnment, project,
unique activity. Let olhen call
, the shots , set pact. You t iUn
moot by being aU.ntlve -and
I abrewd ob9ervtr.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
You may be lmaglnlng 1hat ln-
dlvldual lo lalklng behind your
back. You wuuld be intelligent
to evalual•.-r.1cts ai tliey Hist.
Suspldon and rumor llbouJd be
thrown aside.
CANCER (June II.July 22):
Your lpeCUlatlve ventures
liJOW gain. Enjoy a cltement
.of discovery. A:pplles
erpecla11y in dealings with
children, members of opposite
sex. You are surrounded by
Decks Shuffled
romantic aura. biUons. Road may appear
L1!X) (July 2J.Aug. 22): obstacle-filled. In re a I i t y •
Team up with .Cancer-born in-many are paving way !or yollr
progress. Show e.nthusi891'l. dividu al. Put finishing touches Break down barriers to com--
on long-range project. Check munication. Be clear and
land, real estate. values. One preci9e.
v.1lo J s ultra~ative CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan.
needs reassurance. Give It. 19): You get what you go alter . vmoo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): _ obUll!i hint. from Sqlliortl•
Your relations with brothers, message. Make chan&es. Get
sisters are highllghted. You ready for journey. Plan ahead
may take short journey in ton-for fine ea~
nection with retatlves~Bein-o.it ct e.motlOnal rut.
dependent, but avoid at· AQUARWS (Jan. 20-Feb.
rogance. 18): Money due from oc·
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. %2): cupational efforts is made
Hunch related to money pays available. YOU ti a v e m..
off -be confident. .st a vestment opportunity. ccmsult
discriminating shopper. Gen-prOfessional superior. Not Wise
uine bargain is available. to try going it a.lone.
Don1 jump at dr.t oiler. PISCES (Feb. It-March 20):
Unusual approach is a pr<>-You may feel ·aJone in a
Citable one at this time. crowd. Be perceptive, but
SCORPIO (Oct. 2.1-Nov. 21).: don't brood. You will discover
Cycle r e m a 1 n s favorable. anoUler side of indi vidual who
Lunar position empb.asize:s plays important role. Avoid
new starts, a d d e d in-u ·1y r-~· the
d___. •-· '-' ,.u1'' . Face -as Y ........ -ence. '"""&Ul a pro,,........ exist
E n c o u r a g e' contacts, cha.I· t " 11nd ov1 wl!O'• 1uct., for YeU "" Jenges. What appears set-""°'" •nd 1~. order SrdntY 0m1rr•s booklef, "Secret Hints f&r Mfn '•nd back boomerangs to your ad· "'°"''"·'" send 1>1rthd1/1 111d .50 ,, .. 11 vantage lo Om1rr M lr&l<lfY *""' the DAIL v • PILOT, 8D• ]2«1, Grand ''""'' Sii· SAGITTARIUS. (Nov. 22-'"'"· Hew vor11. N.v. 10011.
Dec. 21): Ac~nt your am·
Club Bids for Deal
Souvenirs
Displayed
A collect.ion of memorabilia
from the past 10 years of
Children's Theater Guild pro-
ductioos will be dl!played In
area libraries durirlg the
month of November.
Pick a partner -or one will
be pnMded -and join the
Fountain Valley Women'• Club
bridge toum811lll1l wb1c:h will
begin Monday, Nov. 2, and
continue lbroogb February.
Playm will meet once
every two weeks In members'
homes, according to Mrs. Will
Romine, bridge chairman.
Couples meet for an evening
of bridge the first Saturday of
-each month.-and the club and
Fountain Valley Parks' and
Recreation Departznent co-
sponsor duplicate bridge each
Saturday ~vening in the com-
munity center. Play, direcled
by Mrs. Helen Creed, is open
to the public and there is a
charge of $1.50 per person.
New day and evening bridge
groul>i' now are being formed,
and lnfonnatlon may be ob-
tained by calling Mrs. Ro-
maine.
Mrs. Curt Burnett will host
the-monthly board meeting of
the club at 8 p.m. Monday,
, Nov. 2. -
JncllJded in the displays will
be set designs, props. be.ad·
pieces, costumes, posters, pro-
grams, scripts, music and
photographs from the Newport
gulld'• prodjlClions.
The guild, a non prof i t
organization, was founded to
produce children 's plays and
educate ch ildren in all facets
of the theater. -
...
Takes Gavel
Mrs. Doug Morgan of
Costa Mesa will be in-
stalled as president of
the Santa Ana Chapter
of Ainerican Gold Star
Mothers Tuesday, Nov.
3, during·ceremonies in
the Sal)l.a Ana Amer!·
can Legion Hall.
_Auctioneer ··
Sells Gift.
Treasures and gifts for auc·
tion will abound at the annual
potluck of Laguna Beach
Panhellenic on \Vcdnesday,
Nov. 4, in the Laguna Hills
Trailer Park Clubhouse.
Members will arrive al noon
wilh gifts to benefit the
Panhellenic Scholarship Fund
and American Field Service.
Chairman for tlie luncheon-
auction is Mrs. L. T. Rosser
assisted by the Mmes. Carl
Nash, Robert s . Brunside llld
Herbert Dewitz.
A short business meeting
conducted by Mn. J. M. Shea
Jr. will precede the auction. All members of national
Greek sororities are invited
and may call Mrs. \Vil liam
Beatty for reservations.
Chapter
Honors
··' Official
Gourmet's Touch
Stirs Up Brunch
ll*lq lbe V intra b lo
Raljlll Peco wll!> • "tt-•al
-...... loa!Pt wJl1 bi' lbe,., P. GJaaimd Lodp, Som
"' llal7-
· :: Tbe nmt.;ln -"
-·· -,..,. u leader -fll Illa CGola . 11-<liopter,
wlll """"' " 1 p.m," Ill_ t1>o : CGola" 11-CGuntry Club. · "-lilt -ellli:loJo ... -... the alWr wJl1 lie the
Gmd V-.ble and Mn.
Peter D1Santlo. Clvte
repre1entaUv11 at tbe
tallwooilI will be Colt.a Mesa
MO)'Or and Mn. Roliert M.
Wlllon, Vice Mayor and Mn.
Willerd T. Jordon, Co!mdlmn
and M,.. Alvin L. Pinkley, !fr.
ad Mn. Nleholu J. Zleoer,
Judie Cllvin Schmidt lad the
llleT. Tbomu Nevio.
Juniors
Cut Cake
TwmlJ-four candleo will dot
~ bb1bday coke u members
of the J-Woman's Club of 1-Bead! cetebrale on
'D 11 Siif.• Nov. S. . , St. Andrews Mother-daughter Dinner a Bell-ringer Mn. Cir! ~ pnlidenl
..... ~ former 'members and -to -the A bell-ringing evening Is planned for mothers and daughtera of from the funding event will be the World Student Christian Fed·
..-, pm;ty In thew..,,..•, SL An!!Mw's Presbyterian Church. The annual Thank Offering eraUon, national missions end the birlstian Education program. a. .... _ at 7:IO p.m.. . dinner, themed Harve•I Delight, will be presented at &:15 p.m. Gtvlng the call for supJXJrl of thiJ worthwhile project are (left to Dartna a brief pr!lll'lJll at Wednesday, N_ov. 4, In the church's FellOWlblp Hall. Benefiting right) Dee Fowler, Jimle Sfyll and Nancy Collier. Ille llll!llal evtlll, a cboct for ----"c..:c.:..;_:_c:.:...c=-:=-==..:....:===-==-==::'.!!-..:..:!:=..::.:::...:.:::::.:..:.==::::::.::..:::=..::=::!...:::::::;_ ___ _
_omelettes, will be made to order for
guests atteodlhg a brunch •JXJosored by the
Women's Auxiliary to the Orange County
Branch of the Arthritis Foundation Sunday,
Nov. 8.
Mrs. James Evans will open her New-
port Beach home for the event, which also
will feature winter fashions by the Beach ..
comber Shop.
Preparing the orders will be Gary Har-
rell. a Newport Beach gourmet chef who
SP,eciallzes in omelettes.
Music will be provided by Christian Eric,
guitarist who sings in five languages.
Proceeds will be given lo the Arthritis
Foundation for research and lo help Orange
County'& 125,000 arthritis patients.
Indians on Agenda
Jim Whitecloud, vice -presi-
dent of the Los Angeles Indian
Center, will di.cuss th e
American Indlan for members
of the Patience W r I g h I
Oiapler, Daught.en of the
American Revolution at noon
on Tuesday, Nov. 3.
DAR bas provided educa-
lioaal assiltance to Indian
youth and aids SI. Macy'•
Court Stella
School for Indlan glr!J Ill
Sprlng!ield, S.D. and Barone
College, ~. Okla. and
provides scholarships from the
general Indian fund.
Member! are asked to bring
gifts for children in DAR-
operated schools in South
Carolina and Alabama. The
meeting will tale place Ill
Hot.el Lquna.
Hoots will be tM Mmes.
James Trlttipo, Lee i:buds,
Ruth Johnson and Robert Hull.
Members of Court Slella llAUT!PUL CLOIHIS. ' • Onl'f Sllflttl'f UHll '1.lllO wlD be pr-.! to .,
ollldal ol -c-i Com--munlly Hospital " lullullmenl
of a three-year pledge.
Rebekah Lodge
Triple Link C1ub of Mesa
Rebekah Lodge has meetings
the fourth Mondays at 8 p.m.
in various locatiom. Mrs.
Douclu Morgan at 543-111311
Author Speaks
On · Rose Theme
Chapters Activities Maris 1"8, Ca t b o 11 c IY "" """° ctn't ._. • .. .-History Told Daughters o1 America meet ,..i':...-:.-.:-~ .... '
each second and fourth M~ THI llCONI nM1 AIOUn A.t Gathering day at ~ p.m. in St. Joachim's ... Ii. 111~ st .. test• Mne Five new-chairmen have
· :: been named to dlrecl ac-
-IDcludlng the Mmes. -J-and Roy Framon. yoalh; Lewi& Lallo!>-
ta, beallb, and Harry Bithell
and Donald llodgOI, con-
omallon.
BorTGWlng the theme for the
1971 Rosc Parade, M r s .
Comella Sanderson, CaUfomia
preskient ol the National
may be called for additional League of American Pen
information. Women, w!U speak on Through
the Eyes al a Child on ?.1on-
day, Nov. 2.
Mn. Sanderson, w h o a e
artlcles .,,.,.., under the pen
name of Neal Sandenon is a
prolessio!Ull Journalist and
pbotagrapher. She will address
the La£l!llO Beach Branch of
WORLD'S· FABRIC :.::=,:,ti!;!·~~ Hieb School
& FASHION•-(\
.
Rituals Predominate
?t1embers of the Beta Alpha
Pi Chapter af Beta Sigma Phi
v.•ill COflvene in the borne of
l\fr s . K e ith K l eppe ,
Westminster at I p.m. Tues·
day, Nov. 3.
A welcome ritual will be ex-
tended to Mn. Oatf ield
Wbitney and a ritual of jewels
will be celebrated for Mrs.
Thomas 5tev8DIOD. · t.l r 1 •
PbilJp Peoples will pmeot a prqp;am on v .... M~g.
Gomma Alplla Nu Chapter
members will gather for a
•
~lund-ral.s\ng party on Tuesday.
v. 3. J\1rs. Guy Hammer,
ys and ineans ctialnnan, Is
planping the 8 p.m. gathering
which will raise funds to assist
a needy (amily during the
Chrlstma'-season.
Tbe diapter marked tis
blrtbday with.a meeting in the
HuriUngton ~ach home or
l\lrs. Bob Ross. Mrs. David
Ballard received "the welcome
ritual and Mn. 1"'8 Bower
!erved u eo-bostess, ,and lhe
program wu preaen~ by
J\trs . Dave PerlOft. ',
parish hall, Colla Mesa. oto-11 .. s -~
In an historical mood , mem--====~~::::_:::::~_..:~~~~~~~~~~
bers of the San Clemente
Toastmistress Club will gather
<at 9 a.m. on Monday, Nov. 2,
in the Municipal Golf Club.
blrs. Harry Sharits will
preside as toastmistress of the
day. Speakers will include the
Mmes.. Geoffrey Manse 11 ,
History of San J u a n
Cap I 1 tr a n o ; Raymond
Loustalet, Flags of Calilomla,
and Harold Markham, History
ol Orange County.
Mrs. Jlob<n c....,iy wtn
serve u evaluator.
C.l•\r•Kflf 0.,.
&r1""' Optni!tf
10 % Off Our
... , .... , ... Low '"'" -Tlirtuth Nt '+'. Ith
YOGA 1$ •••• . ... -. . . . . .. . • TUDE FAIRI \)aliDIS:~:
, & Gin SHOW EXO'nC FISH
SWAP MEET
. ·--, Sales to the Nilic Ind T l'ltlt
Orange Countv Fairground
.....,.., M 111.lr Dr. c.ota -
MMl'f TO C::ttOOS• ,.OM • e TROPICAL FISH • KOi
• LILllS e SEASHELLS
ORIENTAL
FISH GARDENS ._ ... MIAn ... -.. ~ .-,..,..... ........
-
! ...
-
• .;..-11 0.-T-. • ~r1. IM • Set ..... l W , .... ....,, ....... e... .....
......... tilt •
•
NEW-WOMEN'S CL.ASS
CALL fOlt INFO •
YOGA CENTER
+IS I , \1111 SI,
MWY SATURDAY W SUNDAY
ORANGE COUNTY FA.II GROUNDS
11 Pair Dr., Cott• Me1e >
••
l .
•
• • • •
~•sta ·Mesa
EDITION
•
VOi:. 63,. NO. 260, 4 SECTIONS. 38 PAGES . ' . . ' ORANGE COUNTY, CAl\IFORNI.( FRIDAY, OCTOBER 36; 1 tfD ;; • -
···• _IXOil o . e
B.oard Hopefuls
Discuss Issues
By GEORGE LEIDAL Of .. .,...,. ...... ,,
Communlation, accountability ol t.acb-
en and admlniatraton:, achocll finance,
student pride, teacher sb'iker, sta~
aofoP.ed t..U..Oq Ille! the .... -sys-tem of fUltdina educati0o were .issued
dllcwsed Thunday night by foor ol the n.. candidates .seeking election next.
'l'Us!ay to the Newport-Mesa achool
boenl •.
Mn. George Hollingsworth, president
of tbe Orange Coast League af Women
Voters, moderated the two.hour 1ession
attended by about 150 person:i:.
One candidate, J0e Duffy, told organi·
W'I ol the meet-the-candidates session a
Mesa Suspect
Cited in Mail
Fraud Case
BJ AllTBVll R. VIMIEL
Of .. ..,,..."'"
NeWYork fedorll llld .ui. -ties
batt,>lndldOd i Ol>lta -.... and
.. .-alleged ~ In a $2.ll,OllO na-
tionwide stock and mail fraud ring
centered in Dallas.
He ii Alfred P. Zuber, 30, of 3073 Yukon
Drive, whose only local brush with the
law involved a dispute after a neighbor
squirted hJm with a garden hose for rid·
lng bis loud motorcycle up and down the
1treet. •·
Zuber -who has had plenty of legal
problems elsewhere -won't be returned
to fact prosecution for a while yet, 'since
be is convaJescing at C.osta Men
Memotial Hospital from a leg broken in a
rnolm'cycle accident. ...
Tbe indictments were a n n o u n c e d
'Jllunday in New York during a joint
press conference by Daniel P. Hollman,
chief of the anti-crime task force, and
District Attorney Frank Hotan.
Indicbnenb returned by the federal
panel charge Zuber and his rodefendants
with 16 separate counts of stock and mail .
fraud and their firm , Underwriters
Investment C.Ompany.
State officials said they charged the
alleged. ring with 10 counts of attempted
grand larceny in the teeond degree and
one charge of conspiracy to defraud.
Zuber's troubles are only compowuted
by the lale!t case. -
He has pleaded innocent to charges of
e~lon involving $6,600 taken from a
Chicqo mortgage banker, act'Ofding to
William Cqney, ol the U.S. atlnrney'a ol·
fice. Zuber stilt faces trial on charges of
poaeuion of ..marijuana, stemming from
a June raid on a Monroe. Mich., fll'm,
where almost a ton of weed wu con-
f~ted. Michigan-born and r e po r t e d 1 Y in-
dependently wealttiY thrwch lnheritin& a
furniture business, 7.uber was freed on
$20,lllO ball ofter that arreat.
The multlply .. t'CUsed Colt.a Mesan was
listed In fairly good coadltlon today 1t Iba
local boapltal wbere be II being !ruled"
(Ste INDICl'ED, P ... I)
Josh by Patron
In park Spurs
Call to P~lice
Jllll like people boardlDI alrllnen, peo-
ple waltlng In the -t line at tba
supermarket can make u n w i • e
wilec:racU if they choose the wroni
time.
eu.tomen ..,. cloaked In dartmea
whim Ughts went out at the Safeway, 2202
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa, at 1:2.1 p.m.
Thursday.
Smart remarks began -u they
.aways do -and one man aaJd he was
going to 1>1111 a 1tlckup, leadtna another to
allp wt and call p0llce.
Clerk Patricia R. Cran told Olllcer
lack Koch the and everyone elae con-
aiderld the holdup comment just a joah
alter Iba potn>lman arrt...t.
111e ·,... wbo made the comment bad
loll.
previous commitment barred his appear·
mi.
The program was joiliUy sponsored by
the American Aslloclatioo of University
Women's Newport.Costa J(esa Chapter.
the LWV and the Harbor Area Parent·
Teacher "-i>Uoo Councll.
The five candidates seek to represent
Trustee Area i on the aeven-member
Newport-Mesa board.
Mrs. Elizabeth Lilly resigned last June
and the new board memlier will ser.ve
the unexpired portion of her term until
June 1973.
Duffy wa.o; offered the opportunity to
tape his IO-minute $peech at 6:30 p.m.
Thursday for presentation with talks by
the other candidates, Mrs. Gillette White
of AAUW said, "but apparently be couldn't
make it."
RESPOND TO QUES'J'IONS
~LY ,llOT Stet! ,....
Each of the othtr four candidates, Cal.
vin C. Buck, Richard D. llancbett, Mrs.
Beverly Lanptoo llld Mrs. Carolyn Kim·
me, delivered prepar;ed remarU a a d
later responded to written quelli.ons from . ' . PRESIDENT,.SENATDf' ARRlVI IN ~R/<NGI COUNT,¥ ~FTIJll ~DUOUS -JOUltNl'I'.> ~. the audience. ·
Mn!. Kimme bit the laoloUoa of -I•
I'nllll tbeir ocl>oolL "lall!IJllUon -out'le pilnnts;" abe aald, "but little ""
M~rphy"1 lrl~.Up O..,r '-!'Y !'* 19 s.n ·J-; Mr;"lfi~ln ·~ ....... Dey~ --°"'It-, . . .. · . .
back to the schooli... ~
-Mrs. ltimme. called 1 .... -.. in Nixon Family · bud&•t" ai>endin( more 10< IMtructioa .. ,_ -· -
aDd ·Jess for adminlltratJOft, nOtlnl: 11wa •
ca't go on inoreastng the tax toad. She Routed by Fire cited consolidated purchasmg is ona
means of lowering the cost ol education.
eonsideratioo must be given 10 • ", In Clemente
product, she said, the children who grad·
uate from our schools. "They mu!1it be
able to know whert: to find in!o~ation
and how to evaluate it, not jUlt facts,"
she said.
OOUNCEL FAILURE
Noting that of. the 50 to 65 percent of
Newport·Mesa's high IChool grads who
go oa to community colleges "few con·
tinue on to four year coUeges" she blam· .
ed a. "counteling failure" for the fact
that' a Iarce~number of district alumni
"face failure at age 20." Ttie district
can't adequate1y provide career counsel·
lng with a ratio of from 350 to 500 stu·
dents per counselor, she said.
Mrs. Luipton, wbo has been endorsed
by the Newport·Mesc1 Education As.socia·
tion's Representative Council, urged reali·
zatiOll that "the m~ is not a warehouse
for facts but 1n instrument to be used ."
Schools should prepare students with
"sizable skills" to assure confidence, she
said.
With such preparat.IOft grad uates "will
not be defeated by the first stumbling
blocks they encounter."
She commended tM district for inno-
vative programs including the Open Court
Reading, JPJ Math and modular schedul·
iag, the tatter having become very popu·
lar with studeiU in pilot schools, she
Aid. '
NEW METHODS
Yet. she noted, "not all prosrams will
be great. but "" must proceed trying
new methods.
"I don't advocate thro~:J out the
three Rs," Mn!. Lanptoo • "but they
muJt be ma<se aPRllcable to life."
Further, llbl! auggerted that !<aching
the words ''Truth'', "Loyalty" and "Horr
(Ste CANDIDATES, Pa11 IJ . ,
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of .. 0.lff' ...... ,,.,,
A log fire lighted to smooth over the
anxiety caused by a howling mob in San
Jose ignited a smouldering blue at the
Western Wh.:te House lale Thursday,
routing the First Family from bed and
causing considerable smoke damage to
l!alf of the Spanish villa.
President Ni.Xon was not in dqer
from the i:.mouldering fire. The blaz.e was
detected by a smoke.sniffing device
within the wall of the second·floor den,
knowledgeable sourc.es reported today.
But the smoke, pouring from many
ceiling vents in rthe house, prompted the
chief executive to spend the rest of the
night in the guest house across the
driveway of his home.
The sources .gave this accoo.nt of the
fire -the second blaze to erupt at the
Presidential compound since the Nlxons
moved to San Clemente:
At about 10 :30 p.m. the President 's
va let, Manolo Sanchez, lit the fire in the
second -floor fireplace which is all·melaL
The hearth begins at the second floor.
There is no fireplacf: at that spot in th&
dining room ~..low. .
An hour later, the President left the
fireplace to retire in . his bedroom about
100 leet,away.
Fiftttn minutes later the smoke sensor
in the common wall touched off an alann
at the security headquarters of the com·
pound and agentl phoned the residence to
check the alarm.
Pina 5anchez, Manolo's wife and Mrs.
Nb:on'a head maid, answered the phone
(Set FIRE, P11e 2)
T e-rrorists to Disrupt
Anaheim Rally-Murphy
By JACK BROBACK 61 IM ~ Pllel Stiff
Senator George Murphy sajd today that
he had been told tbere will be terrorist
activity tonight in .Ma.heim where he will
appear at the con vention center w i t'h
President Nixon and Governor .Reagan. ·
The Senator made tile remark m an-
swer to a· qaestion -at a .press conference.
He said be had been told attempts
would be made to disrupt the meeting
tonight by several groups.
He said security forces were taking
every precaution and an Anaheim polic~
man In the h1.tlway verified that his de·
partment had been alerted for trouble ~
night.
Senator Murphy called the Disneyland
Hotel press conference to express h i.s
shock and . anger at "the .unbelievable
r iot which look place at the rally la.st
night h11 San Jose. •
"The President of the United States,
the governor ol the number one state
'
and the United Stales Senator had their
Jives endangered by howling mobs of rad!·
cal terrorista numbering well over 1,000."
The Senator said., "This frightful dem.
onstratlon obviously was a preplanned at•
·tack, led by e1perts. EVen the cadence
of the chanted obScenities had the ball·
mark 'of careful preparation.
''We can no longer put thfs off 'as some
chilish pranJC or students' complaints.
This now must be recogn!Jed !or exactly
what it is-a revolutionary movement to
destroy this na tion ."
The Senator said Thursday night's
demonstra tion showed the strength of the
revolutionaries and was an ell'.ample of
what they can accomplish and how close
they can come to the destruction of the
leaders or gur country.
He said eggs, rocks, bricks and other
missiles were· thrown at the President's
car.
Freedom Papers' Hoiles
'
Succumbs in Santa Ana
Raymond Cyrus Hoiles, who parlayed a
career as a printer's devil in Bucyrus,
Ohio at S2 for a 54-houi' week into a
multl·million dOllar. 21>-newspaper em-
pire, includina the Santa Ma ~gister,
d" l today.
. He was 91 arid president of Freedom
Newspapers, one of the largest.chains In
America.
Badham Curbs R~ute Fi·gh:t
Dtath .carne whlle he was a pa tient at
Santa Ana Community Hospital, but the
immediate cause was not disclosed. .
Mr. Holl es was co-publisher of the
Register along with his brother and Its
'pages forever renected the arch-eono
servattve philosophy lhat he '\n1Cbe8
and practiced ~ aometlmes to the an-
. noyance of others..
• • •
Won't l'ntroduce Any More Free1:V~Y Legislation
By L. PETER lllUllG ... """ .......
Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R·
Newport BelCh ) aald today be probably
will not ·bttroduce any new ant.I-freeway
rneasurt in the. ne:1t legislative session.
Badham, wboee C<!Dtroversial bill to
kill the-Newport Buth segment of the
. Paclflc ~ Freeway died in -it·
t<o ear~ thil -· Nici, hoftver, be would most likely support. freeway re-
opening legislation planed for Introduc-
tion by State Sen. James D. Whetmore
(l>Garden Grov,J. . •
~ Is reJ)0<1e<lly preparln1 a
blll that would allow the State Highway
Comml-to reopon route lltudles "to
COlllider a -lftc 11t4mato to an adopt·
ed rooto.
Under -I p0liey, Iha <oDllJlluloe
•
Cumot formally suarantee It will con-
sider o n I y specific ' altmiatta when It
asrees to rtC011Sideratlon ol an adopted
route between any two poinY.
Badhim qualified h~ support of the
tegislaUon, pointing out that be bu yet
to tee even a draft of the Whet.more
meuurt.
However, be Indicated he fully ex~ts
to be In Sacram__-'11to for the: nell'.l wein~
ly leS!k!n.
He Is running for re-t!ection Tuesdar.
against a UtUe-kf)own De,mocratic cha -..
lenger, David Ashet, In the 7lst Aaem·
bly district. The latter ti a cltar underdog
In the GOP-beavy dlatrlct.
Badham said he Is surprised that. wt.et..
more b plannin& to lolroduce tbe r-
way legislation , p0inllnl out that be wot •e ol lhl leadin& opponenla of hll .(Bad-
-l. ,,
• <
ham's) freeway blll,
He uid, however,. be would support
"any legislation · that would aolve this
freeway mess.1 ·
· "Obviously," ·Badham II.id, "thf: f'ree-
way hu been put In tbe wrong place atid
~ mmi be moved,"
The rout< of the rlanned coaJtat fr ...
way Is the heart o decade·long contro-
versy. Newport Bt;!Ch Interests are com·
plfinlng that the rqute, as planned, would
divide their ciir-in half. ,
Since the rout. has been adopted, how·
ever. lhe State Highway C.OmmJssion h111
. refused to conalder.. any changes without
the consent olthjo city of ~ Meaa.,
• C..ta Mesa h..-conUnuallx ~ lrtJ
reopenlna because it-feart the .,.....
,(Set BADllAM, l'lp I)
. • >
He blltorly oppoaed anything fot<ed
upon. -11yone.
-He must have opposed'.his death ~ Mt
1tmploye recalled him ·bounctnr Into the
newsroom at It wlth 1 library book' UUeCI
·••How to Uve Longer" .:. tucked' unde1-
,one arm.
The venerable publisher was a bltt ..
·enemy of ·socialism ' and 1 cherished
friend of free enterprise, patriotJlm and
freedom of religion.
· Hla philosophy was hued· on the Ten
C.Ommandments and the . Ded*atlon of
· lndelperidence •
Mr. Honea will not be remembered Is
a friend ol the United NotlOM nor publio
education.
''It's never been demonstrated that
•everyone·1hould 'be educated ," he snap-
' ped once and ~e upheld other belief• .,\lb
equal forco, offuln1 ll,000 to anyone who
'.lfoold debata lllm lo public. --
> -r
.'r•d•y'• ,, ••••
I .TEl'.f CENTS
ToughTalK '.
·Expected ·
Ill Anaheim
After bein& the target ol n>clia, brlclil,
bo~tles, egp, red fiags and other mt•U11
lnuled at hil limousine tn SID JOll,
Ptutdent Nixon promlaed to ''talie elf
the glov"" at a polltlcal rally """'1>1 ln
Anaheim llld mponcl tO .... c-
"'viciousnees." . · 1
After bll arrival at San Clement<, tlif
President Aid tbe too a n t I w • .,
demmstraton were "radical, ant l ·
.democratic elements" who threatened
freedom ol speech llld uaemllly ta
America.
"This was no outburst by a single In-
dividual," said the President . at tM
Western White House. "This was the ae-
tion of an unruly mob that represents I.be
worst tn America." .
The glass-top limousine containing the
•President, Sen. George Murphy and Gov.
Ronald Reagan was blltud while be Jeft..a
GOP rally as the President neared thl
end lof a 5,500-mlle, cl'Oll-COUlltry cam-
paign tour.
The San J05e violence was rated tht
most serious aimed at any President ill
this counby slnce the assaafnatioo o(
'Presiderit John F. Kennedy In 1913. ' . .Partisan Republicaoa bad atveo ti.
Praidalt a wana ~ II tllt rally.
It got bott<r oulltcle. Nixon ...,rged ...
.climbed atop the hood of Ilia .Jlmouah>e '-
the glare of pboto floodl;,hts. '
Facing bis opponeull as !hey llwleked
-.mtlet, M<oo.thnlst bis jaw !Grward
Ond fliln( up both uma . With bil llnsero,
he formed "V'' symbolJ for tbe crowd.
11ie mob grew wilder.
His motorcade was mobbed for aboUt
. five The presldenUal limousine and othet
vehicles were bit repeatedly by large
rocks. Several persons including a Secret
Service agent and a· televt1lon
cameraman suffered minor inJuries. .
White House aides and rul.t. of thl
President riding In 1 bui &.hind bit
limousine huddled in aeata and ·alalu u
rocka and bottl• smashed four windows.
Newsmen in anotber bm wert: splattered
With .class from five smashed windows. ,
One youth whipped a large belt from
his waist and lubed the top of a car cont
taining H. R. Haldeman, Nllon'a cblel "!
staff.
"It was just like Caracas," said Rose
Mary Woods, the President's Iona-time
personal secretary, who was 1ltting neit t
to one of the smashed windowa. She
referred to an attack on Nixon, then Vice
President, in Venezuela.
Murphy termed the mob "wild-eyed,
tough, angry tevolutionorles" w b o
"should be identified and isolated.''
"I have been careful to point out that
these are the actions or a violent rew. 1t
is important that alt Americans keep Ulis
~~::~· ·:~: ~sl!C:e s~d. take the,
gloves off and Speak to this kl,nd of
behavior in a forthright way. Freedom of •
IJ)teeb and freedom of uaembly cannot
exist when people wbo peacefully attend
rallies are attacked With flying rocks. .
"Ton;,hl at Anaheim I will clllcuJa
what America muit 'do to end the wave of
violenci! and terrorism ·by the radical, an-
lHiemocraUc tlementa in our ~ty.''
'!'be crowd bad gathered by the time
N'11on entered san J<m Chic Auditorium
(Set NIXON, P ... II .......
........
'Night od mornlDi fog moimo
Id the ~ thla' weeki"nd, drop-
ping tbe high reeding to 18 atone
the beaches ·llld 10 de.,.ees hilher
a little further l)llllld.
INSmE TODAY
Th< l'roclUr«i FolU.1 of 1970
in Laguna Becclr come vp QOaf1'
nezt wetk, raidog m.ona11 for
South Coost·communit¥ Hotpl·
tol. See todav'1 Wttkrndtr sec-
tion.
...... H c-' """"' .. ' c....... ., .. _., u
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' • • •
•
2 DAILY PILOT c
5 H;opefuls
Seek School_
...
,Five candidates -three men and two
Nnt:n -are vying for a vacant seat
on th< l)oard of 'l'rum<s of tlie Newport·
Mesa Unified School District.
The l(leeial election will be conducted
Tuesday in conjunction with the general
election. Thi special vote was nectaila·
led by the resipaUon frocn the bolrd
last June of Mn. Elizabeth Lilly, one of
the original seven turstees of the uni!le:d
tcbool system covering b o t b Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa.
Mrs. IJlly represented Trustee A r e a
2 Wblth Hes aouth of Baker Street be-
~ Newport Boulevard ind Fairfiew
Road In Colla Mea. -
Even though the new trustee will rep-
resent that specific area, all n,ooo .voters
within the school district are ellgible to
cast ballots in the epedal election.
School tuntee1 plamed Jt that '!'•Y in
1965 when the Newport-Mesa distract was
formed . The 1dea is to guarantee repre-
sentation on the sctiool bo1rd frorQ 111
sectionS of the district ind, at the ume
lime to avoid old Ume, euiem ward
pollti'es by having candidates f a c e all
voters Jnstead of ju!t those within their
specific trurtee area. Trustees must live
within the district they rtpresent.
'Ibe candidate garnering the most votes
Tuesday Conly a plurality la requirod for
victory) will fill the unup~od porllo<( of
Mrs. Lilly's term, which runs unW June
1973. c 'l1le five candidates include Calvin .
Buck, Joe Duf!y, Mn. Beverly Lanpton,
Richard Hanchett and Mn. Carolyn Kim-
me.
Thursday, the DAILY PlLOT presented
Information about two ot the candidates.
Fro• p .. ., l
CANDIDATES ..•
or" doesn't ruarantee the atudenta will
assimilate the valuea they repruent. 11!e
namples available to 1tudentl -teacJt.
en and admlliltntora -help form val-
ues. she said.
Finally, Mn. Lanpton called for a
parent corp1 to help teacba'1, a commun-
ity caroer corps to auJat student, with
vocational choilces and greater involv•
ment of pamts In acbool P'OIJ'lmming.
Hanchett, the fatheT ot five, who at·
tend or have attmded Newport-M•
och<>oU. ur1od lmprootd communications
and t..cher responsibility and accouota-
bJlity to improve school.
"Aloog with additional mpoooibility,
we should evaluate teacher• more f&Jrly,"
~" said. "Many perform very well,
When they could take the easy way out
and bt paid the same." He url(ed incor-·
Jjc>raUon of an incentive pay plan "su<;h
aa the Or1111e School dlatrict I• trying,"
although he ooted be Is not "against lel1· ure."
' Buck charged that schools are produe.
hg graduates "who can't spell, read,
write, add ar wbtract," based on hls
observations as a consulUng engineer.
Noting that unemployment Is a serious
}l'Oblem in Orange County leaving many
tazpayen with only "a '65 a week unem-
ployment check" Buck called for a look
at wa)'I of eo11trolllng education costs.
He noted the Newport-Mesa general fund
1ncrea!ed 13 pt:rcent over last year, and
administraUve costs had grown 19 pt:r-
ctnt while there was only a 130 student
enrollment increase.
"This ts especially shocking when tax-
payers are out walking the streets," ht
said.
calling for a return to the "primary
role or teaching," Buck said he would
exercise his leader11hip role as a board
member to "ellmlnate emp ire building
end administrative playgrounds." He
cited attempts to buy an alrcraft carrier
for use as a school, and adimlnistralive
pay hikes following the adoption of this
year's budget as examples. A $1,500 in-
crease to $33,000 for Supt William Cun-
ningham was transfered out of teacher's
Alaries. Bue~ charged.
DAILY PILOT
OUNM COAST PUILISHIMO CCIMPAln'
RoMrt N. W..4
J•cJi: a. c • ..t • .,
Vk9 Pr91w.it t11111 o_.., ,,,.....,.
Thol'l'lt1 IC"Yil
ld!IW
11..Mt• A. M 1,,~I•
~ttlllllnl Edllor
c.. ...... OfllM
SJO W•t lay Stroat
M.1II111 MJreM1r.o.1n 1160, '2'2' --........... i •nwt.taalln~
•
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• ~ • Mir'* ll c-n 1t.t11
Frld1y, OctObtf 30, 1970
SEEKS SCHOOL SEAT
COlld!Ute Kimme
Businesswoman
Vies for Seat
On School Board
Businesswoman Carol)!ll Kimme of "57
Elmhurst Lane, Costa Mesa , ia another
of the five candidates for the vacancy
on tlie Newport.Mesa llchool board.
A native of Long Beach, Mr1. Kimme
bu lived In the area five yean:, and for
three Yelrl bu Operated a computer pro-erammmg service. Sbe has three child·
ren, Ernest Jr., II, aU.nding Oakmont
private school In Oran1e, Beth, 14, in
Cotta Mesa Hi&h School, and Karl, J, a
jlf&OChooler.
Among her qualifications for the board,
Mrs. Kimme lists her computer program·
m1nC experiences and a master of artl
degree In mathematics, as well 11 teach.
ing experience and being a Girl Scout
leader.
.Mrs. Kimme 11 concerned t h a t the
"tchool-board needs to use technique•
developed by the buslneu community In
order to sample public reaoUon to lts
policie1!and iMovaticins."
The candidate commends the district
for "recognhing that they must use Inn~
vaUng tea.china methods in order to teach
the vul body of knowledie required by
YoWlf peopi< today ...
* * * Newport-Mesa
Council Backs
3 Candidates
Three candidates have been endorsed
by the Newport·Mua Education Aaso-
ciation Represent.alive Council.
Mrs. Beverly Langston, candidate for
the Newport-Mesa Unifled School Dis·
trict board of education has been 1iven
the teacher associatlon nod over four
Dtbers seeking to fill the unexpired term
DI Mrs. Elizabeth Lilly on the 1even·
member board.
Bart Hake, executive secretary of the
N"-MEA said teachers have been en-
cOura1ed to support Mrs. Langston's
=andldacy, as well.
The 1,000 member affiliate of Calif·
ornia Teachers Association and the
~alional Education Association also
:irges election of Wilson . Riles as S~te
Supt:rinfendent of Public lnstruct1on,
and Democrat John Tunney, for U.S.
ienate.
From P09e l
INDICTED ••.
for motorcycle collision injuries.
Trial on the Chicago ronspiracy and ex·
tortion charges was set for next Monday,
but the U.S. attorney's office spokesman
said the Federal di&trict rourt case will
be continued.
During the joint federal -slate press
conference, the crime-fighter chiefs
described the stock fraud operation IS
one in which the defunct Dallu
brokerage was revived by two of the
eight accused.
They allegedly represented it to poten·
tial investors as. a thriving firm, ob-
taining money that way.
Hollman and Hogan sa.ld although they
properly registered stocks, they allegedly
created and maintained a false market
which coostitu\es fraud.
All other de.fendant.s involved be!lldes
Zuber are in the New York and New
Jersey area, except for three who
ope.rated in Dalin and Salt Lake City,
Utah.
Neighbors said today that Zuber and
his wife were injured in a crash near El
Toro eeveral weeks ago, when a woman
who had just learned her Martne husband
was kll1ed in Vietnam ran a stop 1lgn.
The couple was thro"1! from the
machine, sufferinl major tzUwiel.
They described ZUber u appearing to
be an ordinary buslneuman, but said his
Yukon Drin.-bome was frequented by
long-haired, mod style-dressed mtn,
many from his naUve MtdU&an.
He ~ operated a firm called Line
lndUstrits out of Ills residtnce and was
tut known to be involved ln the pro-
motion of a commercial chemical clean-
ing compoun~. '
One neighbor was placed under
clllJens' arrUt by Zuber last spring when
she opnyed. him with her iarde• hose,
i>JL the iudle thrtw 1he asaault and bat·
t.ery cue out of court u ridlculou1.
• The" couple later made a trip to
Mlcblpn and returned aeveral months ....
"
RUNNING FOR BOARD
Candidate Hanchett
Hughes Engineer
' Runs For Vacant
District Seat
Hughes Aircraft project engineer Rich-
ard D. Hanchett of 811 St. Cl al r St.,
Costa Mesa, . is one of five caodldates
running for the single vacucy on the
Newport-Mesa school board.
The 41-year-Old candidate bas lived In
the area. for nine years and is the father
ol five children, Donald, 20; Robert, ta,
a student at Orange Coast College; Rich-
ard D. Jr., at Cal State Long Beach:
George T., 15, a aopbomore at Mesa High
Schoo~ and Kathryn L., 10, in the filth
sra4e at Sonora elementary school.
Hanchett recently completed his bllche-
lor's degree in eRgineering. He ls a for-
mer Scoutmaster.
He would look for "system implemen-
tation of a computerized data system" to
evaluate students and persoMel, com-
mwllcate to school perionnel and parent!,
and provide data "in usable fonnat to
those with a need to know."
Hanchett Is concerned about poor com-
munications between parents, teachers,
counselors. principals, students and oth·
ers. He believes "principal! and teachers
llhould be given more responsibility and
made accountable. This includes tralnin«
tn narcotic detection, and immediate sus--
pension ol those stµdeRts involved."
The candidate is critical of "imple·
mentlUon of fluible scheduling before
the system was evaluated; poor methods
of personnel evaluation, and the ret~n
tion of "dead wood", radicals and others
because of the lengthy procedure re-
quired to fire en:iptoyes:-------
Hanchett decries what he saya; is a
''lick of adequate leaching of tespon1l-
bllity, respectability, trust and loyalty."
He commends the di!trict for adequate
future building plans, its ability to raise
money, Implementation of special pr~
ject.s and the dedication of the school
board members.
FroM P09e 1
BADHAM •. ;
highway will wind up running through Its
city iimils.
The Whetmore bill, whlch has Costa
Mesa's bl~np, would·offer-&afeguards
again.st that happening.
The controversy has beeome so heated
In Newport Beach that a cltii.ens' group
is currently circulating petitions to force
a refereudum _on f.f:S~nding the already-
signed agreement on a portion ol the
route through their city.
The state has obtained 11 signed con-
tract on the route easterly from Bayside
Drive to the Corona del Mar clty limits.
Wally Koch, president of the Citizens'
Coordinating Committee that launched
the petition drive last month, said today
his group wlll meet next week to take
a count of the number of signatures they
have on their petitions.
The group needs 4,300 signatures, a
figure representing 15 percent of the eJlg.
Ible voters, to force the initiative refer-
endum. The CCC is simultaneously circulating
a second petition that calls for a Charter
amendment referendum that in the tuture
would require a citywide vote before any
freeway aRteements could be signed bv
the City Council.
Koch said be coold not give any figures
on the number of signatures already ob-
tained pending the tabulation esssion but
said the response "has been exception·
al."
tained pending the tabulation session but
in Sac ramento had first indicated h•
would introduce subsequent legislation In
the next assembly session, said today
he feebi he could not do so effectively;
"I have been pretty ntuch rendered
sterile on this iss ue," he said, 1'1 don't
foresee my introducing a bill at all. I've
tried . I've gone about as far as l can."
Blackout Hits
Mesa , Newport
A transformer fa ilure near the Costa
Mesa-Newport Beach city limit plllnged 1
major section of both cities into darkness
ThurJda.y night.
Southern Californla Edison Compiny
spakesman Bob Burbank said the 8:23
p.m. bl1ckout caUM: :was located near
lflth Street and ~ Gull Lane In Newoort
Beach.
Workmen restored power at 7:02 p.m.,
and the lights came on 1gain all over that
part d tho world.
·'
NIXON •..
•'
fo plead lot au~ !or ICurpllY ond ·Ruaaa IA tbttr rim a C"• In 1'
Democratic challengers John V. Tunney
and Jess Unruh. SJa:ns 1n the crowd de-
nounced him u a "faciat" and
~.........._... ... .WU .bundred
·-''ibinted ,_ """ . --~ ~~ . .,...., ' .... _., -ft .dOn't want your f-war."
VIES .FOR POST
Candidate Lant•ton
Mesa Housewife
One of Five
Vying for Seat
Houaewife and former architectural
designer Mrs. Beverly K.. Langston, 901
Sonora Road, Costa Mesa, is running for
the sin&le vacancy on the Newport·
Mesa school board.
A rtsident of the area for 11 years,
Mrs. Langston has two children attend-
ing Costa Meaa High School, C.thy, 16
and Alan, 15.
Mn. Langston cites among her qual·
tilcations for the post "the ability and
earnest desire to implement the wishes
of the commwllty, knowledge or which
I gained through active participation in
!Choo! and other community organiza·
lions." ·
She ·voicts no complaints about the
district, but Indicates she bas sugges-
tions for further improvement. "I'd like
to see a better means of using cummun-
ity volunteers in the achools to relieve
teachers of some responsibilities," Mrs.
Lanpton aald.
Further she seeks a "lay committee
of busineUmen to aid students in mak-
ing vocational choices, and improved
communication and parent involvement
ln the schools."
Mrs. Langston commends the district
lor realiz.l.ng 11how out-dated and inef-
rective the old methods really are" and
!or haVing "begun to revitalize our pr~
grama." The district has successfully,..._
related curriculum to "life involve-
ment without throwing out the basics
>f education," the 39-~ar old candidate
says. -
Returned to RU8sia
WASIDNGTON (UPI) -The Stal<
Department says fragments of a Russian
satellite that fell on parts of the Midwest
last month will be returned to the Soviet
Union.
• tn.ldt, Nllon j.olc1 an abdience ol-about
1.000 persona that lie had ~ succe,.fllt
in wµ,ding down the Vietnam ainru.ct and
repeated his promise to end the· war•ln
such a faahlon u to galn a pDeraUon of
peace .for the nation.
Americana were fighting in Vietnam,
he said, "so that those you ng men who
are outside abouting their obscene
slogans won't.have kl fight in Vietnam. or
anywhere else."
Dlring the -ch some of the
demoruitraton charged at a door of the
auditorium but ..,.e blocked by poU...
On his way out the President pamed to
greet an Indian chief in full regalia and
then headed into the pMklng lot wbere
several hundred police ·oUJcera held the
crowd about 60 yards away.
A few eggs splattered within about five
ya.rds of where be stood. Then the Presi·
dent climbed on the hood of his car, rais-
ed his arms in the familiar V fashion
and gave them hil traditional campaign
.From p .. ., l
FIRE ...
in the kitchen and then went to the den to
t--,estigate.
The house already was filling with
smoke. -
An alarm .vent out to Saft Clemente
and Camp Pendleton fire stations. Sin
Clem'Jlte · volunteers roared into the
estate 0.1 two pumpers to fight a blne
which -on " much smaller aca.le -
resembled the devastaUng fire w b I c h
1truck the community clubhou!e early
this year. It was o: similar construction.
The fire , the classic smouldering varie-
ty, had built up within the two-foot-thick
walls of the ,ielen and smoke was pouring
from severll vents in the ceilings of the
wing of the four-sided residence.
Heat bad built up considerabl y
throughout the 11111 s~ ·tion~ sources sa.ld,
and smoke puffed through seams alo ng
several beams in the rough·plfster-ceil-
ings of the home.
President Nixon emerged from the
house about 10 minutes after firefighters
arrived. He chatted with several of his
Secret Servlct qents in the patio as elec-
tric f1111 IUCked smoke from the house.
The President wu wearing pajamu
and a bathrobe.·
'Ibe blaze was an unusual and tense
climu to a haJTowina day or cam-
PlllPinl and .unrest for the PrtSident.
It was the second fire at the compound
thi.s year.
The first erupted In an ABC generating
truck on an evenlnc last spring wben the
President wu addresalng lhe nation on
the Vietnam war. A stack of paper cups
and r11s caught fire, nearly destroying
the backup generator truck. A crash
truck on constant atandby for the
President's hellcoptera wu UJed to e.z.~
tlnguiah that fire,
An accurate reproduction of
an exceptionally fine Queen
Anne double bonnet secre-
tary. Formed of walnut and
yew wood veneers and solid
pecan and available in two
finishes . It i1 36" w i ·de and
811/1" higli.
'
salute. 'Ille ahouUng and obscenlifH ap-
pu1'd. to -· -At. hls car moved out of the parking lot
through a road cleared LhrouP the
crowd, the·mi!liles began falling.
'Ille Pmtdent's Umoualne, witfl a
poU.. eacort and tralled by a coovortthl<!
with Secret Service agents In tt, lurched
forward. One agent tumbled from the
convertible. Several others were hit with
rocks but none were seriously Jnjured.
A rock smashed into a window of the
"control" car containing H'aldeman and it
stopped abruptly causing several minor
coll isions in the motorcade.
The President's limousine has bullet
resistant glass and the missiles bounced
harrn1essly off it. rts sunroof-type top
also is made of glass and was closed and
covered at the time.
Gov. Reagan called the display "in-
tolerable behavior" and said: "I express
my contempt on behalf of the dtizena of
California."
Auto Stolen
In Oregon,
Crashes Here
A car stolen in Oregon and carrying
three Nevada runaways 1ailed into a Y-
shaped Cost.a Mesa intersection Thurs-
day, causing a triple collision that Injured
five persons.
A 17-year-old Reno girl wu the most
seriously injured. She was listed in fairly
good condition today at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital with lacerations and a
concUssk>n.
Detectives today were trying to unravel
the circwnstances of the original auto
theft and why the three Nevada youths
were in the Harbor Area.
Traffic Bureau Sgt. Bob Ballinger said
the Reno girl was driving southbound on
Newport Boulevard at Fairview Road
when the car -bearing Nevada plalea: -
rammed another aulo broadside.
Driver of the second car, Wayne E.
Tu rne r, 23, of 128 10 39th St., Newport
Beach, was injured, along with the third
driver whose car was hit.
He and Donald E. Snyder, 18. of 246 E.
20th SL , Coata Mesa, were ¥eated at
Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital aionc with
the thrtt Nevada teenagers.
Sneaky Thief Steals
$;114 .jn Cigarettes
Paying customers were checking oat at
the" frc\nt of a Cost.a Mesa store Th\D'sday.
while a non·paying patron was checking
out what he could find in the storeroom
at the rear.
• Ralph Collins, of the Food Giant, 2300
Harbor Blvd., told police 120 cartons of
cigareUes worth $414. were stolen by the
intruder, who pried a door to gain entry.
DEALERS FOR: HENREOON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
1eJ11111 "
NIWPORT BEACH
172f WHtcllff Dr., 642·2050
OPIN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
LAGUNA llACH ,rofesaloMI Interior
0..lptrs Avail ... 1-111-NSID ~45 North Co11t Hwy. 4'44551
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL P ,... ,. ,,,.. ........... c...., M6o1l6J
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U.S.,, Russia
Heating Up
' Over Plane
Raid.Neu
7!Jig '(;an.g
Of Rebels~
· .. NEW YORK (UPI) -POUco
aeiled Thurldly two1 blil-Ju(lt-
Pinr leaders ol the Jorpsl
cOaliUon of Negro street pnp
in . Chlcqo as lhoY..~P!DY
were preparioc to· join·~·
Panther Jeador E I .d r I a ~ e
Cleaver11n Algeria. " ·
Chlcqo -~ )ob\ed Iii the raid on a lw~m
suite at the ~.Q:oydon on
Manhattan'• fashionable east
side. Amsted.were Jeff Fort.-
26, wanted on dlarees of .at-
tempted murder and ag-
iravated ~ping, an d ,
Chester Evans, Jr .• Z6, wanted
, on double mlirdtr,; blond juin-· .
WASHINGTON (AP) -The ping and narpotic5 charies.
United ·Stales, displaying its Fnrt wu jdent!fled ·· by
f'-t .publl dlpl . irTl Ghlcqo oil~ ... pml<!enl •• c omauc -of the "lop ··.21" i>f · the . taUM~ over the Sovlet refUsal Bl&Ckstone NatiOn, the con-_..
to ri!:leBst a U.S.· Army plane gloi:Derate wl)idJ; includes the
and ila b I 1 h -r a ,; k I ii I . BlacUtone Rangets,-of which ·
pauengers, bas ch a r 1re·d Fort was rouiidU: !Sans wU . saia allo to 'tie · a menlber Of Afoscow with violating U.S.-·the ruling ~p.· 'n,\ey were
Russian consular agreements~ beld, without' bill pen4ing ar-
Alter eight days of talking ht rival of warrants 'from Illinois.
r e 1 t r a i n e d , optimistic Arrested With them were
language, ~ state Depart-Pani Valenzuela, 19, and
ment Thursday called fot; the .Jamee Coruiers, 1( ·.who was
.. ' . Gun11aen's • Target? trailed from Qllcago to New immedi~te-relea!e or ··the York Wednesday night and led
passengers who include iwo Qlicago detectives . to the . Rafael Viera, ~ •. acquit~ed ·1n June if! the dea th of
Amtrican generals. .Croydon. She was asleep at one Detroit policeman and the wounding of a nother,
·A .. statement handed to the time of the rald.-but··Mtss · said Thursday that·two·recerit attempts have been
Soviet f.mbaua:dor Anatoly F. Valuenzela and the · ·two made on his life by gunmen in the streets of Ne\v
Dob1'Yriin ,.said, ''There ls 00 . fuJitlves were smoking mari· York. Clarence Fujler, co-defendant in the Detroit
juana in the living room. case, was st{lbbed to death W~n~sd~y. justification for any further ·'lbe girls were ~ld in $4,SOO --------------------delay by the Soviet. Union."• bail eacb on charges of
Meanwhile, the Soviets con· "hindering prosecution" and
Unued to portray the plane's possession of mar;ijuana.
1an<IJ!ti_ "iD .~u;iaia across the Police said ~ foiJnd no ·
Turkish 60rder u a hostile act weapons bu,i a·id find. papers
and linked it to alleged recon. indicating Fort and Evans
naissaftce ' fllgbts from U.S. were planning • to ~ for.
bases.· Algeria, wbicJ!: ls ~ing a
Race Riots Shut Schools
A commentary in the Soviet re{uge for .An)erican revolu·
news agency Tass said the in. Uonaries. Police sajd "fort cident "has again drawn the 1 .. __ ...... the .. r f the attention of the world public to. P Glllll:U to use . ...,1as· 0
Uie serious and constant threat
of peaCe." from "400 large and
2,000 small America• war
bases on foreign territories."
The American bases, Tass
sai~, are "situated in the im-
mediate vicinity or the Soviet
Union and . ~tr Socialist
cduntri!s ·and · are widely used_
for espionage and other hostile
activities."
Tl)e United States mainWJtS
the mnall white plane new 'into
Re\'.. Lawrence Jordan.
Nurse Wins
Air Force
Skirmish .
. S&\Tll.E, .\Va.ii .• (Ul'I) -
Sovitt· terrUtiry aeciden(ally. Capl. Susan R. Struck, an un· ~C:les 1he .iir>erals. ·an , ~led pregnant 11urse, ·will
.f.n1eriean major and a ·nimain in the Afr Force at ~Sb: co~t were on boar<L .1 Jeast.witll r;Jov, 10 penc!ing fuU
for.,wbat tJ.e t!.S. s,us was .. • -aring of ·her ·case before a
tour of Turkish border m-. three-judge panel.' ·
atallnions. Judge EugHe Wright of the
Six Kent
In die tees
Missing
9th Circuit Court of ,Appeals
issued a t·em.porary
. restraining: .~rdp' ~ursdaY,
preve nting· the Air Force from
discharging the ·nurse. ·
Wright issued his order after
a lower court j~e bad turn-
ed down Capl·S~'s pleas.
The appeals judge gave
Capt. Strilck'1 ittOroeys u·nul
Nov. 5 to file motions and the
Air Force unU~ Nov. 10 to re..
·ply, and ordered. the-be&r.ing
before the Uirte-judge panel.
TRENTON, N.J, (AP.) -Ci-
ty schools were oniered· ct~
today in an attempt to coor off
racial clashes sparked by im·
plementation o! a pupil .bu~lng
plan . ·
Forty persons had been jn•
KENT, Ohio fUPI) -
AutbOrlties said 1'hursday they were unable to locate six of 25
persons indicted by a special
grand jury in connection with
last sprtng's disfurbances at
Kent State University.
~ineteen persons have been
taken in cus.tody but slx others
}ave nOt been located, despite
the fact detectives "passed the
word" they are wanted.
Mike Roserror Uie American ~
Civ"il Liberties Union said he
wbnts the t~ judges to
order a court .beating to test
the constitutioMUiY of the Air
Force regulation Under which
Capt. StrUck Was · · to be
discharged:
jur_ed and 32· arrested.·
Al .the . :height ol ~Ju
disturbanees Thursday, Mayor
Arthur H. · Holland declared a
"local disaster emergency"
amf ordered a 9 p.m. to dawn
curfew. ·
GOOD AS GOLD GIFTS
DAILY "LOT S .. •' Settlenaent IVetir: . . . ' • .. -' .. . .. ""' .... .
•
lackout'-
•• ,.
DETROIT (AP) The reached by the time the new plants leaylog 30 setUemeni. nopnced Thun<loy the start of
Un!~ A"uto Wor~rs ·and nationaJ 'bargaining effort wsf in the importlnt sites. an all.out effort.to settle local GeMral.~·~entered< · annoUnoed. That tert .97 to ·tJ Lofel!IcVtl-setUementi in.i pad.I at~ 11ven Canadi1n ~ :::_!'~Y~ tettled in tho .Unltod Stateil' •IJQUl\COC{ jj)day were. ,"r ·GM plailfl,by ,_rty 11..t week.
and seven In Canada. At the Chevrolet Gear Ir: Axle W..', '!be: ma)ar 'llattanal t.Je1 news blackout, the traditional be . . f th lrik Wood-Detroit'l employing 5 809• •the revolved around wages coat ol
' algn serioUI talks · were ex-g~nnrn~ 0 .. _ .... e .!.. e Chey,oiet tian!pijss~ 'p.nti lfY.1ng protection and' rttire-
pected. .. · • .; · · • • · · • ~~ ' ..,.!'-1 .ltt~ .. ~.P31"!Y: iii Tot.do"• i>firo:: with ' 3 300 . ment: • · ,. The '\Ullon aald It had a._....,...., a m1uor \cl w ,Ju~ m.: . , " . ,~ .' • .1 , . " •" . ' l>Oftailt Joca1·1evel 'a.¢.!"~ents .. ~mpw)ou,. ,and the Otltol Jn its la.st oUer, GM aald 1t eatabllat~d. a · "s_P.eeial '.sub-: must ~ approved befOre'· f J ·.'Diesel: ~&ivfslon ·plant in ln-' would boost the average =~Ute ~ un:e~ .1~: new national pact can be.wfrt-d!~. _, IJ,>d .. •. empJ~J..in.i wo/ke(S' !'i~e.~ $4:02 ~hour prob~ · . ten. . .. · . : . :!,~· ... _ · : : . · :·. by 311 ~f! in !lie_ first year of full)' ezplon 8; ~ ~ A union s~esmaJI said. 24 .§:Po'es~c;n ., lO[ ,. GM. !>J, a . thretrear oontr~ct. 'lbe =-~~~~=·!hat now Oftl)e ~ttle~~ls .were,1!1 kfY~ £ii:iad:a:. arid ' ~~ UAW· .. ~ union demands 11.5 cents.
The UAW struck General
Motors .facilltios in the United
States and·Caftada at mldtiight SejJt. 14. ' . . . .
LiUle. progrea . baa : beeb "!'Q!1t<I !!I the national talila
1lrice that. time. . Meetings
thfough . the wet!:\end were
scheduled uncle\': the blactOUt
rules.
~·There will be . no public.
comment concwting the ~
gress of tl)ese .. discUssions,"
th! unioir said.
Tbe union's special sub-
committee. will ·be. headed by
U~W. presicl!nl: ~ e,o n-a ... · d
Woodcock. -·· ·· (;M;S.tcip rl~go~tA:ir. E~rl R.
Bramblett, is ezpected to head
the company_'s delegali911. · ·
"We welCome ibis probih&
of all the ouUla!Mful&. nation_..)
issues,"·Br.ambJett saJd today.
"We .are F,•pared ·to m~t as
many h9w's u .necessary to do
this. . · ~ • · · ·
·•1we are ui-ging'.our plaii:t
mariagement to : flll'ther · b;.
leMily)ocal negoti.&tiona in ..
eUort .to. conclude local •l-
tlenien&,': Brlmblt!U added. .
. A total .ol. 51 settlementa .on
a>the.ptanl. .level . _b,d . been
·:WllO C.res7
N• •ftl11t """P•P.r 111 ttJ• worlcl c•ru •ltftt yMf c-ot1111111."·
11ity like yo11r co""'"unity lll1 ily
noW1JJO,., '"'· It:. iho DAILY' l'~LOT. · TM IANCROFT ..... ,,
·ltUIOTl CON'TitOI.:
IPIClALI
c-oact !Ho«,...
"'1.tii. tolot TY. c ............. .
·J{MfinM·~ "··1 .... 8CCiiMlld ..
!I .,.__c:olot ..... ·Fxr.,..,.c.,. -··
...... ~ . '~·. ~ .· ~ .~,· .• ,,.r.,..,,,.;1:, r :·;J1-.·::.:.,,.:..": :~•.: .,, ... ·. ¥:· .. ·-
NeW:.1971 . Zetytb' ha~dcr3[fd qua~ity
: it . .16" Color~~able With Zenith's ~.. exclusive : .
SPACE COM~AND~. ~~-9' 8~8 for only . . · ·
• ,, l .• . . . . ·' Zenith handcrafted quality for uruivaJed depeadabilitJ
· • Ztnllh A~~Aulom.atk: AM_.:1.IMllfll..~ ·•~•NI~ ~ ,~ ~ .:_
t!'OI -eloetrcnic•lly fine tunes color T't· · · combine• 1.trnout. Zenith ·l!a~etted de-
1n1tanl1r -_1'1.oeflectl pollr VHF~ · · 1Je11d1b1 lll' •ill uclling ~·00.
llJning lllb'IUllic:aly, ' \ <w;•llCe-5. • . .,
· • Su: el•••~--t......._. Ore111er
0
oiO.: • .... Coit!•-'• ere sep..-9'11 lef·i.a.c-otor ~·brigh1l'IMI Willt.roddef f'tldl, bf'Ohl•r · . fl9V<e'I snd .ol!MM1 )Ind.,. IJttcocf lligtl on
;•eefll~ WIOll& brillilll'I( ~. . "" let '°': ;ttiller_t°""'°"~·
SPACE COMMAN09 100 REMOTE CONTROL
Just press the button on the sman control unit yoa J'lol.d In yow
hand to dlang~ VHF cttan~ts anef turn Mt on or Off. OM .,... '?" does ii all.I No need 1o l"'" TV on n:i~ur at Htl It also was learned the
grand jury may return more:
indictments in connection with
itr month-Jong investigation of
tbe Kent State dJStrubanc1\,
which . were. clirnued May 4
when four students were shot
to death by Ohio National
Gardsmen.
Wright issued his Qrder after U.S. District Judge William N.
Goodv.·in refused.
Capt. Struck was to have
been discharged at midnight
Wednesday but her· attorneys
obtained a 24-hour stay [rom a'
federal judge jn Tacoma.
Gdodwin:s. ruling had lilted
lllat >lay.
Watch in $20 gold piece, $2,000.
$10 gold pie.ce watch, S 1.200.
$2.50 gold piece ring, S 180.
BUY NO.W! LIMITEP QUANTITIES!
'
• . '
. lJil<!rtv Head charm, $215.
Cuff links of $2.50 gold piece, $250.
Choll'Ofl A«ounb l11wlltd
... ,....lull l!IPfftl
..1111.AiNrk.lrd 'Incl M81J« Clllrfl, !Ot,
SLAVICK'S
Jewelers Since 1917
18 FASH!ON ISLAND
TV and
' ' ; APPLIANCE
IN HAUOI CINTll ..
JJH1HAllOI an.
COSTA -~~11Jt
· Witeh Probe ·
Evidence Found in Salem NEWPORT-BEACH -6-44-lllO ..
DANVERS. Mw. (AP).-
Archeologtsta have uncovered
new evidence linked to the
witchcraft hysteria for which Z -penons were executed in
riioarby Salem in J&a. ·
Opee Mooday ood Friday ...n f:JO weredeclaredbewitclied,Ther===~~==========:i;;::::::::::i;;::::::::::;i;~;;;;~~~~~:::;:::;;:::;:::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::~·
execuUoqs -Jed by that of
the indJan wcma1 -began,
and In all JI penona were
haJlled and -proaed lo death beneath a pile of Richard Trask, a
NOrtbeastem , '.University
graduate history student, and
Rc:beologlst lloland Rob6ins say they diKDVenid the ,..,.
datlons ol the home of the
.. v. SamQel Panis.
It .Yiu Parris' t.)'MJ'Old
dJugbler -ml .. 11-~ -wbo, udtad i;, tales of wltd!mlt told by
ap lacilm woman, 1Ctt:amed iiiicl·-... ry nlght and
millstones.
'lbe archeologisU unoov~
cellar waJls about a foot below
the surfice or a field where
Pama• home wu beUeved to
have Mood.
Fllrthet dlQiiia. a!ded by -t..-......anhed a, pewter -. a coin dated
11111 and • i....-. of
chlnaware beorinc tile laltlab
of Pml1 and bl.i wife. -
,. ... Pofltk:el ""'"'1'!WINlll
VOTE· FOR
• BEVERLY LANGS'tON
NIWf'On·MISA SCHOOL IOA•D
I. •••icl111t-Newport·M••• School Ditftict Sir1c1 l•St
2. P.T.A. lr1 .. olwtmt11._. Y1•r•-l•1rcl Ser1or1 School l Mtt•
.,.. Hlth Scheol, •
J, Mtmbet of P•rtl'lf Corp., Cott• Met• High Schtti Sl111c1
I lt1 l11t1ptio11,
4. Vi_P,..i ... 111t Cott• M"' Hlth l eotkr Clui..
CMlrwlll; 9;'"19"""' "' ........ Mt C.M.
Choose One of the Many
Coast & Soulhern Federal
Offices to Serve You:
*'MAIN omi:e: .th &-ttll1 Loe~• .U.135t r ' . WILIHIRI • llRAlllllCY PU.CE: 3133 Wlfthlf9
llYd., LA.. •1285 .
LA CMC CiNID: 21111 & llR*dwly • 921.1102 * HUNnNclTOll llUCff: 11 Huntfngtcin c.llllr. (114)117-1041
UllTAAllA LOAN llllMCi! AOINCTi
1IOS H. Malft 8t. • (714) 541.a.57
frlMTA M~ 711 WHahlN Blvd.• Sll4748
frlM PIDRO: 10lt a Plctlio • 13i4'4t
*""'COVIii: r.a.-lhoppfRg etr. • nt-on
*PAllOIWIA CllT1 M1f Vtn Nop BM1. • 112-1171
*TARVMA: 111S1 V"*"8 Bou"'4:rd • MS-tl14
•LOlllO l!ACH:"" a Locwt. 431.1411
·*•~-I •tot 1111 D1llY Hours-91111 to4 p111
ASSEl'S OVER $800 MILLION
Art Llnkletter Shows You
a New Way.to Beat Inflation
... Just Join · ' ' JnL.:·
OUb·
-
Coast & Southern Federal
'Offers ·You Theis . .
Highest Prevailing Rates: --. . '
. COlilPOUNlllll !IAJl.Y Mtll PN6 .,_T.• . .. . ..
'·
. •
1•
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..
:.
• • . • • ' • ..
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-,
• D AILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
. • .
-Cnoice: Mrs. Lan-gston
Costa Mesa and Newport ~ voters will find on their ballots next TIJesday a choice 11mon1 ftvt can-
didates who seek to replace Mrs. Ellzabeth Lilly ., ·re-
presentative from Trustee Area 2 on the Newport Meaa
Unified School District Board of Trustees:
The district was divided Into truotee areas when ii
was unified. Trustee" Area 2 is, rough»', the triangu11r
area bounded by Baker Street on the north and Fair·
view Road 3nd Newport Boulevard on the east and
west. '
The DAILY PILOT commends all Ii'# of the can-
didates wb6 have made themselves available for this
Important communlly position. Each of the five bas
something to oUer and ~ is obviously wllllng to sac·
rilice personal time for the benefit of fellow citlze!la
and the communlly's children.
After studying qualJflcaUons and aWludes of the
candidates, the DAILY PILOT 1'9COmmendl Mn. Bev· erly Langston be elecYd to fill the vacancy on
the school board. A resident of the community for U years, abo 1bows
an unusual grasp of the oveNll operatloa of the local
school system and an Independent thoughtful attitude
toward the district's problems and aosetr. A bomewlle
and" fonner architectural detlgner, she is the mother
of two children enrolled In the district. Since she would
be replacing a woman on the board,. her election would
maintain a 5-2, male-female ratio among th1 ~tru1tee1.
• • • this tradlllon. She has pled~ed that, although bet cbll·
dren happen to be ~nrolled 1n Costa Mesa H!Jh Scllool,
her range of Interest extends to every child m the di!".
tr let.
Mrs. Langston also P.resents an air of amiability,
a desire to cooperate with fellow trustees wiUtout re--
linqui1bln her convictions. Jn short, she seems to offer
a good ba the six members already serving on
the boa .
Tuesday, for the Newport~Mesa Board of
Tru es : Mts. Beverly Langston.
Exn·aordinary Singers
An e1traordlnary Harbor Area singing group makes
its flnt ~cert appearance of the season in a couple
ofwHb.
Fo, a change, it's going to be before the home folks .
Sandwiched oetween their international summer
tour and a hoped-for appearance half way across the
United States next spring, the special assartinent of
young men and women will be appearing regularly
tbrougbout Southern Calilornia .
Actually, the first fall appearance of the heralded
Corona del Mar High School Madrigal Sin gers wUI be
tomorrow, when they appear with the William Hall
Chorale at a rally in the Anaheim Convention Cente~.
They sing again Nov . 5 at a music festival at Costa
Mesa High School.
Then, their first solo concert will be Nov. 19 at th eir
-own schoo; .. I
Jt bad been feared that within the seven-person
compOsition of the ~ard schism~ ~ould ~evelop among
trustees who: reside 1n the two c1t1es -tn other words,
that the Cosi3Mes8 trustees would line up against the
Newport trustees and vice versa. Fortunately for the
good of the di.strict. this has not occurred; tht trust.eea,
almost without exception, have operated with one idea
In mind -what is best for the entire district, ·not what
Is good for children of one of the two communilll•.
In March, they have been asked to sing at the na·
tional conference of American Chorale Directors As·
sociation. They ar~ that good. · -
Under the able direction of Donald Haneke, they
have evolved into a major cultural attraction.
<L ..... _ N\Aui.i:::-.1 ......
SPOOK Of THf YEAR -' i
Jn this area, Mn. Langston promlles to conlinue Tune in sometime. if you can get tickets. c
VCI Student Speaks Out A gai nst Catnpus Violence
Ra.dical Minority Is Inviting Backlash From ~ Public
To the Editor :
l as a student of UCJ, am tired of the 1~s, the protests, the riota, the ~
bings and the kidnapings in the name of
the "opprtued people.''
I say we, u the general public, are op-
presaed by the radical minority. Radials
are acting 11 guerrillas, calllin( ooaDed
"spontaneous" riots end bomblnp. 'J1iey
are mvtting backluh, which will curtail .... lr<edonis. achieving, In the end, just
the opposite ol "bat they set.out to do.
Tbele radicals only make Ille more dU·
ficult Instead of being constructive.
AIL AMERICANS lose if such actions
cooUoue.
. J am not 1 political activist. r am a
~te~f~~~~ :Ujo~l~~~t.I 1c!:
not remain silent while life, property and
freedom are at stake.
Last year on the Irvine campus , two
student strikes were held. Steven Shapiro
was lauded and Angell Davis apoke.
Windows and buildings were covm!d wlth
anti-war, antl-establhbment slogans.
)i.1any rallle1 were held.
THIS VEAi\, -.rithm three weeb ol the
· start of school, one of the Chicato Seven
atteinpted to enhance revolutionary spirit
In local r.adicals. Since, a university car
and the Stanford Research Institute have
been bombed, and now the university
Bank of America has been burned out.
What or who ii next?
T personally do not favor repression
any more than any other person. But In
the light of recent developments,
especially the increase in violenct. in the
last few weeks, I feel I.bat the time has
come to put pressure on the radicaJs -
they must not be allowed to hide within
the university system where they have
free reign to import inflammatory uJtra-
left leaders ()r organize rallies, which,
directly or indirectly. influent-e and con·
done terrorist activities.
IRA BAXTER
Nwraea Prauell
1o the Editor :
This an acclamation to nunea 1n
general and to those setving tn Hoag
~1emorial Hospital, in Newport 8eac:h. in
particular.
I've been hospitalized several time! Jn
several places and have always received
wonderful care in tacb. But never hive I
seen the dedication to the welfare or pa·
tients given like the nurses al lfoag
Hospital.
I wu ln Intensive care for rour days
there recently and each crew of nurses
was equally concerned ror every patient
jn thr: crew 's care.
T SAW nIEf\1 give kindness, un.
ilerstandlng and ratience to everyone -
even those who were demandina: without
cause.
1 wu lransfr:rred to two Gther wards
·---B 11 Geor,e ---.
Dear Ceorgc:
My faUier is alway& glvlnc me
advice about tht boys I go out with
-about bad company, and tbe:
wrong kind or boys, and all sorta or
"helpful hints." One thing lnte~
me: J1ow do fathers know about IO
many things boys might try to do
.,.,.rong?
LOUISE
Dt1r LouiJe:
'l'ht ansv.·u ls obvious. Yle
lathers .... a lot. ••
(For -Solutions ~le'1
PToblemJ, .mi. .. J'°"<f.' Just
add ... i.r.J
• ,
before being -from the haopital end I reeelved the IJJlle 1ood oervlce and
cbetrfulDeal from all tbe nW'tlH In each
ward. Far too many people are afraid to
go to a bolpltal I want all of tbmt to
read this end be ailured they will be well
taken care of.
f salute all nuna boil I ,Pve opecia1
credft lo -.,..1ng Hoq ilcllplW.
In IJ'll--TllYRA TOMLINSON
14.ir,111q ........
To the Editor:
Are you. worried aboUt your ICbool.age
children? Afraid they may be hU'td into
trying ICIDt ol that narcoUc eYel'JODe is
lalkJng about: marljuma? You can pre-
vent tlilil !
Oblerve 1""I' child very dot<ly. II he is
depresaed, give hbn one of yoor diet pills,
that should •pep him up. Th!J may,
however, make blm nimius . .Jf this oc..
curg, well, your tran<p.1Ulzer1 that have
kept you ealm !Gr all lheae yun abould
calm him down. •
IF RE SHOULD develop a phobia
against your pills, er if his desire is to
uae drup IOdally, tal<e hhn to a cocktail
party. Give hhn a martlnl That should
keep him happy.
Now yoor child ii 1olng m the right
direction. He's not at • pot party or on
the street, he'• probably at a cocktail
party with a lampahade on his head.
When be Rfl: bis friends are smoking
their into1icants, It ls time for the
clincher; offer him one of your cigaret·
tes. He won't like it at flrll, but tell him
how long it took you to get used to it, and
show him ways to hold It that look smart.
Show him how to blow smoke rings.
YOU ARE AIMOST there. Now you
must tell your children to beware the
"friendJy stranger" who may offer him
an innocent looking cigarette, which is
••marijuana, the tliler drug!" Explain
that It Is a powwfuI narcoUc In which
lurks murder, death and Insanity.
Then, to wrap It up, lhow him fllma of
a heroin addict Finl tbrool)I cold-turkoy
withdrawal and U111R him this ii wtiar.
pnoklng -will pl him. JAMES R. BUl'LER
Propoaltlon 18
To the Editor:
Last week you p,.,..t.d the DAILY
PILOT'S position on the propositions a~
pearing on the Nov. 3 Ballot.
I believe thtle to be sLocere and honest
Opinions. I don't believe tJ\at your study
of Propocition 11 wa1 quite extensive
enough.
The Automof)lle Club'• baalc viewpoint
ts for amog control and research and
rapid transit, but we are against the ~
pooed method of flnancln& aad In·
adeqUala eootroll.
A. L. WIT? w._..
Sauth Loa Anf•les lliltrlct Olflce AutomablloClubof
Southern Ca!Uonlia
'1'J'fl0 c-We 8elle1'e
To the Editor: Just recently 1 history Wieber at our
scbool &bowed me two Issues or Llfe
magatine. I didn1t think anythlng of it un-
til I rtal~ed that both llSues cootalned
the same plelln lllUJtraUng tlfO dU·
ft-storitsl
One ilsut: Wll dated Od. 17, 1969, •nd
the captJaa -the pil:lan llsled tblt ii. wu ta.a at the scene of a stu-
-riot at Plinc<ton University. ll
-a 1ood aample If poUoe bnltall·
ty.
'lbe Giber -was an earl1ar Woe ol
-~-
Mailbox
Le tters from readers ..are welcome.
Norm4UJ1 writtr1 1hould convey their
messages in 300 wordi or fe.ss. The
right to cundtn.se letters to fit ipace
or eliminate libel reservtd. AU let-
ters rnuat include signature and mail-
ing addres1, but "4mtl may be with-
held on request if iujfident reason
i.s apparent. Poetry wiU ftOt be pub-
lished.
Life -December a, 1961. The very same
picture was printed, the oaly difference
being that it wu enlarged. Thia was
surprising enough, but what even further
surprised me was the fact that' the ca~
tion beneath th!!: picture sta~ that It
was not a student riot at Princeton, but a
picture or the Chicago riots!
COINCIDENCE? J don't think so. How
disappointing to learn that a magazine
will find a good example Of something (in
this case, police brutalitj) and use Jt in
two different instances. Magazlnes make
up a large part of the news media, and
when these oceurrences happen, wbo can
we believe-?
I only hope that Life magazine, and alt
tither magazines will start presenUng the
real facts, so we can once more put <>Ur
faith in them as a means <>f finding out
what is going on in our world today.
DEBI MILHOLLAND
High School Student
No Tr a nsition Plan
To the Editor:
As I read increasingly disturbing
unemployment figures I find it appalling
ttiat the Nixon administration and
members <>f Congress did not have a
transition plan ready to put into effect
immediately when defense contracts
were cut back,
Many areas, too numerous to mention,
could have been part o[ the pro-
gram ••. low-cost ~using, t r a n s i t
syatems, hospitals, child care centers,
training eenters ... to name but a few.
We might add ·another program -
"cure the incurables by 1975." \Yith that
kind of goal we hit the moo n in a short
time.
11'11 not loo late to remind candidates~
KEN JOHNSON
ReN•e Grocer11 Ba g•
To the Editor:
Aa our contribution to the fight a1alnst
mounting trash and uotold waste of our •
precious natural resources, we shoppers
can take our used gn>cery ~ back to
the market each week for our new orders
until they are no lonaer reusable.
For <>ther types of storu, we can
teMe all unnecessary wrappings and
double up on bap whenem poalbte.
MRS. VICTOR VIASBIN
People Pollwtlen _
To the Editor:
Th4l propoted new city of Irvine which
i11 estlntated to brine an 11dded 75,000
(evtntUall1 •50,000) increue In popula·
lion into this 11rea b an exetlJf!nt example
of people polluUon and I c:an't undtr!itand
why there bNn't bHn a musl,•e protett
from the people wbo live along the
Orana:e Coast.
My family moved lo Costa M.,. from
Los Anctles 11 yean ago to «t.t away
from the crim'Cled coodlUou then, we
••
have enjoyed the "elbow room" and com4
paratively clean air here, but there will
soon be no dit!ere.nce between the two.
The whole concept of the new city is
repulsive and disgusting.
DOR0'111Y ZUBWALT
Agabut f'reetca1r
To tho Editor:
With interest J read your freeway
edltorfal of Oct. 141 and I very much en-
dorse the solution of compromise, in the
case of two confllctlng positions, as
usu.Uy fair, but I cannot JUbscribe to
your thinking u set forth.
There is an alternative, and that ii
some fonn of masS transportation.
Someday, we will have to come to this,
anyway. Looking back over the Jut two
deeades, you will note that every im-
provement in our highway system, every
additional road, every additional access,
has only brought relief for a brier period.
THEN MORE people find they can live
one place and work another because of
the new roads,' -and the freeways and
highways become clogged again. The
same story will be repeated again if the
Newport Freeway Is installed.
It is apparent that the time has come,
when we no longer can afford the luxury
of one occupant per one car. The pollu4
tion, the constant continual burial of
more land under a blanket of asphalt,
and the man hours wasted in using the
highways, is too big a price to pay.
YOUR ENUMERATED proposal, and I
quote, "l. That the Costa Mesa City
Council go on record ..• that if Newport
can produce a precise Pacific Coast
Freeway route that doesn't adversely af.
feet Costa Mesa, Costa Mesa will support
it fo the hilt.'' Why not put it the other
way around and say if Costa Mesa finds a
route that doesn't adversely affec t
Newport Beach, Newport Beach will sup-
port it to the hilt?
ONE OTHER remark -I can't for the
life <>f me understand why Costa Mesa
Wt1uldn't welcome a dozen mo re
free'ways. Each street vies with the next
to get more ugly signs up. I know of no
street that has any trees or lapdscaping.
Each building is obviously o( the cheapest
construction. On Newport Blvd., a
beautiful crop of weeds is always on
display. There is no center of town, and
single family resideras, mobile homes,
industry and rom merce are all in·
tertnixed. \Vhat do they have to lose?
LUCILLE HARRISON
Agahist BNrke
To the Editor :
As a five-year subscriber to the DAILY
PILOT I was more than a litUe dl.sa~
pointed in your backing or 70lh Assembly
Di!trict candidate and incumbent, Robert
Burke. l can understand the PILOT'a
sland: "All things be.Ing equal we11 eo-
dorae a Republican." 1 don't feel.
however, !hat anything or lllYOll9 11
equal in this case.
Although Mr. Burke was present. he
j\J5t didn't vote on many bills, tncludlrlg
I) Governor ReagRn's bill requiring an
unrelated male adult living in a welfa·re
hom e to pay his own way : nor did he vote
Quotes
Robtrt 0. ~tcKet, ralo Alie, before
dt:atb aft.er %1 moatQ "IU. heart
1rantph1nt: "'Mley made no promises. I
put my mont:y down and took my cha.n ees.
So r:iir ;iS l'm COM'erned I'm t!I winner,
even 11 lt wu to ttrmJoal.e right oow/'
for 2) equal pay for men and women for husband bundled and put tht:m at the
equal work. curb, as did most or the people on our
s'.:ect.
HE DID VOTE against AB 79 an anti· We were just amazed at the resultant
smog bill to control lead in gasoline. He nearly empty trashbarrels, and felt we
lost 59-3 ~d introduced oil company sup-were doing a smal: bit to help a giant
ported amendments to cripple the bill. problem. Instead or two containers each
Mr. Burke worked 12 years for an oil 'trash collecUon day, we ended up with
company ao is it any wonder that be said one half full. If that situation i.s
in bis Bob Burke Reports from multiplied by thousands all over the city.
Sacramento, July 1970·(p. 3) ''There is"'? the impact iB overwhelming!
hard evidence that lead contaminaUol'l..__
from burning <>f gasoline containing AFTER ABOUT a month, the Ecology
tetraethyl lead will ever reach dangerous League coUecUons suddenly stopped. But
levela!.' . in the meantime we have gOtten used to
Your own newspaper carried the report saving and bundling newspapers, and
that uti-poUution groups have .glve.n Bob Ibey are sitting in our garage. My bus--
Burke 1 rating <>f . "bad" all across the band says be is getting red up with the
board for bis stand. It seems to me that piling UPt and he's not going to do it
seems to lndlcate, be is working ~OT for much longer.
hll consUtuenUI: who , sent bi~ to J haveiried every way possible to find
Sacramento, but for the oil comparues. out where we migh i take those papers for
, collection. I called Mr. Mynderse to as•
ON THE OTHER side of the co11:f Y~ if there was any collection point in hit
wrote that you were not impressed with specified areas and he said no it might
Mr. Lloyd Nocker's record of qualifica· upset his "test'~ and suggested '1 call thi
tions. Jr the fact that Mr. Nocker is a YMCA. I talked to f.1rs. Fox there, an
well-respected attorney, who was a she said they <>nly collect bottles an
former Orange County Deputy District cans. ~
Attorney, former U.S. Army coun-SUrely some club, college, or organ~
terintelUgence agent and ~ormer U.S. tions must have the collection 1
Navy investigator does not unfress you newspapers as the ir project. If not, WH
with at least Mr. Nocker s unim· not? Does anyone etse have ideas on th
peachable character., then I ~ubt that subject? In the meantime, HELP! t
you have done any investigation at all. MRS. WILLIAM C.' HOLMES
Afso, Mr. Nocker has spent hours f
researching our poUutlon problems and Is 1
Indeed well qualified to speak in this 'Sa1'e t he Back Ba1r' :
area. H1s pa!lt record should at leut give i'
the voter the confidence that Mr. Nocker To the Editor: ,
is qualified to speak about enforcing the I am a student at Costa Mesa High anf
law, making ~courts cost the taxpayer .tm not alone in feeling concerned abo~
less, etc. what rould become of the ''Back Bay ;
Indeed, In this case ~ng is equal or area. :
evr:n rom parable and I challenge you to Where could we go to hike If thls l8sJ
print th is. place were developed? Where could Wf
(MRS.) JOAN S. PAUL go to run our dogs if this last place werf
bulldozed over? Where could we go tt
ride <>ur bones when the trails are a$ Back-to-School Night parking tots and housing tracts? •
To the Editor :
Cosla M"a High Sd\ool staged a truly
creative and Innovative Back-to-School
Night <>n Oct. 21. It was obviously a
monumental effort on the part or
studenUI: and staff, and the results were
remarkable I
An enthusiastic and interested faculty,
an involved student body and a new and
exciting approach to educating our high
schoolers was very much in evidence.
Some great things are happening at
Mesa. I am 'delighted that my daughter
has the opoprtunily to share in them.
MRS. DAN FISHER
Ne1.,1,...per Sal.,age
To the Editor:
Even though I'm rather late in getting
around to U, the news item you ran a
couple of weeks ago tlUecJ "Apathy Hit m
Newspaper Salvage Drive" with quot.el
by Jacob F. Myn<\~ tbe Newport
Beach city genml oervices diroctol'
seems still timely and lmportant onongll
fo .. comment
· Mr. Myndene hu llst.d be ii dlssp-
potnted with .he poor public mponse to
his experimental collecUon project In cer·
taln specified areas during the [irst
month.
MY FEEtJNG or. that is that he has
not given It nearly enough time or
publicity. Wllh all the talk going on now
Jn new!!ipa pers and on tel evision
regarding ecology and OUT' rnountalns of
tresh, this lm,ortant matttr abould be
strt!ssed ovtt ind over again,
This past spring, a couple or young men
had a wonderful ldf!a In forming lhe
short-lived Ecolotp Lf:ague and sent out
notlctS that they would co 11 e c t
newspa~ I dullMlf AYO!/ them, 011
AND WHERE can we go to watch wild
animals, ducks and bobcaUI:, frogs and
buUerrues in their natural surroundin&st
Yes, where? Where can we go to gd;
away from the noise, the people and th!
problems? Can we ever relax and enjoyr
Please help WJ save the "Back Bay·~
from its destruction by informing the
public. Please?
JEANNE ·SCHNACKENBEl\G
Lu.nrrloN• Estancia
To the Editor:
'
Estancia High School must be the mos(
luturious high school within many miles;
I wonder if the dollar difference in cost ol
construction betwetn practical and lu~ '
urious could have been used to improvf
quality or education. •
II. J. GU'I
__ mmtii ' _.,
Friday, October 30, 1970
The editorial pagt of the Dailg
Pilot 1eeka to Inform c:1ttd 1tim-
ulat1 ttatkr1 bu pressuti11g thil
newspo~r'• opfnfon.s and com-
mtntaru on topics of interest
ond 1igni/iconce, b11 providing a
fontm for the t.iprts.siO'll of
our rtodm' opinions, and b11
presenting the diverse view-
points of fn/ornud· observef1_
and spokennen on &opfc1 o/ &M <1av.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
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V0C. 63, NO. 26o, 4 SECTIONS, 31 PAGES ORANGE-COUNTY, CA1JFORNIA
r
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, -1,70 •• TEN CENTS
• I ·~ ' ~ ire ous:e·
~ ' ~
es· -.
* * * ~ * Nixon Flees Jn Ataaheim 'l,'onlglat
Nixon to Blast Estate
Violent Radicals In Pajamas
After being the target of rocks, bricks.
bottles, egp, red flags and other missiles
hurled 1t1 his limousine in San Jose,
President Nixon promised to "take off
the gloves" at a political rally tonight in
Anaheim and respond to s u c b
••viciousnw."
After his arrival at San Clemente , the
President said the 900 a n t I w a r
demonstrators were 1'radical, a n't i ·
democratic elements" who threatened
freedom of speecli and assembly in
America.
.. This was no outburst by a single in·
dividual ," said the President at the
Western White House. "This was the ac-
tion of an Wlrltly mob that represents the
worst in America."
The glass-top limousine containing the
President, Sen. George Murphy and Gov.
Ronald Reagan was blit7.ed while be left a
GOP rally as the President neared the
end of a 5,500-mile, cross-country cam·
paign tour.
The San JOSe violentt was rated the
most serious aimed at any President in
..
Down tlae
Mission
Trail
Dana Disposal
Firm Gets Raise
DANA POINT-Sooth Laguna DiJpooal
Company, Tuesday got a raise in rates
for trash pickup in the Capistrano Beacll.
Dana Point area without a protest.
A public hearing was staged by the
Board of Supervisors on tlie proposed in-
creasejrom $1.15 to $1.65 a month for a
once weekly pickup.
It was explained that the supervisors
had granted increases to other collection
services in recent months and that the
South Laguna firm, also known as Solag
Disposal, needed the increase because of
climbing costs.
e J et Block
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -A group of
&addleback V:llley residents are banding
together to fight jetports.
Of major concern is a discussion of
joint use of El Toro Marine Air Station
(or commercial as well as military
aircraft outlined in the Ralph M. ParllOOS
Company report' to the Orange County
Board of Supervisors.
But many residents also hope to block
a proposal to build a 1~ acre jetport in
Bell Canyon, east of Million Viejo.
Her.ding the organization are Ken Cook,
Ali!O Valley Homeowners; Bar t
Spendlove, Aegean .Jlllls Homeowners;
Mel Shope, Gapistrano H•i g h I a n d t
Homeowners: Mike Shearer, ML!aion Vie-
jo Homeowners, and Harry Ashe, Leisure
World, Laguna Hills.
Anyone interested in joiniJ\g the group
may contact one of Ulele members.
:e !\'.,.,, _J)lreetor
MISSION VIEJO -The Saddleblck
College administration appoillted phyli·
cal education instructor Douglas R. Fritz
as director of the collere'.-Intramural
program for the remainder of the fall
quarter.
The board of trustea ol the oollege
recenUy approved hiring a director to
develop and administer an lntn.mW'al
aporl! program for the students.
The. intramural activities will all take
place on Fridays from 11 a.m. to noon, a
time known as the "College Hour .. when
M claues are scheduled.
FrilJ will be paid an uddlUonul aalary '° over1ee lhf program of volle:yball and
balketball. Instructor Vmcent D •
McQillougl1 will be given charge o1 the
program ror tht ·wtnter quarter and
lllchard E. Tt!HJI: w11I be ll!igned the duty during the spring quarter. Both men
"" lllo lnllrUctOrl In the Dlvllion o1
'hyaiCll ~. llHith "IJ1d llelrelo r ,, ..
' this COWllry aince the assassination of
President John F. Kennedy in 1963.
Partisan Republicans bad given the
President a warm reception at the rally.
Jt got hotte r outside. N.ls:on emerged and
climbed atop the hood of hill limousine in
the glare of photo Ooodligbl!.
Facing his opponents as they shrieked
obscenities, Nis:on thrust his jaw forward
and flung up both arms. With his fingers.
he formed "V" symbols for the crowd.
The mob grew wilder.
His motorcade was mobbed for about
five The presidential limousine and other
vehicles were hit repeatedly by large
rocks. Several person.t including a Secret
Service ·agent and a televi1ion
cameraman suffered minor injuries.
White House aides and guests of the
President riding in a bus behind his
limousine huddled in seats and aisles as
rocks and botUes smashed four window1.
Newsmen in another bus were splattered
with glass from five 1mashed windows.
DAILY ,ILOT lteff , .....
By JOHN VALTERZA
OI IM Dlllr Plllt Stefl
A log fire lighted to smooth over tha•-
anxlety caused by a bowling mob ln Saft.::
Jose Ignited a smouktering blue at-tbt
Western White Home late Thunda1,
routine the first Family from bed and
causing considerable smoke . dlm11e to·
llalf of the Spanish villa.
President Nixon WU not in dantet
from the smouldering flre. The blue ·..,.u
detected by a amolce-mlffing devl~
within the wall of the aecond-floor den.
knowledgeable aources reported today.
But the smoke, pouring: from many
celling vents in the house, prompted the
chief e.xecutive to spend the rest of the
night in the · suest home ACl'Olll the
·driveway of his home.
The aourcea g:ave this account of the
!ire -the second blaze to erupt at the
Presidential compound since the Ni.xonl
moved to San Clemente: ·
At about , 10:» · p.m. the President's
valet, Manolo Sanchez, lit the fire In the
aecond-Ooor fireplace which i5 all-metal.
The hearth begins at the· second floor.
There is no fireplace at that spot in the
dining room below . Ont youth whipped a large belt from
his waist and lashed the top of a car Con-
taining H. R. Haldeman, Nixon's chief of
staff.
. PRESIDENT, SENATOR ARRIVE IN ORANGE COUNTY AFTER ARDUOUS JOURNEY
Murphy'a Irish Up Over Bumpy Road to $.In -Jose; Mr. Nixon Ends R1:t99ed Day a Gt.tett ln10wn HOuse,
An hour later, the President left the
fireplace to retire in hi1 bedroom 1bout
100 teet away, ''It was just like Caracas," said Rose
~ry Woods, the'. Presideot's long-time
~1 secretary. who was sitting nut
to one of 'tbe smashed windows. She
referred to an attact an Nixon, then Vk:e
Pres~t, in Venezuela.
SenatoD M~hy~eet~g, -. . ... .
J.a,y~es . ~;p,'n~.r:
1st Junior Miss
Competition
Firteen minutes later the smoke sensor
in the cominon wall touched off-an alarm
at lhe aecurity headquarters of the com·
pcund end a1enll ]>boned Ille resldenco to
check the alarm.
Pina Sanchez, Manolo's wife and ·Mra..
Muri>hY termed the mo0 "wild;<Yed,
tough, angry revolutionories" "b o
"should be idet1ilfied and Wolated."
'"I have been. careful to point out that
these are the actions of a violent few. It
'Damn Mad' at Violence
Nillon'• head Dllid, ...,.end the ~
In the ~hen Md then -"' the den "' lr·1el'.i.l.iate. n>e houae already was fillin& wltb
ambke. ·
Js important that all Americans keep th.is
per8pective," the President uid. By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 "'9 Da!IY , .... Stllf
"But the time has come to take the • gloves off and speak to this kind of On the eve of his giant rally In
behavior in a forthright way. Frtedom of Anaheim, George Murphy said he is "-
speech and freedom of assembly cannot damn mad" about the violence President
exist when people who peacefully attend Nixon faced in San Jost, but conceded it
rallies are attacked with flying rocks. can't hurt his re-election chances.
''Tonight at Anaheim I wil• discuss Nixon is slated to appear tonight at the
w6at America must do to end the wave of Anaheim Convention Center on behalf of
violence and terrorism by the radical, an-ti-democratic elements in our society." the Republican &enator. The President
The crowd had gathered by the time was the target of rock and bottle throw·
Nixon entered San Joee Civic Auditorium ing. demonstrators Thursday night when
to plead fo r support for Murphy and he made a similar· appearance in San
Reagan in their races a·g a i n s t Jose. .
Democratic challengers John v. Tunney "This was as vicious a crowd as l've
and Jess Unruh. Signs in the aowd de-ever seen in my life. I'm ashamed of
nounced him as a "facist " and what.bas happened in our.state," Murphy
"warmonger" and several hundred told newsmen after flying with Nixon
persons chanted "one, two, three, rour, aboard Air Force One from San Jose to
we don't want your f-war." El Toro MCAS.
Inside, Nlmn told an audience of about His Irish temper up, the 68-ye&Nlld
B,000 persons that he had been successful senator branded the demonstrators
in winding down the Vietnam conOlct and "wild-eyed, tough, angry revolutionaries''
repeated his promise to end the war in and said "I think the ringleaders ought to
1ucb a fashion as to gain a generation oC be Identified and lsolated.
peace· for the nation. "I'm so mad and angry about what the
~ Americarui were fighting in Vietnam, President of Ute United 'States was sub.
he said, "so that those young men who jected to in San Joie that I find lt dif·
are outside shouting their obscene ficult to contain m)'lelf,'• he said
!logans won't have to fight in Vietnam or In El Toro be wu asked by newsmen if
anywhe~ else." he believed the violence helped his cam-
During the speech 10mt or Uie paign. Murphy replied1 "I don 't set how
demonstrators..charged at a door of the ! it could hurt any. 'lbese are the things]
auditorium but were blocked by police. have been working against."
He said his opponent, Rep. John Tun·
Pen~eton Sets
Marine Auction
ney, "hasn't taten too much trouble to
oppose thJJ ..rt ol iltlng" and added that
such lnddents make him think the nation
is "on the ver1e of incipient revolution."
The latest atate poll shows the
Democrat widening hia lead over
Murphy. The incumbent now trails by
seven percentage points, 48-41, compared
to only two points a week ago.
With four days left In the campaign,
the war of words between the two men
and their supporters is intensifying.
In San Jose, NiJ:on, in effect called
Tunney a liar for reporting Wednesday
that the federal government planned to
shut down Ute Ames Research Center in
Sunnyvale and ·Jay off 3,000,workers after
the election.
"Anyone who checked, and a
Congressman of the United States has the
same rights to check a11 a Senator or
anybody else, would have found there has
never been any Intention of losing Ames
Laboratory," Nixon said.
"It )las never been discussed. It is not
going to be closed and anyone who made
that kind of charge did so with knowledge
that it was false."
And Thursday, Tunney's father. former
heavyweight champion Gene Tunney,
became a major issue in Murphy's cam·
paign.
The Senator charged that Gene Tunney, ,
as a fellow board member.of Tecluiicolor,
voted to approve the contract which pro-
vided Murphy $20,000 a year, ball the
rent on a Washington apartment and an
air travel car in exchange for consulting ·
work. The contract was terminated last
June. •
John Tunney has charged continually
this was a conflict of interest and denied
his father was present wbln'. the board
approved the contract. ' 1 ""
Murphy Thursday called the ex-boxer a
liar and released•a document purporting
to prove hll coptenUon.
San Clemente's first-ever Junior Mia
competition sponsored by the local
Jaycees has been launched with the first
functiop scheduled to be a briefing of
potential candidates at San Clemente
High School. •
The -activity will culminate locally with
a pageant Dec. 11 where the San
Clemente candidate to the Santa Ro&a
finala will be selected.
Nol a beauty contest per se, say the
sponsors, the Junior MJss competition
will include criteria of !cholarship, men·
tat alertnee, youth fitness, poise, ap-
perance and talent in creative ·and
performing arts.
The potential candidates !or the tiUe
will be given an orientation at the hi~
school Nov. 5 during the first perioi:f.
Interested girls should attend in the Little
Theater.
The winner of the state competition
late In January will w i n a $500
scholarship, a U.S. Savings bond for the
same amount and an all-expense-paid trip
to the national finals in Mobile, Ala. That
trip will be in May.
During the orientation a film showing
highlights 'of last year'S contests will be
shown to potential applicants. tnte~ted ·
girls in the senior·clas.s will be exCUs~
from the first...period to attend the brief-
ing. Applications .will be provided at the
meeting, and then at the activitie! office
uritil Uie Nov. 15 deadline.
ffiemente CofC
Sets Board aid
An alarm .Jent out to San Clemente
and Camp Pendleton fire Jtatiou. Saa
Clemente volunteers roared into the
estate o.i two pumpers to fight a blue
which -on a much smaller scale -
resembled the devastattni fire w h I c h
struck the cpmmunity cfubhouse ear1):
this year.1t was o: similar conafiuction. ·
The fire, the clusic smoulderlng .me.
ty, had built up within the two-foot-thict
walls of the den and smoke was pourinc
from several vents In the ceilings of the
wing of the four.aided residence.
Heat had built up co n siderably'
throughout the wall sc:tlon, sources said,
and smoke puffed through seams along ~
several beams in the rough-plaster cell·
ings of the home.
President Nil:on emerged from the
house about 10 minutes after firefight.era
arrived. He chatted with aeveral of hla
Secret Service agents in the patio 11 elec-
tric fans sucked smoke from the boule.
The President was wearing pajamaJ
anti a bathrobe. ~ blaze was an unu.sual and teme
climax to a harrowing day of cam ..
paigning and unrest for the President. '
It wu the aecond fire at the compound
this year. ·
The first enipted in an ABC generatlnc
truck on an evening last 1pring when the
President was addressing ·the nation on
the Vietnam war. A'stack of paper cups
and rags caught fire , nearly destroytn1 •
the backup generator truck. A crash
truck on constant standby for the
President'• helicopters Wf:S ~ to U· ·
l!nguiah thlt lire. .......
More than .0 surplus milltarJ items -
most of them rolling stock -wW Co on
the auction block Wednelday at Camp
Pendleton.
The pUbllc and members of he
milltary are welcome to bid on the tons
of ""Plus -at the J<dlatrlbu-
Uon end dlapooal oedion of the ·morlnt
base.
The merchandite will include 30; alx-ton
semi trailera, 103 quarter-ton cargo
trailers, a four-wbetl-drive Scout vehicle,
a generator .set. a wrecker, aevera1
pickup trucks, other heavy trucb and a
Jorklift.
County Offices Ordered
To Hire Unemploy~
San ·Clemente's chamber ct.commerce
will be counting ballots of its own this
electiOn day in .the annual ·vqting ·for
members of its board of dire:Ctors.
Four choices ari given the . ge,neral
membership from a slate o('17 npminees.
The deadline for submitting of tbe
anonymous bllllots 11 Tuaday. ,
The candidates ·i n c I u de · five In-
cumbents. Mrs .. Bertha Henry, JatnfA M.
• Holbert. Trygve · Tobiauen, Everett C.
L,Yster and KenneQ! Teel. ,
lfeatller
l'\lghl 1114 momlnc 'log rolurlll
to the coast th\8 weekend, drop-
ping the hip -· to • aJons the bel<hes and 10 de~• bi&her
a little f~r inland.
' ' INSIDE TODA V
Bidden must register et I u.m. the di)'
of tha auction. A ~ation number and
• "paddle" blddtnc device will be U1ip
ed to each bidder for \Ill at the auctkMI
at.trting at I a.m.
Inspection of the gooils will be held
before O>t ouction 1'eclnl· A _..,..1
auctioneer will handle lhe blddtnC. Con-
llnnoUoo of bid :Wlrdl will be mode to
the purcbloer lo -or by IDllL
A phone 1iUlllhet lot 1alonnltloa OD the
lille 11-. '
Oronge County Superviaon hive decid·
ed Uiat they should tbemaelve.a act on
tome o! the advice they have been~ ban-
dirtl out to county Industries.
Two Wffks 1go they urged lndualrlos to
do everything pouible to.provide Jobs for
the rapidly rising ranks of Unemployed
skllled workers. •
"We buve .ubd'-~ to bend
ove< baclnruds to help )he llJ)eil1ployed
•erospace,and electroni.c workers but our
own departmonlo are not lollowlng the
polley," llld Supervbor l>IYld I.. Biker.
Bake" acid he hu -ed th1I
-~ clepartmeDll 111 ... been blrlna
people 11ttady employed with .lllOtber
g~ent agency rather than equally ·
qualified unemployed c!Uzehs.
.Superviaof William Hlrsleln supported '.
Baker's c:omplalnf.
The other nominees are Geora;e Boaz.
Al1l'I Cook, Robert<Cota, Phil· Ellnorth,
Herb H!yely, • 4ames Kele\ed',; tRllph-.
Klo.,.n. •Robert Kutclle\". Joli~ Laqdfll,
II. B. Marks,"Mn. Betty Jo ~·end ,
Tht fTilcturtd FoUits of 1970
fn Laguna Btacll. come up agahl.
t1tz&: week, rcnrit10 mon.t11 for
South Cocut Communit11 HOltJ'--
tal. See toda11's·Wrtkndtr tco-1
tion. .He. uid be llad 1talked · to a former ' • ·
aerolJ>l\<e1P!'•t-nrant who Hrd been . San' Clemen te Cof C ...... ,. , tUrned dowri 1 by two CO\llltyi depatt.menLI .;ry . • l c 11"9flll1 I ~ause hi wu.'49 Yfl" old. M 0 8l8 .~nfot:'Dla['Meet = "' u..: ·"I doUbt lf bis age was'that much of a c..ta ,.
' problem," Hirste~ argued. . Members of the ' San C le m e n t e :" ~ i:
Fellow !upervlsors joined with Baker • Chamber of Oornrnerce and their guats := ,.,. 1.,1;
and Hirstein in orderlng department ~re welcome to an informal mixer at ......... 11 .
heJda to givt unemployed workers Omar'• Restaurant ThW'lday afternoon. ~ 'l
Mltlllt ,..,. II __ ...
~·c..tr ' ........... ,, .. ,,..,.. ,..,.. .. . ....,.. , .. . , .......... , .. ,, -. ---. ._.. MN9U•tt --..:: preferenct, provided all other ractcn. of nie aff•lr will offer HaepY·hour prlcu --• ..... 11 uperlenctud1bWly1reequal. !or mnthmetila. It wW 'bella 111:111. •· .__-___ ,._,. _____ __.
1 I
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2 DAILY PILOT SC
_Ileputy_rJi_Ce-8~9 Counts
I
Lawman fu4~te4 on New Charges'
lht -on Irvioe., Ht may ...,... .-by lht -Vlofo company.
l1tor·loday in SUpertor c-t to o«. 1111 '""7 _. -ldnl Iii tbll capacJty whtn
'""·-···-~ in ••• •• arresttd inllde the goll lhop. p\ea to -•u con-~ "" !JuncM lltUWlder<d oo confrontation
dictmtnt. but Irvine Jed his fellow officers on a wild
Deputy Arthur Duncan, 34, of Hun· car chase that ended in Riverside County
I
tlngton Buch, committed suicide earller with his arrest after bis repeated threats
·-Orlllp oberUl'1 'doputy
Fr.derick B. Irvine baa been lndlcled by
tbe Orana:e County Grand Jury on further
dmpt of receiY'lng stolen property, car
theft and burglaries committed prior to
tlie charges on which he DOW faces
Silperior Court action.
_Irvine, 42, of La Habra, wu ooe of two
deplitles arrested last Sept. 20 in the IOlf •
"1op of the Mjuion Viejo Country Cub.
Fellow ofllcm wllo booked the ptlr
Onegodly lound them in poua1loo d
a Jen golfing equipment and MVeral
iues of Uquor.
this month after being ordered to appear to commit suicide.
on grand llieft-ana burg lary Chatges-1n-lnvestigators-atated-today-that they are--
Santa Ani. Municipal Court. still probing several other burglaries in
Duncan, obviously distressed at the the area patrolled by the two former
~ Nine felony counts art now contained in
time of hia court arraignment, hun1 deputies.
hlmself in the garage of bil borne at 4942 Two of the charges listed in the grand
Maul Circle. jury indldment accuse Irvine of the theft
1 Irvine and 'Duncan were employed dur-of heat.era owned by the Mission Viejo Co.
ln& their off duty hours as aecurlty and Anaheim Plumbing.
·~apiain Bligh!) Bombs Explode
In 3 Sections
Of New York
.
i}udge Orders Punishment by Whip
:: An Orange County Superior Court judge bfs become known ovemigbt as "Captain
Bligh" for his decision to restore the cat
o'nint tails to tbe couuty's halll et
justice.
• But Judge William Murray's fame and
oickname may be only fleeting. For the
l.w'ist was asked today by a concerned
Sheriff James Musick to amend the
'yebrow raialng sentence be impoaed
'Ilnlnday oo a willing prisoner.
-Judge Murray ordered 15 1ttokes with
the cat for probation. violator Bruce Dar·
f1! Howell on condition that Howell pus
B·fltness test. And he a:ave the strapping:
il<-foot, 200-powld delendanl • -to
leconsid<r his decision to tceepl tl>e loo(·
rejected form of ptmlahmeut.
· lt seemed at one point that Howen
ti'ould get the . cat in Judge Murray's
ci>urtroom. Bailifl Jess Hardy weot olf In
searc:b of a whip but Judge Murrty
decldtd on tbe one.-""9t delay before
punllbment could be admlnlltered ta
Howell.
Howell, 21, of Milwaukee, Wis., ls aerv·
ing four moatbs 1n Oranp County jail for
• cbeck wr1t1ng o11 ..... 11e is ....... ,r o1.
violating terma ol his probotion by
alUllJt c.i a fellow prtsoner. •
. . llowell qr<ed to tl>e corporal pwilah-
ment when it wu pointed out that a state
prilon term ml&bt be the altenuiUve. "I
wanted lt to hurt IO tblt you remember It
but I dOn't want any damqe," be wu
told by Jud(e ,Murray.
Judie Murray wu not available for
comment today. But court offk:ials el·
peel that be will comply with Sheriff
Musick'• request for modification of a
sentence that called for 15 lubes and to
more da)'l In lht C01111ty jall.
NEW YORK (UPI) -Three bom<made
pipebombs exploded within 1~ minutes of
each other early today, damaging two
armories and a police staUon .
'Ibere were no injuries in the tJ:·
ploslons, whkh occurred shortly after one
of the armories received a warn1ng
telephone call. ,
Police spokesmen Uid the blasts were
"very cloaely associated" and it was
"hlgbly unlilcely" that three bombing a~
tacks could be planted coincidentally by
different groups or unaaaoclated perllOna
in such a brief Ume. The FBI was called
in almoat immediately.
One guard, a Vietnam veteran who
escaped just before one of the annory
blasta, said the explosion sounded "like
an llmm mortar.''
The flr!t bomb went off at 3:12 a.m.
Some Residents of County
Fail to Receive Ballots
EST at the U.S. Naval Reserve Center in
Whitestone, Queens. Thret minutes later.
a second explosion went off in a motorcy·
cle precinct headquarters in the Bronx.
At 3:22 a.m., the third blast went off at
the U.S. Army Reserve Center in the
Jamaica aection of Queens.
Before the first explosion. a woman
caller told a guard at the armory, "You'd
better get out of the armory because a
bomb ia going off in five mb!utes. Go out
the front door and get at least 50 feet
away," according to police .
With election day four days away, some
Orange County residents have not recelv·
·-
Runner Plans .
Another Trek
,.
·:To Bay Area
:~ ,
... Ken Crutchlow. a 26·year-qld
£ngiishman who ba1 walked adou
Death Valley, bicycled to Mexico City
i,bd hitcbhited around the world, today
J,egan a new adventure. He is running
from Corona del Mar to San Francisco.
: At the drop ol a British fiag, Cru~
chi.ow departed today from the Five
Crowns re staurant and hopes to jog up to
the Ben Johnson Restaurant in San Fran-
cisco's Carmery less than one week later.
'Ibe gaunt bowler-hatted alJ.footer
estimatea the journey by I.he coa.st route
will cover approlimately 550 miles.
Why ia bt doing it? "Actually it's the
challenge of It. No one to my knowledge
has tried it before and i~will give me
another record," said Crutchlow.
He already holds unofficial marlts: for
his hitchhlklng which saw him circle the
41:lobe "on a thumb" in '11 days and for hla
11 day bike ride from Loa Angeles to
:Mai.co City.
.. He plans to run 18 hours a day and nap
JiltermittenUy in a station wagon driven
Jjy his brother Raymond.
But there'll be no riding in the car for J\iln, Crutchlow vows. Whether he suc-
~fully makes the run or not it will pro-
vide more material for a book Crutchlow 'ls writing. It is called "AroWld the World
Op $24, and Other Misadventures."
'
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DAILY PILOT _ ............. _ .................. ..,
C.... MfM S.Ch 14
OAANt;E COAST PUILllMING COM,,AJfY
Roilort H. WoM ,,..Ill'"' .,. ,.. .....
Joclc 1'.~~ Vkt~_. M....,
lliomoc kotl'll
Editor
n o11101 A. M1r,,MM
/o\aMtlrll &"1111•
ft ichot4 P. HoV
~ Of.,.. c.py Mr.,. -0.111 M .. : 211 W.t a.,..,... tfll'Ptrt 1 .. dl: m1 W.t ,, .... ......,_. •
~ 8HCll: ttz P"-1 A-
..... llftl1'911 a.tcft• 1111J a.Md! ..........
1Mi 'lllnll!M: .ais N"11t El ~ ....
I
ed their aample ballots.
A spotelman for the county Registrar
of Voters today offered advice to voters
who find themselves in that situation.
"They can call our office at IM-SOSO,
and we will give them the addrtss of
their polllng place. As far as the sample
ballots go, we malled them all-Out.a weet
ago. If a voter would like one, there are a
few left that may be picked up at the of·
fict of the regiltrar, 1111 E. Cht1tnut St.,
Santa Ana," the representative said.
OfHctaiJ from the registrar's office
said they had some problems with "lax
delivery" of the sample ballots by the
Post Office and estimated there would
"several" cases of votm without sample
ballols.
Tht spokesman also recommended that
county residents who have moved
recently be sure to check with IJ!!ilr of·
fice.
''If they moved before Sept. 10, and
didn't receive a sample ballot, they ought
to check with u1, to find out what their
new polling place Is.
"Anyone who moved within the county
after Sept. 10 ia eligible to retW'l1 to their
old polling place.
"We have plenty of telephone operators
on hand to answer questions so that any
voter who doesn't know where to go to
vote or who has a question about his
ballot can call us," she said.
Faithful She's Not;
Actress Divorced
LONOON (AP) -Marianne Faithfull
was divorced today by her American b~
band on grounds of the 23-year-old ac-
tress-singer's admitted adultery with pop
star Mick Jaga:er of the Rolling Stones.
Jagger aa:reed to pay $480 court costs
to her husband, John Dunbar, 27, an
artist and writer.
Since the cue came up orta;lnally in
divorce court Miu Faithfull bu found a
new boy friend but she. remains on
friendly terms with Jqlf:r. Her name Is
now romantically linked with that of an
Irish Peer, Lord Ronmore.
'
Professor's Plea
On Jail Term
In Riot Spurned
Professor Stuart Silvers' appeal of a
municipal court conviction on charges
stemming fro m his part in Cal State
Fullerton riots has been rejected by the
Orange County Superior Court appell ate
bench.
Presiding Judge Raymond Thompson
stated that hls three-judge court has
refused to consider Silvers' claim that a
60-day jail term he drew for participation
in the riots is unl awful and unreasonable.
Slivers, 32, of 114 7th St., Seal Beach
has not yet put in his jail time. The
philosoph y professor is currently on
va cation in Yugoslavia.
Silvera Jndicated in his last court ai>
pearance that rejection by the Orange
County appellate bench would not end his
challenge of the sentence and he would
ta.ke Ule issue to a higher appellate court.
Silvers was Identified as a ringleader
In Cal State disturbances last March and
was prosecuted for wtlawful assembly
and disturbing the peace alter a strife-
tom appearance by Gov. Ronald Reagan
on the Fullerton campus.
He successfully challenged a contempt
citation issued by authorities after he
all eged1y violated the terms of a Superio r
Court restraining order issued after the
fir.st disturbance.
Judge Thompson's appellate bench Is
expected to consider In lhe nex t few
days an almost identical appeal by Cal
State student David AtacKowlai:, 28, of
Corona.
The young mllita11t Is challenging a
terrday jail sentence imposed for his role
in the March 3 riot.
Horsen1an Slain
Fighting Brothers' Feud Ends
PALATINE, DI. (UPI) -The.,. bitter 1965, a bomb w~ed to the lgnitioo ol his
feud between George Jayne, 47, and his car killed Cheri Rude, 22, an employe of
brother SUu, 63, among the top Jayne's stables. Miss Rude earlier had
worked for Silas, but police said George hor1tmeo in the Chicago area -is over. wa s the target of the bomb.
George wu alain by a slngle shot George Jayne accused Sila.s of trying to
Wedneldly fnd through the basement ltill. him. Silas was broua:ht to trial and wlr\dOW of h1I SI00,000 home u he 11t found innocent.
plaYinl brklce with hil family. On Jan. 19, 1969, Silas shot and killed a
Ge<qe Jayne'• wife Thur.day offered , rQan he said fired three shots into the
1 125,Goo reward. front of his house. The shooting was ruled
Polke uld they were seeking a man justifiabl e homJclde.
about 30 to 35 year• old, driving a red At least two other incidents -In which
Oldlmobile with a bla!Z-k vinyl top near money was reportedly paid to arrange for
Jayne'• homa ln lnvernea, a Chicago the killing of George -were under ln-
tuburb. Pal1Une police, who patrol vestigaUon.
Invll"MSI, worked on the case with the Jayne's widow,• Marian, 43, told
Dllnola Burtau of Jnvtltlgatton. newsmen the family was offtrlng a
Tbt story ol George and Si111 Jayne 125,000 reWard for information "leading
murder, b1fD.bumlng and hone n. responsible."
wu a bitter one of mW'der, atte~to th e arrest and capture of th.os t-
ln1. Etch accuaed the other of trying to · PoJice aald they found an em pty bter
kill hlm, citing rivalry In the breeding can with rlngerprlnt.s and Ure tracks
and development of Jumpln1 horsts:. outside George Jayne's home. and knew
Geor1e Jayne had survived at leu t one the first lhrtt numbers of the c:ar they
other attempt oa b1I life, on June 14, were sttkln&.
t
PRESIPENT (IN SEDAN) LEAVES SAN JOSE CIVIC AUDITORIUM AFTER SPEECH
An E1tlmated 900 Protestors Hurl Eggs, Roe.ks •nd Obsc:enitie1 •t Mr. Nixon's Auto
LA Judge Orders Halt
To Rafferty's Material
Mai • Rafferty 's workers in Orange
County have been ordered to halt
distribu tion of literature which allegedly
defames opponent Wilson Riles and links
the state superintendent of public i~c·
Uon's opponent with the Communist move-
ment.
The ban, part of a statewide temporary
restraining order, was aigned Thursday
by Los Angeles County Superior Court
Leary Reports
He'll Make His
Home in Algiers
From Wire Senilce&
CAIRO -Sell-exiled federal fugitive
Dr. Timothy Leary is finally going to set·
tie down and get religion.
So he tells Al Abram, the semi-official
government newspaper of Egypt.
The world's best·known advocate of
LSD and marijuana. who escaped Sept.
13 while serving a term of up to 10 years
for weed possession in Orange County,
says he will live permanently in Algiers.
He said Thursday he would sneak back
Into the U.S. in disguise to attend a Nov.
3 New Haven, Conn. rally for Black
Panth~ Jeader Bobby Seale, who is ac·
cused of murder.
Leary fled the minimum security Los
Padres Men's Colony at San Luis Obispo
and estimates he will get a total of 38
years behlnd bars on various coun ts if
ca ught in America again.
Chances are, it wouldn't be in a
minimum security facility either.
Judge John A. Shidler. Judge Shidler
ordered both parties to attend a hearing
scheduled for Nov. 12.
Riles, acting through c am p a i g n
manag er Marion Joseph, accuses Raf·
ferty Qf unlawfully and unethically link-
ing him with Black Muslim leader
Malcolm X in posters and pamphlets
distributed by Rafferty workers in
California.
Heavy circulation of the literature is
being achieved in Orange County, San
Diego and Bakersfield, Riles' workers
allege. •
The deputy superintendent of public in·
struction also alleges that Rafferty
titerature consistently implies his con·
nection with Communist sources and the
lnternational Communist movement and
could be damaging to his electio n
chances.
Riles names as defendants Max Raffer·
ty, campaign aide Robert Tuttle, th e
South Bay Citizens for Constitutional
Government and "Rafferty workers one
through 500.''
Just Nuts and Bolts
In UCI Boml> Hoax
A class In Science Lecture Hall at UC
Irvine was interrupted this morning while
police searched for a bomb said by a
male caller to have been placed there al
8 a.m. today.
A bomb sq uad from.El Toro determin·
ed the suspected "bomb" was a box of
nuts and bolts left by construction
workers. The class continued on the lawn
following evacuation of lhe 650-sea t Jail. '
An accurate reproduction of
en exceptionally fine Queen
Anne double bonnet secre-
1tery. Formed of walnut end
yew wood veneers end solid
p e c e n end available in two
finishes . It is 36" wide end
81 '12" high.
Bo)', 9, Slain
In Philadelphia
Teen Gang War ..
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -A ~year-old
boy was shot to death in what police uid
was an execi.:tion-style teen-age gang
slaying on the pavement sidewalk outside ~
a schoolyard·playground Thursday night.
"They just ran up to the boy AI)d shot·'
him," said Detective Edward Kessner of
the homicide squad.
Miles Wheeler, the victim, was shot at
close range in the abdomen.
"We don't know why they picked <1ut
this kid. We don't have him listed as a
gang member," Kessner said. The police
department here keeps lists of all known
gang members.
J\1cmbe rs of the 21st and Norris StrH:t
gang '"·ere sought in the slaying. Kessner
said the killers "went into the area of th•
25th and Diamond gang" where the vic--
tim was standing on the pavem ent talk-
ing with some other boys.
"When they saw the 21st and Norris
Street gang members all these kids ran.
This kid started to_run too but they ran
up and got him before he could get
away,'' Kessner said.
Wheeler is not the youngest gang war
victim here. Last summer Antoinette
Williams, 7. was hit by a bullet between
the eyes when she was caught in thft
crossfire of two warr ing gangs as she sat
on the front steps of her home, coloring
in her coloring book.
A. city hall rally was held here Wed-
nesday to call attention to gang deaths.
which then numbered 62 in the last 18
months.
Within an hour after the rally there
was another death, a IS.year-old boy.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
\
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 W"tcllff Dr., 6-42·2050 OPEN FRIDAY. 'TIL 9 .
Profet11ontl Interior'
Dt1lgntro Av1ll1bf..:AID-NSID .. '
LAGUNA BEACH
345 Horth Coast Hwy. 494-f.SSI
OPEN FRIDAY C'Tll '
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T
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. voe 63, NO. 260, .. SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COONTY, CAJ:IFORNIA FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, ·1970 TEN CIHTS
-----• 1x·on 0 a e oves
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* * * President Routed
Fire Breaks Out
,.
At Nixon Estate
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of tlM Dellr P'Ulf lllff
A log fire lighted to smooth over 1he
anxiety caused by a howling mob in San
Jose. Ignited a smouldering blaze at the
Western "White House late Thursday,
routing the First Family from bed and
causing considerable nnoke damage ·to
half of the Spanistl vWL
President Nixon was not in danger
from the sm(!Wdering ftre. The blue was
detected by a smote-sniffing device
within the wall of the second-floor den,
New Librar)·
Plans Due~
Next Week
Plaft5 for Laguna's long-awaited new
library will be unveiled by architect Fred
Brigp~at the Thursday, Nov. 5 meeting
of Ille Friends II Ille LI\-Buch
Library.
'!'be poblle Is lnvitail to 1Uead Ille meetlni, which beliDI 117:30 p.m. 'In thi
Lagim1 Fecler1l Slvln11 lo Loan, ~ulldlnl·
Brig>, a,s principal speaker ol Ille
evening, will show his preliminary plans
for the branch library Wilding, which
will cover the site of the present library,
the adjacent portion of Park Avenue and
the ti-langle parking lot.
Harry Rowe, Orange County librarian,
also will speak on "Progress cf the New
Laguna Beach Branch Library."
Tbe library site was selected after Pi:'>"
longed study of a number of locations and
Briggs charter member or the Friends
and fo;mer Laguna Beach Planning Com·
mission chairman, was selected by the
Orange County Board of Supe~~ tt
design and superv~ the n~w buil~ng.
Election of a board of directors for tbe
coming year also will be beld at the .
nursday meeting. .
ne nominating committee, compo&ed
of Miss Catherine MacQuarrie, chairman,
Mrs. Nita Carman and Mrs. William
Wilcoxen will present the following slate:
Mmes. John Alkinson, Nita Cal1lWI,
Anthony Oemetriades, Albert Haven,
Dora Mary Macdonald, Les1ey Stroud and
William Wilcoxen; Miss C a t h e r i n e
MacQuarrie; and Leland Cooley, James
Dilley, Joseph O'Sullivan aod Leonard
Scheu. Librarian! Clifford Cave and
Florence Warner art es:-0Uicio members
o~ the board.
New and renewal memberships also
may be taken out at the meeting and
refreshments will be served following the
program.
Biography of O'Hara
NEW YORK (UPI) -Jtandom H°""'
bu commissioned Matthew J. Bruccoli,
an authority :on Ernest Heminp1y and
F. ·Scott Fitzgerald, to write a 300,000-
word bloeraphy of Ille late John O'llar1.
r
l\'Ndter
Nill!t and "'°"""' 10( ftluml
to the coast thlr w1r>mt, ctrop.
pin( the high ftldinl to • 1Jon1
lbe beaches and 10 dqnel bJ&h!er
a UUle further tn1IDd.
INSWE TODAY
The Frccfured FoHits of 1970
in Laguna Btach COYM Up aoa1n
ne:i wttk, rai#ng monew for
South COO$t Communiiv Hoipi·
tal.,See todav'• Weekender ttc-
tio?t. -" ·-' a.ca• -7 c........,. u.a ,_, .. =-::. .. ': ....... , ...
......... -1 .. 11 -" AM~ ti -. M.-11 ...... ,. --
•
"'-""' ,...... ,. --... --. ............... 11..11 '"* """" ,. '""' ,~,. ............ 1 .. 11 ,_ D
-.. M :=.-...11.1: --.. ... I 1 ...
knoWledgeable sources reported today.
But the amoke, pourin1 from many
ceiling vents in the house, prompted the'
chief e:ieeutive to spend the rest of the
night in the guest house across the
drivew~y of his home. / The sources gave Ulis account of the
fire -the aecond blue to erupt at the
Presidential compound ai.nce the Niions
moved to San Clemente:
At about 10:~ p.m. the President's
valet, Manolo Sanchez, lit the fire in the
second-floor fireplace which is all-metal,
The hearth begins at the second floor,
There is no fireplace at that spot in the
dining room below.
An hour later, the President left the
fireplace to retire in his bedroom about
100 leet away.
DAIL 't PILOT Sltn , ....
Fifteen minutes later the smoke sensor
in the common wall touched off an alarm
at the security headquartert of the com·
pound and agents phoned the residence to
check the aJarm. •
Pina Sloche~ Manolo's -Ind Mrs.
Nis:oo's bead maif: fl"'ered the phone
In the ~lllad """ ... "' Ille dill lo ' lr·1estq:ate. I .
PRESIDENT, SENATOR ARRIVE IN ORANGE COUNTY AFTER ARDUOUS JOURNEY
Murphy's lrlsh Up O..r Bumpy Road to s.n J""; Mr. Nl•on Enda Rut11od Day.-Gu11t.ln Own H_.
The -lllreldy WU lillln& With '""*'· 11·' I An llarm •enh oil lo SU Cl.-le
and Camp Pendletob fire otallou. Sii
Clemente volwtteer6 roar.:ed into thf :: ·~ :o ~~ .!:11'::rht .;a~~
nsembled the devaJtating fire w h i ch
struck the commudity dubbouse early
t.1$ year. Jt was o: limllar construction.
The fire, the class$C smouldering varie-
ty, bad built up within the two-foot-thict
walls of the den and smoke was pouring
from several vents Jn the ceilings of the
wing of the four-si~ residence.
Heat hid built up considerably
throughout the wall st :lion, sources said,
and amoke puffed )hrough seams along
several beams in tie rough-plaster oeil·
ings of the liome. 1
President Nisoa emerged from the
house about 10Tnin1'tes after firefighters
arrived. He chatted· with several of bis
Secret Service l(enla in the polio IS efec-
tfic fana; 111eked amolce from the house.
~Tbe President •• wearin& pajamu
ud I blthrobe. · .
The 'tilite wu an unusual and tense
climu to • harrOwing: day of cam·
paignine and untt:ll lor the eresident.
It WU the ll!COnd ftre at the compound
this year.
Laguna Writer's
Memorial Rites
Slated Tuesday
• \ I~ r ·senator MuipJly -SeetJrlllg,-
. --'
'Damn Mad' at Violence
By JOANNE REYN<ILIJS
Of IJM Dellr, Pli.t ,...,
On the eve of his giant rally in
Anaheim, George Murphy said he is "-
damn mad" about the violence Prettdent
Nixon faced in San Jose, but conceded It
can't burl his re-election chances.
Nixon is !lated to appear tonight at the
Anaheim Conveation Center on behaU of
tbe Republican senator. The Preaide.nt
was_ the target of rock and bottle throw·
ing demonstraton Thursday night when
he made a 'similar apptarance in San
Jose, .
••This was as vicious a crowd as I've
ever seen in· my life. I'm ashamed o(
what bas happened in our lti.te," Murphy
told ne.wsmen after flying with Nixon
aboard Air Force One from San Jose to
El Toro MCAS. '"
H'11 Irish tempen up, the 68-year-old
senator branded the demonstrators
"wild.eyed, tough, angry revolutionaries"
and said "I think the ringleaders ought to
be identified anct isolated.
"I'm so mad and angry about what the
President of the United States was sub-
jected to in San Jose that 1 find it dlf·
ficult to contain myself,'• he said
In El Toro he waa asked by riewsmen if
he believed the violence helped his cam·
polgn. Murphy replied, "I don't see bow
11 could hurl 1ny. 'lllese are the things I
have been working a&alnst."
With four days left in the campaign,
the war or words be.tween the fwo meri
and their supportus is intensifying.
In San Jose, Nixon, in effect called
Tunney a lia'r for reporting Wednesday
that the fedttsl government planned to
shut down the Am~ Research Center In
Sunnyvale and lay off 3,000 worken alter
the election. ,
"Anyone who checked, and a
·Congressman' of the United States has the
same rights to check as a Senator or
anybody e!Se, would have found there has
never been any intention of losing Ames
Laboratory," Nixon said.
"It has never been discussed. It is not
·going to be closed and anyone who made
that kind of charge did so with knowledge
that It was false ."
And 'Thursday, Tunney's father. former
heavyweight champion Gene Tunney,
bec'v1e a major issue in Murphy's cam~
palgn.
The Senator charged that Gene Tunney,
as a fellow board member of Technicolor,
voted to approve the contract which pro-
vided Murphy $20.,000 a year, hall the
rent on a Washington apartment and an
air travel car in exchange for consulting
work. Tbe contract was terminated last
June. ~
I , r ' ,
Boys~ Club Sets
. ' Bus Service
For Members ·
'!'be La(Wll lljiach Boys' Club lw
establlsbed a bus service for members
and potential members finding It difficult
to get to the· club facilities, located at
1~ Laguna Canyon Road.
According to club ·director Bill Cook.
the service is only experimental and tbe
bus route was chosen to serve the
greatest number of current memben.
Cook says that. the service Is made
possible through the recent donation of a
van to the club by the Laguna Beach
Jaycees and Sciuth Coast Motors. T h e
schedule :
Time
6:03 p.m.
!:08 p.m.
Deport •
High School Parking Lot.
Thurston .Junior High School
parking lot
6:10 p.m. Corner Park Avenue and Al·
ta Laguna Boulevard.
6: 12 p.m. Corner Alta Laguna Boule.
vard and Temple Hills Drive
6:16 p.m. Corner Temple Hills Drive
and Canyon View Drive
6:18 p.~. Corner Thalia and WOson
Streets
6:20 p.m. Corner Thalia 11.nd Catalina
" Streets
6:22 p.m. Corner Catalina and Cleo
Streets.
6:23 p.rn. Comer Catalina and Legio.
Streets
The bus will arrive at the Boya' Club
at about 8:30 p.m. and will depart the
club for a return trip at 8:45 p.m., fol.
lowing lhe apie route u above~
A mOmorJal oervlce will be held at 10
a.m, Tuesday for La(anl BeKh writer
Bill Purcell who died 'lbunday 11 bla
home, 1164 1"ul!Je St.
'!'be R<!v. Robert Comelilon Will ef.
ficiate •t the service in St. Mary's
Epllcopll Church.
He said bla opponen~ R<!p. John Tun-
ney, "hasn't taken too much trouble to
oppooe thla aort of thing" and added that
such incidents make bbn think the nation
1s·"on'tDe vqe of incipient revolution."
'!'be latat lllato poll shows the
Deniocrat widening his lead over
Murphy. 'lbe incumbent now trails by
seven percentage points, 4Ml, compared
·to only two polnta a week ago.
Laguna Burglar Alarms
Mr. Pun:ell, Wbo WU 'IO, died in biJ
sleep just two weeks after returning
home from 1 two-month stl.y at South
Coul COmmunity Hospital. .
The popular cohlmnllt; -cune to M p } • Laguna -1n 1156 a11er Te1irtng. • ayors roe aun
vice presldmt of lbe advertlsln& !Ima of
B1t1en, 111r1on, -Ind~ 1n 'Follies Week' a.Jcqo, w11 lamm lacoDy for bla of!m
wl>lmlical, --· ....., 1ea..... ·on South Coast UOf All 'lhinp/1 publi8hed in the pld
South O>aat New1 Uld more rece1Uyi in ,
the Ll(una News-Post. The mayon ol both La(Wll Beach Ind
He is survived by bls widow, Jane: 1 San Qemente have proclaimed tne Week,
son, Philip of Walnut Creek; two of Nov. 2 "Fractured Follies Week'' in
daughters, Mn. lJnda Barker of their res~lve communities.
Memphis, Tenn. and Mrs. Romaine 1be proclamations call attention to the
Peter1en ot Lq Beach; and by ail 11Fr1Ctured Follies of 1970," amateur1
grandchlldseo. _ vlrle\y show lo be PftBented 11 Ll(Un•
A 111UV< ol Waupun, Wisc .• Mr. Purcell Beach High Scbool Nov. 5, &, and 7, to1 w11 1 llJ'Od9ale of Ille Unlventt~ of benefit South Cout Community HoapltaJ •.
Chlcaao· He ftnt worked 1 e 111 n g Tbe production, using talent from tbt1 claulfied ldvertislng for the Ht1rst South Coast and Saddleback Valle1 arft.
newsp1pen. tliOil ,..nt Into the wrlUng served by the boopital, IJ pruenled by
field. He worked for both NBC amf CBS the Silver and Gold chapter of lhe
ndlo beloni becoming on ldvertbln& ex-boapltal'• 1uxlllary to supp>rt Ille· aux-
ecutive. illlry'• 1100,000 ifledge lo the holpltaL •
His Laplll columns _, him •nrdl The two mayon, Rlchlnl Goiclleri of
from the onnp Counly Pr.. Club Ind Laplll Beach Ind Walter F. -Jr.
the ,.,.,._ roundatloa at Valley of San Clement., urp.-poMlc -1 of.
,..... lbl bolpllll -'I~
t
•
Abound .From 8-10 A.M.
•
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of "" 0111'1 ,lltt '''"
Thert ar,e more burgla,r alarms tripped
ln Laguna Beach between a a.m. and 10
a .m. than at any other time during the
day or night; according lo Llgun• Be•ch
police. , ; .
And tt ts not.because more burglar• are
on the p<OWI at lllllt 'lime · ol •day, but
becao11 there are i more· mercbabts iito
.advomntly telling · off their .alorm
aystems.
· Since' all of Ute alarm.! .,. connected tO
•a"IDUAer IWitch, board It tbet Laguna
·ll<adl Police DeplrlmenJ,, e1ch ·ra111e
alarm requires an Investigation by ·a Po-
;Jlce o(fker \ , ~
The poUce ofhcer dlspltched to Uto
tcene usually finds a red-faced merchant
r111Jer than 1 masked bandli enlerlng the
1bop al Ute beginning of the bulineta d•Y.·
PJ>llce Chief Kenneth Huck llYI that
Ills depulm"11 does llOI keep I tally of
<fllae •Janna to he does not koow .-Jy
.-much lim< ~ 1pmt In checkinfl ~
tut. . •
HUck -that when a --1 .. 1111a
to install an alann system, he 'iiue1 the
arrangements with the ·compaoy that will
install it. The company then puts in the ·
system at lhe olriier's shop and cOMecta
il'ln'the pollce deportment via telephone
lines.
The police department has 1 panel of
nwn~red lights into whjch all . of the 1 alarms ar:e fed •nd each licht cor-
re.pond1 to a burg~ aJarnj toe.lion;
When the light "'"""· the displlcher ~ up the loc1tkln of the ·alarm oo. a
ma~r 11$f 811<\ "1141 1 -paltol ·cu to Ille
9Cel'le. • : fl • . -<:hie! Rue~ 18)'• that 1·1arp,oumber of )lllfthanll In l;l(unl ___ alonn1
and they, range tn sopltiltl-'Bition from
t~ set oif . when a door .. opens to
oystelll! set off by 1ny D>OV<IMftt '"lthln
the blllldln&.
Although the merchonls' do not,pay the
poliCI deportment dlrectl)' for the
.,rvlco, Chief Huell ii not upoel 11>out tbl
re111lar1ty of false 11.umJ.
i "We tte It • 1 poUce ten!lce that we
ntend to helfi!tP ,down crime, In tlto commWlity," aays.
Tough Talk
Expected
In Anaheim
After being the target of rocks, brleb.
bottles, eggs, red IJags and other ~Iles
hurled at his limousine in San Jose.
President Nixon promised to "take off
the gloves" at a poliUcal rally tonight in
Anaheim and respond to 1 u c b
''viciousness."
After his arrival at San Clemente, the
President said the 900 a n ti w at
demonstrators , were 11radlca1, 1 n t J •
democratic elements." who threiteoed
freedom of speech and assembly 1n
America.
"This was no outburst by a single Jn..
divldual," said the President at the.
Western White House. "This was the ac-
tion of an unruly mob that repretenta the
wtirst In Amuica."
The glass-top limousine containing the
President, Sen. George Murphy and Gov.
Ronald Reagan was blitzed while be left a
GOP rally u the President neared thl
end of a 5,500-mile, cross-country cam-
pllign tour ..
The San Jose violence was rated the
most serious aimed at any President in
thl.! country since the aMUSlnation of
President JohtF· Kennedy in 1963.
Partisan Republicans bad given thl
President a warm recepUon at the rally.
It got hotter outside. Nis:on emerged an4
climbed atop the.bojld of hlx ~la
the gl1re of photo floodlllhtl.
Facing 11'1 opponents as they shrieked
obseenitle::s, Nlxoft thrust his jaw forward
ond flung ap boClu""'. 11'.ltlt..llil 8-,
M formed "V" symbols for tbe crowd.
'l'be1 mob ff'" wilder.
His motorcade wu mobbed for 1bout
five '!'be pmlderillal limousine Ind other
vehicle1 were bit repeatedly by larp
rocks. Several pereom including 1 Seem
Service agent and a television
cameraman suffered minor injuries ..
White House aides and guests of the
President riding in a bus behind his
limousine huddled in seats and aisles u
rocks and botUea -nnubed four wbMiows.
Newsmen in another bul wtre splattered
with glass from five snwhed wtndowa.
One youth whipped a large belt from
his waist and lashed the top of a car co~
talnln( H. R. Haldeman, Nixon's chief of
staff.
"It was just like Caracas," said ROSI!
Mary Woods, the President's Jong-time
personal secretary, who was sitting next
to one of the smashed Windows. She
referred to an attack on Nl.J:on, then Vke
President, in Venezuela.
Muryhy termed the mob "wild-eyod,
tough, angry revolutlonories" w Ii o
"should be identified and isolated."
"I have been careful to poi.Qt out that
these are the actions of a violent few. It
is Important that all Americans keep tl1lJ
perspective,'' ·lbe President slid.
"But the time has come to take the
gloves off and 1peak to this kind of·
behavior in a forthright way. Freedom of
speech and fttedom of assembly cannot
exist when people who peacefully attead
rallies are attacked with Dying rocks.
"Tonight at Anaheim I will disc:ull
what America must do to end the w1~of
violence and' terrorism. by the radiell; an-
ti-democratic elements in our mciety.'"
The crowd had pthmd by the -NlJ:on entered San Joae Civic Aoditort.um.
to plead for aupporl for Murphy and
Reagan in their racee: a g a i n 1 t
Dem0ttatlc challengers John V. TUnney:
and Jess Unruh. Signs in the crowd de-
nounced him as 1 "facist" lftd
''warmonger" · llid several • bUDdred
~ chanted "one, two, three, four,
We don't want your f-war.''
Inside, N-lold on 1udlellce ol about
8,000 -that be hid been IUCClllftll ift winding down the Vietnam ainfllct ncl
repeated bil prumile to end the '"'' ID auch a· fuhion u to gain 1 generation cf
peace for the nation.
Amerlcons ,...,, fighting In Vfetnam,
he said, "oo that thooe young men -
are · outside shouting their a-W••
slog1ns -·t bave In flCht In Vietnam ar auywben elte... •
During tho speech ..... of tho
dem«lllr1lort charged II I door of,. Ibo
1udltorium bul were blocked by poll•
On his way out Ille Pluldent Pl-tO greet ·an Indian chief In IUll reglila 4llf
then beaded Into the puking 1~1 :wWe
several lnmdrtd poUc:o olflcers -Ille crow about., yards away. ,
A few -aplattered within 1boul llVo
yardJ of'""'"' he stood1Then the l'nll-
dent climbed on the bood ol b1a car, ni..
ed his 1t1111 In the familiar V fubloot
Ind , ... tloem bil lndl-1 '"'ll)lllp
salute. The lhouUng and ~nltlel IP-
pured to l!lcr-
I
~---------------•
% DAii. V PILOT SC
--Deputy liaoos-9 Coum
Lawman Indicted on IY_ew Charges
.
form<r QaNe ;:.• d ap u I y lbe -on Irvine. Be m1y ..,.., 1111rdlr bf lllo -Viejo ComJ>Mll.
f'roderick B. JrM! I , Indicted by 111« today In Superior Court lo of!« 1'11 'Ibey Wirt -ldnc In that copodty 'll'beu amsted lnllde lbe 10U shop. the Orana:e County Gran Jury on further plea to. cbaraes coatalned ln the in-Duncan surrendered on confrontation
chara:ee of receiving stolen property, car dlctment. 1 but Irvine led his feHow officers on a wild
theft and burglaries committed prior to Deputy Arthur Duncan, 34, of Hun· car chase that ended· in Riverside County
the charge.s on which he now faces tington Beach, committed &u!clde earlier with his arrest after his repeated threats
Superior Court action. this month after being ordered to appear to commit suicide.
Irvine, 42, of La Habra, was one of two· on grand theft and burglary char1ea in Investigators stated today that they are
~tie~~· 11ml!ted'lasl'Sept. "'·ln-lho-aotJ-SanlLA!!Ulunigpal ·eourt. sllll probing several other burglaries in
lhop of the Mission Viejo Country Cl\UJ. ~. ODvlOuilyaJiti'essed"'-.t the-1the mo-patrolled...by_ihe. two lorrw
Fellow officers wbo booked the pa~ lline of his court arraignment, hung depulles.
allegedly found them In pouesalon of hlmleU In the garage of his home al -Two of the charges listed In the grand
atolen golftng equipment and aeveral Maul Qrcle. jury indictment accuse Irvine of the theft
cases of liquor. Irvine and Duncan were employed dur-of heaters owned by the M1siion Viejo Co.
Nine felony COWlb are now contained in lng their off duty hours as security and Anaheim Plumbing.
•captain Bligh"
Judge Orders Punishment by Whip
An Orange County superior Court judge
bas become kncwn overnight as "Captain
Bligh" for his decision to restore the cat.
o'nine tails to the county's halls el
justice.
But Judge William Murray's fame and
nickname may be only fieeUng. For the
jurist was asked today by a concerned
Sheriff James Musick to amend the
eyebrow raising sentence he imposed
Thursday on a willing priaoner.
Judge Murray ordered 15 strokes with
the cat for probatJon violator Bruce Dar-
ryl Howell on condition that Howell pass.
a fitness tesl And be gave the strapping
six-foot, ,.._pound defendant a -ii to
reconsider bi.I deciaion to accept the long-
rejected form of punishment.
It seemed at one point that Howell
would gel the cat In Judge Murtay'a
courtroom. BaillU Jess Hardy went off in
.....:II.GI a wblp but Judge Murray
decldtd on the one-week delay before
pnn!sbment could be admtnlattred lo
Howell.
Howell, 21, of Milwaukee, Wis., Iii serv-
ing four mootha In Orange County jail for
a cbeclc writing of!enoe. He la aCCU!ed of
violating terms of his probaUon by
auault on a fellow prisoner.
Howell apoed lo the corporal punish·
ment wbea it wu pointed out that a state
prism term might be the altemaUve. "I
wanted it to hurt ao that YoU remember Jt
but I don't want any damage," be wu
told by Judie Murray.
Judce Murray wu not available for
collllDOlli today. Bnl court offlclals ex·
pee( that · be will comply with Sbertlf
MUilet's request for modification of •
-that called foe 15 laabea and IO more da111n lbe COW1ty jail
Some Residents of County
Fail to Receive Ballots ,.
Wlth eieclkJo day four da11 away, some
Orange County' realdenla have not recelv·
Runner Plans
Arwther Trek
To Bay Area
Ken Crutchlow, a JS.year-old
Englishman wbo bas walked across
Death Valley, blcycled lo M"'ico City
and hltchhlted .around the world, today
began a neilt' adveiitw-e. He ii runntna:
from Corona del Mar to San Francisco.
At Ille drop GI a BrltiJh nag, Crut·
cblow departed today from the Five
Crowm restaurant and hopes to jog up to
the Ben Johnson Restaurant ln San Fran-
cisco's Cannery less than one week later.
Tbe gaunt bowler-Juitted six-footer
estimates the journey by the coast route
will cover approximately 550 miles.
Why is he doing it? "Actually it's the
challenge of It. No one to my knowledge
has tried it before and It will give me
another record," said Crutchlow.
He already holds unofficial marks for
his hitchhiking which saw him circle the
globe "on a thumb" in 97 days and for his
11 day bike ride from Los Angeles to
Mexico City.
He plans to run 18 holD'S a day and nap
lntemtittently in a station wagon driven
by his brother Raymond.
But there'll be no riding In the car for
blm, Crutchlow vows. Whether he suc·
cessfully makes the run or not it will pro-
vide more material for a book CrutchJow
is writing. lt is called "Around the World
en $24, and Other Misadventures."
DAILY PILOT
............ -""--.........................
C...M... llmC ,,
OltANG~ COAST PUIUIHtNCi C»IPAtn'
ed ~ umple ballot..
A opokeoman for the co.mty ~ar
of Voters today offered advice to voters
who find themselves in that situation.
"They can call OW' office at 834-5050,
and we will give them the addre11 of
their polling place. Aa far as the sample
ballots go, we malled them all out a wetk
ago. U a voter would llh one, there are a
few left that may be picked up at the of-
fice of the, registrar, 1119 E. Chestnut St.,
Santa Ana," the representative said.
Officials from the registrar's offq
uid they had some problems with "lu
dellvery" of the ample ballots by the
Post Office and estimated there would
"several" cues of voters without sample
ballots.
The spokeaman also recommended that
. county residents who have moved
rece:nUy be sure to check with their of-
fice.
"If they moved before Sept. 10, and
didn't receive a sample ballot, they ought
to cheek with us, to find out what their
neW polling place ls.
"Anyone who movEd within the county
after Sept. 10 is eligible to return to their
old polling place.
"We have plenty of telephone operators
on hand to answtr questions so th1t any
voter who doesn't know where to go to
vote or who has a question about bis
ballot can call us," she said.
Faithful She's Not;
Actress Divorced
LONDON (AP) -Marianne Faithful!
was divorced today by her American hus-
band on grounds of the 23-year~Jd ac-
tress-singer's admitted adultery withJ>OP
&tar fi.tick Jagger of the Rolling Stones.
Jagger agreed to pay $480 court costs
to her husband, John Dunbar, 27, an
artist and writer.
Since the case came up orlclnally in
divorce court Miss Faith.full bas found a
new boy friend but she wemalns on
friendly terms with Jagger. Her name is
now romantically linked with that of an
Irish Peer, Lord Rossmore.
B~mhs Explode
In 3 Sections
Of New York
NEW YORK (UPI) -Three homemade
plpebombs uploded within 10 minutes of
each other early today, damaging two
armories and a police station.
There were no injuries in the o:·
ploslons, whkh occurred shortly after one
of the annorles received a warning
telephone call.
Police spokeamen said the blasts were
"very closely usoclated" and It wu
•'highly unlikely" that three bombing at-
ucka could be planted coincidentally by
dllferent grtMJJ>I or unassociated persons
ln web a brief time. Tbe FBI WU called
In llmo&t immediately.
One guard, a Vietnam veteran who
escaped just before one of the armory
blasts, said the eKJ)losion eounded "like
an llmm mortar."
The first bomb went oU at 3:12 a.m.
EST at the U.S. Naval Reserve Center in
Whitestone, Queens<; Three minutes later, a second explosion went off in a rii.otorcy.
cle precinct headquarter• in the Bronx.
At 3:22 a.m., the third bWt. went off at
the U.S. Army Reserve Center in the
Jamaica sectloo of Queens. Before the first explosion, a woman
caller told a guard at the armory, "You'd
better get out of the annory because a
bomb is going off in five miautes. Go out
the front door and get at least 50 feet
aw1y," accordin~lice.
Professor's Plea
On Jail Term
In Riot Spurned
Professor Stuart Silvers' appeal of a
municipal court conviction on charges
stemming from his part in Cal State
Fullerton riots has been rejected by the
Orange County Superior Court appellate
bench.
Presiding Judge Raymond Thompson
stated that hla three-judge court has
nfused to consider Silvers' claim that a
6Ckiay jail term he drew for participation
in the riots is unlawful and :mrea.sonable.
Silvers, 32, of 11( 7th St., Seal Beach
has not yet put in his jail time . The
philosophy professor is currenUy on
vacaUon in Yugoslavia.
Silvers indJcated in his last court ap..
pearance that rejection by the Orange
County appellate bench would not end his
challenge of the sentence and be would
take the issue to a higher appellate court.
Silvers was identified as a ringleader
In Cal State disturbances last March and
was prosecuted for unlawful assembly
and disturbing the peace after a strife-
torn appearance by Gov. Ronald Reagan
on the Fullerton campus.
He successluJly challenged a contempt
citation issued by authorities after he
alleg¢1y violated the terms of a Superior
Court restraining order issued after the
first disturbance.
Judge Thompson's appellate bench ls
expected to consider in the next few
days an almost identical appea l by Cal
State student David MacKowiak. 26, of
Corona .
The young milita11t is chaUe.nging a
ten-day jail sentence imposed for his role
in Lhe March 3 riot.
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Fighting Brothers' Feud Ends
PALATINE, Ill . (UP!) -Tbe bitter
feud between George Jayne, 47, and his
brother Silas, 63, among the top
bonemen in the. Chicago area -ls over.
George was slain by a single abot
Wednesday fired through the baaement
1 window of his $100,000 home u be sat
playing bridge with hll family.
G«qe Jayne's wife Tburtday. offered
a $25,000 reward.
Pollet aaid they were aeekln& a man
1boul "' to IS ycon old, driving a red
Oldsmoblle with a. black vinyl lop near
J1ynl•1 home ln lnvemeu, a Ollcago
auburb. P1laUne polio(" who patrol
J'nvemeu, worked oo the cue with the
Jlllnols Bureau of lnvestlgaUon.
The 11ory of George and Silas Jayne
was • bitter one of murder, attempttd
murder, barn burning and horse pobon-
lng. Each aCCU!ed the other of trying to
kill him, citing rivalry In the breeding
and develop~nt of jumping horsts.
O«>rge Jayne had llJl'Ylved 1t l~t one
oilier allempl ., bil li!e, OD Junt II,
1965. a bomb wired to the ignition of his
car killed Cheri Rude, 22, an employe of
J ayne's stables. Mm Rude earlier had
worked for Silas, but police said ~rge
was the target or the bomb.
George Jayne accused Silas of trying to
kill him. Silas was brought to trial and
found innocent.
On Jan. 19, 1969, Silas shot and ldlled a
man he said fired three abots Into the
frcint of hi.s house. The: shooting was ruled
justifiable homicide.
At least two other Incidents -in which
money was rtp0rtedly paid to arrange for
the killing of George -were under in-
vesUgaUon.
-Jayne's widow, ~1arian, 43, told
newsmen the family was offering a
$25,000 re.ward for lnformaUon "leading
to the arrest and capture of t h.o s e
rt~l')Dntlble."
.. Polle! said !hey found an empty beer
can wlth fingerprints and tire. tracks
outside George Jayne's home, and knew
the Int thr<e numbers of the car they
were setJdna:.
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U,IT ...... lt
PRESIDENT (IN SEDAN) LEAVES SAN JOSE CIVIC AUDITORIUM AFTER SPEECH
An Estimated 900 Protestors Hurl Eg91, Rocks and Obscenities •t Mr. Nixon's Auto
LA Judge Orders Halt
To Rafferty's Material
Max Rafferty's workers in Orange
C.Ounty ha ve been ordereq to halt
distribution of literature wh1ch allegedly
defames opponent Wilson Riles and links
the state superliitendent or public instruc·
lion's cpponent with, the Communist move--
ment.
The ban, part of a statewide temporary
restraining order, was signed Thl1?9day
by Los Angel,. CwnlY Superior Court
Leary Reports
He'll Make His
Home, in Algiers
• From Wlre Services
CAIRO -Self-exiled federal fugitive
Dr. Timothy Leary is finally going to set-
tle down and get religion.
So he tells Al Abram, the semi--0fficlal
government newspaper of Egypt.
The world's best-known advocate of
LSD and marijuana, who escaped Sept.
13 while serving a term of up to 10 years
for weed possession in Orange County,
says he will live permanently in Algiers.
He said Thursday he would sneak back
Into the U.S. in disguise to attend a Nov .
3· New Haven, CoM. raJly for Black
Panther leader Bobby Seale, who Is ac-
cused of murder.
Leary Oed the minimum security l.A>s
Padres Men 's Colony at San Luis Obispo
and estimates he will get a total of 38
years behind bars on various counts if
caught in America again.
Chances are, it wouldn't be in a
minimum security facility either.
Judge John A. Shidler. Judge Shidler
ordered both parties to attend a hearing
scheduled for Nov. 12.
Riles. actihg through campaign
manager Marion Joseph, accuses Raf-
ferty of unlawfully and unethically link-
ing him with Black Muslim leader
Malcolm X In posters and pamphlel5
distributed by Rafferty workers in
California.
Heavy circu1ation of the literature is
being achieved.. in Orange County, San
Diego and Bakersfield, Riles' workers
allege.
The deputy superintendent of public in·
struction also a11eges that Rafferty
literature consistently implies his con·
nection with Communist sources and the
international Communist movement and
could be damaging to his election
chances.
Ril es names as defendants Max Raffer-
ty, campalgn aide Robert Tu ttle, the
South Bay Citizens for Constitutiona l
Government and "Rafferty workers one
through 500. II
Just Nuts and Bolts
In UCI Bomb Hoax
A class in Science Lttture Hall at UC
Irvine was interrupted this morning wflile
police searched1 fod a bomb saJd by a
male caller to have been placed there at
8 a.m. today.
A bomb squad from El Toro determin·
ed lhe suspected "bomb" was a box of
nu ts and bolts left by construction
Workers. The class continued on the lawn
following evacuation of the 650-seat Jail. '
An accurate reproduction of
on exceptionally fine Queen
Anne double bonnet secre-
~ory. Formed of walnut end
yew wood veneers end solid
p e c a n end available in two
finishes. It is 36" w i ·de ond ..
81 1/i." high.
Boy, 9, Slain
In Philadelphia
Teen Gang War
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -A 9-year--0ld
boy was shot to death in what police said
was an execution-style teen -age gang
slaying on the pavement sidewalk outside
a schoolyard-playground Thursday night.
"They just ran up to the boy and shot
him," said Detective Edward Kessner of
the homicide squad.
Mi.Ie.s Whe'eler, the victim, was shot at
close range in the abdomen. .
"We don't know why they piclted out
this kid . We don't have him listed as 2
gang member," Kessner said. TI>e police
departmen t here keeps lists of all known
gang members.
Members of the 21st and Norris Street
gang were sought in the slaying. Kessner
said the killers "went into the area of the
25th and Diamond gang" where the vic-
tim was standing on the pavement talk·
ing with some other boys.
"When they saw the 21rt and Norris
Street gang members all these kids ran.
This kid started to run too but they rau
up and got him before he could get
away," Kessner said.
Wheeler is not the youngest gang war
victim here. Last summer Antoinette
Williams, 7, was hit by a bullet between
the eyes when she was caught in the
crossfire of two warring gangs as she sat
on the front steps of her home, coloring
in her Coloring book.
A city hall rally was held here Wed·
nesday to call attention to gilng death!,
which the.n numbered 62 in the last 13
months.
Within an hour after the rally tbtte
was another death,,a l~year--0ld boy.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HEMTAGE
1tJ• "
NEWPORT C:t.C. 1
1727 Westcliff' Or., 64'..: ... :;~
OPEN FRIDAY 'TI L 9
INTERIORS
Profettlon1I Interior
0..lgn•rs Avolilblo-AID-NSID
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LAGU!'IA BEACH
~45 Norlh -'•Ht Hwy, 494-6551
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
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San ~lemente
Capistrano EDIT ION
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VOt . 61, NO. 260, o4 SECTIONS, 18 PAGES
'
ire
".ti {r ".ti ?i
In ,A naheim Tonight
Nixon to Blast
Violent Radicals
Alter being the target of rocks, bricks,
bottles, eggs, red flags and other missiles
hurled at his limousine in San Jose,
President Nixon promised to "lad:e off
the gloves" at a political rally tonight iA
Anaheim and respond to s u c h
••viciousness.''
After his arrival at San Clemente, the
President said the 900 a n ti w a r
demonstrators were "radical, a n t i .
democratic elements" who threatened
freedom of speech and assembly in
America.
"This was no outburst by a single in-
dividual," said the President at the
Western White House. "This was the ac·
tion of an unruly mob that represents the
worst in America."
The glass-top limousine containing the
President, Sen. George Murphy and Gov.
Ronald Reagan was blitzed while he left a
GOP rally as the President neared the
end of a 5,500-mile, cross-country cam·
paign tour.
'lbe San Jose violence was rated the
most serious aimed at any President in
.
Down the
Mission
Trail •
Dana Disposal
Firm Gets Raise
DANA POINT -South Laguna D~posal
Company, Tuesday got a raise In rates
for trash pickup in the Capistrano Beach,
Dana Point area without a protest. '
A public hearing was staged by the
Bom:d of Supervisors on the proposed in·
c.Tease from $1.15 to $1.65 a month for a
once weekly pickup.
It was explained that the supervisors
had granted increases to other collection
services in recent months and that the
South Laguna firm, also known as Solag
Disposal, needed the increase because of
climbing costs.
e J et Block
SADDLEBACK VALLEY - A group of
Saddleba.ck Valley residents are banding
together to fight jetports.
Of major concern is a discussion of
joint use of El Toro Marine Air Station
for commercial as well as military
aircraft outlined in the Ralph M. Parsons
Company report to the Orange. County
Board of Supervisors. ·
But many residents also hope to block
a proposal to build a l,SOO°llcre jetport in
Bell Canyon, east of Mission Viejo.
Her.ding the organiution are Ken Cook
Aliso Valley Homeowners; Ba, i
Spendlove, Aegean Hills Homeowners;
Mel Shope,· Capistrano H I g h 1 a n d s
Homeowners; Mike Shearer, Mission Vie-
jo Homeowners, and Harry Ashe, Leisure
World, Laguna Hills.
Anyone interest~ in joining the group
may contact one of these members.
• New ,D irector
this country since the assassination of
President John F. Kennedy in 1963.
Partisan Republicans had given the
President a warm reception at the rally.
Jt got hotter outside. Nixon emerged and
climbed atop the hood of bis limouslne in
the glare of photo floodlighls ..
Facing his opponents as they shrieked
obscenities, Nixon thrust his jaw forward
and flung up both arms:. With bis fingers.
he formed "V" symbols for the crowd.
The mob grew wilder.
His mototlade was mobbed for about
five The presidential limousine and other
vehicles were hit repeatedly by large
rocks. Several persons including a Secret
Service agent and a television
cameraman suffered minor injuries.
White House aides and guests of the
President riding in a bus behind his
limousine huddled in seats and aisles as
rocks and bottles smashed four windows.
Newsiiien in another bus were splattered
with glass [rom five smashed windows.
One youth whipped a large belt from
h1s waist and lashed the top of a car con·
taining IL R. Haldeman. Nixon's chief of
staff.
.. It wu · jUst like c.iaca," said Roll
Mary Woods, the President'• long-unle
personal secretary, who WU tfttinl nut
to one of the imasbed windows. Sht
referred to an attack on Nilon. then Vice
!Jresident, in Venezuela.
Murphy tenned the mob 0 wild-eyed,
tough, angry revolutionOries" w h o
"shoo Id be identified and isolated.''
"I have been careful to point out that
these are the actions or a violent few. It
is important that all Americans keep this
perspective," the President said.
''But the time has come to take the
gloves off and speak to this kind of
behavior in a forthright way. Freedom of
speech and freedom of assembly cannot
exist when people who peacefully altend
rallies are attacked with-flying rocks.
"Tonight at Anaheim I will discu!S
whal America must do to end the wave of
'?olence and terrorism by the radical, an·
ti-democratic elements In our society."
The crowd had gathered by the time
Nixon entered San Jose Civic Auditorium
to plead for support for Murphy and
Reagan in their races a g a in s t
Democratic challengers John V, Tunney
and Jess Unruh. Sigm in the crowd de-
nounced him as a "facist" and
"warmonger" and several hundred
persons chanted "one, two, three, four,
we don't want your f-war."
lnside, Nixon told an audience of about
8,000 persons that he had been successful
in·winding down the Vietnam conflict and
repeated his promise to end the war in
such a fashion as to gain a generation of
peace for the nation.
Americans were fighting in Vietnam,
he said, "so that those young men who
are outside shooting their obscene
slogans won't have to fight in Viebwn or
anywhere else."
During ~speech some of the demoostra ~ed at a door of the
auditorium but e b!ocked by police.
Pendleton Sets
Ma1·ine Auction
More than 200 surplus military items -
most of them rolling stock -will go on
the auction .block wedDeaday at Camp
Pendleton.
MISSION VIEJO -The Saddleback
Coliege administration appointed phyai·
. cal education instructor Douglas R. Fritz
as director of the college'a intramural
program for the remainder of the faU quarter. ' "
The public and members of he
military are wekame to bid on the tona
of ourplus mercbanclloe at the redlltribo-
tioo and dlspoaJ ..ction of the llllrino
ba ...
The ·merchandise will include 30, 11%-ton
semi trailers, 103 qurter.ton car10
trailen, a fCM.q"--wheel-drlve Scout vthlcle,
a generator wt. a wrecker, .everal
pickUp trucks:, other heavy trucb and a
forklift..
J
The board or truJtees ol the college
recenUy approved hiring a director to
develop and administer an intramural
sports program for the students.
The intramural activities: will all take
place on Fridays from 1.1 a.m. to noon, a
time known as the "CoUege Hour" when
no claues are scheduled .
Friti will be paid an additional salary
to oversee the program of Villleyb.all and
basketball. Instructor Vincent D •
.,cCuUough wlll be given charge of the
program for the winter quarter and
Richard E. 'lluetz Will be •14illled the
duty during tlie ll)lrlng quarter. Both men
are alao instructor• In the Division of
~ E<b:atlon, Healtli and llelrea·
Biddets must register at a a.m. the day
of the: auction. A regiatraUon nwnber and
a "paddle" bidding device wlll be USllll"
ed to each bidder for use •t the auction
starting at t a.m.
lnapection of the goods wlll be beld
before the auction beg!N. A ptmment
auctkmeet will hind.le the: biddln1. Con.
Unnatlon ol bid awards will be mode to
the purthuer in penon or by mall.
A phone number for inlonnalloa Oil tbo
llielanMIO'I.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, OCTOJER 30, '1970
OUS·e . . .
DAIL V r 1LOT Sid ,....
PRESIDENT, SENATOR ARRIVE IN DRANGE COUNTY AFTElt AltDUOUS JOURNEY •
Murphy• .. 1rloh Up·O. .... ~ 1t...i ~. S.. J,IN; Mr. N~·Jnds R ...... Doy o G-·0.°"11 ~
Senator Murphy LSeetllln~;
'Damn Mad' at Vjolence
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
01 "" o.11'1 f'i.., ltetf,
On the eve of his giant rally in
Anaheim, Geor1e Murphy said he is "-
damn mad" about the violence President
Ni.Jon faced in San Jose, but con~ it
can 't hurt his re-election chances.
Ni.Ion.is slated·to appear tonight at the
Anaheim Convefttion Center on behalf of
the lt'epubUcan senator. The President
was the target of rock and ·bottle throw·
ing demonstrators Thursday night when
he made a similar :Sppearanc.e in San
Jose.
"This was as vicious a crowd as I've
ever seen in my life. I'm ashamed of
what has happened in OlO" state," Murphy
told newsmen .alter flying with Nixon
aboard Air Force One from San JOle to
El Toro MCAS.
His Irish temper up, the 68-year-old
senator branded the demonstrators
"wild-eyed, tough, angry revolutionaries"
and said "I think the ringleaders ought to
be identified and isolated.
"I'm so mad and angry about '":~t the
President of the United St.ates was a-uD-
jected to in San Jose that I find tt dif·
ficult to contain myself," he said
In El Toro be wu asked by newsmen if
he believed the violence helgec:i his cam·
paign. Murphy replied. "I don"t see bow
It could hurt any, These are the things I
have peen working against. 11 ~
He said his -~ Rep. Jobn Tun-
ney, "hasn't taktn too much trooble to
oppooe lhls oort of thli>g" and added that
auch incidenti make him think the naUon
.Is "on the verge of lncipient revolutioa."
The latest stat. poll showa the
Democrat wWeu1ng his lead over
Murphy. The IIicumbent now trails by
seven percentage points, 48-41, compared
to only two points a week a'go.
With four days left in the campaign,
the war of words between the two men
.and their supporters is intensifying.
In San Jose, Nixon, in effect called
Tunney a liar for reporting Wednesday
that the federal government planned to
shut down the Ames Research Center in
Sunnyvale and lay off 3,000 workers after
the election.
"Anyone , who checked , and a
Congressman of the United Statts has the
same rights to check as a Senator or
anybody else, would have found there has
never been any intenUon of losing Ames
Laboratory," Nixon said.
"It has never .been discussed. It is not
going to be closed and anyone who mad~
that kind of charge did so with knowledge
that It was false."
And Thursday. Tunney's father, former
heavyweight champion Gene Tunney,
became a major issue in Murphy's cam~
palgn.
The Senator charged that Gene Tunney,
as a fellow board member of Technicolor.
voted to approve the contract. which pro-
vided Murphy $20,000 a year, half the
reilt on a Washington apartment and an
air travel car in exchange for consulting
work. The contract was terminated last
June.
John Tunney· has charged continually
this ..,as a cooruct of interest and denied
his father was present when the: board
approved the conlract.
Murphy Thursday 'called t.he ex·boxer a
liar and• releaaed a ~ument purporting
to prove bls contention.
County Offices O.rdered
-' To Hire Unemplo yed
O<a!ll• C<lurity SUp«villl'iuve -.
ed that tltey lbouJd -Iva act Oil
.,.,..o1 the advice they havt -Un-
~ out to county ln'*lltries.
Two weeks ago they urged induslrla lo
' do ewrythlng poaible to provide Jobe for
the rapklly rising ranks of untmployed
skilled workers.
"We have aaked lh..e people to .bend
over backwardl to help the -1oyed ,
atroop1<e and electronlc _..,.but our
own departmentl are nol folloftlc t::.e
policy," Nid Supen<ilor pA9id L. Baker.
illl<lr lllil lie lllo dllco•ered that •
OOUllll deplrlmeula ..... -blrlnl . .
people alteady emplo"*' wltli ·~ ~· iPriCf railJr Ulan .qu,lly
qualified unemploytd dtlzent. ·
Supervilor William Hlrit<ln 111pjlorted
Baker'• complaint.
He Nid he bad talkecr lo . a former
aerospace plant accounLlnt who had· J>een
turn(d down by two county departmenta
became he was 4t yean old.
"( doubt if his age Was lhat much of a
problem," Hil1teln arpid.
Fellow tupervlaon joined with Bater
and Illnteln In ordorlnC dei>!ft1mtnl
hcladl to give -loYed ...,u,,
pn,......,., provided 111 otlior iadcnA>!
-loncl·and abUlty ara equal.
Ja ycees Sponsor
1st JWtior Miss
Competition
San Clemente's first..ever Junior Miss
competition sponsored . by the local
;Jaycees has been launched with the first
function scheduled to be a briefins of
poteqt.ial candidates at San aemente
High 'School.
IJ'he activity will culminate loc,lly with
a pageant Dec. 11 where the 8'n
Clemente candidate to the Santa Rosa
finals will be selected.
Not a beauty contest per se, ·say the
sponsors, the Junior Miss compeUtion
will include criteria of scholarship, merr
tal alertness, youth fitness , poise, a~
perance and talent in creative and
performing arts.
The potential candidates for the title
will be given an orientation at the high
school Nov. 5 during the first period.
Interested girls should attend in the LitUe
Theater.
The winner of the state competition
late Jn January will 'win a f500
scholarship, a U.S., Savings bond for the
same amount.and an all-expense..paid.tclp
to the national finals In· Mobile, Ala. That
trip will be In May.
During the orientation a film showing
h!ghlights of last year's contests will be
shown to potential applicants. Interested
girls in the senior class will be excused
from the first-period to attend the .'brlef·
Ing. Applications will be provlded 'at the
meeting, and then at the acUvitlea office
until the Nov. ·15 deadline.
Clemente COfC
Sets Board Bid
San Clemente's chamber of commerce
will be counting ballots of ita own this
election dai in the annual vot.inl for
members of its board of dlrecton.
Four choices are . given. the general
membership from a 1Jate of 17 nominees.
The deadline. for aubmltUng of the
anonymousballoi. Is Tllftday.
The candidates I n c J u d e five ln-
curilbents,' Mn. Bertha Heftry, JIJJles M.
Holbert, . Trygve Tobi..,.n,. E~erett' c,
Lyster and Kenneth neL ·
The other . notnlneet are . ~1e Boaz,
Alan .Cook, Jlobert ()>ta, PhJI Eu.-th, ~erb · lllveJy;.'J•'ma. Ke~,' 'Rll]lb
Klassen, l;tobc!rt Kutch<r. Jobn ~.
H. a Marks, Mn. Belfy Jo Mccone and
• San Clemente CofC
r
Hosts Informal Meet
Members or the San Cleme.nte
Chamber of COmmerce and their 1Uttta
ere weleome to an lnl~l mixer at
Omar'• Reatlurant '11nnday afternoon.
The lll•lr will olltr llllppy-hour·pt~
lot'rtlrellimal, II wlll'llqla .at 1:30,
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JEN CENTS
es
Nixon Flees
Estate
In Pajamas :.
.
By JOHN VAL TEl\ZA
ot tllt 0.llY l'li.t steff
A log fire lighted to smooth over flit
anxiety caused by a howling mob In San
Jose ignited a smouldering blue at the
Western White House late Thunday,
routing the First Family from bed and
causing considerable smoke damqt to
half of the Spanish villa.
President Nixon was not in danger
from the smouldering fire. The blaze wu
detected by a smoke-sniffing devlc:t
within the wall of the second-floor delr1 knowledgeable sources reported today.
But the smoke, pouring from ~
ceiling vents in the house, prompted tbit
chief executive to spend the rest of thl
night in the guest house across ~
driveway of his home.
The aources gave this account of the
fire -the second blaze to en1pt at the
Presidential compound llnce tbe Nixon!
moved to San Clemente:
At about 10:30· p.m. the President's
valet, Manolo, Sanchez, lit the fire ln the
aecond-fioor fireplace which ii all-metal.
The hearth bt:gins at the leCOOd floor,
There is no fireplace at that spot in tbl
dining room below.
An hour later. the President le fl U.
fireplace to retire in bis bedroom 1boul
.. 100 teet away .
Fifteen mimllel later the smoke semer
In the ''"'"-nil toui:hed off .. llaml at the ...;;;r;ty JieaaQuarters of the com·
pound and qents phoned the realdence ta
check the alarm. ,
Pina Sanchez, Manolo'• wife and Mrs.
Nixon's bead maid, answered the ~
in the kitchen and then went to the den fe
ir'lestigate.
The house already waa filling wltll
m oke .
An alarm went out to: San Clemente
and Camp Pendleton M' ttatlou. Su
Clemente volunteers roared into I.hi:
estate 01.1 two pumpers to fight 1 bla.M
which - on a much smaller acale -
resembled the devastatinl: fire w b I c 11
11truck the community clubhouse earlY,
this year. It was o: similar construction.
The fire, the classic smouldering varie-
ty, had btiilt up within the two-foot-thick
walls of the den and smoke wu JlOW'inC
from several venta: in the ceilinp of tho
wing of the four-sided residence.
Heat bad built up con1iderably,
throughout tbe wall sc:tion, sources aaid.
and lllllOlte puffed through seams lloag
several beams in the rough-plaster cello
ings of the home.
President Nixon emerged from tM
house about 10 minutes after firefighters
arrived. He chatted with several of hill
:Secret Service agents in the patio as elec-
tric fans sucked smoke from the hou1e.
The President was wearing pajamu
and a bathrobe. • The-bi87.e Was an unusuill anif tenli
climax to a harrowing day of ca~
paigning and unresl for the President.
It was the second fire at the compowid
this year.
The first erupted in an ABC generatine
truck on an evening last spring when the
President was addressing the nation dill
the Vietnam war, A stack of paper CUl)I
and rags caught fire , nearly destroying
the backup generator truck. A crub
truck on constant standby for tbl
President's helicopters Was used to t:P
tingui!h that fire.
WeatJaer
Night and morning lo( retut111
to the coast this weekend, drop-
ping the high ,readinl to 18 along
the beaches and 10 degrees hlaher
1 little further inland.
INSW E TODAY
The Frac&urcd FoUiet of 1970
in Laguna Beach come up again
nt~ wtck, railing monq far
South Coa..s & Communi~ Hospf·
tal. Set todag11 Weekender 1ec-'
tion.
.... "" 11 CIHfllnlM I ~~ n.J .......... . .......... --. ••""'91 ,... • .. .._. , .. ,. -" ..... ~ n .. _ . Milll.. ..... ,. -.....
""""' ~-14 ,.. ........... ...
Or .... C-'J f • ..._.... tl.U
,,,... """' 14 ...... '"'' , ... ~14-11 -.. --·-. ..._.. ..... , .. ,, .... """ .. Wlll l fir , .....
I
I
•
,
~~---------~~-....---------
• J DAILY PILOT SC Frld1y, October 30, 1970
-Beputy-Fliees-9 -Counts
•
~ Law.m(tn Indicted on New Char.ges
.Jl'ormer 0raqe lberlll'1 d t p u I y
n.derlck B. Irvine has betn indicted by
the Orange r.ounty Grand Jury on further
charges of recelving stolen property, car
theft and burglaries committed prior to
the charges on which he now faces
SUperior Court action.
.Irvine. 42, or La Habra. was one of two
ciquUes arrested last Sept 20 ill the 1<>ll
ebop of the Mission Viejo.Country Club.
Fellow officers who booked the pair
ollecedly found them In poo...,lon of
stpkn 1<>illng equipment and oeveral
Cfae!I of liquor.
Nine felony counts are now ccntainOll in
' the -.., Irvine. Ho 1111,)' .....,
later lDda)' In S-1« Ceart to ellw .i.
plee 'to cblrP! . cooWnod 1n the in.
dlclmenl
Deputy Arthur Dw>can, 34, of Hun-
tington Be1ch, C'Ommltted suicide earlier
this month after being ordered to appear
on crand theft and burglary charges in
Santa Ana Municipal Court.
Duncan, obvloualy distressed at the
time of bis court arraignment. hung
himoell In the Cll'OI• of hll home at 042
Maui Circle.
Inrine Ind Duncan were employed dur·
Ing tbelr off du!)' hours u ltCUfit)'
~Captain Bligh"
:Judge Orders Punishment by Whip
·tAn Orange County SuperJor c.ourt judge
bas become known overnight as "captairf
Bligh" for his decision to restore the cat
o'nine tails to tbe county 's halls ef
justice.
·But Judge William MurTay's fame and
nickname may be only fleeting. For the
jurist was asked today by a concerned
-Sheriff James' Musick to amend the
eyebrow raising sentence be imposed
'lbursday on a willlhg priloner.
Judge Murray oi'dered 15 strokes with
the cat for probatton violator Bruce Dar-ri'1 Howell on condition that Howtll pus
a.fitness test. And be gave the strapping
sh:·foot, :ZOO.pound defendant a week to
reconsider his decision to accept the long-
"jected form of ptllllshmenL
.It seemed at one point that Howtll
'!O"ld get the cat in Juqe M1DTay'1
cpurtroom. Bailiff Jess Hardy went oU lo
lttr<b ol a wblp but Judfo Murray
dedded on the __., dtlay before
pimlablDfnt could be tcfm!nlefered tt
Howell.
Howell, 21, of Milwaukee, Wll., ta le!'V·
In& four moolhl In °""le County jail for
a cbeck writlq off-. He ls accuoed ol
vlolatlni terms of hll probaUon by
auault on a fellow prtaoner.
Howell qreed to the corporal punish-
ment when it WU pointed out that a state
prlsoo term might be the alternaUve. "I
wanted It to hurt so ~t ycu remember it
but I don't want any damage," be wu
told by Judp Murray.
Judce Murray wu not available for
comment today. But court officlala e:r·
pecl lhat he will comply with SberlH
Muslck's nquest for modlllcatlan ol a
sentence lhat cliled for 15 I-and IO more day& ID the county jail
~ome Residents of County
Fail to Receive Ballots
With eledJon day four daya away, aome
Orange County residentl have not rea:iv-
'
l(unner Plans
'
Jtoother Trek
fo Bay Area
~en Crutchlow, a 26-ye.ar-old
F.nlllshman who has walked acrosa
Death Valley, bicycled to Mexico Clty fPd . hitchhiked around the world, today
b)!gan a ne·N adventure. He is nmning aliin Corona del Mar lo San Francisco. ·
>.At tbe drop of a British flag, Crul·
chlow departed today from t.be Five
Ctowna restaurant and hopes to jog up to
the Ben Johnson Restaurant In San Fran--
cisco's Cannery less than one week later.
The pun\ bowler-batted six-footer
estimates the journey by the coast route
will cover approximately 550 miles.
Why b: he doing It? "Actually it's the
cballenge of it. No one to my knowledge
has tried it before and it will give me
another record," said Crutchlow.
He already holds WlOfficlal marks for
his hitchhiking which saw him circle the
1lobe "on a thumb " in '11 days and for his
71 day bike ride from Loa Angeles to
Mexico City.
He plans to run 18 hours: a day and nap
Intermittently in a station wagon driven
by bis brother Raymond.
But there'll be no riding ln the car for
him. Crutch1ow vows. Whether he lllC-
QISlfully makes the run or not it will pro-
~kle more material for a book Crutchlow if writing. It is called "Around the World
on '24. and Other Misadventures."
DAILY PILOT
"""*' ••xii ................ _.... .._,_
C.... Men S. C'I O't
OlltANGli COAST l"UIUPIRtG CQMPAMY
ed their sample ballola.
~ spokesman foe the COWlty Re&latnr
of Voters today offered advice to voters
who find themselves ln that situation.
"They can call our office at BS4-5050.
and we will live them the address of
their polling place. Al far as the sample
ballots go, we mailed them all out a week
ago. If a voter would like one, there are_ a
few left that may be picked up at the of·
fice of the regiltrar, llli E. Cheatnut St.,
Santa Ana," the representative said.
Officials from the registrar's off~
said they had some problems with "la:r
delivery" of the sample ballots by the
Post Office and estimated there would
"several" cases of voters without sample
ballots.
The spokesman also recommended that
county residents who have moved
recenUy be sure to check with their of-
fice.
"If they moved before Sept. 10, and
didn'l receive a aample ballot, they ought
to check with us, to find out what their
new polling place is.
"Anyone who moved within the county
after Sept. 10 is eligible to return to their
old polling place.
"We have plenty of telephone operators ,
o.n hand to answer questions so that any
voter who doesn't know where to go to
vote or who has a question about his
l?Jllot can call us," she said.
Faithful She's Not;
Actress Divorced
LONDON (AP) -MariaMe Faithfull
was divorced today by her American hu,s.
band on grounds of the 23-year-old ac-
tress·slnger's admitted adultery with pop
star Mic)r Jagger of the Rolling Stones.
Jagger agrttd to pay $480 court C1>sts
to her husband. John Dunbar, 27, an
artist and writer.
Since the case .came up originally in
dlvorCe court Miss Faithfull has found a
new boy friend but .she remains on
friendly terms with Jagger. Her name is
now romantically linked with that of an
Irish Peer, Lord Rossmore.
' bj 1111 . VIII<> Compan)'. C*'"" ,...J:r'u..1 clpacity when
-intlde the ,.u shop. Duncan surrendered on confrontation -
but Irvine led his fellow officers on a wild
car chase that ended in Riverside County
with his arrest after his repeated threats
to commit suicide.
Investi,:atora stated tQday that they are
still probing several other burglaries in
the area patrolled by the two former
deputies.
Two of the char1ee listed in the crand
jll')I lndlclment accuae lrvlne of the theft
of beaten oJmed by the Mission Viejo Co.
and Anaheim Plumbing.
UPI T....,_t. ·Bombs Explode
In 3 Sections
Of New York
PRESIDENT (IN SEDAN) LEAVES SAN JOSE CIVIC AUDITORIUM AFTER SPEECH
An Estim•t.d 900 Prote1tors Hurl Eggs, Rocks and Ob1c1nftits at Mr. Nixon's Auto
NEW YORK (UPI) -Three bom<made
plpehomba uploded within 10 min-of
each other early today, damaging two
annorila and a police station.
1bere were no injurlea ln the ex·
ploslom, whkh occurred shortly after one
of the armories received a wamlng
telephone coll.
Pollet spokesmen said the bluta were
"very closely a.uoc..tated" and It wu
t'hl&hlY unlikely" that three bombing at-
tacks could be planted coincidentally by
different lf'OUPI or unaaoclated persons
in auch a brief time. The FBI was called
In almoal lmmedtately.
One guanl, a Vietnam veteran who
..caped just before one of the annory
btasts;-Slld""the .. t!!xplosion-IOIJDded UJ.l.ke
an 81mm mortar."
The fint bomb went off at 3:12 1.m.
EST at the U.S. Naval Reserve Center in
Whitestone, Queens. Three minutes later,
a second uploslon went off In a motorcy-
de precinct headquarters in the Bronx.
At 3:22 a.m., the third blast went off at
the U.S. Anny Reserve Center in the
Jamaica section of Queens.
Before lhe first explosion, a woman
caller told a guard at the armory, "You'd
better get out of the armory becauae a
bomb is going off in five milutes. Go out
the front door and get at least SO feet
away .'.'_according to police.
Professor's Plea
On Jail Term
In Riot Spurned
Professor Stuart Silvers' appeal of a
municipal court conviction on charges
stemming from his part in Cal State
Fullerton riots has been rejected by the
Orange County Superior Court appellate
bench.
Presiding Judge Raymond Thomioon
stated that his three-judge court has:
refused to consider Silvers' claim that a
6Q.day jail term he drew for ,participation
in the riots is unlawful and unreasonable.
Silvers, 32, of 114. 7th St., Seal Beach
has not yet put in his jail lime. The
philosophy professor is currently on
vacation in Yugosla via.
Silvers indicated in his last court ap.
pearance that rejection by the Orange
County appellate bench would not end his
challenge of the sentence and he would
take the issue to a higher appellate court.
Silvers was identified as a ringleader
In Cal State disturbances last March and
was prosecuted for unlawful assembly
and disturbing the peace after a strife-.
tom appearance by Gov. Ronald Reagan
on the Fullerton campus.
He successfully challenged a contempt
citation issued by authorities after he
allegedly violated the terms of a Superior
Court restraining order issued after the
first disturbance.
Judge Thompson's appellate bench Is
expected to consider in the next few
days an almost identical appeal by Cal
State student David MacKowiak, 26, of
Corona.
1be young milita11t is challenging 1.
ten-day jail sentence imposed for bis role
in the March 3 riot.
LA Judge Orders Halt
To Rafferty's Material
Max Rafferty's workers in Orange
County have been ordered to halt
distribution of literature which alJegedJy
defames opponent Wilson Riles and Units
the state s1.1perlnteRC:lent of public instruc·
tion's opponent with the Communist move-
ment.
'111e ban, part of a statewide temporary
restraining order, was algned '11lursday
by Loe Angeles County Superior Court
Leary Reports
He'll Make His
Home in Algiers
From Wire Services
CAIRO -Sell-exiled federal fugitive
Dr. Timothy Leary is finally going to set-
tle down and get religion.
So he tells Al Ahram, the semi-official
government newspaper of Egypt.
The world's best-known advocate of
LSD and...marijuana. who escaped Sept. lf wbUe serving a term of up to 10 years
for weed possession in Orange County,
aays he will live permanently in Algiers.
He said Thursday he would sneak back
into lhe U.S. in disguise to attend a Nov.
3 New' Haven,· Conn. rally for Black
Pan~ leader Bobby Seale, who ls ac·
cused of murder.
Leary fled the minimum security Los
Padres Men 's Colony at San Luis Obispo
and estimates he will get a total of 38
years behind bars on various counts if
c~ught in America again.
Chances are, it wouldn't be in a
minimum ~ity facility either.
Judge John A. Shidler. Judge Shidler
ordered both parties to attend a hearing
scheduled for Nov. 12.
Riles, acting through c a m p a i g n
manager Marion Joseph. accuses Raf-
ferty of unlawfull y and unetbically link-
ing him with Black Muslim leader
Malcolm X in posters and pamphlets
distributed by Rafferty workers in
California. •
Heavy circulation of the literature is
being achieved in Orange County. San
Diego and Bakersfield, Riles' workers allege. _
The deputy superintendent of pUlilic-m:-"
struction also alleges that Rafferty
literature consistently implies his con·
nection with Communist sources and the
international Communist movement and
could be damaging to his election
chances.
· Riles names as defendants Max Raffer-
ty, campaign aide Robert Tuttle, t h e
South Bay Citizens for Constitutional
Government and "Rafferty workers one
through 500."
Just Nuts and Bolts
In UCI Bomb Hoax
A class Jn Science Lecture Hall al UC
Irvine was interrupted lhis morning while
police searched for a bomb said by a
male caller to have been placed there at
a a.m. today.
A bomb squad from El Toro determin-
ed the suspected "bomb" was a box of
nuts and ·bolts left by construction
workers. The class <:1>ntinued on the lawn
following evacuation of the 650-seat !ail. '
An accurate reproduction of
en exceptionally fine Queen
Anne double bonnet secre-
~ery. Formed of walnut end
yew wood veneers end solid
p e c e n end available in two
finishes. It is 36" wide end
8I1/2 ... high.
Boy, 9, Slain
In Philadelphia
Teen Gang War
PHILADELP•nA (UPI) -A 9-year-old
boy was shot to death in what police: said
was "an execi.:tion-style teen-age gang
slaying on the pavement sidewalk outside
a schoolyard-playground Thursday night
"They just ran up to the boy and shot
him," said Detective Edward Kessner of
the homicide squad.
1ttlles Wheeler, the victim, was shot at
close range in the abdomen.
"We don't know why they picked out
this kid. We don't have him listed u: a
gang member," Kessner said. The police
department bere keeps lists of all known
gang me mbers.
Membe rs of the 21 st and Norris Street
gang were sought in the slaying. Kessner
sai d the killers "went into the area of the
25th and Diamond gang" where the vic-
tim was standing on the pavement talk-
ing with some other boys.
"Wh en they saw the 21st and Norris
Street gang members all these kids ran.
This kid started to run too but they ran
up and got him before he could get
away," Kessner said.
\!(heeler is not the youngest gang war
victim here. Las( summer Antoinette
Williams, 7. was hit by a bullet between
the eyes when she was caught in the
crossfire ol two warring gangs as she sat
on the front step! of her home, coloring
in her coloring book.
A city hall rally was held here Wed-
nesday to call ~ttention to gang deaths,
which then numbered 62 in the last 18
months. ,
Within an hour after the rally there
"'as another death, a 15-year-old boy.
•
R.oli•rf N. W..4 Prn111.,1 •Al PVlll1'Mt
J,,ic l . C r.trl.y
Via l'nt:..nt •A G4ntrt;I ..,_..
Thom•• K•"ll l!dllor
Horse1nan Slain
Jh om•1 A. M11rp1iiM
Mt1'181°"3 Ed!lof
1Ut.h•rl P, ff•ll
Sor.t1h OrMll• ~1r l!dlfOr -Caih MM: lJt W.I ley Sfnst
frlrwport auc,,, nu w.1 ..... '°"""'''"' . UfU"' lffChl ml F-1 A-H\l~Hntlall llltCh: 17VJ Ifft~ 1111.1!..,.,..
.. II CluntnN; ao.i Nll"lh El C.mlno AMI
, ..
Fighting Brothers' Feud Ends
PALATINE, Ill. {UPI) -The bitter
feud between George Jayne, 47, and his
brother Silas, '1, among the top
horsemen ln the Cbicago'area -Is over .
George wu ll•in by a sinJle shot
Wednesday flrtd through lbe basement
window of h1a •100,000 home as he sat
playlng bridge with hll family.
George Joyne'• wile 'lbundsy offered
a '25,000 reward.
Police aa1d they were aeeking a man
about :Ill to 35 years· old, drMng a red
OlclamobUe with .a black vinyl top near
Jl)'rie's home In Jnvemeas, a Chicago
suburb. Palatine police, who patrol
Inverness, worked on the cue with the
llllnoll Bureau of lnvaUgaUon.
The story of George and Silas J ayne
wu a bllter one o) murder. attempted
murder. barn burning and horse poilon·
Ing. Each accused the other of trying to
ldli him, dtlng rivalry In lhe breeding
and development of jumping horses.
George Ja)'1MI had turVlved at lea.at one
other .iumiji\ oo bis Ult, oa JW11 H,
-
1965. a bomb wired to the ignition or his
car killed Cheri Rude, 22, an employe of
Jayne's stables. Miss Rude earLier had
worked for Silas, but police said George
was tbe target of the bomb.
George Jayne accused Silas of trying lo
kill him. Silas was brought to trial and
found innocent.
On Jan. 19, 1969, Sllas shot and killed a
man he said fired three shots inlo the
front of his house . The shooting was ruled
justUlable homicide.
At least two other incldenla -In whlch
money was reportedly paid to arrange for
the ktlling of George -wer.-under in-
vestigation.
Jayne's widow, Marian, 43, told
newsmen flhe family was offtting a
$25,000 reward for Information "leading
to l h e arre.st and capture of t h o s •
rcsoonsible."
Police said tht.y found an empty beer
can v.'ith fingerprlnta and Ure tracks
outside George Jayne's home, and knew
lhe first three numbers of the car they
Wert aeekJni,
DEAU:RS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
7eJ 11111'M "
NEWPORT BEAC li
• 1727 Wfttcllff· Dr., 64~·2050
Ol'IN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
Pl'Gf.,.lonol Interior
O..lgntrs Avoll•bl-AID-ffSID
LAGUNA BEACH
345 North c .. st Hwy. 494-6551
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
...... Ttfl ,,... M• .. 0,.... C..., lfloltll
I
\
Popular Race U:GAL NOO'!CE LEGAL NC1r!CE
..... ---·-•<'•
Ftld.,, October 30, 1970
LEGAL NC1r!CI!:
DAILY PILOT J3 -
LEGAL NOTICE
HOT1ci to c11•6ltiis
Cl•Tllll(AT• °" •us1J11a.11 ,.,.,.)1 SUPlllUOll: COUl.T °" TM•
54 Crack Yachts
,ICTITIO\ll ll&AMI ClllTl!'ICATI -IUSINEU. ITATI 0, <All,O•flllA ll"Oll
,_... TM undtrWtt!M "°" af1ffy IM 11 -fllCTITIOUf MAMI THI COUNTY Of' otlAMtl
ClltTIPltATll Ofl I UllMllS. MllM • llutJntM ., nn; lhtlW ....... , ... llt'WH"l't'IH .... <H'TllY "'"' .,. N .. ,. -JUDAH .l<*rs •1CTITIOUI MA.Illa IMIOM l1iand, C•Jlf1H11.1to, ""°"' 1'l'lt I (Wldlil(tl"' 1 llutllltU l l'lOll H H _ _. 111111 tf li\.IU. ITH Tilt uNtWtl'IM Oo uttlfy tN'I ,,. l\liovl; firm """" et SKYLAJtK IN• S1_.. H-1 1M6C11, C1llflr~l1 ulMllr C«NMCI. cwdul:llnt 1 llutlnttt 11 1 ..... B•kllcA T!lllOlt DESIGN Hill 11111 1o11d fll'WI II IM "tklll""" flntl ,..,,,. ol WA1tM-MOTi(( IS Hlll:ESY GIVE .... "'-St .. Cotti MfM, (111tOrM1, llNMf .... !+. CIDl'rlllOltitl--....hltlOWl!)tl tff"°"..! ~ lft1GT~-CON$TllUCTIC)H ~ANY «<dJIOft ef IM •llll<t9 ~ ~
lltlou• fl''" -., •ACll"IC GEHEl\AL -w. "'"•rid .. 1('9"' ....... k •• 11111 ~I "'14 firm It wrnPOMd.tf ltw. "'" 111 --PllVI"' fr!:."':.'1:~ CO. 1rW t111I MW firm It C....-.0 ol IM tollowa: fDllllwlll9 Hf..,.,.. wi10Mo -...... Ill f\111 wld 6'c161nl ''' ~....... I ... •,..._:
IOllOwlntl --. WM41 nttT>ot Ill fllll SllH'ldtl 0, M.tur~ tn\o\ llub'I A"'' 1111111 •IKft 9f F'ftlftftU 1r1 11"follow11 •Ith"" ,_.lll"I' ..........,1. 11 .,.. tllll 1lt<• o1 tttltMllU ,,.. H lvUowti IMlllOI lt.111111, C•lltomlt. E, 0. W1trnl,.._,, ft1 Ylt lldO SOI.Ml, :: "::!:'°'111= ·~ lflf~ =-~ 11~1'5';'.', ~-~~:i. r.1H~~~ ':: 011" s~~!:· 6~'!;..11,lt ~9:'11~":\'!~=· t:;:. •.;.. w.,z: -.iclltrl, to tM U:.0.rtJOllfll 11 m O-t StHtL H<1 Hv. Tr• W. lttft $1, C.Slt $1111 ol C1llt0tnl1, Or-1 C-IY: (tilt, llOMrl I", W1rrnllloton. 11) 0r1¥1• N1WPOrt hKftf C .. •ll~ ~ Set for Mazatlnn
By ALMON LOCIWIEY
Of Tiii Dlll't l'lltf Stiff
When 54 crack sallJng yachts
get under way In the 1,000..
mile Los Angelei. to Mazatlan
Race Saturday, Nov. 7, It will
be a far cry from the original
race which started April 9,
198"1.
In that inaugural rac:e lhtrt
were nine starters. One of
them ran aground aJld was
destroyed on a bleak stretch or
Baja California beach off
Poi11t San Lazaro.
Anothtr temporarily aban·
doned the race in tht Gulf of
California to In vts t I gale
mysterious nares that sup.
posedly siinalled vesse1 in
dislrtss. Th e "distrtssed"
\lessel was never found.
Wit. C1tll. 011 Ott. "' lt'V. "'-""· I NOlllY Ac1cl1. cor-dll Wr, C1Mf, w~lefl ....... •I.Kt 0 -011911 OctvMr 27, 1t10 l"lltllle 111 1rld IOI' wlcl Slit.I, --II• 0.IH S~ttmbtr t, 1t10 ulldlrtltl!O 111 t.11 -trtn ":"lftlttf ":
Kirawan, under 1 n 0 t h e r Ht•N T. C¥o11H11 ·-••"' ~r• o. ~,i, 1tl)OW11 "' '"' e. 0. w.,,..1"'1°" "'• -.1.11 of .. M~,-, bu' ,a!:':.: Thom.Ii 11:. illdl'I lo bl l!!e ~rMlll .-,_ """'* h 1~'1~ J1me. I". WtrFlll"lllOl'I rllOlltll\ tfttr Ir\ ""' Cll t owner, was later destroyed '''"'of c1111or1111, 011r111t Coun•y: ed to 111t wtt111n 1111•r-nt •lld RoMl't P, Wirmr,.111n ntll<t.
hll t ·•• I 1 N l 011 0t1oblr ~1. ltJO, ti.tort ll'lt. • .tellllOWle!Hled 111t t•ew•ecr !ht """· S1•,. of c11uorn11 0r1,,.e cou11rv· Cuttll S. .. eO¥n!Oll W C r,Ju•& 0 en er ewpot Hol•N P11bllc In 111d for 111\cl lltlf, tSEALI Oii SnltFllb9r 0
), lf10, lwk!rt 'fl'if, f ElltfUll)r.of 1M W111 vi I
Harbor on a stormy night. P1rM1MllY 1-.rec1 H•r,., T, cori1t1111 11111 M.•,~ ••,•,•1,_o•~,11_.,,, ,...,,,., PubUc; '" 1ncr ~r 1tlcl ''•f~ . ..,,,,."',, •1~ovf"•"'&"c~•~'dl) ' ' Thoml• •• Stacltt k/IOWll 10 '"' to ... .,.. 0 .,., u .... '" "'' "''°"111'1' "'""'" E. G. Wtrmlflt!On, .. • Two boats in that or1g1nal "''°"' w11o1e ,.._ 1r1 1ubK•ibtd to Pr111tro11 Ol11ei! 111 .hlll'lft I". w1rm11191vn. A111>1r1 P. w,,,,,. Att.rMJ• _. .__ . lb rll tftl wllftln 1111lrum1111 1nd .cknow ltdt«I Ort"111 (oimf• lnlllDll k11G#n tv mt to bt !tit ~n1 W CM"' Ori,,. race will be on e sta ng 111e.,. e•Kulecr the "'"'· MY comm1111011 £•Pl,e• wlloM "'"'" 1,1 iublcrlbtd 10 ,~, w1tM11 Ntw1111 lludl
line for this year's ra~ They tOFFICtAL SEALJ Aprn '· 1t11 1111tf"\lftll11t 111d ecMowleOttid 11111 Ill• c111"'1111 n ... ' MARY K HIHllV P11bll!Md Ottllfl Cotlf 0•11., PllOf, Klllwd lill llmw Att.......,•ftr IPC•W are Sweet's Jinker and Nor1..v P:.tM1c . c1111om11 °''aber 30 .,. NOYtfllblr " u. 111, (OFl'ICIAL SEAL) P11bl!lhfd Dr111p1 cont D•lh' Pf111'·
Doheny'& Kainalii ln addition Ptl11t!Ht ottk'I 111 ---1110 2011_1!. --OENEVIEVE..G.,..AME lf.AA Im IMJ.10 · O•t""I '°"""' NoltrY P11blk • CtUlorllll there will be one other skipper M., comml111o11< E•P!m LEGAL NOTICE Pr1nc:1,...1 ou1c1 1" f 1:"1':AL NOTICE
f th · .1 · th ' NO¥. U, lf12 Or..,...(_!., ~ rom e maugur-.. race 1n 1s P11bl1111ec1 Or•lltt' coe11 0111r l"llot l'-»MI M., c-1111o11 £•1~• ,,,,,,-.,, ., susntaa
·th •··t He ,., October n. :io 111111 NoYff'l'IOtr '· 1:1., '''' '''''' 0, '"''"'" -~--. ,.,., ,_ year WI a newer Utul • 1f10 1'7S.10 ~ICTITIOUS MAM• , bll,;::;.;""O,."';'~ Colil 011" PllOt l'ICTITIOUS •AM•
Ben Williams of LA YC with TIM undtl'll•-' ttrtlllff '""' 11 c-0<1; •, 1i, n. ». 1m 1w..1~ T'7 """"':!:::'. ~ ~:1't~
the Cal-48 Capricious JI. dll(:t11111 • bu1l...u 11 '1' ct111r Pl .. '"''' LE".. N-CE ;r,1 c"!t: MtH, c1u1om11, _.., 11'11 nc·
Will• • •. -1 ,.._ • • LEGAL NOTICE MHI. Cllttomll, llnder .... f1c1lt\ou1 tlffn UJU.o U.&.& !ltlovl ttmi ... ..,,. ot WESTEC CON· tams ongtnm \Aopr1c1ous 11111\e ol GAIY'S CUSTOM SHIRTS •1111 SULTA.NTS •lld NI lllcl firm .. Ufft-was a Bounty sloop 111" w!d flrm II cornPOWO e1 11111 lollow. POtfd f1I tlM fol1ow\ll9 ,..,-. ""'°" ' P.-U lll!iJ PC,_, ""1'loM 1111me Ill 11111 IMI PIKI l'·•lf """' 111 11111 11111 PIKI pf ~ h 1• 1be race was lattr turned ClllTll"ICATI •I' •utlNl!li °' rttklencl 11" foN-1: ClllTll'tCATI 01' COlt'O ... TION 1'011: to110w1: • • ._1 aff . be l'ICTtTIOUS NAMI Gtbtltl .. Lt Pont, flt (9dlr Pl~ TllANIACTIO .. 01' SUSINSSS UNDll C1rl J. Dunc,.., 12JG l.orRtolldtrl"'/, tnto a b1eMtiU air lo Tiit ulldlt1l1....0 do Cl1'11tY "'"' .,. Cost• Mell. C1llr. ••CTITIOUI NAMl Cost• Mell. Ctlllor!\11, sailed in November of even-COFMIUCll1'tll I bl!llMl.1 ,, ,., M.lt!!W Ave.. Oiled .. Octobe:_ •. 1' t THI! UHOEll$1GNED COllPOIATION °''" Dctobtt :rt, 1110. . . 811* 11111111. C1llforf!ll, 11"°'r tlM ulltrltl.,, 1111 don lllrtlw tltlllY tt..11111coftdllet!fl91 Ctr1 J, Dul!Ull numbered years to give skip-llcltloll• "'"' -of THE 1~1.ANO STAT£ OF CAL ORNIA. bu1IMll loc1t9d 11 '°'° Pit<enll• Aven111. Sith! of (llllornl•. Or11111 C01111fy:
pers planning lo make the HAllDWAlll! • SPorllrlt Good1 1l0<t 11111 o~~NGE ... COU ,',',..: .. ~--N I Cosll MIMI, C•!l!ornl1, '74)1 l.md<it "'' On 0cr~ber ,., 1f10, btfor•. -•.• lhll Hiii "'"' It c--.d ol 1111 follow. ""Oct r I _,.,,.. me. I 0 ,,., fl(Hlbn firm "''"' OI MARVA( ELEC· Nol•,., 11bllc In ltlCI for .. ""· Transpac in July of odd-111111 ptflDlll, wllOM ... _ Ill NH •lld P11bUt In 11\d tor Hid st•••· per-UV TRONIC-S 111d 11111 ll!d firm 11 compoHd ptl'10n1llv ·-·'"' Clrl J. OUnc•n
he d . h t pllttl Of rtllcllnc:t 1r1 11 followll: •-••f!d G4obl'lelll Lt '°"' klllWll le "'1 of !flt tollewlll!il <.-11lon, who.., prlfl. knri•n to ,,,_ 10 be the ",_ WM.., num re )ears a c ance o Alblrt "· Hot1a1111. 21, °'"'~·Bil. ~. tv bt tl'MI "''°" """°" "'"'' Ii iublcrll>-,1,.,1 •It<• of Ml""' 11 11 tot1owi: "'"" 11 1111'1Krltllod 1o "" w11~111 1". get back home and tune their Htllfl D. Holl1nd, 214. Oll1M, fltl 11. tel to 1'lle wl!Mn lllll<llmenl _,Id M. Y. ELECTRONI CS, INC., 1090 1lr11mtnt llllf KlttMIWllCl9td ht O.teijltd
Look Otct Fellows
How did the Mazatla11 ra~
come about? Largely through
the single.handed efforts of a
Newport Beach marine in·
surance broker who not only
(lrganized and promoted the
race, but sailed in the first one
and every one since.
Cr.rt l r th 2 22,nu.le haul t111ec1 0.:1.,_ 1. 1110 •10"•',~, •,-... ,,""' 1•eculwd t11t "'"'· Pl1c111!11 A..-enue, CMt1 M 111 tl'lfl ~·· 0 e , ,,.. Alblr1 F. Hot11nd CI C1lllo!'11t1 f2'JI fSEALI
.c-· the Pac"tc' Htl~ D. Holland Mlrt K. Mtnrv WITNEU lh h•llll ttll• 111 "" OI Mtry K. Htftl"I' '"" u • Sllll of Cilllornl• NOl1r., P11bllc • Ctllforlll1 Octobtr, lt70. NOii,., P11Dllt . C1lll1ln1l•
Hobie Alter (left) and Cappy Sheeley are so busy
congratulating each other on their c liff-hanger fin-
ish in the Hobie Ca t National Championship regatta
at Honolulu that they apparently fail to notice the
lovely blonde ''pussycat" who also wants to join
the admira tion society. Alter, designer and builder
of the Hobie Cats, finished second. only a quarter
of a point behind Sheeley in the breezy regatta.
The founder of the race was
Clark Sweet, oWM:r-skipper of
the 40-foot cutter Jinker. Jt
was Sweet, incidentally, who
abandoned the race to search
for the mysterious vessel in
distress. Being an ex Coast
Guard co~mander, Sweet
placed tht possible rescue at
sea above any thouf!'.hts of win·
lling or placing in the race.
The race caught On )ike no Or1n9t COlln"': Prlnc:INt Office In M. Y. EL.ECTROHICS, INC. Prl11tlo1I Offlct In On October 7, 1'70, btlo,. ,,,., 1 Holl'l' o,_e C011nl1 0-V.teditr Dr1npt CounfV other. The LAYC sponsors Public In •llCI tor 11ld SI•"· J>ei'WllllY Mv Comm luloll Exolttl Pr11l0tnt MV CommlHklll E.llPI ....
t d h•-tP!'ffrtd Albtrt T. Holl1nd 11111 Htlt!I D. Nov, 14, 1f72 fCOl'-lte 5"1) Nov. 24, 1tn now urn own many ")'ac 1..:1 Holtlnd lu>owll lo "" '" bt llM ···-Publllhtd Or•nvt Cttll O•llY Piiot, STATE OF CALll"OllNIA P11bll1Md Ot~ Cttd Dtl" l"llO!, which apply to make the race wllm• ,..,,,., 1r1 subtcrlbld to 111e wnhln 0c1. '· i•. n. JO. 1t1D 1•10-10 tDUNT'I' OF LOS ANGEL.Es. 11. Ckl<lber » 1nc1 Navtmbtl' " 13• ~
because of 8 limitation of 1n11n1m.n1 11111 1dl:11GWltd9" thtr ex· LEG" N-CE 011 tftl1 11t 0.1 of 0c1a111r, A.O. 1t10. 1t10 '°"' Kutecl llll Hrn1. r\LI "''' btfott ,,.., t Hot1rr Public In erid for LEGAL NO'nCS around 50 boats. The limit•· !OFFICIAL SEAL! 11ld c-1¥ •nd Sl1t1, Pll'$Clllll., •i>-1--------==------
tion is imposed by the size of ~;z,., 1CP11i~::;111rom11 "'~~\1' c'tii::1~i\.:'1~tA~~,~~L~:..X. ::W': 1o0!:0
io ~Af,;_H:~;,,~"':'~:e~ tlllTtl'ic•;~-:, st111 .. 1-. the harbor al Mazatlan. Prlnc:IPll OlllCI In MISSION ,, llle CllY Hiii, 11 F1lr c~•llon lllat ... 1C111td !tit wllf'olll Ill-f tCTITIOUS NAMI 0•111111 CounTY Orlv1, C-Mll Mev, C1llf11r11l1, 11 7:» ,,..........,, "" bfflllf o1 !ht COFllOl'tllon n.1 u11C11r1l1111d don nrttlY tM! " COft' The success of the race was ""~ Col'l'l111l11kln Ex11r11 P.M, °" 11 _, ,, -.rb11 t11trHtr11r lhtttl" nam911. '"" Kll-ltdslt'd to "" d11<flll!il 1 bu$lrie11 ,, 1111' H..W 1tw.,
. . ' , . Publllhtd Dr111111 (Oii! 011" Pllof, Ille lollolllllnt1 1pptlt1lio<l1. (Ofllclll $HU tlllous firm -01 AUTO tts Ind ~t ror~een early as is evidenced Hovtll'\bef' ''· 1tn "" Monda.,, Noven'lber '· n10. rrttrdlrw 11111 111C11 ~•t11111 exKvtld llll Mmt. cast• Mt11. ci1lfor11l1, w11c1« .,.,. fie-
by JS commurucahon from 0c1. '· u, 2J. JO, ltl'll lf.56.10 1. z-E•c...tllR P-11 .... 11-1 ... n. 11:oew1 o. HerD11 ,,.1c1 firm 11 ~ of tM to1'°"""111
Dick DeWitt A mong
Best Power Racers
Sweet conceived the idea for
the race after visiting fritnds
in Mazatlart and viewing the
excellent faci l ities for
terminating a race.
the 1961 LAYC P U h I ·1 C 1· t Y cor•Klt'd, for Etk11r o. H1fl001. m w, NoltlY P'uDllc oen(lll, Wl\oill 1111"'4! In fltll 1NI pl.C. ol Wlfi.on Strnt, Cast1 Mesi, Cllll,, for M1 Commlw.Jon E~1trt1 mldena 11 ,p ,.._,
chairman. Ray Wallace. to LEGAL NOTJCE =~i':Ur~i'.:;':.! :. ... 2~,:!;1c1! .IMCAI• .. ::;·~~~:~• ff= 9~~\Jt, nt \Ill Ul'lllll'lt,
Sweet. The letter was dated rwi. ,, "" fi rs t tnc:r1inrn1 of 1teve100-A".,"'"' •• Ltw o.1wc1 0cto0tr 1. im
M 9 1961 P.•M -nt of 711 1P>ll m w. WllWI Sltttl 111 S11'1'111119ll Will! ll'lKt GlkMl'I ay ' . Clll:Tll'ICATI! 01' IUSINISS wltll I ~uc1IOl'I 111 p1rlttt'1!11 of s tlll(tf L.n A ...... Ctllltnlll flMt Stele of C1Ufllr'lll1. Or•-c-111: "Just one month ago we l'tCTtT10U$ M.11M1 °"' pr_..,.,. 1oc111c1 11 ,,. ,.,.. m w, T.._., 0n Oct. L 1t1'. blfor• rM. • ,..,,.,
started . ho t th t "rl'it r.Hidl"lllMd don <••1111 "' " C'OI'>-Wllt1111 St'"', C.0.1• M111. c1111 .. "' • P'libllllold Ortl'llt '°''' 011.,, P11ol, Pl/bite In .... for .. w Sl1te. ,...._u., an epic a race a c1uc11,. • 111111rie11 ,, 1QOO wt11 eo.11· c1 tonf. Oct. '· u. n JO. 1110 1&1t.-10 _,...o tr1.1Ce Glkllr1t1 ·~ "' -"'
P'."1mi"1rs.to Ohe ahec~~~liclbielhn· =~·~ ,:= t1~,.,.c~:'-;~1:,: '·.:r"':.!tT'~ ~ml~m~··i:·1:~':i LE·c•• N-cE ::·~:: i:r~ :,:-,.,;u::=.
.. Bespectacled Dick DeWitt of
South Gale, who emerged dur-
ing the year as one of the top
men of the sport, was con·
firmed Thursday as one or the
four national champions for
1970 in offshore powerboat
racing.
De\Vitt. 4 2 • y ca r ()Jd
manufacturing executive who
emphasizes that he only races
for the sport of ii. was 0£-
fici alty credited with l ,000
points, highest total earned by
any race in the nation driving
a t r i p le-outboerd-powered
boat.
DeWitt also finished second
overall to f.iia mi Beach eye
surgeon Robert ?..1 a g o o n
among all the outboarders.
Inboard division titles went to
Bill \V ishnick of New York in
the overall and twin engine
(liOO to J.!XJO.cubic inch
d is pl a c.e men t l inboard
categories, and to Bill Martin
oC Clark, N.J. amor:ig the
single-engine i n h o a r d s .
Magoon was quadruple out·
board king.
Announcement of final 1970
Point totals was made by Ross
Bennett Sr. of Ft. Laud erdale.
Fla. Offshore Division Vice
preside'nt of the American
Powerboat Association, follow-
ing last Sunday's final cham-
pionship points race of the
sason -the Ha\\'llii Offshore
Challenge al }fonolulu.
Ben netr s announcement
was made through the Pacific ~Offshore Powerboat Racing
Association which sanctioned
the Honol ulu event .
DeWitt, who also enjo:ii:s
sailboat racing. is joined in
offshore po'verboating by hls
brother, Bill. who SC Mies as
nauigator-mcchanic aboard"
lhe 27-fool Magnum hull
All osaurus. powered by U!ree
135-horsepower Mercury out·
boards. •
They·vc been r~ci.~g less
than two years. Last June
they fi nished fourth in the
.Bahamas 500 in the Caribbean
(not an APBA race) to record
the best performance in an
eastern eve nt by a West Coast
driver.
Upset outboard winner over
Mjlgoon in last April's Long
Beach-Ensenada Internati onal,
Oe\Vitl finished second lo the
Floridian in both the Long
Beach }lennessy Cup and th e
Catalina Challenge Trophy
races in August.
Also finishing among th e
J970 national leaders was
Peter Rothschild of Newport
Dwight Bale
Ta kes Race
Beach, two-time P 0 P B R A
champion whose 600 points
placed him fourth ir:i the
overall inboard list with his
twin 496-Cu. inc. MerCruiser-
powered Cary hull, Thun-
derballs.
The 3G-year old oil company
vice president missed adding
to his national tally when he
was winner in the inaugural
169-mile Hawaii race around
the island of Oahu, but lost of-
ficial points by missing a
checkpoint.
Overall. there· were "five
West Coast racers among the
15 who earned division points
by finishing one or more of the
seven championship races -
three of which were in the
West -and 11 in the outboard
ranks, including V a I e r i e
Holwerda of Los Alami~. the
first woman to appear on the
official list.
Miss Holwerda, with
navigational aid from another
department store advertising
copy writer. Trish Speak of
Los Angeles, finished fourth
among outboarders in last
August's Long Beach Hen-
nessy CUp, race as the first
all·girl team to compete in
full·fledged Offshore Class
competition in the west.
Points are scored separately
for inboards and outboards in
all races, with 400 to each win.
ner. 300 to the runner·up. 27S
to third place, etc. on a
declining scale 20 places deep.
National offshore racing for
1971 begins Nov. 6 with the
Hennessy Key West race in
Florida ..
Long Beach
Sail Show
Ends Soon
With the only Mexico races
at that lime being the
N!latively short 1 2 5 -m i I e
Ensenada race and th I!
relatively long 1,430-mile San
Diego lo Acapulco ract, Sweet
figured that the 1,000..mile
Mazatlan race would not only
be an ideal length. but would
provide some 5pirlted 5ailing
across the Gulf of California
from Cabo San Lucas to the
popular fishing resort at
Mazatlan. Ma11y yachtsmen
were already familiar with the
downwind sail down the coast
or Baja.
But Sweet dichl't have an
easy time selling the race. He
first broached It to the Long
Beach Yacht Club and was
tumed down. Still convlnced
that the yachtsmen would
welcome such a race, Sweet
losstd the Idea to Los Angeles
Yacht Cl.ub where it mel with
a littl e more emthusiasm.
The early April start was
selected as being an excellent
time of tht year for cruising
the Mexican and Baja coasts
on the way home.
In addition to Sweet's
Jlnker, the 1961 entry list inc-
luded E. L. Doheny's 75-foot
ketch Kamalii; Stuart Cram-
er'! Kirawan; Glenn Roland's
La Volpe; Dick Lerner's Gant·
in: E. H. Spaulding's Misty ;
Ben Williams' Capriclow; Ro-
bert M. Allan Jr.'s ~loliday,
and Richard McDonald 's Wind·
spun.
Lerner's Gamin was the
boat that was grouJtded and
destroyed off Poiftl S a n
Lazaro. stranding the aew for
more than • Wttk.
Eight Teams
lrt Douglas
nta a 811'. n ucu 0 e Gll:OGG ARTISTS .. ANO OESIGNEltl Pt1ce, Cost1 Mell, C1llt., lot /1.U Ul l t'dttid ~ exKlrtM lhol W'"'·
Mazatlan Race Committee of 11111 11111 u 1c1 '"'" 11 mmPOMd .,. "" _.m1111cw1 10 tn11111 11111 -·•'• • (OFFICIAL sEA.L) tvllewllll "''°"• WhoM "'"" 111 11111 1tor1111 v1rd for botl1, lr1!11r1. MARV BETH MOll:TD,.. the Los Angeles Yacht Club, l uld 111n ot r11ldtllc1 11 a1 fo1ll:Nrl: cAmPlrt •rid o!Mr tnc:1~111s 1" 1d-NOTICI OI' l"UILIC Hl!AllMG l lEl"Oll No11..v Publ tc • c111g11ll sincerely hope !hat you and all Tllom11 Grot11. JOIJYt Hlll'moll dlllDll 10 cont!11u1111 ..... Ult of It'll THI CITY COUNCIL 01' THI CITY PrlntlNI Otllc• In , , AYtnut. Htrlftftl Bt•Ch. C11\I, resldllKtl tor rnldenlltt J111r-e1, Dll 01' PO UNTAIN VALL•Y Or11111 Caunfy hands enjoyed a roaring good Otlfll October 1, ,,10 JIFllCltrf., locllt'd II "' Vlcl1lrl1 SlrPll, MOTICll!! IS HEREBY GIYEN 11111 Oii M1 cornrnloslon Expll'PI ·1 d th 11 ( THOMAS S GROGG (M!a Mesi, C1Hf .. In I CJ t-. TIH!ldlV Neven.Mr 10 1t70 II l·OI) p M A•tll t, 1f71 sa1 an e ex c e en 5111, 01 c1111orn11" J. 1-E•<••ll011 P•""" H•. 11.-111-n, 111 Ille c~ncu Cft•rn~rs. ci1Y Hill 1o":ioO Pub11!1Md or1n11 c11111 Dl1" 1"11111, hospitality displayed by our Or1n11 (ounTY: tnr Moc111t1r T~ftnalotV~ .111<., 110. I. 51i!er A.venue, Founllln y 1j1 e y, Oct. t, )j, n, JO. 19111 1M1·70 • , On Oo:fobtr I, 1t70, bltort me, 1 Nollrv 17'11 Slrttl. Sin!• AIR, Ci1U,, for C.ilfornli, 1111 (lfy Counc:lt wlll hold 1 l----,,cc,,-O"C===:---graclous Mexican hosts. Lets PuDllc In •I'd for 111<1 S1tt1, oer:son1u., """luloll lO •dcl ind ll'llinftln • 10 fl. oubnc 11eir1n1 Dll the 1o1towfnt1 : LEGAL NOTICE hope the next race to 1ppe1rti1 Thom1 .. GrvtJ11known10 "'' •n • 20 11. rider on the 1d1tl111 t1mpar1rv 1, 0,.1,..llCI r• An::~lttdllf'tl c1111!'91, _____ 7 =:------. , • bl f~I PIJ'Wrl WMll lllmt II lUbtC<lbt<i dlrtellCl'tll 1l9n lo direct P'OIPICllYe Olslrtcl -Q,clll\l»CI t1t1bllll!lnt $110-1 · ntl that delightful city will be big-to tl'le within lns1'11"'"'1 •nd 1<kflCIWltd1-bu.,t r1 to "" 11ew ''""' No. uu 1"•1 pltmtnt11 u11 z-AC 0111t1ct lO e,.. CEllTl,ICA~·, o~ 1usn•••
ger and more enjoyable than !tiF";l~~;.'("'::A'tl 1tme. (~11 ":..e~·~e:in.1~1l:-1~0111~1~:J";i ~~~~7 :;11t•P~11~1111 .~"':.I'!:;! ~C'l:IT':! =:,: M ti
ever." M•rv IC. Henry 1 ~«11 ~~' A~:;,:11~-c,:;. 21°f:' itMwe t1c11111n 111 tnt 1re1 1ur11111Mlno llM Cl• 11~,u':""bllil= ,, 111• ar-AV:,
Gordon Curtis Jr., chairman ~~:~~-11g::~:;·:~orn 1 a11r'"1c.11i0m~r ttlto"-l:M-'2.U .,.. "" ti 1 "'cf:::;M. ,.. 11:nHt11tlll 2"'1~1 c,~l.~ Mt11, ~c','",orillr,11"': ~ H~.;
r the !'~ 'f ti f o' t Count., Ille office o1 t11t Pl1~nl"" DfPICJl'Nfll, · 0 " -• -' .... 11..,... 11tme"' • O 11"'~ J• aza an race or r "'II 11 * n l"ilr Drlw COii• M•i• " '' 11111 trn"'"'"' .. ''" !lmi k c_....:! of"" 11111ew1111 ""911•
LAYC le S t. M., Cornm!HIDll £•1lrn ~fotlll • • ' , fW Din..., 1f ,..,.... DIW'-"'-1' wMW,,..... In twll t'ld 11KI of rtlldt!Kt • wro wee . NOY. ,,, ltn Cll •. •1111 • ....,k "''"'· L II lollowt• "I ~-ould like to take this op-'llbll"'" Or11191 Cottt 0111¥ ,~,:; ~g~ls~fc:'~ Pl.ANNING ,_ ..... ,.., ... ,. .. llflln• CllMll•lltl AcUlfl • HtclOr v. sou, ,,., W•!lftl"""I . Oct. f, 1'-n. )0, lfl'll CHARLES BECK, CHl.IRMAN ,....,,Ill l"rl<tM , ... Ht. lSt, det'll1I AWftUI, C111t1 Miit, Clllftmll port.unity on behalf of LA Y.C Wlhllfll L. eun~. Sfcrtltl"I' •nlf of _.,ke ''"'°" 11 oau11w111 corT11r ot 011ecr October u, "10. to thank you for your splendid L CE 01r1c1or of P't1n111111 11.-i-11n1 Strttt 1f'ld T11t1trt A"""''· ~· Y Son . . . EGAL NOTl PvbllsMd °'"'" C:O.it Otlt'!' Pli.,t, fCOlldltlGl'I U Ot' Rttolulloll Ho. 11M21 b., $TAT£ OF CALIFORNIA. help and cooperation ID mak-Oo:toblr lit, lf10 ,,, .. 10 Hewbtrl"'/'1 oe111. Slort. ORANGE COUNT'!': · the M tl -~ IS TIMM -~ •r• tllllM •rocttHCI On Oct, U, 1f1'0. befert -· 1 N1111rv mg aza an race ;:IU\;U • Clll:Tll'tCATI 01" SUll N ' ftll!'llllfit "' "" ~illlnlllo L-of t1'e Pllbllc 1fl llld I« Hid II•"'· --11¥ success. Rarely do we find a Tiii 111111;!~,!.!tlO.:! ~:,::'~"' 11 con-LEGAL NO'nCE s11t1 of c111tor1111 (GC1"''1. Cale •s.mo et -•red litc1or Y, sou. kllJIWft "' -.-. '·'' led ho _ _. ~· M l I nu E GHii Hltll--·' •nd '"' F .. nltlll Y•lllf'f lonlne be Ille P1r1011 wlloM 11111'1'11 II wDKtlftd person so ~ca -w uvt "' • -• • 11n1 Onfl,,.""" Thi 1a111ne ordlnenct. hftl111 111 lfll wtt11111 1rmrvrn.nt .,. ld.MW1"t"
an! h t de I to d "''' ,_, .,.. Mir "'2S. Cllltorlllt, •· M""' •11111 Eld!lbl" •re on fllt In "" Id hi fMKlllld "" Hme, y as a grea a 0 under tlll tkll!lO\tl llNll lllmt pf lllYOA Cllll:Tll"!CATI! 01' t UStH l:JJ Plilllllllll Ot!f•rl"*'I Pftd .,.. 1v1ll1blt , .. ,, .. , "'" • 'tb b · • bout th MAHAGEMl!:HT CO. Mid tlllt ~Id firm l'ICTITIOUJ NAMI f bile f ti _, l lllon ,. WI rm~1ng a l ke race, 11 Qln\llOHll ., "" folklwlllll ...,.'°", T"4!o Ullderllol'!l!d e1e c:erlll'I' ""°' ,,, ii;,:. ""7; :'tnt1r.,"~m1:vor.;, 1,, ~:'!'.!:~:ire . Ctllfor"'• but organizes and a es part ""°" "'"" 111 tun 1N PIKAI o1 m,. condll(:llno • 1>11111'111• 11 117 "111""1" _.1111111 ta lllest ,_...,, win be 111en Prlnclo•r 0111c. 1~ in it too " dltllCI II II IOllawi: Slretl, APlrtrnlnl a, Newport 811<1;, Ill -1\lnllY '° clO t(I, II lurlhlr In-0•1"111 ,_.., · Bt)'Mlll E, HlC~INn, 1&>31 CrlflbrVOk C1llfOml1, under ll'MI flcflllolll ll<m ftf"11! torrriellon 11 Otslr" "°" ml'l''COnllcl llw! M1 COll'W!llHlon E•tlrM With 50 or more boats lak· or .. 11n11 A'll. c1111. ot l.R.i.c., • .,,,...,.,,IP 11111 th•t Hfd Pl111n1111 De11n~1 ,, ffl·2•2~ 111d rllff JuM n. un . rt . th J ( Oiled Oclober" 25, lt lO firm 11 aom.o:Md of lftl tollowl"' J11r111n1, to ltle 1bcw1 llm11 p bllshed Ori,,.. Cotlf 0.11¥ l"llol, 1ng pa In e ast WO races, llNIOft E. Hlck11t1n wl>osft "'l'MI In full Ind llKH el CITY couNc1L OF THE-0 ~ 16, 23. » tnd No\'llftMr .. how prophetic can you get°' STATE OF CALIFO"HIA, rt1ldenc11,.t IS lollow.: CITY OF FOUNTAIN VAL LEY If~ r 1fl"Pll ' OltANGE COUNT'!': M..,.cu• D. P•1llow, 10:11 I!. U!h MIN I Cole
On Oc1. 11, 1'10, before ""' 1 Nol11V Strffl, Lont 911cft, C111f. C!IY c1ei1t ' LEGAL NOTICE Puti~c In •I'd for 11111 s111e, P••S(lnttlv t:tooert J. 9•ker, 21n1 er11111 Circle, •vbllihed O••l'llll• Cotll OlllY Pilot, l---===:;:i,i.;'CCC::.---tooe1rfll 81Y1on E, Hlek11t1n know11 lo Hu11t!nolot'I 8P1cll, C1lll. .......,Mr lO lfJO 1'11•10 T....,1 me 11 b9 .,,. HrlOn whole n1me II WJ1t11m H. Mc(Orll'llC~. 1m C1rt1 • NOTtc:I TO ClllDl'TOll:S i11blcrlbecl to It'll wlthl11 ln1lrumellf tnd Str-et, G1rdt11 Groye, C11ll. SIJf'llllOll CDUllT O• TM• n AT• 1ck1111Wltdllttl Ill tKICultd !tit Mme. W1rd A. TholftOIOll. 2"651 llht• Orl..-e, LEGAL NOTICE DI' CALll'OllMIA "II: THI (Ollkl•I S..11) M!11lon Vltlo. C1Ut. COUNTY O' OllA ... I MIN IC, Htnl"I' . Jol'l11 McA1111.,, 12l "'· C1roustl S!ttel, ~ .-..i1n • Hotl'l' l'ubllc • C1llfot11l1 An6ftt!m, Ctllf. T.US2 E'1t1te of f;llED P. LEAMING, t l'M Prlnc:IH1 Oflltt In Victor J, C~•an• 1422 APOiio A..-enllft, NOTIC• TO ClllOITOllS known •1 F, P, LEAMING. DecNIM, Or1nt10 Cou11ty An1 hel..,, C1llr. su•111101 COUllT 01' THI! NOTICE 15 HEltEllY GIVEN to "" Nov. ''· Im Clllrlt1 It. llndlf, 10l6 IEI DorlclO iTATI 01' CAL11'011N1A 1'01 utdltors ol tllt 1bowol 111rnM clKMtn'I
Jack West In Monsoon II 1"11bll1Md Or11111 Co.ti D1tl't Pltot, Orlve, Fulltrlon, C1lll, THI COUNTY o,_ OllAHGI 11111 Ill "'""'" lllWlnt c'llllM "''Ml ,,,. Octoblt :Ill 11111 HOYtmOlr ,, ll. 10, Hertltrt L lllumtt01d. 1H7 w. ,. .. A~711t llkl declcllnl .,.. '9C!Ulrtd to fllt '"""· from the host San Pedro Yacht 1t10 20»10 Cft11t111, An1ri11m, C•llt. EU•" ., AMIEE L. 51MMONS. w1111 111e necHHl"I' -"'"' 11111'11 offltt Rlc:Nrd J, McCl11l111, 7«13 G•H11btltr DKllHd. of ttlt cl1rtc of lilt .... ..,tll\tlf court, OI" Cl ub successfully defended LEGAL NOTICE Ave ....... An11111m. c1111. NOTICE 1s MEREl!IY G1VEN '" t1111 to ol'IHl'lt !lllfn, with ""' """11" .,_ Ull • th El tr · p R•!Pft S. 51<:~111. I., Fllttt111h SI'"'' crtil!lor& of l!'le 1tlclov1 111mtd d~edtnt 'IOlldltrJ. lO 1tle imclen!IMd tf t1M oflk:I Ul3 e m e ec on1c re. ""'· 8, NtwllJlrl Be•cll. Ct lll. "''' 111 PlrlOnl hlvl"' cl1lm1 11111111 !he of her tlloole"fS. SHEPl"AlltO. MULLIN, dieted Log Race Sunday. MOTIC ::.:.•:,1C,l~~s"5"1• Hertlt n L, llllfnPOl.t llld clK ........ f ••• tll'llllted lo 11\t 1111m, RIC"TER ' HA,IAP'TOM, 61 SOUfll S.rl11t w l (Sic• ,,11 -'"' 11.c.C.} WU!l1m H. McCcmild: wltft ,,,. llKftHt"f' YVllCl'ltn. 111 th• offke Slrttl, Loi Allffltl, -Cllltorllla torn:i. est's percent o error was Notice 1, ritretw •l~•n 10 i11e CrtdTlOn ward A. ThornPiOll o1 ,,,. tie.ti ot 1111 11xw1 ... 1111td C011rt . .,.. wi.1c11 It !ht plact ti 1111a111n1 ., ,,,. only ,413. of HirrY A. IC1lld.lrl1n. TtlNltror, wlMlff Johll MCAlllf'f' 10 •rt1111I 1htfrl, wlft; Ille MC"li"' un6ttll11'1111 In Ill lftltllll'I Pll111111nl '-111111 cld I '1070 9 ICll fl lYll Vicic<" J, C1ron YOllCl!eri. to !ht ~enlpl'lld 1r 11'1• oHl<e ltM! 1tl1t1 DI' 111d cllclldtfll, wllllln lout 1be electronic log. race . ts H1111:l'~',.,: ~~.I ,_.., ~ or • ....,: Rlcll1rCI J. McC1ttL1n ol M1 1ttor,..,1. GREENIERG ' lftllflllll Iller Ille llUI PllbllclllOll " 11111
a special pred.icted log event si.1t., c1111or1111, "'"a Dutk 1ren11er 11 ~~~ J0·11~:~1ow MAGEE.''' South flevetl.,. D,tv•, kvv-111111c•. · h h f I J • . 1tloul I• b9 "''di tv Lu S. How1,C1, 1n Rlli>h S · $ed<tlt IY Hlll1, C1tltornl1 90212, wllldl 11 Ille 011" October 11, lt10 10 w IC on y e ec roruc naVJ· 11nm1rr l9d wam111, T,.Nle•Pe. WllOll , .. 1e1 it Zlndc• lllKI ol DullMH ol""' 11ndfrtlol'llll 111111 DESSIE H. LEAMING
g ti I d ·1 (;"0 g bu1IMH lddrtH It 1to1f Tudor Streif, I 'i•--J' m1l!ff'I Pfflilllll\ll to lllt t'llllt of .. Id EXKlrttll ol 1111 Wiit ti a ona an p1 o Hoe e a r COY!ni. c°"""' OI Los Allffi.s. stir. of s0•,•,'!.. &0 ,'!!.:~." •· __.,."'· wu,.111 1aur rnon1111 '""' ,... 111e •bOY• ntmed ""'""'·
he ··--"' ,,. ,,..,,,, II 1 ... 1~1 tlct. $MrPPAIO, MULLIN, Can UM:U. C1tlfornl1. On Oct 1 it10 btlc>rt IN 1 N~lt1' flrit PUtl Cll Oll .., "' llG lllCHT•ll a HAMPTO N
lhe I . . lhe Tiie or01N1r1¥ to bt trtnil••t'd 1J loclltd ' ' ' ' 1... 01t" OctoDer 14 1tJ'O •• 111 5 _.__ JlrPll 0 rs p acmg 111 COn-ti ?10111 Buch llYll,. H""llfltlall llitdl, Publlc ln end tar 11!d Sl1t1, It•-,. DOUGLAS C. SIMMONS '• SOii '"""
t t . COllnlY of°''""',, ... of C1llfoml1. ·-rte! Mln::u1 D. P1n•-· Robert J. EIKVIOr °'!ht Wfll of ,'" ••. ·.~ •••• , ... ·,.<•,,' ... •I~ "*11 es were. Stld PtOPl!rfY It cleKrlDtd In 1ener1I 81ft.,., Wlllt1m H, McC«mldl;, W1rd A. l!'le 1bQ\<l 11tmed dleldtllt. His Grace George Kaye 11 . T110m11w11. Jolin M'Avll!'Y. vktor J. 011:11H1E11G • MAGii iltt.,.,,•r1 tw E•.telrlfl• . ' ' "All lhltk In Ira.di! tlxtu•" IQllllll'l'ltlll Ctron, Cft1rles II , :l!nc:~1, Htrtltrt L. MJ 11'111111 ............ DrL'l'I P11b!IWCI D•llntt Cotlt 0.1" l"Uol, HHYC, .519; Ronjumar JI, '"" pllll(I will of l~•I coui'.i111, studio e111mvold, Rlchtrd J. M(C1t11•" •1111 ih¥11'tv HUr1, C•IL!tl'Rlt "211 Octctitr 1•, 23, » •n• NOYtl'l'llltr '· Fred Woodward LBYC MR· 11u1111en known •• Merle Nor"''" R1IPh s. Stc:ke,., known tv,,,. to b9 ltlt T•h ,,IJJ 214-ffOt 1910 lfl .. 11> ~ . . • • · ' CO'lmtllc Sludla 1nd loc1ttd 11 210111 HrllDlll who11 ""'"" 1r1 sublcrlbed to Afflrltll'l fw •~tcultN' Saram1 II, Winterer, SPYC; lle•<ll BIYlf .. Hunllnolooi 81•<~. Coun,.,-!ht w1tht11 1n1lr11m111t Ind 1cltnowlti11" Pwb!l1hld Or1np Cotlll Derr., Plr111, LEGAL NOTICE
.816;. Shipmates, .Bob Wilson, ;~0'i:,'::'ff!~'111~,".~r1::r~!:,·,lll'l'lmatld ~~F~~11~':~~11"''· 'f:,'f'r ,,, 'l. JD '1111 Hov""~l1.1~ • , .. ~-miJ .... ·-·
Monsoon II
Wins Again
cup~· Series cl YC,SJP.3Y9C; Mardi.i, Max Zieg-:; :.~'e;, '~m~~t~·.,,.;~~:~~be~. 17,~,; N:i':.. Pu::i':~c.11tor1111 LEG .. N-"'-cE ClllTJic~i\1:u~' .. -...u,:~Nbl
The 1970 S.1.1,._1 Show tr, , 4.56. st .• co111 Mt11, C011nl1 of Ortnot. s111e Prl..clo1r Olflc1 In ""'-' Vl'I Ti,. undt••ltnft 11o certt11 111n 1,1 -;:============;,lof C1tltor11l1. Orlflltl Count-, CON:111c1l11!i1 1 butlr1111 tt nt 0.:..n A'lf,0 sponsored by the Southern Eight teams of collegi"ate !lo 11r 11 ~nown to Ille Tr1n1ftrt1, 111 Mv Comm!1tlon E•Pl'tt sUl"ElllOll COURT o• THI L1111t11 111c11, C•. '26$1, ""°"' "" flc-
LOCAL tou1lnt1s ntmtt Ind lcfd rttlll used b'I' Nov. U. IPn JTATI 01" CALl,OllNl.t f'Oll 1\llout flt1'11 111rn1 ti 1.AGUNA Ol"l'ICE California Marine Association sailors started competition to-Tr1nf!lrot fol' 1111 tll•f't re•'' l••I p111, II ,11bll1111d Or•n111 CO.II Di ii'!' P'llol, THI COUNTY Of ORANGE EQUIPMENT 11111 11111 Mk! ttrm •• '°"'""
d Ofll1renl trorn Ille 1lxwt, 111: Oct.'· It, lJ. llO ,191'11 115'·10 ti .. A-47511 POsed ot Ille fo.llewl'°" --. wPloll en s Sunday at the long day in the Douglas Cup match No 1th1r "1ws p1p1r tell• .,011 •• • .. ~. ··-· ''· ,,_ L.EGAL NOTICE MOTICI! OI' Hl!AlllMO 0111 Pl:TITION 1111l'l'lff 111 ruu 11111 11.ce1 of rm1c11nc:1 .,., Beach Arena. racing series off l..()na Beach 11'1011, • .,.,.., c1 • .,. 1\iout whit'• ..,.,.,.,. •¥ -~="'""~"'""'"'='--I P'Oll: P'IOSATI OF WILL ANO FOii •• toll-•: •oe ~ Lte 5. How1rd N6TICI 01' TllUSTl:l'I SALi LE"lllS TllTAMl!NTAltY (IOND OOll'fll11 A, P1rt, ffOt CMll!ltltfr Stan Miller. chainnan of the Harbor. goi119 °11 I"+"• Gr1•1•1 Or111t • Tr•n111ru . ,.,, ,.un WAIVIOJ Rd .. M.l.,.rm. c1. "'°'
ho ·d d th' The · · he' ·led Jn Co11t th 111 th1 DAILY PILOT. Publlthtd Or-• Cot1! 011" l"!lo4, On Frid••• Dectrnbtr '· 1t10. •' 10;00 Ell•I• cf DOROTHY s. MUSGllAYE, M1rlon 1. P1rti. MG CPMlnlklHt' 111., s w. sat crow s IS ytar series IS • mg sat Oo:tOMr :Ill, 1'70 ~IO A.M .. CALIFORNIA LANO ANO IN· 1l10 kl'IOW'ft II DOROTHY II, STEWART A1111>tlm, c •. '*' ha\•e been about on a par with Columbia·26 Mark 11 sloops. VESTMENT COMPANY, I CO!'DOtllklll "' MUSGRAVE. Dlce•led. 0111(1 Ott. IJ, lflO d11,., tl>Plll"ltlf Tr1111H ll'ldet' 11111 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Tlo•I H1r. Oou11l11 ,t... 1"1rtc ' last year and that a heavier Skippers drew by lot Thursday 11u,,u1n1 to o-i ot Tnn.t d•t" se.. ,1.,,, M111tr1,,. hos tl!H Mreln 1 Ht!llOll Mlrlon 1, P1rtc than normal attendance is ex· to select the boats they will 1"'1\ber '· 1'61, ••ecvlld"" c. w. Htller, IOI' Ptobllt ol Wiii Ind lor lnv1nc1 DI' STATE OF CALIFOIHIA. •at the LONG BEACH ARENA 1 """1" "'"'' 11 ~11 HHrtle ,,_..,, L1ntr1 Ttsttrlltflr.r, la Pf!llloner, ORANGE COUNT'!': pected this weekend it the sail for lhe entltt series. _, T1M1n KorM1. inc. • ~•tlorl. m.rtne1 tv ""1c11 Is m16t for rv'""'' °"' Oo:lobtr ll. 1t10, """" ""' 1 ·-. l bl ki dol,,. bulllleH ., Mew Del M•r DIY't~ Ntlle11!1,,, •1111 !Nol ,,,. llmt Ind 11lc1 OI Noftrt Pvblk 111 *"" fir "" "'''· weatucr remams avora e. S ·ppers and crews made a '""'' co. 1 1o1n1 wn111r1, 11111 r1<orcltd tlflrt111 1111 Hm1 "'' been .. 1 tor penon.ii Hv -*'" Doutlill• "· P•'11 ,,...
Dealers and exhibitors l l toor or the O>lumbla Yach'-OCT. 23 • NOV..1 *lembet ••• 1'61, ts lnitr. Ho. IOUi'. Ill N11111mber u. 1f10, II t:-10 -.m .• 111 Ille Mlrlor> I. P•i11 llflOW!I 111 !flt II bl IP>t wo DOOk 5150, Pll• "3, o1 Ofll(ltl Rtcordl I" courtr_,; ot o...nmt111 Ho. f o1 p ld 111rM111• wllow 11-trw l.ub•Hlllld II the show report brisk business Plant in Costa Mesa 1"urJday "" Jllfke of tlM CWRIY ll:toCllr'dtr of C0'"'· II 100 Clwlc Ctnl~t Ort ... Wul, In ""' wlllllll IN!~ .... -*'-~
d 't the l I Or•,,.e COVIii¥. C1llton111. WILL Sl!LL ""' CllY ol 1.111111 Allll Celllorl'lll. '""" ••KlrtH rttt ltl!W. esp1 e curren econom c and later were guests at a~ A'J PU8LIC AUCT ION TO HIGHEST 0.1" October 23. 1'10. COlflcl•I Sffll slowdown. Largest.boat in the ception at the Ne--Beach SHOW HOUIS: 11ooe11 FOil CASH ,,..,,1>11 •• """ of w. E. ,T JOHN, OOt'lllh'I' w . .w,..:1,
h .. _. ~ ft1.v5 • 11 MJ. .lllt 111 l•wlul "'°"""cf !ht UnllH Sl•tttl COUnTY c1~r11; Nof•'l' l"ubllc. C•llllmll s ow, the Morgan-42, has been home of Lanny Coons, former n~ ..,.._, • ~· r m 11 111e s.ov111 lrD11t ent•enc• to '""' Old AIMrt A,. t1111111R ,.,111~1 ... 1 Diiie• iii
.. Id O(ll·clafs ~rted Th II . le ·1 d $'l'UllD•-• or111te c:o11111¥ C-ourlhollM "" w111 "" '"' H1,.... ._..,..,. Or•• c-111 • ' • ~ • e CO tgiat 581 Of an MW I "" l"\1 _,. Sl<l!ll, Cit¥ ol S1nl1 Ant, C1ltforn!1, 111 Slllfrl Numlltr )II M1 Comml5lllHI ,...,.._
price tag was nearly $,fo,000. member of the Columbia finn. 12 NOON TO 11 PM r11hl, 1111t •nd 1ntt-r1~1 conv..,ei1 '° •NI c..11 Mt11, c111..,,,11 mu !>IPf. n. 1'1'
One Of them~ popular sec-Four se~ea of racea w1·11 he -~•Id "" u undtr wld Dffd or Trust '"' 1110 M-M:llt P'utllsfted or1n11 <••t o.11.,. 1"1io1, v.M fl SUNDAYS, 111 Ille 11,_rl'o' 1llu~ltd In lh• Cl.., 01 Al........, fir •.tit~ . Oc.!obtr l'-SJ, » tnd NOY9mbtr lo
lionS of the show is that of lh"e s11ited today and three on '"'' Mn~. in 11ld '°"""' lflCf S1•1• P11bu1111c1 or"'" CO•lf o.u., 1t1lo4. 1t70 1,,,_,.
British Bo at i n'g Industry's Saturday. The match race 12 NOON TO 7 PM ""xl~~4·~~ TfKf Ho. 47'S. •• ,,_,. Dll 0c~'~"'~'cM~. ~M':.·~~~·.C'~"~'----''~,,.~·~1·--r:;;;::..::-Nimii'io--
sh. nd Bo 8 J J d 1 Mio rt<O<'dl'O 111 fl06ll 1.tt, l"•tn :rt, LEGAL NOTICE LONG BEAC•I (A.P) 1p a at ~r s series is patterned after the '°· 31 •nd :n of Mrx1111-11 Miios, LEG.. N~CE · Federation. ,......,,._..,;onal Cup in whl-'" reaord• 01 Or111t1 C01111tv, C•U1orn11. ......, ""'' Dwight B11le of Walnut Ctttk '"""''6'"'-\:11 s.1c1 .. ,. wlll bt ,,,ldt, ""' wtfflolrl pl.lot~ Li.ckely Spilt 157.8• The British are ex · itin every crew races every other c°"'.,,."' or w'"'""'· ulll'tts or ll'l'llUP<1.1------------~· ' th. [ di h -tt11rdl11t !Ille, POS1111klll. or -IUPl:ltoll COURT Of TME miles per·hour Sunday to take every 1ng tom Dg ;es in tbe tWO days of competition. c\lnltltaMfi, It HV t1M tf!l'lllllllnt 1rl"" ITATI 01' CALIPOllNIA ,Oil
hy 33-foot sailOOat plus a wide ar-. The Dougl•s CUp .... n •t up cJ011 tum of th• llG .. NCllnd "" Wld THI COUNTY 0, OIAMOI the blown futi:I hydro trop in ,.M Dffd of Tr1111, io.w111 114.s.s.oo. wi"' 1~ Nt. A,.,,., the National Drag B 0 at ray of hardware, acetQOrieJ by Mr, Ind Mr!. Donald llf'ttl ~ M.111 10. '''°' tt Ill Nici llol1 NOTICI ot HIA,lllNO o• PETITION •• , dacron "·· Douglas Jr. -ldtd •• .,.nett. " 1111. 111111111" "" ,o• l"Aoe.t.T.: o,. w1L1. AMO P'Oll Assoc iation national cham-e11ou. w~ It!'"• 111 Mid Died of Ttutt. ftn. c111~ l1n1ts T1J1'AMJ11TA1t'I' '" o ..., l ltMllWI ol 11'11 Trll''" •ftd ot ltlt IDNO) pionships before 13.000 sptt· trutts Cl'Nled II'!' llld Delll of Tr1111. E•l•l• of MINNIE MAY IOYO, •·1 · Lo n--• Man·ne l1'lt btnflkltl"I' vt111tr 111d DeH ., Otc111111 . ... ors in ng vi;lh.;u IOAT DOCK Ir FLOAT O ..... ERSI Tfvlt • .,., '"'°"of. bt'lch Ot' dtltlrll "' NOf lC~ IS Hlill:EIY GIVEN Thi! Atlee Sl.adium. nn 11w Gbl .. 111oM HCV•M .,.,,, .. .,, ,.,. IC!ftM!I M1 """' fllf'lln • "1r111t11
Th d " f J J he ( ~ P t<Vl1!d Ind dlllw.red frl !lit IOI' "'*ti el wlll ttMI for "''ll ntt vi e ll'-S as es a was DCABI G llfldltf'11tn.o a wrllll!!'I 0tc11r1111111 o1 Lirtttf'• T"'-''"' to fttlll1-r rNo turned lflO world retord ~ ,,.,.._.__ Ot111111 l1ld 0tm111d 1or St••· 111111 wn11t11 llOMll. '"'"'t!ICI i.. MICll ,. ll'llOt '°'
D 0 C K 4 ... 5 -~tlld llf-.~·tru\191 ~Nrttcw~ ""' .... -tl!M .... holder rt1r. Ed. driven by Lar· .. 11111 111"111th1t11H 111 1111 111c1 .,.....,.,. 111 lllot'9 ot "'"""" 1111 ,_ ,.., bHll "' -Hill or F'resno. Tht 187.68 111111'¥ ••Id OOlltlfloM, Ind ~Ill!'. Ill IOI' NO\'tl!lblr ,,. .. ,. tt f ;)O .. ,,.,, 111"" " E N A M E L I J~r., 11, lf10, lhe llllMF'1ltllld tlllltd 11111 court,_ ol 0..1rffrltlll Ne. t of ''Id m.p.h. cffoft camt In a · P • llOllte °' 11<etc11 tnd o1 11tt1i.. i. 111 court. 11 11111 CIYkl c111t11" ortvt.. 111 ""
prciimin1uy run and J{i \I lat~r -·~-·H-.. -... --.. ·--·-··-··-~ tl~~~ ns:.11'" 11• Ol Mkr °'' ci:.~~"':tr.'r:Jrlll•
• was dl···uali'fi'ed In 3 ••ml· hy • ---11y -.JI •-D•!t: 0cto0er n. ttro w_ I!. tT JOHH. """ . -_____ _..e • CAt.lll'OfVtl A LANO AHO Count¥ Clltk.
finaJ trophy dash for charging INVE$TMINT COM,A.NY. Jtlll'I! •. lltlllllllfl,
lb II fl WALKER PAINT WORKS It Ulci Ttlr&I .. , 41f ltll lrtJI llrtt!, e ft Cl \\' ag. Ooroth., H, Cr1wlord, Cttlt Mt111 Ctllfilt'fllt n•ll
Roger Comwo ll of Reno, "''"'"' '""'"' "" '"" M•<t~ 5PS '"·' •"'"'" ,.. l"tllllllltf' Nev,, ilnd tbc f11.stcs! f.lnt-116 W. 16th $1., Costa u-,. 642-5776 ... "ULr$•1.7J • (tul.DllHUN Dl lll,,tl ,00 • UHD11 6flll l"ublhhf'd Of•net ce1,t' Dt!!Y Jltlot PublWl!ll Or111w , .. ,, o.i.nt "''°''
b!lttom rpccd, 142.40 m.p.h. ''"-------•·!'"---·'""----------·•I".. • O<tobtr » 11111 HOYtmlW" la. ":11.,,. Octobtr n, JO ltld HO\'ttllbtr ~:
• •
•
I
• '
J:1 DAJl.Y 'ILOT SC
• •
Wortla
-.. , . .
'l..
'Extra Cost' o'f Being Poor
OVER THE COUNTER _ ComPilete-New York Stock List
NEW VOll;IC IA,.! • _ '"" t -ltte "I-Ytl't 'IDCt. iacfll .... "'ic.1 -... ... ~ ... , .. ........ ......., ....... c:.-.
NASD Ll1tlng1for111urod•y, Octoloar 29, 191' . ;;; oi:., l! lf.l ·!r: l. .. = • _:II· .1 'I + ~ . \1.:. ........ -~~'i:::'l'J'. ·I.: ,. ..... ::: .....~. "~I;··~ -••-•==•-••••-------.--.,.I ~-A-. ----1 M11t 1 i · i• '*J ••••· •.:>wi » 1 " =• ~~ ·',"lO ;.~ .ur :.,,. ~ + tt lMJt•1,.. " 11"' !°" ,.,,. .:.:·" ""*y .,.Nf . ~ 1t ., • ., -·1:.:;.~;.:~~1: 1f1mt1r-'11 n:~·trr£· ~-:IG~~?i,;:E ·.11tl ~ =·1~~=~vra' ~ 'it:,~: l$!~ II ·'r:· f ~G=_~.! 1t::'1 Ali ~ ~:::. ofi 1( 1:U jf.""'r•C. I,;, '" T1111na111 1J~ 1'¥1 :. ::ni1:·2j\ 1 " Utt !~ = !!" C-R ',1f', W ·tl· 11tt Im ~ :!: lt ~ .. OI i«ur "''°''"11 W <414 t (M M 1.-T1••1 AS l 1¥i Mclrtn I,• 2 b 14 !\ -Cflrll t'fi 1'1 i'•' 6" I i ~ A rln !
Prevei:its Cutting of Corne1·s -
II)' sYLVIA POllTER
A IUpert> woy to oave nmey
Clll yollf lood budaet b throuih
llloppiQ& the weeileod opeclals
11 the supermorkeb ond
loodlng up on l>argaJn.priced
foods which you can •tore Jn
~Dome treiier. -
But where wlll the poor con--
OUJner, llmdy ltralnlOJI bis
or her paycbtck to finance
doy-by..t..y ~ or rood, set the extra cub lmpUcit In
u.e Of lhm money-saving hint?
Even usumJng th1J lomlly bu
a f.reaer in good working con-
dition -quJte an 111UmptJon
-how can th1J lomUY olfon!
to Jalce advantage ol lhll m.
lllipubbly SOUlld odvlce!
A top-notch way to save
money on your clothing budget
b throuib buying ltople, bulc
ilerm ll OUt-of·stasoll Nlel
and always being on the
lookout IOI' things you know
you'll have to buy during the
year. November, for l.nstance,
is a tradltiofal month for sales
on. women'1 and children's
COiis; December b a tradi.
tklnal month for l&les on
men'• and boy's suit; January
is a prime month for sales on
a wide variety of clothing
nngtng from Ungerle to shoes.·
But bow can a mother who
buys c::lothes for her klcb only
when they cooldn't go to
IChool otherwiae take ad·
vantage of this money-uving
hint? Just the suggestion that
obe shop these tracliUonal
oalel bu more than 1 toucll ol
arrogance about it. .AJ for
women's and men'a coats or
suit!, doel this bottom level or
consumer ever buy to ex-
pensive an item new?
Again, a major way to save
money on items rangtn& from
big·Ucket appliaD<eo to minor
cosmetics bl throuib !hopping
• dllcount store in the area.
Savings can easily range from
2S to 30 percent.
But to repeat the rtfrain
once more, bow wW the poor
family get to a d.J!COUnt store
located many miles away?
The bus or train !are will be
an obstacle by itself -and it's
Improbable that this buyer
will hav_e a car at his or her
dlapou). I'm not even men-
tloolng the 1vallabllity of cub
to finance major purdwes.
It is obvious whl!ll I put It
this way, isn't It? And I could
amtmue to place virtually
Leatherby,
Richmond
Set Merger
The Rlc:bmond Corp. and
Leatherby CompanJes o f
Fllllerton. eam., announced
recenUy they had agreed to an
ez:chan«e of stock that would
let the Virginia Financial con-
glomer•t.e enter the speclaliz·
ed work:men's compensation
field for the fint time.
Chief executive Officer War·
ren M. Pace of Richmond
Corp. and Board 01airman
Ralph W. Leatherby of
Leatherby COmpanies said the
merger would involve an m.
ltlal e:1cb1nge of 1 7 5 , 0 0 0
abares of Richmond Corp.
common rtock for the outstan-
ding sham ol Le:i11terby com-
panies.
111e transaction Is subject to
approval by Leatherby
stockholders and regulatory
authorities.
Leatherby 1989 net earnlngs
after taxes were •151,442 on
every major mcmeyavlng
gukle tn th1I eontell But I
co/lies• that untU now I had
not realized how unrealistic
my IOWld Po<kttbook advlce
could appear to the very -· ProvocaUvely enough, It wu
1 22-yeaitd secretary who Is
putliiig r husbind tbr6uih
denial ochool on her poychecl<
who brought It home 10 me.
.. "I'm saving your guides for
the time when J hive enough
money to use them," ahe said.
"Right now, I'm too poor tG
take advantage of any of your
hlnt1!0
If she can say that -and mean it -whet might a really
poor woman Uvin& in the ghet.
to aay? And how c•n I even
compare this girl and her hu,..
band in lf'aduate achool with
the ghelto girl and 1 husband
who didn 't even complete
elementary school?
Jn ao excellent anll!ysis en-
titled "The Extra Cost of
Belng Poor.'' Ttienah Meyers
of the Dept. of Agriculture
zeroed in on these pointa at a
Washington conference a few
months qo.
111(., art FOii Grnl ,1~ i2-$Y'1 I Mt Tnerm A !\.'I Admlrtl _.. • 1.. ~ -C"" l"' ,. .. + "Whllethebu)'lnahabttsor~ ~1 .:~·11=:~r:rc I~: :~1P"t' ?f"Hrll'r.'Zf: r~1 ....... f1~~1 (..AJ "11ll "Jl ,.11:+:."'~~r'J. J l~ Rt 1 -~ I • ,-"· --•n,,-t me-•--of ._r11w,,_ 1n1er. ,.,.I. I 11)h 1111o .... ~ El 11i. 1 r• .,. c. 1~ s\'i "~ 1"'" fl ,.. " ).I -v. • ''I '""' ,._ t1v. { 7l ~
Wiii: .......... tu _,. 1UUCJ"11 :IQlel' ""iit1i 11 o1 ~ur-l'JW l'h 1._ ltYCll Cp ff 1 Tr1c c~ -2.,., ~ ~i°" .:JOb i • '"-,S;tt.-Iii Cl"" t At -.·.--...., +·\ii -\II
the buying public are :~~,'fl:.~ilt. ttwJ F:: tlltf I~ m == g 1.1'1 ::\II t~~. '?... 1 .. , ~ ~ l.t~.!! " 'l91? lftt! "fl~+'\\ c,',".!'l GE,.,.. 26 ,. Im t-. ..... ~"" +·u.
determined at least parUaliyMC1.1rlln cwkli"'-~m" N ~· c l!~~l~~·~o 'i:i "a"J 1nc1ut1r)Q 1•' ,JI\ J"-··· c1~~ f':l: -',U 1:T"1il~1;il2 =1: ,.. ~ 'l +_l!
by convenience," she said,;::., t:1111~~=~''i:.C: lltl;;:ai/&~ '' ,. .,, "11 ~,,,.J :r.~ .. ,.ie 21 ~·Ii M"'+:?c 1l'~ .. ,lc '? :r' ,.v. ._."'=1" 1 " "Thole Of tbe poor are die-::,_ <bl.II.~:'; & ~~ 11'1 t Ro.a f11 Hl'I J"" Tr 11r ,1\ •l'I A111111 12i.u 2u W: " + " Cli1.t¥c: t.» 77 ..,.. .q; .,.. _"' ff.,. lt1' + ~
t ••• 1 1 1 1 b dlfi"" ,..,~ G Lllllll' 11! t :e;M •1
1" !" 1'~F' ,~~"':=:mu g l' ~ ~ :.~ ,',!! "'.~~ 1 •1* ,.~ •1 ~ -.. ~ ll"' ri"" ::.~ li.cv a most exc us Vt y y an OUI '"' di~. Prktl GRI Elf 1"'11 "' "°' •• , I~ tV. Uni'-< ~ "'AOl!Alu l.lt 111 I • ~ im-141 .• .. • ., •2 24' l• ~ --... 5ft ~ Ji Jr' ... "
ex.ta:ting need. 'Poor' ls trying ~1• 1 not ~=!ft!~ l~ _in' 'it U~J·1~ ~: =· ~~ 1~ ~~~~lld.)~ ~7 Wl . ;: ;·~ ?)~\;;,r'.I. , r:: ~ '~:: I SI\\ n~ 11~ ::':
to keep erpend!tutes-u near ~.'s -. Or """"§~'l~' w rri? t~ ~r: E I-. ~ 81 J_~":l ~ 2t~ "le~~ '·i1 1 2'... " 261\-fi ~11rtcf11 1A fr ri~ if"' Jr-= ;z 1H tm 11~ 1~ +·~
ew:n with income u possible • :!t ct:;r' ~~ !t 8:J: ~~ 1i"' 11\t filr~""" ~ 2"41 ~l mr ~ ~ !o::'f: f'.12 f.v. lil"' 'ir7 + i% ~~11~11 1::: ·~·· Im ... ll". 'w"'-1 u 1• !I " ... r,~ .. •• 'Poor' la buying when you AFAl'r 17 II LS ~ "' ll!d 3~ ~UP ..... ,. JO\li 21 AIHMCI! 1.20 6tt 11'AI ····· CM1v£1111 2.lf ... ~ »• ""' :: ... AID lnc I l\O ~ c ,.... a... s-l"' 1m "'"" SLcl • 6\lt Alllf AUii\ •• II "" +· Clot"Dll ,. m b l!.i. 2'~ :.:.·:r
Cln .•• 'Poor' Js buying in the Alli lrwo: J~ 2\9 r1pji ~ 7~ ~ "'' H I~ Iii" ~/ ~-: 2:\t "t ~r~:m ... i'~ i\ ~~v. ~!" l~l'I + tt ?~~. ·i 11' ;: ~~ l~ = .000 1.-16 1:"' + \:
ntlghborhood, fl t whatever the !I& ~ Jtt :~ &f:Pl!Mll )., ... ::VI ~~o: 11°' 1 vine. s1 15 11\.-\o Al\i.<IStr 1A 2( 2214 21/o6 2ti~ -~ CNA ,.tA1.10 7 '° lt-1..-~ If ~"' 'IS"' 11 .. .._ lli
I ha• , AllM Cp t t \lt Gr..., M1 U1' 16 ~ CtnP 1~ "" 111etfQ'I a" '""I"'"" llSll 30 N r... ""'+ v. C0tit SI G1f 111 O '2\lo a -"ii !,' 2 * 211o, + ~ pr ces ppen to be ..• 'Poor AIWlt In ' 'I'll Grnlf flE 11VI 11\li ,,,, 1\11 "' WICll Ill! '° 20\'ll A UJ Cllll"' SI Ul'J 1•111 U\.lt -"' 1SG1 fllfl 11 , ~ "7141 ~ -16 ~ + -
Is buy'•• ut' amoun'· you '"'" Atme t:1 '"' 1111 G.-cN• Pr 21\ "" Gr~ J ~ WACll• ,. u 11 ",.,..PC At s u ... 1•-14"41 + v. oucot ,,.;. 11 ,. .... 1'.M 1lttlo ,.. • ~ •~. 111. ~~ .,.u Ulf> Q .._., All S1~ 7111. • Grwl~ In '"' 1 S•"'I Up Ill ..... w11n Boi llilo lt\lt AlcOI l.IO 1' $3\11 S2~ SJ + "' ou81111 .12 :ti ~ •M •N .,.. "' u »'di ......... Vil -·r~ .. -··" t t• Alrll'ldU1 2lot.2'6GINrllCll l"'' l:i"' .. !U"'WRPlle Jlll K""'-154/tl.60 22'"'~"---"'ll(l!lllll •I JJ6\lltl "-141 ·M···tm"""-····· ai O•\I, ~wwy one a a 1me · AlrtM'n F n~. u 111 Gun 1n1 sw. '" 1111 M '~ w~ 2111 ~AMBAC .so " t~ t t\lo -"' 011 "•I 1.• 11 •1"' ..,,._ .,.. _"' ,,.. 74* "' , , 'Poor" Is buy1111· whatever AJtiw H Nil '" G"'"" ,._ •111 111 s1 s 1111 v.· • .., NG u 1~ A-• Es 1.:to • im 11u lfl-t + :M.~0111'" •"·• di " " ., +1 1~ ~ 111~ Slli\ •••.• Alkrll • 6'h H•l'IO'lf I 20 n SC1I Wlf 12\'t • Wlll't RE tU •Vi Am!• •12.60 1 17 36\lo """ -114 olflllll Allr I ~ '111 -y·· •,\ .. _+. " -J6 J6ft + ~ quality Of brand or item you Alt01-c 'S > as~•" In I I~~ SoN! Tel 3'V. "" W1I Tr 7V1 W. Am Hn1 ,22r .)If "4\t n"" -U -1\\ oUIMll: 20!> -I .. ..,. ¥ J 1,,. "i "o \II .... . All(O lnll 12 13 1111 '" $\Ii ' 1· GICP IN Ullo Wit.It R• 101,\ 11 AontH p1a,SO , ' t7V. 94\i ff -3 olOlnl11 ·,... ' 35 ' I ffo ~ ' .... . can manage OD your time Allll a... ' ' 9!11'tll F 29 30 w EISl'C l~ 15 Welo:Urn 1\11 1111 AA!r~lltr .to 11 SI 571' SH• -"' OIO Sou... • 1100 SI s Sl ::,·,; 11 '.!" I' , ... ,. :..:..·· ~
ts ,. All'911 E~ '"" f1A Herl! C1' 2¥1 2'-NU<'"'/' l \.. ' Wtlilll M 11 11\.0i Am Alrlln .IO 13' IHI! lit\ lHt + 'II Cott 1"'11 I W IS U\o\-1m -Ill ,, •• 11\ "' _ ~ paymen • • • oll,,_ G• 1 '"' Hkloc 1111 1 1\lt SllllO'fl\ lt\11 l'O\t WUut 1' lt9 t AmB&kt .OS. 17 1•\.-\o 111,\ 14YI -Ill olr Ill pl'.ll t • " ..W •···• 110 , .. .tt V.
Eno gb I lit · ts Amide 2\lt J1'o HIHttvn m l~ Shi ""'' lt'4i ""' w1tn NA s 51' A8r1na1 2.10 J4J 411\lt «1 «1\11 + Vi as 1 "Oil 1• JI"' 2f 2fl4t •.••• 1 r,• ~ a•+"··· u -sure y e pcun Am ew " I~ U\.ti Holll'I II" JI , 5!111 HPd :ti '3\lt W•ln Mltll • 1•~ Am!Sdl;1 1.20 76 m. 2n\ 2111. -14 8~ I 6 lN '"' lni \.... •• -.. !!._._ -! I '' r.1i ti 10 101'1 !1.,. .. Sir 111'1 lt\6 Wllll Putt tOV. 1i>U Am C1n j·10 IO '91' lfV. ll\l -YI olu 11 1.6' fl 11\l 21 '!n "P" lot '"" ,_ _..... are now painfully obvious. 111e ~,.,,f E~~ "" ~ H:=' "'" ~ 1111w c1 36 :11 win11 Wh s 11'1 "'"' ltf .1s ' 2~\io 2•:i. 2"" .•.. cc• ,. 1 .4Sr 3' 1~ IN 1 ••.. " ..., J1'1-'"' -t
poor not Only have l.'s Am Furn ~ "" or11 •• "" 10 ubi.c Tv ·~ 2"' WI..: PL 1t:W. 20111 Am Ctrn . .uo 11 • "" 7¥1 -\\Col l.7• " 2''6 "" 2 ••.•• ~. ~ •• ,..A .u ..... A G'ffi $.!l'I J6V. rll GI 1\'t I utc11l F 11.\i ~ Wtlllw I!!' '" ll'i A Cl!1ln 1 . .0 -l 13\'J 2lllo 11\/o -CombEI\ !,:ID 2t 41 4'\lt ~ .... 5' n._ lt•" HJ~'+"·· money; they also have less A Me<lk• l~ 1•11o _,.,, 111 ,,.._ '°U uba Fcl 3\'t , wrltM w uv. 2 A~u• '·:f 21 W 2• ''~ +l'llt com1So11t .• '' JJ:t 11\'t 1t111i + ~ il' Ill.Ii 11 lJi: + :t
economic freedom on all :~·t~ ll* lt, :• ,.":,' ,:~ ~v. T•m•• lllfl '" YPOnv E '~ .sv. ~ •• ~'l11~1 .. ·2, 11: !I ~;: ~ .:.:.\.; ~~~E'11t1:.2: 11! !' ~ ~-="" ,J 25111 '"' :Hi.,+"'-
h ••• fro I """"' ... 1\'i no. HV9 Gft 11\lo l•llo A ~ Ill t ., •v" ;m .... Com• DU .60 16 No 1•\.11 11'11 t-. 17 t~ r.'7'11 2~ ..... pure u .. 46 nts: t me, .1.1c1 11111 , ·~ ttur11 P 1 MO .. ~ •• 0f,u:' 12 117: 1~ 1m ::.·" c,~~.' ~ 11M,1 u~ '.! ... 1.!~ ! .. » 12 -*
I . t t lil Alden M 7\!i • '"''" c~ 21'*• '•"• AmEIPw 110 404 H\11 ,... l -··--4 ' _,.. _... .. SS 21V. ,. •, .... :.:"' pace, amom, ype, qua y, Arden pr tt JI H••" ,,.. 11 e iri.I 30 11~ 1,..., ···~cone r.11111 1 u u:it n 17'111 . ..• 31 "* ,,.. "" -1s lain I t Ark MoP lll4 ·13~ H'rd9-A•~-J Jlo'i MUTUAL Aa'.n1~: 50 'll n~ 12\lt 1 :t' + ConnMlg .Ue 16 22 21* 22 +\lo lllldUll IO S6 1•~ ntt ~" •• :!~ JU may exp a 0 more Arr-H 11\lt 21 1m1 ... S_y Sl'o 6"' AG"t" 111i.to 2 2l'4 13\li 2ilio _ tt Ccnr.!OcCp .60 J l•V. U~ IA~+ V. ''"/l.C 511 :l4 Ill• 11,.. 1,, .. _ :.:1_ .bo t ... I d tm I Arv~ m Iii 11\d G•i" 27 '"" Am Hol1t A 1' t'4 !\'t •1~ + "'Con £cll1 l.IO 151 n 2Jlot 21._ -\i "" 1r1JI• I ll 11"-.. •• .... U ,.., ury an resen en AICC Bot )11\lt ,1v. 11111 NulC 2-"I u'"' .., H-1.60 1" Miio 1 \II mo _ -con£dls "' s 2 Sl\lt 5114 M\'J-111. •nlW 1.so .si: !..~ !f,Z +'Jli
of today's u n em p I?~ ed . :~d ~1, ~ R! t~r·c:.., !~ :11o~ ~ ~"'J, l\.'':11t ''it\11 .. )~~--Yllf l::~r:i ,,:J: ~ = rs~ r, +.~ 8~:~ tu ''° L JO so +1 unskilled and underpr1v1leged 8•k... 11~ 17"' fntrfll '" 2 3 FUNDS Amlnvttl .so It t r.· !!lot -"'ConF•itlt~t I :r• nv. ~ 2'\lii -,,., ~t .... , I )0 !1 2J 22W. 2:Rll T ~ 811 Pelnt Ji.. 1111 In! BW!" ~ J .C.mM11Hcl .12 » 211\IJ "' -,.. Con L11111'19 11 ' ™ Jt\ -"' tNcdr I ;iSg I f:nL 1."' 1"' -.. than a milllon pompous e111n P ~, Int Mui If it it~ AMe1C1J IA S9 n 1"' JV1-1-.ccnN11G 1.11 30 21 26\t 26lli-1' tNcNt11 '1,.o 12 ~ ~n_ -••·+··:.:.
hr 81umrl ~,,\It tnl 5v1 U 27'r'I .C.m Molort 109 4'111 _fY, l4 •.. Con• Powr t 16 30~ Jiil~ 3"1/o -Iii INN 0!81'60 J 22..., !2\'t "' p ases. e1vlnt 111\ lSW. 1n1 sv pt 1$ 111'1 AN1IG1' '·II 1• :l\i ~ ..Oh -1r,,f, CcnPW 111•.SO 11:>0 51 J7\ll 51 .... GtNN 11IA .io .~ 121'i l2'1'1 f~ -+ " eettnm 23~ 24v. lnl•irl 9\'i 10 Am Pho10 . '9 • t•,r. t'llt -\l.i ContAlr ·\5P U6 10 9% 1n . . 1 West ~lnl ..., l'!K'I ~ "/! l40
l•/lt lsli lt>.~ 10\lo tonlct 15 '' AR:lll .n. In fl ~ ~ -1\o\I Con! Ctn .60 70 :W\o\ 'N :1111'1 + -IWnUNI .to 300 "i'•" toll•"' ff~=~ Be m llld lli:i 5"' 11 SoUlll "'"' )11'1> Am tlnq _ I I •~ 1'~ )Jil + \II Cl C1n l'f•.'H 1100 S6 !.I S6 + lllo WUn trl'l M I~ •• Berk H• ,.w, W4 JICOl>I F 1 4\lt OtlMtr 2t ,,,, CoA !IA 12 4 Am lo .60lt Sit 22-"o 22 It"' -Yo Cont CO!O .'Hr " Mt 114 I'll -"'/' IWl1ttln :SO 12 NI 7\o!t 11'0 -(.io
De 81tr Ull :111/o )fl'J JMuln C-~ tW HIE'N YORIC (A,.) Inv G111d l.6$ •'05 A Sllllltt l.90X317 2"9i U 2 -Ill (111'1 CP 2 S' ,,,.,_ '1¥o lt\'1 -111 '"nGnt ,,6 :it, U !,!~t n1 _~-~
lm Blllou1 w l\lt t Jim WI! S'A •IA. T,.. f<lllowltl9 QUO. Inv hllllc •.n 1:21 AmSoAfr .70 lflOS •Pll .&6'4 •-'Co -1'141 CT(p "'"'-SO 2 ""' :16'4 3614 .... -s~ 120 •• •• •• .. '\•d Sen 11 111 :ll\11 Jimn F :u :M"' 11111ttt1 ~11911 o~ lnves eos 10 l't 11 79 Am5A'1-'"·70 ' :Jtl'J 19\lt 3'\11 •..•• CT CP PIB2.!0 l ~ UYI-3J\lt .. , rrvhovr•{ r lit 1~ tt"' ,., !I rtthr ,jt1 JV. Jimibv 10 101'1 tilt NiltoMJ Auocl-1nvn!or1 Griiup: ' Am Sid I 14 lHlo !31'1 33~ ..... ConlMl~e ·l! 152 1"' 16\11 U\11-W 1'1111'1r .90 11 ?>i.;. ,,. 23,,; .;_:·;,: lll•dt HI ,._Jiff¥ I'd• ~ '"' •llorl ot S..O:urltltl IDS lldl s.n 4.IJ Am51d ltl4.75 2 t7 t7 ti -1 Ccnl OU 1. 2&.I 1nio 21\lt 2"14 .... r11mmnCo I •1 11\i 1 j'" i ~ Chances Appear
For Economic Boost
8091111 El jV. ttlt J"'"1! Pd 2• 241'1 0..ltn, Inc., 1;1 Miit l.'9 t..U Am s1 .. u ... 29 21MI 21 '1' 21lo/i + Ill , .... ,o .. 'pl 2 ' 31114 311/o JM!t ••. llL!Hld .'De "• 271:, 2•W. No 1'.o. ,_,_ C 1 " 1-• < I $• "'" ,,, .. ,M ~·kls ,, .. ~ Proe ).JO 4.02 AT•T wt 720 11' N 7't + V. on -Ye .ICI .Ml 2'111 21'9 ~ -V. UMOh 210e 6' .. '' ., BOGi A .. 1m16;:;K:1:tr pt'" 11"11"n..M' Htllfll~ $Toct 11.1tJ1.711AmT .. T 260 II•~ '7\lo ~+\II Cft!l'OI D1I• :MS 4114 ~ 'N -V. Ult 011i.SO11'12 2t 2""' 2t ~a llOI C1p n. IV. tt:llvlr 26\11 21Vi COllld ,._,,,. Dttn Sf!ICI l .n f ,lll AmWW111 .5' lt 10"4t 101.. 111'111 -'4 ~~·~ fl'·~ t10 ~ 50\~ ~ -"6 1111 R .. ~H 2t t~ W. 9\'i
..... 114 ~ 1(111 Grll '''" 214 IOkl (bldJ °' ·Oowhl II•• PY •• 10 '·'' AWWJpf l.'H 1100 ,, u 11 -"' ,_r" 1.a) ~ ')O ~ ~"' = = ~ri~1':ur·i: I I I• 14 l• .:: ·~ 8r!nkt In «'.I ~ 1(1nm l 3'¥o (1111;111) TllllrMlv l"v Reali l .U 6.51 AW prirt 1.15 IS10 16\/o 11V. 14'4 + 14 Cooper Tit l 1 1't'o l~ 1~ _\lo ulrw/ncl .Jo l~ n !~ 2'21,., _+ ~
By JORN CIJNNIFF
NEW '(ORK (.\!')_ -"There
Is DD economic uptum ln sight.
There hasn't beeJt an Im-
provement, and there ls no m..
dic1tion there ls coin& to be Ill
Improvement."
These: are the words or AFI,
CIO President George Meany,
but It may be speculated that
they reflect the growing feel·
ings of rnllllom of Americans
as some_ of the ~'--CQMmic
stallstlcs signal s to r m y
weather.
And. the timing being what
It is, the low state of economic
actlvity is bound to be
reOected at the Polls, perhaps
to a far greater degree than
anybody suspected just a
month ego.
The latest index of economic
lndicato~. whlch point to
future economic aciivJty, fell
during September, meaning
that the economy is Ukely to
be sluggish for months to
come.
'Ille whotesa1e price index
leveled off, but tbe overall
figure hid a very sharp rlse in
the price of industrial com·
modifies, which means C(ln·
tinued upward pressure on the
priee of many manufaetul'td
goods. ,
And although the latest
figures on unemploY.Inent may
not be released until after the
elections, It ls felt by m Rny
buslness economists here that
joblessness is still on the rlse
and may reach ti percent.
One-indicator of future
employment, the "help-wanted
advertizing Index," compiled
by the Ccnfertnce Board {rom
ads in 52 newspapers, fell last
month for the seventh straight
time and now is at its lowest
since August 1965. ft reads
162, based on 1957-1959 equall·
ine: 100.
The misfortune ror the Nix·
on adminlstraUnn Is that it
may argue that the sltuaUoa is
coming under control. but Its
arguments 1 re understood
more by profession&
economists than or d i nar y
voters.
Paul McCracken, the
President's chief economic ad-
viser. can point to rising pro-
ductivity as a hopeful sign,
lrtct Sci I~ Jtllo Kur T 1 1\.\ aMI ...... Sl~I 17,,7 ll.22 AW •.lpf 1,.Q iH0 ltv. 191/j ltlli ····• COPtl~nll J XI 301 S1 J»k s. -3\lt u!IW 111J.~ 2 -.... ""' ·• rwn . "' l\lt '!Ji IC•Ur!I 1\~ '* Alltrlln 1 u I r;i lvv 6.(J '·"' ""' Ziii( 1 11' ll't IYt ••.•• (DPPl!Of 5ott 1S l0\11 lO\.. 30''o -'Ill ulfW 1)13.17 3 :fV. 67111 '7'4 -H'-·--· . Jn u\Per 81'1/i~ llt 1(1'1 IS IC1Jtwll 2'1' 11 Admlr111y F.irld1:" lillC'OCt '·" 7 ... Amlron .60 11 N 20 20 • .. •• CoowtdSll ' 6D J1 1\V. 11 J.¥4 .. , ulfW 1)!5,71 llJ '21' 41\lo -'Ioli ua;a\l.se any nle OUtp 811Cktl' f 6\lt 1Cwl1 E tv. 1\4 Grwth 5.lt '.1' JOl'lMln 11.1' 1t.7t Am1l•k .60I 10 1111. 11 .. 11'4 -\lo !orlnllo.8 :iot 22 21 17Vo 21 + \It ullon Incl J ss,.Vi -U~ .1,1.0 _ ...... ··•-· (e~-t red tb lhmn Cp ' MI(.,,. Fib 1'.ttll U llltOll'I l .ll 3.n ICtnt-funds: ANtF Inc ,91 11• 2•111 2no 1W. •...• orGW 1.loa W l#Vi 14Wi l""'1 -1 I ,. mruuNUr •lll-lll o uce e 811r11UP s 2'"41 t7\'o ic..,. C11$ 10 10\'i lnJW '·°' 1.n Allollo 7.fl '·'' Amt~ .IO 7 :16\lt 36\lo :W\lii ..... oronetln 22 ,,. 22\lo 2:2\lt 2214 -"' -~J-up·wa-" pr-..... -~-p......_ CIC L111 N 7"' lftl'll .. C 1 N Aclvlus •.11 5.01 (111 81 11.lt1f.tJ ,!.MP Inc ,5' ll 551'1 ~ 5.1 -"*Cowin com 131 nt. '\It "'=\It H•lllburT I.OS 12 :»~ 3-. 1·" ·~··vi• ''"'""' i•1 W$V 22\llJJ IC1n9 Int 21\ ,.._All,._ Fcl t ,•t.1• CW 82 11.071!.._~.c.tnl>r• Corp SS 11'\11111 17'111 .... ,!PClnll 1,10 so lO 2'na lO H1mW1t HI , $ "'• ...... T J I J lltl M 17 71'.1 I ,al,P'IAlfljl•Tll •.•77.00 CusB• 7.Un1Am111r1.60 71 '3 l2 33 +ll r1ne 1.60b 10'3?1'Jll\9:12U +·'lfi w1n11n PitP1 4 ' 'f•-Yio ru y, a ga n n S arta :::::, B .. ~ " ~J:' c: 5'141 s111 Alu•• •.•2 6.62 Cu• Kl 1.1• 7.l't Am.ir pf2.U 12 ~" .u .is~+~ reoun Fin 1 1 1a"4o 1~ 11* + "'H1mml'ld . ..o "'· 19 lt 1• -~~ W&J one Of the most sought c,·~·M· ... 1>• 1J lfowo Vol ,...... 7~ II Ari\ "f' .57 .6! Cui IC2 1,31 •.7t Am1t1r pl,61 ' l\lt •• I'll! •.. . r,..mplCr. .IO • 14'4 1' 14 -V. k111dlrt1n .61 ~ .J/' ~~ ~ + ~
f --·-f IP ) 71A ic .. 1.1r 2\lt J 11u1i. '"' 10.20 Cllt 51 1•.o.t 17.50 AmlllCI 2.'0 ,, Jiil~ 30 30 -\'I Ct'OllStH"" I 1 201~ 1fl• 20 -""H•llll "'' .12 1 It lt ""' ... v. 8 ter l\HWi 0 the ad-C11 Sow 7\!i I l''C D•I lYI 7 AIPht I'd t.61 )0.51 CUI $2 l.t1 t.1' Amltl .32 131 tYI 6'4 6Vt -"'CP,,.Coll «lot 15' ~ t~ fl\ -~ H1n11 Cp .50 n 1'~ lnli t ••. ,,
mini tr °'•• Jt · f the C1p ln!A J .... lVa Llt!Ct ht 27'4 21 A-1.23 J.n C11t ll tM 7.09 AlllCOtlll 1.90 200 ltlla 1t\"I 1A'I •••.. Crown COB 71 111• 161111 l6lil + .... N1-M I.JO , 21 M ~ ll..a +···•r S a.....,,. lS one 0 C1PTIM: 7Y1 21;. Vnct p~ 314 ,... Am 11115 2.ff l.11 Cus 5' J.11 4.U Anc~ ttock I 1"2 "'° U1't ll\'J -141 Cl'Mlltll 1.1111 17 ~ »Ill lOllo -\lo H1rcourt I U 37\1& ~ ~ _ \?
most 'l·~;ncant lnclicaU"" .. (Irr ow 11 ... 1214 LIM Wll 51" J\\""' Dvln t.u 10.22 Pol1r J.Oll .. ,. AncontNSv 1 12 1~ 16\'o 1"' -\\CT$ Corp .• 3' 15"' M\"I 14'11 ..• H1rrl1 Int I " ~ " " -'4 e•~ ..,..., C1rle Bl 1 7'111 UrlOll l'/1 7 EXlll'IH: Knkk.11 1.37 '·" """ CltV 1.10 10 ~ 36 )l•Ao -\\ Cll<llllY .HI 22 131111 13"' 13"11 -'4 Hlrt(D (p 1 4 14* '"' 1''111 that Inflation ls being sue-C1r'lr GD 21'4 2• LI,_ M ,16'4 171.lo C1011 7.JO 7.M Knick GI 7.$1 1.30 APld'tlfCll .t:I 21 13~ UV. I~ + v. Cl/di!¥ pfl.'H I 1~ l~ l~ -l'o H1rTSMrit .IO 37 21~ 11"" 1" ·····
f II It k d ',•K, NG 1°" lt L~AdV Ld '"~ ,~.... Inc:..... '·" t.10 Lrit Gr!~ 7.7S •.• 1 APcoOll 1.311 lt 34llo J.1'4 3.w. + 1Jt c,~.!!!!!,n .21, ,• •"•" ,1,•. ~ ... _ .•.• ~.· .. N, •'•' ,• ..• ~. "• lt.'1' ,",.~ ih, +_" .,. <eSS U y a ac e • ISi C111 J '"" Lei! COfll :~ '1llo lnVflt 7.tJ l .'1 L11< 11:..:ft lJ.ll 14.lt APL Cor_p so 11" 1t 111/J + 40 w"""" .tc 1 , ., ...,.., .,. j•• ..
B t ,~ · J t Crntu "'" :to\i t.cls"r r. 1l'l4o ,,,., SPtcl 7.U , •. , Liiier!¥ J 11 JU APL p1 Cl.06 11 Ul4 14ft Ul4 -V. CunnDrU9 ... f t\' fl.Ii f . . . H1v!'l Alll 1 ' 1'(;, l""' 'lil T l'-U t.1R:rt 11 no quest on a c"' 11,.s lm 1m L-1i ,,. 1~ 1nt s1ocl{ 1.n 1.u LU• sik ,".Jy s:oi Altll sn-1.111 1• 1u 112 1u +2 ~11~11~wr ,.-~ 35 iov. ~""' 10" --1o11ie111""' • "" 71'1 11/1
all that the promisin~ forecast ?.t~t:-~ m t:;;i.:i. f' :u. ~::: ~m' tJ: ttf ~111,:, ~";1 i-:f :~ ~~:t:~ ~': ~ ~:Z ~~ ~~ '.: ::· c~ie,. ~ 1.')0 J ~Ito 2•\.lt fl,.. = it ~~~MH".i \'r J,5 ID: JJ1, IJv. =I~
I I ed · lltl ~-1· · ClllrT 0 ni. •o.o. •.oll rotv 1111 11!1. Am Inv •.ts •.11 L"" 1:u J,t7 Arch Den I J7 »wt is 3!1\\ + ~ ,c!~~ •• '·1"., S 23 n ... Htltrti! Curt ' ,.,~ , , eon an In s 01.Q ISUC ear· Chm L•• I '"' LOii Etrn 14\':t 15"• "'" Miit 1.10 l..d L_.. •• "'~'"' Ar llPSn-1.111 JO .,.,. 1~ lj'llo .•.•. '.."'!.:'""' • ):S ~-~~.~ + \~ :::~ '~.' .IO II 19'11 1'4' 1m :.:.··~ ri .. not o-tent~•e· we;~t chK--1M s14o llli '·""di "' -1~1~ N Gth-2.J.1 1.n c.11111 n .ot'1.ot 11r11111 os .10 111 · ,.. 10J. • ,. -u-. ._,,,..,~, ',.' 11 H ,~ 15 _"' ,,.. 11 ui .,u t:l'>ll l/111 I~,.. uv. M..t C';EI l:l't 1• Anchor-Grcup: C1plt t41 941 APmccSI 1.60 :rl02 ~ 10\"I 20'A +. 1lt oinlllvr .2.!I' 11 1-. ~ 7"" \.lo H 1•;:i. C XI 191'1 1f11t lt\!i among the popula~ as the r.111 Br&t • Jtl'I ,,..,,1 111tv ~"' • C•PIT 1.21 7.tO Mut 12:,212:'2 Armco pn.10 t 16'k ''Vi 11h -to. o ..... CP 1_1) 29 2~ 23~ 2,~ ="' 1o1:::':rk 1 .!~ ' l 'lo 01" J\lo ••••• . , t:hrlt1 S lN 101 M"'llllr! '' ?ftV. Orf!~ t.5"110."Luth Bro 0.5111.S..AnnOl.rr J,IO J .Ullo 6\oll •s~-U.o-i'"' ,,.· >" '1•'• ,,,. >I•+ u ' ·"""' 199 lS 3.1\.t 3!1 +· .. · dismal outlook contained m r.11.111 P t"' 101 M-1 A\ l 'll I" lllC,,... 1.1s 1.1o1 111 1n •·" 1.t1 A1m11C~ .IO 161 30 2914 29V. -lit oi'r11na Pf 2 ...-,.;: ... + It .. rrsn 11 1.10 I 2S\lo 1-A\ 21 + It
lit I I. r.11 ... c1e1 '"' 1 M1nln M 11/t "' Fl '"" 1.U J..19 nlltn 1.111 • n Arm Ill ult l.IO 2:S 29V. 29 '1Vi + V. D111 Proceu 1o! 12'111 ~ ~ tt ~:,bjrl~ .U W OV. 4 .Q -V. e unemp oyment 1gures. c111r Mt• '"'1ov. MA-c w. r>• vrnt :v.12 ... u 1"11 t.n lo:n Ale coro .tO 1 1•111 1t111 flVI -v. 01-,coe, , " 21 l./flo 1 l'I lA -It .,.1 .l'CI :w.. ~ 2111v. 16V. -"' -dml I I II al Cltlr u A 2MI '''~ Mir Ml• 1,.. 1"'" Allollo Fcl 7.71'.1 •.a 11 Gtll 10 '1 11 60 Arvin Ind l _ 21 13"" :t.I~ 1Jll -It O•l"t'O pl• ts r10 1111..., ~ IO\.!t -v, Hf~/!J'1 14 ''" •i. t + "" .aue a n s ra on can so c111r us ,,,. '4'' ...._.,.., ~f """' ;,,,. Auoc11 1.u 1.u 1u Tr 11·111i 40 AahldOll 1.20 1» ""' 15'!\. ~ + "'01...,nHucr ·50 11 1o1v. 16 26 -Holle 1 "31~ 31 31 -n ar•rnethattheGeneralMotors C:ll'•n Ml 1• .... l•''>M Browr ,,, 2A A11ron •.OJ 1.«1M1tes 1:lS ,: .-....011 Pl2.4B I :»'4 $2114 $2\lo+l D•v!nPL 1:60 JU 11'111 21 2111o+~woer~~r7090 1• lr.i »V. ~+
I'>" Cl1r~ Mt 1•\11 2fAA "°'!.,,, LP 1n ·~.... I Houthlon: trwrJ lOM 10 46 Aud Brew l ~ 7'111 Al ..•.. OPL pfD 7" "'° r;i tl\11 t2 ~ lfo!f E19<tin ' 2 i:i,~ "•' -... strike hides the real advRnces t.1"'"'°" 1:111 "' Mavlll' o '"" 1114 Fllnd A .ts 1.:11 kl Fii 11 n n:&, Aull ca· 1.2t 14 :Mlio :l4'4 >•llo ••.•• 0Nt1 cc 2 i• JW ~ ""' ••• Halktvlnn 22 J, l~"-4•'" ... '1 _" . . CHnl ~ 11\'ll l'"' Mt:C>o.., 711 ,,.... FUftcl B 1·12 1.20 ldA Mu .:,, s.n......, 5111 1.2t I 2t\\ m.. ,, .... -.... Det .... rP 1.12 3'6 l"" ltVi 1~ + '4 ltollySu. 1:10 ... ---... toward stability, but ordinary t:tlnfon o s ~"· ~le M ••-\ ~~ Stock .11 S.'5 c11 11.1• 11.10 AM1Tr1n .oso 2 tlot. tv. '"' + 1' D11 t.'ll1i 1.10 21 JN ,,... 23'ii -t,... ltofnrsllot «1
1
:,.• ~~ ~~ l::? .! :;
people at election time aren't ~=r c~ 1~ 1h; Z.~1• ~111 t4~ B•~C• ~:tf :fi 'o\tF ~~ 1~~ 1~1: !~i~1 1~¥ ~ ~ ~~· ~t: = ~ 8:1l:.:"1'..t.10 "'l 2;tt 2tU ~~ ····· i:=,~1 \lfo -7Ji 1s'4t 1~ -,,
I ed b • COOlr Cp 5'i Jt """''~ tn I• iu~ B1yn;lr 7:Jt 1.)1 F AIClttEI pf• ?10 SI.,. Solll< SI"--l"h Dinn Mii ,60 l:M 21!\':t ltil> 20 ·~ Hosr !Ml _;. ~ 7~ 21'141 jl"t -"°' so mpress y promises as r.01 ..... Sv '"' '"' _Mltltd C• 1'A -ll11con 11.7 11.16 ~~us G~~ 1:·g 1t~ Atl Rkhfld l 11Sts ~ 51\o'i Stllo T y, DennMll pf I I U'llt 1~ 1'3io -"'HOUd '"" .IO H '"' ",.. m.::"' _+ ~ Jltey are by ex~Ung con C:0Uln1 I" 1~ 11YI ll.ll"'••x "' 'VI 8111'1 Knt 7.60 7,60 • Allflc~ pll,7 USO 414 ,.,.. 4:\\ T "4 o.r.nvll:1I .Ool 109 llo'I 1\11 •v. -\lo HOlll Miii .'O 13 "" ti • r.otcn Sir 2~1.fo 2~'14 Mldw r.T 11 If 81rt Gift 1.21 JA' " OmG •.'1 J.GJ Alt R!cl'I pl l Mt ,. ... tru. 91'4 +IVi Oen11Pl¥1nl I ' 22V. 21~ 221\ •.... HuOU•lllF 1.10 ... ~ .... 16U 1$~ ""
ditions c~ !....,, 4111 """I' r-·~ '~ ,. .... Bl1lr Fii 1.1'11 I.ti Ill~:~ 1;·1t ,;·;1 A!tll(ll pfJ,ICI m '"' "'~ •1 -"' Oe5o!Clnc ,IO 65 70 ''"" "" -141 OlllF Jlf4,4(t •"-15 1~ 1~ l'~
S k" I London thl r.-r1r -··-Mln VIG 11~1NBoncl1I-J.U !·"~11t Tfll •'ts 1'ts"''-1Chtm 1 27 ,,._ 2Ulo JUti+i.-0e1EC111 l.«1 11'• .?! .. l,T-111 ,." _+1"'~·.'1·•"'2.ll ~ r pea 1ng ft 5 C-Git 111lo 1' ·~o fl •rll '"' ~ BOiton SI 7.12 .11 EA Miit 1·,. 914 All•1 Corp 16 :to/o tti 2/o6 .... Oel E"d trl'J.JO , ........ •w ....,. .. ' 1..., !O .ci :Ill!\ ..
k H~-Stein f lit r:om T .. 1 2"'4 ti\• ....... ~I ''\ ·"' llol! Fdl'I t .61 lD.51 I 11\d 1"n ··n AlllCll llt.75k JJO I] 13 ll -,.. Oel S'"I ' Ill\ 1iJ\ ll1" ••••. ~NG1 ... 25 SI $0 s :+ We! , t:r~rt 0 e t:om ~ltll N l'fi Matlwk It 1~\lil 17 ~IOI\ 1.1.1 1.16 fl:I /nvtt in 7'.3.1 ATO Inc: .Ch '5 I" 1\.11 11"1 -\to 0..1.,. .'U lJ Ullo lS 15 , .... ~HetUf,,1 pfl.50 1Z ... 47" 'I _ ~
President' c 0 u n c ,· I of r'Oll'I ~... 11 \lo 11"" ~""' ('"~• " """ 8rOld St 12.u 1l.50 NII Slew-s.,. ..,,, .... P!ll(I •1 7'4 71/r 7;\o -~ Ol1IFl111n A ,', l!.~~ ,, .. , .. 1~ .. --· """, ..!' 177 19\o\ ,, ~ + "' I 1'.:emo A • •14 Mllllm Plr 11 1' Brwn Fd 3.Jl J.M 8111" t5'.lOU Automtn Ind 11M2 •4' ~ 1:w, -\'J.D11mlntl I.to .... .. ..... 1" '" ,, 18"" ln\ 11111 +"' Economic A d v I s er s com· t:mp Cm 7\11 ,,. "OO•• p • • ... Bullock C11•1n: Bond ,·" s'09 Avco CP .6(1e &1 10\11 1014 14m -b 0!1m Shim I :w 17"' 17\h 17'\ll -"'tJUbbrCI 1...th 3, 2'0\.'i tcw. 2Q1,(j -\(&
J l'.:m11 !~ti •3.\ $~ MDort S 10 1~111 llll!ltk l!,51 U.11 Dt~ld 3·.a i02 Avco pl).20 21 :ni.-Jll'I llo\11 --. D!IS~ f' Cl 1 :U 21 21 + l.Q n\Hl81y 1.20 ll 1f lll>ii l mented· r.'"o Tee ·''"' ~ ~·-T,,I 1~ ,.... C:1Mn 11.lS 10.llf Grwi~ 1·,, .... ,\Vtf'P' "Pd ,,!!'_ " :JQ\"I lO 30 -"h Dl1S " Dl.?O '' l6M. 1'\o'i 14\o'i -llo liufll Hit ·"° 1 ·~· ... I~+ \.\ • t:eom~ '"" 1r1o ~!•Tr wt _J;i l" Olvtd 3." J.S. · ' ,,.._.In ""' 11 n;, 1 7 -~ DICltllhon .4 ll t'li fl.lo tV. -,._ H11n1Crtom ,12 29 171"): lf l~ + ~~ ''The JlttSS M J 0 n g er t:on P'ICk ,. JI "~'di '\ r.~ _,,., NllW S t.2J JO.II r~c!:k ~·}J ~·~Aw.rt pl 1 I 1JV.. Ul4 lJV. -1r,i, 0D~fd Mb 106 6'\lo ., .. •1 '16-1"' ld1hoPw 1.60 23 2f'4i 11• ~0 ++ ~
h ron!rtd 1;\ ~ Mot Clutl T~llO 11lo'I Nill. \Int 1J.6' ol.'1 • · Avol\Pd 1AO J.17 )ti.\ 71 11'1 -411 iGIOrtJo .60 IJ 111'1 10.. I~+ V. ldr1I 8u 60 6D .,,... .... bothers to Inquire w at the............. ' ?V. ........... 714 J Bl/SM FCI J,tl • .,,N:1'0CG~h ~-~ r~ A.zltcOlt .13&. 12 1311. 13"' lJt' -.... 00"1'11"""" .«I IJ 11111 l!"4t 11"' ... .., ld111a r>1i.1s I '""' 12\lo 12" "'
I t t t I. ,. f lit t:OOHr t. 1• '·'"" MlllRI Es ' ,,., CG Fd 7.tl I.SS ( ' "1 -a-I "" pf A 2 2 ,,... 21 27"' -.. IP Cm! 111 olli 61'4 ""' ""' +1 aes sat.stes mean or er.""" s 314 , uw•r LI;. ''"''"'CIPfttnr 7.06 1.1,~lll"W F~ :·:i :·1! 0111n11 pfB1 1 ,,,,.. 29\11 29'h+1 rrrcrn 11t3~ 21 lJl'I 24\lt 2»\-\'I . th Jy want (O f;DSf!I Yf l>l <t•.lo NCC Ind l \;. 4 .... CIPll htv 2.19 J.17 tl/W · • Bllldi: W JO ,. 1t 11:iit 11"11 + Vo Oll!on Co .6' S 'lJ'!\ l'V. 161'1 .. , .. UI Power J,, '' "6 41'4 4Sl4 -Vt economy, ey on t:rwl•d ,,,~ l•lh ........ 11 r. 1.,~ '"" C1p11 sr1r s.n s.11 New Wld 11.a1 IJ.36 Bi>k..OllT ,,5 :111 !~ 23\o\I z:n .. _ v. O!""" .JOO '' no11t 111 12<1v. +,,., 111 Pw pn·u ~ lJ uv. + 14 know what they mean for the 'r•-"t Mh ''Ii ' ,,._oe .. r 11 "~ 1n c ... 1 Shr •·• 10.11 ~~~'~ 'i·~ ':·~ s,'"• •s, '-!l lt '"' 2A ~ + "" o,,·~M'o '"'• .. ~ n ll'I 1~ '"' + v. 111 Pw p1f1o 1r: 30,,.~ ,",.~ ,•,." ++11 ,.,.,,..,, Cn 31t.'J ,,.._ .. ,..,,.. c,. ~ '°' Ch-lnnlnt FUl'ds: •• · · 1IC "' '·"" 11XI ti 60 '1 +1 v I .-lJ.t 20 1~ 20 •mo , A' n n eJ"Ctlon." l':rutdtlt ·' $>~Ni!Fn"I' 'l "" ll1l1n 10,:t2!1,11NDl't!tl 1J.ff>>",·?!StngPnl .1So :M M 7 nt.-•~DrP-.)1; 111'Mt19'il,...:_:·\i, ... l'tl •1 11""!01;,!1 ,._ e • ... ..... , r.•o l"" '' Com St l.f' I'° "'"'' •. ··~ Bt ... P Ill 2 ' lt 1$.,. l~ -l'I OomrMln .IO Jiil 6lVo 6l &Slit -""JNA c. 1.40 19' ~ '"' 2tl\o .:..:·,;;
Stein's eompJ11.lnt Is un-n1 .. ~ Ltii ~ ~·' N•' Ltb ,.,.. 29" <>rwt~ ,,.Q .:...100 er 1f·r? 1f·ll 3~'!!'!.P,,•, l·'·1 1,5 ..!.~ ,,.",\.'I a\(&, .. ~Fn1111 .t~~ ,.! ,'"lll 1 ... ,. ,~ + ~·:,:::-... .,.""',.','.,,.'ii: 10 •i. 1-. tio _ \•
d dbl b ,,-hf I n8ntvM t 'P>""l"od 2''"'' lll(om '"flt · · "' · "" ,,. -~"""'"''"·-..., ,.,.+ 1221 20'-'204'o-\lo erst.an a e, etause e ee s n818 ne_, 4''< •l> Nit Pet 1'41 '"" soe<i i:.1o1 :., 101 Fd 1.n t.10 &•l'lk o1 NY 2 12 (l)i', .,.., .t0'Mt -v. DDl'lc ~P .it 1 1 U'h 1J11t _ 2 ,, 76 1, _..
th . h d • I d n"'" G•., 14'4 2•"· ,._1 '"'" ,., •" h~ie Gr e01· nr wms 11.ll 12,13 81n~ t1 2.U " 57ll ''llJ 57"4i -Vi Darr llv1r 7 l\lt I \\ IV. lnllpltPL 1.50 '9 2l\lt 1314 2l\lf + at e economy JS ea e·1 ow11r ""'"'" " '"' 1.,. · ' c.1111 60; •.5t 'Nell 11.2111.21 e1r11ou 1.str :)! J7>.~ :M\i J1•4 + !~ ~· P .10 «1 J7\lt 31Vi 3;rv,. +·" 1nat11N11 .to 10 11 1.,.. 1 .... -h J(hi f th the n. I I'd •hi $"Ow , ... ,,~ Fllnd f" I 62 nh •.IO 7.C llll"d CR .ts 2'2 ~ 41 ilU. Dcw(rtom f·'° U U\lt U\4 "'' _ v; I-RI"" 2 '' ll'Ao 31\\ '" -~ a ea er uture an .., ~' ,..., , ..... ~, S""~ ,.\ ..,. , ·-· AIM '·°" ,.t1 11111<: lllC .13 , N 11 11 :.:..·\lo nre11111e1 .4B 3, ni;, """ 21.:r, + •'"'Rd 1112.25 11 ll'-.. 37h -u. • • ' Mir 1, 1~" "En t:.F l"'o 111.!; fnl "·'• ... 76 C !.tte • ll 10 11 81tn Mf9 22 ll't. ll'io ll'll Drust p!110 3J :131'1 lnl91'1d Sii 2 "" "" 2l -14 CUtTent Popular slallst1cs ~. ,•" 4 r,t •'" .., • NAtr. 1 "~ ,~... s,""", ;.:u, ",.11 P~t Flld ,:" 7:61 a11u Ml flf 1 36 1714 1,\':t l6Vi .:.:.·"' ores!.r 111 Br 3 ,,... ~ ~"' -+ n: 1""'°"' .2tp 11 2H11 n 111 2.Sl9 t " · dJ t B t th t I h ..., • ""4 1 ~re~.,, F 7"li ..,,,., lllC ·1 ..lJ 111111 Ind 97 16t'o UV. 1s•• + "o o .. vtvs c 1 .,, 19\lo It .,.. 1 1 pt $0 130 l\IJ 1" IV. "' 1n ca e. u a s uman ne!Jll '"' oi.o 1n , .... , ,. ... " :,,., CMmcl 15.t117.'9 P1u1 Rev '·" '·" 811111,. Pit 50 1 "1/1 ...,,11 .;11 + \It 01111 P ~«'.I 52 2214 21"' i~:l4 :..:· ... 1";;1~ .~ 1160 SI 5JV. .I.I l
n""1re g:;u~,~~~ 11•,,. •,•,,,_ "'1e11 " :v"'i ~71& c0,•.~!f~1 , -, -~:""M~ ~-~ ',·~ Ba~sc:hLb ·.13 10~ '°"" '38" ,, ~ Dl/ll:P•p11.rs 1 t111t tllo): "~ _ ")n111c 111A1 .1s 21 " IJ>oli 1~ -"" • ' • • .. "& fl•·~ "<lo .,.,., • • ·•• "v · · 81~!l'L1b 10 t2 2Jl'I J:l'AI 2ll\o ~ o B 11 110 » " 1 C J 17'4 11Vo 111,(& -V. He also told his audience Dirt Ill• 1•,,., XIV. ..... ~. Nr. ·~ 1~'' Fllfld t .IO 10 ... P~n. 1i.d ll.61 8•MCI• .~ J '" .... t~ ~. D~~.~ '°'I ltl ~~ ~i~ #".:!:I" ~r:.~ ~~1031 Sl "" •11\ ~J~ + .....
hi gtv Am£ 16 1•\':t ••r .. , "!1 ' 4" fl'Wlh f·JJ J.61! ~:1•rl~1 ,:·:I 1~·~ lle1rlnt1 1 l :n~ ~~\It 3Sl.I +" duPo•!I l ue "lll"h 111\lt 1171'1 + _. tntrlklllC l.IO ' 34"' l.1\11 1'1\ -\,,. that It Is "a pleasure at t s n~ cr ,;~ 1~ ~.":i".,';:~ 1~ 1:\~ v~ 1:°' ::ll Pi: Ent 1:112 ,'.let::!= ~ f, i~ ~~ 31\lt -t~ <111Pon1 pf•.50 • "" 12.., 62-11o _Vi IBM 4.ao ll '"" :n n -\~
time to be here where the U.S. Disc Inc N J\'i ~ ,..,5., 1~ 2...,h Col Grlll 10.tJ 10.n PIM Fnd lO.'l H .«'.I aec1 Didi .:ICI l:tt l l'\\ Wt ~~"\ -"'r!uPcnt ~J ~ 1 J1111 51 "" JJV. + \!o '"' c11 N11<:1r ~ 29,k 29J ~~ +3';i •· dJ d n1ver (M 3\lo l'I\ .,,.,, •• ,., ••t '1h COfT\S 8d '·12 1,111 Pl1n I"" t ,1t lG.IM Bel!Ch AIP 75 :n 11 10->it lO&<t ·· '14' Dl/Q Lt .6' 56 '°"' 20\lt ~ •.. ln!FllFr .j(IO 30 60la 60\'ll 'f\lo _ ~ economy can u.:: scusse as~"''' •Iii s ""'o t>-ri t·~ ~~ c ... u~ Aa 1.11 1.21 'rk1 Fllnd1: se1co Pet '50 1111 10v. 1"'10 ,,,,,.. +'Iii D<t •11011ttos 1t1a 7~ ~"" 2~ -"''"'Harv 1 eo 76 1ll'I 2l'll 23,"' • . 1. • .1 II • t nnld1n l. 1\-\ t "'"'o '"•t '' '" Cwllh c 1.12 1.51 Grwt~ 21.02 21 .02 Beldl!PH liDb 1 1' 15 15 Di.iQL 4Pf 1 l'10 7611. '5\' 21111 ln1Hcltl 1 b. 2 11 lJ 13 ·+··;: intere.~ 1n.1? In I se , an" no :'IS f>ow JM 3•>a :Ml\ OP! Sein '""' lt Comp A1 1.J1 t." N Er• l.tl 1.tl 11111 How· ,.0 32 31"' 31"" 31" •·i"· DQ" J.11011.11 11no 2• nv, 11 t. 1·· In! 111e1u1i 11• n:wi 1ni. 12v, _ ~
a poll'l'ocal ·issue wedged ln llovre 011 711'~ 2111t .,.,,.on• ''l s ComMt 5.•s 6.n N wor 21.au n.oo e111 1n1erc(l(I 1 1~ IYI IV.+ ,._ !h'mo 1111 n !!Kit 101'1 icv. \\ 1n1 Jrld p11 70 4 lOllJ 70~ 20'lo _ •• o ...... NL 2\la l OOtt T~ 17' 17' .. Comp lld 1.112 1.n Pro FuM l .IO l.IO Stmll Co I 6t u .. lHoil l•t .. -11111 DYnlAlll .20p " 1'9 sv. 5\\ "'lnl Mlntr . ,5 12\lo l) !!\,\ -;: between camous unrest andn1111-1n D 14V.1•".,.....,. NA ..... ~Comp Fd 1.11 '·""ro Porit un1~au a111111x l.MI 37 23:i., 2J141 2316 _\~ -E·F-1ntM1_. "' 1 11 ,2 •i +• Dtll'lfon 111,j, lqji o.vcu 11\'1 17\'I om11-J.11 '-" Pf'O'ldnt 4.05 ,...., 8-ll(P I'° lS U\;, ........ .Mlio -"'E lef' h IO • ... lnl M1>9 .JOI ,. 1~ 11'6 1~ pornography" F:t Pelnt 11 12 Ol'C 1•11 11"'''"' oncor<I ll.llll.11Prll<I 5¥1 f ,llt t.tl11~ Pl•Jo 1100 JJ 52\lt JJ'i'I I Eta c ' •• "'" '2'A-\'i1nt NIO: l M ,.1 q 14 '1~ .,.-.~ ' F.eolC wt JV, 4 Pabil Ir •J 4'\lt Ca1nol In 10.0ll IO.JO Puril•n I." t.n ~ p1131l 2 nil n n•· -tlCD CD .to 1 II 11~ 11°" -"lo In t PIP 1 51! ,.-•• But to voters, the econom y 1<:111 !h .. 1 n. "K ,..,,.0 5 , con11 Ml •.'1 '·"' Pit111em Fund" 9 Jori.JO 1211 2914 29v. -. +1'4 E1•t Al• LJn zn 11" ll'lo 13\li -111 tnt p Pf • '' ll\"I lt\'J ll'll -'Ii
t b d. ed I l!C'Oll Lib 21 \f),, P•c F•E ~ 31 Cont Giii 7.M 1.n eo1111 •• n 7.36 111"51 et :l2 'i 29v. .. ' Ee11 GF .17f ... Jl'll 33 1:1 •.• ln!l ::c.111 !IO Sil u S6 canno e J5CUSS as n•F611(~vs :tilo • "•~rn Co '"~"'CorpLd 13.2111.61 Gror1 1J.5'U.7511enpvrtln : s1 f1~ m-\\Ea1TU1111,ol0 611 l6'\lll6"o-\\1ntT .. TI OJ l! ~·, ~ •i;.+·,,
terest ... g ... 'itself It 'is not an El P••E• ,, .. 12\.lo P1l'll'OI 2 ... m nt¥ C111 10.~ ll.51 Grlll 1.71 t,.52 Bfr111¥ Pho '9 "' ,.., , •••• '·~ F..!O•IC<lrllk I~ 58' ,. 6J ~~" -411 ITT oll. !o 24J = 4 \It ·~ -" . FIN $VS! I I'll "••'"• D• '"' ~ ... m WDlv J,:fl 5.71 •ncom 7.11 7.77 8ftmf( Caro 1171 '"" I 1'11 -~ EllMYI l.ol(I ,. 3Cl'o 29~ lO ... llnlT&T gfJ I 11 Ill IOU -''"
academic COnS!deratiOn amOnll: Fldrr Ile •14 1 Ptr'"°' Ii 7>f. I\,\> "'WDil •.H 6·U lrwftt l.J.t 6·93 Stlll SU 1.13 2'I' 71'11 ;>ti\'> 71 + V. ~~~~~! .:.ll .. ~ n,,~ "•L ,,a~_+~ 1,n!,.f&T P!IC4 11 l2~ r,.'2 ~ ='~ "'Hite WI ~ "eui.v I" OJ<o -l'o 1110~ M ~1.11 5"1.&S v1111 7.2t 7.97 fll•Tlll""N 60 t7 u ,~ ... 1, •• ''' ....... u.. .. .., 31..-. •• ,. n.Ti•• ''' •-,. ,~.. .,. them but a very personal and "I H\IC ,, 1•'4 ••~lit ,.~ 10 o.1ewar1 G•-= Vo¥•• s.93 1.ir <d! m :. 41 .so.:wi ~ ,. -'<dlsonerw 1 10 n t\ n"' 2::11~ -" · "' 111 S1llo siv. -.,, F ~ICO'I' )l\ '" •ttrl M• 11'~ l?'il Deel! 10.71 11.U Revtr• !·" t .I! 111111Jelln "8 ' u~ 15* ~ + ""EG.!.G .10 Jlf 11 .... 1•'11 -'ti:~: ~;\\ ~(I) >dt l2\\ 3t'Mt 311111 -... emotional one -and one on eurom 5\~ 5'11 Peer1e1 T l'f'lo JI Pt:!w, 11.n 12.n 11:1ntr•t 1 . .n n.IJ e11u L~ua' 1 11 11., 18 18 · ·v; <;1M111k .21a 4 • '•"" ll~ ... inru111 1111.12 ~, :M!tt :M1' 3•'-' -\II . Jlt • ht It t t I'll C Sv. l:W. 7~ "'A fi"~'" 1\\ N 0.11• •.21 •.1' Ro""'I~ J.41 S. S Block HR 3' lt ~t~U, ~,, -'"Eitel Anoe 17 ... \.'t 41'1--\OJ lnl9f'PICI 1 ,n, 21 21 + .... ~·h1ch eym1g aemp 01'10111 16\o\>Ulo'IP1G•W l!lllinu.Drt•tl 12.121?.US•lrml'd •.1•J.J01111 ... een ,·~ 1t'6''o '-1'4<L-I .. -'OIM~mMaQ .. ti's W. t\lt -~lnl8rtlldt0 1 UV.!JV.-t(&
ha"e their say at Ute polls Ft MoCllll ""' 3'11 •e11n ,.~c :"' '" Dl'll'f i::11 10.11 ,,,,. Sch111rr 11.n 1•.» 11ot1t11t B••i 11 ,,.., 121~ ""' ~ \~ i_'."",,.~,, •,,,.' 1 • ""' ,,.,.. 11Y1~~1,.1 .. ,Pw 1·,. '' ''°'" ,,,,.. '''"' + \\ ~ • !!mos OU l•Yi ,......, Pees1 WI ' 1\lt Drl\lf LY 11.IO U.)I Sclll!O•f Fllfldl: llatlftll Co '° ... 1•'Wi 14>;, ,,.... " 12 s.. SU. ... •lit -[! •ni.rl!Slr .60 1 7 16 lf•; 16 -~
!' lit. Concern .Ver th. E_..., C 25 26 ~Ht fj 1o1 IEl ....... HOwlrd: In! In~ IS.• ll.55 &all(ll .2s°O IDS '9\.\ .cs ... '9 ••... 1':1P1soNG I U 1611; -~· ... ~ -w I-.... ~ •• ~ 131~ "'' lt -1 .... E ....... Rt l\':t 2 P~lll.dt 11f ... '' 811111 t .M 10.U Spel 21.50 J7.511 Bond llld .61 • r~ ~"" *°" ,.,,. Eltr• CP 1,20 15 21\li •4 23 + \II ~• 211-* '' -'• economy wedged between e111w1s1 •'-i s\o\ Ofl11 111& 1,,,, l~\~ GfWlft 10.11111. eai u.1.11t...t1 sen1e~ 1.10 x,, 2211t ,,., n :--:-~ ~""'m••':i1e1: !, n 5tl!o ~ ...... J:::~~ 1:1 21 n 1,,1 .. 11 -'• l!on c-. ,... , Pl'lololl "" • lncoro! SAi J.tll corn St t.Sl l .Sl flor!IW1r 1 H ., h 1J·~ 23•\ \~ If.... I «IV. 4111~ _ .. -... t 70 ... 1t1' -.... campus unrest and pro-E11u11 011 121\ n" "ln~rt~ AA\<~"" = 7.'1 1.n~ s.cur1tv '"""': !IDl'm1111 .iO :11 11\.\o 10Vi 1G·~ + t• frmtr¥ • '.to 12 s1io 521' ''~ + "low•;~1 1.60 11 ?:~ 11 '1+.~ .. no~raphy1 Or does th e ~·19 c!: ~ m :~:·,~~ '1 1;~ !::;..~, 1::~ l~:~I Yn~~ l~~ l:~r =~·~111~14 1: ~ 3~ 3r.: = ~ .. ri:~1\1 1 ·1~' ~ n~ r.~ ~~ -~ .::Ho:o ':~~ ~; "'~ 2fl~ ~r!6 + ~
political sandwich c 0 n ta In ~:',iJ..tlr ~ f' =~ ~~ ~ ~ t:..-: SC 1~:~ 111: ,.v~r•Am l:ff t:~ =~~~112.~ •y J\:' J:~ J.'Z-:;. ~ ~~!~'!:~~ :~ 1Jt n"' n""" i~ !1: :;rJ ~';,!,.IO 2Jl ~ ~~ ~ = ~
more of the bread end. butter ~l=T 1~ I~= :!:t\ i~ 1i~ 1~ ~= 1t·~ 'tn r.:..1~~ '':;:'::ii; :~1:f:.~ ~J: ~ff r~ f!:1 ff~.::: ~=~ ~i: ~ ll"" ~ W'f + *' -J·K-
luues of jobs and lnflatton? F11 ~t " so Pubtsttr • 6*1!11u11y .:" 1.1.1s,..,.,, Fo •.•• 1.9•'"P" 111 .• ,. 1.1o1 •'t N ~'" ..... 1<sa ~•t 1.to •'-•">• ~,,.. ~"":.~1::~"111:!: ~ :~ 1 l!Cllll Gfll 1.~1 1.uiwar "" fJ.t116.1J Blld"H"r'!..', 11 3'M '° ..... E111111,.. .:io .!~_···;,_ J•-r ·'° 2 iv. :""
I
I
I
total revenues of '1,1~.sao. •••••••=>••""'""'._,.. .. .,...,,;:::o::::m=
l!O' Pro 3.lt ,,n5h °"" '·"1'·" .~ ., ...... J '.1Vt :I.Wt l sYI ..... IEl!l.:t!lnl '•HI 29Xl\I1" ....... JIM~ 6lltt '1 1!1 ·~ 17.$1 IJ.~1 Sldli I.SI t,.O .~ W't G ,.., ~ ""° 2~ '6 ·· · •. !Ht~ Pl't. 4 2 "2 n + \':t J FO · .. '" 1,•• Evt ,. I" II .1112.1' $1tme Flllldi\ _ ~!YnUG 1,72 u, n,,•, :17_!; 2r.2" -• •,~ .. Pllnt ,30. )) •1\ ,. t~l l'I • .,_,. · 20 10 ~ Ftlrld 1.:tt 9.0" Cip!I _ 7.J.I I,°' 8rown Co ~-.,.... + V. lllVf Cp .14 3t '1'4 !l\o"I 11'1t ·+\lo J1aFC1 fn.INI! t t\lt t \\
Richmond Corp. bu useb of
$875 m illion.
In addition to the parent
Leatherbf Insurance C.o., the
Leatherby group CU!Silb ol ID
adjusting, company, 1 Ille m.
surance agency, a Joss contrOl
tervices company and an in-
v..tment corporallon. A 1arp
1,_., OP OIL PAINnN•S
WHOUSAU WAllHOUSI
OPIN TO THI PUILIC
..,. .. ~ ... ~ :r., ....... -·-LallS WAJilTID
Financial Briefs
NEW YORK (UPI) -Com·
buaUon EOJ1lneerlOJI. Inc .• bu
received a f1 million order
from Litton Industries' Ingalls
West shipbulldlna division for '
ta high capacity marine steam
boilers for nine N1vy am·
pillbious assault vesselL
KNOXVILJ.E (UPI) -The
Te.-Valley Aulltortty
has awarded the Kentucky
Oalt Mlnln& dlvillon ol Falcoo
Seoboanl Inc., 1 '11 IJllOlon
contract to pmkle JJ mUllon
tons ol Eut Kentuc:'1> Stum
coal for TV A'1 Bull Run and
Klngllt<ln SlwJt piantl ow
the nut tiw )'W'I.
CHICAGO (UPI) -Wlbon
_._di<al .J!~ cal
Corp ... ;u oroeod·Shiilftlon
relocate lta laboratories in· the
aoulhern suburbo of Cblcqo In
the """ three years.
MlAMI BEAOI (UP!)
Flrl! Rul!J -Cor»-
has put<hased 42,000 acres of
ranch land ln Park County,
Colo. 6S miles southwest of
Denver, for devtloPmenL
HARTFORD (UPI) -Pan-
coastal, Inc ., and Pantepee
lnternat!onal, lnc., said they
distontlnued their j o I n t
mineral exploration venturts
in Nevada and Idaho last June
30 and Mve written of:f the
claims. The wrlte·offs
amounted to $025.000 ror Pan·
COlltol and fm,000 for
Pantepec.
HOUS'!llN (UPI) -Awai
Oil Co. and the Atomic Energy
C.ommtsslon have beRQn a
three-staae lest or Project
Rullson's nuclear 1timul1ted
1•s wen 1rr weslffir'C61Mao.
Austral President C. W.
Lelsk said the t~t.s will run
four or five months and that In
the !Int ph .... the lest ... II
hu newed at rat.es up to 21
mUlloo Cllbic fetl daJI¥.
R d T k Firm Bu l.U IM 1......st I.al 10.1• 8wnShar11 .l'O I! IU 1o;, ! + V. Etlty !>12.lO 6 r."' :U 13 Jtffn,.110! .IO 71 U\t 'Jllo ecor a e ' .. ··"" l•··••n ... , -, .... ewnSl'lool 1.JO 7 ,. ... J1"' 3'111-\'i Elll"tf!Mf .... ' -I"' 1>•+"•H-A ..Kl ttl 22\.'t 11'11 ":# C-1n'.ii 11:13 s,,;iril I ':» .:» =~ l'~ ..,. _._ 17'-~f,t -... £v•n1P .600 ,, :iill '"" ,,,, 1::'\.5:11 ':: ~ ~ '"" ~Id ~~ !Ai·:~:: ~:t:i. •ncr, s.fl ;:g == c;o ·~~ 1il ~~ :r:z ~" -+: .
141 ~~~ .'JP 1U im 11~ :;:: .! ~ Jrmw111 "'2 261 N 1!1~··
F D. FIB~~·· p'i°Ji '·°' =~·~"w 'l·.~ '1:~ :vd•, F pl,IO 2 ' Sl'o ' :;: ~ ~=~ .fb ,,tt tt:t ~I ff·.ti = lt 11::.1r'Pt601 m tt"' ... or JSney IMll'St !·" J.M STFrm GI 1,Sl ,,SI 8i:l':.11tlt •":: 13 It'll m 1t~ -VI F•ji'"UI •\511 2J A It. ,r4 .. :.:" '""°"' .lJ '·'' SllN II «'.1 .... 25 •1.U B1111~ 11.....:0 i; 1:ti 1," I ... :!:.\, ;:,;:r.i pl I 2: 1,,..1• I'" IN .. o Vlfll Jt'I! •,i Stffdmtn F 1: 9"""11: llfl !'O ' )I\~ 't '''' 'It F .ll o ~ h,1•~ = ;:_
URB FstF v. • .• 1 l&.51 #.m Incl J.Jll '-'2 Bu•\" Ind 1 '.io lil!!t :IN ~ ,,.,... ~ ll1t1tt . °" ,, ~·.. • ... B ANK (AP) -WaltF111" DI• f ,,. 7.u Fldve '.516.09 PlurNll!" 11Je 110 lt't 21•~ ,.,....:..:'~:,:1~i"114° ~ 11 .. .., l!. »1,~=-~ Flt tf'l(;lll 7.M 1.Jl Stein ll:OI Fd1: lkwlNer tif U '1 ~ \Ii '4 F W I I" ii " " Disney Productions nt a lime "'' 1ns111: 1.n •·" 11•1 l!.1• 1•.1t ,11,,.1111¥ .10· ,, 15" 11 .... 1t~ +·" F.. et '" 11.-.. Hit ''"' + tt 1 Fii MUlll 7.10 7.11 CtJ 0. ,$& l,s.\ llUITfht 10 1-11-• .I ... I•> -•'•""• •Mllll ·.""., -u,,L S!,L Sf"',,._+ ~ when m"'"t mov~ f>'nns are"'' N•t •·• 7.tlll Stoc k l ·'' ,,,.9 • .v .. ... .1tt ... .. ~.. ,.. ... -'" "'' Sier• 3' '' J7.ICI Suotrvlld l"v: -C-~~;~ l«J" 5J l-1\11 )ll~ ii:-•
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'1"•'1ng the ·····Jal blues "", c.. J.-1 .. Gr'!~ $,ti ,,,, Clltol ,, .l'O St :ie .. .16111 ..... ,• 51 2$\'io JS + "' •oe 1uwun.: , ~ltt .,-,... ,.. 511mu ''° t.n Cldftlce 1., ... ., " fdMoe l.IO 1' nl\ n 1 .. · -\I
ed rd I "• Of~ •• ~ S".'i Tl'Cll •.• '·" Cir F1nttt! ff = ~ ni .,. ~ FlfdNMll ·" m Jl-'i. ...... ~ -+ l report reeo annua and Fnll 0111 J.tt 1 . .,. s-r 61 1st 1.11 c1n11111 """' 2,1 11 11~ ,, +;; ~::r1:...sr'.: ' '"' lOV. 10\'i-,.. I , Feund,. 7,,. 7.•1 "tMll AP lO,U 11.0S CtmPRL .4i. '2 1'111 'l'f'AI 2'* -I~ F_,111 ln1; 1; l{l~ l~S~ 'it: ·;···
quarter y earnings 111ursday. F"Ct;:;.. l:U li: T~~ l6, I::: E~~:,0111\':fo s '• •• u +·lt ~=Dg:!!tt01 'f :•t ~ ~ ~ n 111t -.,....._ ll ,...., flt nm• _.
For the y ear ended Ocl 3 '~~~lf' C'r; '·'' ::' ,X• 2t: '~~: dn •,.':" ;,'° fg ~:t ~'*111 'J'~ = t, ~,&!'.'.' c JO 11 11•\ ~ 1~.~. ~'" 1111 •fodc Nrt;tt -"'"
lit f Utlt sj 5 '' '" c11 •" 7 21 111111 1 'fl j fl" ii;"" ~ .. ~ 'I !~,.. 'HI' 2J'' -+ "' &ellt "''"" •tt lll'IOl'llcl•L e inn reported net income,,...,,. 1 1 n ' IE 1·41 !.2' 11111c 1 · 1 1 l ··· 1'lltro1 1. n" 'H\11 2:1·, +" ._,,1
of $22.4 mUUon, or $3.19 a ~~rti: G~r i:tl t::i. ~ 111:;~13:~ !~ ~ J ~~ ~ ~~ =:i ~~:"1~: ~ ~~ 'm:1"' !114 :.::~""' .=_-:;:.:,.._-';:_=;:::
(rt\r'C 1.11 !''' tnc .ICI •.l• .,,. Ct.Oft s 11,r.' ~~ Ir'' Ls~ -1"\ F.ttCl\n 'jl41 alt 3N ~ '"' shara, compared with $15.8 I~ t.~2 ,,, uni. Miii Ji' 1.t1 _,,i..., I"' ii§ ~ ~ ~ ~::w~~l :r,ICI IJ ,,,.. 1 2N ::. 'i!t..,, 11-0tci.t• .,. Nici 111 1m •M llJIGt71 ;rrtl!1N1 . 9.01 .1r1TC11 M ' l!!ljll't 1-'--'f •"•• f,t!~ "'.,,~·.•!'!•llldt•lvldtnl._,.1Jotl111 ..... t-and .,., 82 a year 1 • o ~ ':!! "" n c.11t11 1 t.01 1rri...c, ·'° 101 ! ~ 1 = i; : . .::air ro• ..... -t ..
.,.. ~ • "f'W AM 1.n '·'\ =l"W'llltl, ·~'°°' 1 fl'i ~ ft" j;,;' Fd '1.1o 1 '"' 7'l t1'1i ··•· PtJ ... Ill ma..,,._ ""' lltl!Ntlll Revtnues were $167 million, "911""7.c :-; i:,: . 1t~·it 1tJ! _ , 1' ll!1~' ",.,."' ~"' t'•tt F!!':!!",~ ·._?: J: l..O(l 1~ lr' +·"' c• ..,."""' ·~" _..,..
k ,_ 7 IS r 1.lf ~ f,..,., ''" ~~ I a111 Ji\: IN •• , n. ... ....-...... 9' .... ro tw
compared ...nllt $148.3 miUJon. ="a.c· °' •.n v""' I ·1, I ""* ~ 4"' ~ ,,1nit:':f ' 1• 2!11.t Yi 2'1\ -Vt 11111 rw: ......._... .. • "'" .-
Market
.. .... .... Fo the lourllt .~ •• '" ~ II'',,,, 7,J• UFf'!:~ .I t.. t. '"·?! I 1! 1'1' '=11
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ff t mill! •t 50 .,.,, St 1 ~ 1 .~, v11 I. n s.n J.!! • :n '""'. .t •T .StO .... -"' 111 tw , ·'° 'I /j'" ~ I -.,, "" 1111• -· .,. t«WNlll!lW '*" comewu...,. on,or • n ~,,:1 .. ..:,!:~ M 11 i:::M 1MA1ns1i ,,, C: ~ =i l:'tr~rf 57 ~ ~ ~~.-.. ~.:?,.:;,,7~=..,-:;
• share, co~pared with '7·' = g:: ~-~ ll=tA· tn ,11' c:.::..rlr,.. , ,: Ill :t "' tuorClo.,, .. 1' ' ij\.f " -......... ,,. ~ tltlll ,. .... ......I 1. j
mllllon and $1.2' a Bhatt. H~;,,111oni · '"" Ml ·" eeoi,:l~L/ 1.~ nL" 1 ~ ~ +" l':t'irt , 1" ~· '+ « ~-. ,._o.c.,... • .. 11 "',,,. • ..,. l Revenue• w re ou mllUon "•"' J.N •.1o1 •• 111111,. f,: ;·r ~' L• 11 1 11 ~~ ,.'~ 2lG-!•t.: ~~~, ',· ·::t ~ 1111 1 -"lllld" fNllltnC. ,_,,,. • mo ..,...,..
nl -'red Jiit ..:"2 Ullo .! .,~ l:C CJ; vJ!lm lrt t:u 10'.S: e:MPw \·'' IS ljll ISU lJl\ "' '! t 111 _ ::.~ tt1'o f'ltll!lllld t tlfl VllUt tfl tll-dlvlfenl co pa w -· m n:: lr'IW\I_ 10,:ICI I~.~ '"' ""' 10.71111.6' c:::' SW .tO n 'I 4 I~" = ll~ 11\l. \\ ..... ., llt<llll'ltWloll ..... •-llltt Iii full.
The finn said the figures do ' a:-f:lf ':!~ ~in:1" cm:1t.1 c::l~.W~~ U__TI~-r~ffil -"' • W2 ~ 'ii 'I' ~ ~---.. ~·~ -·~-+•·I-~ I !
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tral TransportaUon Co. com· """'" 11.J.' ,, ft! Ttd'lv 7.~ M! gtt·•:t.r·:: sl r:: Jr.: m: .'... ,, ,:f"wlll'_j ' R "t' I + ~ lllrtlllt,, •-h """· iiw-Wl!llM .. ,. ti
merc1a1 paper, which tt w111 ~r~'1 .. "' f J •.. n ~wr::i,,:,,,.:1 ,1':.11 1lr~.-ESi~£ 1~ fl ,t. ,m tt='l .. ,.:...,~.!!!, .--1! 1: " u. \\;,~ .. ,.. -wutt ~ ..... WllM
write off and deduct for tu s rne ,:~ •.f"I w1111tr 1 .tt •.iO O•r~Nv1 2 •i :s&!' :;.,. .• ,_, 111 , U 1i1o 1" '-+ dl•ll'lbl!l9t • .._"""" """"' ~
red . 11 ..... Cltl 1.11 ~,.. '*ttl Ind .ii !·'° OllteMI\ ·" 1!0 ,.~ ... .-'" +" -' ·~, • !' I ~ -•t 9'11\otn'. vt-111 ~., ....... purposes. uc1ng ne ocome '"' c... s.• .,, Wltll'fflft " 1 .,. , ·" ~Tr Ar ~ n~ U\l = = t: .i. '
1" 2... 2Vi -141 ""'"' ., ... , .. ........i.. --....
about $740,000, or 13 ctnll 1 "'='" ~· I l ·~'"11 ~:J iJl'· -,,,.i.: Tr 101 J~ •.. ,J!' ~ -G-~ +er· • ~ "" Wdl '"' , 111 10trm11f"Oll1 ... _ n · ..... :t.~·c~'·" '"1~ 1~." Jr1:11t_,,,""'111-,. .......... -. .. •
share. ':IGN "' ••• ; 1 1 Cl!lt'nNY IM '" Qlti ., ... 11"'-..,.,,., .,,"'.. lt 1lt\ ,,.,,. 1tM. t ':." ........... " .... -
•
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-·· f"ridq, Oclobfr JO, 1970 SC
-.
•
w:--'"'
DAILY l'ILOT JI
His First Son
Costs 83,20()
<;AV ~RE, Italy (Al') -
Dr. Anaelo ZamPolla • f
nearl>y San Plotro-d' A<lfe·-
so overjoyed &mclay 11 Ibo
blrtb of b\s lint aon afltr r-
doU&blm tbll be -1ip
lttt clrlnlcl I« --clttd Yillqen. '!'be blr 1111
WU J miJ1loD lin -$1,a
::.1
'
''
•
.,
" I !
J C DAIL V PILOT
-wigmore, · Dumm.it Duel Set
Assistant coach "'Eame1 L>Ufifen ~
UCLA, who has SC9Uled the Cou.gan,
singled out several leading players by
name, Including fullback Bob Ewen, who
passes on occasion; Bernard Jackson, a
speedy tailback. tight end Hugh Kio~
fenstein and safety Lionel Thomas. The
latter has Intercepted f~ passes this
season.
LOS ANGELES -Jack Wigmore.
. former Mater Del High School star and
Costa Mesa resident, will lead tbe
• Wasbl.ngt.on.-State 1 University Cougars
against UCLA tonight at the Coliaeum in
· a Pacific 8 football collision.
•.
Wlgmore has been named lo start by
Cougar coach Jim Sweeney.
UCLA will seek 10 break out of a three-
way tie for second place in the Pacific 8
Conference and Washington State hopes
to escape a cellar Lie.
Last week UCLA was to all intents bop-
ped out of the Rose Bowl running by
Stanford, 9-7, before 83,000 .
About half that number may be on
hand for tonight's 8 o'clock kick.off.
Leader of the UCLA attack is
quarterback Dennis Dummit, who rates
third in the conference in total offense
and passing behind Jim Plunkett of Stan-
ford and Sonny Sixkiller of t h e
Washington Huskies.
Dummit has severa l ex c e 11 en t
rece1vers, including Rick Wilkes and Ter-
ry Verooy, his chief targets who have
caught 'Zl and 24 throws, respectively.
Wilkes has gained 389 yards, Vernoy 393.
Ed Armstrong, who has caught 24
passes for 331 yards, and Jim Oggs, 16
for 333. are the leadilfg receiveh for the
Cougars.
Dummit's statistics are impressive. He
has passed 233 times for 1,639 yards and
10 touchdowns. He has been intercepted
10 limes in the seven games played .
"They are an improving tearµ and we
are. by no means, taking lhe Cougars
lightly," Durden said.
Nicklaus Suffers Disaster
'----------·-----····--··-·--------·---·
Readers'
Hot Corner
Dear Sir:
Since moving to the Newport Beach
·area 2 years ago. I have read Glenn
White's column "White Wash" with
amazement, consternation. and a~·e.
J realize he is trying to emulate Jim
Murr av, but his sarcasm, vindictiveness,
and viCious attacks on individual athJetes
and coaches are neither funny nor in-
'rormative.
ll is amazing to me that a man who
tan rarely praise athletes should be a
sports writer.
In an era or student disruption.
disillusionment, and distrust it seems to
me we should support and praise our
young athletes who may not set the world
on fire but do not set the campuses on
fire.
Constructive criticism is one thing;
destructive diatribe quite another.
Dear Mr. White:
Sincerely upset,
Shirley Schieber
Corona deJ. Mar
In your article. on October 26th you said
that Dennis DJmmit of UCLA, I quote,
"was barely good enough to earn a varsl-
ly letter ...
You also said he can 1t pass under
pressure, he onJy threw a SO.yard
· ~ touchdown pass on fourth down to beat
+ Northwestern.
What do you expect from a
quarterDack that has only one other
• returning starter from last year's of-
fense. I went to the USC-UCLA game last
year and he tore apart the Ttojan pass
defense.
Against Texas he passed for more than
300 yards and scared Texas half to death.
I admit he's not the biggest or fastest
quarterback I ever saw but he does great
for a man his si:z.e.
You also pick Rex Kern, Joe Theismann
and Archie Ma1tning to win the Heisman
Trophy.--
Ohio State hasn't played a team in the
top ten and Ole t.1iss lost to Southern
Mississippi.
I personally think Jim Plunkett will get
the Re isman. I think everything you said
about Dummit was completely wrong.
Come on Glenn baby, get the cork out!
Steve Delaney
?\-tater Dei
Dear Mr. Ross:
This letter concerns your recent article
Dn the Edison Chargers' triumph over
Los Alamitos , in particular this excerpt,
''if emotions play a major part in football
victories, Edison's unbeaten Chargers
could remain unscathed in their re-
maining Irvine League contests."
Remembering that the last of these
three games is being played against
Fountain Valley, think carefully about the
result of the last meeting of these two
schools. If you have forgotten, Edison
won that game, 21-20, pushing FV out of
her share of the Irvine League crown.
lf emotion does , as you suggest it
• might, play a major part in football
· games who could have a better edge than
FV? Let's just wait and see.
Joyce Rowland
H UL ME FAS TE ST
.. PRACTICE DRI VE R
RlVERSIOE -Denis Hulme. the New
· Zealand native who now lives in Eng-
"'find. clocked the fastest lap Thursday as
• . drivers pr.ct.iced for Sunday's Times
, ·.(;·rand Prix at the Riverside 1ntemalional
_Raceway.
Hulme covered the 3.3-mile course at
1J3,10t miles per hour 1n his McLaren · but his lime was well off the course re-
cord set. a yen:r ago by the late Bru~
McLaren at 126,,42.
Other top speeds during the practice
11ay were Vic Elford, London , 120.m in
a Chaparral. Chris Amon, New Zealand,
STP l\1arch Chevy, 120.609, and Peter
· Gethin, Colnbrook, England, 119.758 in a
McLaren',
Official qualif}1lng started t.od•Y·'"
I
As Aaron Breezes to 64.
LAS VEGAS·(·AP)-"Thisr.-said Jack
Nicklaus, "seems like it would ,be a good
night to stay away from the gambling
tables."
The British Open champion and defen-
ding title-holder in the $100,000 Sahara
Invitational golf tournament; had just
finished recounting the horror story that
made up his first round.
Nicklaus, one of the pro game's
greatest stars, had taken a rat, five-0ver-
par 65, struggling in with borrowed clubs,
a pick-up caddy and broken shoelaces.
And Tommy Aaron carded a magnifi-
cent 64 in the opening round of tourna-
ment.
The 33-year-old Aaron, in a rut since
winning the Atlanta Class ic earlier this
year, went out Thursday and tore par to
shreds, ripping out nine birdies in his
round over the par 71 Paradise Valley
Country Club course.
The da.!zling 64 was good for a two-
stroke lead over Don January and Joe
Carr.
Nicklaus' regular tour caddy, Angie
Argea Called. Jo-Show up__on__Ja_ck's lee
time -and the caddy had the clubs.
.. I was in a hurry when l got out here,''
Nickl aus said Thursday alter his round
on the Paradise Valley Country Club.
"So," he said, "the first thing I did was
break a shoelace. Then 1 broke it again.
"About 12 or 13 minutes before my tee.
lime I looked around for Angie and time
was getting short. So I went ih the pro
shop and asked : ·Does anybody play golf
around here?' "
He said he tried two sets, both with
rubber grips which he doesn't like, then
settled on one with leather grips.
·•1 didn't notice they had aluminum
shafts." he said . "and I'd never hit an
aluminum shaft in my life."
Nicklaus said he got a 'spare driver out
of hls car -"it has a shaft I don 't use"
-and a putter. "It's the old white fang . I
haven't hit the club in three years."
He went to the practice tee, "hit two
duck hook drives and a bad fiv e iron and
headed for the tee."
Nicklaus missed the green on his first
hole and _bog~yed it.J!~~~his drive
and was over the green on the next.
Another bogey. He got a pa,r on the next,
then hooked his dflve and missed the
green for another bogey on the next.
But he parred around to the 17th, his
eighth hole, a par five.
"I hit my drive in the rough and had a
one-iron to the green," he said. "But this
set of clubs doesn't have a one iron. So I
got a four wood. And I haven't hit a four
wood since I was in high school. And I
put it on the green.
"Then I three putted.
"I was on in two on the next and I
three putted again."
He wa:oi trapped on the next and
bogeyed it, then missed a pair of five-
foot putts coming home.
•·Angie has worked for me sinct!: 1963.''
he said. "and that's the first time I've
ever left my clubs with him. He 's very
dependable."
And what happened to his regular casl-
dy?
"f don't want to go into his personal
problems," Nicklaus said.
U,.I T•PIMle
REDSKINS' LARRY BROWN COOLS HIS FLYING FEET.
Woody Feeling Squir1nish
•
Surprising Nortliwestern Menaces Bucke yes
COLUMBUS. Ohio tAP) -Maury
Daigneau has ground su pport for his
Northwestern passing bombs thi!ll'time,
and it's making \Voody Hayes, the Ohio
State football general. squinnish.
The Wildcats. the surprise of the Big
Ten race with a well-rounded attack,
match 3-(J records with Ohio Stale Satur-
day. The victor will become the leading
Rose Bowl contender from the con· • feren ce.
Oaigneau passed last yca_r for school
records of 22 completions and 294 yards
against the second-ranked Buckeyes.
However, the Northwestern rushers
wound up with a minus 29 yards, and
Ohio State wa s a 35-6 winner.
The Wildcats ha ve ru shed for 1,140
yards and passed for "873 more in a 3--3
season to f>--0 for second-ranked Ohio
State.
More importa'nt, they ha,·e become a
ball control team and added the league's
leading total defense. That bothers
Hayes.
Northwestern looked so good on the
films the Ohio Slate mentor had of them
this seO\SOD that ht asked Notre Dame
coach Ara Parseghlan ror movies of the
Irish'! 35-14 triumph over the Wildcats.
"The films show them to bt: an ex-
et>p(]OMllY fine football--:team. lt's i
shame they dropped those close games
outside the league. It Would be a truer in-
ctication of their ability," II aye!! Mid.
The WlldcaL~. After the opener against
Notrt.Oame, were nudged by UCLA 12·7
pnd Sa.1u 21·20 berdre taking nparl
Illinois 48.0, Wisconsin 24·1• and Purdue
38-14 ht the eonferenl't.
Ohio State, a proltlbitlvt favorite Satur-
day before an Ohio Stadium crowd of
86.000 ~efeated Illinois -48-29 last week
after beating Michigan Stale 29--0 and
Minnesota 23-8 in the Big Ten.
Mike Adamlc rushed (or just 30 yards
in 13 carries against Ohio State last fall.
This season the 190-pound Wildcat
fullback leads the conference with 441
yards, 52 ahead of Ohio State fullback
John Brockington and Michigan's Billy
Taylor .
Northwestern. never rk:h in depth, has
avoided crippling injuries. Ohio State also
will be in its best physical shape of the
season for the midseason showdown.
Back from the injured list are backs
Larry Zelina and Leo Hayden, All·
America n comerback Jack Tatum and
offensive guards Brian Donovan and Phil
Strickland.
The Buckeyes lead the series, which
started in 1913, »12·1-They have won
the last four meetings.
Northwestern, which last won a Big
Ten title in 1936, hasn't been in the con-
ference's first division since a third-place
tie in 1962.
Clay Finally Upstaged
--By 2-year -old Girl
NEW YORK I AP) -Muhammad All
came to town to look at some movies
and found ~imsell upsta ged by his 2:·
year-old daughter, ~1aryum .
Rarely seen in public, Maryum is a
charmer. She Is a scene stealer.
"Just like her rather," said All's at-
. tractlve-statesque wife. Belinda. bouoo-
ing ttM! moonfaced tyke on her knee. ··she talks a streak. Sometimes she lets
out the wildest yell!."
"She knows her father is a (ight er and
she wants to be a fi ghter too. She Is
always beating up boys twiee her age in
the neighborhood. SOO can hit and
·acratch.
''Sile can put on an act, too, when she
wants to. She's just like Ali -the only ..
differenct is the sex."
Belinda and J\taryum accompanied All
.to New York Thursday to tape Ali's ai>
pearance t'.111 ABC's Wide World of Sports.
io be shown on the network Saturday 6
to 7:30 p.m.
\Vhlle AU. also known as casSius Clay,
clowned with commentator lloward
Cosell in front of I~ ct1meras, Maryum
staged a 11how of her own in the \l'ings.
She donned head-phones to listen while
her father described last Monday night's
figh t in Atlnnta ago\IW_ Jerry Quarry
which All won on a thITT.1 round techni·
caJ knock~ut.
-· --·--·
\
U,.IT...._
MIKE RIORDAN PACES NY OVER SAN DIEGO, 114-107.
Sports iii Brief
Bonave11a Tramples Foe,
Awaits Fight With Clay
BUENOS AIRES -Oscar "Ringo"
Bonavena scored a spectacular fourth
ruund heavyweight victory over Brazil's
Luis Faustino Piris Thursday n'ight a few
caught five passes for 104 yards and one
touchdown in the 4~ victory over
Washington State. He won back the
starting job from Jim Fraser.
hours after it was disclosed he was •
virtually certain to meet Muhammad Ali RIO DE JANEIRO -Pele. the king of
in December. Brazilian soccer, has released another
The scheduled to-rounder ended when report that he will retire in 1972. So far,
Piris' seconds threw in the towel after he has found few Brazilians who believe
2:30 of the fourth stanza. Piris had a him .
deep cut in his right eyelid and his right The latest report came from the
cheekbone was swollen. southern state capital or Curitiba, where
Muhammad Ali, also known as Cassius Pele told newsmen 'Thursday he was
Clay. disclosed in New York earlier on · retiring. after ~he world soccer Mini-cup
Thursday that a hght between him and-of 1~2 in B;azil.
Bonavena was just about set. No date or Wit~ an income ~f around $200.000 a
site has been decided on, b~ it was ex-y~ar JUSt from pla~1ng soceer,. and co~-
pected to be in December, probably at s1dered one of the richest men 1n Bra.!11 .
~1iami . Pele. 30, had earlier announced he would
retire in 1973. •
NE \V YORK -The Baltimore Orioles
still can't beat those New York Mets -
not necessarily on the baseball field but
in the bank.
The Orioles, who came out second best
to Ne"' York in the five-game 1969 World
Series before crushing the Cincinnati
Reds in the 1970 version or identical
length, were rewarded Thursday with
winning full shares of $18,215.78 -just
Sl22AO per man below the rec<l!'d set by
the Mets.
The reduction was due to poorer at-
tendance. Last year 274.001 saw the Na·
tional and American league's playoffs
and 272.378 the World Series. This year
only 194,867 attended the league cham-
pionships and 253.183 saw the series -an
over-all drop of 98.329.
Baltimore awarded 31 full shares and
13 partial shares or cash 11wards while
the Reds handed out 32 full sham of
$13.687.59 and 15 partial shares or cash
awards.
•
Cal Sta te {Fullerton) edged Whittier
College 24-10 in a non-conference football
clash at the Anaheim Stadium Thursday
night.
Money Need
May Force
Flood to Plav
" NEW YORK (AP) -The rpeeting was
called solely to explain how much the
participants made in the 1970 World
Series -but all anyone wanted to know
was whether Curt Flood will get anything
Crom Washington Senators in 1971.
For the first time Thursday, a dent ap.
peared in the armor of baseball's
renegade outfielder, ~till enmeshed in a
$4.l million antitrust suit to overturn
baseball's controversial reserve clause
which binds the player to a club for 1ue-
unless he is sold, traded or rr:leased.
Senators' owner Bob Short is trying to
sign Flood, who sat out the 1970 season
after being traded from St. Louis to e Philadelphia and who -unlit Thursday
-had insisted he would never sign a COLLEGE STATION. Tex. -Gene Stallings. head football coach and athletic baseball contract containing the reserve
director at Texas A&M . denied Thursday clause.
· he will resign at the end of the season. .The 32-year-old outfielder with the .293
"You can be sure t won 't quit," he career batting average in 14 major
said. "I preach to our athletes that they league seasons said Short offered him
should have pride and not quit when the more than the $00,000 he earned in 1969.
go ing Js rough and J'm not going to do his 11\St year with St. L<>uls. Washingtc)lf'
1,1,'hat I try to teach them not to do." gave the Phi ls a player for the right to
deal with Flood. e "I'm paying alimony and I've got five
PllltADELPHIA (AP ) Th e kids to support," Flood said. ''That's
Philadelphia Flyers scored three third enough to drive any man back into the aame." l)E'riod goals Thursday night, whipping He discounted-the-possibillty that t~
the Los Angeles Ki.ngs 3-1 in 1 National onl"-year absence had eroded hls abilities
Hockey League game. and said lea ving the United States to e spend time In Copenhagen, Denmark,
was a pleasure.
BER KELEY -Ste\.'c. $\1.·ceney. the "l\fost or my hangup w8s mental and
leadlng pass cntchcr on California's root· that gave me a chance to get away from
bnll tenm, .,.,-as retumcd to the starling ii.'' Flood Nid. "That's why I'm more lr.-
lineue Thursday by coach Ray Willsey. ctrned to play -that and the fact that 1
Sweeney didn't start last Saturday_,~b~ul~~nee= d the mone)'." '."f
•
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I
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s DAILYPI~ I
Water Recall Figures Misleadi11g?,
• .
ly IAllBAllA OEllllCB
CN tlM D.ur , .... ....,
Cloe ol lour dlreclora of the South Coul
County Wator lllslrict (SCX:WD) umed
In a ..call action today queatiooed
statements made bJ members Of the
Still Seek Home
South Coast Citizena For Rosponsible
Water Management. who are drculaUng
recall petlt111111.
Robert B. Malone, ~ to his se-
cond form on the SCCWD board three
years qo, oald that a comparison of
Viejo Center
Behind Schedule
'Ille proposed Mission Viejo Teen
Center teel'1UI to have rounded a corner
only to find I dead end.
The &ite wbich the teen center'• com-
mlttoe had zeroed In on and wu ready to
Sea Gallery
Plan Aired
In Laguna
purchue has auddenly been removed
from lhe market.
1'We've been negoUating for lhe site for
the put two and a hall months and all or
a sudden thl ownen said no," said a
disappointed John Moen:, committee
chalnnan. He declined to say where the
1lte was.
"Now we have to go back to other
possible sites and start all over again."
Moers said the teen center is definitely
behind a:hedule. The committee had
hoped to have its site purchased by the
first week in September.
"We aWl hope to have the center ftmc-.
tioning by the end of the school year," he
said. "If we don'\ we might as well give
t.a.nmi"Beach planning commlaloners it_up_as a lost ~ ~pJOblem is ~
a-and tbe need lo IOlvt It Ls DOW." will continue their review of landscape He sald that although there wm always
architect Richard Bigler's "Gallery by be a need for a teen center, the needwill
the Sea" proposal Monday night and diminish as the community develops to
make their recommeodat!on to the City de the acli I "· Council provi o r vlties or 1~ teenagers.
-The Bigler plan;-whldl has attractecl---1'he..proposed_toen_..nter, which would
·•-d ti ti would pre-e five be a need for a teen ce11~r, the need will w1 ....... .,rea a en on, "'" • funds bu been designed to serve
old bulldlnp on El Pueo and ~ ieena£er1 in the enUre Saddleback
them with a park d~v~opment for indoor Valley.
and outdoor art exhibits. When the. lite ls purcbued the com-
Olher items on the Monday Planning mittee will aeJect the type of structure
C91nmission agenda are: and hire a protesalonal di.rector -Loren Hanellne'a ~ Io r •
permiaaion to add IS 1llllta to hil Vacation
Village complex in Sleepy Hollow.
-Allee Jarman'• request for
permission to convert a one-car garage
into an extension of a dwelling at 2601
Victoria Drive.
-Review of a site plan showing a pro-
poaed parking lot for the POI\ Office an.
nu building at 2225 Laguna Canyon
Road.
-A variance appllcation from Bob
Huy Teuco Service, 1&13 South Cout
Highway, to permit atoar&• oo the pn>
,,.ny of not more than 1i. tralien,
trucb Ind p-er fthicla.
--Ind rniew of the final aubdivi.lion report prepared by Daniel,
MIM, Johnson & Mendenhall for the
1eneral plan.
Riles Charges
Pupils Coached
In State Tests
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Wilaon Rllea,
candidate for state superintendent of
public Instruction, Thursday charged that
dtlldren taking statewide reading tests
were "coached on the answen."
He told a new1 conference that at the
Tularcitos Elementary School In c.rmet
thiere waa "manipulation of test ICCftl"
and "apparent tamperlog with the tosta
and coaching."
He said the school's principal now
works for incumbent superintendent Mu
Ralrerty.
Rafferty earlier thll -k r.ported that
Boys Club Set
For Filin Class
The Boys' Club of Laguna B<acb soon
will have its own movie company.
A fiJm.making class, UUed The Raw
Stoel: Flint Compahy, Wil! be taught
every Tuesday night at the club, 1085
Laguna Canyon Road. by Instructors
Russ Daly Ind Peter Roth.
'Ille claA II open to all lnieruted
persons aged 13 to 18, whether ...
perienced or Inexperienced In the cinema
art.
Activities will include instructlon in all
areas of movie making, from writing to
ahooting oo location. Professional films
will be acreened and studied at every
ineetill(.
. The lint claA will be held at 7 p.m. on
Tuesday, Nov. 10. For further in-
lormaUoa call 491-2535.
'
the mulls d lllatowlde rudlng ---.-aleady-bul-nol ltartllnC-Jm. -
provement over the put five yean.
RU", on leave u depJty IUperln-
tenden~ allo dfJtrlbutod the lex! al • n.... noon by Loo Angeles teleyllioo
station KNxT that Aid wJten Loo Angelea
fint fll'&den were "being prepared to
take a new citywide reading test lut
spiing. tiley were coached dlrecU1 oo
whit would be on the uamtnation."
1•1n tome cues· the a'ctaal teat fcnn.
ftlelf, OI' I facsimlle GI \~:!I:!:" to
the -Ind -for clrlil Ind lludy before the toll -sJwn for the reoonl,'' the report Aid. l---11Bm""lllo-ald~be""""--badM.....,Wtahied.._,_,~an-~
order Wednesday from a Loo A!1Celes
-i otoppill( Rafferty'• ~
campalp orpnllation from diatrtbutlnl
Jiteratare ~ "mnean on 'lt1J
character Ind patrlollnn.
"I hope Dr. Rafferty helleves In taw
and order Ind will loDow the -i
order.''
llliel, In I Loi Aqelel ~
.'.f' aid Iha~ H eleded, be order a muter plan for early educatloo. com-
parable to the -plan for hJghee edllcatloo.
Marine Exercist>s
To Start Monday
sa1&rles and ldrn1nistrlUve 1 colt.I in
SCCWD-and the ne\gbhortnc ea~
ilel<b County Wator Dlltrict II totllly
mllleading.
in lis.'111 with oalaries ol 161,000 paJd In wator dfJtrict Ind the South Lquna
the Capistrano district;-which wu Stnltary Dillrid, wblch pays fill,000
described as a dlstrlct of Jike 1Lze. toward tbe1r ialariel each year.
At a .;c.nt meeting propooenta Of the
..call colnpand SCCWD costs of 191,000
"ln the tint place," aaJd Malone, "our "The d1ltrtcta cannot be compared u
manager, supervbor and other office to alse,'' Mid the dlredor. ''Clplltrano la
personnel divide their time between the • difiertnt physically, with ftw billa,
Laguna Feast Filmed
Jerry Liotta, who operates a movie camera by day
and bis movie camera whenever be can, photG-
grapbs one of weekly hippie feasts ln Laguna Can·
yon. He contrasted it with conventional patio bar·
becue. The film titled "Picnic" will be shown at
the FesUval of Issues Nov. 11 through 15 to help
evaluate Laguna Beach, It will be held at FesUval
of Arts grounds as part of the Orange County Com-
munity Health Services Survey currenUy evaluat-
ing art colony health needs.
Buried Utilities Rejected
' Emertibl ·Terrace Residents· Vote Against Pro)e~t
By FREDERICK SCBOEMEllL
Of IM Dll/r P119t llltf
A propOsal for undergr(iunding utllltles
in the Emerald Terrace section of north
Laguna Beach appears to be a dead
issue, Laguna Beac.h Planning Com-
missioners and proponents of the project
learned Thursday night.
A vote of 91 of the 171 property owners
in the proposed area showed M against 32
in favor and 5 undecided on t.be un-
"ergrounding issue.
At the conclusion of ftle mettlng,
Wllllam Lambourne, comm l 11 Ion
chairman, commented, "We will go no
further with this proposed district. We
have another di.strict that we would like
to look at."
Lambourne wU referring to another
proposed district including part of Myat!c
Hillis.
However, Lambourne noted, 1f at some
time in the future, the feeling changes in
Emerald Terrace, the commlss.lon will be
happy to go ahead with the procedures
for undergroundlng.
Opponents of the undergrounding plan
citod high coat, ioequltable assessments
among propertie:1, additional costs for
hou.se hook-ups, and disturbance to yards,
streets and plants as reasons for calling
off the plan.
c.ost per piece of property would be
roughly $1,500, It was estimated.
Others demanded to know just bow
undergrounding would affect t b e I r
particular properties. Lambourne told
them the planning commission could not
begin to "determine how undergrounding
would affect each of you, :1peclfically."
He suggested that residents, before em-
phatically saying no to the project, sup-
port a petiUon which would request a
leull>WI)' I I ad J,' 81 .......,...i "1 law,
which could......,., maliy of the
speclllc qu-
Such I ltudy would -lround 11,000 Ind be pald for by the city,. not the pro-
perty owners of the propooed dfJtr!ct.
U, auch a study wu favorably recefv ..
ed, residents could again peUUon the city
council to begin engineering -... -out bids for the work, Ind lny
usessmenta for the property ownen.
Many resident. said they would like to
see the poles come down, but that tbe cost for the work should be pa1d by the
utility companies. By law, the companies
have to set aside two percent of the an-
nual revenue within a city for un·
d~groundlng pro]ecll. In the Art Colony,
that ligu,.. is 124,000.
"That would take down about four
poles per year/' co~ioner l\()bert
Hastings noted. "By that rate, lt would
take 150 years to underground the entire
city."
Lambollrllt also notod that the uUllty
company funds for the next "four or five
years are beine devoted to un-
dergroundlng In Hetsler Park Ind In the
downtown area."
Mercury Concentrations
Found in Seals Livers
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Two govern-
ment agencies reported Thursday finding
deposits of mercury in seals' livers so
large that bealth food blood building piUa
made from them are possibly hazardous.
---.. As a result of the 1discoveries, the
government is now testing ocean fish, the
seal:!!' diet staple which previously was
presumed rree of the contanUnaUon.
George Y. Harry, director of the U.S.
Marine Mammal Biological Laboratory ln
Seattle, said the Mercury ci>ncentrallons
were "Just amazing," ranging rrom 19 to
172 parts per million, compared to the
Food and Drug Admlnlstratlon's max-
imum 1afe level of 0.5 parts per million
in human food.
Harry said the Seattle Laboratory
tested livers of aeala caught this year oft
the U.S. West Coast and the Pribilof!
Islands wutheast of AJuka. All or mbre
than 50 seal livers tested contained
mercury, he said.
A£tor hearing of the Seattle dlacovery,
the FDA said It tested the liven ol 1eals
killed on the PrlbUorr l1ianda In 11114 and
-fl'ff2e,CJried~bY I CalUoi:n!J ~th rood
f1rm which makes teal Uver pills u a
"blood builder."
rood product has been recalled under
FDA rupervlsion for mercury con-
lamina~lon. -
Downing B. Randal, the linn'1 pml-
dent, uld be picked seal Uvtn tor his
pills yean ago "because lhey come Crom
an animal most~lree·of·eontlminantl.!' -
"You can just figure from thll that
there i!n't any place on the whole earth
that isn't contaminated, .. Randal 1akt.
His company allo maka reindeer Dvcr
pills.
Both the marine loboratory Ind FDA
oald they wm oow lollinJ ocean lllh for
mercury. The FDA oald it had found none
al allJllflcance so far. llarTy lndlcatod hi
round some mercury In !Lib, but clecllned
to elaborate and aid bll proaram wu Just getting under, way.
MUCWJI, a metal, ii I Jonc·lllllng
poiaon which can fatally dlmace the
brain, nervou.s sy1tem, kidneys and llftr.
Fish contamlnated with the suhetanco -
lroquenUy 111'1 In manufacturing Ind
-ng pilots -ban heon found la
lnlllld w1ton GI IS U.S. lllfa. llutocfa.
tJs11 told I Senala oubcommJtt• U Jala
u laJI Juli that the ocew wm pn111111> <d rel1Uvdy free Ol ll\e poison.
A compaay l'iiiiCltilcafp -
baud Ith Martne Amplllbiolll Brlflado
will launch I foor.dly traJninC -et San Clemento Island Monday.
Thi maneuven will involve Intelligence
and aubmartne oper1tkml q:alnst 1 ftc-.
ttUoua "tnsursent force" on the illand.
, OAILY PILOT Stiff, ..... The FDA found mercury concentraUons
of 40 to 57 parts per mllllon In the liven,
and 30 parts per million In the piiil. FDA
.acienUsta saJd the1pill1 were a "posslbt~
"'Ille ... 11 probably got tt '""" lllh. their rood,• Harry said. ''The lllh could
either get It frOm n1tural merarry
de.posits ln the ocean or ftom human con-
tamination."
The compillY' will wort from the sub-
marine USS Medngal to combat the
" who an ~ the llland u :f1" ml -tra1nlDI area.'1 ~.ft• .
•
Leafing Through Donations . ~ Members Of San Clemente Friends of Library count aonated books
for Saturday and Sunday benefit sale. It will be from 11 a.m. to 4:30
~.m. at the San Clemente Elks Lod~e. Commlltee members, from
lift Ia flgbt.-are Margarel Parker, 'J'!telina l eetcb andJ'eatl Brown.
Booll: cklllatlou are 1Ull beln& llJ'CJPted al the ·Ubraiy. >
' I' J ..
· moder•te health hazard."
The manufacturer, Randal's NutrlUonat
Products, Inc., Santa &a, Catlf., volun-
iarily ~1'11 the J>Uli llOiii'1iiilUl"roocl
ouilell in nilll 'llala, the IJnt lime I
'Ille liver naturally coUedl such
depoo)ll, Herry oald. 10 the high -
ceolraUoni do not mean tM fish wen
iiliii6iiliill0 ~· -,
•
llDIDer In aru and .xnewbat IZDlle-!n
-boolmpa Ill bHlllrtct ......
COllllltl of two JWtl't'Oln, of &00,000 IDCI·'
IOD,000 pllonl ,_it~, for I total '
Clpec:itJ of 1,100,000 ptloDI. , I
"We baft to matntaia Ulrtl two-
mlll..,_lloe tanU, --milllonl ' 1a1Joo !ant, -with a IOD,oti01JalloD.
capacity, -with 1111,IOD p1loal and hro
that bold ltltl,000 pDoaa eacb. .:
"Tbll adds ... to eight -rib • total capacity of 7,115,000 plloal, all In.
CllrTllll -· We a11o 11m> to maintain U
mllea Of tra-•ioa -to --= lone area." ·•
Maioae oald that ncall pc_,tl
_ have reporlad that SCCWD ..._ TU
Smith II paJd Sl,000 a moatb. "Tbla II oft
by about 11.ttltl a rear," be Aid. · •
l!ood mooey labeled u "aurplua" ..,
the cllltrict cr!Uca II In fact -earmarked to pay the South cout
dlltricl'a lhan of the cumnt waterllm·
project carrytn1 water down Laguna
Canyon Ind IOOlh to the SCCWD. ,
"The -money WU ~flcaily rafO'.
ed for Jn.dlltrlct ~ --.........in. pumping ·.oo-and u-
and to pay our llhan of the joint ppallna
project with the Laguna County Wator
Dlstricl." uld Malone. UJt cannot be .....
ed for anytblna die IDd 1t def!nltalJ ta
not 'surplul'." .
'Ille -ICOlfed at I llllPall<\rl that di...:ton fall to "do tb1tr
homework" and come to meetinp uia~
propared. ..~ 10 days before -....... ~.
be llld, "we all receive copiel ot the
minuta Of the laJI m..tlng, copies. of aJl
correspondence received In the interim,·
anaccuwlll(_of~~and
reports from other -. Uil ~
otudy 1n thll materW before -
meeting" ~ oald be failed to --why the recall had been launched al lbll llme,wilenthreeofthe __ ....
volYed wW be coming up for rM1oc11oa.
In 1rr1.
Malone, Gerald S. Pell and Tad J.
O'Connell have ooly-year d their_.
rent tenna to serve. 'Ille fourth db-
.. -recall ta IOllght LI Tbomu R. -kl. Dr. Anthony Oriandella ii Iba OD!
ty dinJct<r DOI named In the ncall -.
m'!!lt.
Petltlooa -are beJnc cimllalad In 11t attempt to ...,,,. llgnaturea GI 10 per-
cent of the reglalered voters In tho
district. whlch has some l ,7tl0 wlAn. ·
II aulliclent aipaturea are verified, Ille
board lllllSI call .. eiectloo In not -than IO nor....., than 125 days.
A Ill, pen:enl-In water ..-1a
the Boutb Coall . -_.. Iba
ncall motemai~ which II --by memben of tho Tbund1rblr4
-AlloclaUoo la Dana Point..
later Iba ---jolaad 111 ..,,, perlJ owners In Coall RoraI imd at1-
northerty -of the -,. -oald he fell the board bad emd ln not advillhg ~ of tbe ...
pending ""' -. which .. ~ -mended by Diehl, EYw Ind J111puj,
an accounting firm hired to atucly 1111
dllttlctl OMndal aitUltkD. 11Howlver,~
he Aid. ''the --lnevltabll, ... they ..... to lcqel 11-the IJnt In 11
yean." !
Death Recalls
Bitter Tragedy
One Year Ago
-•
DALLAS (UPI) - A year ago, OllO ol
Mn. Beverly Jean Hope's beat l'rlendl
wu raped on her kitchen floor by an ez.
convlct wbo poured lf&bler Ould orrt her
with the Idea of baring her allve. .
Wben the rapilt left his -alone ta
find a match, lhe leaped up nude Ind l1e4
next door to a neighbor'• home.
The friend, now recovered, tried tO
lalephone Mra. Hope hro or tln'ee tlmoi
TuelcJaJ about I hmcb dafo Ind flOI ni>
...-. Made --IYe by hlr -ordeal, she lalepboned Mn. Hope'• ..,._
band, G,....., 1t hil Ofllca Ind urged hlnl to go borne and .,. whether auythill( bad
haopened to hil wife. .
Hope, a weD·kH!o contractor mo!
home, Ind the moment he entor<d the
front door found I trail of his wlfe'I
underwear leading acroa the Uvill(
room.
Jn one of hJa two sons' bedrooms, HQll9
loond hil 31-year .. ld wije, lyfnC uearl1
naked In I pool of blood. •
.,She WU beat up ruJ beef ••• there WU
blood-all over tbe bedroom," homicide
ctetecUve Cbarl• Dhorlty uJd. "It a,.
pwe4 to be a ,.. crime, an attomp¥
rape, becaue there 'WU aotblnC mh!alDC
from the boule llld uo alpa of lortad.,..
try.''
Dborlly Aid Mn. Hopa bad been dead
anbourorlm-herlmlbud-
her. PolJce had no 11Dpecll.
Jolm !. Abnlo. 29, """ --al ropJnc MrL Hope's friend -not a
auapect. Ha 11 In jail, -lo die In the electrlc chair.
Burglars Hit
Laguna Schools
L; .11111 S-h polloe .... !!!!w'fpihl&
burgiarlea at two Lapia Beaeb -
Wedn-Y nlCbt lo wllidl "-fl -
takmi rr.m the fllllY cub -al both
achools. •
Police Aid then .... no alpa GI a
fOn:ed entry al althlr Tb•raton
lnttrmedlltt S Ch O O 1, wbere • WU
taken or at Laguna llaacb 1111J1 ld»ol
-. the thief toot m.
-thl cub -oro lo!.-., 1111 -.....,._ _,, tllll ocl 1 ...
• DAll.Y '11.0T F .. ;,,, O<tobw 30, 1970
!!ecv1 Attac1" ..
I_Jull • 1-n Vietnam
Broken by Reds
...
SAIGON J AP) -North Vietnamese miles north of Saigon. One American and
!l'OJllll illlatt<red the !all ID !be ground two North Vletnamele were killed and sis
war ta VJetnam today wltb heavy attacks Americans were wounded in tbe one-hour Alert~J;1 :te~p':t ':ietter on two awed poliUoaa. Four Americana, clash, and a former Viet O>ng aervtng u
being smuggled from the Salt Lake three Soutll Vlet!Jamae and II Norill a -.! with the Americans also wu
County Jail Wednesday before it Vietnameee were killed, and 2 7 wounded. Field reportl said aome
reached its destination. The chief Americanl and U south Vietnamese were armored peraOMel carrlen were damag·
of security guard for the women's •ouoded. ed.
section of the jail opened tbe lelte~ U.S. olfJclalc bad been anticlpattni a .'!be attacb ..,. the he.lvtest ground
and read: "Dear cook and all kit· , chen be!p. After all the griping we stepup In enemy activity to "grab usaults on U.S. poaitlonl since Jut Jult
have done in the past we thought beecllines" just before-the U.S. con. 2Z. when 12 Americans and 11 Nortb Vie~
we ounht to thank you for today's .,........,11 e)ecttom next Tuesday. 'Ibey namese wre killed near Fire Base Rip-• said the North Vietnamese hoped to ln-f(~Od. me.al. It sure was good_. Please fluence AJ'.Derkau voters againlt can-c:ont, in tbe northern ·pan ol the country.
don't sl<>p now," The letter was dldates bacted b the NI Since then South Vietnamese buel bave
signed by 19 femRle inmates. Admlnistratic:n Y s: 0 8 come under bea'Y tbelllng, and there
• In the beavitot asuull North Viet-baYe been numenJU1 sharp grouod
Bruce Reynolds, sentenced I<> 25 ,...... ln>cjJI moving under cover of • 1.-Inv 1 · ---~ •-B
f hi rt . th -~--•·-••e atta·•·• Landing Zone c o vmg gov.,. uu.n:m .. ~ ut yean in prison or s pa ut e u-wu-IHll"'"-\;u;Q ctiv'ty · 1 1 •• us. fl.2 million Great Train Robbery, Oaala, a-U.S. artillery bue In the central a 1 tnvo •-. · forces bu been
hopes I<> speed up bis release by highlands defended also by South. Viet-mostly light. 1
returning tbe •'few thousand'> be nameae forcea. Informed aources eaJd tbe North Vie~
bas left of his share, the London Tbe bue ti" miles IOUtbwett of Plelku. namese were aided in assembling for the
Daily Mirror said Thursday. The wu'hlt by 40,morlar rounds !bat pinned attacks by the c:urtailmeat ol American
paper said the 39-year.old convict down tbe defenden. North Vietnamese air operatians this week due to storms
got $-120,000 from th.-1963 holdup, oappen followed up with • (nlllnd and bard rains lubing Sooth Vietnam.
and that what's left ls in a Me:ti· asaautt flriq rocket srenades and Tbe U.S. Command reported only 119
Tricia Nixon, while on a cam·
paign 1wing I<> North Dakota
in support of Rep. Thomas
Kleppe, was made an honor~
ary princess of the Chippewa
Indian tribe of North Dakota,
She is wearing 'the beaded me-
dallion presented to her at the
Tlirtle Mountain Indian Reser·
vatioti.
Haelalae1 ..... Clula
·Amman Cehter
·Hit by Fighting
By Ualk4 P,.,1 lalenallout
Arab guerrillas and Jordanian trooj)I
fought with heavy macblneguna in
downtown Amman Thursday, killing two
perso~. Egypt ~~ lhe new Jorda·
nlan premier, swom in lea than 24 boon
before the fighllllll, with Instigating last
month's civil war.
The fighting 'with 50 ca Ii be r
machineguns centered around the post of~
fice in downtown Amman. It continued
for 20 minutes and according to Palesti·
nian sourcee one guerrilla and one Jor•
nJan security man were killed.
The fresh lighting came after King
Hus.seln named a ·new 17-man cabinet
headed by Wasfi Tel, a veteran politican.
known for his toughness and rightist
views.
fn Caito, tbe semiolflcial newspaper ·Al
Ahram saki Tel wu the "real power''
behind the tl)ilitary cabinet of Brig.
Mohamed Daoud, whose appointment
touched ofl the c:;ivil war. It said Tel alao
was the •jmoving power" behind the
cabinet of Ahmed Toukan which took of·
lice alter Daoud resigned.
According to tbe newspaper, the
possibility of naming Tel wu raiaed chJrlo
ing the war and was rejected by the lat.
EgypUan President Gamal Abdel N .... ,
who was trying to negotiate -pace
between the guerrillas and tbe J<rd.anJan
government. '
The editor of Al Abram, Mohamed
Hassanein Heikal, said in an article ta the
newspaper today Israel would launch an
offensive against Egypt.
"Our troops wiU face an attempt to
110W1d their very depths which may prove
to be the severest experience we have
passed through so far," he aaid. ''The
test has not started yet but is on the way
and its fl'Ollt will be wider and more com·
prehensive than we lhink. It will be a test~
of political, econonuc, military and
psychological confrontation.''
can bank. The paper said Reyno'.ds usault rifles. American fighter-bomber strikes between
hc'led this would make a good im-1be U.S. Command said t It re e a a.m. Thursday and 8 a.m. today. • Americami were killed and 21 wounded In , Meanwhile, lhe U.S. Command, In a r.ression on the parole board. which the five-hour, predawn batUe, and some rush to meet· President Nixon's latest
s to take up his case in 1977. of tbe artillery wu allgbUy damQ:ed. cutback of 40,000 American troops by 0 Field reports said three South Viet-Dec. ~~ aJll1CIUllCOd the deactivation of
Reagan Clfugs to Margin
In the United Nations, the United
States proposed the cease-fire expiring
Nov. 5 be extendect for another 90 days.
In making the proposal to the General
Assembly, U.S. Ambas.udor Charles W.
Yost aiso suggested the United Nations
help restore confidence between Israel
and Egypt so that "serious discussions
which will permit rapid progress toward
a settlement" can be resumed.
Yost said "we pledge ourselves to do
everything possible to help get such talks
started and to promote their auccessful
conClusioD:'.---The-folks at the casUe-1--""' _........ ~ allO were killed .m..tt lour more Army units and ~l!!r!Lt<r Jt T
Convalescent Center in Illinois, ...iuixiel-'!be'Ncrth VietDameS< loot H-U.. UnltaCStates of a liiib uni(atotal--s unney-
saved their peitnies, ·nickels and men, 101De ol tbem cut down by eUt in American strength of about 2 ooo _ --_
dimes to amass $8, which ·they American hellc.opter pmshiJll. men. Four of lhe units are heUcoPter
Spurts Ahead
gave to a staH m ember ·to purchase other North Vletnameee troops 21 coinpanies with about 100 aircralL Some
a pumpkin for Halloween. The mlles north« SaJ.eon made a •imi1ar at· of the he:licoptera already have been
staffer approached E•rl-Wuner,, tact on ~ of the U.S. 11th. Armored transl~ to the South Vietnamese air
who grows and sells vegetables at-cavaby-Regimeat:-in---mpt ~biYOUC-• force. . .... .
his borne. Werner tefused .to ac-tr tr -1:r Current U.S. s~ tn Vietnam 11
cept payment and gave the center :·100 men, an~ th~s ~ to be reduced to
a pumpkin -one weighing 119 Cambodia Dri.ve cut~~~ Nix0o s fifth phase of troop
pounds. . . Meanwhile in Cambodia. government · e s · ll b La trocpo hunted today along the Mekong Rumors of ro!nance· between ta. ed y ck River across from. Phnom Penb for Viet
British Princess Anne and Crown Cong troops who amtuhed a river COD-.
Prince Carl G~1t•v of Sweden YOY ~'(home several hundred Cam-
aren't new to Buckingham Palace, Of Troops' Pay bodian soldiers from combat training in
a royal SpOkesman said today. Vietnam. The fire from the bank killed J3
''Prince Carl Gustav has been men--TAING KAUK, Cambodia (AP) ~mbodian soldiers and wounded 50.
tiobed before -as has Qbout every Cambodia's biggest offensive, cocked and
marriag,eable prince in Europe," readJ for more than a week, was stalled
he said. Suzy, society columnist of today by an 1D1espected onag. The !l'OJllll
the New York· D~ily News, today have not be<n paid.
reported "exciting rumoi's" .flying Cambodian olflcers Aid the problem
around the palace because Queen Jsn't that tbe tat force that they claim .
Elizabeth II was inviting her ;Ill-numbers ....., ·than 20,0QI! ww1d n:fu1e
year-old daugtber to a lunc;1teon to fight unleos paid. · · ·
• she is giving for the 24--year~ld "But we thlnt the men ought to hive
bachelor prince, 'Suzy added that oome mciaey In their podceta belon they
Anne bas been invited I<> Stock· •!lad\." said a ataff alll...-at Taing
bolm next spring "when earl Gus-Kaul: beadquartera, JI miles norlh of
tav officially comes of age,'' but Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital
the pi;i!ace spokesm.in sai1 that In fact, Lt. Col. Littaye Suon Aime,
was news to him. commander of ooe of the btjgades 1trwig . C ~~o~ Highway 6, saya his men are anz,
Jamn Clarko, Allegheny Coun--to get out and fight the North Viet-namese, pay or no pay.
ty's chief clerk. has taken all he Senior C.mbodian officers believe the
can from the. pigeons. He is trying soldiers will light better u paid becaU1e
a new weapon. Sitting on the out.. that will make We euier for their wives
side ledp,e above the prothonotary's and Children, who 1hare the bivouacs ud
ground-floor office in the City.. enemy mortar attacks.
County Bui!ding will be two imi-Cambodian soldiers receive no ration!
talion owls. Sports buffs told Clarke from the 1ovemmenl 'Ibey are paid well
th:?y'll scare away hundreds of pi· by Asian standards and must find lheir
geons who have made life miser.. own food. A private receives about 1,700
able for perlestrians and Clarke. rlels a month, the equivalent of $33.
The situation got so bad, Clarke As a result of the pay snag, several
said, that "when we bad a painter senior Cambodian officers have been
touching up the prothonotary sip,n dl.spatched to ,Phnom Penh to pict up
• • . somebody had to bold an um-large quantities of cash. They are u·
brella over his bead." peeled back Saturday or Sunday. .,,
Gaorge Harrison of the Beatles
says Vice President Sr-i ro T. Ag-
new'• criticism of rock music ly-
rics, including some used by the
British group. is of no interest to
him. 11I don't know the man. I
dont care what he thinks,'' Harri·
son told newsmen at Kennedy Air· port Wednesday. Harr.ison, accom-
panied by his wife, P~tti, flew
from London on a business trip.
Bonn Loses 125th
Starfighter Plane
BONN (UPI) -The West German air
foffll lost its lZSlh FIOG Slarfighter ti>
day, The supersonic aircraft qashed
near the Bavarian town of Hilzki.rcb, the
defense ministry said.
The pilot of the American-dalgned
plane paraclluted to Safety.
* * * Floods Curtail
Viet Fighting
In Da ·Nang Area
SAIGON (UPI) -T ..... ntlal monooon
rains sent the Da Nang River on 1 ram-
page today, haitJng the war in that area
· and causing heavy 105.!I of civilian life.
But the heaviest fighting in months broke
out in the central highlands, the Mekong
Delta and Cambodia.
Phnom Penh dispatches, said govm>-
ment troops today launched an am-
phibious assauJt across the Mekong River
to root out Communist concentrations
near Moat Kraps, 12 miles southeast of
Phnom Penh, where the Communbts am-
bwhed a government convoy 'lbursday
ni,11:ht and killed 14 men. ,
Reports from the fieJd said a force or
1,500 Cambodians made at least three
landings from World War II vintage land-
ing barges along a stretch of riverbank
running JO to 20 miles sOOtheast of Phnom
Penh. One attempted landing was driven
back by-heavy Communist fire.
It was one of the largest operations
mounted by govmunent forces on the
perimeter or Phnom Penh, and officials
said government troops, thwarted in their
attempts to land, crossed elsewhere and
were moving along the ri verbanks. Air
support was called in and a spokesman
said indications were the Communists
suffered heavy losses.·
,The rains in tfie Da Nang area where
20 inches of rain fell during a 2&-hrnr
periOd sent water uo to 14 feet deep roll·
ifig across some highways.
Rains~orms Sweep East
West Basks in Sun But Dakot,a,s Blanketed by Snow --. -
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -One week
before the election, Gov. Ronald Reagan
continued to hold a big lead over
Assemblyman Jess Unruh, while Rep.
John Tunney appeared to be pulling awaY
from Sen. George Murphy, the California
Poll. reported today.
Pollster 'Mervin D. Field also reported
that the Mai: Rafferty-Wilson Riles race
for state school superintendent ls a toss.
up, while Evelle Younger continues to
cling to a nam>w lead In the fight for the
attorney .general's job.
Field said that a three-day cross-see·
lion survey completed Tuesday night
showed Reagan with 49 percent an4_
Unruh with :n percenl 1be rest were
_u~ided or supporting other candidates.
The .figures are identical to tl1ooe of
last May, allhough Reagan bad widened
his margin In between.
'JbO poll showed · t b a t irhlle Reagan
malnlafnl his bage margin among
Republicans (llM), "ii ii the fact that he
only traJil Uliruh 51-15 amona Democrats
that may bring him victory.
0 "Hls (Uliruh;s). poor showing in this
campaign bas be<n due primarily to his
Inability to mU31er anything lib the full
pote~tial voting strength of t b e
Democratic Party in California,'' Fie1d
assert'lf. · Tunney lead! Murphy 48-41 In the U.S.
.Senate race. Since Murphy held a 45-41
lead Wt May, success.ive polls have
showed the scales swinging slowly but
steadily toward Tunney.
In the r"f' for school superintendent
the poll reported that it called "one of the
most dramatic shifts in wter opinion
ever measured by the Callfornia Poll in a
quarter century ••• "
It gives challenger Riles a 43-42 edge
over JWferty. Only laat AU(U!I, Rafferty
led 54-29. The poll suggested that an en.
dorsement by San · Francisco State
College President S. I. Hayakawa was a
major boost to rutert campaign.
In the attorney general's race, Los
Angeles District Attorney Younger led
Deputy Attorney General Oiarles O'Brien
41-35, bllt here the heavy undecided vote
obviously wW be a big factor. Younger
led 46-31 three weeks ago.
In the race for the four other major
posts and one controverslal proposition
tbe poll found the following :
-Ll Gov. Ed Reined<e ho!~ his lead
MarXist Claims
He'll Rule Chile
By Coalition
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -Salvador
Allende declared Thurlday he wl11 never
lead his country down the road to com.
~ Ctllfon•I• ...........i 1 1lltl\I
•"""" lnnd fode'f •• Ille l.,,,...r,. tvf't tli.,.I I .... .,..,,_ llllwr\WI"'
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... -"""' In , .. mon1)fl9.
munism ae pruident of Chile. He takes r-perct•re• office Tutsday.
""" ~ ...._ Allende. a Socialist-Maniat, told a
L.-. AJ'lllfln ,,..,, mo.ilY "'""" wllll "°""' v.rl..,.. llltoll Cloucl!neu •rid ' .... "'°"*" 11'1111 9¥.,,lne OYtrCtU. ~ lllfl'I 11 Cl¥k C.,,ltr w11
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1,!9'11 -wn ••POrtld In ,,,. los
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~ L11t1 Erle lo -IPtwdltfll FllM'lo
ell "'.utfl' •Wl"'""4 ri ll! rll~
Giit IM •tltn1 Nrtlofl of 1M CNll"f ...... .,.
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C,lroll
" n news confirence hil government will re-'' » 2.:i. fleet the rommon purpoee of his 11:1~party
" .u Popular Unity coalltiofl. Chile's well«·
.. 1• As ganlzed Communist party is regarded as
: : lhe dominant force in Popular Unity.'
1• .., · 'l'he 62-year-old president-elect, rock·
" ,. Ing back and forth In a high-backed r.d
ti • .10 leather chair, scolded a Paraguayan re.
• ., porter who asked him tr Chile was
11 3' As 0 marching toward communism."
" •1 -41 "My government will represent the ·-: : forces that make up Popular Unity. plus
He1-$2 1, the workers, farmers and small business
~ 11 .. men of Chile." Allende said. t: ~=* 11 " Allende did admit, howevtr, that the
M1tm1 :· {~ -;ii 12,IX'Q Populair-A"c:tkwl Committees-hi• ::-=:,. :; ~ .12 coalition set up during the election earn.
N-v.n: " " palgn would continue to exist as "Politi-=.~,,;••1t1 ~ ... :: .cal education schools.'' Thfl Communiatl
c.i.t1om1 c1" ff "' control most of these committees. ~
~~"' """"" '' "' Al'ende announced he would naUonal-~119 1t•1n : !: he forel~wned companies "within the
over Democrat Alfred Alqulat. 48-30.
-In lhe race for leel'etary of state,
Democrat Edmund G. Brown Jr. leads
Republican J am e s Flournoy, G-39.
Brown led U-36 three weeks ago.
-Incumbent Controller Houston
Flournoy leads Demoa-at Ro n a I d
Cameron by a hefty 45'29 margin.
-Treuurer Ivy Balw Priest lead!
Democrat Milton Gordon, 56-lL ·
Propotiltion 18, which authorizes the use
of up to 2S percent ol gu tai revenues
for public transportation and air polluUon
cootrol, led 5Z..21 percent
* * * Students 'Elect'
Reagan, Tunney
In School Vote
SAN . FRANCISCO (UPI) -A
statewide poll of 10me 30,to:I high achoo!
students has given Gov. Ronald Reagan a
narrow victory ovu Jmi Unruh.
Len Apcar, 17, governor of the Junior
: Statesman Foundation of Palo Alto, said
Thursday Reagan received 46.a percent
of the teen-age votes and Unruh 41.1 per·
cent. The poll was taken ·from 80
Northem and Southern California schools.
Apcar, a San Carlos High School senior,
said the poll indicated that high school
students are not a.s liberal or radical as
some of their leaders think.
"They vote a lot like their parents," he
said, "but they're maybe not M con.
se.rvative u their parents -but they're
not that liberal ...
A pear said only I. 7 percent voted for
Ri cardo Romo, the Paace and F'Nedom
Party candidate for governor, and only
3.4 percent favored American
.Independent Plrty candidate W'llliam
Sheaz<r.
* * -ti Grafting Drains
Lebanon Coffer;
No Money. left
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -:Premier
Saeb Salam bas warned Lebanon the
state treasury has been plundmd by
graft. and now is empty, ·
"We came to power to find that the
state treasury is totally empty,"' Salam
said in a television interview Thursday.
He was appointed premier Oct. 5 and
formed a "government of experts'' eight
days later.
Salam cited what newspapers today
called "yet another scandal" during the
·administration of fonner Premier Rashid
KaramJ, who wu also finance mbiisttr.
• Salam saiO a prison under constructJon
east of Beirut will cost 17 million by the
time it is finished as agaimt an original
esUmate of $1 million.
During parliamentary debate on his
government's policy statement last week,
charges were made that three scandals
involved the communications sector of
the economy.
They were said to involve deals witli
three French companies. Twire this week
Ambassador Bernard du Fournier ·of
France has expressed his government's
dissatisfaction with the way the aneg ..
tions have been "unduly dramaUzed."
The treasury was robbed of millions ot
dollars in the three deals, asserted the
..former minister of communications,
Michel Murr.
Salam declared on television that
despite the empty treasuiy, there was no
need to panic .
"Lebanon's over-all financial situation
is sound," he claimed.
Salam has ordered the fonnat,ion of a·
ministerlal committee to investiiJ'e tht
allegations of graft.
:
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fllr -ltllr atftllnuMI -ti. -.t
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UP'IT.._... ..
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\ I '
llN '"'" 11 " one of his campaign promises. :=,_,, :! !! Aft er his lnaull!rll he wUl nationalize
1111 tn. c11Y St tt the large ~,' lron ore and nitrate t:: ::::i.co , ;: :; · mining operal ons, then later '\lbe coun-
ht111, " " try will be informed of what other
.,.""·"ft .... ,----:-:--mMOpcilJil wt are-iotnc'.-U1Aonallze,''
W1t11.,._ • M .a he sald.
Beatk Visit•
Fonner Beatl'e George Harrison, following a recent vlsilinR trend by
hi s ex-grot1P" mates Paul McCartney, John Lennon and Ringo Starr,
Is In the U.S. to discuss plans for the release of his new album. All
the BeaUes have visited Mre in recent weeks in support of individ-
ual bwiness concemi. -
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U.S., Russia
Heating Up
Over Plane
Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F.
Dobryni.n said, "There is no
justification for any further
delay by the Soviet Union."
Meanwhile, the Soviets con·
tinued to portray the plane's
landing In Russia across the
Turkish border as a hostil e ac~
and linked it to a lle~ed recon-
naissance flights from U.S.
bases.
A commentary in the Soviet
news agency Tass said the in-
cident "has again drawn the
attention of the world public to ·
the serious and constant threat or oeace," from "400 large and
2,000 small American war
bases on foreign territories."
The American bases, Tass
said. are "situated in the im-
mediate vicinity of the Soviet
Union and other Socialist
countries and are widely used
for espionage and other host ile
activities."
The United States maintains
th e small white plane new into
Soviet territory accidentally.
Besides the generals, an
American major and a
Turkf~ colonel were-on board
for what thi U.S. says was a
tour of Turkish border In·
stallations.
Six Kent
Indictees
Missing
KENT, Oh;o (UPI)
Authorities said Thursday they
were unable to locate six of 25
persons indicted by a special
grand jury in connection with
last spring's disturbances at
Kent State University.
Nineteen persons have been
taken in custody but six othen
have not been located, despite
the 'fact detectives "passed the
word" they are wanted.
lt also was learned the
grand jury may return more
_indictments in conpection with
its "month-long investigation of
the Kent State distrubanet~.
whicb were climaxed May 4
when •four students were shot
to ,death by . Ohio . National
Guirdimen.
Raid Nets
'Big Gang
Of Rebels~
Nurse Wins
Air Force
Skirmisli
SEA'ITLE, Wash. (UPI ) -.
Capl. Susan R. Struck, an un-
married pregnant nurse. will
remain in the Air F-orce at
least until No"v. 10 pending full
hearing of her case before a
ltlree·judge panel.
Judge Eugene Wright ·of the
9th Circuit Court of Appeals
issued a temporary
restraining order Thursday
preventing lhe Air Force from
discharging the nurse.
Wright issued his order after
a lower codrt judge had turn·
ed down capt. Stru~k's pleas.
The appea1s judge gave
Capt. Struck's attorneys Until
Nov. 5 to file motions and the
Air Force until Nov. 10 to re-
ply, and ordered the hearing
before the three-judge panel.
~1ike Rosen of the American
Civil Liberties Union said he
wants the three judg~ to
order a court hearing to test
the constitutiona1ity of the Air
Force regulation under which
Capt. Struck was to be
discharged.
Wright issued his order afte r
U.S. District Judge William N.
Goodwin refused.
Capt. Struck was to have
been discharged· at midnight
Wednesday ·but her attorneys
obtained a 24-bour stay from a
federal judge in Tacoma.
Goodwin's ruling bad lifted
that stay.
'
Wit~h Probe
.
Evidence Found in ·Salem
"
-'-''-''-'-· -"-"-'""--'°-'_1_•_10 __________ DAILY ~LO~
Settlement Near? ..
"
_GM· Talk& Hit 'Blac_kout~ '. .
. TRENTON1-N.J. fAP J -Ci·
ty schools were ordered closed'
today in an attempt to cool ofr
racial clashes sparked by i1n-
plementation of a pupil busing
plan.
Forty persons had been in·
jureg and 32 arresled .
At the height of t he
disturbances Thursday ,1 Mayor
Arthur H. Holland declared a
"local disast er emergency"
and ordered a 9 p.m. to dawn
w:!ew.
GOOD AS.GOLD GIFTS
Who C;-;.,.,7---
No othor 11ow•pop11r In fl.111
worlo:I c•r•• 1bo11t yo11r cornmu•
nify liko your col!'lrnunity d11ll y
1111w1popor 4,, .. lt'1 tho DAILY
PILOT.
,.
Watch in $20 gold piece. $2,000.
61 O gold piece watch, $ 1 .200.
$ 2. 50 gold piece ring, S 180.
Uberty Head charm, $215.
Cuff links of $2.SO gold piece, $250.
'
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e1nkAmefk11d 1n0 M111tr Ch1r11•, lcll.
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•
DANVERS, M.... (AP) -
.,.~logilts raave uncovered
new eviden.ce linked 1o the.
witchttalt hysteria for which
20 persons were executed in
nearby Salem in 1692.
Opeo Monday Giid Friday ootll 9:30
were declared bewitched. nie\==~:;;;:=====~===~===~T:;::;;:;::;;:;::;;:;::;;:;::;;:;::;;:;::;;:;::;;:;::;;:;:~~============~==============~~ executions · -led• by ·that of
Richard Trask , a
Northea$tem Unlveraity
graduate history student, and
ardieOioglst Roland Robbins
say-they discovered the foun.
daUons of the' home of the
Rev. Simuel Parrts.
It was Parris' ' I-year-old
daupt.,. Elnlbelh and an II·
year-okl cousin who, excited
by taler ol witchcraft told by
an Indian wonian, screamed
and t .!ihivefed every night and
the Indian we.nu. -began,
and ;in all 19 persons were
hanged iind one pressed to
de8 th beneath 1 pile of
millstones.
The archeologists uncovered
cellar walls about a fooi below
the surface of a field where
Parris' bOme was believed to
have ,stoo:d.
Further digg;ng, aided by
studeflt vOhfnteers, unearthed
a pewter · spoon, a coin d8led
1689 and a 'fraginent of
chinaware. bearing th' lnitlals
of Parris and l}is wife. ·
VOTE ' FOR
BEVER.LY LANGSTON IXI
NIWPOIT·MIU SCHOOL IOAID
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Cll91nMll a.ft'( •""" "1 ...... M. UL --I
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•
• DARY PROT -EDITORIAL PAGE
---~
Laguna's Good Fortune
Among Laguna's more fortunate attributes. apart
from the climate and the scenery, are the people them ..
selves who call the Art Colony home.
They add up to a remarkable asse mblage of brains,
talent and enthusiasm -artists and architects. writers
and scientists, experts in almost any given field abound.
Their willingness to share. their talent and e%)Jeri·
ence for the benefit Of the community is a gift beyond
price.
TypicaJ is the current phenomenon of a nat.i.onaIJy
known landscape architect donating bis usually cosily
services to the city so that an appealing old section of
the beachfront can be saved from destruction.
It was Laguna's luck that Richard Bigler happened
to be around when the city began to ponder the fate of
the old El Paseo structures that were proving a finan·
rial burden.
His "Gallery by the Sea" plan promises to mate
this one of Laguna's most attractive tourist lures, at the same time giving an economic boost to both the city
and its artists.
Exchange Club's Fine Gift
Before the group of kindergarten students 1lttinJ
cross-legged on the classroom floor,.tbe talk tiy a uni·
formed policeman embellished with a new gift from a
San Clemente service club already has become a valu·
able tool.
Using ,an expensive, pennanenUy bound· series of
flip posters and intriguing coloring books, policemen
volunteering-for classroom duty have found that It is
easy to imprint the rules of safety, respect for authority
and understanding of the policeman's role in the minds
of small children.
The San Clemente Exchange Club made ii posslb!O:
Followinf the club'• oUlcial format of "Offtcer
Bill," a patrolman can flip through . the preaentaUon
quickly and easily captivate the youngsten.
On one such presentation at a Las Palmas class.
the posters were used more than a week after the color·
ing books were given to the chUdren.
The class remembered every message almost to
the exact wording.
The amazed officer remarked later that the Ex·
change gift aeems to .work better than anytb!ng el1t.
The value of such • gift ii lasting.
Dog Lovers Can Help
HavinR made their point and brought about npeal
ol tbe dog control ordinance, members of the Laguna
Dog Own~rs Association now have an opportunity to
cooperate with the city in clearini up son:te of the pro))..
lems that generated the ordinance.
The dog lovers emphasized their willingness to sup..
port strict enforcement of existing leash Jawa. After
filing the referendwn petitions, they suggested a re-
spite to test the efficiency of the city's new agreement
with the SPCA before any ordinance revision.
II will take six weeks. for repeal of the ordinance to
become final. So a test period now is under way.
By strictly controlling their own pets, cooperating
with the SPCA animal control officers to the extent of
reporting and helpinJ!e to confine atrays, and helping
prosecute leash la~ violators if necessary, the dog lov ..
ers can help elimmate th& need for more" restrictive
legislation.
The citizena who demanded the strict ordinance are
offended, not by dog owner& who take consdentious
care of their pets, but by those who flagrantly ignore
the rights of others.
....... MAui:t::..1~
s SPQOK OF THE YEAR
A Season of
Recollection,
Premonition
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
IJCI Student Speaks O•t Against Campus l'lolentt
I 'We Are Oppressed by the Radicals'·
' -The hwnan memory is like autumn, a
season of both recollection and premoni·
tion. .
It is also like autumn in that it is a
harvest. The reward of the green and
growing years is the golden sheaf o[
memories one is left with in the Indian
!Ul1llller years of life.
Your own memory crop is bountiful if
)'OU can look back and remember when-
THERE REALLY wasn't much nee4
for an alann clock J",!9"-because there was ~.
always a roo61.er
somewhere in the
neighborhood to an-
bOUDCt the dawn.
Many a farmer
made pin money by
hitching up his team .· v· of horses and charg. •·
tog Sunday motor-
ists ~ to haul lheir stranded cars out of
rnuQHOtes.
Everybody in America seemed lo start
munching raisins all at once after word
was spread that they put more iron in
yottr·S)·stem.
During the flapper era of the 1920's,
women for the first time began to invade
men's barbershops, thereby riling the old.
timefs and forcing barbers to hide tneir
copies of the lurid Police Gazette.
TIIE NAnON HAD more pot-bellied
&loves than pot-bellied people.
• Sometimes the lights in a moott house
were Dashed o• and the film stopped so
the manager could come out and an-
nounce, "The show will not continue
unless you kids in the front row qu.it
shooting beans al the piano player."
The best horseshoe pitcher in a small
town was looked up to -even though he
always see.med too busy to find steady
\o\'Ork.
f\-lany a man who lived a long life died
in the same bed and same room be wu
born in.
. Neither babies nor dogs were e:1pected
to subsilt on canned foods.
N a Republican, I -Mortba Mitcbell'I babblinc-Al a Woman,
I'm embarraaed. by her lilly,
compulJWe outburltl; And u · a
tupayer, I'm qert!d at the u·
pense ol her hysterical office dec-
orating and laodlcape redulgnlng.
-Mr1. W. E. B.
--"" .... ., .......... ,. ..... .... "' ................ °"" ""'
To the Editor:
I, u a ttudeat ot UCI, am Und of the
speeebel, the pi-otests, the rlo1B1 the bom-
bings and the kidnapings in the name of
the "oppnssed people."
I say we,·.as the general public, are op.
pressed by the radical minority. Radicals
are acting as guerrillas, causing ~alied
"spontaneous" riots and bombings. They
are Inviting backlash, which will curtail
our freedoms, achit:vtng, Jn the end, just
lhe oppooitt of wluit they tel out to do.
These radicals only JD.lb life more dif·
YOU COULD bec<lme a local celebrtty flcult UW.d o1 !>e1og collllruc:tlve.
if by eome Jucky chance )'OU bed met · --
heavyweight champion John L. Sullivan ALL AMEJUCANI lose U such llCtionl
in a bar and lhaten handa with hlm. . . continue.
Alter lhe blr1h o1 lhelr lixtll child f . am not • polJtlctl activist. I ,m a • white, mlddle-clul college atudent. I am
father and mother had to decide whether part of the "silent majority." But J can-
it would be cheaper to set a cow or 10 not remain silent while life, property and
on buying milk from the store. freedom are at ·stake.
You could tell a gangater by bis black Last year on the Irvine ampus, two
hat and dark shirts and the fact he student •trikes were held. Steven Shapiro
alwaya bung around cheap night clubs. was lauded and Angela Davia spoke.
It was a sentimental day for Mother Windows and buildings were covered with
when she got a new gas stove and threw anli·war, anU-establlshment 1Iogans.
away the old wood..and-coal·bumlng iron Many rallies were held.
monster that had been in the kitchen long
years.
KIDS 001' A thrill out ol llOlj)ing lhe
linoleum-covered floor of a big, old·
fashioned bathroom and seeing bow far
they could &lide across it on their soaped
bellies.
In most of America a (ellow had to
think real hard to find a reason for
staying up after midnight.
Before taking off in an airplane, the
pilot first had to wind up its propeller.
The favorite pinup girls of World War 11
soldiers was Faye Emerson and Betty
Grable.
KIDS WHEN digging a backyard cave
always conjured up the dream of going
all the way through the earth and
wondered If the flrlt penon they met on
the other 1lcSe would speak Chlneee.
Every child abo hoped to be Ille IJnt to
catch any new dl.H:asi thlt appeitti:l in
his clw.
The most popular alr condiUoner in hot
•·eather was a cardboard fan.
The key word of the American credo
was opportunity -not security.
Those were the days -remember?
THIS YEAR, within tine weelcl of the
1tart of school. one of the Chicago Seven
attempted lo enhance revolutionary 11pirit
in local radicalt. Since, a university car
and the Stanford Research Institute have
been bombed, and now the university
Bank of America bas been burned out.
What or who is ne:rt?
l penonally do not favor reprt11ion
any more than any other penon. But In
the light of recent development.,
especially the lncreue in violence in the
last few wteks, 1 feel that the time bas
come to put pressure on the radicals -
they must not be allO\l'ed to hide within
the university system where they have
free reign to import inflammatory ultra·
le(t leaders or organize rallies. "°'hich,
directly or indirectly, influence aiid con·
done terrorist activities.
IRA BAXTER
J.es•I, Illegal DM19s
To the Ecfltor:
Are you worried about your school-age
children? Afraid they ma y be lured into
trying some or that narcotic everyone iJ
talking about: marijuana? You can pr~
vent lhia!
Laws Thnt Kill Jobs
Observe your child very cJc.ly. If he Is
deprused, give him -ol your diet pllla,
that should pep him , up. This may,
however, make him nervous. If this oc·
curs, well, your tranquillzen that have
kept you calm for tD tbele years lbould
calm him down. Fiscal and monetary restraint aimed at
eontrolling infiallon are generally regard..
ed as principal reasons for rising
unemployment in recent months. No
doub~ any successlut effort to curb in-
naUon will bring so~ adjustment. and
even hardships which make people tend
to forget that continued mnatlon v.·111
bring far greater adjustmenta and far
areater bardshi~. However, all of the
blame for rising unemployment should
not go to current anll·lnflaUonary
measures. The mQU of laws and restric·
tkm that lulve become part of govern·
men! are amoog the greatesl )ob klllen.
Quotes
1.-Dyw E. 8-, PkalHt 11111 -•u taeb ramlly woukl 10lve its own
problemt first and lhen work hand In
hind with fellow Arnuicans to makt this
• better place to uxe. we would lite
-~"""ry_day like lb!' Apollo 11
reco1117.
i
f
1
m! PIJBLICATION, PIClllc Busl-,
,.porU on lhe tattst jol>kllllng move In
Congress. It tells of •·A tlMI' concept of
feder al minimum wage fl:1lnc .• ," that
has been otrered 1n CongrOS1. By 1m.
the proposal would at wage minimums
at 12.10 aA hour from the preHOI 11.10.
1'he proposal 1llo contelns otbtr buUt·ln
restrictions and regulations. The end
result of lhese would be the lurther nar-
ro•·lng of job opportunily for unskllled.
and part·lime worker1.
COllN'IUllS authorlllff have lh>•n>,
with facta and lllllfH, thll every time
there 11 1 boolt ln the mtnlmum wage,
unemployment jwnf)I a111011C cttttln
grvupo. And lhe et<alatlng bnpect of a
minimum wage lncrtue addl fuel to the
flnl ol ln01llon1nd d9«I much to offae\
or unctl olt ·,...utne 1ttampil ta control
inflation.
-lrllLNt'HJlnln
IF HE SHOULD develop a phobia
against your pil ls, or if his detire ii to
we drugs socially, take him to 1 cocktail
party. Give him • mart1ni. 'lb,at should
keep bim happy.
Now your child ta going in Ille right
B11GHrse--.
Dear George :
My rather Is always giving me
advice about the boys J go out with
-•bout bid company, and the
wrong kind ol boy1, and all IOrb of
"helpful hinta." one thing lht....ts
me: How do fatben know •boot IO
many tbinp boys mlcbl try to ·do
wrong?
LOUISE
Dear LoulM :
The answer ia obvious. We
father& l'f'ld I lot. • • ,
(For lnlllnt SolutioM to LUe'a
Problems, write to Geor1e. J u&t
add Wiler.) ' •
Lettert jrom n~ arc totlcMl'U'.
NormaU11 IDTiterr 1hou!d conve11 thtir
me1sage1 fn 300 words or Jess. The
right to condnll letter• to jit space
or eliminotl iibtf r111rvtd, All let-
urr mUlt incJudf rignahtrt and mait-
ino addre11, bus namu mar bf wfth-
Mld on r1qu1rt if tu!fidAt rtmon !@..°PJ_'!!rrnt. Poctrp will TIOI ff pub-
direction. He'• not II 1 pol party or on
the atre<t, be'1 probably at a coc);tail
party with a tampohade on hla bead.
When he says hla friends u. smoking
thelr lntox:lcanta:, Jt ii time for the
clincher; offer him one of your clgaret.
ta:. He won't like it at lint, but tell him
how long it took you to get used to It, and
ahow him ways to hold it that look nnart.
Show him how to blow smoke rings.
YOU ARE ALMOST there. Now you
must tell your children to beware the
11frieodly stranger" who may oHer him
an innocent looking cigarette, whlch is
"marijuana, the killer drug!" E:IJllaln
that it is a powerful narcotic in which
lurks m\D"der, death and tnsanJty.
Then, to-wrap il up, lhow him filml of
a heroin addict going through cold·lurkey
withdrawal and aaure him this is where
smoking narcoucs will get him.
JAMES R. BUTLER
Proposition 18
To the Editor :
Last wee.k you presented the DAJLY
PILOT'S position oo the propositions ap-
pearing on the Nov. 3 Ballot.
I believe these to be llncere and honest
oplnlons. I don't believe that your study
of Proposition 11 was quite extensive
enough.
The Automobile Club11 basic viewpoint
Is for smoc control and research and
rapid transit. but we are against the pro-
posed method of financing and in-
. .adequate controls.
A. L. WITl'
· Manager
south Lot Angeles Dtstr:let Office
Automobile C1ub of
Soulhem callfornla
Reiue Gron.,, ,,..,
To lhe Editor:
M our contribution to the nght against
mounting trash and uzFOld waste of our
precious natural usou'Pces, we ~hoppers
can take our used grocery bag1 back to
the market each week for our ntW ordtra
unW they are no longer reusable.
For other types of 1loru, wt can
tt:IUMI all unnecessary wrappings and
double up on bigs whenever poalble.
MRS. VICl'OR WASBIN
Peeple PoU•tlon
To the Editor:
The proporod new clay of frv tne wbich
ta .. umaled to brlnll an added ?l,tltlO
fOYtlltually 450,tltlO) incruae la popula-
Uon Into this area ls an ·emllent example
of people pollution and I can't undtntand
why there haan't been a manlve protest
fnlni , the people who llve along the
Orange Coatt.
My flmliy moved to Costo Meu from
Los Angeles 11 years •IO to get aw11
from the crowded condlUons thert, we
have enjoyed the "elbow room" and com·
paratively clean air here, but thfrt will
IOOll !Je .. dlllerence belwt<n .... '""'
The whole eoncOi>t of the new clay ii
nputalve Ind disgusting.
DORO'lllY ZUBWALT
Who Can We Belleee
To the Editor :
Just recently a history teacher at our
school showed me two issues of Life
maguine. I didn't think anything of it un-
til I realized that both issues contained
the same picture illustrating two dif.
ferent stories!
Cloe tasue was dated Oct. I?, 11169, and
the caption beneath the picture stated
tbat1t-wu-taken aHhe:scene of a stu-
dent riot at PriDceton University. It
lbowed a 1ood e:1ample of police brutaJi ..
ty.
'Ibe other iasue was an earlier issue of
IJfe -December I, 196t. The very same
picture was printed, the only difference
being that it was enlarged. Tb.is was
surprising enough, but what even further
surprised me was the fact that the cap-
tJon beneath this picture stated that it
was not a student riot at Princeton, but 1
plclure of the Chicago riots!
COINCIDENCE? I don't think so.' How
diaappolnting to learn that a magazine
wlll find a good example of something (in
this cue, police brutality) and use it in
two different instances. Magazines make
up a large part of. the news media, and
wben thue occurrenea happen, who can
we believe!' -
I only bope that Lile magazine, and all
other IZ}SIUines will start presinting the
real facts, ao we can once more put. our
f111h in them as a means of flndinl out
what ll 1oin& on in our world today.
DEBI MILHOLLAND
IIlih School Student
No Tran1ltlon Plan
To the Editor:
As I read increuingly disturbing
unemployment rigures I find It appalling
that the Nixon administration and
members of Congress did not have a
transition plan ready to put into effect
immediately when defense contracts
were cut back.
Many areas, too numerous t.o mention,
could have been part of the pro-
gram •• .low-cost housing, t r a n s it
1ysterns, hospitals, child care centers,
training centers ... to name but a few.
We might add another pfogram -
.. cure the incurables by 1975." With that
kind of (oal we hit Ille moon In a lh>rl
time.
Jt'a not too late to remlnd candidates!
KEN JOHNSON
A9•lta1t B11rke
To the Editor:
M a five-year sut.::riber to the DAILY
PILOT I WU more than I lltUe diaap.
pointed Iii your ~acklng of ?t1th Aaembly
D1ltrlct candidate and lncllmbent, Robert
Burke. I can understand lhe PILOT'a
stand : "AD things being equal we'll en-
dorla • Republican." J don't reel.
however, that anythin& or anyone ii
equal In J!>b cue. Al~ Mr. Burke "" .,.....1, he
IUll dldn~ -on ll1lll)I bllb, lncludln&
) Governor Jlfagan'1·bW r<qutriog an
unrttaled male adutl tlvlog In a welfatt
home to pay his own way: nor did he vote
for I) equal pay !0< men and wom<n for
equal work. •• RE om VOTE against AB n an anti.
smog bUI lo control lead In gasoline. He
loat if-3 and Introduced oil company sup-
ported 1mendmenll to cripple the bill.
Mr. Burke worked 11 yurs for an oil
compllJ\Y so Is II any wonder that be said
In his Bob Butke -.ftepol'U lrom
Sacramento, July lfTO (p, 3) "There ii no
bard tvklenco that lud clllltaminltioll
•
from burning or guoline eontalnlng
tetraethyl lead will ever reach dangerous
levels."
Your own newspaper carried the report
that anti·pollution groups have given Bob
Burke a rating of "bad" all across the
board for his 11tand. It seems to me that
seems to indicate, he is working NOT for
his coruitituents who sent him to
Sacramento, but for the oil companies.
ON THE OTHER slde of the coin you
wrote that you were not impressed with
Mr. lJoyd Nocter'• record of quallfica·
tiool. If lhe fact that Mr. Nocker Is a
well-respected attorney, who was a
fonner Oringe County Deputy Dlllrlct
Attorney, former U.S. Anny coun-
terintelligence agent and former U.S.
Navy investigator does not imprest you
with at least Mr. Nocker'a unim·
peachable character, then I doubt that
you have done any investigation at all\
Also, Mr. Nocker has spent .boor9'
researching our poUutlon problems and Ii
indeed well qualilied to speak in lhif
area. His past record abould at leaat giv9
the voter the conlidence that Mr. Nocttt
is qualified to speak about enforcing thf
law, making our courts cost the tupay~
less, etc. .
Indeed. in this case nothing ls equal or:'
tven comparable and I cballqe )'OU to
print this. ~
(MRS.) JOANS. PAuL:
. " Geethermal Power ·.
To the Editor: ~
The DAILY PILOT bas edll«lalize<i
that "Steam Must Walt," (Oct. 21) the
position taken by Southern Call!ornu\
Edison at the recent PUC hearings. Mr.
Wesley Marx, environmentalist, lecturer,
author, testified that "recetitly it hat
been discovered tflat low salinity areat
do ex.l st in the area'' (Salton Sea}. •
"In an investigation which Edison held
Itself, Robert Rex of the University of
California, Riverside, suggeated thii
geothermal source could supply Sootherri:
California's power needs throughoUt thjj
century. Applicant (SCE) has suggested.
that the maxlmlbtt unit stze 0 r:
geothermal unlta: would be small. ~
11AT THE SAME TIME it b not men..;
tloned that the potential nwnberi of unit$,
jn this geothermal source has bee~
estlniated at anywhere from 2,000.5,000-
st.eam welll. Applicant. •. indicates that il
Is experimental, and the record shoulcl
show that Mexico, in the same general
a~a. is pretenUy putting I geothermal
plant into operation near Mexicali. • •
. (ourl lederal government la preoenUy
contrading for retearcb, tening •••
would provide water for drlntbq: • , • ~
ett. ·
Is our teclmoloty behind Mnh:o'1!-C>i,
eould all those government benefits at7
tached to nuclear power make a bettee
balance sheet for any uutlly! :
JUNE FLEMINCI
----
Friday, October SO, 19'1t>
Tl!< tdilorlal page of th• o.au
Pilot ''''" to in/ontt and 1tifno. tilctc rtcdns ~ prtnnting thi.r
"'1Dspaper't opinfont and com-mentarv on topic..r of intnirt
cmd ~lf1CG'11<e, bJ/ J)rOl)fding jj
forum fur tht uprc1.11 .. of our rtadera• opf:niont, and b11
pretentfng ·the dit1trll vicw-
J)Oin&J o/ in/orm.td obttroera
orul ipokumc• on toplc1 of th•
dau. I
~rt N. Weed, Publisher
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---~--------------~----------·-----... --------. ----..-----~------..-----·----------..,---
Friday, October 30, 1970
i CHECKl~G Proposition 19 Takes Aim on Loan Sharks I r-1 ) I . •. --u&=-a;·-··-·-r w By ROBERT-P-:l:Aili\l:RtE rfl"lp, 19 m& es friTe!Orly·\iiteres ra1e -to 'lCf-piirceOt:-Kenni~LollJBeac. money ror reaiestifedeVelop----Strengthe nlng theUsury aws--
punishab!e by up to five years Loans by banks, savings and They argue that the pro-ment, passage of this measure to protect the consumer, ' ' SACRAMENTO I UPI) -
Loan sharks are the target of
one of three-measures on th
Nov. 3 general election ballot
affecting money lend ing, in-
in prison for an unlicensed Jen-Joan associations and other posed amendment is needed is imperative." rather than catering lo the
dcr tp lend money at rales commercial lenders a r e because of the "urgency of Opposed fs Assemblyman b 1 " lh
, Girl File Clerl{s ver ·lhe limit-for. such-ioans.--alreedy--exempted-. --b~lnllifg-new--eapua1-1-n·t-o-William Campbell;-R-Hacien needs of 1 cor rat ons, 0
Asse1nblyman Leo J. -Ryan, Entertainer Art Linklette r, California to prevent a serious Heights, who argues "it is the lawmakrr says.
terest rates and property tax-
i K
0-Burlingame, opposes the chairman of yes on Prop. J, slowdown or complete collapse consumer who suffers the Prop. 13 Y!'ould increase
n1easure because commercial signed the voters' pamph.let of the construction industry." most from today's high. in· from $5,000 to $10,000 the pro-
lenders such as banks are not argument for th!'; measure, In 45 states loans are allow· terest rates, not cor· perty tax exemption granted
affected. along with Assemblyman Paul ed at higher rates than in porations. • on the homes of veterans who [ w t N I Sponsored by Assemblyman I. ors on y ODS Charles J. Conl'ad. R-Shern1an Licensed lenders, R ya n
Oaks. Prop. 19 makes loan says, can charge up to 36 per-
; . sharking a felony, rather than cent interest.
Priolo, R-Pacific Palisades, California, they say, and "lf "It i11 time for the voters to have lost the use of both legs.
who carried it through the California is to be competitive demonstrate th.at our concern The exemption would also be
Legislature, and Sen. Joseph in attracting I n v e s t m e n t should be d!rected towqrd extended to their widows.'
' a misdemeanor. v I t By L. M. BOYD gulls, and the relentless Texas d "\ hy should a bank. savings
t mockingbirds, an d the burr of Il will "strike at the secon ::ind loan. or industrial loan , STOCKINGS -Thal girl aroused grouse. largest source of revenue or compafly be able to charge ~ wh-o~iS quickest to wear out organized crin1e/' Conrad people three tiin~s for thei r !~ her nylons is the file cle rk. YO U CAN FIG URE almost argues. moneYJ·ust because the slate •~ She goes through one pair on a third of all th.e money we "The poor members of , ks KIRKPATRICK'S
t ff B says\ ycan? 'he as . ..__tbe-.avetage .... ev.ery .JQ days. owe goes o pay o ca rs. Y . . ' d tt
I This is bee .,h... . d "we." I mean individuals, not m1~or1ty groups an , sma ''The nloney still comes -ause .-J.S.r.eqJUr.e · ·········-·····-·L:··-······-~--.. -a--···--.. -bus1nessmen are the most from the pockets of low and to scrunch down on her gove rn menL S oli 1n-l'k . . 1 . . . 1 ~ haunches to get' into the bot· st itutions .... THE SAGIT· 1 ely. v1cb ms o th.is ~r.1m1na n1odest income people whose
• 1 d 1 f'I b' TARI US GIRL says our practice. These 1nd1v1duals. only erime is not haYing • om rawers 0 J e ca inets. ' -bl to I th h enough n1oney to be able to :. A detail ed study or depart· Planet man, ~ends to be a .lit· ~~:m!1 c~=~~~fs o;:i~ pr:yu~o pay the sudden heavy cost of • en store patrons wHtJ charge lie reckless 1n her love life. th 1 h k. h cards revealed the foregoing but fairly logical in everything he 08:"t s a1r 't w 0 t mt~ medical. home. or automobile · else c arge 1n eres ra es up o "" exp ense'. . REMEMBER, IT'S STILL • percent a week "he says . Since the measure changes
24 )'EARS IN THE HARBOR AREA
.
MORE · COLOR FOR
• YOUR CASH ( OFT~~~~SE)
CHECK OUR LOW· LOW PRICES
illegal in Pennsylyani?-to kill Your questtO'ns and com-Other mo n 'e y meas ures. an initiative statute, it needs
a snake unless it bites you ments are welcomed and Props. 10 and 13, would ex·~ voter approval. RGI!
• • •. AM ADVISED the will be used in CHECKING empt big loans to corporations Prop 10 v.•ould exempt loan SALES & SERVICE
i average ~an walks the UP wherever possible. from state interest limitations of over $100,000 to cor-'~---------------equivalent distance from coast Please address uour letters and increase the property tax porations and partnerships • Phone 644-7650 ) to coast every year .• ' ' to L. M. Boyd. P.O. Bo• "emption for d is ab I e d from a el au" '" the State 2760 Coast Highway Corona del Mar
I 1~ 111AT FLOWER once wa s 1875, Newport Beach, Calif. veterans. .Constitution 1vhich limits the called "The Little Folk's . ....'.:.'..'.:'.'...'..:::'.:C:'.'..'.::::::::'.'.'..=:'.'.:.~:'.".:''..'.'.'.:::.. ______ _'.~:'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'....::::'.'.:'.'....'.."."~..""~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
• GloVe~" bilf Sorriehow ir got
; lightened up to "foxglove."
• SHORT Sl'ORV -lfere's ~ why thfy don't .See each other
' anymore, that young couple
t who were about to get ·married
j in Cairo, Egypt. He said he
! would go it alone to fight'the
, Israelis. She laughed at him.
• saying he was so near.sighted
-he--WOuld be USeless. He lost -
his temper, grabbed a gun .
and fired at her twice point
blank. He missed.
CUSTOMER SER.VICE -Q.
"Were you a~are every tenth
hon ey bee in the United States
make s i t1~ home in
California ?" A. Is that a fact?
So does every tenth U.S .
• citizen •. , .Q. "How many
': Americans are shot to death
every day? A. Maybe 60
1 • • •• Q. "Do the Russians
have juke boxes?" A. That
:i they do. First one was in-
• stalled only fiye years ago, In
Moscow.
PERSONAL NOTE -Geese
never fl y in V formations on
short hops. They jus t scatter
,. and light out. Jl's only on
·,those cross-country migrations
• that they fly high in those V's.
j This comes, to mind because I
. heard the honkers go over the
house the other night. Low
· down and off course. They
, must have been weathered in , ~ ~',,somehow. That's another bird· 1 noise you never forget. That,
.' and the cries of the coast
@ DAVI 5 BROWN
·vour
RCA-TV
Sales & Service
Dealer
for
• SADDLEBACK
• LEISURE WORLD
• EL TORO
• COSTA MESA
• CORONA DEL MAR
• CAPISTRANO
and all the
Harbor Area
OUR RADIO
DISeATCHED
SERVICE TRUCKS
ARE YOUR
ASSURANCE OF -- -
FAST -EXPERT
SERVLCE
SINCE 1947
@ PAVI' BRl1WN
411 E. 17th-
COSTA MESA
~1684
DAILY f .f , SATURDAY t ·6
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the most vivid, most lifelike, most consistently
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c o mbines the three features you want most in· one set: consist·
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major components that make ii all possible:
.,
1. An AccuColor Tube. Compuler·designed for optimum
color a ccuracy and sharper. more de:ailed pictures. Each
AccuColor tube has RC.A:s own Permachrome Shadow Mask. It
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2. An AccuColor Automatic Tuning System.lfsfiddle-
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And AccuTint-our one-button automatic -gives you m ore nat-
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3. An AccuColor Chassis. In RCA's AccuColor "New Vista·
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,,
•
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free tuning and a chassis thats 100% solid slate for long.
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labor charges fo r repair of defects in 100% solid slate Ac cu·
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FrldJy, OetObtr 30, 1970
... IJ1"1 Ttltploott
TOBIAS DUENZL IS JUST PLAIN TUCKERED OUT AFTER ORDEAL
B•by SIHps in Arms of Deputy After Brush With Duth on Cliff
Tot Saved
From Edge
Of Cliff
ROCKY POINT (AP/ - A
baby boy rescued from the
brink of a 300-foot clltf where
he was found clinging to an ice
plant ha s been t<lfely reunited
v.'ith hi! mother.
Twenty-month-old To b i a s
Duenzl was rescued early
Thursday by Monterey County
welfare worker Belh Foley
who heard his screams from
her home near the cliff about
11 miles south or Carmel.
Valley.
The boy's mother, Peggy
Jean Duenzl, 23, said he ap-
parently wandered 8\Yay from
a friend 's home aboul 6 a.m. a
quarter o! a mile from the
cliff. She notiried sheriff's
QUEENIE By Phll lntlll'landl
deputies after sea r c hin g i,:;~:.:;:=:;:::::::,;::.:;~:;::~~=~:!:::!:.::!!:~~:5;i,;'J fruitlessly ror several hours. ..
''Stop staring, I forgot my ha:irpiece !" fl.1iss Foley said she first
heard a baby crying about 8 a.m, bul couldn'1 locate the ---------------------
sound. ,
Heavily Guarded
Com~t Ai·raigns
Ohtas' Suspect
SANTA CRUZ !U PI) -
John Linley Frazier was ar-
raigned Thursday on grand
jury indictments charging him
with killing five persons at Dr.
Victor Ohta ·s mountain
mansion . Judge Ch a r I es
Franich warned all parties to
the case not to talk about it.
The 24-year-Old Frazier ap-
peared before Franich in a
heavily guarded courlroom <>n
ind ictments returned by the
Santa Cruz County Grand Jury
late \Vednesday: -
Ffe is accused of killing
Ohta, 47, his wife, t\YO sons
and secretary in the wealthy
eye doctor's $300,000 home
Oct. 19.
Fran ich said he regretted
''the necessity" of i1nposing
gag rules on atlorneys and
principals.
"This case had received ex·
tensive local, statewide and
nallonal coverage by the mass
media,'' he said.
U.S. Health Democratic Candidates
Sneer at Guard Off er
"Then,'' she said, ''I heard a M w ·zz H
scream.ranoutagainandsaw anson l ave
this youngster hanging on the r;~.;;:9;;.i;"'-·--------
edge of the cliff .. .I worked I IVl:oV"-*""• ' ' : '1
:'t:~ug~?,:.:~1~n:e;~h~~':nJ Day in Court Soon 1 ~; 2 DAY SPECIAL!
he somehowscrambledtoward ~ ~LL KODACOLOR FREE'
mP." LOS ANGELES .4t;PI) Aug. 9, 1969. Tate slay!ngs. I ~ ROLL FILM UP TO She said she gave the l:S, 12 EXPOSURES fairhaired lad a bath and fed For the past four anil a half Lawyers for Manson, 35, and !$ Developed & Printed •
Care Crisis
'78 Seen by him, then turned him over to months, Charles fl.1anson has fl.tiss Van llouten, 20, and the J~ 1 Roll Pet CllltofHf Llmir-Offfl Vold Wl1ho11t Co•po• .. SACRAMENTO (AP/ the miHtary policemen In ~ K M AC DR U G De · candida civilian clothes had been ac· the sheriff's office. lie wa s been called a killer, a devil two <>lher defendants, Susan ~ • •
• LOSANGELES (APJ -The m~alic . tesfort<>p tivatedtoguardconstitutional taken to the County General and Jesus Christ by some <>f Atkin s and Patricia Jii;i 1804 NEWPORT BLVD. • umb 1 tu' ts terin C a I 1 f o r n i a state <>ffices Hospital in Salinas, where he Kr . k 1 bo h ,-:--n er_<> _,s .... en_ en &-generally-sneered-today-al officers against radicals. was reunited with his mother. the 79 witnesses presented in enwm e , t 22, were ex· !$ . _
· U.S. medical schools must be Republican Gov. Reagan's •f· Reagan si i"il he took the -The ln<>ther said she had the Sharon Tate murder trial. peeled to begin prese nting 1 ... 4 • •
: increased SO percent by tm to fer to Jet them use National secu rity measure after revolu· been living in Sun Gallery His defense will answer soon. their side next week if the pro-~ - - ----- -------
: avert a "crisis in health care tionary threats of violence near Gerda, 80 miles south of Psychistrists appeared to seculion completed its case. , Guardsmen for bodyguar<fs. aimed. at dis rupting the elec-Carm•I but t•-1·r home burn : personnel." the chairman of ~ • •ii: • clear the way Thursday for T'ne trial began June 15. -At a news conference Thurs-lion process. He said election ed recently and they were
: the Carnegie Commission on day, Reagan confirmed that opponents of the state"s in-staying with fr iends in Rocky th e prosecution to present its Of the defendants, only
: Higher Education says. c u m bent constitutional of-Point. final "'ilness whl'n they said l\lanson is expected to testify
: Clark Kerr, former presi-ficers also had been offered Diane Elizabeth Lake. 17. a for the defense. But his
. d f th u · 't r 5 Children the protection. forme r member of l he lawyers have subpoenaed Lin· •• ent 0 e niversi Y 0 J i} F l da Kasabian, the former :: Galifomia, said that if com· Reagan 's Democrati~ op-3 3S ''Manson Family," v.·as com-"family" member wl10 '"as · ponent, Jess Unruh, promptly " ·: m I 11 ion recommendations Cheat Fi' re branded the action "political petent to testify. She recently the sta te's star witness during
:: made public Thursday aren't grandstanding." B V Angela had been a mental patient at three weeks <>f testimony
;: followed "there will be eon-Sen. Alfred Alquist, the J I Patton State Hospital in San about what she said happened
• LOS ANGELES (UPf) Democratic candidate r 0 r Bernardino. Superior Court at actress Ttate's Benedict
::;: rostinwnts· .• g' inflation in health care Five · children. ages two Jn 7th Day Judge Charles H. Older must Canyon estate and the follow· lie utenant governor. said he through II, were rescued had received no such offer. make the final ruling on her ing night. Aug. JO, 1969, at La-
. The commission n!eom· Thursday ', from a: burning "Maybe the governor feels NE:\\1 YORK (A PJ _Black competency. Bianca's home.
. ~ mended in its report to the an-motel room in the \\!i!lowbrook Democrats are morl' ex-inilitant An gela Davis. im-The defen se tried lo have She had bt'en chargf'd in the
nua/ meeting of the Ameri can area by three men who kicked pendable than Republicans.,, prisoned here and fighting ex· her declared mentally in-seven murders. bul was
in lhe door after seeing Atquisl remarked. tradition l.o California . is in com Pe! en I . But l\1-'0 granted immunity for hcr1 Medical College that the smoke. Charles A. 0 , B r i e n , the seventh day of a "ti unger psychiatrists said she '1·as testimony which i n c 1 u de d
number o( entering medical The men , Charles Jones, 32:, Democrat runlling for attor· strike protesting her solitary ~::::!]~. 1~9. rce~~~enrg'at~on 5:fu; statement~ d!Uiss Vbean Ho{u1tehn
student! be raised from the Los Angeles, James McCoy, ney general, said he w as confinement in a cily jail. accompanie mem rs 0 e
:.· present l0,800 \o 16,400 b" 36, Compton, and v Jct 0 r aware or threats against state Sh led .,.. d ha d '"ith Leslie Van Houten. "fl.1anson Family" to the ;, e v.•as re.por ~,iurs ay <>ne of the three female defen-LaBianca home. Prosecutors • 19711 Bodin, 37, t.o.s Angeles forced officials, but said he was rely· by ;1 prison doctor lo be "in ' · open the door to the room of jng <>n "my t'olleagues "' for perfect heart h"' although she danls charged lVit h :fl.1anson in said l\1iss Lake's testimony
The Ill-member commission the r.oo1· .. -· Motel and p<Jlled ., 0 .8 · · h. r the sla.ving of gro<.'er Leno \rould be needed to cor· . .,...,. secur1 y, rien 1s c 1e ha~ refu ••d all f---i ""rept ··also recommended cutting '' '"' uvu '"" La Bianca and his wife the day roborale 11 r s. Kasabian's training time for doctors and the children to safety. deputy state attorney gener al. regular servings of fruit juicr. after ~1iS"s Tate and.four other statements about Miss Van Police id en ti fie d the A spokesman for Edmund plus supplen1ent;:1 I vita min , dentist! from eight years to youngsters as Tony McKinley. C 8 J .11 persons "'ere killed. Miss Van Houten, as required under
THIS HALLOWEEN •••
"LET A CHILD
HELP
ANOTHER CHILD"
Welcome The Youngst1rs
This Hallownn
When Th ey Bring
UNICEF
Canni11t1rs To Your Door
And Call Out To You
"TRICK OR TREAT FOR UNICEF"
six years. <>pening 126 "area · rolYn r.. son or the pt s. Houten is not charged in the California lall'. >health education c en le rs ,, 11. and his brothers and former governor and the Miss Dtn'is, 2!i. began the ~:::::_.:__:::~;:;;,".:::'.:..'.:~'.'...--.".'.'.'.'.:'.'.'.'.'.:..:::'.:_ ____ 2~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>across the country and sis ters, Nellie. 10. Sylvester, 9, Democratic candidate f or hunger st rik~ last Saturday !P1id Porr11c1r Advert11omeflll 1P1fll P11111c•• Ad~er11um11111
:_-building. nine 8 d di l I<> n a 1 Anlhony, -i. and Shaldona, 2. secretary o( sta t<'. said no after she was transferred
; medical schools in the United The fire erupted when one <>f personal offer from Heagan from a cell shared 111ith three
'•States. the children was playing with had arrived. But he said if one other women in the \Vomen's
.-Said Kerr : "No matter how matches. Damage to the room did come offering guards, House of Detention to a guard-
·~many health professionals areli~wiaisi$4ot\iii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii·i·wiei'lil tiaikiei\h;e~m~.;.,ii;;;;;;iiii,ieidiroo;m;;ioniihi<cioi•;·n;.;;;;iiiij <educated, and no matter how ----
:adequately medical education
,facilities are distributed
throughout the n a t in n ,
___ A~meri.c..ans will not rece ive
adequate health care UriieSS" a
system is developed to deliver
serv ices to those who n.eed
them -regardless of income ,
geographical location. age <>r
.·
race."
Blood Gifts
'Poisoned
SAN FRANCISCO I AP) -
. Smok ing within l"-'O hours
before giving blood has a
, "poisonous" t'ffect on the
donation, says an Army
medical specialist.
Smoking shrinks the bk>od 's
o x y g e n content and such
donors need a strong whiff of
oxygen or three to four
minutes of exercise to restore
a healthy balance. Lt. Col.
. Charles E. Shields <>f the U.S.
#Anny ~1edical Re se arch
: Laboratory at Fort Knox , Ky ..
: told the national convention of
: the American Association of
: Blood Banks Thursday.
: Oxygen cannot compete ln
: the blood stream with the
: "toxie factor of ca rb o n
: monoxide," he explained . Bin-
: ding of carbon monoxide to
· hemogk>bin is 210 t i m e s
· stronger than for oxygen so
there is a "definite loss of OX·
ygen carrying capacity."
l/Nl'l'ED
STATES
NATIONAL
BA/VIC
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
BRANCH
HOW OHM
SATURDAYS
· t ,. 1 P.111.
; •OL1'MUIS. 10.1 P.M,
'JllJIAYS 1M P.M.
1 fTI4, ..... 1211, Lee.~ S.:
·S.. CMllt "-9. Celhl M ...
-R-EAl--
ESTATE •••
An Investment
Worth Investigating
Take a look at the
REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT SERIES
Are you searching high and lo\r, seeking just the right inveslment for your
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FINAL NIGHT
You've got to hear this lecture
.•• Even if you missed the others
Nov. 3-DON OLSON
"Recognizing a Good Investment"
Moderator-Pat Mc Vay
co.SPONSORED BY
DAILY PILOT
HUNTINGTON BEACH· FOUNTAIN VALLEY
IOARD OF REAL TORS
COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT
A carload of money that shoukln~
leaves Califor11ia everyday. ··· ,
You-and Proposition Jo-can do somethine about it.
Hundreds of millions of dollars will leave California this year-never to return.
Hundreds of millions more that should come in will go out instead to 45 other states with
more modern Jaws. About 'Yi of a billion dollars in all that should be spent here for new
construction-generating thousands of new jobs.
Why ?
Because large business loans can earn far more interest in almost every ~iher state
"iii the nation. That's why New York passed a law like Proposition 10 way back in 1850.
Proposition 10 will put an end w this money drain. And do it wiL~out costing you
a penny or affecting the interest y<ni pay in any way, (In fact, it might even lower it in the
long run.)
How can Proposition 10 guarantee this?
Because it only applies w loans over $100,000, made w corporations and partner-
ships. The kind of Joans so vital to th~ construction industry.
The State Legislature passed Proposition 10 unanim ously and Governor Reagan
signed it. Former Governor Brown supports iL So do business and labo1· unions. But their
endorsem ent can't make it law without your YES.
Your YES on 10 November 3rd will keep Califo rnia money here, where it'll do the
most good.
Paid for by Californians !nr '\'ts on io.
State Chairman: Art Link letter
Vice Chnlrmen: ]ion. Tom Bradl~y. Hon. Edmund G. "Pat" Brown,
Roger Kent. Gordon C. Luce, li lr!!. lrene Par.11ons ?.fann.
For more jobs!
Vote YES on 10.
•
. •
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. .,, . ·----------
34TH DISTRICT
lncumlant H•nn•
34TH DISTRICT
Ch•ll•nt•r Teague
3STH DISTRICT
Incumbent Schmitz
·-----~--·--------~-----------
JSTH DISTRICT
Challenger Hel1>9rn
•
·: ....
3STH DISTRICT
Ch1llenger Lenhert
FrldQ, lktobtr 30, iq70, DAILY 'ILOT 9
·OCGS Meeting Set
ORANGE-..,,.!l'bo °'"Ill wUl~rqtpl lo old ~lln
County Genealogical Society accordlac. 1to 'ted Rilt.bard,
will hold Its reguljt monthly society president o( Santa .
workshop Saturday, Nov. 7 in Ana. Mr. and Mrs~ Harry D.
-the Fellowship Hall of lhe-ilober1J of Qrarile will« ..,
Lemon Heights Ba pt Is t chairmen of lhe ill-4ay affair.
Church, 8t5 South Esplanade,lp;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;i!"';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ...
Orange, from 10:30 1.m. to DON LU,CAS
3:30 p . m. !Hneaological
material covering all the CEL~BRITY. GOLP:
states can be round tn the
society library which may be
researched only at t he
meetiAg. Experienced persoN
NOY. JM .
NEED A DENTIST? -Congressional-Platforms Told EMERGENCY
PLATE REPAIRS YO~H::IT
By O. C. HUSTINGS
~ 01 flit ~111 ~11•1 Sl•lf
The maxim that off-year
elections are generally pretty
dull is holding true in three ol
~·the four. Orange County
; Congressional races.
• The one e1ception Ls the 34th
~ District in the western porti on
' of the oounty where incumbent ~ .Democrat Richard Henna is in '
~ a neck and neck race with
.. Republican challenger William ~ ,Ttague. This is the second
t .lime the two have run against
~:each other and Hanna shoWed
~ a slim 3,643 vote margin in the
t 1968 race.
f°DETERMINED GOP
;-Republicans are putting up a
I del.ennined fight for the seat
Death J\'otkes
TlllUIUC
JOIH-h I!!. Trl!N<. 613 ..$. P1rton. $.In!• .... ~. Dll• of ~•Ill, Od. ,., SurvlYl<I IW
wilt, CtCtlle, of •ttw homll lt\ree ..,.,s,
R11mond, ot 0.-tntll Don, 51"!• l.n8; Roneld Tr\ink, 0•~1'11111 IWO ,,,,.,.,, Ell•
1nd Btlh Trunk~ brolher, A:oy Trunk,
111 of Mlnne11!111 sl• 1rendchlldrl!l'1 -,, .. 1.,.renddllld .... l$ervlc11 will tr. tielcl
S.tur!N1, 11 1.m., P1d llc View Chepel.
rn11rmen1, P1clllc V-Memorl•I P1rt..
OlrtclH IW Paelffc Vl.w Mo<"tutrv.
ARBUCKLE & SON
Westcllff Mortuary
f%7 E. 17th Sl, Costa Mesa -• BALTZ MORTUARIES
Conina del Mar ': ... OR l-9450
Co1ta Mesa ........ ml 6-UU •• BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broadway, Costa Mesa
u~ • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1795 Laruna Cl!J'yoa Rod.
Ul-Mll • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery Mortu1ry
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Be1ch, California
614-%700 • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7801 Bolla Ave.
We1lm.l:nster .... lh-35U • I . ' SHEFFER MORTUARY
La(llDa Beacll •..•... •~t$H
Su Clemente ..•.... 49U181 • SMITHS' MORTUARY
IZ7 Mila St.
HanUnit«rn &ach -
PUT WH IN
YOUR POCKET •
SeD' UftWUlteod Item.
Willi 1 OAll,.Y PILO't
Clm.!Ae4 Ad.
PHONI
642-5678
which Hanna has he.Id tor tour
tenns. A Republican victory
would put all four districts in
the county in Republican con-
trol since the three GOP in·
cwnbents are expected to be
easily re-elected.
180,721 Republicans ; 2 , 9 7 8
American Independents. and
245 Peace and Freedom
members registered in the
34th.
The three candidates are
Rep. Richard Hanna (0 ).
William Teague (R) and Lee
Rayburn (AIP).
deatti of James Utt.
LAW AND ORDER
He said he also proposes
"rigid enforcement of strin·
g e n t anti-pollution Jaws and
continued withdrawal of our
troops from Indochina.
PHYSICS PROF
Fillings -
Pentothal
Extractions
-Credit
Dr. WAn
COSTA MESA
261 E. 17th St. -Phone 646-1882 This will be tile last General
Election held in these distri cts
as the state Legislature will
reapportion all congressional
districts next year based In
the 1970 census .
Listing law 1ntr order as his
main plat(orm. Schmitz said
he would seek an end or in·
nation by reducing the fede ral
deficit. increasing d e f e n s e
spending end removing
governmental spending on the
UNEMPLOY!\1ENT free market.
Hanna has centered his He said he supports strict
Halpern, a physics professor
at UC San Diego. said that if
elected he will seek an im·J ~~~~~~~~~i;:ii~~i;:ii~"ii~i;:ii~~~~ mediate end to the war, "evenr iii
VIETNAM ISSUE
if I have to disrupt Congress
to do it.'' Menu Treats
' In 1968's campaign. the big
issue was the war in Vietnam.
This year, candidates have
divided their focus, centering
on both the unemployment
problem and the environment.
Law and order, as in the '68
campaigiJ, is running in st·
cond place as an iSsue.
campaign on the unemploy· laws against pollution and
ment problem particularly 11.s crime. but opposes any
it applies to Orange County population control legislation.
aerospace workers. As the Lenhart, a businessman, i!
ranking .,Californian on the in his thi rd congressional cam·
House Banking and Currency paign. His prin;e area of con·
Committee, he sees some ce rn Is the stabilization of
monetary solutiOns to in-... aerospace and defense indus-
flalion. tries and the deCrease of in-
He said economic pressures
could be eased if military ex-
penditures were cut in half,
which would be possible
through use or a professional
army. He said he considers
ecology as 1 major issue ef
the campalJn.
SPECIAL thru Sat., Nov. 7th
Delll:lourQveri Reacly -
available for comment on his
plalfonn.
32nd Congres1ldbal District •
-Of the 233,027 registered
voters in this district, 48,186
Jive in Orange Co unt y.
Located along the coast, the
district tak es in portions or
Huntington Beach and Seal
Beach. There are 114,775
Democrat s: 105 ,341
Republicans; 2,152 American
Independents and 795 Peace
and Freedom members.
"1 have worked to pass im-terest rates.
portant legislation in hous ing,
to lower interest rates, and tG
control inflation. At the top or
my legislative agenda are the
P,roble!T'~ in .the economy, the
environment, consumer pro-
tection and controlling drug
abuse," be said.
occ Homecoming
Slated for Saturday
Chicken Ballotine
l Bonele1s Chicken Leg I Drug use, which was not as
prominent a fe ature of the last
congressional campaign, has
been the center of increased
candidate attention this year.
Stuffed with: white I wild ·Jice; rice & mu1hrooms1
•pplt1•uc• I •Imondi; cordon belu,
•
A $30,000 diamond and plati· ed on the head or the winner
num crown will be given to among the seven queen can-
In. sbe
,... 7tc --·----·----··············---··-······--···-
•RISH U.NCH
The following is a list or the
calldldates by district as well
as t:heir stance on a few
issues :
25th Congresslon1l D11trtct·
-The . 25th occupies· th~
northeast corner of the county,
with 79.811 of its 251,730
registered ,·oters livin)it in
Orange County. Total registra·
lion in the district which also
lies in Los Angeles County is
:25,220 Democrats ; 113,588
Republicans: 2,972 American
Independents, and 372 Peace
and Freedom.
Teague is the vice president
of Pepperdine College in Los
Angeles, He is a: member of
the Special State Cha_mber of
Commerce Committee o n
Environmental Quality Control
and the Western Interstate
Commiss ion for Higher Edu -
cation.
the Orange Coast College didates.
homecoming queen Saturday The crown consists of 240
night -but she'll have lo give diamonds -totaling 40 carats,
it back. two pear shaped diamonds,
EGGS ............................ 49c ...
There. are three candidates
-Rey. Chartes ·Wiggi~ tR),
Les Craven (D) and Kevin
Scanl!XJ (AIP ).
-THIRD TERM
Wiggins is seeking his third
term in the House, A member
or the House Judiciary Com-
mittee and the House Select
Committee on crime, he
recently served as chalnnan
of a national drug abuse con-
ference .
An attorney, he .ees drug
abuse control and pollution
control as the main issues of
his re-elect.ion campaign.
THREE CANDIDATES
Three candidates -Rep.
Craig Hosmer tR), Walter
Malonee (0) and .John S.
Donohue (PFP) - are vying
for the seat.
With no information from
Donohue, only lhe views of
Hosmer and Malonee can be
presented.
The incumbent has served in
the House since 1952 and is the
senior member on the Joint
Committee on Atomic Energy
and the House Interior Com-
mittee.
A supporter of 'President
Ni1on's Vietnam po Ii c i e s ,
Hosmer said he fee ls water
rlghts for Southern California
are an important issue. He
also said he favors a strong
national defen s e , flnancial
support for veterans and
education and economy in
government spending .
OCC will play Cerritos and JU oval rubies in a
College Saturday at R p.m. in platinum setting.
CAMPUS VIOLENCE LeBard Stadium . Halftime Queen candidates include
Ceremonl.,, 1·11e1ude a massive Christy Ol1'nyk of San•· Ana · He said his primary area of 1.<1 ' fireworks show and the crown-Yvonne Gomez, Costa Mesa ; focus would be on campus ing of the queen. Vicki Mayberry, Huntington
violence, crime, taxes and in-Jewels by Joseph of South Beach; Linda Taylor. Corona flation. "Communist naUons
Fretli Turkoyt for ... Holhleyt
flaunt powe r around the world. Coast Plaza will bring a del Mar; Vicky Lillywhite,
New leadership is needed and $30,000 diamond tiara -and Costa Mesa; Penny Chase ,
past failures must be i:eplaced two armed guards -to the Newport Beach : and Kris
with new approaches," he 1_g_a_m_e_. T_h_e_c_ro_w_n_w~il~l _be~pl~a~c-...,.,·_w.,,e_12_e1_, "Cos_ta_M_e_sa_. ---·~------..,=c=-=--coc---,c-c-
noted.
Reyburn. who is an e1ec·
tronic technician sa id he
believes en all volunteer army
should replace the d r a f t
system in the futu re.
A
COUNTY QUESTION
ORANGE COUNTY TRANSIT DISTRICT PROPOSmON
Shall the "Orange County Transit Dlilrld" be CNClled and
eslablishocl?
'
Cr'aven, who is an educator,
is also concerned with
narcotics use. He sened on a
special narcotics committee in
West Covina and as a member
of the State Democratic Ex·
ecutlve Board.
Malonee is a mathematics
instructor and a businessman
who said he believes in the ap-
plication of business principles
to the solution of political
issues. '
"America must stop its
headlong pace in so many
directions and produce, in a
businesslike manner, t h e
leadership to solve crime.
racial i s s u e s . educational
need s, inOation . pollution,
poverty, disease and foreign
affairs,'' he said.
He said he favors cutting
federal funds off from cam-
puses struck by s t u d c n t
violence and giving Co ngress
the power to coin money to
solve the inflation problems.
3Sth Congressional District •
-This district is split
between San Diego and
Orange Count ies. There are-a
total of 387,938 registe red
voters. 259,520 ol which live In
Orange Coubty. It is heavily
Republican with 221 ,711 GOP
members: 134,195 Democrats:
2,745 American Independents,
an d 1,127 Peace and Freedom '
YES!!! IEaUSE, .... TUlsrT DiSTRICT WILL •••
"The inability of people to
live in peace is probably the
greatesl problem today. I am
pledged to seeking new ways
to end war, riots, and student
unrest honorably. I will con·
tinue to work .in the fi elds of
drug abuse and pollution con-
trol whether or not I am
elected to office," he said .
Scanlon has not b e e n
3-tth Congressional District •
-The majority (204,489) of
this district's voters live in
Orange County. There are
132,993 registered Democrats;
l '•lll l'•llllcal Alher1 ... IMllll
Members.
The three candidates seek·
ing office ar·e ·Rep. John
Schmitz (Rl. Thomas Lenhart
ID) and Frank Ha I pe rn
(PFP).
Schmilz. an avowed mljlmber
of the John BirCh Society, has
served in Washington since the
Jul y special election held to
fill the vacancy created by the
HERE'S THE BEST MAN FOR THE JOB
Elect
JOE
GREENE
.,. COUNTY
TAX COLLECTOR
• Administrator • Leader • Man of Integrity
6 tf2 Y ean Outstanding Service As Deputy Tax Collector
COUNTYWIDI CITIDNI COMMlml FOii: JOI •1tllNI -...... Y. Sllew MM1 K"tti It. Clerk, • c.-c.ltelr-: Ti ...... L. 1tr.-r, fl..-e; CMrtes M. c1.,,, tr-•r..-: J~ P. AYMt; .i......
P. Apn Jr,; Wllt19'11 It. Dt111c•; I. Molcoh11 A•teH: W .. H9fl'l11 11H llH S.,iet-.
Melt Ar•o
Weltor J, le14o
J, It. l ei/ey
Phyll!t J. 1111
Robert S, l1r11e1
Allee lertlett
Die• l ro119hlo11
D1. •ii•• T. lrow"
C. M. "Cye"~ ~etherlf
Fto11• Q, Fty, J,,
De ... icl W, Geter '
lei J. Ht1tt1J••9•r
Thome1 E. Heffarn en
Welter Knott
C. M. K1111s
F. R. Mer¥in
Dr. Arthut F. Me14
D1¥lcl R. M•••
Tlio'"11 J, O'ICeefe
Mrt. Either '•ietlt
lluuell C. '•rl1
Dr, Richerd A, Pro1lo11
J . F. Q uilty
ltev. Done!d E. lteiler
A-H. ki"9blon1 llio'"•' C. lt09•rt
C. S. Rumbold
F. leYell• Se11def"t
Dr. W. Stern9he"
J erne1 H. Tow11111!d
J•ck Tri,let
Robort f:. Turn•r
ler11ercl Wli!l!l•Y
CITIZINS !&01
.IOI Ollllfrfl P.O. BOX 941,.SANTA AN'A-;-CALIF.
• Plan for and Implement a Public Transportatien sy st e:n to
meet Orang• County's grawlng needs
• Provide alternatives for use of the private autamoblle
• Maintain ·"home rule" for ,Orange County and give us equal
voice In plans now underway for a regional transit system --
• Receive available federal, state and private funds to camplete
these lobs as quickly and efflciently as possible
• Protect our natural environment -Relieve traffic con11estlon
Endorsed by:
Orange County Board of Supervi1or1
Orange County Chomber of Commerce
Oronge County l eague of Cities
Citizens Committee for Propo1ltlo11 A
Henry T. Segerstrom, Chairnican
Oronge County league of Women Volerl
Orange County Republican Central Commitre•
Orange County Congres1mon Richard T. Hanna
Orange County Senator Denni• Corpenler
Orange County Supervi1or-elect, Ronald Cmperl
O range County Transit Committee
O range County Humon Relation1 Council
American Associolion of University Women,
Gorden Grove ond Santo Ano Choplert
UCI Project 21 Study Teom on Tronsportotlon
The Colifornia Stole Legislature una nimously patstd
legislation to permit establi1hm1nt of an Orange
County Tronsit Disrrict. The levislotJon wos
introduced and supported by then State Senator
John Schmitt, former A1semblymcfn William
Oonnemeyer, Assemblymon Jam-s Wh•lmot•, ctnd
As1•mblymon Robert lodhom.
Vlce·Cholrme11
Mrs. John Bryden
Hubtrt f•rry
lee Ktomey
Hon. Williom J. Phillips
Joh n B. Lawson, Finan,• CheittHn
Ric:hord K. Wolk.,., Trea1urer
PlntmCl•ll VJce .. ChalrmM
Jam•• Day
Jam•• Moor•
Edward L. Ohen
nnanc• CommltM
Don Boyles
Wiiiiam MaSOll
Phll lp J. Reilly
Horris Thamp'°'1
It's YOUR MOVE ·so
We Cll 'MOVE in the future!
• von YES 01 PROPOSRIOI l
llOVEMIEI 3
-j.... • •
'
)'
•
'
-"
•
•
,
Je DIJLY PILOT
Labor One
~·Key r1ze
In Election
WASHINGTON (UPI)
members are one comer of a
love triangle in next week's
elections. The prize in this
· political romance 1.:tip.ld be
control of the 92nd Congress.
Organized latior has been
going steady with t h e
Democratic Party s I n c e
Franklin D. Roosevelt mold®
it into his liberal coalition
nearly four decades ago. 11lis
year, Richard M. Nixon, wilh
an assist from Spiro T.
Agnew, Js trying to woo union
members and other workers to
the Republican banner.
'trld.riy, Octobff 30, 1970
FAMILY CIRCUS
,...,
.n.:=-
'Mommyl Look What yOU dl<I lo my wasnl" But..most_union.leaders have
refused to buy the Nixon line
that GOP candidates who
stand for law and order and opp ose vi o I enc e and ------------------------1
pennissivenw sbould b e
elec;ted to Congress, and that p••••••••••••••••••••••
Republicans must be given
control of the Senate and
House.
AFLCIO President George
Meany .and other labor leaders
·: argue instead that the im·
Men in Service
j>Ortant issues for wQrkers in Rlchard w._ Kinney, son of Miss.. I.or traini.ng as a
this election are the pocket· Mr. and Mrs. Willis C. Kinney personnel apecialist. book ones -inflation,
· unemployment, Interest rat.es, enlisted f!lr three years and
-all of which have soared under will receive training in Greg Aydelotte, son of Mr.
President Nixon. Memori.:l Activities. and Mrs. Wendel W. Aydelot-
-But ~ m."y_be ~!!~rit_ After_ completing_e.t g hJ._te,..e~ted for three Yea.i:! ~ _
story with rank and file uruon weeks of basic training at Fort has been guaranteed training
members. Chances are they Ord he ill e"ve eight in Aircraft Maintenaoce. will not follow completely (any • "'.' rec 1 •
inore than they have In reeent weeks spec.laity advanced m-
years) the advice ol their dividual training at Fort Lee,
leaders .o vote for Democrat..s Va.
plus a few liberal Republicans.
There is some evidence that
workers in large numbers are
turning receptive ears to
Republican rh etoric because
Navy Seaman ApprentiCe
David W. Llttleb.aJe, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Don W. Lit~
of fear of crime and violence tlehale of 3281 Admiralty
Md disgust over campus
disturbances and r a d i c a I
demonstratorii. And m a n y
·whi te workers feel they have
been forgotten by t h e
Democrats, who they say are
concerned primarily w i t h
helping Negroes and other
minorities.
President Nixon's flirtation
. with New York City hard-hat
construction workers, w h o
clashed in the streets with an-
tiwar demonstrators. may be
an example cf the warm
reception the GOP law-and·
order approach is getting
among worken across the na-
tion.
At stake In this political
triangle ts the voting power of
some 18 million u n i o n
members, roughly a quarter
of the total labor force . Not all
will go to the polls Nov. 3, of
course, but the potential vote
of union members, plus their
wives, husbands and other
voters they might Influence, is
enonnous -and enough in
many cases to be the deciding
factor in congressional races.
Drive, Huntington Beach, was
graduated from basic training
at the Naval Recruit Training
Command, San Diego.
Navy Seaman Charles T.
Forkner Jr., son or Mr. and
Mrs. Charles T. Forkner or
2801 Bayshore,Drive, Newport
Beach, is serving in the
Western Pacific aboard the
guided missile cruiser USS
Chicago.
Navy Seaman Jon K. Bea-
nlqs, son o( Mr. and Mrs. V.
C. Hennings of 8291 Atlanta
Ave., Huntington Beach, is
serving aboard the fast com·
bat store ship USS Camden in
the Western Pacific.
Navy Fireman Darrell W.
Floyd, son of Mr. and Mrs. R.
U. Floyd of 2065 Goshawk.
Huntington Be a ch. has
reported for duty aboard the
destroyer tender, USS Dixie,
San Diego.
Airman Paul A. Jeffenon,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E.
Jefferson of 24022 Silver Bay,
El Toro, has completed basic
training at Lackland AFB,
Tex. He has been assigned to
Sheppard AFB, Tex., for
training in t h e com-
munications field. Airman Jef-
ferson is a 1970 graduate ef
Mission Viejo High School.
Nicky Dale Ncrtbern, son or
Mr. Jefferson P. Northern.
enlisted for three years and
has been guaranteed training
in Motor Transport.
After completing e i g b t
weeks basic training at Fort
Ord, be will receive spe(.'fa]ty
advanced individual training.
Navy Airman Apprentice
Jame• M. Swal.n, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John E. Swain of
17013 Edgewater Lane, Hun-
tington Beach, was garduated
from Photographer's Mate
School at the Naval Air Sta·
tion , Pensacola, Fla.
Navy Li~t~nant ( j g )
Ronald F. Kirby, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph F. Kirby of
970 Victoria St., Costa Mesa,
is serving aboard the fast
combat store ship U S S
Camden in the Western
Pacific.
Michaet D. Vicari , son of
Mr. Francise J. Vicari. That is why there is such an
intense tug ()( war be~een
Nixon, Agnew a nd
-Republicans on one hand and
Democrats and union leaders
on the other for the affection
of union members. The
Republicans believe thal if
they can att ract enough of the
labor vote away from the
Democrats. the COP just
might gain .control cf
Congress.
= Coast Guard S e a m 8 n enlisted for three years. a~
Recruit Thomas J. ,Sley, son-has ~~.guaranteed..~pec1aliz!.
f ~1 d Mrs Jackson B ed training as a Radio Relay ~sl~y r ~f 8;1 E. t8th St.. Co~ and carrier Attendant.
Not only are union leaders
concerned that a GOP victory
will be an endorsement of Nix·
on policies -and thus, they
say. lead to more or at least
continued Inflatio n and
unemployment -but th~y
fear that a conservative vie·
tory would mean an anti-labor
Congress for the next two
ye an.
Mesa, has enlisted in the
Coast Guard at Long Beach.
U. s. Air Force Technical
Sergeant Howard K. Bennett,
son of Mr. and Mrs. John G.
Bennett of Culp Creek, Ore .. is
participating in a massive
NATO training exercise in
West Germany.
Sergeant Bennett is a flight
engineer with the McChord
AFB. Wa sh., C-141 Starlifter
crews who are helping to
airhfL more than 2,200 Tactical
Air Command support. person·
nel and 1,000 tons of cargo
from the U.S. to Gennany and
back.
Myasthenia Gravis
Foundation to Meet
• 11An informalive educalional medical advisory board,
Henry Kenneth Bennett,
husband of Mrs. Rebecca Ben·
"nett. 2454 Visla ' Hogar of
Newport Beach. r e c en t I y
enlisted in the Anny.
According to Sergeant First
Class .James A. Long, U.S.
Anny in Costa Mesa, Bennett
will receive adva nced in·
dlv idual training upon com·
pletion of eight weeks basic
·training.
Navy Scaman Apprentice
James W. Trotter, son oI Mr.
and Mrs. Jay W. Troller of 721
Jasmine. Corona del Mar. wa s
graduated from basic training
at the Naval Training Center,
San Diego.
Trotter Is a 1970 graduate cf
Corona de! Mar High School, -
l[Vl[ll"f' ·•oov· SLIM GYM
·~-• • LOil A Dllll&I llZl IN I WElKS , ...
Members aad friends ol the
.meeting of • the Myasthenia. ~c~h~a~pt~er~a~re~in~v~it~ed~·===~=========~~I Gravis Foundation will be heldl~
Su111daf at 2 p.m. at the KN·
HOM[ DlMONSlllATION
NI.I s ~ ' n:LEPHO,..-E WALT
A 11.IM OVM (714) 1Jf•J77S
XT·TV Studio, 6121 Sunset
Blvd., between Gower and Et
Centro" announced Dr. Ho-
ward S. Barrows, chairman,
board of lt\lstees, El CenLTo
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e S01'"'T TOUCH! \\'ate.rite
water softener lor IS&le,
like new, must aacrlfice,
e ON TH.E WATERFRONT!
:Z BR unfurnished bou5e
for rt.nl In Newport Beai.:h.
• J?ry )'"our lean:, httl'1
)ICll1 ~nswe:r to tM rainy
1e1.11on that'• on it! way .
GE t lectrlc dt')'f':r in good
oond!Oon. -
•
•
last 2 days of our
WOMENS FASHIONS
t .00.11 .00 ,_, ..,., Y•riffl pri"h, 1i1•1 3•·46
14.00 poMS. nylo" 1lr•lch, bl1ck, "'Y'f• 16-46
11.IO,...,...., llllrta, reel, 1olcl, while,$, M, L.
17.IO .._ kot ~ $ color1 10-11
l ,,t
'·" '·" 11.H
15.00.Jl.OI fedret 1.-ren 1c rylic, colort, 36-41 11.H
15.do.17.00 ~ ,......._ Winluck® Orlon® 1ccrylic 10.tt
7.00.11.00 f-• Jelly llllm, 1olic/1, pri11t, 10-1 1 4.ff
lJ.00-11.00 Me-. .. Im, poly11!1r cr1p1, 1-1 1 7,tt
21.00.22.00 -..i k•Jt pMCltos, 1olicl c.o1ort, f1n cy p1H1rn1 12.tt
1J.00.16.00 wool 1...-..n. -41, 16-40 t.t,
40.10-41.00 wool cle1ble k1Jt cl-, 1·16
40.00·60.00 -1 .. polfl. 0111 •lie/ fwo pi1c• 1tvl•1
JO.OO·J4.00 pilllt !"'...._ polyoiter, 10.1 1
14.00 ,...,, fit 111cl f11r1, wool, bl1ncl1, 1-13
2'.tt
2t.tt
J1 .tt
t .ff
26.00.JO.OO ,_..11lt1, bone/id 1crylic, s.13 lt.ff
12.00 N:lrtl. pl11ll, flip incl pint 1kirh 7.tt
16.0I p ...... fl1r1 or 1lr1itht leg 10.ff
22.00 twalc "'"• pl1id1 incl 1olicl c.olor1 12.tt
1 J.01 1w.oNt 'lfttl. 1crylic, group I .ff
12.00 .. Im, cotton •nit 7.tt
21.00-26.00 4,....., I pi1c11tyl11, 11'h.-12'h 14.tt
86.00.141.00 lr:•lt c. .. tw-. wool. 1-1 6 St.tt4t.tt
76.00-16.M pamt cnhl-. wool, 1 end 3 pc. 1tyl11, 1-1• 4t.tt
flllM tri..,_.. CMb, c11hm1r11, wor1t1c/1, wool1, 6-1 6 ff.ff
•0.00-60.0I pem1ib, 2 I 3 pc., 1-1 1 J4.tt
JS.to 111eftY .... lt:1nek"1 to11® mod1cryl., ••· lot19 111p1 16.tt
JS.tO ...., ............. K1n1•1lo"® mo41crylic 11.tt
cMtl ef W...-"'94 ..,....II l..t., cotl1rH with mink Jtt.OI
,V1 ....,,. ..,.,.. •I• cMtl., h1lo coll1r 4ft.tt
,,.., ...... ..,.,.. lltl111lr: cOtltl, porlf1it coll1r, pl11tH cuff1 49'.IO
4.00 ..... '-. 1hip;1, d1titn•. 1olic/1, fill colo11 J,ff
10.00 1,...1• IMtfrllr .. ,,, tlO'lft, lin1cl incl unli11ecl 6 'Ii ·I 6. ft
12.00 l,...lu IMtW fto•ft, -4-1 button, lin1cl , unlin1d 6 '/i.11.tt
6•.00 c..._.. cecrh, 7 colort, 1i111 1-11 54.tt
60.00-70.to c .... 1-11 "'·"
17.00-JO.OO letwY tlrllHI, Arnel® tri1c1l1t1
14.00·11.00 4,..._, bonc/1cl Colon® 1crylic mi11 1•'
21.00 loc•.n. r1yo11-nylo"·wool, 1i1et S-1 5
lt.OO coordlltOt.d •'""Ins"''' 1i111 5.1 5
lJ.00 cooNJllflfed A·ll11 •lrt, 1i111 5-1 5
t .tt
10.tt
15.tt
10.tt
7.tt
10.00.11 .00 '°""""Mo .... , 1i1e1 12-ll 7.tt
11.00-15.10 A-II .. Mirta, wool, pl1icl1, 1olicl1, 5-16 t .tt
J0.00-22.00 ~ wool, pl1id1, 101icls. S-15 1J.tt
lJ.00 ........._ p11ltov1n, long, short 1l11v11, 16.40 I .ft
I .H f ...... iniiill!l;r,-Pylifttrle6t;""l•c• trim.-J'.1:•40 -·J .ff-
t .M .._... NeH lllps. "ylon t1ffeknit1 whit1, colon I .ft
t .00 """ .Up1 eM clMt!ll-. whit1, P,11t1l1, 32·40 5.tt
4.01 tt.tf 111,., nylo11 loico1 ,whit1, color1 2.tt
J4.00 11:111111 all .. p1111p, bl1ck p•t. h1own, novv c1 lf. 11.ft
11.00-22.00 4,....., 01coon® poly •nit, 10·11 15.ff·17.tt
1.00 •ll'YI .......... e11u1I to p•t111t clr111, bl1ck 4.tt
11.01 ,._.. .... ••11dbott, c1uth1d p•t1nt 6.tt
4.10 wo"lltl't fJotroKI lltil"'bl•, 6 f,19 r1nce1
I.SO CHrfH of the llltr r1·moi1!11ri1in9 tr1otm1nt
10.00 La!wh1 tlfr tit, 1th1ctiv1ly p1ck1g.d
CHILDRENS VALUES
J.4t
5.01
7.50
4.50 ,__,., ,M111t1t _.. boottM, 1crylic, h111dm1d1 J.4t
7.10 bo'f'' loitt ...... ptoywMt, p1r"'1·pr111 cotton, M.L.Xl 4.Jt
J.50 cotto11 cerdur1y • .,.,.115. 11cl , blue, "'1i1f, M-l-Xl 2.5t
5.10 bop' 9114 tlrh· twooten, 1crylic, 1l·11-14 J .4t
a.oo.t .00 perty _.,......, polve•I••, t -1 1-11 4.ff
JI.II 1tr1li.t, pr i11• lf,,t
10.IO ..,..-..4 1,U., white, y1llew 41.tf
lf.M tlo•W. .llh """'81, pri"I cover 14.ff
Jt.01 ploy yerd, print tri"' IJ.tt
17.00 Mt• chek, lr1y 1J.tt
14.00 beaJMt, whit1
JJ.01 pe....W. crl~ I ~ .,irch
1J.OI c••ltrM, t1p11try pri11!
6.00 l•foltt ...,, Am1ri c1n blu1
t .OO ntker ~. chro1111 pl1ted
MENS WEAR
'
10.tt
JJ.tt ....
4.St
6.St
4.00 ...,.., fr..,.-ce ........... 6 fi19r1nc1s J,4t
tl.00 MoyltrMll1 J ,_, •1lt1 77.00
110.00-lJO.IO .. 1tt tr... fo""4 Mllen. delu111 f1Dric1 17.01
16.00 M•fltlortn peJfll preK rMll. polv1tl1r end cotton 1J.tt
26.00 lepl K-....i111r 111 ... ...., Arnol® hi1cel1t•·nyle" 21.ff
J.51 Mocl'tlefotn terry ~ w11h1bl1 cotto11 J.lt
S.00 ll•lt ceft9m Ulm , mock turtl1 neck J ,tt
14.00.20.M lllMrt lntc1 e..-.rs. 11lid1-llrlp11 t.tt
45.00 "-Mo ...._.... w_,., 01e11n® poly11 .. r on4 -•I J4.ff
10.00 1.,..,... 11Mf JeU1t1, e•tto11 corduroy, f1tt, s1flcl 1t.H
•
t0.00 1...,... _.._ led:11t1, doubl•·•ingl• "r•11t•d lt.OI
1.00 .Wrta, 1horl 1l••v•, no-iron poly1d•r-cofton, 3/10.50 J .lt
I.II Mcl'llert• .a..rt ...._ sMrts. P•nl'I pr111. J ,ff
11.00-11.0G M~ .,.,. c ..... 1olid colon J7.0I
Jl.00 c....,., .i.cb, wool, r•v1r11 twid
6.H -M..,....... ....... cl.ni .Wrn,. poly11f1r•coH01t
7 .50 M• ....... Jeet ...._ .Wm. p1r111, pron.
1.00 f-4 .... ttea. 1olicl col<or1, 1frip11
7.00.t.OO f-4 ... Wts., ltl1ck or brow11 11olh1r
J /4.IO tee-slilm., er•• .or Y·n1ck
TOYS & GAMES
11.ff _ .... __ _
I .ft . ... ....
J /J,Jt.
2,,ft lhl" ...... Nee MP, r1c• your own c1 r1 Jt.ff
t.t Men.l's Triple 1111 .. ..ter, for 9irl1 only 4.99
7.tt 11.0'1 ._, Sktel' •r1ws A Teotll 14'/J" till J .tt
t ,,, TopPI''• ~ Seniu c..ter, 91 r191 11rvic1 ctr 4.ff
ltt.10 J pc ... .,. pe1I ..W., modern, with 1cc111ori11 J,t,00•
Jlt.00 ...... c....,, I' pool t1bl1, t1ble t1nni1 top Jlt.OI
45.H roe.Ir: '• NII t9ltle ..... Mb!• 17.ff
45.ff ... riw ltkyc.let, bov1' 111111 9irlt', chro"'• f1rtde r1 J7.tt
15.00 J...,... ltlU .. lfr •It• riM blcyc-., boy' '"cl girl' 46.tt
40.N cHYertlW. 20" Wcyc.11, lr1inin9 wh11 l1, 9litt1r •••I JI.ff
HOME FURNISHINGS
14.95 1 ... ..,... 'l•lttMI, .....,_ or boir 1pri119. "' 41.tl
17f.OO I ..... d91n., 9r11n or 9olcl cotton velvet
171.IO 1wtMI reclr:en, 4 styl11
14t.OO ~ cHlr, nylo" v1lv1t in S colors
1 t .OI I ..... cHlr, wid1 f1bric ,1el1clio11
205.00 •Jt• Meir: cMln., 1tt1ch1d pillow h,ck
ltt.00 L•Z..loy® ..-. reel!-, H1rc11lon® olefin
JI0.00 c1.W" chfr
tt.tt
tt.ff
lot.00
1Jt.N
149.0I
lit.II
IJt.00
J5t.Ot •tl.00 colltl"'porei'J 100" ,111ow Nd! 11fo, Z1pel®
610.00 FNK• Ptowl1el• sofo, 1llp011d wood trim 44t.OI
6tt.IO plll1w Mck t' tofo, down I fe1th1r b•ck, modern 411.00
11.SO a1.,.,,19fff ~le, t ~·, quirt •it•, "With liner 1J.tt
15.00 l119llA Shlffl114 I pc. ploc. wttwlp l petl1rn1 t .tt
70.00.lJO.I c~*'. m1ny 1tyl11 •t.00.lt.OI
12.00°15.00 IU!p ....... wh it1 1lr1lch1c/ tilk, 11lf.fold ,,ft
Jf,t5 W""'"' 1 pc. '"kw•N llt, 1voc1do Teflon® 17.tt
44.tt o..c-.,. 7 pc. cookw.,. llt 14.tt
I .ft llt of J •b:l119 Mwll, 1t1 inl111 1!•11, ring h1nill1• J.tt
J0.00 1tehi ... •tMI -II pc~ fir I. l i1rrih pot. 1t.tt
15.00 c~ J lilt• ....._, witlri 1lcohol burft•r 7.tt
---4 f;00-l·~· .......... -,_.,1;1M1-ft•IMll.11,-tf•i11l.1t-l.ff-
l .51 LMy ,.,..,.. M-91 .. ._. .._.. towel J.lt
4.00 S,rlitt...W llMi.n ._.. towef, 1S"JESO'' J.H
1.00 Ledy ,.,,.,... ,..,... l•Mk ""' ...... J .tt
6.50°7,SI lltftlflWt' rill, 1olicl c•lors, 1trip11.
4f.t5 Ylltvr. -nr..a, or boll 1pri119
6t.t5 S.Oly "1!1te4 """"911, or boll Jpri119.
11." •YIM ,111 ltJeMIOOM, 1h•t t111tur1
t .00 Ryl111 pill ... 1.1 ........... , .....
11.00 llylH pH1 ltrOOllll-, 1mbo11H t111tur1
1J.OO Colldtl o,.._....,. tlropor~. '41"x54"
·1s.oo 411114" 11.tt 1s.oo 961114"
25.00 711154" 11.tt 45.00 120lll4''
J .SO Swrety Del•11 IHrtli towel, 2S"ll-41"
1.10 .. _.. to..t I.It IOc ...ai d1ttl .,
BUDGET VALUES
l .tt
"· Jt.tl
"· 47.tO
.... y4. I .It
• ... yd. 6.lt
.... y4. 7.lt
t.4t
Jl.4t
12.tt
I.It ...
l .tt ~ .. tlwfh.. "ylon wit~ 1i p·b1c~ J.tt
4.tt acrylic "''" hh tlpt, 1hort 1le1v1c/ or 1l11v11111 J.tt
I .ft c.tfol ftHce 411ter, pr1fly color1, $-M-l 1i111. J.,t,
1J.tt flllN ·.-. ..... c ... ~ ..... S-M·l •.tt
J .tt T......_ i--flf My. No·iron. W11!1r11 1tylin9 3.7 2.4t
ltc t lrh.' 1tNtell titfttt, ' moRll11-I <f y11rt ]/J,Ol-
J. tt-4, tt Myi' c~ •Wl'ltel'l. go lcl. white, 9re1n. ).7 J.4t
15.tt jHler tnlc _.. p-.t Mfl. n1vy, told, red, 5·11 '·''
1 t .tt &"4.,.., cof cll'b, 111 cotlo". ll1v1rtib1, 1-1 1 14.ft
1 t .tt P" feclllltl, ~wool m•lton. N1vy, brow", 9r1y 1-1 6 14.,t
JS.tt ........ , tweod c ..... 14 '1i·2l 'h . l l1ck ot brown 20.tt
7.00 betlMne. feoM, no -iroll Cotto" twill, 19·16 4.tt
6.tt Ti,...._ lwy _...., pqtl, P•rm1n1nt pr111 19-41 4.tt
1.00 wltt«ll •ty" 1lllrt1, pink, blue, b<own. No-i ron, $-M·l l.tt
7.9t T.-!etltl te4f t-dilft. no·iro", $tor'" coll11 16·46 5.tt
15.01 4..Wo lwMltetl b4..n. wic/, l1p1l1, llue•lllvy 1f,ft
~I.~ •II w..i spoJt cll'h, l·butto11, 1in9l1 bre11f1c/ J4,,t
71.00 lllhl, 111 wool worlled, wool/iii~ bltnc/, Jf.ff
t .t, ""71 spertl ...... whit1 with bl.ck 1lrip11. 1 to 12 7.tt
J .tt tlellHt •port .Wm .lont l11ve, S-M.L.Xl J .tt
4.tt Mt"Ylk llitlt ...... iolid1 1ndutrip11, S·Xl J .tt
I .ft Cel.-t fl•rlf prl11t ........ twift tor full 1ir1 6.tt
J4,,t If l"'f, 1locttk W.U:1tt;, full, 1ift91 control I I.ft
JI .ft ff perf, t.rl, d111I control1 14."
21.tt H perf. fllt, dw1 I co11!tol1 14.tf.
!lowing thP. showing of a
new educetional film on this
.serious: ncuro-muscular di$.
ease the audience will hear a
lalk enlitled, "Recent Studies
on the Cause of Myastheaia
Gravis'• by Dr. Jamea R. Nel-
ton, Nturologlst·ln-Oiief at the
achool cl medicine, Univenlly
.C Californi a. San Diego, who
heads the MC Clinic at the
University Hoi pllal and Is al-'° a member of tht C.tlfornla
Chapter's Medical Advisory
s .. rd.
e WANTED: Gni ndfathf:r
A: M1'nttl clock w/chlmet.
liere'1 )'Ollf chance to
make Mme f'Xtra money
for Chrlllmu U )'OU ha"'
one for sale.
may co south coast plaza, sen diego fwy at bristol, costa mesa ; 546-9321 ;
oT. Nelson will bt lntro-
duced by Dr. C!orlsU1n He"'"
mann, Jr .. prolessor of neur. '
ology al UCLA, and chalrm,an.·1_ ________ "1""_, _____ .. _,
I . J I , ...
shop monday thru saturdey .I 0 •m to 9:30 P.m; 1und•Y. noon 'til 5 pm
d
MAV.CO,
..
BARBARA DUART E, 494-9466 '"*'" Ode!Mr -. 1t11 • ''" n
Pumpkin Pa rty
Ha-1-lowe·en
Cats · Howl
It's almost time for the great pumpkin to appear
and South Coast_Club Juniors aim to be r_ea_dy.
In celebration of the great event, members will
emulate little spooks on Halloween Eve. Dressed in
costum~s of the day -or evening -they will appear at
the Mission Viejo residence of Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Clarke at 9 p.m.
---Social-ehair;man-Mrs.-David-Adams has-ouilined_a___
festive evening with bobbing for apples and similar
games for pleasure and membership contribution of
· favorite hors d'oeuvres as a culinary treat,
Prizes will be awarded to those sporting the best
costumes in various categories during the evening's
entertainment.
Guests are welcome to attend and may obtain in ..
formation from Mrs. Robert Parsons, 495--5901.
( Mrs. Thomas Fortune is chairman of South Coast
Club Juniors assisted by the Mmes. Charles Daly, Ger·
old Williams, Donald Feehrer. Larry Adams, David
Travis, Dennis Baker, Clarke and Parsons.
Meetings are scheduled the third Thursday evening
or each month with October's session featuring astro..
logy in the South Lag'.una home o! Mrs. Michael Baum.
RAIDING THE PUMPKIN PATCH -So~th Coast Club Juniors
(left to right) the Mmes. David Adams. George Daech and Gary
Clarke stage a midday rWl on the pumpkin patch. The object of
their enthusiasm will lend a toothless smile to tomorrow night's
Halloween party planned for members and guests in Mission
Viejo. Best costume will be singled out for honors.
Members participate in a number of social activi ..
ties during the year as well as raise funds for speciaf
projects.
' .
Deck the Halls
Yu le Arrives Early
In Jeweled Splendor
Christmas will arrive in "'San Clemente in November as mem·
bers of Los Ninos Guild o[ Children's Hospital of Orange County pre·
pare a display of holiday boutique items designed to outshine the
Yule tree.'
Jeweled calendars, wall hangings, sequined aprons, tin can
trees, boutique mirrors, decorated book covers, embroidered linens
and Christmas tree skirts, ornaments, candles •.. these are just a
few items made by talented Los Ninos members which will be on s_ale.
Date of the third annual sale is \Vednesday, Nov. 4, from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. in the San Clemente home of Mrs. Wood Glover. Proceeds
\vlll help support out-patient clinics o{ Children's Hospital 'where
thousands of children are treated each month without regard !or par-
ents' ability to pay.
Guild members have v.1orked during the summer in countless
works hops under expert instruction to prepare a di splay which will
meet an enthusiastic reception.
Holiday gifts and decorations will take the forefront. but there
'viU be many intriguing items for year around use according to c<r
chairmen Mrs. Glover and Mrs. John Ki sh of Laguna Hills.
The out.of-doors won't be ignored as Christmas wreaths made
\Vilh hundreds of tiny flo,vers will be offered as well as more tradi·
tional door hangi ngs of cones and pods. ________,
Mrs. Edv.•ard T. Bonci. president, and her committee have sent
invitations to the yearly event with information available for those
interested from any ~uild member.
Summer wo rk shops have been held in the ,homes of the Mme s.
Bonci. Glover. Bruce Brown, Orville.Fox, Mel Morgan, Roy Garbarinc
and Byron Thompson.
Other !und·raising projects organized by the guild are sale of
Christmas cards under the direction of Mrs. Margar"et Hudspeth and
a bridge round robin.
THREE WISE )NOMEN -Members ol Los Ninos Guild
know smart shoppers will find a gold mine o{ Christmas
decorations at their third annual holiday boutique. Dis-
playing bright candles and a wooden wall wise men are
(left to right) the Mmes. Jobn Kish and Wood Glover,
sale cha-chairmen, and Mrs. Edward A.. Bonci.
•
Love Might No·t B·e Lovelier th~· Second Time-Around ·
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Will you
please tell my idiot sister (age 32, hus·
band killed in Vietnam) that just because
a guy has been married and fathered a
child does not mean he is straight.
Everybody in town seems to know B is
a tag -except my sister. Now she says
ANN LANDERS ~
they are plaMing to get married . Gel band was killed. I've tried to tell her .
THIS : He is sewing her wedding.dress, what she is getting Into but she insists I
'frTedeccratlng htr apartment and will bake am mistaken and swears their "se~ life
1be •lx-tler wedding cake himself. Sis is very good." Can this be possible? What
11ays it will not be a large wedding (her are the chances for a successful mar·
llusband has been dead less than .six riage with a ho m o s e x u a ~ 1 -
months) but B already has asked fi\.e or SLEEPLESS NIGHTS
his '4chums" to stand up for him. Every DEAR SLEEPLESS: ~tarrlage today Is
one of his "chums" is three feet ofi the risky e\o·ea with a man who Is straight.
ground;-They don't walk , they ny. · .. ~IM\ women who mruu-1tom osexub:_(B
Sis i:s a lovely girl, but t believe she It a,pparently AC-DC) are a little edd
went lo pieces mentally whto her hws· llJo, Tbm are llolaled oumplO DI IUdl
marriages wlalcb hive werked, but the
ovcrwbetmln1 m1jortty fall, 11 Hlrly 1U
cases tbt b1t1bud .tlfts of tbe mu-
qucnde ind drifts back to die kind ot .ex
he llke!I best -and ll'1 wtUt the boys, not
tbe girls.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a 1:1-
yeaMld girl with a t-year-old problem.
l\fy sister. Wh<!n my friends come over
she hangs around and acts like she is one
ol our·crowd wlildl lhi M noL U 1.,.IDl
If sbe 11 permitted to bang around with
you ·she won't make the effort. Show this
colur:Dn to your mother. It might belp.
her to leave WI alone I have to kn~k her
down or pay her off. When I go
someplace I must take this grimy litUe
pest along. 1 keep telling my mother it's
not lair but she says, ''Your sister has DEAR ANN LANDERS: A gal I went
the same rlg'hts as you." lo school with {many years ago) moved
Souldn't a t-year-old be playing with lo this city eight months ago, We were
kids her~own age? When I tell her this never close friends but I try to be cor-
she says klds her own age are boring. dial. The problem: Whenever we meet
Can you help me? -GOING MAD (and we seem to meet quite often) Pm
DEAR MAD: An older 1lster'1 friends never sure how she will greet me. One
are always lriore lalere1tlag. e&peclaUy lf day she fallis on my neck and showers me
the 'sister 11 lt and tb'e f•grlmy liffli--Wilh-liugs aMkiSSE!S. 1'he nexr day she
pe11t'' is I. Yoar mother sbo11ld not allow treats me as U 1 had bubonic plague.
)'oor kid 111 to Inflict herself tn you. How do t deal with someone who is so
Socb injustice makes siblings bate.esich unpredictable? Any advice ? -BLOW
tther. The .. year-old should be ea;;. l!OT, Bl.OW COLO
<Gllflpd to <ultlv1le lrlendl o! lier ..... DEAi\ BLOW• Uoprodl<lll>Ull7 b ...
•
ol the prlnclpol 1ymptomt of e111C111ooal
IUness. ne ~lallty of ,_. frleDd•1'.
greetings Uve DOtblli&.te de wM yw-.
they are a batomelu ol lter mNd. If . -she's up she'll be elf1111Ye, U alle'I dlwa
you'U gel the 1m1U ltello. ~
lhb should make )'Oii ie .. ryctlvt. • .
Give in or Jose him ••• when a w
gives you this line, look out! For tiP1 OQ.
how lo handle the super aex aalemnan.:
check Ano _Landers.· ~her-booldel •
"Necking and Pelllng -Whal Art the'.
Limits?" Send your request to M'fi.
Landers 1n care of the DAILY PJLOr ~
enclosing 50 cents in coin and a Joacc
1tamPed, ~li·addreued IDVtlopt. :
'
I
•
~-r-
~JI DAll.V PllOT Frld>y, Octobo< 'l/J, l 970
.... -..
l:.
·. ..
... •.. •' , ..
' -·
·•
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... ... ,-:
il'. , .. .. •• ~-----
··: ...
I ' ... '· " •.
An Appropriate Burial
. ' I
Horoscope
Taurus: Set the Pac --t--·
----!t--~A TURDA y·---.,,.,antie-aur bl\ION. Road ,nay appear
OCTOBER 31 'LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): -.C~liUed. In rea.lity ,
By SIDNEY OMAllR
ARIES (March 21-Apdl 19):
You ricochet between the eon·
ventional and tbe unusual. Key
ls to find middle ground. Ap-
plies especially In financial
agreements with m at e ,
business partner.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Include family ' members In
special entertainment, project.
unique activity. Let othen caJl
the shots, set pace. You gain
most by being attentive - and
a shrewd observer.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
You may be imagining that in-
dividual ls ta1kiqg behind your
back. You would be intelligent
to evaluate facts as they ex.tst.
Suspicion and rumor should be
thrown aside.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Your speculative ventures
show gain. Enjoy excltemenl
of discovery. App 11 es
especially in dealings with
children, members of opposite
sex. You are surrounded by
l
• Decks Shuffled
Team up with Cucer-botn ln· many ari! paving way for your progress. Show enthusiasm. d.ividual. Pu1 finishing touches Break down barriers to com·
on long-range projt!ct. Check municatJon. Be clear and
land, real estate values. One ·
I 1 )X'ectse. v..110 s u tra-ctinservative CAPRICORN (Dec. 2%-Jan.
needs reassurance. Glve it. 19)-: You get what You go alter
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22): -obtain hint ·from Sq!llarfas
Your relations with brothers, message. Make changes. Get
sisters are highlighted. You ready for journey. Plan a.Mad
may take short journey in con-for ·fine entertainment. Break
nection with relatives. Be in-out of emotional rut,
dependent, but avoid ar-AQUARIUS {Jan. 2&-Feb.
rogance . 18): Money due Crom oc-
UB'RA (Sept. 2J.Oct. 22): cuplitionil -effort! is made
Hunch related to money pays available. You have in-
off -be confident. Be a vestme~ opportunity. Consult
discriminating shopper. Gen. professional superior. Not wi&e
ulne bargain is available. to try going it alone.
Don't jump at first offer. PISCES (Feb. !&-March 20):
UnW1Ual approach is a pro-You may feel aJone in a
fitable one at this Ume. crowd. Be perceptive, but
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): don't brood. You will discover
Cycle re m a i n s favorable. another side of individual who
Lunar position emphasizes plays important role. Avoid
new starts, added in.-selt"f)ity. Face facts as they
dependence. Begin a pro}ect. exist.
E n c o u r a g e contacts, chat-T" find oo.rt wh0'1 h1tkY for YOU 111 lenges What appears set· m_,-•nd me, MWr Sl'llnev Om•rr'• ' booklet, "Seuirl Hint. !or Mtn Ind back boomerangs to your ad· w~n." Stnd blrllld•lt ind 50 cenh
l '" Om••• "'""IO!IY Stcrtlt, ,,.. DAIL y yan age. PILOT. ,.,. 32«1. Grtnd C1nlr1t Sit-
~ SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-tron, Nn .Yor-. N.Y. 10011.
Dec. 21 ): Accent your am·
Souvenirs
Displayed
Club Bids for Deal A collection of memorabilia
ftOm the past IO years of
Children's 'Ml.eater Guild pro-Pick a partner -Or one will sponsor duplicate bridge each ductions will be displayed in
Qe provided -and joi n the Saturday evening In the com· l'b · d · th
I • Cl b munlty center. Play, directed area I rar1es ur1ng e Fountain Val ey Women s u month of November . , bridge tournament which will by Mrs. Helen Creed, is open he 1 1 ·n
begin Monday, Nov. 2. and to the publlC and the·re is a t>!nc11't ~ t d sp ay~w~
Tak.es Gavel
Mrs. Doug Morgan Of
Costa Mesa will be in-
stalled as president of
the Santa Ana Chapter
of American Gold Star
Mothers Tuesday, Nov.
3, during ceremonies i!1
the Santa Ana Amer1·
can Legion Hall. ..
Auctioneer
Sells Gift
Treasures and gifts for auc·
tion will abound at the aMual
potluck of Laguna Beacb
Panhellenic on Wednesday,
Nov. 4, in the Laguna Hills
Trailer Park Clubhouse.
Members will arrive at noon
with gifts to benefit the
Panbellenic Scholarship Fund
and American Field Service.
Chainnan for the luncheon·
auction is htrs. L. T. Rosser
assisted by the 1iimes. Carl
-
Invited to toast the "death of the midi"
are residents in and around Glen Ellyn,
lll. A window of a .dress shop, appropri-
ately draped in black and decorated with
thistles and mandrake roots. d ispl~ys a
mannequin wearin~ a midi in a wooden
coffin. Signs in the shop say the "Midi
is the Edsel of 1970."
continue through February. charge of $1.50 per person. . se esigns, props, a ·
Players will meet once New da y and evening bridge pu~ces, costt1;:s, poote.rs, pr~
~J.1':el'.)'..1w.O..w.eeks..in..members'-gr:oups..now...ace..be.ing_{orm.ed,....J!:ams. gr1 .__mw;tc an_
homes, according to Mrs. Will and infonnation may be ob-J>h?~aphs f~m the Newport
Nash. Robert s. Brunside and
Herber.t...De\vi~------
.:. '· l Romine, bridge chairman. tained by calling Mrs. ~ guild s P~ocluctlons. .
Couples meet for an evening maine. The. gu~ld, a n o n P r o f 1 t
A short business meeting
conducted by Mrs. J. M. Shea
Jr. \\'iii precede the auction.
All members of national
Greek sororities are invited
and may call Mrs. William
Beatty for reservations.
or bridge the first Saturday or Mrs. Curt Burnett will host organ1zabon, was founded to
each month and the club and the monthly board meeting of produce children's plays and
Founta in V~lley Parks and the club at 8 p.m. Monday, educate children ln all facets
Recreation Department co-Nov. 2. of tbe theater.
.,
<O ~~Chapter
·'l~· "" .... ·
i:.v1. 1~ ..
Honors
Official
~. HoftoringtbeVenera b le
~Ralph Peca with a testimonial ..
dinner-dance tonight will be
the A. P. Giannini Lodge, Sons ~ •• i of Italy.
~:t The event, ln esteem of
.• Peca's three years as leader
!! · of the Costa Mesa chapter,
~. will begi n at 7 p.m. in the
· · Costa Mesa Country Club.
.e Among the state offlclals at-
-.. tending: the affair wUI be the
· ·; Grand Venerable and Mrs.
~:Peter DeSantla. Cjyic
•.:. ·. rep re s entatlves at "\he ~ · testimonial will be Costa Mesa
~-Mayor and Mrs. Robert M. !::.~ Wilson. Viet Mayor and Mrs.
;~ · Willard T. Jordan, Councilman
;-. -.. -and Mrs. Alvin L. Plnkley, Mr.
~· and Mrs. Nicholas J. Ziener,
::. Judge Calvin Schmidt and the
Rev. Thomas Nevin.
Juniors
: : Cut Cake .....
~ Twenty-four candles will dot
: ~ the birthday cake as members
of the Junior Woman's Club of
. Laguna Beach celebrate on
: -'n.lesday. Nov. 3· St A d w' M th d 'hf o· 8 II . ,; ; Mrs . car1 Manus. pre'1dent, • n re s o er-aug er inner a e -ringer
•• • 1 invi tes former members and
'! ·coordinators to attend the A bell·riniing evening ts planned for mothers and daughters of from the funding event \Yill be the \Vorld Student Christian Fed·
!.::_' btrthday party tn the woman's St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. The annual Thank Offering eration, national missions and the Christian Education program.
-~ .. CJubOOuse at 7:30 p.m. dinner, themed Harvest Delight, will be .Presented at 6:15 p.m. Giving the call for support of this 'vorthwhile project are (left to
-""'!. Durlng; a brief program at Wednesday, Nov. 4, in the church's Fellowship Hall. Benefiting rig.ht) Dee Fowler, Jamie Styli and Nancy Collier. the aMual event, a check tor----~-----------------------~------------------------
·.• $1 ,000 will be presented to an
official of South Coast Com-
. ~ munlly Hospita l as fulfullment
··~ of a three-year pledge.
. Author Speaks
On Rose Theme
Chapters Activities History Told
At Gathering
Gourmet's Touch
Stirs Up Brunch
Omelettes will be made to order for
guests attending a brunch sponsored by the
\Vomen 's Auxiliary to the Orange County
Branch of the Arthritis Foundation Sunday,
Nov. 8.
Mrs. J ames Evans will open her New·
port Beach home for the event, which also
will feature winter fashions by the Beach·
comber Shop.
Preparing the orders will be Gary Har·
rell. a Ne\vport Beach gourmet chef \vho
specializes in omelettes.
1'.1usic \Viii be provided by Christian Eric,
guitarist \vho sings in five languages.
Proceeds will be given to the Arthritis
Foundation for research and to help Orange
~ounty's 125,000 arthritis patients.
Indians on Agenda
Jim Whitecloud, vice presi-
dent of the Los Ang~les Indian
Center, will discuss t h e
American Indian for members
of the Patience \V r i g h t
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution at noon
on Tuesday, Nov . 3.
DAR has provided educa·
tional a.9sistance to Indian
youth and aids St. Mary's
Court Stella
Members of Court Stella
Maris 1448, Catho lic
Daughters of America meet
School for Indian girls fn
Springfield, S.D. and Bacone
College, Bacone, Okla . and
provides scholarships from lhe
general Indi8n fund.
Members are asked to bring
gifts for children in DAR·
operated schools in SouUt
Carolina and Alabama. The
meeting will take place in
Hote l Laguna .
Hosts will be the hfmes.
James Trittipo, Lee Childs,
Ruth Johnson and Robert Hull.
IUVTIFUL CLOTHU , • •
Only S1'9flt1Y 01ed lly p b: Wflo un't bMr to be 1tt11 twk.t In ftle s.me drfts.
Their Lou -Your Gt tn
each second and fourth Mon-THI SICOND TIMI AIOUND
day at 8 p.m. in St. Joachim's .-E. 11t11 11 .• c"'' Meu · ; Five new chairmen have ~~been named to direct.· ac-
.. ,PvtUes including the Mmes.
Rebekah Lodg e
Triple Link Club of ~lesa
Rebekah Lodge has meetings
the fourth Mondays at 8 p.m.
in various locations. 1ifrs.
Douglas P.forgan at 548-1938.
may be called for addition41l
information.
Borro\\•ing the lheriie for the
1071 Rose Parade, li1 rs .
Cornelia Sanderson, California
Pr~sidcnt or the National
•League of American Pen
Woruen, will speak on Throuih
the Eyes or a Child on Alon·
day, Nov. 2.
R'ituals Predominate ~P;•r~~~h~h~all'.'.'.:_•~Cos'.:'.ta'.'._'.M:":'.:'."·:____~~~·~~~·~·~·~·~-~....,,.~~~..-!
Jn an historical mood, mem--::
· l\obert Johnson and Roy
·Franson, youth; Lewis La.Bon·
ta, health, and Harry Bithell
aod Donald Hodges, con-
; ·: servatlon.
~-
• ..,., .................... --------------i
COMING: NOVEMBER S • 8
.. • .. ~: .. ~.·
I
I
10t00 P.M. DAILYI
WORLD'S FABRIC
l\1rs. Sanderson. whose
articles appear under the pen
name of Neal Sanderson is a
professional journalisl and
photographer. She \\'ill address
the Lai\lfla Beach Branch of
Pen \\'omen at 10 a.m. in the
boardroom in Laguna Beach
lli gh Schoo l.
& FASHION <' _ .
TRADE FAIR .-JJiois~~~~~
l\1cn1bcrs of the Bela Alpha
Pi Chapter of Bela Sigma Phi
will con\•cne in the home o{
J\lr s .•K-eith Kl eppe,
\Vcstn1inster at 8 p.m. Tues-
day, Nov. 3.
A '\'Clcome rit ual will be ex-
tended to l\lrs. 0 a t f i e I d
\Vhllney and a ritual of jeY.·els
vdll be celebr<l;ted for f\1rs.
Thomas Stevenson. .Pi.! r s ,
Philip Peoples y,i ll present a
program on Verse ~1aking.
Gamma Alpha Nil Chapter
members y,•lll gather for a
YOGA is ....
fufld.raising party on Tuesday,
Nov. 3. J\1rs. Guy 11ammer,
ways and means chairman. ls
planning the 8 p.m. gathering
which will raise funds to assist
a needy family during the
Christmas sea;wn.
The chapter: marked Its
birthday With a meeting in the
Huntington Beach home of
~trs. Bob Ross. l\frs. David
Ballard receiVfd the welcome
ritual and l\trs. John Boy,•er
served as ro.hostess. and the
program \vas presented by
l\lrs. Dave Pemm.
hers or the Sa n Clemente
Toastmistress Club \viii gather
at 9 a.m. on i1onday, Nov. 2,
in lhc l\funicipal Gou Club.
l\frs. Harry Sharits will
preside as toastmist ress or !he
dny. Speakers \Viii include the
f\fmes. Geoffrey ~1 a n s e 11 ,
Jiistory or San J u a n
Capis tr ano; Raymond
Loustalel, Flags or California,
and Harold t-.1arkham. History
of Orange Counly.
li1rs. Robert. Gregory
serve as evaluator.
SWAP MEET
ty!RT SATURDAY omd SUNDAT
ORANGI COUNTY FAIR G.ROUNDS
M 'F•lr Or .. Cott• Mth S1ln lo~ht ~~~~n~~!w ;T~!m~F[.J~~OI r 1~
Orange County Fairground • L1L1Es • SEASHELLS AN l IQ U E DA V ,,,,.J, NEW-WOMEN'S CLASS Newport lfy4, •• F1lr Dr .. Cost1 ·M1s• .,n1ENT 1\I~ CALL FOi\ INFO
501' Off -n..., ""'"'"·"' FISH GARDENS
l:l-,. ' ;; ~~;~~~~~~~-~-~-·~ ... ~~,..~,:,;;-:,,~""',~;_~"-~"~:.~-~1,:·,.=·~·:·~~· '~"~· ,~,,.~-~'":"·'~'"=· ~"·~11.:~Y~O=G:::A~C=E=N2T=E~R~J, 1st SUNDAY EVERY MONTH Hit H...,_rt 1 1\'ll., (tlll MfW: 40 •• 11111 51, Cllli M11• <i;f~~~"1~~~~~~~· '""" US·llll 111111 I ..... UI ~~~~~~I
•
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&too.,., Thro•ch
f.,r Mon I W.,m111
Col1\r1ti"t O ur
G r•ncl Op111i11g
10 % Off Our
Alr11cly low Pric11
-TI.r.,ugh No•. Ith
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-----------------------·-.... ---... --~~·-···"·~·~,~-~~~--~..._... ............... -----·--------------=----· -·~ ~ ... ~ ~. ·-· ---" -.
Loo·k Out Fellows
Hobie Aller (left) and Cappy Sheeley are so busy
congratulating each other on their cliff-hanger fin-
ish in the 1-Iobie Cat National Championship regatta
at Honolulu that they apparently fail to notice the
lovely blonde j 1pussycat" who also wants to join
the admiration society. Alter, designer and builder
of the Hobie Cats, finished second. only a quarter
of a point behind Sh~el~y in the breezy regatta.
Dick DeWitt Among
Best Power Racers
Bes pectacled Dick DeWitt of
Popalar Baee
Set fo~ Mazatlan
fridq, Oct.obtr JO, 1970 DAR. Y l'ILOT ....Ji
LEGAL !1011CE 11ctf1c1 'tO CllDIYIR
C•llltTll'KAT• Oft 9V'JlllDS ........ lllOll COUllltl' .. Tiii! l'ICTl'TtOV& &i.MI: ,....,,. ··-·wu• ITATa Of' CALl,...itA ,.._ n. vodtrt19111ed ._ cwtlt¥ Jht II ~ ClaTi:,~.;:-,:........ • TMI COUWTY °" ........ CllT1\1c•T~ IWlffllS. dllclll'lt .. ...,,. ...... m~ ...., ...... .,,. "'*"ltMd .... <ettl"' ...., ... .... " .... l'ICTIT.OUI ....... hlllM 11i.nf. (911for"'-o ufldMo ... Ille-~ 1 IMIMH et M N, '"""'°'' IE.st•,. el' IL11Alll!TH JUOAH JONll
TIMI ""'"raltllM .. ~tif't' tflt'I' IA 1tllol,n ti"" Nini ef P,YU.IUt IN• ..-.. ~ e..dl.-~ a i1M1fttta 11 IMlol laticedl TEltOll: QUl~N ltld !Mt H lrl fl""<;;,11 ,..,.: flctlllew tll"l'JI NfM el' WAIMo NOTICI! IS Hl!illt!IY GIVlll t. h
., e.1 ....... (.llHMfllll. "'*"'""lie· ~ "' "" 1'11owllle ,..,.... w ..... lfrt4TON (OfitSTR.UCTION COMl'ANY crldltors -"" ...... ....,...,. ....... 11ti0u. fl"",..,;.,, et l'ACll'IC Gf:Nl!ll:AL. ,.."" In tvll ~ l'ltcl ltf r..w.ncit II II 1M Witt Mid flrin 11 _... fl .... tlllt .tll "'-JllYlllt (l.itftl ... !Mt ...
co, af'lll 11111 UN flnn •• ~" "" lllUp~: i.i-:=. --.._ """"' !ft 11.111 .. Id ........... ..-ilrM "' flit ""-' .. followl!W --... ,_ -lfl fllll ... \lllllfl 0. MfYm. ttl\I\ ........ .,., .. ~ .,. .. fol ...... : wttlo "" ....... ,., -'-"" "' .. "'
tr.I 111•.c" "' , .. io-. ............ : ''''"" lll....i, C.tlttwltl.. •• 0. w.,.,,..._. m Vl9 Lide SMI. = -:.:= ol' i::. •-:;. "",::-' =.~ -.Kttr:v_t , Ctflk!_lft, 16<1 Hf, Tr .. W, Daltd Oct. 2'1 1'70. "'"""" a..dl. Gal~ • ..._,, Wtm>-·-·· ..... --.... --• U> .,_ 1trh St .. Coift~Mi'ta.~lt. 6...-..0..Malvtlt ~ Ill Mt,.._ C-_. M111. __,_.. ·
Sttdtl. u. No. T,.. w, 1tth St. cw1 ll•I• .t ttllt11Jnl1, Ota• CelJl'lt\I: C1111. 111*'1 ,,; w.,mlflftor... llJ Dr,.,.._ ~I~ ~=• :':i Mtw.. C•llf. Of! Ott, 7'. ltl'fl, ~ JM, I Nofl"" Ac.cl•, C.,._ •I....,,, CIHf, ~ ........ ',:" .... ~-""'"' •
O..fld Octobff n, tt10 ,,llOllc 111 Mii tw .. 111 "'"· "''~"' Dlfld 1#111'!11111' 1, ""' ..._..,. . a 1 ..... "' • ~ • •gy v•-··-•• th H••l'\I T (Olll(U11 •-rf'Jll 51Ul'4r• Cl MM!rlt II;-ti rN • o wir1P11nellWI ttw _.,.,.. o1' u ld OK"*'nl, within flur By ALMON ~ """aw an, wnu~.r an O e r ,.~, 'it, Stadt! _ to 111 11w ",_ wt.O.. n•nw 11 •vl!Krl~ Jt"* ,., warmlllfltn mentr1t .ntr t111 ft"I ..wikttlwl tt t1111
CM T1rM DillY ,.... ..... owner WU later destroyed SI•!•"' C1Utorlll1, Orlftft C.u11"': Id .. ,,_. wlltilfl ""''""'*'' Mid "'°"" ,,, W1•ml111tofl nollcL
When .. era-• aaUtog ~, chi.I while 'tryin• to enter Newport o11 01;1o11tr n. ,,,., ..,...,, ""'' • K~)'"'" ""••ffvfld ._ uma. II•"' °' C•Mfotnit. °"""'' c.vtrt¥: i~11 ,!; :r~,:m " -l.'.ll >l'r"' a Nola,., PUbllC In ~ fllr will llltt, ti L Oii .. ......_ I, 1t10, Mfora IM, I 'tl"V """"dfe-•et under W'"' ln the. 1,000. Harbor on a stormy night. l*.on&lll' ••PHreCll HlrlY T, Con~llll •nd Ml,., ••th 'f.!"IOl'lc ,, ....... , •• ,., f'vOllc 1n Ind ""' Mid St•~. WAL' •• , .... ·::. •• CU.IN (VMI) e -Tllo!MI Ill . SllClll 11;,_n to "I',, ti. 1111 Nol•t'I' Pub!..,. • • ..... NI __.11y .,,...,,", f, G. W•flPlll\f!Oll, MOO •
mJle Los Angeles to Mauttan Two ~II beta in that ~!!!nalnl =~~~:,,~"': :~ :==.!: ~~~'='~=~In · 1~:.:;..~!":'n:..ttn.,.•C-7.:·:= :S."":;'C:..~
Race 8aturd1y, Nov. 7, It wlll race WI on tbe 1 ... • g tf\tl' •Kffvt..:i n.. .. ..,.. Mv c-1u1on •ulfn .._. ...-,,. 1v1Jter1tltd tro r11e w11t11n --' ._..
be a far cry from the original line for lbis woar's race They tOF,tCIAL seAl.l , ••-~' 'o' 1tn c • _11, '''°' 1111~1 ..,. _._.._.. IMY "' c,"-"'"' .. -,_
ed A rll • ~-. • MAlllY K. Hl!N•'t' u .. _. fll••• I oe ... ' ecutld .... ,.,.. race which atlrt p , are Swee~·s Jinker and Hat•,.., "vblk. c.i1torn1a Oc•*r .>0 Md Novtmber .. IS, '°' tO,FICIAL lf.t.Ll ll\lblllhlf Or~ te.t IMll't '!lot. 1911 Do"ny's Kamalii In addlUon Prlnc!NI otl1« ln 1t70 2021·111 GENEVIEVE o. ,AMfS Oct.'· ""'u. .. lfl'I , ... JO -u•; • Or•"'" Count\! Nallt'I' 'llflJlc • Ctll111rnl9 In that lnaupal ract there there wUJ be one other skipper Ml' c-111~ E••I,.. LEGAL NOTICE '''l'ltllll onrc. 1111
I '"-· ,,..,,_1 • th' ~ Ntv. ''· 1m Or1nH CevlltV were nine starters. One of rom uR:: ma.,. ...... race in IS """11MN °''"" C•1' 0111y '11o1 ....,.. M" c-•ui... l!XJllm them ran ......... ,"" ud was year with 1 newer boat. He ii tu11r n. a ,.,. HowtMtr '· n. ca•T1,tCATR o, su11Nus oac........,. "· 1m c••'Jr~i\T:;°" ,.-:J:Nas '"6 • .,...,.. u-1.. l'l'fl 1'1S.7' ,ICTIYIOUS NAM.a '°Ublhhllll Orfllll Coetf Dilly Pllet, ffV lie II destroyed on a bleak slrlClU• or Bfn Willlams of LA YC with Ttw 11ndl"'1t~ cttttti.t tJw 1t """ Cd. '· ,., :a. a 1m 1 .... 10 Wt'": ~;"" n; LM•.:;
Baja California beach off the CAMI Capricious U. LEGAL NOTICE dixtltt1 • tiuti-a·a. t 1t "«IM 1':. Cot1• • -,, • N,.-,_·~·-,· sr .. ;:..:.,,_~~ .....,. . .,. tko
P •-t San • ---W Ilia , · !cl . M"'' c:atfforfll1, ""'*' !fie tlcttlllWf. fir"' &.CIUIUo UJ.U..111 lllloon "'"' -If WlfSTl:C COM-O"' -.wiro. I ml original Capr ous -9f GA•Y'I CUSTOM SMllllTI ..... SULTANTS ..., .... fl'llt " c-
Another temponrily abln-was a Bounty sloop ""' Mid 11nn ., ~ "' 1111 fllllfW. ~ ot "" frtl .,. --..._ ••· In ••. C I · ......,. 11'19 ""°"' wtoooM two"" 1n 111• tnllf ,.11e1 "'-'' -1n 11111 .,... 1>1eu ., mlOltla h .. cloned ~ race U)C u r or 'lbe ract WU later turned Cl•Tlll'KAT• ., •USINl!tl of re116tnet i. •• ~twit CliTI"'CATI °" CCNl'l'O•ATION "°" fol~:
Califonu•1 lo I n v e 1 t I g a t 0 • . • ,1ct1T1ous MAM• Gabrlllll LI '""'• tlt c•r PIN TlllANU.CTIOlll .,. s1111Nlll UND9• C•rt J.. ounc-, 1uo ~m Ullo a bterulial affair to be ,.... """"""" ell C'lrtllv 11\ty •rt COiii """'· C.1111. ,ICTITIOUI NAM• Cati• Mnl. ca11i:i'.ni1 •• mystertous flares that sup. u.iJtA in N"vember of even· con9vc!IM • 11v11-11 t10 M1r1111 A..... °''" 0t1o0t• 1. ''~-· THI! uNor1:s10NED COfl~ATION D.te11 Octtbt• "· 1t11. -~ly 11-alled VtlH:l I "' • _ ... , S11ti. l1l111d, C.NflWnl1. vlldlr ""-G.111ri.1i. LI,..... .._lie'"" qortl,, !till It 11 COftdt.N:ll"' .1 C•r1 J. Clu11e111
...,_... ft'" n numbered years to ""Vt UJI\. ·····-·-""" -"' THE ISLAND STATE 01' CALIFOlllNIA. ... _._ loCltad .. -PllCl!lll• A...nw. Slife of C1llltrnl1. 0.11111 °"""'~ distress. Th e "distressed" •· " """' o•.t.NGE COUNTY -.. ....,.. pers planning to make the ~~c::f:~.~· 1~ ~1 ~11= on OCtabtr 1. 1•~ .....,. -· 1 Noll,.., ~1~t.v_ ~;,, c:=:: ,::1v,.'t'rLR~ ,:i:,., ec:r; ?:• :r.10
·.., ..., ';.,: vessel was never found. Transpac in July of odcf.. 1 .. eanont. WlltM """'" 111 ;vu •nd l"vbllc 1n 1nc1 fll• Mhl Ste-. "'-n" TlllON ICS 11111 lhll Mid"'"' h c~ _._.n.., ,_.,.a c1r1 J. OUM.I!' How did the Mazat1aa nee bered •--lo ,,_ ., n 11c1t11C• ..,.. •• fll11ew1: •-••..:! G11w1e11e L• '"°"' 11;_, "' ,... ,,, 1111 '911-1111 ~111tn. wtme ,..1,... k,_.. to ,.,. "' ti. ""' ...-w11c1M come about'!' LaraeJy throu .. h num years I .cu .. ,ce AIMrt F. Htl1'nd. 111 °"""'• 111. is. ''ti. '"' ""'°" wllD-. 111'"' 1• 1\lbtcrl~ clNI PIKI " bv11.,. .. 11 11 flllltwl; ,,_ 11 1\ll'l5Crlbtd "' !hi wltl'lln 11'1· • &11• get back home and tune their Hll1n o, Holl.Ind. 114 Ol'Wa. ••1 ,.. eel to Tiie wlltiln ,,."""""",.. t •NI M. v. l!LEC"TlllONICS, INC., 10IO tlfVll'l•nt _, ldr.~ ............
th. ••••Je h••••• efr~-ol a Dlltd OctlMf' 7. lfi'O .1dtnowlafted sl'le exlCV MfM, l"llKllllll A.,..nue, COiii MI I• !fie umt. -'II -auueu w w craft for the 2,225-mUt haul Albtrt F. Hon• 10t11c111 Sein < c1111ot11•• t7tl1 CS!ALI Newport Beach marine in--· ... _ p ill Htlln Cl, Hollllld M.lt'I' . lllfl.V WITNESS 1h fllfld fh1t ht .., " Mt,., IC. ,...,,., surance broker who not only a ... .._ w.:: IC C. Stall or C•11111rnl• .iota.., Publk • c1n1aml• octati.r, 1,JQ, No""' l"vbtlc -t111torn1t Org.nl-~ and p-J-· the 'Ibe race Ca" .. "t on like no o •• ,.. C_h', ,,,lllCIMI Office In M. v. ELECYltONICS. INC. Pr!nct ... 1 Office In ~ , ..,.,Ul.CQ ...., 0n oc,... 1, "'°· 1ltfor'I '"'' 1 Note,., Or11111 Covnl'I' o-V1ccMr °''"" c-rr race, but sallll!d in the first one other. The LAYC sponsors Pubnc 111 •nd ,., Nflll 11111. ""on1u~ "'" COl'!lll'llnlM fltPI'" ,,111111tn1 MY c°"' ... 1111.., •• ,..,.
I d h•-1-1'1111 Alblrt T. lotlfflNI Ind Hellfl D. Nov, t4 ltn fctr!lol'ltf SNll NDY. 24, 191'J and every one since. now urn own many yac w Hall•nd t-i. ,... 10 ti. ''"' "'-•vbll"'4d 0r11191 c111t 01111 "11o1. sTAtl 0,. CALl,ORNIA. 'vbn"'4d 0r1"" c...t Dlllr •1101. The founder of the nee was which apply ta make the r1ct Whal•...,......,, IM/btetlbad"' 1r. w1tt>1n oet. '· , .. n .JO. 1m 11,..70 COUNTY OF 1.os ANGl!LES. p . OC!obtr • ,.,. fftffmMr " '"' ~
because Of a linu.tati'on of 1Mtl'v-11t and KkrwwlldM ftltl' Q · LEGAL N-CE · on !Ill• ht 111.., ., Ocloblr, A.Cl. '''°· 1910 .,, Clark Sweet, owwer-skipper of 1e1.111t111 1111 ....... v•• btfot• ..,., • "'°''"' Publl<: In 111111 flat LEGAL NOTICS ··--1 t t•-Jt-• It around 50 boats The limita· COFFIClAL ll!!AL) u llll (ovnl'r tncl s11i.. "-•tv .... ---'"'"'""'==-----un: 'W" 00 CU"°'' uAer. t' • • d by• ••• o •• of Mlt'I' tc. .. Hmrt 'UBL1( HEARINGS WILL SI! HELD S't' -1"1111 OEHO VACCHElt, ""1Jdlrlt,I' p.SlfM was Sweet, incidentaDy, who ton JS impose un:. lwr; Nollt'I' Pvt>tk-C11lilof1ll1 THE COSTA MESA PLANNING COM· Mown "' ""' to ... tM Pl'lllffflt of "" caltTl,tcATI °' •utlN ... abandoned ~-race to HOrch tbe harbor at Mazatlan PrlnclNI Dlfkt In MISS10ff 11 1111 CllY M1U. n F1lr ~•llotl ~I •WICVIM "" wl!tltn I~ ,ICTITIDUS ...,..
I.lie: • Oranee Ct1.1111V Ori~. Cotti M"'' C1111otnl1. 11 '':Ill •'"""'*" on bellttl ol' 111t -•llOll T1'le ~ltftlf .._ cant1Y flt II -for the my!tertous vessel in 1be success of the ract was MY COl'!lm1tt11r1 r:oires ,,,M. ., 11 _.. .. -1111, ""'""'"' 1Mr111\ lllTTllll, 1n111 ..:11-11111e..:1 ,,. 1ne Mttnt 1 """"" 11 '°" Hlftllr ~JrwL
dis·-... Being •••• ~---1 lo--· early ..... _,., ... ___ .. ~ , .. 1t72 _, ... '"" 911 Mlllldll', NoYtl'l'ltler •• 1910, rllltdllll ..... , Mlltl'> ClfllOl'll'loill PICvtlcl 1111-. Cost• ......... C1/lfotftla, ....., ~ ftc,. ut: ,. ...ua11 ,..._.:""" • • "'." ucm,...,., PvWl1Nlll 0•1-C011t o .. ., • tt1t1 tolkiwllll •Pllllc•ll-. (Offld•I S..11 llllolll """' 1111'!11 ot AUTO ... ~ Wiit Guard commander, sweet by this commuruc1lion from 0t1. t, "· t:t. '°' 1m l&sf.10 1. hlll ••ceiotllol ...,"'" .... r•·t ... ,., lllllllllt't D. ...... ..Ill f1"" " ~ e1 "" ... .....,. ••· 1-1 • •Ye b It It <OM'tctld. w Ellllolr o. !~tltlll. m w. Nal•,., Pvbllc --. wi-...,,. in""' .,. ..... ff plated the possible fttcUe at UIC ft Mn p u c y Wllto, Strnt. C•I• MIN. ttlll .. fot My C-l••lorl &lolr'll rnldHICI ii -...... :
sea above any thoughts of wt. chairman, Ray Wallace, to LEGAL NOTICE ,..""'"'°" -to (llftllrvcf • 2MI "'· "· -••• ,',M•.•'•'•'•"•• li'!Jee Glldlrht. 1• Y'-""91-
Sw -· fed ---~tLWl_ll!!_ll\..flll'~ll of 1,......1 N-' llld'I'. lling or placing in the nee. eet. ,_,n: letltr WU da tlttL •• 1111 tint lllCI'_, ,,,-~ A.....,. .. _..__ ---Dltllll OC1o111r...a...U11
S ved ·~ t•--1 M 9 1-1 ,....,,. ll'llflt or "' ,,,., m w. wu..,. 11/'ftf 111 .. "....,... will" lll\ICI Glldlrltl . weet concet u..:: U!:ll or ay • -• c••T1,1c.t.TI o' •UltNlll w1111 1 rtdvd'lon 1n ••"'-1"' or s '"c" L.lto A--. "''"°""' ...., ,. ... " eamem ... °'"'" ~ th. race aft-v'-ltlng fn-..1-"Just one month ••• we ,ICTITIOUS NAM• on .. -m-laCIJ!ld •• !II •NI m w. T...., Of! Oc!, .. ""' ...... ""' • .....,., -... 13 T;IJUa _._ ... _.. --e T1'le ""'61r11IMlll ..... t1l1lfY 11.e ,. con-Wl!IOl'I ''""'· C.0.1• .Miii, C1J11 .. In • "Vbllll'lllll °'.,,.. C-1 Dlllr "'IO'I, "1.lb!IC In """ for 111111 s ..... ~ m Mazatla11 and vtewlng the a~~ an epic boat race that 11111c11119 , 11u11nt11 ,, 20C11 we11 eo.rt ci -· o.:t. •· 1" n. • nJS 1111,.70 _,,... an.a 011c1w11t •-"' • • ezctllent f 1 c 111 t I es for~promises te-be-a classic bien-Hllt!W••· ~ 11MC11. c.u,.rN•, i. z.. ·~ ......,,. ...., n -u .. ,., 111 1111 --wi... -11 ..-nw 'al al'-: Ufllltf> 1111 flctlUov1 n"" "'"" .. TOM fot PM!l ltoOert Wllll1m1. !201 ld1ho of ... w11!1!11 Ifill""'*"' .,.. ....... terminating I Tact. ru uur. On behalf of tbe GROGG A11tt1sT1 AND DESIGNERS P11cr. c""' Miu. c1u1.. ''' LEGAL NOTICE IClwd 11e exlC\llalll "'9 ..-.
LEGAL N011CI
__ _,South Gate, who Crf!~ged dur-
ing the year as one of the top
men of the sport, was con-
firmed Thursday as one of the
four national champions for
1970 in offshore powerboat
racing.
Beach, tw~time P 0 P B RA
champion whose 600 points
placed him fourth in the
overall inboard list with his
twin 496-Cu. inc. MerCruiser·
powered CM1 hull, 'Ibun-
derballs.
The 30-year old oil company
vice president missed adding
to his national tally when he
was· winner in the inaugural
169-mile Hawaii race around
the island of Oahu, but lost of·
ficial points by missing a
WJth the only MexiC'O nets Mazatlan Race Committee of and flllf wkl 11rm 11 C0!"-9111 If tM """'"Ion 10 "'"•LI •NI ..,.,. • 1oit,1c1.1.L SEAL! • folkiwl!l'f 111r11111, ""'911 Mmti In fUll 1tor1H l'lr( "" be.Ill. lr1ll1r1, MAll't' BETM MOflTON at that tune being the the Los Angeles Yacht Club, I tlllll .iKI ., te1111tne1 1, .. t1111aw1: c""""" •11111 ''"'' llldllllfll•!• '" ad-lfCITICI o• 'uaL1c N•A•tN• ••,Oil• "°""' l"vblk • C•M..,... relatively ahort l 2 5 • m i I e liDetrely ...... that you and all Tl'lcll'!lll Gr-I 3«1\o'/ ....,,...... cllllon lo ('Ontln111... tl'lt VM If ftlt TMI CITY COUNCIL 0, TMI CITY ,,1nc1 .. 1 Ofllct II'! .u~ A,..11111, HlrrnlSI lle1dl, C1lll, ••1io.nc:n for '"tdeflllll ..,......,1, on 0' ,OUNTAUI Y.t.LUY -Or1-(_,, Ensenada race Imel the bands en1oyed a roaring 1ood o..fld 0cto0tr 1, 1910 .. .._r1v toc•ted •• 211 vie11r11 sir.i. NOTJCE " Ht:111r1v GlvtN 111t1 on "'" c_.11111n ..,,..
relatively long 1,4»mile San sail ind the e :s: c e 11 en t stt .. ofT~~n1!· G•OGG ,, c::.:, ~~.::1·;.:,z.:.,c~· •. 11,.11, ~~~~:::~~~..;'..'~~ ~0:0 ,t.t11t.::d11 ~:. c-d Dint P1ttt.
Diego to Acapulco rice, Sweet hospitality displayed by our or•"" county: 1or Mac1u11r TtellnOIOf'I', Inc., 11N •· 11111r Av.n111, itOVt1t11n v , 11 • "'"°""-'-'-·-•_•_n._,._,_.,, ________ ,.
fl red th t th 1 000-II • On Cktablr I, 1910. ~ IPll• • Not1tV 17111 StrKt. Sin!• A111, Cil11.. for C1UIOl'Tlt1, tht Cltr (OV11Cfl wlll 11ct1111 11 gu a e • . m e gracious Mexican hosts. Ut s ,vtioc '" '""' tar ••Id s1•t1. "flOllllll' _....1 .. 1on to •<Id ""rn11nhiln • 10 "· PUbltc ,,..,, .. on"" 11111tW1111: LEGAL NO'l1CE MazaUan race wou1d not only hope the n e x t race to ...... ,9'11 ""°""'' G._ kntw!I to mt1 '" • » 11. r11111r on 1111 ••lrtrnt 1e,_,1rv 1, ~""IK• ,. A""'91ct-' c"""' l-----.,.-,=-----
lde I ~-but Id . . . be ltl• -ton ............ ..,. •• •Ubsc:rlbllll cllrttll(lrlll •ltn '• llllffft Pfl'5PICll.... Dlllrkt -OnlllllMI Hllt>lllPllM s ......
•
DeWitt, 42-year old
manufacturing executive who
emphasizes that he only races
for the sport or it. wa s of·
ficiall y credited with 1.000
po ints. highest total earned by
any race in the nation driving
a t r i p le.outboard-powered
boat.
DeWitt alw finished second
overall to Miaml Beach eye
surgeon Robert ?.1' a g o o n
among all the outboarders.
Tnboard division titles went lo
Bill Wishnick of New York in
the overall and twin engine
(600 to l,~ubic. inch
displac e m e nt) inboard
categories, and to Bill Martin
of Clark. N.J . among the
single-engine i n b o a r d s •
Magoon was quadruple out·
board king.
Announcement of final 1970
point totals was made by Ross
Bennett Sr. or Ft. Lauderdale.
Fl a. Offshore Division vice
pn!sident of the American
Powerboat Association. follow-
ing last Sunday's final cham·
pionship points race or the
sa·son-=-the Hawaii ()ffshore
Challenge at Honolulu.
Ben net t"s announcement
was made threugh the Pacific
Offshore Powerboat Racing
Association which sanctioned
the Honolulu event.
DeWitt, who also enjoys
sailboat racing. is joined in
offshore powerboating by his
brother. Bill, who serves as
na vigator-mechanic aboard
1he 27-foot Magnum hull
Allosaurus, po\vered bY three
13S.horsepower Mercury out·
boards. · .
'I'hcy·ve been racing less
than two years. Last June
they finished fourth in the.
Bahamas 500 in the Caribbean
I not an APBA race) to record
the best performance in an
eastern event by a West Coast·
driver.
Upsel eutboard winner ever
l.1agoon in last April 's Long
Beach-Ensenada International,
DeWUt. finished seeond to the
F loridian in both the Long
Beach Hennessy CUp and the
Catalina Challenge Trophy
races in August.
. Also fini shing among the
1970 national leaders wa~
Peter Rothschild 0£ Newport
])wight Ba]c
Takes Race
checkpoint. .
Overall, there were five
West Coast racers among the
IS whc earned division points
by finishing one or more of the
seven championship races -
three or which were in the
West -and 11 in the outboard
ranks, including V' a I e r i e
Holwerda of Los Alamitos, the
first woman to appear on the
official list.
Miss Holwerda', with
navigatiopal aid from another
departmtnt atore advertising
copy writer, Trish Speak of
U>s Angeles, finished fourth
among outboarders in last
August's U>ng Beach Hen·
nessy CUp, race as the (irst
all-girl team to compete in
full-nedged Offshore Class
competition in the wesl
Points art! scored separately
for inboards and outboards in
all races. with 400 to each win-
ner, 300 totlie runner-up, 225
to third place, etc. ·on a
declinin( scale 2U places deep.
Nationa.J. offshore racing for
1971 begins Nov. 6 with the
Hennessy Key West race in
Florida.
Long Beach
Sail Show
Ends Soon
be an aJ tng,.,, WOU that dehghtful City Will be big• fll the wlthl11 ln1i'>"v.-il 111111 tclr.llO'Wlld9-bllYera It tflt MW trtel No. 6fl' ltiel pllmenl1I Uu 1-AC 0!11Tld 11 tn• (laTIPICA-;::~ .......
provide some splrltll!d ~ling 1er and more enjoy1bte than ~F";1~7:'t't:A~ um•. ~~,.~1~'~':.11.·~.1:"".~011'".:e.~tt;i :ii~:.,.: c;t''~~.~11111 .!:'"':'IY'!"t! ,1cT1ttous •AMI
across the Gulf et Caltromla ever." M•,.., K. ""'"' uo1 01i1er Ave .. •n • c1..cP z-. 11c11111e11n 111e ''" 1u•rwndl"' 1111 ci. 111~ .,,..~,,.... :'rn~...!'A':.:° rn:m Cabo San Lucas to the Gordo . halrm ~,.,.., ,ubHC-C1lllor11I• Fow fvtll\tl' lnflll'mttlon .., !Pie lbo\'t .... C111t1r ... I -I II ........ -: n Curtis Jr .. c an Prlnc:l•ll ot11c1 111 11>Plfc111on1, '9!ePtl-l:u-52'1 or ra11 •I t 0,....,.Ac. "' •...wa..t1at 11111 .. C•1• MtM. .,c~ ':"':t Tv ...,. ""'•If
popular ft.shin& resort at of the first MauUan race for Dr_. Count\! :" ""~ "n 1~ 1 Pt~"~!: f;::~· ' • .....,._ .-IN•••••""' " ~'"' ::~·li:liOMlll fA "'-......._ """'-Mazatlan. Muy yachtsmen LAYC wrote Sweet . :;.. c;rr~;;1e11 lulrn c:fif'tm11. •, r • ' :_°""..:'I:..,,_,., Cll•••IMlll• ..,_ -Ill ft.Ill wt 'Itel" ,.,_.
were already familiar wilh the "I .:ould like to take this op-~ntt:.111' 0:11111 c ... 1 0.1"' 1i:,~ ~~.:;:i:i': "LAHNINO 1. ,.,,.:1 .. ,, ....... Callll'lll• ... ActW It. "1-1~~-sou, n.t ....,••••
downwind sail down the coast portunlty on behalf of LAYC Oct.'·,., n. •· im cH.t.lllLEs eECK, CHAIRMAN ~~ ::!' .r:=-J~1:! A-oJ::. M;-1'.c..1lfltl'lll of Baja thank ndid WIUl•m L DuM. Slcnlll'Y .,., Bl'OllklWnl llTllt lfllll T•IWt A-Cl•Nlll t+lc.t« 'v ...
But Sweet tfida't hive an to andyou for your spit LEGAL NOTICE ,ubl1:!.i~..:. 7:-...w.;.'" '''°'· 1c111111n1t11u.,lllf!ll4vtloftNo.1MJJ ~ STATE Cf' CALI'~'"' . , help cooperation in malt:· October :11, 1t111 .,., .. .,. H....,.,...,. Dip!, SI-. o•AHGE COYNT"l'1 '
easy time sellinc the n«. Re i .. • the Mazatlan race such • ,,.,.,,KAT• . ., •usiN•ss T,_ """'"" ••• ...... ,,,_.. 0n Oct, u. 1m. ..,.,. . .._. • ....., f'rst broached It to the T-... '1CT1Tiovs MAM• .. _,,_ ""'_,... 1o ,,.. '"1111n"" .__ "' "* ,...,1c: 1n .,., "" 11111 .1t1tt. __...,.., I _,,,6 succeaa. Rarely do we find 1 n. .-ni 111111 .._ arttfY,.. "con-LEGAL "v'~ 11111" C.tltam4a C<k¥'t. c... u.ooo et -•rid Hactor 'I. ktl. _,_.,...., -.. Beach Yacht Club and was ...&Ml fed -~ cfl.lcll 1111.:_. , :rm E c-1 Hit~ -.1 .,. ... '°""""111 V•lltT Zon1"' • "" .,...._ ...._, "'"" ·11 ....,....
I -~ •-Still --'~"' person 10 """"ca -'~ ... , • ,.1' ,!_r ,....; C•llllM'nl• ~ Ot6'11nu .. TP:t Zofllllf On1111111U, 2m11"' .., thl w1tt1111 """-'..,. 4lldb11111.., u.-,_,, uuwn. t.vuYuiu:u enJ bas It de I to do wtl'. .,_ .... • • a M.lpt, Miii Ext!IWll -111 1111 k: tM .., ""ut(VtMI tllt"""'
that the yachtsmen '"'OU)d w1J br;.,,!., IJ'e bout the =Ag;=~~~C:.":'...,11117:1 "'.!..111~: CSllTJ~r,.T~ll'.~~N ff r.r--=c r.=·~~.!n"r111t-::.llllfc (Oftlcial "'~! .... i. ~
welcOme such a race, Swett · ~·R 1 raet, ll CGmPOMlll "' "* t111i-1... "'*" n. v•".,..... Ille cwtlhl ttin '"' Tl:oN •1,,.,. "' lftll!Y 1n ,,_ -1n Net.,., P\lbllc • """"""
I sed th Ide lo , __ .1. .... l but organizes and takes pArt .,,.._ ,..,... 111 tl.IK 11'1111 ••eu .. 1'111-condudl,,. • Ml-• •I 117 Prn-tti ..,...itlofl "',...._ ,,,_.11 w111 ti. elwtl ,,lfldNI OHICll Ill OS I! • ..,.,,. IUJ61! es J '1t too .. dtl&Ce .... "''-•= Slf'taf.' A..,._, •• ,.......,.. &Hell. Ill OillPOrtVnllY " .... " tu ......... In-Or•-~ Yacht Club where It met with n · .,,,_ I!'. HICltrMn. 1m1 Cr.,. c1r1forYll1. uniw 1111 fklltlov• llrM -formlllon 11 dellrllll, ..... ....., contKI 1111 My c_,.1,""' 1.i,..
l'ttl th 1 Witb 50 or more boats talc· Of'., k nt1 .1.111, c111f. of 1.111.1.c .• • •••"'"'"11" •"" ""' 11141 1"1111111111 °'"""""' ti H2·2G• Miii mer Jv111 i:t. 1911 a 1 e more e11 us asm. 1 -• In 1 o.1e111 Oclebtf" ''· 1•10 """ 11 ~ 111"" folln'lne ..,..,.., 1o 1111 ,...,.. """'· ,...,1llhltlll 0,1,.. c-r D91,, "'"" The early ApriJ ltlrt ftS Dg p"' ~ the ast tWll Tacel, lry-I!. Hickman wlloH """" ht tull •nil P'-ef CIT't' COYHCIL OF THE Octobtr 1'-2'. • enC ,..,....,., 1, 1-J~ being cellent how propbtUc can-· get' STATI!" 01" CALIFOlllHIA. r•llllfnce.,.. .. f(lllowl~ '"' • -CIT't' 01" FOUNTAIN VAl.Lf't' lt70 ,,. .. ,. se +:\;i.e\11 a1 an ti: .1--• OllANGE COUMT't'I '-'-v• 0. ~·rlltW· . M ,.., f Cole ti of the for Isl °" Oct. 21, 1no. ..,_. ..... • Notarv s1rw1. "-•••Cf'+. c1111. c~ ci.;.t • LEGAL NO'l'ICB l1'le year CTU ng Pv&llc In 11'111 tor Mid 511!1, Hrtonl lll' lllobtrt J, llk•r• 21721 Srenl1 Clrclt. ,,vtil1ahlcl Or.1"" CONI Di1ty l'llol, 1----'---~==-----the Me:rican Ind B1ja coasts •-•«I .,,..IOll l. Hkt,...,. known lo Hunltntton •M<fl· C1n1, ........_.r ». 1t7t ttn.10 T.-n
th •-M II ..,. to be thl Mrt0n ~ nal'M 11 wun1m H. MtC0""1n, 7ffl C1rr1 NOTIC• TO Clll~ on e way 11ui11t, onsoon subKrlbllll It 11M wltt.ln ln1lrvm1nt 1M SlrHI. Glrllllfl Gr-. C1llf. SWl•tOlll COU•T 0, TMa ITAT• In .mlltlon to S w e e t , s ac1i. ..... 1e111e«1 11.e extevlllll tM wmti. 'tl•rd A. ThamDIDll. 2.w """ or1w, LEGAL NC111CB 0' CALr,o•N•A NI: TM•
nk the M 11• • (DfflcJal 11111 Mlllloft Vlllo. C11ll, COUNTY 0, OMNel Ji er, lnl entry 111t me-M•IY IC. H111,., Jallfl McAvle'f, 12J N. C1t'Olllll llrftl, .,..,,,
Ju-'-"' E L Dohny'1 75-foot wi·ns Agai·n "'"" l"llbllc • C1Uf0rn1• AMh•lm, C.111, ,. ..... u E1holl ,fA 'lll~D ,_ LSAMtMt ..... ~ . . :. "•Incl••• Offk•'" Victor J. C•rtn. 1'22 "'911t Al'lnvl, NOTIC• TO c••DIYO•I 11.-n II F. '· Ll!!AMIN(;, °""'""' ketch Kamalu; Stuart Cram--Or11111 c-tv A111Mlm, C•lfl. ' IUl"IEIEIO• COU•T °" TMlf NOTICE IS HflllEB't' GIVIN ,. .. ' Kirawa • GI--Roland's NO\I. 2l, 1,n ClllrlH 111. z1ncn. 1U6 £1 Darllll<: STAY• o' CAL1,0111N1A 1110• credl!Orl of ttia •bovol MfMlll ......,. ef' S · ~' "''"' · f'vbllll':elll Or11+91 Collf Dilly 'llol, Clrlw, Fulllrton, C1Ut, THI COUNTY Off OUfMI th1t 1ll .. ,_ Mvl111 cllllM ... Intl fM La Volpe ; Dick Lerner's Garn· Jack West 1n Monsoon 11 Ocloflar _,. 111111 Nawmblr " n. 20. Hert:ert L. Blvl'ftl9llll, 1211 w. ...., •~,., ... 1c1 c1ec:lllll!lt '"' rlWINlll ,. ftlt .......,
m. • E H Spouldi .. •'s Mi-"'· from the host San Pedro Yacht 1910 20Jl>.10 CNii.u, Al'lllllefm, c1n1. E111.. " AMIEE L. SIMMONI. w1111 t11t necftl.I"" _,..,._Ill Ille eMCll • · • ''& ..... , • Rlclllrlll J. M(Clllltn, ~ OrlMflbfltr Offealld. ol ii. derlr, fA flLI ..,..... -"""' _., .,, Ben Williams' Clpricioos; Ro-Club sut"CeSSfu1ly defended LEGAL NO'l1CE Av.,..,., Ana1111m. c11H, HOTICI! 11 NfltEIY GIVEN " 1111 to PrtWll "-" w1t1t 11'11 ~
bert ~·.-Al11n Jr.'s Holiday, his title tn •1.-Et~1·c ~ .~.'""•· .·~·",-· 111, •,-,,,, 11rtat. creC111Nr1 11 "" lbo¥e Nmld lll<:edtnl WllCl!eir .. .., t11a .....,.......,. " ,,. """' 111 UR:: +:\;UUll l"IV UUC T•AMI,.. ...., • ...,..., 1!111 IU M,_ 111111111 d11!m .... lrtrl !Pit (II Mr 1ttamtn. IHE,,Alll0. MULi.iN, and Richard McDonald's Wind-· dieted Log Race Sunday. lllOTKI 0" • Htrtltrt L •tVf!llOllll wllll lllKlnlllanl ,,. r...,,,......, "" "*"• 111rcHTElll A HAMPTON. a'-"" ""1fll •• ,_ Ne. JIJ~ CI Wlllltm H. McCar"'ldl: wtlt+ tti. _ ... ,.., _,.,.,., 111 1111 olflce Slttief, Ln .. _.... C.llflnllll t11111i
spun. West's percent of error was Nonce'~~:, -;r:!' :·l'f,, 'creC11lton wan1.A. n:o.n-of,.... ct1r1111w.1b0\le .,..It..., avrt,., w111c11 11 "" 11111cit fA ....._ ., -.
Lerner's Gamin Wll the mtly ,413. crt He,.,,, A. "''""'"'"' r,,,..,.ror, """°" v",'.":..""', ,','w,_ 11 '"'""' """"" w1111 ttte ne<:nMt'I' u,.'"'""• ~ .}" ~ ~--.,-· -~
boa th _,......, and .......... .. 21070 a.Nd+ •iv.:t ~.... • "'' l'OllCl'otrt, .. Ille vnlilefli.r+tlil et tM elfkl " ...... w... • ..... ,_. t at WU ··~ The electronic 1-rlct ls llul/MK "' " lllldllrd J. Mc:CllllM ... tll• •llwnsn. GlllEENIEJIG ~ "*''l'I• .,,., 11'11 """ MllclllftM" flllt
ed olr ' l S "l!I' H""llnttall IHcll. C1111r1t\I II lrttl, Mii Cl ,, r1'low .. lie destroy . Po.. an a special predid.ed Jog event 111i. e1 c1111am1a, ""''' bullt 1._i,, 11 • ..;::: J · •• :e. MAGEE,''' Savtll IM-rlr Drlw, &ever-""'o.:.C. oc..e.r 14 1,,. Lauro alnndlng the crew for • hi h I . •bovt " ... "'"' ,. LH s. How1nl, •n Ill lpll s. S«k••• l'f Hiit•. (11Hlm:lt f02U, ""Id'! IJ "" OEISIE H. Ll!AMING-• lft w c only e ectronic DIVJ• Unmlfr'lllll ~·"· Trllllfetft. """°'' • it lJM;k place " llV$IMU .. -vnlllll'll•""' "' •11 E•tevtrbl "' .... Wiii ., more than a week. gational and plJn11.... • e 1 r 111111""' llldreu 11 lto19 Tllllltr St•ftf. Sllfl et c~:=nlt • t1111tet• ...,...1n1ne 1o 11:1 .. ,,,. "' •;:: 1111 •blrtl ..alMd """""'·
Eight Teams
In Douglas
VW.'6 • Ctvllll, c-l'f ol L\t .......... '"" ol °''"" COVfL"'• • M.edlnl. wlltlln fovt ll'&Ollthl '""' IN•,,,.•RD, MULLIN, can be Uled c1111on11a "· ft•"' ,w11e111an If tt.11 ...i1u. "°" • • Thi'"'""' '9 be tran1f1rN II loclflllll 01'1 Oct. t, 1'111, be!WI 1'111, I Nollt'I' 04ileCll Cktablr Ill. 1'70 llllCHTI• a MAM others placmg in the con-•I 21'1t ... m 811'd .. Hvt111nef0n 9"«1, P11bllc 111 .... for Ul1d 11111. illll'MlllllY DOUGLAS c. llMMONI t: ::-c.J::: ""' t-... . County (If°''""'' Sl•le or C•l"-1•. ._ ..... Mln:VI Cl. P••tl~ .. llltt:erl J, E•tc:UIDr of tM wm" Ke~ were. .S.1111 ··-"' I• llltlCrlbllll In "'"'r•I ........... Wlllllll'I H. Mc:Cormltk, W••lll A. ""•blrtl l\llNICll daCMtf+I. T ... U1fl •»n• His Grace r..-.. .... e JCawo ,,, Tllam-. Jotw: McAvlllY, Vidor J. o•••••••• a MA••• *""'""" fir,!~_.. -''"'
•' -.n;v>6 .1 ~• '.t.11 •tadl In frlcM, fh!lvrn,'"vl~ C1ro11. CMrlu •· Z!11C11;1. Htrbert L. lf7 uvt11..-1Y Drfw Pvblllhltl "''"" -• HHYC, .519, Ronjumar JI, tnd 1oac1 wlH ,,, '"'' Catmllk s1v111111 e1ul'!ltOllll, IUchlrlll J. MCC1t11111 1nc1 aa-ty ~11. C•Hllnlll MTt Qctotltr 16, n. • ft "".,..,, •· Fred Woodward LBYC 168• bu'l"'u t11tWn 11 Mtrte N•'""n "''~ s. Stt11111, 11-n to,.,. II bf 1t1t ~1 (Iii) ttWll'I 1,,. mt-1' . • ' · ' cosmetic Sllldlot elld t.c.atltlll 11 21070 HllOf'll WlloMi 1\1,,.... 1r1 svbterlbed lo AIWlll'11 fer IE.llCutw Saramt rr, Winterer, SPYC; Buell S1vf .. Hvn11,..1on •••th, Ctv,,,.,. 1111 wlltlln ln1trv"""' Incl •c.k.llDWlldtllll Pvblltlled Orene• COit! Dtill'I' Pl1al,
,16• Shi Bob WU ,, 0t111ff, 11a11 of C1llror11l1, tl'>lv ••.cutld ll':e Mlfll. Ocloblr 16, n. » •nd No'llmbllt' 6. 1-------~-----• • pnlllts, SOD, Tiii bul-trinitir will bl co111v"'m1tltlll (OFFICIAL SEAi.i 1910 1'17·10 '-1t91P
LEGAL NOrlC!:
Cup Ser :es CYC, 1.39: Mardik, Max Zi-· Oft or •lier th• flll llllY ol NOYlll'lbtr, 1910, M.•,N •.• -...., .•• ,,.,,,, CllllTIPICAY• ... •U1rrt•• ~ I SP -• al 811111 of Amt1rlt1 HT&U.. SAi W. lflh o.,,. v v.. LEGAL N-CE PICTIT1CIVI NAM•
The 1970 S••!••·t ~~-er, YC1 4.56. ll .. cos11 Mua, covnlY ot O••nt•. 11111 Prlnc:IP•1 Offl(• "' v•1 Tiit uMer111111111 " e«fll'Y ...., ---~N• ;============:,! of Cell111rnla. Or11'1ff county C*'+ductll'ol 1 bu1!,,... -' :m OC-Aw.. 8""'"",....ed by the Southern l;o.;,.ht ~-O( -.n_;_.. So !tr 11 •-n It 11'11 Tr1n1l1ree. •II M~ (Oftll'!lfHlOll E;oilllflt Sllf'l•ID• COVlllT 0, TM• LffUlll Suell, C1, mJI, u.fW tllc flo-
1""'-· """'6'' -•0 "">n>••Al.IC LQC tM!Mfl• n•'"" tlld llllldfllN• vied b1 Nov. 211. 1172 STAT• °" CALIPO•NIA 'o• 1111ovt llMll -.. LAGUNA °"'1ce California Marine AssociaUon sailors started competition to-Al Tr11111eror"' thl "''" w1rs Leif"''• 11 "vbllll!ld D•1"'' Coeit DillY "11"· TM• COUNTY o' OMfM• EQUIPMENT 111111 11111 Mllll """II c...,. 1111111mit tram tP:t '"°""' 1r1: Ocl. 9, "· is. Jll ,1'70 11U·1!1 Me. A.,1'11: POted 11 1111 ftllowlrll ,........ WfllM
ends Sunday at the l.ong day in the Dougla Cup match N• ..... , ...... ,.,., '•"• ve• •• • ... -. -~ .... ··-L.EGAL NOTICE MOTtC• Of' H•.t.•1NO Ofl' l"ttlTION llll'LIU Ill 11111 ""' .. ._. "' ,..._. IN Beach Arena r.....i .. w .--let olf Y __. n-...i. flll•te, •Yl"f .lay, af.tri wh•t't ""''.,... •v ,Diil 'llotAY• Of' WILL AMO '0111 ts follOWI: ' • cn.•"5 _. 1 ......,. ~ Ln S. HOWl,111 NO'flC• CW T•utfalf'S SAL• LIYTl•I t•ITAMlfffYAll:Y lllOND Doveitt A. ,ml. ,.. CllMlldW Stan M.iller, chainnan of the Harbor. t•lttt •11 l1t tfl1 c,. ••• , Or•flf• t,1n1ftr". -. ,... w•rv101 ltd .. An1M lm. c1. f2* show. said crowds ~'-year ---tes It he'-• -'led 1n C.1•t th11t the DAILY PILOT. ,,v&i!llMd 0r-c-t Otltr Piiot, °" F•hl..,, Otcel'!lbtr •· 1t11. 11 10:ao r:11a11 °' oo•otH't' 1. MUSGR.t.Vll!. Mtrtan 1. "1tt. tm ~ M.-ull3 'u+::: ""'' u'6 _.. •:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'_'.°'~"~ .... ~·~·~·c':'"'.'....-----~""'=:::70 A.M., CALIFORNIA LANO AND IN· 1111 k-H DOlllOYHY a, STEW.t.lllT .t."IMll'!I, Cl. nm• have been about ,1111 a par,with QWmbl1-• Mart 11 ,1-. VESTM ENT COMPANY .• COl'JOl'•llM •• MUSGflAVI!, Dl(Mlld. Cl•lelll DI;!. ll. lfjlO ""'I"' d"v'°' 1IH'Olnlfcl frl,llfM UILdlt 1111111 NO'flCI!" IS Nl!'lllfll't' GIVfN Tl\11 14.,. Doutlu A. ,,.,. last year and that a heavier Skippers drew by lot Tbunday lllll"'vant to Detd ot T<'llll NIH """ ''"" Mvn,.... ,.., 1111111 "'1'1ln • ..i111an Mlrion 1. P•rk than nonnal attendance is el:· to sel__. .... _ ............... -i.11 lllPlbtt '· lffl, ••tcllled b1 c. w. H""'· fW ,.,obi,.. ol Wiii •nd tor ........ _ d ST.t.Tf OF CALIFO•NIAo
1C1..0. g.., ..,.,..,,. .. ~, .,.., it tlJe LONG BEACH ARENA 1 mtM'ltd ""'"' 11 ftl• _...,, •rOPtrl'I'• L"'t•• T11t1rMnllt'I' N Plllllo111r. OlllA.MGE COUNTY; . pected this weekend i£ the aail for the enUre .er}es. . 111111 T•rt•n Nomes. inc. • cor..0'111o11. retweM.• ,. ""'W: 11 """ ,... IVrtlltr 0n OctPMr 11, ltN. ...,.,. ,_ • •"-, , dOlne t>vtlMH 11 Mell 0.1 Mir 0.nltP-••rtlcul1r1 . .,,., 11111 1111 llrM 111d ,tau °' Nott,... "vbllc In _. tw Miiii ..... weau1a remams favorable. Skippers and crews md a ,.,_. co. , 1o1n1 Yl!lturt. •nd .._... -....,,,.. 11:t -hit "'"" "' "' ,,.,_11., -...w DowlM..., PM 1111111 Dealers and exhlbitol'I at tour of "•--1Umbta Yach'· OCT. 23 • NOV..1 Seollllembtr 11, 1H1. 11 11:11r. No. 10651, 111 Ntvembtr 1s. 1no. 11 ,:,. '·"' .. 1n "* MlrlOft 1. "''* ...,..... t. ,... ,. .,. ,,.
UI+; """"' I.Ill b9olt $150, ""' m, el Offkltl lllteeirlll• Ill eov,.,.,.. .. ~""*" No. I ol Mid """"' ....... 1'111.t\n 1r• """l'IMlll • the i;how report brisk busintsl Plant in a.ta Mesa "nNnday "" tfll« 01 tM Covntl' •~r ef cwrt. •t 100 Chllc: C....llr Orlve: Wiii, Ill Tiit wltt.1111 IMl,.,_r+t -i "'*"• 11111 I "-'te ··-t I °''"" c-ty, c1motn11, WILL St:LL "" CllV of """ ...... C1lllom... """ -~11111 1111 -· ~11· UR:: curren eeonom c and later nre lllata at • ,. AT l'U&LlC AUCTION TO HIGHEIT Olltd Ocl+:IWr n. ''"· (Ollkl1I $HI)
slowdown. Largest boat in the cept.ion 1t the Newpott Beach SHOW HOt.aS. ••ODE• FOlt CAsM '"'"''"" '' "'"'"' w. 1, ST JOHN, DOl'Ofl+Y w. 1m:9,
.-•-.. , ••· ~or-•••, baa ~ · home of , -·-Coons, .r---~ n..&vs, •11 ..._. u •• In llWflil _,, et "* united '""" covnh' c1trt1 "'°''"' ,,ubllc, c.tlflWIM ~NW UR:: e""":"·"'W UIC'l:ll ._au17 HNOlll:I ns;uir,. -· -..-m II llM '°""" ff1)flf eni'>"lllCI lo 1111 01111 • ....., A. '""""" ,,,lnclHI Dltlcil"'
Id oloClal '---~ --\'·t: --'I and •••-&-Ori"" CDV!ll'f Covrtl'IOUH 111 W•I •tt> U. M""""' ... ltwn °''"" c_., so , I n:f.llK"""'· '""' con: ate ..... or nOw a -·-••• *''"'· c•tv ot ''""' An1. c1111orn1 .. '" ..,.,. """'"""" """ ((lfim:ftllon • ....,_ price tag was nearly '$40,00<I. mem of the Columbia flnn. 12 NOON 10 11 PM ,,.111, 1111e ,,,., 1r:1er1:11 con""'" .. ,.,. Ca111 ,_., c11...,,... ftlM s1111. n, 1'1•
On. ol lhe -popular,... Four-~~ ol _ will -,_ flt!d .,., 11 l.lndll' ••1111 O...·tf Tnm T .. , mo.....,. ·pv1i1ii11tc1 0,.,... c .... .,.,,.. """· IL~ IM:JIQ ·-· I.ft; StlrllA,,. In tlte '"°"'"' 1Jlvllf'CI Ir: "" City ef AltatM• ,., ... "....... OC!obtr , .. u. • "" ............. Lions of the show Is that of the Piled todiy and three on ''""' C09t1 .M .... In 111111 counl'f a s111w Pvbll1fltd Or•"" CC.If IMllY '11c1, 1'10 lt1Nlli 12 ~ 10 7 •M !kKrlbfll .11: Ot;tobtr M, 2', :», 1110 lto.10 British B o a t i n g lndustiy's Saturday. 'ft1e rmtdl race ._, . ..-' Lot '' o1 Tr1e1 Ha. ou. •• .,_.. "'
Sw nd •-t B 11 d • M# r~rllltlll In Sooll: ut, """ "· LONG BEACH (AP) nip a ""'"' u er 1 aertes is pitterned alt.er the '°' 11 tlld :n ot MIK•ll•-• ""'"' Federation. r-.-l-aJ Cup in which rlCWdJ ot O•.lfttl cov11•"· c11111n111. LEGAL NOl1CJI:
Dwig6t Bale of Walnut Crttk ""''tl•-• 111111 "'" win ll:t .,....., llVI "''"""'
P'oJot·" L'•ckety Splo't 101.0~ The Briti3h are exhibltlng ev-crew rices t\'f"', other ttv-nt or w.1l'1'1nll'. •~••n1 or ...,.11..i. •------------r<' '" ...... .tki r ~_..~ t' ln';',:'_ ol . .!:..1u-'"1rc:ll"9 lltle. il1911ft1loft, or In-Slh'S•tolll fOU!IT OfJ TM• mile.Ii per hour Sunday to take ev.,.,u ... ng rom '"'.,.~ ~I I.UT; two cUys com ....... -. ('Vmbr•nctt. "' 111.., "* ,_1n1ne ,.,~ •tATI cw C.t.L1111o•N1A ~•
h In 33--foot sailboat, plus. w\(te,ar. 'Ibe ,._. .. , .. Cup -put up clHI tlll'I'> of Tiit no .. MCDl'llll "' 111111 TM• CDUNT"I' 011' OllAJM• the blown fuel hydro lrtlp Y ~ OMlll of Tt1.111, to-wit: 11Ut1.00. w1111 ,,._ ""' """"
the N.tlon.I Drag B 0 a l ray of hardware, 6Cteuoria by Mr. and M~ Donlld i.rnt '""" """" ''· "'°' 11 1n ttld""' llNfYl(I °" MUlltJM °' PITITtow --• d "·· ~-·-J J1tOY16t111 ICIWll'IC"-11 .,,,, Ufllltf> rl:f l'O• ,,lltO&l"TI 0' WILL •MD POii AliSOCiatlon national cham-41iu acron IWC'. .......-r. 1ernu ,,,·,.141 OeM °' Trwt. IH•• ™"" "'"'•• ThTAMINt••Y 1 No """ Ind OMllMt of r1:t TIVllll Ind 11 1111 SDNOI piOnships before 13.vw spec. lnll~ ttt•l'llll b'I' Mid Died of Trvil. 'Ill... .. MtHHlf MAY llO't'D,
Int · Lo g •-aeh Ma...1--TM lllfltfkl•IY _,,, .. id °"' ., DKNMlll. 0" "' n ~ '"~ BOAT DOCK & FLOAT OWNEllSI -·" ---',,,_ • "'~" • "°"" """"' ""'" ""' ., .. Stadium. "" 11t111t111tnt _.,. 1 ~ • r • • T. Fa"• ic1+1rnan hi• 111"' llllf'l111 • "1111on
Th d • r t t h t ., · • PEARL G:UY ,..,."'°" nlClllclll _, *""'""' ,. .,,. ""' .. ,..i. • ..u1 •nd tor ,,..nu ,,, c ay s as es ca w 11n111tr111n1111 , "'r""' 0ec11r111D11 "' Lflttti Tlilltfnfflt...., .., '11"...,., CM• turned ln by •'tlrld record 011tv11 ltl\lll °'"'9l'Llll fot .,..., 111111 wr111en ..... ,. ~ " .._Id': 1t "'"" ,...
hold Cr tt1r . Ed, drlvtn by Lar· D 0 C K 4• .... I =~': :ONl .. f. ~~~~ ::;:rr .;~kJ:'\:.,..;.:',: = '= -t·l"I of Fresno. The 181.61 wn1,, Mkl t011Ntlolll. 111111 9llllt'llltcr."' "' .......,,.... 1a. "''· et•:• '·"'·· 111"" ., " E N A M E L Jvff' 11, '"°· the vMtrlltMlll CIVled Mid eourtr-el °"""""""'' Ne. J el Mid m.p.h. effort came in a fttllce o1 twNd+ •nd "' ei.citen .... covrt. 11 111 c1w1e ~ Dfm. 111 1111
preliminary run and mu h•tcr ·--·-·-·-·--·-·-·-.. , ... -n:r.r"r~iltolt.tm. ""'"· °' 111111 Of-c':J:.':::.::Ov.c~~11•
di al·r·cd In a ·-t-11uy , _....., _. •~ 0.11: oc"°°" n. 10• w. 1. ST JOHN. was squ I l ~... ·-r·· _ _._.... ~ALIFOlllNIA LAND AND CD!lnlY Clerk.
final trophy dash for charctnc • 1Nv1sTMI"' coM,AN'I'. hllrl+ •· ,~
th• yellow nag. WALKER PAINT WORKS ~~'.f."1:'....... ~ ..... :~.'..-::::...""' Roger COmwaJI of Reno, . rrs.1,~sKTelat'I' 1~:!1.~'.:1;'..'r*-"
Nev.. had Lile fastest flat· 116 w.~ 16th St., Cotta Mna 642-5776 AOU4TI t1.7S • 'll&&.DUH UNOI& 12# $1..00 • UN'Dll 6 flll li'vbUlhllll °''"'' COl!f 01H't' ,,It' Pijl>llWlll Ol'•llM C~ll O•!IY• ,not, botto~ speed, 142.~0 m.p.h. 1.,_=========~~~~~~~===~~~ °''*'JD w Ntwrr101r t, 1~ n:,...,. OCIOblr "• a inf ~r ,_..':
•
Jf DAIL V PILOT s Frld.IJ', Otlobw 30, 1970
Wortll
'Extra Cost' of Being Poor
Prevents Cutting of Corners
II)' Sl'tVIA PORTEii
A tuperb WIY to uv• money
on your lood budgtt Is lbroqb
lbopplng Ibo --op<C1als 1t lhe supermarkttl and
loading up on barpln.prlc<d
foods which )'OU CID store in
your home freezer.
But wbere wJU the poor con-
sumer, alrtady stra1ni113 hls
OI' her eayclie<k to llnanct
day,by-<!ay porchues of food,
-pt.lJie .. 1ra .cul>Jmpli<:it.Jn
Ult ti thus money.saving hint!
Even assuming thb family llu
a rretUJ"-in good working con-
cliUon '... qui" an wumpUon
-how can this fa.mfly afford
to take advantage of this in-
dispu1ably sound advice?
A top.notch way to ave
money on your clothing budget
Js through buying staple, basic
it.ems at oul..cl-seuon aaJes
and always being on the
lookout for things you know
you'll have to buy during the
year. November, for instance,
is a traditiofal mo'ntb for sales
on women's and chUdren'J
~ts; December is a trW..
tJonal month for sales on
men's and boy'1 suit; January
is a prime month fdr sales on
a wide variety ofv clothing Cl A
ranging rrom lingerie to shoes. ian ces ppear But bow can a mother wt..
bloya clothes for her lllds ooly
when !hey couldn't go to E
-sc1ioo1-.fherwbe take -111---Or
vantage of this money.avlng
Economic Bpost
hinl! Just !he IU88esti00 Illa!
ahe sbop thete tracliUonal
sa1es has more than a touch of
arroganci! about it. As for
women's and men's coats or
suits, does tb.ll bottom level or
mf1!Ulner ever buy so U·
penslve an item new?
Again, •·major way to aave
money on ltem11 ranging from
blg-Ucket appliances to minor
cosmeUcs Is through lhopping
a di9count 1tore in Ule area.
Savings can easily range from
2S to 30 percenl
But to -:.repeat t~ refrain
once more, how will the poor
family gel to a discount atoro
located many miles away!
The bu.I or train fare will be
an obstacle by ttsf.lf -and It's
improbable that this buyer
...Ul have a car at bis or her
dlsposal . I'm not even men.
Uonlng !he availability of cub
to flnanct major purdwes.
Jt is obvious when I put It
this way, isn't it? And I could
conUnue to place virtUally
' The FiMst In
Pipes. T obo«o.
And Gifts
IOUTH CO.UT PLAIA ......... _ ... ..., ....
........ 54CM2'2
•
MIAMI BEAal (UPI)
Finl llWIJ' -Corp.
• •
OVER THE COUNTER ·Complete-New York Stock List
Jtlarlcet
Spaflob
•
'"" :.rg,
fl All l\Yl~I ~1 lh ·~'· "' . ~ ~~ •101! ,,,., 01,,
11 l'u
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J 8 DAILY PILOT ~,lday, Octobtt JQ, 1970 . '
Wigmore, Dummit Duel Set
LOS ANGELES -Jack \Vigmore.
former fl1ater Del lUgh School star and
. Costa Pl-fesa resident. v.·ill lead the
Washington State University Cougar11
against UCLA tonight at the Coliseum in
-;a~~!~r! ~~:D:~~~~~-;o s~rt by
Cougar coach Jim S"'eeney.
UCl..A will seek to break out of a three-
v.'ay lie for second place in the Pacific 8
Conference and Washington St.ate hopes
to escape a cellar tie. -, .,
Readers'
Hot Corner
Dear Sir:
Since moving to the Newport Beach
area 2 years ago. I have read Glenn
White's column "White Wash" with
amazement. consternation. and B'A'e.
Wt week UCLA was to all intenta: bop-
ped out of the Rose Bowl ·running by
Stanford , t-7, before 83,000 .
About--ha1f that number may bt on
hant!JO!.. tonightif: o'c~kicko_IT. •
Leader "Of U CLA attack is
quarterback Dennis Dummit, who rates
third ~ in the conference Jn total of fense
and passing behind Jim Plunkett of Stan-
ford and Sonny Sixkiller of t h e
Washington Huskies.
Dummit has several e x c e 11 e n t
receivers, including Rick Wilkes and Ter·
ry VerRoy, his ch.ie! targets who have
caught 'l1 and 24 throws, respectlvely.
Wilkes has gained 389 yards.. Vernoy.393.
Ed Arm.strong. who has caught 24
passes for 33l yards, and Jim Oggs, 16
for 333, are the leading receivers for the
C.Ougars.
Dummit's statistics are impressive. lfe
has passed 233 times for 1,639 yards and
10 touchdowns. He has been intercepted
10 times in the seven games played.
Assistant coach Eamel Durden ol
UCLA, who has scouted the Cougars.
111ngled ·out several leading players by
name, including fullbac' Bob Ewen_whet
passes on occasion; Bernar-d Jackson, a
speedy tailback, tight end Hugh Klop-
fenstein and safety Llonel Thomas. The
Jailer has intercepted four passes this
season.
"They are an improving team and we
are. by no means, taking the Cougars
lightly," Durden said.
Nicklaus Suffers Disas,ter
As Aaron Breezes to 64
LAS VEGAS (AP) -"This," said Jack
'Nicklaus, "seems like it would be a good
night to stay'" away from the gambling
tables."
The British Open champion and defen-
ding title-hvlder in the $100,000 Sahara
Invitational golf tournament. had just
finished recounting the horror story t.hat
made up his first round.
Nicklaus, one of the pro game's
greatest stars, had taken a fat. five-over-
par 65, struggling in with borrowed clubs,
a pick-up caddy and broken shoelaces.
And Tommy Aaron carded a magnifi·
cent 64 in the opening round of tourna-
ment.
Argea failed to show up on Jack's tee
tlme -and the caddy had the clubs.
"I was in a hurry when I got out here,"
Nic klaus said Thursday after his round
on the Paradise Valley Country Club.
"So." he said, "the first thing l did was
break a shoelace. Then I broke it again.
"About 't2 or 13 minutes before my tee
time I looked around for Angie and time
was getting short. So I went in the pro
shop and asked : 'Does anybody play golf
around here?' "
1~e said he tried two sets, both with
rubber grips which he doesn't like, then
settled on one with leather grips.
"I didn't notice they bad aluminum
shafts." he said, "and I'd never hit an
aluminum shalt in my life."
hole and bogeyed it. He hooked his drive
and was over the green on the next. (
Another bogey. He got a par on the next.
then hooked his drive and missed the
green for another bogey on the next.
But he parred around to the 17th, his
eighth hole, a par five.
"I hit my drive in the rough and had a
one-iron to the green ," he said. ''But this
set of clubs doesn't have a one iron. So I
got a four wood. And I haven't hit a four
wood since I was in high school. And r
put it on the green.
"Then I three putted.
hi was on in two on the next and I
three putted again."
He was trapped on the next and
hogeyed it, then missed a pair of five.
foot putts coming home.
I
(
c
Die
out
Cor . c I realize he is trying to emulate Jim
Pl1urray. but his sarcasm. vindictiveness.
and vicious attacks on individual athletes
and roaches are neither funny nor in-
formative.
The 33-Year-old Aaron , in a rul since
winning the AUanla Classic earlier thls
year, we12t out Thursday and lore par to
shreds. ripping out nine birdies in his
round over the par 71 Paradise Valley
Country Club course.
Nicklaus.said he goLa.spare driver out
of his car -"it has a shaft I don't use"
-and a putter. ''It's the old white fang. I
haven't hit the club in three years .. "
'_J\ng~ worked for m_e_ since 1.9fil._" --'--"'
he said. "and that's the fir9' time I've ---1--.:ltt
ll is amazing lo me that a man who
can rarely praise athletes should be a
sports writer.
In an· era of student disruption,
disi.llusiomnent, and distrust it seems to
me we should support and praise our
young athletes who may not set the world
on fire but do not set the campuses on
fire.
Constructive criticism is one thing;
destructive diatribe quite another.
/
Dear Mr. White:
Sincerely upsel,
Shirley Schieber
Corona de! ti1ar
In your article on October 26tlt you said
lhat Dennis Dummit or UCLA. 1 quote,
''was barely good enough to earn a varsi·
ty letter."
You also said he can't pass under
·pressure. he only threw a 50-yard
louchdown pass on fourth down to beat
North~·estern.
\Vhat do you expect from •
quarWrback th at has only one other
returning starter from last year's of-
fense. I went lo the USC.UCLA game last
year and he lore apart the Trojan pass
defense.
Against Texas he passed for more than -....
300 yards and scared Texas half to death.
I admit he's not the biggest or fastest
quarterback I ever saw but he does great
for a man his size.
You also pick Rex Kern, Joe Theismann
and Archie Ma11ning let win the Heisman
Trophy.
Ohio Stale hasn't played a team in the
top ten and Ole Miss lost to Southern
fi.1ississippi.
I personally think Jim Plunkett will get
the Heisman. I think everything you said
about Dummit was completely wrong.
C.Ome on Glenn baby. get the cork out!
Dear ti1r. Ross:
Steve Delancy
Mater Dei
This letter concerns your recent article
· on the Edison t11argers' triumph over
Los A1amitos, in particular this excerpt.
"if emotions play a major part in football
~lictories. Edison's unbeaten Chargers
could remain w1scathed in their re-
maining Irvine League contests."
Remembering that the last or these
three games is being played against
Fountain Valley, think carefully about the
result of the last meeting of these tv10
schools. If you have forgotten, Edison
v.·on that game. 21-20. pushing F'V out or
her share of the Irvine League crown.
lf emotion docs. as you suggest it
might, play a major part in football
ga1nes who could have a better edge ~ipin
FV'! Lei's just wait and see. . '
Joyce Rowland
H UL ME FAST ES 1'
PRACTI CE DRI VER
RIVERSIDE -Denis 1iulme, the New
Zealand native who now lives in Eng-
land, clocked the fastest lap Thursday as
driven practiced for Sunday's Times
Grand Prix al the Ri verside lntemational
}\3ctw8y.
flulme CO\'ered lhe 3.3-mllt course at
'123.109 tltilcs per hour in his ,._tcLartn
bul hls Uml· was well on the c0urse re-
cord set. 1:1 year ago by the late Bruce
McLBiren st 126.342.
Other top spt-icd.s during the practice
ctay were Vic Elford, London, 120.977 In
• Chlparr1:1l1 Chris Amon, New ?.caland.
STP March Chevy, 120.609, 11nd Peter
· Gethin, Colnbrook, England, ll!l.758 in a
McLaren.
Official qualifyin g slatted today.
-~-
The dazzling 64 was good for a two-
stroke lead over Don January and Joe
Carr.
Nicklaus' regular tour caddy, Angie
He went to the practice tee, ''hit twe
duck hook drives and a bad five iron and
headed for the tee."
Nicklaus missed the green on his first
ever left my clubs with him , He's very
dependable."
And wha t happened to his regular cad·
dy ?
"I don't want to go into his personal
problems," Nicklaus said.
REDSKINS' LARRY BROWN COOLS HIS FLYING FEET.
Woody Feeling Sqnir111isl1
S urprising Northwest ern Menaces Buck eyes
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Maury
Daigneau has ground support for his
Northwestern passing bombs this time,
and it's making Woody lfayes, the Ohio
Stale football general, squinnish.
The Wildcats, the surprise o( the Big
Ten race with a v.·ell-rounded attack,
match 3-0 records with Ohio Stale Salur·
day. The victor will become the leading
Rose Bowl contender from lhe con-
ference .
Oaigneau passed last y<?ar for school
records or 22 completions and 294 yards
against the second-ranked Buckeyc!'I.
Jfowever, the NorthY,.estem rushers
wound up with a minus 29 yards, and
Ohio State was a ~ winner.
The Wildcats have rushed for 1,140
yards and passed for 873 more in a 3-3
season to 5-0 for sccond·ranked Ohio
Slate.
titore im))Ortant. they have become a
ball control team and added the league's
leading total defense. That bothers
Hayes.
Northwestern look~ so good on the
films the Ohio State mentor had of them
this season that he asked Noire Dame
coach Aril PArseghian for movies of thf
lrish·s 35-J.4 triumph ove r the \VUdcafs.
"The film!! shov.· them to be an ex-
ceptionally fine football team. It's a
:shame they dropped those close games
outside .the league. It would be a truer in-
dication of their ability," llayes said.
The \Vildcats, arter the opener against
Notre O:lme, v.·ere nudged by UCLA 12·7
and SMU 21-20 before taking ;ip11rt
llllnols 4S.O, \Viscon&in 24·14 and Purdue
38-14 In the conferencr.
Ohio Stete, a prohibitive fa vo rite Satur·
••
day before an Ohio Stadium crowd of
86,000 defeated Illinois 48-29 la st week
after beating Michigan State 29-0 and
titinnesota 28-8 in the Big Ten.
ti1ikc Adamle rushed for just 30 yards
in 13 carries against Ohio Stale last fall.
This season !he l!JO..pound Wildcat
fullback leads the conference with 441
yards, 52 ahead of Ohio State fullback
John Brockington and Michigan's Billy
Taylor.
Northwestern, never rk:h in depth, has
avoideCI crippling injuries. Ohio State also
~·ill be in its best physical shape of the
season for the midseason showdown.
Back from lhe injured list are backs
Larry Zelina anit Leo Hayden, AJl-
American comcrback Jack Tatum and
offensive guards Brian Donovan and Phil
Strickland.
The Buckeyes lead the series, which
started in 1913, :J0.12·1. They have won
the last four meetings.
Northwestern, which last won a Big
Ten title in 1936, hasn't been in lhe con·
ference·s first division since a third.place
tie in 1962.
Clny Finally Upstaged
--By 2-year-old Girl
NEW YORK f AP) -Muhammad Ali
came to town to look at some movies
and found himself upstaged by his 2·
yrar'<lld daughter. Maryum.
Rarely .!ietn in public, ti1aryum is a
charmer. She is' a scene stealer.
"Just like her father," said Ali's at-
traclivt statesque wife.. Belinda, bounc·
Ing the moonfaced tyke on her knee.
"She lalks a streak. Sometimes she lets
out the wildest yells."
•
•·She knows her fat~r is a fighter and ·
she wants to be a righter too. She is
always beating up boys twice her age In
the neighborhood. She can hit and
scr11tch .
"She can put on an act, too, when she
wants to. She's ju~t like Ali -the only
difference is the sex.··
Belinda and A1aryum accompanied AU
lo New York Thursday lo tape.Ali's a~
pca rance on ABC·s Wide World of Sports,
to be shown on the network Saturday 6
to 7:30 p.m.
\Vhile Ali, also knO\\'n as Cassius Clay.
clowned with commenta!!l[ Howard
Cosell In front of the cameras, Maryum
st-ege<J _a show or her own in the wings.
Silt donned head·phones to listen while
her fnther described last Monday night's
fiJ.thl In Atlanta ll(_alnst Jerry Quarry
w~ich All \\'On on a third round techni·
cal kn,ockouL ..:ii._ •
-----~---------~
MI KE RIORDAN PACES NY OVER SAN DIEGO, 114-107.
S po1•ts iti Brief <
Bo11ave11a T1·amples Foe,
Awaits Fight With Clay
BUENOS AIRES -Oscar "Ringo"
Bonavena scored a spectacular fourth
ruund hcavy~·eight victory over Brazil's
Luis Fau~tino Piris '11lursday night a few
hours after ii \\'as disclosed he \Yas
virtually certain to 1ncel ~1uhammad Ali
in December.
The scheduled 10-rounder ended \\•hen
Piris' seconds threw in the towel after
2:30 of the fourth stanza. Piris had a
deep cut in his right eyelid and his right
cheekbone was s,~·oJlen .
Muh ammad Ali. also known as Cassius
Cla y, disclosC'd in New York earlier on
Thursday that a fight be.t\\'een him and
Bonavena "'as just about set. No date or
site has been decided on. but it was CX·
peeled to be in Becember. probably at
~liami.
0
NE\V YORK -The Ballimore Orioles
still can't beat those New York Mets -
not necessarily on the baseball field but
in the b:ink .
The Orioles. v.•ho came out second best
to Jliew York in the five-game 1969 \Vorld
Series before trushing the Cincinnati
Reds in the 1970 ver sion or identical
len gth, \YCre rewarded Thursday with
\\'inning full shares of S\8,215.78 -just
S122.40 per man hclow the record set by
the i\1cts.
TI1e reduction 1vas due to poorer at-
tendance. La!il year 274.001 saw the Na-
tional and Aineti can league's playoffs
and 272.378 the \Vorld Series. This year
only 194.867 attended the league cham-
pionships and 253.18.1 snw the series -an
over-all drop of 98.329.
Baltimore awnrded 31 full shares and
13 partial shares or cash a\Yards while
the Reds handed out 32 full shares of
$13,687.59 and 15 partial sharrs or cash
av.'ards.
•
Cal Stale (F'ullcrtonl edged \Vhitl ier
College 2'1-10 in a non.conference football
clash al the Anaheim Stadium Thursday
night.
•
COLLEGE STATI ON , Tex. -Gene
Stallings, head football co..1ch and athlelic
director at Tesas A&M . denied Thursday
he \viii rcsii;:n at the end or the season.
"You can be !$Ure I won't quit." he
S3id . ''I preach to our alhletes that they
should have pride und nol quit when the
i;:oing is rough and rm not going to do
v.·hat I try 10 leuch diem not lo do."
•
PlllLADEl.PIUA 1AP J Th c
Phlladelph1a Fl;ers ~red thrte third
period gn..,ls Thu rsday night . whippin~
lhe t.o.s Angeles Kings 3-1 in a Nalional
Hockey League game.
•
BERKELEY -Stl'\~ S\\·ttncy. the
leading pass catcher on California's foot-
b.'lll rcom. \V<lS returned to the starting
\incur TI1ursd~y by <:o:"tch Ray \Vlllscy.
Sweeney dldn·t start last Saturday, but . .
•
caught five passes for 104 yards and one
touchdown in the 45--0 victory over
\\'ashington State. He \\'On back the
starting job from Jim Fraser.
•
RIO DE JANEIRO -Pele , the king of
Brazilian soccer, has released another
report that he will retire in 1972. So fcir,
he has found few Brazilians who believe
him .
The latest report came from the
southern state capital o( Curitiba, where
Pele told newsmen Thursday he was
retiring after the world soccer tilini.cup
of 1972 in Brazil.
With an income of around $200.000 a
year just from playing soccer, and con·
sidered ooe of the richest men in Brazil,
Pele. 30, had earlier announced he would
retire in 1973.
Money Need
.!\lay Force
Flood to Plav
.!
.NEW YORK IAP \ -The meeting was
called solely lo explain how much the
participants made in the 1970 World
Series -but all anyone wanted to know
was whether Curt Flood will get anythi ng
from Washington Senators-i n 1971.
For the rirst time Thursday, a denl ap.
pcarcd in the armor of baseball's
renegade' outfielder, still enmeshed in a
$4.1 milliori antitrust suit lo overturn
baseball's controversial reserve clause
which binds the player to a club for life
unless he is sold. traded or released.
Senators' owner Bob 'Short is trying to
sign Flood. \\'ho sat out the 1970 season
after being tr.oded from St. Louis to
Philadelphia and wlio -until Thursday
-hatl insisted he would never sign a
baseba ll contract containing lhe reserve
clause.
The 32-year-old outfielder with the .293
career batting average in 14 ma jor
league seasons said Short offered him
n1ore than the $90,000 he earned in ]969,
his las! year with St. Louis. \Vashlng\.Glf
ga\•e the Phils a player for the right to
deal with flood.
."I'm paying al!?1ony and I've got five
kids to support, ·F'lood said. ''That's
enough to drive any man back into the
game."
He d1st0unted the possibility that the
on~yea: nb6en~e had eroded his abilities
and s:ud leaving the United States to
~pend time in Copenhagen. Denmark
u.11.'f a -pleasure;--~ -'
"~1~1 of my han~up was menta l and ~h~.t ~ave nt~ a
1
chanc; to get awey from.
1t, flood said. 'Thal $why 1·r11 more lr,.
tltncd to piny -that and the ract tha• ' ·11ttd the money." ~ ·
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Friday, OctobW JO, 1970 " DAILY PILOT J 1
Toy Tailback Has Something Extra
J IM SCHULTZ
Pirates Still
Can Win Title,
Says Tu cker
-By PmL R~ "It takea a great dul of courace and
Of "" Dfih' "1"' 11'1f character tor a plsiyer of his size to be · When YQY're ~ 5-5, 145-poWld running the _great running back he is/' Brown
b
1
_ ack, kchances are slipi that you're going adds.
o ma e it i:1n a football field on raw ablll-Schultz strained a neck mu.scl e alter
ty 1!1~b:~ase cf Jim Schull% "·-n..i·-la being tackled In the Eagles' 14-12 Irvine u..:; ..,., ....... League loes three-weeU--ago---and-then
Eagles' toy tailback, ·the raw ability and performed with the injury plaguing him
talent do es.1st. jn Estancla's 18-16 wln over Costa Mesa a
But Schultz exhibits something extra, week later.
which bl! coach, Phil Brown, say. Is Im· Drown held his rushing ace out or a re. J>Cl,~~l. d ~'--uld "· . , cent llHJ Eagle whitewashing of Magnolia wor ~ru ~ said about JJfll s in order for him to recuperate suf· char~cter," begins Brown when em-ficlently.
barking on the aubject or his team's _... Despite his neck problems and the
leading rusher. y.·eek's layoff, Schultz currenUy ranb
Tars, Western
Clash in Key
Sunset Ga1ne
It's Homecoming and Cinderella will
attend the ball in search or prince charm-
ing tonight when the Newport Harbor
Sailors entertain the We!i:tern Pioneers at
Davidson Field in a crucial Sunset
League football encounter.
Bl' CRAIG SHEFE The pumpkin chariot arrives at 8
of 111e 01nt l'lltf s11t1 o·clock for the opening dance,and the be-
·0range Coast College football coach w~tc~ing hour may come long before
Dick Tucker isn·t about to say his team is f11!dn1ght should Western gr~b the gla~a
out of the running for the South Coast-shpper from the foot of Errue John.9on s
Conference title. Cinderella (the Tar football team).
On the contrary -Tucker lhinks his
-' --club-stiU-ha:sTchance-at-it.
"Sure we've still got a good shot at it.
Fullerton could be beaten. They could
have been beaten the last two u·eeks. But
first we've got to get by Cerritos."
'l'he Pirates tangle with Cerritos Satur·
day night at LeBard Stadium.
"It's a typical good Cerritos team.
They've only lost one game and right now
they're th e biggest threat to Fullerton,"
says Tucker.
The Falcons come into Saturday's
game with a 4-1 season mark and a 3-0
conference record.
Tucker says Cerritos runs the ball
more than they have in past seasons, but
he quickly add:s, "they still pass the ball
a lot, too."
The OCC coach praised the play of his
offensive team in last ,,,.eek's 34·7 victory
over Santa Ana.
Newport, after riding the crest of the
Sunset League wave for five weeks,
tumbled to a three-way tie for thTfOP
SjX)t by losing to l.oara last week.
Western, controlling the count-down for
the departure of Cinderella and her
magic coach from tonight's Homecoming
ball, is geared for an upset which could
all but eliminate the Tars from further Ii·
tie contention.
Coach Jim Everett of Western feels his
team could be undefeated with a few
breaks. The Pioneers lost lo Marina (7--0)
despite gaining over 300 yards end to
Loara (14-12) in league play.
"We have made mistakes when they
fiurt us the most,'' he says. ''If we can
e,iminate these mistakes, we can win
some ball games."
"We were very poor in execution la st
y,•eek and our defense had a lapse. We
have to play a good game on defense
because we don't do a lot of scoring,"
J ohnson opines.
Prince Charming of the \Vestern squad
is Greg LaMendola, the quarterback
general.
tourth on the Orange Coast area ground
galnlng list witb 338 net yards in 82
cracQ.
Brown admits Schultz•s omnipresence
in the Estancia ba.ckfltld ls not just a
chance thing.
... "Ltst _year, when I took over the head
coe.chlng ]ob, Jimmy was highly recom·
mended by the people here, even though
'he was only a sophomore at the time,"
Brown recalls.
"He runs the ball well and is a
dedicated worker."
"As a matter of fact. we don 't have
any prima donnas on this team. It's a
concerted te am effort wjth no cruising
aJIO'l\'cd,•
Schultz was good e.nough to start at
fullback as an Eagle. sophomore in 1969,
when he managed to pick up 256 yards in
76 tries for a 3.3 average.
llis shift to lailback this year cam e
about due to an overabundance of good
fuUbacks in the Eagle ca mp.
Starting fullback John Dixon, a 190-
pound junior who transferred in from St.
Monica's lligh In Santa ti1 onlca during
the summer, has complemented Schultz
we11 In blocking and rurming categories.
The latter has 189 yards in 30 carries.
In addJUon to his regul ar chores of
packing the pigskin on picturesque
outside S'l\'eeps and clockwork-Hite ln&lde
thrusts, Schultz also does a good job at
blocking and catching the ~a_U_,_when
qu<irterback Curt Thomas throws to hltn.
Estanci•'s junior ball carrying flash
plays at a defensive halfback slot on oc~
caslons, spelling starter Bob Kaiser when
the latter gets a chance to rest on the
sidelines.
''We use Schultz ma.Inly for pus
coverage when he's on defense,'' Brown
explains.
So, one should never be fooled by the
exterior of a package.
It doesn't take very Jong to realize that
it's v.·hat's inside that counts.
Mru~in~f Tries
To Rebound
Against Oilers
one is a football team which has never
really gotten untracked and the other
eleven is trying to put its once reliable
express back on the right track.
Above are the most Proper descriptions
of the Huntington Beach Oilers (1-5) and
the Marina Vikings (3·3), who knock.
heads tonight (8) in a Sunset League bat·
lie at lfuntlngton's Cap Sheue Field.
Coach Ken Ptfoats' Oil City gridder!
topped La Habra, 14-6, in the initial 1970
preseason enc:ounter. But since Ulen have
proceeded to drop five in a row.
1.farina, meanwhile. has matched the
previous school record for most wina in a
season-with-new head-coach-Leon
\Vheeler (who moved from Morningside)
at the helm.
A pair of 171).pound signal callers v.•ill
have the most to say about which peU1
Dame Fortune takes in the clash.
Huntington's Garth Wise helped the Oil
City crew amass over 300 yards of·
fensively in last week's :ID-14 loss to
\Vestminstcr with a 178-yard aerial
display his best to date.
How ever, \Vise's real value comes
when he 's running, whether it be inside
or around· the ends.
He's rolled up 491 yard! on 96 totes to
put him in the runnerup spot on area
rushing charts, behind Marina's Joe Ven-
timiglia (671 yards in 69 carries).
\Vise is also secon'f in area scoring
stals behind Mater Jjll!fs Bob Haupert, 50
-pcrint!rlo--42-. ---
"That's the best our offense has looked
all season. We u·e.re more consistent. \\le
ran the ball a lot better whicb Ls whal
we've been hoping to do.
"l don't think we're good enough to
pass all the time. But a good sound run-
ning game wiU establish the passing
game," adds Tucker.
He is one of the league 's leading
passers \vith a completion percentage of
close to .550. He has 10 touchdown passes
and last week completed 12 of 16 for 196
yards and three.scores.
DEFENSE SH INES -San Clemente High's de-
fense was the Jone bright spot for the Tritons Sat-
urday night as they bowed to Katella, 7-0. Here ,
Katella's Mike Barela ""{33) loses possession as he's
hit by Joe Uribe (32) and Dan Russell (7tl). Trilons ,
in the background are Bob McNamara (24), Tom
Morris (2il) and Ray Cannavo (34). ' . '
The Vikings have the perfect alter ego
to the Huntington whiz in tow-headed
Steve Monahan, possessor of 9'1S total of-
fensive yards this season.
Pttonahan, a converted split end, led the
flu-r:idden Marina eleven la two straight
Sunset wins (over Western and Santa
Ana) before the Vikings ran into bad luck
against Newport (a 7-0 Joss) and
Anaheim (a 48-8 devastation). The OCC coach reports t h a t
linebackers Phil Naylor and Paul Moro
may return to action this week. Naylor
(ankle) and Moro (knee) were injured in
Ule Fullerton game.
Linebackers Dan Moats and Kurt
Clemens along with · center G r e g
McCants and fullback Coe Meyer are not
expected to play against Cerritos.
lrvitae Ct•1reial
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Estancia, Los Alamito s
Match Explosive Attacks
Two high school football teams with ex-
plosive offenses clash tooight when
Estancia hosts Los Alamitos at Orange
Coast College in an important Irvine
League strug gle. Game time is 8.
For Estancia it's a do-or-die situation.
The Eagles of coach Phil Brown. are
ha1 ing a banner year. They've won five
or six on the season and are 3-1 in league
play. But they have to win their remai ning
three games to stay in conlention for a
CIF AAA playoff berth.
And tonight they figure to get their stif·
fest test since a 14-12 loss to Edison four
weeks ago.
Los Alamitos comes Into the game with
a 2·2 loop mark. A 30-14 loss to Edison
last "·eek virtually knocked the Griffins
out of title contention.
Los Alamitos keys its attack around
senior hal fback ~1ike Hixson. a 5-6, 145-
pound speedster who has averaged about
125 yards per game.
Estancia has rolled up 165 points this
season. averaging 27.5 per outing.
Chief offensive figures I n c 1 u d e
quarterback Curt Thomaa and tailbacks
J im Schultz and Bob Kaiser.
Schult?, the Eagles' leading rusher,
returned to action last ·week in the 40-13
victory over Santa Ana Valley after a
\\'eek's layoff with an injury.
He alternated with Kaiser at tailback.
Kaiser will open at flanker tonight, but
may see some action at tailback.
Thomas gives the Eagles a well balanc-
ed attack with his passing and rolloul!:.
Kaiser and end Lee Frledersdorf are two
of the better receivers in the league.
"Los Alamitos is not as big as most of
the teams v.•e've played," says Brown,
''but they are a sound football team.
They have it all. We have to stop both
the ir ruMing and their passing to beat
them."
Les Alllmli.. l'tlt nd1
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Katella Tops Tritons,-·7-0 Although Wheeler's offensive starting
array has escaped almost totally from
the throes of sickness, the defense will
undergo five changes.
Matlftt
US flob Wl11
MUnllftt lM BIKll
By ROGER CARLSON
Of ttll O.ltr 1'1191 Sti tt
San Clemente and Katella High School
got a jump on their Crestview League
rivals Thursday night -:-but the Tritons
or San Clemente never got out of first.
gear, losing a 7--0 decision to the Knights
at Anaheim's La Palma Stadium .
San Clemente's offense was unable lo
threaten-the Katell a goal-line at any time
during the battle for third place in loop
hol tilities. The deepest Triton penetration
was to the Katella 39.
The last SC drive reached th at point
but the Knights' defense stiffened, hurl-
ing Clark Jarrett and Ray cannavo for
one-yard losses to end the uprising with
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3:23 left In the game.
Katella , meanwhile, moved up and
dowr the field behind the shurp passing
or SteVe Thomas only to blo\v several
scoring opportunities.
The onl y touchdown or the night came
v.·ith 10:50 remaining. The 41-yard dri"!e
consumed four plays v.•ilh Thomas pass·
ing to Mike Bare.la for the final 12 yards.
Ray Dodge toed the PAT to give
Katelin ils seven-point margin.
Other than that it was a display of San
Clemente's potent defense stlrling serious
threats time aft er time only to see the ef·
forts go for naught.
The Kn ights had a third dov.1n on San
Clemente's one-foot line but couldn't
score in lhe third period when the Triton
defense. led by RiCk Anderson, twice held
the Knights back at the line of scrim·
mage.
On another occasion San Clemente
went for broke with a fake punt and pass-
ed incomplete to hand the Knights a fiTs1
dov.n at the SC 24. But Katella ran out o(
downs at th& 15.
( Later Ray Jimison intercepted a San
Clemente pass lo give Katella possession
at the losers' 18. But Toby Re.schan put
an end to that with an aerial theft in the
end zone.
ln the fint period a SO.yard pass play
from Thomas lo split end Rob Conrad set
Katella up on the Trltons' 16.
But Dodge's 27-yard field goal attempt
went awry.
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GWC Coach
Calls Harbor
Up and .Down
Mater Dei's Cavalry
Rides Past Saints, 41-8
I-lope springs eternal and despite an
opening shellacking at the hands cf Rio
Hondo, Golden West College coach Ray
Shackleford feels the Rustlers are still
very much a parl o( the Southern
California Conference title chase.
"Rio Hondo plays Los Angeles City
College tonight befort our game w I t h
Harbor and if LA wins, we will be right
back in there with a cmance at the title,"
he says.
By PHIL ROSS or 011 o.u, 'Litt St111
Mater Dei'ii f\.1onarchs unleashed tm:ir
ov.·n version of the Polish Cavalry -slot.-
back Dennis (Woody) Wojtkie\vicz -and
In fact, Shackleford ls looking ahead on
The victors mixed their passing and the s::heclule and may take in the LACC
running games well in outclassing the Ufl. Rio Hondo game personally.
dermanned Saints. "We will know before we play another
Pt1aler Dei's defense, which relin-game what the situatio.n is between these
quished a net total of just 121 yards. two teams."
didn't give up a point until the final 30 The Golden West coach says his squad
snapped a two-game. loss skein Thursday seconds when St. Anthony tall ied on a Isn't downcast over the IOM la Rio Honda.
night with a 41·8 swamping' or-rne-Sr:--Jia~n>Jlij' an·d"'a-PA'l'-pass.---2.:We..-didn't ~get..aeybody hurt beyond
Anthony &iinl" in an Ange lus League Haupe rt, who !lAW action at flanker in the normal bumps and bruises that come
footba!J game before 5,000 at Santa Ana the second hal f, pulled in a 10-yard scor· with such a game. The attitude cf the
Bo\\.'I. • Jng strike from reserve Bill Clough In players is real good and I'm aure they
l\'ojtkiewicz, a ISO.pound senior who fourth quarter and Clough followed. four · have enough pride to bounce right back •
doesn't normally see a lot or ball-toting minutes later with a touchdown pass of 13 "Harbor is a hard team to figure this:
Lions~ Loar a Square Off
action, didn't waste any time as he yards to sophomore Mike Coury. year. I don't see how they can possibly be
romped to a pair or touchdowns on long Fullback Rick Sheldon accounted for a bad team. They have good coachine
runs in the first period. seven markers on a short TD plunge and and an exctrlent area to draw from.
The speedy slotback subjected the an extra-point kick while Wojtklewicz a~d "Like many teams, howevtr, they have
hapleu Saints to a Chinese torture at Mark Sfanbra made good on lWC).pc>Lnt been up and down this season. 1bey look
Westminster and Loa.ra Hlah School to a pair of touchdowns.
hook up for the first time ever toni&ht in The offe nse, led by junior quarterback
varsity foot.ball when they collide in a Jdf Siemens, hasn't been held in check
Sun.set League battle at Westmlnster's \y any team. Siemens has accounted for
Stadium. 470 yards with his 31 completions. a 12.3
d I average per completion.
His other 9.7 sprinter. J im Beyers, I!
ready at fullback while quMterback Dean
, Lappin (180) carries imposing passing
aedenllals into the coo.test.
Lappin has completed 31 or 58 for 53.4
percent and 340 yards.
8:09 of the initial stanza. He took a conversions. good in ·one game and then Joie to I team
pitchout from Bobby Haupert on the ram-G•Ml sTATllTtC• like Cypress."
ed Monarch. belly option and broke Fi"1 •-1u1111N1 ~f 1
,• Shackleford dOesn't plan i1ny cha~
thr0ugh right tackle for a 33-)l&rd romp ;~~:: ::; ::!\';t~ f : in his oUen.'!ive starting lineup. s
on the lint play of a series following a toi.1 11n1 t1o110n1 ,, 11 means ChRrlle Buckland will continue to
.wccesarul onside kickoff Dy the winners. ~!~! :a.~~ ;:: ';l paet the running attack with a big assist
Just 21 SC<..'Onds earlier, another swifly ::,rc1~1::1 ,,,...., .}: ,;: from Bob Cornukc.
Kickoff is slated for 8 o'clock an or And tailback Chuck Winkles hRS been
Loara it'• a do or die situation wtth vie· tory m•ndatory In ordtr to keep pace the l~adiz!g runntr for the Lions, chalking
Lappln, not the runner in the saxons'-
sprint out offense that ffulli 11. makes up
for it with his pinpoint paaslng. Jle's a
Juni01 .
-junior tailback Rocky Simpson -had Puni.1Avet"111 ''"-' 11».0 •t H.J Steve Griffith is the passing le9der w1lh
goUen Miter Delontne bmlr<I With a-2...-=---~:=1';':., Ti 11..s ~--44-colflpleUons oulollQU!JtmP11JOt_4tl _ _. _ _,
yard TD ttetpllon from HaupGrt. kff9 •r a ... 7.,, • 1 yard! but only two touchdownS. StvUil 'th I II 1 d ,..._....-llarbOr and up 329 yards. on Q carries for a 5.2 wt ~ ow ea m 1-"t""' • average and five tcuchdowns.
AnaheiR'll Loara, however, hu depeodtd on a.
Westminster, ho"·ever, finds itaeU In solid defense for most er Its suCCftl. The
&he-spoiler's role , af~ _!Ufferlng fl~ -5.\.lon.I have been <'Speclall tough
11tralght defeata before victory laal week <'lnat the running gaffie. - -
11g3inst Huntington Beach. Ccacb Herb Hill Is expected to have
Coach Bill nos,vell's crc\\.' was hurt tailback Steve Elkins back fgr the second
('Qllslderably by IU defen11lve side Y.'hlch straight game but he Indicated Mark
gave up a minlmum of 22 polnt.1 per op-.. HAnna would start at that spot. Elkins
ponenl before finally holdlna Hunlln&IOO rum the 100 In t .7 -.ids.
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yards Jn 10 c1rrles, broke loose on a 57· ~~~.~·= cost the RuaUtrs toucbdo-.ms last week,
yard scoring blast on right tackle on the let ~ ,, • .,,. however •
Initial play of another Monarch series ~= 1~ !, i ::: Kurt Dedrick at Danker and Mike
with 21 seconds left in the fir5l quarter---:;~i:W1'1 1: ,;: ~ 1~:: Sh3ughnessy at splli end are his favorite.
Coach Bob Woodl' Mater Dei grldders, CtoUfl~ , t s -1.1 targeti.'
.now $.2 on lhe season and 1-2 In Angelus '11111 , •• ~Na ,.. n 1·• Dedrick has caught 11 for 121 yards
play, marched up and down the flcld M•1" o.ifl( ,,.1 " and "ll touchdown whlle Sha~ bas
virtually n\ will throughout most or the H~u""'' j, 1 o 112 ~ to receptions for 124 yards aDd the other
·tonteaL c'°"f:111~ ~ ,~ : ,t ::U TD.
t
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II DAIL v PILOT Friday, Oc:tobtt 30, 1970
Start Area-"€ros·s Country J>owers -
Your
Engines!
::·M~intain Undefeated Marks
by Delce · Hou/gale
tr you read the rriotor racj.Jig jourfli'ls, you wonder just what
laas happened this season between 1969 world champion Jackie
Stewart and the manufacturer of his formula 1 race car, March
~gineering.
Stewart drove a March car most or the season with little
success, and recenUy switched to a one-off car designed for hlm
by his team manager, Ken Tyrrell.
The second guessers have built this development into a rift
t>etween Stewart and March, coming as it did at about the same
time 1'1ario Andretti's March connections were severed. (An-
dretti's car was destroyed in' a crash at the Austrian GP and
·wasn't replaced .) Atarch Engineering or England. a new race team and racing
car manufacturer, was launched with a Jot or fanfare early this
year. Is it going into limbo as both Stewart and Andretti defect?
Max Mosley, team manager for the STP March Can-Am
racing team, is here for Sunday's race at Riverside~ He supplied
this story:
"Jackie Stewart had a distinct problem at the end of the
1969 campaign. He was the world champion, but he had no car,
and there were not many people willing to sell him one, because
he was so competitive.
"Ken Tyrrell decided right then to build Jackie a car, but 1
it couldn't be ready in time for this season. So Ken ordered
three cars from us. They raced our cars, while at the same
time developing their owq car as an insurance policy. Tyrrell's
Achilles heel was the fact that he was not a rnanuracturer.
"When it became clear that Jackie was not going to win
the' world championship again this year, they started using their
own car. At that time the suggestion was made that March cars
were not a success.
"The fact is that if Jackie's engine had been as reliable in
1970 as it had been in 1969 he would have won the championship
again. "He placed third in South Africa and won the second race of
the year in Spain. Only two other manufacturers have ever won
world championship races their first year out, Mercedes Benz
1ill954 and '-fatra in 1968.
Stewart's E119il1e Fails Twice
''Jackie bad the pole at Monaco and bad a 15 second lead
in tbe race when bis engine failed. At Spa he was two seconds
a lap quicker than anybody in practice, buL during the ratt his
engine failed.
"In tbe French Grand Prix be was up with J\1atra and
Ferrari undl be bad an engine problem. At Brands Hatch he
went out with a Oat tire. At the German Grand Prix a flywheel
came off the engine. At the Austrian Grand Prix a fuel line broke.
Pending World Record
111'he Jut time be drove a March was at Monza, Italy, and
Jackie flnlslted second. The fact is that nothing:· related to our
cbas5l1 ever falit:d , and while the car was running well Stewart
was compeUtlve.
Balboa Island's Sally Johnson hauled in this 133-pound tuna for a possible !·G·!:"·A· women's world record on 30-pound test line. If it proves a world mark
it wtll be the second record for a Balboa Angling Club member in less than two
months. Forrest Shumway caught~a 163-pound Big Eye tuna for the men's
mark on 30-pound line. f .. _, ,
"Compare our record this year, ror e11:ample, with J\tatra,
which won tbe •·orld championship last year, For tbe entire 1• seuon Matra was on the pole twice. in the lint 1ix races
this year bad either Jackie Stewart o.r Chris Amon on the
--•peleele five timt:1, and often bad both drivers on the front row."
Mosley contends this iii a respectable record fw • new CGm·
pany witll new cars, ud lte 1bnulda't get mucb arpmenL
f'orm•l• Cars Much Lighter
March formula t cars for 1971 will be much lighter artd
will have a different shape from anything seen so far jn grand
pri1' racing, Mosley aaid. They should also be safer.
••we make a big, big play for safety," Mosley 53id ... The
Important things We have done with the new car are to stop it
lrom catchJng fire and from distorting badly in case it crashes,
to prevent injuring the driver.
"You see, il we can make a contribution on the safety
front it encourages automobile companies to make a contribu-
Uon io racing. And of course we don 't want the responsibilitY
of injuring a driver."
Annh,ersar11 for Breedlove's Wife
Uni Tests
University lligh's Trojans
face one Of the stiffest tests or
the season tonight when they
entertain the San Dimas
Saints on the Mission Viejo
High fleld with kickoff al 8
o'clock.
Both schools are in their
first year of football and each
has dropped a pair o f
Perhaps it ls ironic that on Nov. 4, 19'5, Mn. Lee Brtedlove games. San Dimas has four
emerged from the obscurity of a suburban home life to become victories to three for the Tr<r
Ute world's fastest woman on wheels. On Nov, 4 of this year sbe jans.
will be at tbe wheel of a tank-like automobile somewhere be· Against one common foe.
hfeen Ensenada and La Paz, P.lexico, driving ia the '-lexi<:an San Dimas won over the
100 off.road racing ·classic. Workman JV squad. 24-14.
Once again she will surface into the limelighl, a woman University faced the same
who bas savored the sweet wine of success and tasted the bitter team a week later and posted
dregs of despair. a 40-S triumph.
Mrs. Brttdlove, then married to Craig, bad five two-way Coach Jerry Redman o! lhe
runs down the ult at Bonneville In ber husband's "Spirit of Trojans says this doesn't
America" jet car. Tbe lint time she bit 99 and 106 m .p.b '11ie mean a thing.
final pair of one·mile runs were at %88.0! u d 33%.28 m.p.h. Jor •·C-Omparative scores are
a two-way record of 308.5' that stands today for women. generally a false way to com·
Early In lMI she teamed wllll Craig to set 106 speed records pare teams," he says. "We ex-
ln an AJ\fX al the five-mile San Angelo, Tex., test track at speeds peel a real tight game Friday
of more than 160 m.p.h. Ltt bit ISS during the Ubour endurance.,.. night. They have a balanced
nm that covered 3,380 milts. · attack and they have many of
"Then I got pregnant," she said, "and eventually I. lost the the same problems we have."
baby. I bad an operation after that and was sick for a k>ng Coach Bob Baiz of San time." Dimas say1 University is pnr
Id bably the best team he will l\1n. Breedlove bas made ber way in the wor on tea room face this season. This includes
IMde.linl slnce ber estrangement from Craig, strolling among the two games he losl.
DOOnUme patrons of cafe1 In the Los Angeles area, giving tbe -'ce and sales pitch oa ea<:b garment she wears. The Saint line will outy.·eigh r• the Trojans by five pounds per
That'• an easy way to pay tbe rent. but Lee Breedlove is man but thr backfield is con--
Uppy to be back In racing, no matter .. what the pay. siderably heavier. The four of·
"I tried to get In pro stock drag racing." she said. "t wrote fensive backs for San Dimas
qui~ a few letters trylna: to find' sponsorship, but this bas bttn will average 17 poWlds more
a bad year. I've been turned down every Ume." than the Trojans.
Sbe'll co-drive what oner Jimmy JeHries describes as a San Dimas operates out of a
"Baja commuter car." and Olds-poweml experimental with pro offense with \V::iyne ~1oses
woodea fenden and a flbergla11 body called "La J\tula del the leading ground gainer and
Oiablo" or tbe Devil's Mule. Jeffries, a Baja California racing scorer with 12 touchdov.·ns.
\'~rn, will be the lead driver. Steve Bernard has come along
Laguna Beach High'• !oot-
baH team, winless thus far in
Che 1970 campaign. faces its
toughest challenge of the
season tonight at Santa Ana
Bowl.
The Artists engage powerful
Saddleback High , the third·
ranked team in the ClF "AA
div ision, in an Orange League
clash.
Saddleback comes into the
game with a 6-0 mark. The
Roadrunr.ers have victories
ove r Mission Viejo (20-0),
Troy (36-21), Ontario (12-0),
La f.firada (38-7), El Dorado
(42-7) and Valencia (34-6).
Coach Ben Haley's club has
averaged 3).3 points per
outing while allowing just 6.8.
The Roadrunners are· well·
balanced, but prefer to run
more than they pass.
Quarterback Bryan Myracle
leads the Saddleback o(fensive
assault. He has gained over
600 yards rushing this season
and has thrown seven touch-
down passes.
Fullback Dave Middleton. a
6-2, 205-pounder gives the
Roadrunners power up the
middle, I-le gained 129 yards
against Valencia last week.
Tailback Bryan Dawson ts
another good one. He runs the
100 in 9.7.
Laguna, although losing lo
Brea last week, 24-19, comes
off its best game of the
season.
Junior Skip Winship stepped
into the starting fullback spot
for the Artists last weclt and
resflonded with 103 yards
rushlng. ..
Haley says his team has
been preparing for this game
just like any other. "Laguna
played a good game against
Brea. We can't afford to look
past them. We really expect a
good ball game."
Laguna coach 1-ial Akins
calls th is the Artists' biggest
challenge ol the year.
"Saddleback does every·
thing well. They are really a
well balanced team. "We're
hopeful we'll be able to move
the ball against them."
StHIMldl Lttu~t .. K,
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Prep, JC Football
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slowly al quarterback bv.t is F•t•re in Auto lndu3try for ·Titaniuna beginning to put a passin• cREST'ViE·w LEA-0111: WL'f''A
Even such an exotic race car as the Norris Industries Ti·22 game together to give lhe ~: .. ~en• : 1~ .~ Grid Scores Can-Am car driven by Jackie Oliver. which features a highly Saints 8 balanced attack. Koteoa , 2 " "
exotic and expensive titanium chassis, has a practical appllca· Redman is also pleased '1'ith ~1~~~~;~ ' ~ ~ ~i Ju111w v1n1,., ""tb•" ·~. the development of the Trojan FocP!llli 1 "° ., K11en1 o • o ._,, ~ pass·1ng g Tustl" J ,, " Mlulan Vltlo o 11 J o.-1t
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"Titanium is the world's .most common metal," he said. 1'lt ~ ~":~~ ~ ~:':;;"' :~ K•te11• 1·T!=~~~en:n_:. 0 ~:io;11,,,11oS ~ ~ 1: t2: Is everywhere and il b useful when you consider Its properties. lll T1vue G SP•" uo 0r1n1e 11 E• _,.,, Edliont1eor•nt -TD., Morardo.
Tttanium is absolutely rustproor. Eventually all automobiles will :~ ~:~:1"', g !11~~r..., :~ Faottirn "!";-:,~~ ~ 11o...t u ~11.r."p',,~e·,7'~11.,.~nc111=~~i ~
hive to be built of titanium. 160 a111e., T T110moto11 ...,., o.m.I "'"'°" oa11 from 1(•11n.1
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lf all new cars were built o il8nium they wouldn't rust at all. u5 0111 a Ntlto11 11J YW BRAKE
-Automobiles ··ould la.st for years longer Ulan they do no"'." :~ i:rt"' : :~ :~
J
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.. _____________________ ...1 545-9411
e DISC IUll SftCIAlm e
COSTA MISA STOH ONLY
J11t .._..,If",
~ .14MtU " Mf·22&t
ALL
AMERICAN
FOOTBALL
FORECAST
BROUGHT TO YOU BY
'THE ALL AMERICANS'
AT
HARBOR AMERICAN
Your Authorized AMERICAN MOTORS Dealer
NEW 1971 SPORT AIOUT
$2594
D1li~trtd in Co1t1 M11a
Ordtr Your1 Today:
No llnde dade, Jilt 1milt•t
rot• frCtftl rite All A....ncein..
nit fs llew H_,..r ...... le• pleb .... ttils Wffk:
1-TEXAS I-MICHIGAN 11-AIR FORCE 16-ALABAMA
2-NOTRE DAME 7-STANfORD 11-MISSltSIPPI 17-HOUSTON
~HID STATE I-ARKANSAS 1J...-ARIZONA STATE 11-U.C.LA.
4-NEBRASKA 1-l.S. U, 14-MISSOURI 11-GEORGIA TECH
~TENNESSEE 11-AUBURN 15-SOUTHERN CAL ~SAN DIEGO STATE
Saturday, Oct 31 -Major Coll1111 Penn Stai. 21 west Vlr&lnl• 1" l"ll~Url!I 23 Syr.CUS9 20
Air Foree
Al1b1ma
ArklnHt Auburn
Boston Colle .. Bowlin& Grnn
Brl&111 m Youna
Bucknell Buff1lo
Cinc.innntd
Cit1clel
Clem SOii
co111t• Calumbll
Dlrtrnouth O.wldson
°'""" ••Floridl lllst. f'um11n "'°"'' ~·Tedi H1tvard Houston -Kentuck1·
Loul..,1111 M1mphl1 &lite
Mlthlpn Michra .. n State
MinlH!SOlll
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New Mu:Jc.o North C.rolilW
North TIX.ti Notrt Dime.
OPlto St111t Okl1holnl
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21 MIMlMIDDI Stata 22 PUrdue 28 11Unol9 14
35 Tun MM 1 S•o Diep Stlll 35 Fruno Stata ll 3' Flotldl 14 Sou1hem CllJtomll 27 C.J1fomi1 11
20 Army lO Stonford 2li Cl~ron Sttte 14
21 M•ni ... n ' Ttnnuset lS Wike fOre!.1 ' 22 Wyoml,. 17 Tu11 38 S.M.U, 10
21 Rlltprt 17 T.C.U. U BIYIOI' 14
11 Holy er-1 Ttus T.c:h 21 Rice 16 3' Wlthlte Ii Toledo lJ Mi1ml {Ohio) 7 ts Rlcltrflond 20 -u.c.LA. 31 W1st11n11on Stire 7
IS Mlf)'llnd 11 Ul1h 20 S•n RISI 1
20 Llflliltl 11 Utlh Shill 27 ColcddO Stale l!i JO com.It 27 V1ndlrtrllt 17 Tu11ne 15
24 Ylll 17 Villll'IO'oll 27 Xl'lltr e
23 ¥.M.I. & V.P.I. 27 W!llltlll & Mary 1 2' Norlt'terll llllnolt 10 W11hln;ton 21 Ore&on 10
20 Mllml, '11. l& West TIUS 3J Arllnflon 1 23 Eell. C.rollMI 21 Wtstem Mkhlpn 21 Ohio u 10 ri =:' Cetati"' J Other Games -Far West
20 PeMqf'tenl• 1s c11 Luthenn 21 occidental o ~-~-t.ftln-.. -1:-·-{;l-;:~~l.·~---~;,,~~-·-'
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PROFESSIONAL FORECAST
s • .-...N ........ 1
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IUFFALO • ,. ••• 11 ...... , ,, ••• •••, 16
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Stop in, tell u1 whet you think of our forecastf
HARBOR AMERICAN Amertcen Molora AUTHORIZID AM!RICAN MOYOIS DIALtR
1969.::,.arbor Blvd., C.M. 646-0261
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.
Hospital
Charity
Sl1ow Slated
~
Charity is the name of the game being
played by the Silver and Gold Chapter of
the South Coast Community Hospital
Auxiliary as they prepare to stage the
1970 edition of The Fractured Follies in /
the Laguna Beach High S c ho o I
auditorium, 625 Park Ave., Laguna
Beach, Nov. 5 • 7 at 8:30 p.m.
--,.:Th._.e group has pledJed to raise $JOO 000
!or the hospital and is well on its way to
realizing its goal. The follies production of
two years ago yielded $10,000 for the
fund.
Fractured Foll ies is an amateur varie-
ty show which is directed by Peter
Thomas of Cargill Productions of New
York. cargill provides costumes, script
and direction and the auxiliary enlists the
talents of dedicated amateurs from
Newport Beach through San Clemente.
Not even the gently falling rain Io
Laguna's Irvine Bowl where the troupe
has prepared this year's numbers, has
~n ab~ to ~~RJpen the spirits of early·
r~s1ng housew ives and hooky-playing hub-
bies.
Hollywood Baekstage
'God Bless Uncle Sam'
Spoof on Both Sides
By VERNON SCOT!'
\11'1 MollY .... (91'n...-t"I
tlOLLYWOOD -.. God Bless You
Uncle Sam" is the title of an unreleased
movie spoofing some of America's
monolithic verities.
ln as much as anti-establishment films
are in \'Ogue, it follows that 'a movie
knocking sacred cows on both sides of the
ferlfl: might be twice as funny and pro-
fitable.
Robert Lansing. who stars in the pie·
ture-as-an--Air-Foree Captain, explained
that "God Bless You Uncle Sam" is not
unpatriotic or subversive.
Nor does it blame the country's woes
solely on the beleaguered guy with lunch
pail, hard hat. white collar, military
uniform or the fuzz.
··There's a n o l h e r eslablishmenl ,'1
Lansing explained. "the junior con·
fanni sts who dress and talk alike.
They're as locked Into their own rigid
rules as anyone else.
"Our picture. affers a pox on both their
houses." •
No one has heard much about the film.
nor has a release date been set. AcM
co rding to Lansing, "all the money went
into the picture, and not for publicity or
advertising."
Lansing believes the picture will be
compared wilh "Dr. Strangelove," and
JlJC_dicts scri.:;uns or outrage will be_ heard
from extre1nisls on the outer fringes of
the political spectrum.
A grin on Lansing is a rare thing If you
see him only on television or in movies.
His deep-set blue eyes, high cheekbones
and 'aggressive jaw have restricted him
to drama either as hero or villain.
"This movie is different because I have
a chance to play some comedy," he said.-
A Ralph Andrews Production, .~God
Bless you Uncle Sam" was made in seven
or eight weeks almost totally on locations
in Southern callfornia.
"".The budget. was small," Lansing said,
"'I~ alLtbe mterlors_sbot .in..LcJ.rn~x& __
equipment establishment in a cramped
studio. OUr director, Bill Naud, specializ·
ed in television commercials."
The story involves three draft card
burners who escape from a-sheriff and
conspire to set right the manifold
shortcomings or the nation.
"It's not jUst a witty anti-establishment
film," said Lansing, drawing a distinctioo
between those cute little inside picturey
that make the average A·merican JoOk.
retarded and a movie that is madt for·
entertainment. ' ·
"OUr picture Is funny. And that's lb~
big difference."
There's another difference. "God Blesi.
You Uncle Sam" is as yet unreleased.
Morning rehearsal calls have J>rought
participants~to the bowl-before 9...a.m._on
many a nippy day. in recent weeks.
Afternoon and evening schedules have
added to the attainment of a smooth·nm-
ning show, if not theatrical perfection.
Among numbers requiring more than CAN.CAN GIRLS TAMMY ERIKSMOEN, JANE ARMBRUSTER AND GLORIA POWELL
··The far ri ght and the far left will be
convinced we are picking on them ,"
Lansing said, grinning.
Singe1~ Pride
Would Rather
Play Baseball the usual atten:iorl tO detail are a can-can
line, and all-male vaudeville "hoofer" line
with the addition of a Sensual female ala
Carmen Miranda, and a 'spectacular
~ ~altz scene. But these are just a sampl·
mg of the mesmerizing menu of at·
tr.actions slated for the benefit show.
This is the fourth such extravaganza
11inct 1965 and each has been successful
in Its purpose of fund raising. The aux·
Uiary is a group o[ over 300 women who
-aooateunn~·-to -the4\ospita1-each week
relieving the nurses of many duties theY
would be hard pressed to perform in their
busy day.
The FoUies is a rollicking program of
likils, dancing girls, music and vignettes
and the company draws on masculine
volunteers to act and aid in some of the
technical duties.
Zachary Malaby is acting as technical
advisor; Jack Lions is handling props and
sets, and Edmund Van Deusen is stage
manager.
Auxiliary memebers working out of the
BJ>Otlight include Mrs. Van Deusen,
chairman, with a committee composed of
the Mmes. Macauley Ropp, Violet
Adams, Jeffrey Towns.end, Malaby and
Peggy Taylor.
Others. assisting are Mmes. W. L.
Wooley, George Wolf, Charles Quiller,
Sam Garst, John M. Shea Jr., Alfred
~ess, DaOO Rosen , Theodore Taylor and
David KaWasaki.
t.fmes. Neal Amsden , Evelyn Reynolds
Cordon Fleener, John B. Lawson, Jack
Snipes, Gene Brookband and Jun Chino
complete the group of hard·working aux·
lllary members.
'Tickets for the three-night event are
$3.50 and $5. 'They may be purchased at
Peggy Taylor Realtors in Laguna Beach
between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. or reserved
by calling the auxiliary office at the
hospital, 499-1311, extension 296.
-
INS~~S
Friday, October 30, 1978
The Newport Harbor Museum Is
currently showing Peter Max Ip
Its gallery at 400 Main St., Balboa .
Some of his posters and boutique
items are on sale as well. See
story on Page 20.
Travel
Gulde to Fun
P1ge 2t
Page za
Uvt Theater ~ Page to
Wlteell ud Campln& \ Page zt
DAil'( ,llOT Slflf ,,,.,.
TERRY CHASTAIN, CHERYL LEDGER REHEARSE DANCE
Coldstream Guards-Black
Watch Show Time Changed
• •
Opening performance of the massed According to Robert Reoch: Chciftain
bands of the Coldstream Guards and the or the United SCottish Societies of
Black Watch Regiment!, scheduled for 8 Southern Californi a, a close federation of
p.m. tonight at Anaheim f Convention various social cl ubs in the area, or clans
Center, 800 W. Kate Ila Anaheim, has been as they oall them, his membership will be Oat 'N' Aboal Pages Zl • U
\ilao. BOiie ln&\-Pap-U -·set back-until 9 p.m.-Cause-.for-the-delay well-represented at the performance. Jn
Jn Ute G1Uerits Page %3
"Monte Walsh'' Page ZS
Art Cmoey la Vep1 Page U
Tetevtslf• Goide Page U
Gulde to r.tovles P1ce 14
Ctmi<I Page !$
~tn. Rex Harrison Page U
Cudld1&t1 OD TV Page 14
is the presence carlief of President Nlxon short, the Black Watch laddies can ex·
at a political rally In the.Center. · pect a mighty welcome rrom their
'Dle two gre11t British military bands, American kinsmen.
num~rlng I ~ bandsruen In all,'8nd now The Coldstttam Guards Is one or Her
oompleUng a two-month tour or the coun-B r 1• l a n 1 c M J 1 · · r a es Y s companies o
try, have a1tractcd SRO audlcDces "H hold wherev~ they have appeard . Local ousc Troops." and Its bland plays
citizens or Scottish and English ancestry, at all state runctions. The ColdJtrcamcrs
as \\'ell as those "''ho enjoy martial are tlJ.~ oldest regiment In the British
music, mi\rchlng and llighland danctnr.:1 Army. Jn turn, the Black Watch ts Br!+
are expected to atltod .. ,....... laln's"Senlor" RlghlaNI RegimenL
. ' .
~
Intermission
Co1n1nunity Theaters
Figliting for Su rvival
By TOM TITUS
01 tto1 EHl11 ,1111 Iliff
They call it by many names -little
theater, amateur theater -but the most
applicable description is community
theater. Not only to di stinguish the prD-
duct of the local playhouses from that of
the professionals, for often the difference
is ind iscern ible, but because without the
•·community" there very likely would be
no theater.
A number of Orange Coast producing
groups are learning this lesson painfully
this year.
At the outset or the new season, two
young companies were left al the post.
.Th e Open End Theater of Newport Beach
ran oul of money; the Rancho Com-
muhity Players of Mission Viejo ran out
of enthusiasm.
Last weekend produced a n o t h e r
casualty -the Ensemble Theater of
Huntington Beach, which closed down its
premiere show, "The Diary of Anne
Frank," after tbe fourth of a scheduled
six weekends. The prognosis for early
rebirth or this embryonic organization is
dim.
ALL THESE ARE relatively new en·
lilies along th e Orange Coast, but the
problems or survival play no fa vorites.
Orange County's largest community
theater, the Laguna Moulton Playhouse.
also is fighting to keep its head above
water following·a series of body blows to
the pocketboOk.
Laguna, however, w.ijl weather the
storm: the playhouse ha)...nearly a half
century of impetus behind it. While the
Laguna Community Players' eyes were
rar bigger than their collective wallets
when they elected to move from the
homey atmosphere on Ocean Avenue into
the high rent district on Laguna Canrs>n
Road, they possess the resources, both
jntegral and financial, to bounce back.
They will. however, have to suck in
their bellies and tighten their belts for at
least the rest of the season. Laguna
already has initiated a crash program of
austerity which included the dismissal of
managing director Jack Seymour and
three others on the playhouse's salaried
staff.
"The season will go on as scheduled :
there's no thought or changing it,"
reports Betsy Rose, v1ce president of lhe
Laguna board of directors. "We'll just
have to do more scrounging and less
spending for a while." .
WHJCll MEANS there .,.ill bi no more
productions, at least for this season, ap-
proxlfnatlng the technical extravagance
of the playhot1se's last two shows,
'-'Oliver" and ''The Royal Hunt of the
Sun." Professlooal acwnen In the
·--·.
backstage area will be replaced by
volunteer service -of which, Mrs. Rose
adds, more is desperately needed.
· Additiona lly, the playhouse has -an~
nounced the launching or a massive,
c:ountywide fund·raising campaign to Ct>!· ·
lect the money needed to finish the
season and to pay off a bank loan and
current bills. The target figure is a stag.
gering $100,000.
The first $12,000 came across the table
in a hurry, in the fonn of two $6,QOO
checks from a pair of well heeled
playhouse supporters. This, however, in a
gargantuan theater such as Laguna's
with equally gargantuan problems, is
merely a drop in the proverbial bucket.
ALL OF WHICJI must be read with a
goodly amount of teeth grilting by one
David Mai ville, who is laboring · in
desperation to hold together t h t
Ensemble Theater in Huntin gton Beach.
His group's financial needs are more
down to earth, only $1 ,000 to cover the
costs of acquiring and refurbishing a
building, but his chances of success at
this writing are minimal.
Maiville, who directed a solid if
youthful production of "Anne Frank'' to
get the Ensemble off and hopefully run·
ning, feels with some possible justifies·
lion that the powers that be are ganging
up on him. Rebuffed by city building of·
ficials (rom establishing his theater in an
old bullding.oo Main Street, he now finds
his group forced out of the parish hall of
St. Wilfred 'S Episcopal C h u r c h after
another inspection revealed building code
deficiencies.
"No matter what building we would
select," he points out, "we would have to
pay a licensed electrician $12 an hour to
do the necessary wiring, and that would
kill us. Unless somebody comes through
with a helping hand, we're finished:"
Two community theaters, both fighting
for survival. One needs $100,000, the other
only $1 ,000, yet the betting odds ridE with
the well-established Laguna Moulton
Playhouse and foretell Uie demise of the
struggling new Ensemble Theater even
before it has a chance to prove its worth.
They call it community theater, with
emphasis On the word "community~"
Wlthout it, you're oi in the cold. ·
BACKSTAGE -Marla ~mall, who11\
play the role of Toni In the Ana·Modjeska
Players' production of "Cactus Flower''
next month. lw: quite • career behind
her at the age or 21 •.• she's traveled
around the world as a member of the
Young Americans and recorded three
albums with the group, as well as belng a
part or the Oscar-winning documt:ntary
on lbe-YOW1£ AmetlcansWl¥eat,
Charlie Pride ts one o( the nation's top
country-western singers, the first Black
man to make it big in that field of music.
But if Charlie had his "cblUbars," aC·
cording to some who know him well, he'd
rather be a major league ball player.
He 'll be making his first public 1p-
. pea ranees in Southern C a I i f o r n i a
performing Nov. I al the Convention
Center in Anaheim.
While Charlie won 't exactly say that his
heart is still on the nation's major league
d~am.ond~, he admits that ba5_$:ball helped
him in htS career as a singer. Working in
a smelting plant in Helena, Mont., he al.s9
was playing semi-pro ball when a Los
Angeles Angels' scout signed him for a
tryout. Charlie won ·t say mucb about his
short time with the Angels but be recalls
Angels' owner, Gene Autry, another
country-western singer of some note
after seeing him in action, advised blm 1;
han on to bis job at the smelting plant.
''J g light," says Charlie. •
Angels released Charlie but. as his
per nal manager Jaclc: Johnson now
says : · wasn·t himself at the
tryout. A little m.ore Ume and he would
have made it." •. .
• Returning to work at the smelting plant
Jn Helena, be continued semi-pro ball -
and singing. Just for fun, he'd take hls
guJtar to the bad park and aing a few
songs for the folks there. Ont nigbt after
one of his informal concerts, a man came
up to him and asked ir he would do sOme
singing for pay. The engagement was .i t
an auto race In East Helena. Jl was the
first time Charlle was paid for perform-
ing and be liked tt.
-More personal 1ppearaocet came up
and Charlie asked his plant foreman if he
could lake a little Ume off. 1•1 didtl'l ei·
actly quit," says Charlie, "because [
wanted my job back in case things dldn:'t
w9rk out right But tbe fortman tol"mc
my job would be w11tlnj: and that made
me feel good.''. •
Yes, Cbarllt was cautious. lt wasn't
until his third rtcord was In clrculatlon
that be actually severed bis Ues wllb tht
smelling plant. lie resigned and cbancet
are, be woa'I be &oil>& bock.
•
Sr."'z!'t"l,"="".1?'":,l'l'.,_.r•~i"l4l", ,:"•'::"'!"~'o:'!''••!"*~"~"~*~·-=--,.•~-·:"·"""'•0-.~1~.':":~'"':""'.:'"'"· -::1,,.•i'fr.'.-""" 1'f~~i'!".:>•".·.T>,Fi>r.,=:-l"'1"~F".C.ffff';"••n.r.-..,.,.,-;,••,,.•11,r""'"'"•"*•"'""1 ,.,.rr t,l'f',• • • .,.. ~· ., .. ,. ·-r'"l...,,. .. f f, .•.·.·~. ~--~-.-
-. 2f DAIL V PILOT ftld1y, Octobtr 30, 1970
1 Peter Max Travel
Show-~pefi~-h Isl~nd T~ps :·
For ... B·eauty ......
•
, A maJ« eUlbll I( Ille -of graphic artlal ~ Nb
opened at the Niooporl lllrtOr
• ,Art Museum thil -llld will continue through Nov. 29.
lL was organized by Elsa
Cameron. curator of the 1if. H.
de Young titemori al Museum,
San Francisco in collaboration
wilh the Newport Harbor Art
1'1useum and the University of
Kansas Museum of Art.
Included are dozens of the
posters that have brought ATa:r
international fame. Twenty
orig inal paintings, drawings.
collages and many examples
of his product designs make
the exhibition a unique ex-
perience. A . catalogue ac·
companies the show with an
introduction by Peter Selz.
director of the University of
California Art 1.luseum in
Berkeley.
. Born in Berlin thirty years
ago, Peter 1i1ax was raised in
Shanghai. Jsrael, Paris ar:id
New York. He studied al New
York's Art Students' League
for five years and began bis
career as a painter.
"Jn today's state or
technological evolution, every
...
aurflft that ls manufactured
Ja 1 potential communnlcatlon
media. What better way lo
groove my contemporaries on
earth than to decorate th e i r
materiW life with mind ex·
panding designs." 1ltis statc--
ment by Peter litax con-
cerning modern commercial
objects perhaps best describes
this sho\v.
To "bring art to everyone"
in a literal sense led logically
to mass production of hi s
designs. Whether lithograph
posters, china, clocks or
clothing, every application of
a Peter ?.tax design is closely
supervised by the designer, to
insure its fidelity to his con·
ccpts. In this he is foUowlng In
the path of some of the
leading figures in the Art
Nouveau movement of the
turn o{ the century, such as
Louis C. Tiffany, wh o
transformed such mundane
products as lamps into objects
of beauty that are now much
coveted by collectors.
It Is ditficult to categorize
~fa:r's art as it is easy to
recognize. He uses color as a
direct mean.s • f com-
Guide to .Fun
Halloween Fetes
Dot Southland
OCT. 3t
, .. VIOLIN DUETS -Lynne Rosenberg and Roger Hickman
perform works by Mozart. Jobann Christian Bach, Johann
Sebastian Bach and Bela Bartok, 1 p.m. Friday, Oct. 30 in
the Concert Hall, Fine Arts Village, UC Irvine. Admisalon
·.-!m.
• • OCT. 31
-,_: BLACK WATCH REGThtENT· -Forty pipers, drummers
-~ and dancers of Brilaln's senior Highland regiment join Eng·
land's Coldstream Guards for a 9 p.m, perfonnance Friday,
Oct. 30 in Anaheim Convention Center. Call 635-5000 for ticket
information.
•.· OCT. 31 • NOV. It
PADUA PLAY -"Concierto l\iexicano", a musical tour oC
. Mexico will be at the Padua.Hilla ]'beater on Pa;dua Ave. in
Claremont through Nov. 14 at 8:30 p.m. Wed-Sal with
matinees at 2:30 on Wed. and SaL Dtning room open for
lunch and diMer. Reservations -i-..1:.a&.
·OCT. 31 ·
HALWWEEN CARNIVAL -'Westminster Community Car·
nival begins at 7 p.m. in Sigler Park, 7200 Plaza St., West·
'minster, following a 1:30 p.m. Costume Parade.
. OCT. 31
PENNY CARNIVAL -,Ne~ Beach Parks1 Beaches and
Recreation department fdates\b~oween ~ctivities (rom 1 to
'4 p.m. in Eastblulf, 38th Street""Mariners and Peninsula
park!. Call 673-3180 for information,
OCT. 31 '
·:RAU.OWEEN CARNIVAL -Westminster Recreation and
:· P;trks Department plans 1 costume parade at 6:30 p.m.
· and a penny carnival from 7 to 9 p.m., Saturday in Sigler
: ·Park, 7200 Plaza St., Westminiler. : ocr. 21 • "fiAu.oWEEN CARNIVAL-Costa Mesa's annual Halloween
• Penny Carnival with costume contest is scheduled Sat.
!: from 2-4 :30 p.m. in Costa Mesa Park, Anaheim and Cen·
l: t.ral Sts. Tbere will be tricks and treats for young goblins,
.: :tii(th penny-priced carnival games and prizes.
::-.:· OCT.31
~~'lEEN CLUB DANCE -The Westminster Recreation and
• ~Parks Department will boJd a Teen Dance in the com·
. •: munlty Center, 8200 Westminster Ave., (for WestmiMte.r
' ~·teens) each Sat fronl 8 p.m. to midnight. Admluion, $1.
•:·for members. $1.50 for non-members.
:• NOV. I ANO NOV. I ~': FD..M SERIES -The Newport Harbor Art Museum is pre-
~=· senting a film series, "Civilisation," at the Balboa Theater,
::. 'lOO E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa. There will be two films per
;: :ShCMing with two screenings set at 2 and 4 p.m. Tickets for
·:.· Jnc:livldual screening, $2.50, may be. purchased al box office
:;:before each show. if seats are available. For information or
~· ticket orders contact the Museum, 400 Main St., Balboa or
~: phone. 67S-3866, during hours it is open. ·
:.. NOV. I .. NOV. 29
· ;!'. ARABIAN HORSE SllOW -Ke.llogg Arabian horses are
:.: showu 2 to 3:30 p.m. Sundays through Nov. 29 at Cal Poly,
• ~ Pomona.
' :; NOV. 1
. •: ROCK CONCERT -"Grand Funk Railroad" appear in , i.: Anaheim Coovenlion Center's Artna, 800 W. KateUa, Ana·
: ~ helm, Nov. J. Call 635-5000 for ticket Information.
~..: NOV. 5 -NOV. 19
.. ~STORY HOUR -Tbe Mariners Library has achtduled a
story hour each Thursday at 2 p.m. in lbe multi-purpose
--room, 2002 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. The stories are
geared to young chll<lrl!:n.
NOV. 5 • NOV. l!
GRDJ>REN'S STORY ltOUR -The Costa fl.f esa Library,
568 Center St., Costa Mesa, \\'iii hokl a story hour for prt-
schOol children at 10 :30 a.m. every Thursday. No cbaru.
: NOV.' -7
CHAMBER CONCERT -UC Irvine Chamber Orchtstra.
directed by Peter Odegard presents premier perrormance
in the. Concert Hall or the new Flne Arts Village, 8:30 p.m.
Friday apd ~turday. Complimentary ticke.Lt av~ble by
. ! !
• f
' i
calling 833-8617.
l'iOV. 7
YOtrl'H CONCERT -Music ror chambtr orchestra pro-
grammed !or young listene rs will be performed Sat., Nov.
7 In the conctrt hall of the New Fine Arts Village on the \ic1 cam,pus. Peter Odegard will conduct tht two perform-
ances at 1:30 and 3 p.m. sponsored by Learning Unlimited.
'flckcls SI for youths; $2 for adul t! ma y be rest!rvtd by
calling Bs3.2.-.:H or purchaSed at lhe door.
NOV. 7 AND I
ISRAELI ART -Festival of art i nd culture includinJ
• tatting of Israeli !fnes, folk music art dlsp ay and auc·
• lion rrom 2 to 10 p.m. Saturday and JO a.m. to 4 p.m. l Sunday, In Hoag Memorial Hospital confertnce cent.er, New· ~ i port Beach. call 6"1$-7230 ror Ucket Information.
NOV. I
I TEEN DANC:l.=..lltn•fll for March of Dime> fnlurtn1 lht
t ~I Garden" in Hunllr11ton ~nter ·Man hotn 7 to IJ
• ·p.m. Sunday, Nov. a. TlckeU are 75 cents, at the door.
NOV. 11
•. DON COSSA OK DAll'CERS -Lions Club of Gard•n Grove
«pe>nsol"I Cossack chorus 111)(1 danctrs, 3 p.m. Tburaday,
Nov. IJ II Garden Grove 111,ii School audllorium.
ARTIST PETER MAX
In Newport Beach Show
Rlunication -a positivt tour
de force.. 11.e. brilliant colors
are used in daring com-
binations, confined in often
rhythmically repeated areu
by bold, sinewy lines. From
this starting point works may
inco rporate startling
photomontages, bold
geometric a b a p e s and
astrological symbolism. ln
Jhem there is enough color to
be :11timulating, enough style to
be exciting and enoogh an-
achf'Olllsm to be endearing.
For this special exhibit of
Peter lilax' artifacts, tbe Art
Rental Council of the Newport
Harbor Art 1.1useum bas
transformed its gaUery, which.
is adjacent to the Museum's
main gallery, into a Peter
MILBoutlque. 11-fany i~ms in·
eluded in the 1bow as well as
~that art not will be
available for sale.
Tbe Newport Harbor Art
Museum is located in the
Balboa Pavilion, 400 11-laln
Street, Balboa. M u s e u m
hours: Wednesday through
Sunday 1-5 pm. Monday nights
6-9 pm. Closed Monday and
Tuesday during the d1y.
Admission is free.
Live
Theater
"Son of Nifty ''
A revue is on stage al the
Nifty Theater, 307 1'1ain SI.,
Huntington Beach, Fri. and
Sat. at 3:30 p.m. th.rough Nov.
7. Reservations -536-9158.
''Rblnoctros·•
Golden West College drama
students in Ionesco's social
satire, Thurs. -Sat. through
Nov. 7 at 3 p.m. in Actor's
Playbl'.lx, 15744 Golden West
St., Huntington Be a c h •
Reservations -892-7711.
"Stop Ille World -
t Want to Gtt ori1•
Fu I I e rt o n Footligh.ters
pre~nl Anthony Newley's hit
show, at 119 Buena Vista Ave.,
Fullerton Friday and Saturday
at 8:30 p.m. through Nov. 14.
Call 527-4415 for ticket in£or·
mation.
''Harvey"'
The invisible rabbit takes
the stage 1t Laguna l\foulton
P1ayhouse., 606 Laguna Road,
Laguna Beach. Playing Tua.
day through Saturday until
Nov. 21. Call 494-0743 for in·
fonnation.
"Indians"
South Coast Repertory of-
fers Arthur Kopit's historical
drama, Wednesday lo Sunday
1t 8:30 p.m. throu gh Nov, 28.
Call 646-1363 for information.
"David and Lisa''
\Ye s tminster Community
Theater present! drama or
problem youngsters, 8:30 p.m.
Nov. 7, 13. 14 and 21 , in Finley
School, Edwards at Trask
Ave., Westminster. Call 897·
&115.
By STAN DELAPLANE
SUVA, FIJI The flame trees are lopped with
Chinese red blossoms now, and the ground is cover-
ed with rain-struck \Vhite plumeria Dowers. Viti
Levu is the. most dramatic island in the South Seas :
Wild green mountains soaking in gray rain clouds.
Tall coco palms fringe the white beaches, leaning
into the prevailing wind. The flashing blue South
Pacific goes on forever, and it's -warm as mother
love. "
* .
\Ve came down to see Prince Charles give the
islands Dack. Back to the people whose cannibal
grandf.athers ceded them to Queen Victoria 96 years
ago.
It's still untouched country. Suva is a litlle coco-
nut capital out of Somerset Maugham. Frame tropi·
cal buildings with overhanging balconies. Fijians
in wraparound sulus. Indian women in saris. Colo-
nials in starched. white bush shirts and shorts.
There'i a-rough;-unpaved road around the is·
land. As you drive through thatched hut villages ,
chocolate-brown Fijians wave to you and show teeth
like sugar loaves. (A hundred years ago, man. it
meant they were going to eat you. But the British
changed the die!.}
* Nol much for the better. When England exports
cooking, it gets worse. But -cheer up. A few tour-
ist hotels have arrived with better chefs. I had a
good grilled rock lobster the other night at the new
Travelodge. And Ibey say food al the luxury Fijian,
halfway.around the island, is splendid.
* Air fares are still much too high. From Hono-
lulu to here is an expensive piece of water to fl y.
We came down on Pan American's 747, the first
jumbo jet across the equator and the International
Dateline. Cheap enough once you get here. Afld the
Fijls are one big free port. No tax, no duty.
* "Where can we buy parrots in ~1exico? And
how can we bring them home?" Couple of pet stores
in Mexico City sell them. And I've seen them in
Mexican markets. Like the big market in Merida
in Yucatan where they sell the big red and blue
macaws. A gaudy bird. Now there's some kind of
quarantine on parrots. I've l)een told you get a vet's
certificate of health a~ ... ~av'e it visaed by an Ameri-
can consul. But J'd 'ci;ck that with U.S. Customs
as Y:~:a::1:e~::r o. * to be wary of the little
parakeets you see =on~he Indian's finger
on the litreet ,corners. The reas~he bird is so
tame is he'S been stuffed with ~ird s ot. Couldn't
fly with Pratl and Whitney engines h ping him.
* ''With ne J•pa,nts• li1ngu•11•. will we hav•
trouble ridlnt • tr•in betwHn TokyO and Kyoto?''
I didn't. That's the one they call "the bullet
train." You won't find anybody speaking English,
but there are signs in Engli sh in the station. And all
station platforms have the names of the towns in
English. (Save your ticket stub. Japanese ticket
takers pick these up \vhen you LEAVE the station
at the place you gel off.)
* "My buddy •nd I were go1ng to take an •ll·in-
cluslve ski trip to Swit1erl•ncl. But he thinks we
could save money making it on our own ... "
Those all-inclusive things are pretty good. The
people who put them together know how to shave
costs. But you CAN do it alone. Icelandic is the
cheap line to fly. Ask them about excursion rates
and a package deal that gets you a V\V car with
snow tires.
* ''I •m ..Ai1kin9 a collection of foreign recipes.
If we 110 to France, will fi1mou1 restaurants silve th••• to me?"
Our Secret Che( Abroad says: 11Asking a French
chef for his recipes is like asking the Russian Gen-
eral Staff for a map o! the missile bases. Sometimes
you see something like a Maxim's recipe in a mag-
azine. But this is publicity. The chef probably
sneaks in a pinch of oregano from his foxy pocket.
He doesn't tell you that."
* Our Secret Chef (he does a little restaurant
spying for me) says: "Tarshish in Jaffa has the
"Cactus Flower" best chicken soup in Jsrael. The secret ingredient
A.na·Modjeska Pl11yers offer for real Jewish chicken soup: Ask the butcher for
the. romantic comedy Nov. 12· the feet -he throws them away. Chop off the
14 at 8:30 p.m .. In the Ebell claws, Take off the yellov.• skin. Add to the sim-
Club, 244 N. Hele11a St., An~1ring soup. That adds the richness.·''
helm. *
Eddie's Dad
Home Pru·ty
Not Staged
~ sta1cd ••welcome
home" party for Tippi lledrjn,
guesting In the role of
magazine executive ln "A Lit·
Ue Get-Together ror Ciss y"
teleplay of MGM -1'V's ''l'hc
Courtship or Eddie'!! Father."
became the rtal thing whtn
series star Bill R I x b y
discovered 1itlu lledrln had
just returned to lJoUy•'OOd
from movie making In Africa.
At the end of the Jay's Cilm·
h1g. Bixby, who plays the
editor of the magozi1e she
controls, substituted wines for
t~e colored water. MI s s ~edrln, who «<•led Ille "Ed-
dle's-li"lther'Lrole last sea~n
on ABC-TV. rectnlly finished
n1m1ng I.Mr. Klngstreet'•
War" and plans to do. tw
more movies in A(rlca in tht
neil-l\ro )'ell'&.
'' ..... we hetrd the J•pan111 are good on
rock music."
Rots of rock. You 'rant the Shinjuku district
"'here the students hang out. AJI night coffee houses.
Underground movies. Long hair. It's the Haight·
Ashbury in the flo\ver children days. Your starting
point is a coffee house called Fugetsudo.
HUNTERS BOOKS
THI WUT'5 PINEST IOOKSTDllS 'ii' no YIARS-SINCI 1151
NOW IN SANTA ANA
AT
FASlIION SQUARE
H,HO helrt ·a Ptip11~•clcs
H,000 U-Grntl .. C_.
" IARGAlNS GAlORll
OPEl'i ft'El'ilNGS-"l'IL 9 P.M.
CAMPING RECIPE : POUR DINNER, POUR WATER, HEAT •. EAT
Mom Discovers Me•ls·in-a-b•t In vented for Outdoor Gourmets •
Meals for Campers
Food Requires Only Water and Heat
Somone is alwa ys thinking
of trailerists and campers and
probabl y no one has given
more thought to the matter
than the Rich-1ifoor Corp.
This firm has decided those
who go backpacking or trave l
\vith small Wli ts lacking in
storage space should never go
hungry. Or. more precisely,
that they should. enjoy com-
plete meals, just like the rest
of us.
Rich-Moor sells over 125
freeze-dried foods that require
only the addition of water and
heat to turn them into a meaL
The list includes
six specialty din-
ners, four chic-
ken dinners, two
h a m dinners,
ci ghl meats. six
soups, 10 break-
fasts and others.
Cost per serving ranges from
25 to 75 cents.
You may have more than a
liUle difficulty In findin g a
friendly neighborhood shop
that stocks the line, but you
can get name or nearest
dealer and a brochure showing
all items by \\Tiling the firm
a t PO Box 2728, Van Nuys Ca .
91404.
* Another tirm thinking or
trailerists but not
necessarily or us -i s
Airstream. A Wally Byam 1971
Caravan to Europe will vi sit
17 countries. 63 cities. and a
hundred or so villages:
Caravaners will rendezvous
In Hershey, Pa .. take cars and
trailers to Eli zabeth, N.J.,
where lhe units will be taken
on a d r i v e-on-drive-o f f
freighter bound for Antwerp.
The caravaners will fly via 747
to London, where they will
spend IO da ys on elaborate bus
tours befc>re picking up their
rigs in Belgium.
A ·~caravaner'' reporter
writes, " ... Ladies will find it
<
Our Wholesale Dept.
has s•rvices that are
the envy of the trade!
7 Day• Week Delivery
Finelf Produce
lowest Prices
Foil Wr•p Potatoes
Ready T 01sed Salad s
Diced On ions
Carrot Sticks
Celery Sticks
Re•dy M•de Cole Sl•w
Fresher By F•r Produce
And All At The
Lowe1t Pr ic es!
EYentually,
Why Not Now ?
' WHEELS·ni1
.CAMPING
By JACK KNEASS
diff icult to resist buying \\'Orld
famous linens, lace. delicate
crystal and rare tapestries
which are made in Belgium.
They wi ll also like the ex-
quisite cut diamonds o f
Antwerp.''
Rumor is that one Nev.'port
man who \Vas about to sell his
yacht and take the trip
reconsidered after reading
that line.
* Sales of r ec r e a t i on a 1
vehit'les re moin good. The
lalest report from the Rccre:i-
tional Vehicle lnstitu le shov.·s
that. v.•h.i!e sales of camping
trailers and truck campers
decl ined 3 percent in August,
lra vel trailers regis tered an
increase of 4.5 percent. and
motor homes conli nued lo
sho1v big gains. as did lhe
much cheaper pickup covers.
f.tanu!acturers predict that
October and November figures
will be better tha n August, a
starlling contrast to sales
curves of past years.
f.Iost western manufacturers
have introduced their 1971
models. with many being
s h o wn at the T r ai le r
Cooch Association shov.· in
Dodger Stadium. Al\ v.·ilt be in
production before the recrea·
lional vehicle shows in Decem·
ber (Long Beach) a n d
J an uary (Anaheim ) a r e
history.
* 1itembers of the industry
who point with pride to the en·
try ol major manufacturers
into some ports of the indostry
may be silenced for good by
the addition of B u i k i e
Knudsen 's Rectrans, Inc. The
firm will produce self-pro-
pelled motor vehicles 40 miles
ou t of Detroi t in an old Ford
plant it has purchased.
* A nc\v sign that \Vil1 in£onn
tra ve lers of the localion o(
~stablish.ments that provide
overnight facilities for travel
trailers. campers. house cars
and similar vehicles will soon
become commonplace o n
California State highways.
According to A. C. Estep.
traffic engineer for t b e
CaLifornia D ivis ion of
Jfi ghways, the signs will read
"CA~f PERS" and be posted
near high_y,·ay exits in the
scime manner as those now in
use lo direct 1notor ists to sites
\\•here gas, food and /or lodging
are available. The new signs
also \.\'i ll be the same col-
ors-v.•hite reflectorized letters
vn a blue background.
The requirements that must
be met before a facil ity is
eli gible for directional signing
we re orginated by a statewide
committee that i n c I u de d
representative s. of the Calif-
ornia Division of Highways
and the traile r park industry.
Estep said that e a c h
establishment must be equip·
ped to provide power, water.
sewage and similar amen·
lilies.
Also required are:
-It shall be licensed fer
priva te operation, or b e
operated by a governmental
agency.
-It shall be accessible to.
and capable of handling all
types of travel trailers and
recreatio nal vehicles.
-It sha ll be open lo the
public for 2.J hours each day
during the time the signs are
in place.
-It shall be no more than
10 miles from the State
highway exit desjgnated by
the sign.
Our Retail Store
Ha s Everyth ing
And At The lowest
Prices In Tow n
Fresh Fig~ I Cali f. I
Fresh Re spberri e1
IC•li f.J
Our Flower Shop Is
"Busting Out All Over''
With Fresh Cut
Flowers
Air Borne Pineapples
from Hawa ii
Chestnuts From Italy
Ginger From Fuqi
Endive From Belgium
Sugar Cane from
New Orleans
Shallots from France
Hospital Fruit Baskets
Fruit Shipping and
Gift e4~ks
And You'll love
The Savings!
In Gay Halloween
Colori !
Order Your Ar range-
ments Early!
Vote Tuescloy, NCl]Y-. l nu ORCHID TO
EVERY VOTER!
~'( Wlltt'
fLO\lllltS
M t mlttr el
-Ot"-t Ctll!!tr , ............... .
I,
1
CLIP THESE COUPONS AND SAYE! •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • ,ANTASTIC SPECIAL '. W•'Rlli FAMOUS FOR THEI• • NEW CROP •
: CRISP CELERY
L•r1e lunch
• ICEBERG • GRAPEFRUIT •
;I LETIUCE • ""' or White • • • 10« EA. • • • • 1 OCEA. • 1 oc ~-•
• Llmlt-S • Llmlt-5 • Llmlt-6 •
• · With Thi• Coupon • With ThlJ Coupon _. With ThlJ Coupen • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS EXPIRE NOYEMHR 4
The1e re1teurents demand the finest for their customer1 . That'i why they feetur1
NEWPORT PRODUCI! P•troni ze them! The Fithermoet, Huntington Beoch ; The
II•• leet, Newport; The "•II new" Vitia Woma, Newport : The Chow leQ, Cost•
Mes•: Tlie Stu~ S•lrt, Newport, ond over 200 others. How .about you celling us?
"Ora'flge CollntU'i rai tt.tt Growino Product Organi:atlon ~
H35 Ytars of PrOd uce
-Know llow ..
Ph-
67>-1111
6n-a1'11
'''"'"'
~'\V~trt quality b tlie
Order of (ht Hoi,tsen
' .. , .. ~. , .. .•. ,. .,..,
'" ~
.. ~-~·--..------------· ----po---------. ·----~ _ __,. -----
., •·. . ,
~
-
'
WEEKENDER
frldAy, October 30, ]q7Q
' N' ABQ.LJT . NORM
DAILY PILOT 2J
By
STANLEY
--·~·--··-· COCTFrlY' S REST A URAN T, NIGHT CLUB AND EN T ERTAINMENT -SCENE
Hallowee n
October's annual fun and games time known as
Halloween rolls around again tomorrow night.
Seems only a few months back -rather than a
'fhole year -that we got the hobo and witch cost ..
tumes out of mothballs for an evening's merriment.
.... :. ! ! I <· \f
Seeing as how we have to pull them out of tb.e
closet again tomorrow, might as well ge~ i!lto the
spirit of the thing good and proper. By hitting the
out 'n' about trail to one or more of the local spots
hosting spooky affairs.
While doing so, however, it might be . a. good
idea to reflect on a curious historical sidelight to
the: proceedings. And that's how Al~allows eve
has stolen the limelight fromLhe followmg da_y that
was the original cause for a special celebration.
Because November 1 was the dale initially set
aside for observance as All Saints' Day. Which took
the form of a church fe stival. known as the feast
of Hallowmas. in honor of all the saints.
It's still on the books as All Saints' Day but
lingers largely forgotten in the high jinks marking
the preceeding eve. Ce rtainly no one of our ac·
quaintance will be sitting down Sunday to a feast
of Hallowmas after Saturday's big night on the
town tricking and treating.
Before setting out on the bi g Hallo\veen caper.
though, don't forget tO Jet the kids have a little fu,n
first. There isn't a ny reason why they shouldn l
alsO enjoy some of the adult hilarity spark ed by
ghosts, gobli ns ~nd jack-o'-lanterns.
No r should you Jet the youngsters g~ab all
the gaiety by failin g to join them in ~ressmg f.or
the occasion. Wh ether as a cowardly pirate or dis·
beveled empress. some form of costume is virtually
de rigueur to enhance_the festivities.
THE I
WHISTLING O)"STER i
PLAN NOW AND MAKE .n J; .. ~'· --'
RESERVATIONS FOR
YOUR HOLIDAY PARTIES
GrMps of 25 to 10
WIEKEND INTll TAINMENT
W edding Receptions
Banquets • Luncheon
Dinner • Dancing
16903 ALGONQUIN STREET
COl'I' PACll'IC COAST HIGHWAY a WARNEil AVE.)
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
•
!"" Hearty Drinks on th~ Rox
at the Jolly III
PLUS GREAT STEAK ANO LOBSTER
JOIN US FOR A
WITCfilN' GOOD TIME
HALLOWEEN
e HOWL WITII DELIGHT ... Ev .. y th;ng
on the menu $3.95 ... in cfuding fresh
local Jobster, fresh broiled swordfish,
fresh savory halibut. Even our famous - -
Drunken Crab.
• Shake. rattle and moan to thP. hot and
mcllo'v jazz sounds of the JAN DENEAU
TRIO.
e Enter the competition! Prizes for the
Gaulish Girl , Ghastliest Guy, Gayest
Garb.
e Be thorol Satuiday. Oct. 31. Starting al
4:00 p.m. l .. uncheon specials daily.
TAtE
r/t6e
J \
'
'· . . : ~
-WHAtE
Btlboa Pavilion
673-4633
And, of course, there's always the possibility
'of copping a prize for coming up with the wildest
attire in the crowd.
However you manage, once under way a num-
ber of places in the area beckon for a fun-filled
Allhallows eve. Time prevented compiling a com-
plete list but, as of press time. we were able to
verify major Halloween happenings at the follow·
in~ spots.
Derby Restaurant, -1262 Palisades Rd .• Costa
Mesa.
Alley West, 2106 \V. Ocean Front, Newport
Beach.
Bob Burns Restaurant, 37 Fashion Island , New·
port Center, Newport Beach.
Richa rd's Villa Vida, 719 W. 19th St., Costa
1\.1esa.
White Hors• Inn, 3295 Newport Blvd., Ne\vport
Beach.
Merrymac, 3344 E. Coast Highway, Coron del
Ma r.
Tale of the Whale, Balboa Pavilion, 400 Main,
Balboa.
Henry's Aeropuerto, 2122 Palisades Road:· Santa
.-'\na.
-··---.. -......
priate means of expressing the pleasure we !elt
during a dinner outing to the delightful Swiss Chalet
restaurant.
REALLY SWISS
1'"'rom both appearance and the bill of fare, this
cozy little spot might well have been plucked from
a Swiss village and transported mortar and schnit-
zel to its Newport Beach setting. Even to the point
of hearing German spoken in not one but two ad-
joining booths.
A diner has neither to speak nor read German.
however, to peruse the Chalet's menu and turn up
many intriguing possibilities. Wh ich, in combina-
tion with the restaurant's colorful decor, spelled an
evening meal we'll remember as long as any \ve 've
actually enjoyed in Switzerland.
RUSTIC ATMOSPHERE
Various wood textures account for a rather rus-
tic atmosphere, and many cheery art objects and
wall ornaments are of authentic European origin.
To all of this. bright red tablecloths add just the
right dash of elegance. ld_ ----~-
Swiss Cha]et
Apparently it's no longer necessary to gaze on
a scenic Alpine view to encounter the inspiration for
a bit of yodeling. \Ve found· sufficient causer one
night last week in Newport Beach -ar.d that's a
consid erable distance from the Jungfrau.
\Vhile it didn't quite come to giving our vocal
chords a workout, there was a definite urge to
start singing ou t like monutaineers. As an a ppro-
Real
Cantonese Food
eat hert or
takt home.
STAG
CHEWlllO
111 2!st pl., Newport Buch Ol;oi. 3-9560
o,.. Y .. INoM ...,,. 1Z·IJ -H. M S... 'ti J o.a.
FAMILY RESTAURANT
"Jt'e Like Kim"
NOW OPEN DAILY
11 :30 A.M. to 11 P.M.
Enioy lun ch or dinner in the relaxing •f-
mosphere of our compl•t•ly r•modol•d and
newly redecorated dining room.
NIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT
ON THE HAMMOND . XH
SUNDAY FAMILY SPECIAL
Frw·Soft DrlnkLfor The Youn11t.n
2200 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mescr
Food To Go 642·8274
BEWARE!
THE PUMPKIN WILL PREVAIL
AS THE GHOST OF BOBBIE
BURNS MAKES HIS J UDGE·
-MENT-4:0ME -·· • , ••
• • • HALLOWEEN NIGHT
Zaa lest Co•t•me
Gftailltest Puntpkln
Most Or lfllnal Couple
l7 FASH ION ISLA ND, NEWPOIT CI NTER
For Res•rv•tion' Cifl 644-2010
-ENTERTAINMENT -,
To consider all the prospects for dinner here,
one must weigh the offerings under four general
categories. Cha rbroiler selections, continental en-
trees, cold plate dinners end seafood plates.
PLENTEOUS PLATES
And let it be noted quickly that a n extraordi~
nary quantity of food comes with each order. Seeing
as how all dinners include soup and salad, potatoes
or noodles, rice or dumplings, vegetable, lettuce,
relish. coffee and cakes.
Annual
Halloween
Part11 ,
S aturda11 -., }
Oet. 31 .;
-
lfqitt 111nrst llnn
THE BEAT IS BACK
Exciting New Sounds from
Joe & The More Ill
D-cl .. Nlt)lltfJ ho• t t. 1 :10
Df.....-Senod ,, ....
6 p.lll. 0. I• T1lo P•lt
l 11fht l111te ... • 11 :JO t. 2:JO-Mo11. thr• Fri.
2nd Annual Hallow"" Festivities-Oct. 31
Cnhlmn ,...,_ ~ Tiie HMllM' am.
3295 Newport Blvd., N•wport B••ch
R•so rvations 67 3-1374
~:~~N .. -7, it ll ~
12 .P.M to 5 .P.M Sunday Only
GOLDEN · FRIED CHICKEN
• • • • All You Can Eat
All the chicken you
can eat, served with
salad, mashed pota· •
toes, giblet gravy,
hot roll and butter.
c
BROOKHURST &. ADAMS
HUNTINGTON lllACH
I
·--•
It \Vas to the continental entrees that we turned
f?r both our choices. A wise move, we concluded, in
hght o! the superb eating afforded by the main
cours~s -:-not to mention the quality that matched
quantity in all or the accompanying food .! w
The first of our two selections Was schnitzel a
la Holstein {fresh cut veal filet, topped with fried
egg. melted cheese and anchovy filet), $3.75. The
other was sauerbraten (marinated beef, wine sauce,
potato pancake}, $3. 75.
CONTINENTAL CUISIN E
Additional continental entrees (prime candi-
dates for ordering on the next visit) range from
Thueringer bratwurst ($3.50) and veal steak a la
Parisiene ($4.50 ), to smoked park chops ($3.50) and
Swiss beef fondue Bourgnignonne ($6).
In a price spread of $2.75 to $4.75 charbroller se~ection s include hamburger · steak.' top sirloin,
sh1 sh kebob, prime roast beef-au jus. New York
cut . Seafood and cold plate dinners ($2.50 to $4.25)
irtclude Braunschweiger liver. imported German
salami, breaded scallops and .l\1onterey abalone
steak, almondine.
Daily dinner specials extend !rom Monday's
breaded veal cutlet, $2.50, to Saturday's liver a' Ja
-Wiena.-$2~75._Should...any_one.Jiay~e ca a i a
nice selection or · a la carte desserts runs-from rum
cake to irilported Swiss ementaler.
Imbibers can take their pick of a number of
draft and bottle beers or wines by the glass.
GI FT SHOP TOO
One of the most recent and visible changes at
the Swiss Chalet is the replacement of the old deli~
catessen section by a strikingly attractive gift
ond AMERICAN CUIS IN!i
TROPICAL COCKTAllS
YOUNG
SISTERS ·
Frorn L., V19•1' St•rd~1t
WED. ttir• SUN.
l :l G to 1 :l a
lt61 ADAMS An. (at ...... llaJ
HUNTI N&TON IU.CH 968-5050
PRESENTS
BOB ('
1 BROOKS ( :i /
DUO 'S. / • ~"'·
"HE AND ·~;3°FOUR~>ij;
Opening Sunday, Oct. 26 ::;;
o/f/~°ik o/mt (:
NEWPOIT l fACH. CAU~NIA
MOl{l'S
TIKI
NOW
Arr!AllNG
HIGHT YOUNG STAI
MICK 'FIRZZELL
MICK FIRZZELL
MICK FIRZZ ELL
MICK ,llUZILl.
MIClt' l'IRUILL
TllftffW ttl,o s.tw...,
AN INTEllTAINMINT MUST
1400 PALISADES RD.
COSTA MESA 557 -8466
lK.._, 9' T1lrt ....... IH
't Or111191 Co111ry Airport
MOIU'S
COffll SHOP o,.., _ to'11 P• Do/lw
VOLCANO ROOM
lunch and Dinner Dilly
FASHION SHOW
E¥ery Mond•y
12 Noon to I :30 p.m •
Try M .. 1'1 o -
MAUNA lt'.EA COfHE
MOKl'S TIKI I OM I
S.r¥11d In • Fr"ll PlnffDO'-
HA""" NOUR 4 lo 4 OAILV
wltfl Hot Hori If'°""'*'
IANQUET fACILITl lS
Club1 or Group•
up to 55 p•opl•,
Al10 11:., ...... od for
Priw•I• l Holid•y Parfl•t
l i ·-01"· ..... 3
,.11 • ..-. ..... ·1 z~
'
I • i
f 4S 4&>+i f$ P ff 39¥ ·f 1f6' 1 4 J 8$$ 9 i f ;;ms p.s 04$iS:i G1 Fw1xsz •¥.rtt:r.ew ~p:a1~tf:4':1J•s: "'"""''*e"..,....,.""*''*•t, •• ,, .. , , , ,., ..... ~~-~~-~--------·-·-----
•
el\~Z e°ti'.6}!
.iw-... HtliJar N agarifl• At1.1«nl''
Now °'*' Oii s~v F"""' J pm
•,
. . . . MR. MIKE'S '
, , HOUSE ·of PRIME RI•
... 'I
Continued from _1.P•r ,21 _ _
h h I l • \' s op. ~oget er with a shoppihg display offering
what bas to be one of the are~ts largest selections
of imported and dome stic .. beers.
' ' .,
PRIME RIB · .. --$2.95 :.~~,':~ ,
A wide range of. merchandise is offered in the
new gift shop, w~th many items especially su1table
as "last minute" presents. Particularly the candles,
beer steins, v!'ses, tea sets, stuffed animals, dolls,
DINNEI SElviD TO 1 A.M. '
FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHTS
LUNCH SEIYED DAILY
FIOM 11 A.M. TO 2 P.M.
209 Palm, Balboa 6•7-.5_5•7,._74 t•t fllt II ... f.ny LAMlllll
Whw Ill Dtwtll'j' lfllll MlflllloC'S l"rhN IU~ llnl..,,•111
Commencing Friday October 30
cMarlltf'
'Jlesfflum11t
cNew
Dimensions in Dining
cNew
---1Menu11ndGuisine-,..
cNew
Personalized Table.side Service
Reservation 644-1700
NE'NPOIT IEACH, C4llfOtNIA
Dancing in the Swin1inc Lido Lounge
THE BERLINER ·
German Family Restaurant
f•mous For
\ .
statuary and 1ewelry. ,
Lllncb is also served at the restaurant and fea-
tures a daily sp~ial, 13 different sandwiches priced
at $1 .25, a cold plate, and a top sirloin or hamburger
1 steak.
~·.
The Swiss Chalet is located at 414 N. Newport
BIVd. (not to be co nfused with the wider Newport
Ave, that runs closely parallel), Newport Beach.
Cl.osed Sl¥!days, the restaurant is open from 11 a.m.
to ~O .m., Monday through Friday, from 5 p.m. Sa ' ' . s.
Young Sisters
Sister acts come an~ go ~n sl\o~-biz, ran~ing
from those who hold their popularity for seeming·
ly end.less years to others who've disappeared from
the scene before th eir name ever gets a chance to
become a holl\ehold word .'
~:
One new teaming of fami ly siblings -current-
Jy makJ~g th~ir prange County debut -has all the
requirements for ast:eqsion into the first category
of long-lasters. The extraordinaril y beautiful and
talented Young sisters; Lotus and Orchid, now ap-
DON JOSE'
Now Appearing
JOSEPHINE COURREGES
DUO
{formerly of the Di Castro Sisters)
e COCKTAILS e
Enchi11dt •nd ·T1co •.•••••••••• \,,, $1 .35
'
.. 'SAUERBRATEN with POTAJO DUMPLINGS Chill Rollono ·Enchilada .. .. .. .. .. .. $1.50
Serftlll whtl Ike. .._. , ........ -Wiii
:· Enjoy A Wund1rb1r Time At Our
i'.BRA TWURST FESTIVAL
9093 E. Adams (al Magnolia) Hunt.
0
Boach0 962·7911
'
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7th
. St•rting At . 8:00 P.M. .
Music •nd, D1ncing . With The
EDELWEISS QUAR1'ET
FROM BAVARIA
Rtl1rv•tion1 Sug1J1ll1d
Open D•ily For Dinner
From S P.M.
CLOSED MONDAY
CHILDREN'S MENU
...._A ... lc-4 Mat...-Cllllrt•
18512 IEACH ILVD.
Town I Country Center
HUNTINGTON IEACFI
t~l-5800 968-4300
!<., • ,,
W.\l!llO ~,..
nu1 ~!
.N+ IJTf1fflf I .. ""'"' .......
' '
PRlnCE
~f.L .. 1 wil.GIES ' , fAM1lY Rts:rAURANT .......--·n.m
!lllllqS ,_ '2.71 tt $05 .
I Cf'!Jl 11Hf"1(1p• , .... ....,.,
·SMIANiA: 1~175linlr11tC. m.1no
Cl "'91:1: I. II £4!1+1t<J
HENRY'S AEROPUERTO
NOW OPEN
WATCH FOR GRAND OPENING
NOVEMBER 10-11-:l;z
SPECIAL MENU -ENTERTAINMENT
.. LUNCH 11 . A.M~· ~~ER 4 P.M.
. MEXICAN FOOD e i ' ' e LOBSTER
'
'•NTERTAINA\ENT-SHONA ,BISHOP DUO
2122 PALISADES ' ROAD SANTA ANA
.; Near Airport · 545.5579
Visit Htnry'.s N~ .. •ch. 11 M•r .. luriMt IMch
' .
PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES
HAVE CHANGED A LOT
SINCE THE
OLD DAYS
. . o ·o.t 'N ABOUT
•
White Hors'e Inn
Joe and th e Marc llf are playing at the White tJorse
Inn , 3295 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach, each eve-
ning, Monday through Saturday from 9 p.m. tci clos·
ing. There ' is dancing to a good beat or just .plain
pearing at Li's restaurant in Huntington Beach.
BORN' IN KOREA
Born and raised in Seoul, Korea , the Young
sisters' father was the department head of the
licll.®LoL l\l!Wc aLthe...U.niyenjty of Seoul. This
background providect the inevitable basis for
launching their own musical careers.
In her teen years, Lotus wa s raised and per-
formed with the fafifous Kim Sisters ·in-Korea:-
During that time her unique piano and songbird
EL MORO
• The Finest, In ltlexft"an Food
And Co,,ktalls
LUNCH AND DINNER
MARl.0 SANCHEZ
AND HIS LA TIN -GUITAR
EVERY FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT
CANDY-SUN •• WED.· THUR.
HALLOWEEN COSTU~E PARTY
Ch•m.,..gne, Prizes1 o;.nclng
S4T. OCT. 31
16655 PACIFIC. COAST-HWY.
SUNSET BEACH
· I Dlrecrty AUCll!I Htlfri._ H9rHar)
846-3177 For Reserv1tioni ·
Vl1it' th• MW HINRrs. AIRPORT
DAl~Y PILOT•..., l'llllle
listening to the exciting new sounds of the group:
Jime 'Watson, guitar; Joe Nicoletti, vocals; John
Stark, drwns, and Wayne ]\.fills, bass and sax. Giv1
a listen.
artistry captured the ear of critics, American acts
tou ring the Orient and officers of U.S. military in·
stallations in Korea.
A MUST TD SEE ' -=-By,-aU-stan.dards ~tus-alld Orclµd come -across
as two of the most delightful performers in our
memory. "Catchin_g one or more sets of their unique
showmanship is a must for Qut 'n' abouters w.bo
treasure the distinctive in musical offerings.
T_hey fo!Jow especially well on the heels of fine
Chinese cuisione at Li's restaurant. Where the .diner
always ha s a formidable task in choosing from such
excellent possibilities as sweet and sour Mandarin
duck, lobster chow don, cashew nut chicken and
dozens of other Oriental dishes. The Yqung Sisters are on stage nlghUy, Wed·
ne sday through Sunday, ffom 8:30 to 1:30. Li's ii
located at 8961 Adar:ns Ave., corner of Magnolia.
Huntington Beach.
RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE
HAPPY HOUR Mon . thru Fri. 5 to 6
LA.DID NI.HT
Fri •• s... 10 , .•• to J ....
Temple Gardens
Chinese Restaurant
150t~ lAt Hlll'berl c ..... M ..
J4t.1tJf 540.lfU .1 • .. . '
ONN: 11 :JO •••· N, 11 p.-.. S..-, .tin n.n..,
11 :10 ... to 2 ........ Frld.y -s. ....... ·'
"' BoKr "aousE Now-Tue. thru Sit.-8:30 to 1:30
TIM SCHAAF TRIO
Hippy Hour Mon. thru Fri.
S to 7 P.M. -WJtll Hlil'I 4•_.,,..
F•shion Show Fridays 12 to 2
Clo1ed Mond•ys Beginning Nov. 2
$p1ei1li1i11g in $11food
And St1•k1 with the
O c1•1 At Your T•bl1
.IA.N9Un FACIL1TllS
317 PACIFIC COAST HWY.
HUNTINGTON IU.CH
R1s1rv1tio111 Acc1pt1d
136-2555
FOR THE FINEST IN
PRIME RIB
IT'S NOW
RICHARD'S VILLA VIDA
Serving Thi Area's Best
Roast Prime Ribs of Beel
EAlLT llRD 5"CIAL S to 7 P.M.
COMl'LETE DINNER PRIME Ill OF IEEF ;:_ __ .......... ____ .. _ .. _. __ .. _ $2.15
NEW YORK FILLn ...... --........................ -.. .-$3.25
HALLOWEEN MASCj)UEIADE PAITY
SAT., OCT. JI from 9 p.m.
FAVORS-PRIZES-ENTERTAINMENT
COCKTAILS
and
NIGHnY ENTERTAINMENT
AT THE PIANO BAR
'Dining Room Cl-Mondays
LUNCHEONS e BANQUET FACILITIES
719 W; 19th ST.
COSTA MESA 642·5619
Jnl ANNUAL .
HALLOWEEN
,.. COSTUME PAITT
SAT, OCT. JI
Prlz•O.I.,.
SISS. M•S-..Ms
ftMEU,
IESTAUUHI'
Contlnonlal Cul-.
Cocktall1
Sm>ing
L1mCh<Oft and Dit1Mr
MOndar lht'01111~ SofllrdaJ.
Closed Sundays
W• are loc•t•d next te
the M•y Co. in Sollth
Coiit Pl•za.
JJJJ s. ...... c....w... ..... ...
-. . ~ .. :.~ ... ·.·alL·,~
~.~2
OPEN
TQ THE
PUBLIC ~~~I~~;~~~ JI( SE~:~~~~. ~~.~~~y CLUB
THE GOLD ROOM An elegantly-desig~ed restaurant servfug lunch and diri· ner seven days a week , as well as weekend breakfasts.
~~-~
• • • • •
Reuben•s
NEWPOJ!f WCll
251 !.oo.\STJ1111111AY
"· j
· · The chef is a specialist in ·quality at rTioderate prices.
3000 Palm Ave.
' Cocktails. •
Y1 111 il1 frof!I P•t ific Co11I Hwv. off Goldtn••1l St,
6 milet to11th tf Gol'1•nw•1I St. f10111 S111 Di190 frwy.
• Huntington Beach 536-8866
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Lee' Marvin
Needs GirI 1 ........................... _ ...... ..._., Mus C-Sh ----.............. .
l}l!llP0'--·-11 --1 . ~-'-T.!-J..--In 'Monte'
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...
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Ht'• ~ ci.ea "'" ... corw, bat IWI tbt lppl1111 -.oa..-. .........
•ciul,-tolllo(t-
and -"" bind.. ,,,. .,. pla... llopo, and the artlal
11y1 "Tbaat you, tbaDk JOU.
VICTOR IOROI, MASTIR 01' MUIJC AND MIRTH
In Muolc '"''"' DIWI, Nev. 6 ~ 7 Iii Loi Anti*
It bu been wonderful .. play lhoulhl, "It ii _..... lo -llbn the 11111 cl ....
for you qlln. I lhould '°"to Bo r 1 • •-In b •I we 1 n_ternatlonll comodlao," u ...U
.... )'OD another sele<llGll, bit ............ ... lllll llndll u • dlsllnpllbiil perfGrmlna
my plane leave. ~: H • r • Umt to vllit 1111 homes In Coo-bf board arllll.
Airport In..,. hour ana twenty -w the Virgin hluds. Few people bow Ulll 8arJt
mlnutol. I pl1y. In • Cal1v, Much cl 1111 llUC<'ell 1<111 ID alto,fl 1 fllnlOnltorlu.
Egypt, tomonow nicbL · · a ckUcate balance betwttn the He devm aa eDOl1lml
Few naliu that Victor _.rt muolc: he performs 80 portion cl bll span -to
Borp spends aoe out of..,.., mqnlfk<llUy and the con-eervln( 11 Na.-! Oialnnu
four ond a hl1f hours ·of the valllve comedy he ....,. to cl the ,,,_ to -
day lraYelinl to ...i from illlr up 80 ef!ortless!y. B c b o hrs b I p Fund, 111
<"lll•mellll. He has been 1111 brand cl lwmor bu «alDflltloa wlddl he,_
lralllpor1ed, "1 kJ!at I n llll :IWI -
cl, ..... War D. 1'1111 ,... anm 11r1np to the u-
Slltos _,.... --from Dmm·~ Plnlaad,
Nonray aacl heden for tne
year cl .,-1111"1 II --............. lbal, -the ICbolll'lfllps .,. lalltlillle
Lii MARVIN
.... " 'Monie .,..,
lllCI tllot --cl ..... IMWeslilftwtmct.o-.
wbkh .. ••me· .. <lrlOio :
c-17 ,,,,_, -... : ..,..._Marrin'• .... -If:·
DCllll Giber Ulm J e I a M :
Moruu, tllo ~--
1cclaJmtd Vrendt 1 e t r • • • Art C.amey maklnc .... -.... ; clebaL • JEFF
BRADLEY
Greenland, rlcbhow ID llonl '1'111 -.., ..... _ to
11--------1 Kong,p1ane,car,boll,pr1Yato Rhi'no Film proylde 1 cent{••tnr ~.lrlln.hl'drof>laneand ____ tolllmonWclsratlt*ltthe
.... WIW' lids. Be.-. ..... !or --
&91deoctcltllolrillutotoihe
brawrr 1o • ....mc ""'
J ....... follow -lb• "PlllDtloG .... .. ....
O-W tlplAi IOOI -1t
-U I ...... r.lmlll) for-1tcl.... ... ...
...... nofllnn jolllct ....
"I mu11J pi., tllo nae! Appeann. • g I rolls." Mania -sr...;
I "'and Clfta tbrw1l!I • ..
s1 .... -Gultorht ..... ,,_a ' ,r. -a. MON. THRU SAT.
l'IATUllN• DINllDS
I• tfl• S111 Ft1M1.-M..._
Lt.Cl Oii Ulll
STUD e llAJOO•
5.,.94 witt. Fbliotml11'1
Wh1rf S.11r 0.11th lr1M
S TO 11 N16HfLY
IUslll1SllWl'i-llnlcll-
t11J1 TO I
HNhY
llCTCU llUNCN
1110 I
OPIN naT IAT
t1111 TM• OC'IAM AeMCIWT to 111Wf'911T •PCM Ptl•
JIN W. OCIAH -ROHT
-IUCK
uWJ>ortcr "Inn
'Tlotd
..,.,.,,_.IN" ......... Med
MnnalAlllAN
81NIN• IOOM
C.-'1l.W. ~ ... ----c----................. D_ .. ----1'700 MACARTHUR BLVD.
NEWPORT BEACH. CALIP,
~.a.-~~
Ill Ma 11111 PrlM"'s ..
KATHY & THE
KRAFTSMEN
n " no1 .......... ftnd To Be Aired e11or11 ""'1nl .... Nm ........ Borge breatlullng at the
D'Ang)ettrre in his native
Oipenba1en, lunchlnc In New
y ark ud performlnc tbll
ume emitnr ID Bu rru..
---"" • -jolt; In V 0 "*"'--·-_; e"as u,.. .... ,:ra·-·
.......
Althoulb -• -· .......... -. .... -
perlonntr -II tbs
--°""'-... c:-&-. KM, C•• •11
-:(714)m.&IH
LUM-e CocktoH1
Lote DI-rs Te I A.M.
Actor E. c. Man11a11 wu In tiae ~
tdped to namite the MGM -
DoeamtntGy ··~'Ille
ei.:t Rblnocam" a I r In 1
llovember II ID the "GE
lklnDlram Seritl" an NBC.
TV, Inrta Roltln, ........ ,
wrlllMlroclor cl the ecaloa IP"'i•I, ,....-lodq.
Manball, bell -mnambered
for hll Televlllon AcademJ
Emmy-wbmlng role In "Tht
Defenden'' mies, now It.an'
in ''The Bold Ones," •
lelevllloa -on NBC.
Museum Presents
Wildflower Show
cu.wa GALLl:JIY -lllO I.. COul. JllclowlJ, Lqoma
lleadl. llGun: 11 a.m. to I p.m. dilly. Olmall1 t11 ablllll,
-pelntlnp "1 ~ Gollllap ttnup l'Wr. I. -
OOC Q.\U PY -Or-. COul. Collep Glller7 II •
"'-· :1111 r.-llood, Colla-. Roan: I 1.m. It·
t p.m. OD aldbll llnucb N ... 11. Scalplure, -md
pnnts by Henry W-11.
GOLQJl!i! '!11'1' twUIQll: -Jlltt Gofd<n -81., -lnctaa Beach. lloan: I 1.m. to II p.m.,,ran.. •, rrt. CUn..a,
... -In ........ ..,. ud -·' anllJ' -tlroaP Nov. t, tbs filth .-! Fac:ully Art lliow.
Art· Cormr fl _., fn I picture to tflo illmy, 1'111
Lio v., .. ""tllt !Int -u oplmt ....... -.... .
.... -· cl • ·-_._ . ., ju5I '" art "' .... -1111 -·--. apnta w aew4 • •n. U .,_ . _,,°"""""Riis,'' doe1 -lhel!I.,..... -· • .. "" -ao,ale cl Ille ..., .. ,.... ......... : ln~i!ralu.J llolel. Rs po-. ........ ... '
C....,, wlD -llllplo Of>' .,.-.. "8 o I a ....
partud:J' ID 6pllJ" •t• '-'•'slli', • coatl•••.,_, ~ In u.. --•I ::;.-. .. ~ ~·; JIM' ..... O'Dllltlac 0 f ,..,.. •-. ~ ~ __ ,,.. __ t --~ .
....-.. Finl, he ptalnys I _...,.. Wt'N It
dllpeMe Id« who con11nts tt ii wbla WI ...._.._ • ·
ti ..,_. la tbt ~ bl Jei••• -... ftom
"8bodr " Jtecotnltlon," wtt'elt Manin <t111•&dln .. .-t
" the !Int "" cl -rt -.i ............. , -~·1 ~ ''You todQ-il A laWcrll Jlll't If
it-I Cln, -YIU -the "Mon't Wtllll" ..id. 11te ...... ~." Sbe pnnldll tlal '9111 Ill
Hat, ... """ the -ar.d the .... ..... -f~ If I n!udnt brt~' in ltberwtae It 111111 tt tlllit
11V11ttor from Foret 8'"•." to'doy'1 ailteDcl. ' ' I ll 9
whldl II tllo lh'rd 11C1 II N"tD pl111 I duct hell -· Silllall'1 c:omn1 -:lwlJ hit M.inla iays cl _'I n10. conn GAADEN ru,11.gay -ms E. Caul Rlcbn1, "'Pim sutte." "S:. km:s me 1111111-. bet'~ .
CorOllll del Mor. lloun: Iii~ a.m. to 3:,a _p·m;, M ... .aat. PlnlllJ, can., -11 but I doe1 f11 "!-.... f*
OD ublbll llnucb Nor. II Calllomlo P<ilj;OUnl b~bft.. 111 O¥tnpd ...,._ ..-..,. m°'?thl 11 a -m4 1111i , '-~--~-----------. ----.... -.. ., ___ ., ___ ..... __ ,, ... t Un ............ bl "
U!l FINE AllTll \'llUGll: -on <lmJNI II UCI, ID II• by 1111 draft floud In T -.twp-for her·lfle<t1wo-·Jlli! .. --·1-.. --.. hll>ll cl pQlll<I. nllefl ud IClllplore bJ RO)' Llddanln, McHIDJ'• 1.,.. • 'll·a~' she won't ....... 1111 ._r; 'llraoP Doc. rr. which 11 the mnpan1on pltce from me -J -111to
IAODLDAat COLLllGll -Orlifnal prlnll "1 CGrlla Kllll cl "Adapt-• 11a1.• Iowa --.., I 1•1 ·
will he -Hoo. II to •, ID collefo llll'.-y, --dlllJ -Jrw1n, former .....,_ Ir~-~ the Jll'-t I 1.m. lo I p.m. cl llJICTV'1 -"TmfPI _.. '"••-~ f
WOJILD or Nii& 11AX -Elhlbll cl W!R1 by .......... m4 Joni -•illor ID ... .:: ::: ;:.. ~ 't
•rtlll ,_ 111.u llnucb N .... In llewparl -Art -·-.-.ptl, I 1 "" -.... -. .. -a., -CID -""-.. HIJPll>li for ....... 11oo cl -the -·'l":. ...
CIVIC CJl1'l'illl Q.\JJ.U.Y -llewpcat -OIJ Roll, "All llNdnC cl -"1 flit "1 lll1 IWD Nt.., •bl :'l f·
... cl ............. "1 Alina 'l1Ullellrwllte cl -Alla. Tbs ..--. .. Ill IC-... If I'm ..... --33119 Newparl amt., Newparl lleach. JllllJ --ComlJfJ m11.• mlfl. '"l'bat'1theW1Jlllllt0 I
'i'llnlulh Nomnber. tor's hoUdq ud "!-_,. ..,...,,.J .._ 1111 _.,
JACll[ GUINN GW.i&Y -Palntlnp "1 Ntw Yort artlll true for Alt Clmi1, wllo II carelully.1'116> o plea. w111r
JIGonle Landlleld open1 today, tllnMiO 11-mher. Open ........... II' a -cl an ape 11 lhe sa;it -
I HALLOWEEN 11====;;;;;1
-.... ,.. I 2 BIO NltES ON THE TUBE .... _.. . ........................ ..
KATHY ESQUEDA I ·COSTUM• •••Tr' ... ::..:.:: ":: '#,• ~~
PIANO W e AIT 9AWIY WEiil -4ittr11Mite4 wlffl tk
--'""'1T n44 I. COAST HWY'. 1"'"'4oy -.. of l4io DAILY
C.... .. .._ 671-nD PILOT.
646-1111
130 E. 17 .. St., Con M-
CASA GARCIA
--NOW OPEN 24 HOURS
SPECIAL Nl&HTOWI. IREAKFAST 11 , .... lo I a.m.
NOON IUFF£T 11 It J
DINNER 4 to 11
COCICT AILS • •·'"· to 2 •·'"· fwf .... ...._tlcMmc.Dhhl
1712 PLACENTIA COSTA MESA
-1'1H---M11-114Mll4
AU NIW MAii IAYlllOM
.. Alm
feala ... IAM ALDA ... ...., ........... c-t .........
lddleCant--.1 ._..., ................
Hiii .IOI TllO
12565 HARBOR ILVD. : : =-
Garden ·o .... • 1n41 -""• .. - -
• •
FINEST
SEAFOOD
AND
OYSTIR IAR
IN THI
SOUTHLAND
630 UDO PARK DRIYI
NEWPORT llACH 675-0100 ·
--~ ~-
l'llll O 1£1 ....,"._...,_.,.,..
~ ... ~ ..... ~.,. ,.,~ .... -.... t ..,,., ~-Pll .....................................
tlllly JI a.m. to 5 p.m. al 2111 E. CGu1 lfw1., Cor01111 del . -...1111 -. ,..._ and """"'"" Bel It lies lo lie
...... .-. lie -.... .,.,..,. hooal--wcltldl_.., t
BOWEBl,llUIDJll-•N.Maln.St.,lutl:Ana.·Baan: II an bpeawtor with lbe m•n·l••••·WllDID 11111 t 10Lm.j4~:•1"m.'J'ml..aot.; ltoMi:.i,.&m,lftd71t , -~~lmf· ~cl ftii)lldlc -•app1fJ ~
I p.m. Wed .. ud "l'lln. llo cbarp. . Wlldllowm ~. -~ -W.,." t
ond RoWed Naturo P1o•1snplll -me°""""' Jlcw. D; Cmrdllll and -wve;:;o__;:======;::;; -:
Alilhem Art ----mett -.... .. ,.._ .... the '1!!!111-~-----· ____ ........... Fuit · I ~ di)', tlnuCb Nov ••• and blltcric a:b8* opw Slmd8J, once 111111.Cad wtllel' ldor "'"NT i
lhnlqh Nov. ·n, ud -AlWlcln art ud alllllJ -bl-· Ii+ 11•...., people A*.., ldd. "A* -b fa ~
Miies, Nov. I lo •· wve ... b•q It lldU the S.. K "'-lo Ult Mll.Y ~
THE
NIFTY THEATRE ........ "SON OF , .
NIFTY REVUE"
ITAITS AT lilt
NllAT a IATnlAT
Jn MAHI IT.
MllNTllleTON llACM
.... •• ;w;ilem
C.-tnfl IJ6ot1U aro,_ •1•-.
MMu1tel .. tt.1,..r.,.t •••
"THE LITTLE STUDIO" ..,. ___ ......
WDA1". •n•• 1 P1l111ffllp -c.t .. 1., -s..1,..,.
~,....,...,.,.. •• ;ell·~
POllT THIATRI MAJOR PRIYl!W
l'lllDA Y~ OCT. 30, 1:45 P:M.
HO' ADOITIONAL C_HAllOI
•YOllWAllT-
_. rr 111
'IWO II• MOYID
NI llYllYONI
,..... '7U2'0
llCOND BIO MIMI!
Lii VAN CUii' "' •• , RQUIRO"
-.
•
,._ ... --... • I'll.Of. : comoilYJlftlll!n.
..... ..., wen .. ,._ .... Meric•• pley .. H.. .._ ,...,._
hr." -NetMul °""'"' ICOPIT 'S ........ _ .... INDIANS
.... lllOW ITAlll •
COMIMIMI' ..... .... --..... -·MA-naT-IP ...
mvA KOSCJNA
"HORNEYS NEST"
'
" ' ..
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' ' . • • ' :•
)
•• -.
•
-__ . ___________ __;, ______________ ...;........::.
I
Q!C"_;az!(, ,.,, "'-= ~ • z z; <~t i.• ttsc ~.. e,t=t • H ·---· •
\
DAll.Y PILOT Friday; Ocjobfto 50, 19717 !" 0 . '
v .... '·~ i.-.ffo.,le•·
f V DAILY LOG
.. . . ' ~ ., '-.,} .
I ' •
'
Liza ·stars in · 'Junie Moon'·
: . . s • -; ~---:-:-1 -! D Q) Did ~ (C) ~~ Editor's Not c 'j f'h Is IJlii,WU' 811Dcll (R); Plans Suffing film by John Severeon. tlu A-fotion Pfcturt · Codt . ... • ::t ~d~ c~:qr&~;d CJ,!~: movie ~ide ;, J'!',pored ~-•flgeing ouUaw, who leads 'X 1 • . d' 1•1 TAh•d ARlott!on Picture Code · · ...... &,nu6r .. u•R , •••••••••••••••••••• -·· .,bw . the· .Jilm.s~~c. .o.J-.. .m.. :am.an .baod .ol.~l.-11~ ••. ~~~': ... J!'l~! Y,J e JI_ _n a 1ng prwram "'!aY
m Moria: ':'Qiu """ (d111111) Harbor Cou~ ·~A. Jlrf. • ln the Texas of llJ,3, go awry. after the title tnificaresth~ 'l)~"'fOUltd'"O'lf'1he ·.,,,.otttm -
. . i:: ID A Y •
•
'"5'1-GllMI' any, ·kilil Dick!-. NfoeJ JauCv. u • W,~t ~Violence. f0Uow1. W l I 1 l a m rati1'Q' given tile picture by picture page ••
Ill"° '" ~. -"'' ""' !l"d 'Mn "'Wliliom 'Wll# e Holdeo and Roberi.Ryan. I:::::::;:::· ::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;! .....~ ~"" C.nu. 'ii ·C9111111'i~ c~lft Zlllilskle Politi (R), Ant .. lr
1 • •
.: • tz:aol::!"9..:f,_, .,.,.. fs U.tind~ da)'q r'11~e ··nk>nl 's first Ameri~n film ~. " 'S.Ej,,,:\t~ (••=.'65-Cwl '"'''"' . determining ' ••liable • focus'." on the troubl., of ; , n., ..... (C) (90) H1I l:OO~ITOf) ·'6--c-r:: L:!"" . .s f or ce~ • 4 g e today.~· youth. Daria !falpr1n
••• .., 1Ptttf, luP!!'t Avbtn !lo llen (C) groups and wzU appear and M~k Frechette.
SMer, *"' Dftnir. 1lail nsti«, Alf-Nllllt SMr. .,..,... ~ weekl11. Your views arc MA11JRE TEENS Frtd Sftl'b ind DIVld H111m1n. • "Aalct Mlltlf' ftCI "Bf . . d AND ADULTS O Sill O'CIMi MO'tlit: (C) "Lowt ~ .... Trwdi" ,• • sohcite . ilfaiJ them to Mo-F.,. 8 Few ,,Do. Jlari More
'" II 1 c.l4fidl 'llwl" (c:omedy) '61 • vie Guide care of the • -TMmy ~-Flbiln, Jin Stlt1· DAILY PlioT. (GP): Sequel to 1'Fistru1 of ~ In. ':~byS.::(~) (30) • ~J~a~:n~~~~t~~l i~al~~i=
TM Flilbtolln (t) (30) ADULT'S d t ll T•• t Tllllf (C} (30) . ma e wes ern.
::. l :lO • ' .,
~ Lodit (C) (30) qcTOBDt Sl Bonnie and Clyde: True The Hawaiians ((JP): Sequel
on.dl/Musiait (C) (30) ·story of two bank robbers and to "liawaii" starring Charlton
,....... 34 (C) (60) killers in the Southwest during Heston and GeraJdine Chapliri.
; ~~ ~~ ::1: (j~l the depressio~. Warren Beat-The Hornet'1 Nest (GP):
NNS ill tilt Rot1id (C) (30) 7:00JlSunll• ,_..., (C) ty, Faye Dunaway. World War ti adventure set
Clldld c,...., (lOJ 1J l~!=r:=: ~~ Catch ZZ (R): AcCi>Unt of a behind enemy lines In n. f1Jil1 lull (C) (JO) TNll (C) bizarTe bomber squadron on a Northern 1taly. Reck Hudson
l"lttalll for LM111 (30) Ion tltt Cllwl -A k' d ~-w II H I D " Sh do nt Demt RIPOrt (CJ (30) 7.30 Dvsty's lrMllollM\"{C) r in an v1~n e es. ouse o ar.. a 1n
IMW Ytur ~ (C) (30) I Mr. W....... (C) Mediterranean island. Alan and Sylva Koscina.
F11dtlwos cW bl« (30) · . ~~.;oodJ Woedptdi• That Cold Day ta tlle Park (GP): Based on the television
Alt ftmi11 t1ns (C) (30) .._ (C) (R): A drama in wlticll a program. Joan Be 11 nett , . 7:C. CIS ~ ,.._, (C) <~I & 1111 frSttds (C') spi11ster develops a sick Jonathan Frid and Grayson
m He Ni&llttr Ntw1 (C) (30 l !OO IHI Cil ...... nll)'/hlid hn· passioh for a young stranger Hall. Mlb MJ Unt? (C) £30) Ho (CL k · · · I ['jjl(])I Lin llltJ (30) '"' ur ID aJ1d ma es him a pnsoner m Kel y's Heroes (GP): World
lllt Ille a.cl (C) (30) B ~fE ~-"'::t, (C)Slcnt her home. Sandy Dennis. War II comedy-adventure with
. ..... 1111 (Cl (30) ClnMP (CJ The Diary of a !'it a d Clint Eastwood and Donald
,. ' '
easy.c•r• 1ctivt w11r
'°' mtft incl bo)'f
next week:
the· opening of
our •II ~ew
boys' se,fion
"•11li11111ric•rd e 11111t1r ch•rt•
7 f11hio1 i1l1N, "'wport li11ch •44-5070
c.>rlll. 1111 um.a Word (30) IMarwl ,., • .._.re> Housewife (R): The disin~ Sutherland who lead a gang or · ;:'r:~:? M•ril (~) Talts " w.11 flrfl tegration or a New York mar. l!lotdier'!i In an attempt to steal'll----------------------"1 nJ' Clrl (t) (30) 1:30 ' e@ ~ ..... (C) riage. Carrie Snodgress and ~old bullion behind enemy
.. .
7:» Ot 00 n. t.a.m. (t) (601 • 1;!~ (C) .._ ..,,.._ °"' Richard Benjamin. lines. Don Rickles.
Dr. ~°'~°"' (Bradt~ Cra"!· 11111 AalNll" · (IMftlurt '60-Fellinl 'tSatyricoa (R)~ An 'l)e Loo_king Glass War
·Ian!) is ln1ured by• panic·strlcken Cir* Mocttz91W odysse'y throo...,~the decay and ~(GP): Movie or John Le Car-
)'OU{ll 1111n l'lho has been relulld FICia lid 11" · • • life-~n& treitrne'nt. ·betlu• 1111 81 . ~ depr~vity or anc_ient Rome. r~'s novel .or cold-~ar es-
• ·: kklMJ" 1rn1aine b 1V1i11hla. s:oo fHI~~ 1 .. Croovlt Martin Potter, Hiram Keller ptonage w 1th Chr1stnpher
• .,• DID ttidl_ ~ IC) (~ ".A • Collill · · · altd Max Bom. Jones and Pia Oegermark. .. ,-...:;. -C:IJ!ld Sol.illil ."11tit"-~1t--h15 • v -·m-tr:tllltlr(C)~stralght-1 R-)-~Elliott---'"Loven.-ud-Olhtt-Stntngers
: ~ falil!IJ's at/I~ • .lohn dec ides.11l l MIM: "lli&flit DID SclMll" Gould plays a veteran of Viet· (GP)· Comedy inspired by a ~ '-~ "uafs ~,/i:ai:~ :~':~:a~ ::r: (mystery~~-1ohn Barrymore, nam who returns to oollege fancy. wedding. Ci~ Young D JO'PD <Cl (30) I M S~ ~ ... (ih-and campus violence. Candice cast as the father of the bride. M @~mn.. lrtdJ 11111t!! mi) •sO.....t..11 Todd, Lnlie Banks. Bergen. Monte Walsh (GP): Lee b fOJ.. -CS1\.:,}(rj~ "EIMt 11 .. lltW"' (dra1U) ••1-Tb.e G~ssbopper (R): Jae-Marvin port~ays a toui;th
iiP (Wuttml '54-0•I• Robei1· Sahu quelme Bisset -plays ~ Cana-cowboy who lives to see the
.:.· son, Miry Murphy, William Hopper. ,~~ r~lnl dian girl who·seeks exci ement West outgrow the need for his
IT...tll • Ce111tq•ca (C) (30) ,.~ LltiJll in the United States and ,finds kind or man. Jack Palance
: ~ill 8o:MI (C) (60) 9;JO m n. PW: PllllMI (C) JlarCotics a n d prostltutlon. and Jeanne Moreau. . ::CW~ .. (C)(C)(~) @(f)TM DMbWlcMn (C) Joseph Cotten and Jim Brown. Sabata (GP): Western star-
: MH '-" 491 hi,,_ (30) Mf'l'it:, "11111 ~ Morde" M•A .. S•K (R): Jrrever~nt rin( Lee Van Cleef and ': .: r:ss tuntloll di Slfundol (60) (western) .,_Wlllitm Ellldtt. comedy about the Mobile William Berger.
: :-,1.1!0 . Yiirfeil "':""! Sllow (C) (60)l'"" l!"""~'1:'1: ........ (C) Army Surgical Hospital during TEENS AND AOUL TS
;:: Nu11 Foch. Bolt IUShJ, ~anley ti! 6 mM. a, hfubll (C) the Korean War. Elliott G,ould, Chisum (Gj: Late 19th Cen-; .• · : ::~~:~n: ainpr • MDI --. (C) DoRal.d Sutherland and Tom tury New Mexico starring
• D @(UEDllM"' • DM Pro J. Mftll. "C•,.,.... ~.....,. Skerntt. John WaYfte as a cattle baron. •. -r.uor CRJ30) "A Latter for Nan· ff' (wntern} 57-Sttrfint Hly· 99 Women {R): A story F o r re s t T u Ck 'e r a n d -,.... ---1 . f:J..~;!"(c;A. -ab0Ut8Womcn'S··prison with' Christopher Georite costar.· -·
r;.r:, ~-~)~xi?O) 10:30 9~ Hartt.i llolllblflln Maria Sc.hell and P.fercedes 1Pacllic Vibrations ( G) :
o Mindi .... ...,.. di Jnt · ID 'ift m Mn C... .. McCambridge.
. 1oM <Cl (~ I ;:.i_! "lllcf Dtdll" (~ Paranoia (R): Carroll Baker -
' -1:05 GD L•dll Ubll (SS) ~ni l lery) 41-Ellen Dreli. is a newly widowed jet-setter
1:3G llla£1lKeN...._ (C) (~I l i~SllJ ""*' (C) who becomes the target in a H~adm.stu Mdy Thomp$0fl, h1
• 11;00 An:llie's F.,._ (C) plot to dupe her out of her ht· =-=."" "if' Marrartt tl'ld a>ICll Jtnl . m· 1'I · · --BrOWlllll )oiJI J!~tl 1.11 ':' u . Wondtlf 6 world ~~ W'llt' heritance and dnve her to kdl
Plnment for 1 new soctety'. set· 1., (Cl A Id 1fttQ th• ipecill herself. POPULAR PRICES
ti111 ap ump In an ldylUc foiest world of 1 diild'1 h1111i111tion lllld Tell Me that Yoa Love Me, IC!lb,. StNhawd
wher• Ml'JOlll doll hls own th fnr curiosity. Wlntm""" • 1Con1 II J I Moon (GP)• Liza Min· -••u. ELLO DOLLY"
'
p 00 m ·-of .. Cllll P'llS. lnc:ll1din1 ptOPll flt tihtorr un e . n
,90) "Tiit War M.trcha11t1.' children, •Iii-'* _. ln1nllftlti nelli, Ken Howard and Robert c..tt .... ~
• (l}fl)1'1 hrlridp .Fam,. abjects. Moore star as three hll· 1:JI P.M.
• (30) "love at First Slight. n @ ~....., ..,. tc> dicapped people who meet in a ":::::::::::::::'::::::::::::::::::::::='II m IMfd Frnl (C) (90) Peter Us I" I ~ h . I ,. h ,_ * llllO'I Melvyn Do111las and Phd1 1 , .. , osp1ta and 1ve toget er ..,_..: est. MIN • Mine .. ...._ when they leave. nvwulS Ill I · • Filstl llakall I Drqatt (C) (JO) lll:lO tfflffi ~ l•d lwd 'l1te Virgil and Ute Gypsy -·-· -~~11JJ~1o ·(!O) ~ _..{t) .. ~.l!:k. .. 0~-~-!.~• ... (~); _~_n,.v~~Sl?.!!_.O! D. H. _
1 , Cl11!d 1uestL / Lawrence novel sUirr1ng Joan-Getting Straig)ir
laysiton
~: •. . •. •
•'
: DAVID JANSSEN Pwes'l':1): •.l»JOll ~=. lilt" na Shimkus.and Franco Nero.
*KEENAN WYNN m• ... ""'_,. l"""'I <mdlCL "WARNING SHOT" '4S-W"~li•m Hlrtnlil, M•fJ Moen. 'um: JTIJQ: •fwllllp1111
CBS FRIDAY MOVIES IE"", ......... ·-PICKWICK ~ ;:.~f_=,~";·C;'~~~ . """'-
101 ~.,.,021 ... 2,.
11
-K!,H ... !. '!!
8elleJ, Stm . Wanam1ktr, Lillian 12:00 fl Q't CJ) Sc1111J D11 (C) -Gish, Stefame l'Olfl'tll. lle1rt0r 0 Movie: (C) "'WlldlHll ,If a..
P11ker, Georp Grizzar d •. Geo11e dlstan" (tdventure) '66--Llx Bar· llDILJWIOd (2llJ MO wttl Sanders. St~e Allen. C1rru1I O'Con· ker, Marie Versini.
nor, oan Cot~lns. Walter P1c11eon. I Kolidlf (C) D 'l1le FqitM (C) (60) Dr11111 d1 11 s-tna
D BEST BET TONIGHTI "'" a rn n. MN .... tC) * 'THAT GIRL!' VISITS Morit: "Rnp ll11 Wiid Wllld" HER FUTURE IN-LAWS (dr11111) '42-John Waynt,
D il1I (I) Ql n.t "' (C) t30l D II "'""° ttl ''Tiilft Sire NI 1 Bundi of C..rdi m MOVll: (C) -Tiie II& laid'"
In St. Louis." Part I. Ann is more (dr1m1) '57--Alln Ladd,
llmlly th111 htr play op111ln1 In 1:00 Ci)~~ & M~ (C)
soum .sw
TROPKAl FISH r ' ..
I:.arge<t Sele<tlon of
Tropical Fiih a.;' ' MROus 1bout fll99tln1 het' fiance's I irb WorW (C)
f\l1 hom1 town. Mlbel AlbtrUon (}) Wo flltNI_.,_~)
illd frtnk FIJ!tn pest. Calfomil Betn n. USC T19f111&. 1 , M .. ll.ii't...._,
Supplies In_ tbe are~ •
the line.
Also
"THE LOOKING
GLASS WAR"
Of'll!N 0 .. IL T l 'U
SAT. & IUlf. 12:11
"111!1! f'AlllCINO
IOTH IN COl.011
l hlllr ,_ (C) (3<1) O llltiM: "Sel Wlfl:" (ltrtma) '&Z mw.w1UOM.COfTA..-1i1
Dn1d SIMlltld (2 hr) -ftidll1d Burton • .lrllll ClilllnL I"' f'•lnllt'fl 111:-,:., • ~
. Olltreldl/fh (C) (30) I"--l •n, Will TllVll '111-G,lltwn:ot'DT'.-:Hn:-ttNdl ~ .. -•• ~ ... ~>. llltrtp (30) . S1orin tC Slcc:lll «CJ Cllelllndthl1'9110HIUI ...... ' ----
Nltlcil (60) 1:30 !CllTht JtbDn1 (C) l~~~~~~~~~~!__ _ _::::::~~==::..--.\i :· t:JOD @@a>L•••· A1111rlc111 ~ WfllllMll1 (QI· SlJll (C) (30) "lo\19 llld the Eski· Freddie Bl13$18J Bid Gordmu "'°·" "l0\111 ind th• Muiu nct,"I 11\d 811~ li11hern a~ ltlllduled. .. ·. I""" (C) (30) Baxte1 Ward. Eil ~°"';'i' lllllicll P•fJ M1son (60) m
: Mmlc&ll/rutor'1Dfti (C) (30) 2:001Dlllty'1 .Tr8om (C)
.• ....... (30) . llltlrutlonll -(C)
;: \e.-Ollt.il (l)ID ....... 1w.rld Tlllto F..... • ,: • t [Eli) .• ,.., .. ,,........, ....... .. ...... tC)
" . 111 • .... i<l 1001 2:301-........ (CJ :: · a11m mr• ._. (C) (60l · HIP •n• .., <Q ... T: · Guests: GTtn C•mpbeH, Nancy Sin· • Wlf'I T~ (C) l· 1!11, *TY Rttd, Act Tf1Klin1 Co. K111p of C...., ' I TM W (C) (60) . 0.Um l '"Ti f ~ (C) Nnrs Georrt PL11n1m. G) Vlfldldll M -: . Nwef1 (30) 3:00 IJ Tiit .... ~ (C) "ShoclN ?· Ttt.Ct111111t ' 40 (2 hi) Populttion Contftll fk L.ptllldT' f-1t:30 19 .. ..... Nm (C) (30) is U11 qlllSl:iol dlsMMd bJ ,..., 1 ' • ~ CE) TY ..... Os.sart (C) (30) derrt5 fn;i111 LI CHldl 1M ~
~ 'f.. ii "T:.t(t)1ci B arct}s:.:'1.!l. •• 11 ..
KIDDIE
SHOW! ........
ll"'U ®-(ti ••• ""' -....... -
'=' ED Nwt :Zi
1
(C) From th• hrldltt Vallty Coun·
: , .. fiemt 1:' .,.....,. fJI Siena try Cfob ill Liii ¥tell. T• ..., ... IF:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~========~===,11 -~ (drlma) '4a..4ftlmptlrty ~-(C)
: TM Din, 5" (t) , I i• i art. Wa1t1r Huston. I Outr.ci l.lllllllttl "')
.. Morie: "TIM Honiblt Dr. Mltth· M1kldla 6e S!Mprt
; CldC" (td·li) ·~artlll'I SIMI. ' ~ llc!MIP'ldwl-(<) ·' fD Fllct ht (C) (R) ' ;;_ •£91 llilcil , ... Diet S:1511JDwtt I ..... fC>
;. "41:30 8 a (i) Ml" lltlftl ,(C) Guats: S:JO IJ lllMlt ...,.. ._ t11er • •: D,, Cl.o 01-son, 8ill Shoem.Ur, ... ......,. ('l'lllenl) 'S3-JMI ', larblf• Edrn llld JMn Mills. 1 L•ll1, Brfe11 DDnltvY.
: m @OOl!ll,,_c.-1<1 J'-'"'-tol : lilfl Cosbf n 1Ubst~ir1t boll. r..tJ "' (C:J .: Guedt: BiP Cosby, Mi1-Dairis. Cllllfr.•1 ...., ... (C)
Jlfln WlltlltnL · ladM t. ... (C) ~ 8 MIM et• CC> ~., ... a-t eel •
~
• ' . • '
' •
·· .. dJCAC
: COLOR
[!!Jo
• -
NOW SHOWING
TWO GREAT
ATIRACTIONS
Held Over
''3rd
BIG
. WEEK
IN
.,,_,, __ _
• "'-"or•,...
ollOSS1'MIU-
AIRPDRT -mlruamR·U IUllll USEIEll·ME~llSSET
..... f'C9. • .......... ,
fgl-=-~
Clrlortet.. tt.hMI
'~• H•w•iia n'•'' (GP)
•
Lowll ..........
.. ~ .
111CATCll·22 1
IS THE MOST
MOVING, TlltMOST ', .
INTELLIGENT, THEMOST ~!_i..t_:;.
HUMANE-OH,TOHEU ' )J{}'
.WITH IT!":' 1rs THE -'
BEST AMERICAN FILM
l'VE SEIN JHIS YEAR!"
-'iJHCEHT CM!IY, H.Y. TIMES '.f-•· -~ .............. Sii_
....... -, .... 1, ...... rtm, ,..,... _ _. ... mr , •mus •11111. aH1Mnmmr rman•C1W1&•11111111m1F
m111n•mas ---
EXCLUSIVE
ENGAGEMENT
-·-·-111a T---·--NO RESERVED SEATS
FREE PARKlNG
Mon. Thru frl. 7:00, us. 10:30
Sot. J:aS,3:30,S:lS, 7.00,8;45, 10:30
SUn. 2:15. 4:00, 5:45. 7:)1), 9: 15
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE
COUNTY INDOOR THEATRE
ENGAGEMENT
__ NO.RESER'IED.SEATS
diary of a .
mad housewiie
. a frank perry film
.....
richard benjamin · frank langella came snodgress. w_ .. , .,.,.,..,, .. ,.,
'"''" ll>e iOIM!I by Ille Qut"'t~ • pr~ liiln,itK1111f·by trntlr-perry
A ~VERSA!. PIC~ •TE01N!CO..OR" ~ -.,;.:::"'o=.-0>
WI1'S·ll .
P~s ., lot• TOI, Alice B. Toklas"
' PJU'll)N Clint Eosfwood
" "WHERE
EAGLES DARE"
~
sablil IGJ&:i:::.:i::O "BARQUERO·
<>::::::JStoni lMVon(
• '
'
•
DICK TRACY
INKY IS DiLIV£RIHG
NGI CARO Fi:ECORDS Ft>Fl STORAGE IN TME
WOMEN'S SECTION-
~ I,
~
' . . ·-
TUMBLEWEEDS
•
ID-JO
Mun AND JEFF
I DAILY CROSSWORD ::~ POWER I
ACROSS
l Y/alktd
lhroug b
wa !lu r, Conversation
lo Rule r
14 Tree '1 5 Co!0tless
16 Uni t of · area
17 Triba l
ritual :
2 words
19 Inane;
Slan!J
20 Pitc•1
21 Assemble:
2 words
ZJ Re lax :
2 words
ZS Recent:
Comb. form
26 Agreeable
ftply
27Klnd o{
nolst
29 Boy's name
Jl Diff iculty
33 Number
34 T ime of
'" J& Roy-a l
40 Girl's name
-4 2 Euch1r lslic
plate
.44 Small 9rOtJp
4)Slighlly
nuts
41 Eurojll!an
lilt' of
resp1ct
441 Fe minlnt name
50 Wear awa y
"
..
0
'"
-42 Eq ual
53 Cl oe le In
fOfm of
a ship
54 Sound or
SOrlOY/ 51 Spanish article
59 Ran easilf 1 6110%: 2 words
64 Pinker
&7 Instance of .
combust iori
68 Ce melery
itPm
70 Israel
seapo1t
71 An tmo!ior.
7Z Opera
7l Quantily of paper
7• We apon
75 Rapldity
i11 moving
DOW H
l O-Erla nder: .,J ''That's all Fcrmer there is";
Swedish 2 wcrds
leader .ffi Jvy Lragur 11 Fr ighle11inq member
l Z Persuap'e bf '48 Assigns
reas on ing 10 a nr w 13 Gatllers pos ilio n
a crop 51 Somelhinl)' 18 Obl~i11 !hat
1 Sm al l lumps through obslrutls
2 Mrmbe r vigorous 54 Unt il now:
of firsl l!lfOl'I : z words
famHy 2 word s 5S Und er
J Mischler 22 Tim e Ptriod relrli;ier•
., Omit io1 pr o-24 Pineapples ::tlion:
nunc ialion 27 Oid gaf~n z words
5 Removes work 5& Basebi ll 's
4 Busi nrss 28 Etrace Yog i -
.analys t: 1 JO lns tr umenls 58 Sharpening
Abbr . 32. Lay 1 •ager de vice
7 Suspend ta JS Of punishrne11l 60'To preve11t:
;i l1ow fre t N J 7 Pompous Leg al
movement ' JB Helper fi2. Abound
I Highway '3 9 Indu lge In 63 Possrss
built during Indolenc e 65 Nou n ending
WW·ll .,1 Consumed 611 Peruse
'Seesaw nourishment 69 Letter
10/30170 I
tXILE o" fUSTI ' .
PERKINS
c '
MISS PEACH
I
' I
' •
STEVE ROPER
COME ON. EYEll'l90DY/
·-"DEl'OllltS -Mlle W. 'INr' !
ly Chester Goulcl
B.Y Tom K. Ryon
By Al Smith
•
• •
U'L ~INa
SALLY BANANAS
0 ~~~~R
GORDO
'
MOON MUWNS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
NO,
HE'S FUNN'/-L001<1Nc;,
•
By John Miies
By Me.II
By Saunden and Overgard
------
Fndq, Oc14btr ao, I97D DAll.Y-l'ILDT 25
I
·:
" r.
ll Ii '
---
ly Al.CIPP
ly Gus Arriolll
By Ferd Johnson
)
By ROfJ91' lolen
......
0
0
MR.MUM __ _.....
DENNIS THE MENACE
' .
·--• • " . "' ••
•
•
J
•.VISITJNG GUESTS -
.Glen ~pbell a·n d
Nancy ,SiQatra .are
l\lesU OD "This is·Tom
\Jones'' tonight at 10· on
·Channel 7. ·
·Rachel's .-
;Interview
'Disaster'
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The
liltii'VieW....it.h Rachel Robert.
WU a dla&ster, '] UTived at
b.!r rented borne in Beverly
Rll1a and waited. And waUed.
She was upstairs speaking on
the telephone to her husband,
Ra Harrison, in Portollne,
ltaJy. After an hour I vanish-
ed.
· Mils Roberta telephoned: "I
hate acU-e!les who keep
journalists waiting. Please
&Ive me another chance." ~
When I arrived the """'111
time, I lllSpOded what the
telephone call had been.about.
The altemooo headline pro-
.claimed that Rachel Roberts
-would flle stiit for divorce
-Ra Harrlaon in Los Apgelea ·and Mk for a millJon.
;dollar settlefD"1l
"How tawdry," she commm-ted with a grimace. "Jt makes
. it IOUDd as though I married
Ra for his money. The story
is not true." ·--···--a1c11eT-RObt-ri-s:-·rs
unabashedly 43, trim of figure
-there could be DO doubt in
her low<>Ut leather mlnldms
-and proudly Welsh.
''The Welsh are noted for
three things: They drink beer,
Ibey sing and Ibey talk.'" she
remarked. She eschewed beer
for Poullly-Fuiss 'wine, but
she did play some demonstra-
tion records on which she
sings in a sweet, clear voice .
.And she talked.
"That's my trouble~ I talk
too much," she :sighed. And ,
alter saying she didn't want to
talk about her marriage, she
did:
1'Rex is still very much in
Jove with me, and I am in Jove
with hlm. Elizabeth Harris,
hi.I new Interest, formerly
Mrs. Richard Harris, bas
alioolulely nothing In do with
our problems. She is a lovely
alrl and a dear friend.
''Oar problems are complex.
For one thlng, Rei: wants a
-------.Ue who is merely l.Wife.-1
tried thal For four years J
1ave up my career to be Mrs.
Rex Harrison. B u t J
dilc:oftred that dido 't wort,
that I needed to upress
mJRlf In the profession for
·wbldt I had trained.
"There are other prob1ems
• well. I never considered
'myself pretty, and J was
aware ol the beauty ol Kay
I<mdaD and Liiii Palmtr, his JllW:'km wives. I must say it
-.. eeemtd to bother Rex .
Ill can make you feel .like the
-beauUful wnman In the -1d. "'l1len theft Is the matter of
llelng married to an Jn.
temadanal · star. I never
nallsed wbal r. ""8ld be Uke
1ii1lll I married Ra. The ,,_ .. _.,,. .. actor In his
~are eaonDOUI·''
f lifjjs Roborta ·Ald 1be
doubted, lhal .... ,and Ra
wOuld -be di....,.<(. &he ._ to have made
up her mincl about oae mat·
-ler: She._ to --career In AmerlCL
"Fcir aD Ill ~
. America la ae e:rdting placo
to live and wort in," lhe
remarked. • • T h e mere
.... -aed cballq• malui 1t llimulatlng. Encland? It'a I
welfare llate."
Eaffier um ym me made
lier -.0 flllll -I In
••Jlodot'1 Wtva," ,pirocmced
by Mike FraekoYldl and
dirodedbyGealpldllal•.
TV Spots Sell Candidates·
', Br ,..,_,o.,J..;; -a calculaled, evto llllle•MbOy are hem, led to Llndaay1 and dosen.s ol others,
la lime . ...,. again to pmb slnlaW -which a«ecta tllem by·•·bandlul ol meo who The commentl ol one ol tbtJl!
the ~. t he us all. are marketing the candidates -42-year-old Robert Goodt
deod\!11111 and lhe meatballs While tt Is DOI really known In the same superficial man-man who-take1 credit· for_~
way !Gt the selling ol to ·what extent Ibey are suo-ner tb<y sell other metchan-Ing Spiro Agoew u Go;'l;i
danl. cesaful in electing a man to of· dire -in b1ts and pieces of 10 of Maryland -indicates
eWctlon yun the flee, their impact OD the power to 60 'seconds. . the ima,ge-makers COuJd wt I
· Yitwed the grand of party or 11nI11 t lo n s A fa 1cinat1 a g article little advice themselves. '1
an tradition o( thmaelves h11 already been in Newiweek . de al 1 with "We want our candida to
commercials disutrous. For an estimated siX of the politlcal image-be liked, that's ~ most lm-Mfi fi'oar Cats of bumcw, f1S million ln air ceeta tbil mater 1 who have been port.ant thing. It'1 much lien
faUgut:. 'Mt1I year, the candidates are going rapoaslble for the current important to know the{=
g ls no longer straight lo the people, but not rash of politplup: for John than to know bia stand , an
tter. It has in the old sense of the word. Tunney, Ted Kennedy, John issue,'' he told Newswee ,
Fred MacMurray, Beverly Garland, Tina Cole and Don Grady don cat cos-
tumes for a masquerade party on "My Three Sons" tomorrow night on ehan·
nel at 2 at 8. It's Halloween you know.
... .. ....
·-·-·-----·-_}_---
Advertised specials
good thru November 4.
1970 and then we think
and talk turkey.
(whatever that cryptic
remark means)
SQUEliEE
AID
SPOICE
56c
Jib -• loga alPt. y.. pall lt Oll1 e( the ,1_ comparm..t. rub thit ~with U.. .,nsr•
9q\1"9• It ..oodr. with ti. 9q11Mg• ad thMi
•• , It'• .............. u. cop ... '"'-
,•
You can't, throw our ad in the trash I •• .
can unless you have one, but we11
sell a gdod one to do the job -right.
8 FREE
LJIERS
IJfll
TRISH
CAI
ovww
111n.oo;
CIBTQS
Thi• g, th9 good Oii .. 110t
th9 on• J'O'l whcu:lr: ooc•
1111.d ii aoelr:1. Tov. bow,
flft pmw t1 a long tira.e..
How many otb•r 1bu.g1
do yov. bow that hen• a:
guanmt.. ui. that. (The
o.n!y OD9 J bow 11.1DJ
mother-b:1°lcrw'•
JICllJIJiAg.)
&O YDS.
MISIDIG
TAPE
WITH
LID
SYEAR
GUAR.
T-flllftetyoar ..............
~ ......
···-.... ·1 JOU... • ... ' ,.,.,,;;;;;("
Boy. am J going to load
l.lD lh11 -k. Thia 11 U.. ~-lncb..llhdl I pay th
art nppllw l9c a roll
!or. U you·,. a d9al..r.
!l.l•t walk cm bf, 41.1~-·~ ~ ....... lie
I
POBTULE
BEATEB
-511
PBE-nIOSBED
WHITE Bi
GOLD PULLMU
WITH FAUCET
I ' •
ull!MDA REGISTER FOR
. ~ .. FREE CLASSES
l
WIDNESl>AY "onmb.r' "Bow lo In1tall EYElflllGs.-Ched... __ ,__ Wallpap91" J,y the
7:30 to 1:30 PM. Ent•rpri•• -,
Check. EXPERTS Wallpap•r
f TO TEACH YOU Cotnpuy
HOW TO DO l?' No••inhlr lJ-SOW to lmtall
f. TOIJJl:SELF. l:..U..ldclr:
i Check. Got It? WaUCOftriag'1 .. I (Rep«rt that lalf · by th• mabn of
part. •lmtbtg with Xwtt.lnc:k..
! U . MIRADA.) · Uigvn)
YOUR CHOICE
TABLE TOP DIMMEB or
SOCKET DIMMER
C-.. from thil OU or that
-. Tb-I• that 0119 and thl1
II th1a ooe. That OM 11 Dot lift
thh -Wt dwr.,. not a bit un t11at .. °"" OwN.
,.
1'7
12x12
MOSAIC m.E
48c
The labmatkm mpplled mid. •an colon".
Do.9 _,_. OTW age 12 Nally beUnt1 that?
SuWc. lo *"I'• Shorty wo\lldu't l'WI. a bad item
90 li J'Oll WGDI t1.1 .. tnatt b1Dt.
StO'l'CH
GIRD
SPRAY
1''
JUMBO BIG
OF SPOlftiES
DOUBLE
SWIG
LDIP
8'7
lf ~·N golng to pt swagved JO'll might
Q'I .fr.u g.t doQhle SWC19Vitd. Th.., 9CfJ for
th• ''hath". h bid..,endent. hang ti bl lh•
ha IL th• dn. lb• garag .. or ta th. chllll.b•Y
Yo1.t gotta ....t fO\nHIL
10% DOWN
HOLDS ANYTHING
'TIL DEC. 22nd
1-C-U
DOOR
VIEWER
147
•
•
~!""-"!" ________________________ ...,.~-~-----~~-~-·----------~~~----~----------~·--~-.. -------.. ---~-... ~,,. . . ~-
'60 WILLYS
JEEP
4 WHEEL
DRIVE
Pickvp truclr l l2601 l)
'64 CHRYSLER
Town I Country Wt •
9on1 V-1, 11110., R&H,
pOwtr •ltering l
br1lr11, t ir condition•
1119: I RRJ996)
•
• ·-. , ....... ' ' (
,, . .
•
' . s . '
. . .
FrW.,, October 30, 1970
Ply1110L1lfi
---~
•
I
'
I· '
' ' ..,, '
I '
. ~
' ·~ DAll'r' PU.OT
NEW
191-1-D-USlER-
NEW 197.D PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 2 DR. COUPf
New 1970 Plymouth
Road Runner
383 cu. inch V-8 engine,· 4 birrel c1rbur1tor,
power front disc brakes, power st&ering, bucket
1e:1ts,_consOl1-10licLtt1t~ush button r1dio,_
vinyl top -decor group, tinted windshield -
fibtrala!iS belted tires.
'66 P~mouth
SPORT FURY
COUPE
Aulomtlic, R.IH. pow•
t r 1leerin9, t it eondi•
tionin9. ITlZtMI I
'E6 PLYMOUTH
VALIANT
SEDAN
6 .cylind1r, tl•nd•rJ
tr1n1miu ion, ht•l1r.
ISLU0171
•
r
~! __
I ,, • f
r ..
. . •
'65 MUSTANG
4 tpetd, r•dio •IMI
ht•ler. 10YS6l41 .
-
'65 CHEVROLET
IMPALA
4 DOOR
V8, 111lomt lic lrtlll•
miu iop, rtdio, httltt,
powt r •lt1ri119, (PHY
6 79 ) Air cond.
•
"
'69 Karmann
Ghia
4 t pttd tr1n1mi u~n1
r1d io t nd httltr,
IXXD l491
·----
'69 Chevrolet
STATION
WAGON
VI, 111!01t11lic, r1dio,
httlt r. IZM X910 l
' l
'69 Pontiac.
LE MANS
2 DR. H.T.
VI, 111'tom1tie, r1dio,
h11!1r, pow1r li11rin11.
,,;~,·ol roof: IXKH6771J
'67 FORD
GALAXIE 500
2 Or. H.T. VI, •ulomt·
1ic, rtdio, httltr, PO*•
t r tlttrin9 , IVFY099) •
•
SPORT
SUBURBAN
St.+ion w•gon. V-t ,
•ulo., ll&H,, pow•r
•l11rin9 I b•••••· fie;·
tory 1ir, !ZLJ401) ·
'68 MERCURY
COUGAR 2 DR.
HARDTOP
V-9, 111IOm1tic, r1dio,
"••+tr, powtr 1!ttrin9 .
IWEC19'4)
• '
'
IMPALA COUPE
V8, 111fom•lic, r•dio,
he1ter, powt r 1fet rin9.
I SZH75 l l,
·-·
'60 PLYMOUTH
BARRACUDA
VI, 111lom1tic, R& H,
pow t r 1!11rin9 l
br1k11, tir cond., ¥i11yl
fop; IVWJl641
3 OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM
ALL AT 'FANTASTIC SAVINGS.
. ' ' ...
'
~
.~
'
MONACO
... V8, e11lom•tic, RIH, p;s,, P.B., eir cond.,
,.;ny l lop, P-window1, I •••h. ISV24711
'66 Plymouth
FURYlll
VI, 111lom1tic, r1dio,
he1ltr, P.5., P.l .dTSP-
e67)
-..._
\ ~ ~ r ·l ~I
I l , I I ..
..... -.. -.. -1 ....... 1 ..... L . ...-l
,j ,""--.
'66 MUSTANG
CONVERTIBLE
VI, •ulom•fic, t•dio
t nd ht•ltr. !UKV63l l
'67 CHEVROLET
IMPALA
SUPER SPORT
V-8, 111tom1tic, • R&H,
P.S., ftclory 1ir, bue·
lret 11•h. con1olt, t ic.
ITPS9191
) •
FURY
CONVERTIBLE
VI, •ulomtlic, rtcfio, ,
httler, power 1!1erin9.
IVTP6421
' ~·g~~
'67 PLYMOUTH .
Fury Ill
VI , 111lom1lic, R&H,
P.S .. t it conJ., !TWJ •.
OSJJ
-
,•
i" I,
• .
,.
-·Plush Bayfront Cotta9e
From this immaculate, super-clean 3500'
home , you have a sit-down ·view of the jet·
ty & bay boat action! Den , formal dining,
large yard. $169,500
Bill Comstock
Estate-Probate Sale
Bayfront with pier & slip. Five bedrooms,
three baths, .fireplace, F/A heat, two car
garage. Approx. 3400 sq. ft.; 15 yrs. $168,500
Al Fink
The Impossible View!
For the Impossible dream! Charming home
w/beamed ceilings, garden baths. Gorgeous
landscaping -perfect for small family -
private comm. w/bdch, pools, tennis .
$115,000.
Carol Tatum
Fine Lido Home
S21h" Lot affords complete privacy to own-
ers of custOm 5 bdrm. home w /large So.
patio. St. to St . location. Just 1 house from
private beach. $106,000
Mary Harvey
Highly Desirable Area
Within Steps of Bay
Harmonious blending of charm & utility
are combined in this spacious 2-story home.
Tbi.s 2 bdrm., study &J!!m ... l'!!l ... ~ome _p~
vides luxurious living at its best. Many uni.:
que features add to convenience &: comfort.
$97,500
Kathryn Raulston
Open House Sunday
1 to 5 PM.
171141 BOLERO LANE, Davenport !~land.
Hunl Harbour waterfront -choice location
-«.foot dock & pier. 3 Lge. bedrooms -
3 baths -spacious L.R. Immaculate. Ask-
ing $83,000 . -EZ Terms.
Art Gordon
Corona Del Mar-View
Elegant, fee simple; beamed ceil., 4 BR.,
S Ba .• separate family rm. 3 Car garage,
wet bar, two fireplaces, Fenced yard home.
'68.500
Al Fink
51/2 Assumable. Loaii ... ··
Custom 4 BR., 2V.Z ba. home on quiet st.
Large fam. rm., cov'd porch, sundeck. re-
flect . pool ; large lot. Near sboppirlg, schools.
Low int. loan! $65.000.
M. C. Buie
View Home Only $48,500
Panoramic view from immaculate 4 bdrm.
-home. Walk to schools, shops & church.
Lovely, carefree rear yard.
Eastbluff-View-$7·00 Dn.
Lovely EastbluH vlew home. Greatest back
bay, mountain & light view . Immaculate 4
bedrQOm; oversize garage. 3rd Car or boat
space. Only $47,500.
George Grupe
Open House Sunda.y 1·5
2244 AL TA VISTA
EASTBLUFF LUSK HOME
4 BR .. 21h ba. Large poolsize lot. Walk to
schools, church & shopping. Low down .
Only $47,500
Harriett Davies
Where Else in Newport ••
Is there a 4 BR. home with formal dining,
bit-in kitchen. elegant decor, 5t'reat for fam-
ily living & steps to the ocean? $44,900.
Belle Partch
Harbor View Homes
Out of town owner says "SELL'' his 3 BR.
home NO\V. Din. rm. & fam. rm. Beautiful-
carpels &: draperies. Immediate occupancy.
$42.500
Cathryn Tennille
Owner Anxious-$39,500 •
Immaculate & homey, describes this air-
conditioned 4 bedroom, 21h bath home.
Breakfast area overlooking sunny patio.
Walk to ocean. Good financing.
Mary Lou Marion
Four Bdrm. Open House
at: 2101 HIGHLAND DR., Newport. You
wlll'be PLEASANTLY surprised. BUY NO W
& be settled for the HOLIDAYS. Come by
Sun. after 12:80. \
Harry Frederick
"Please call !or our picture
brochure or current listings."
ColchtAll,Banker
.... COMMm,.
551 NEWPORT CINTER DR., N.I.
'I
.
MAC,NAB-IRVINE You arc cordially lnvl.ttd to
view o:tr NEW 1971 ?i1odel
Hon1e, (lieganlly decorated
& furnished.
•
Serving Newport Harbor since 1954. twenty-five experienced residen·
tial salesmen with over 270 years of service. This luxuriouily different 5
bedroom home with panor.
amic view of the Bay, Fash-
ion Island & the Mountains
will surely make yo"u want
to Jive ln Dover Shores.
Open Daily 10 AM to 5 P?if
FINER HOMES HOMES UNDER $60,000
THE BEST OF EVERYTHING ON
LINDA ISLE
Pier and slip. The epitome of elegance and
gracious family living in this beautiful 6 bed-
room, 51h bath custom hotne built by Jim
Higson. Fabulous location overlooking Har·
bor Island and Bay. $245,000.
SENSATIONAL LIDO ISLE BAYFRONT
OPPORTUNITY. We are exclusively in-
structed to offer this magnificent 5 bedroom
Higson built home, with pier and slip. Ask·
ing $225,000. Op~n l :OIH :OO Sat. & Sun., or
call for appt. 218 Via Lido Nord. Available
for immediate occupancy.
SPANISH BEAUTY
Beautifully built four bedroom, six bath Span-
ish home. Ideal floor plan for entertainment.
Formal dining room, gourmet kitchen, but-
ler's pantry and extra large walled terrace.
No home m the area has more custom de-
tails. $139,500. ·
HACIENDA
Four bedroom family room, dining room,
large breakfasl room. 3 fireplaces (one in a
dreamy ki~chen), large, sunny atrium with
retractable roof. 3800 sq. ft. of superb quali-
ty. Fee land, room for pool. ASSUMABLE
6% Joan, owner will carry 2nd. ,125,000.
CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX
Best Buy in town! 3 bedrooms 2 baths each.
All electric kitchen. Located' neat Fashion
Island. Shopping and beautiful area! $62,500.
BALBOA POINT
4 bedroom, 3 bath beach home. Perfect fam-
~ly living. Patio convenient to family and liv-
ing room. Boat launching privile ges for sail-
ors! Great terms and anxious seller. Asking
$59,500. Ready for o!rer.
HARBOR VIEW HILLS-LUSK
Adult livin' at its finest. 3 bedroom home on
special 105 by 175' lot. Expansive yard for
entertaining with huge concrete and slump-
st~ne. patio. surrounding 40' freeform pool
w1~h 1acuzz1. Lovely new landscaping. By ap-
pointment. $55,000.
UNDER MARKET
Top a:ea in Ba~crest at $54,950. Pool, dining
room, plus famlly room. Decor with a flair.
5\>1% Joan.
HARBOR VIEW HOME
2 bedroom, den, 2 baths. Beautifully carpeted
and draped. Many extras. Owner transferred
-immediate occupancy. Asking $37,500.
WELL LOCATED CONDOMINIUM
NEWPORT BEACH
5 minutes to ocean and bay. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, split level, fireplace , carpets and
drapes and built-ins. Separate laundry room
-patio--3 car garage. $33.500. Owners ex·
panded fam ily reason for sale-would con-
sider exchange oC $13,500 equity for large
home-Baycrest. We stcliff, Eastbluff on Har.
bor View Hills. Please call Mrs. Fay for appt.
90' BAYFRONT RENTAL
Former California Governor's 4000 sq. ft.
h~f!!e 6 bedroo.ms, 4lh. baths, family room,
dllllng room, pier and slip. Top Bayfront lo-
cation. Annual lease $1200 per month. Call
Bert Fehren for appl. 675-3210
1033 Mariners Drive
(just south of Galaxy)
Ivan Wells & Sons
Roy J . Ward Co.
EXCLUSIVE AGENTS
1033 Mariners Drive 646-1550
{Open Da}lyl
FRESH LISTING
Very livable family borne
with 3 bedroon1s and pancJ.
led family room. Large mas-
ter suile with mirrored
dressing room and garden
bath. WIFE-SA WG kltch~ .
en w1th 2 ovens &. large
pantry. Priced right at
$38,500.
e
Coles worthy
& Co.
REALTOR
N~'POrt Beach Office
1028 Bayside Drive
6'&4930
MACNAB-IRVINE REALTY COMPANY MAXI HOME
901 Dover Drive, Suite 120, Newport Beech 642-8235
1080 Beyside Drive, Newport Beach 67S-32JO
~~ ....... ~
~Ge=".;:.°'c;•;,;,l ____ ;,;lOOO:::~G::on:::::"::.'•::l:._ ____ 1~000~ General 1000 General 1000
llerc is a spaciou.,. 3 bedrm,
2~1 bath, 2 story home with
elegant Cloor to ceiling drap..
C'S & lush gold pile carpcung
thniout. Located in a choice
Huntington Beach area the-
home includes formal din-
ing family nn.. beautiful
storie fireplace, garden kitch.
en, with elec bltns. The HJS
&. HER garage door opener
ii just an eXtra bonus with
this super sharp home. Low
down to a 7~% VA loan,
$.16,000.
2 CORONA DEL MAR 2
HONEYMOON COTIAGE
A cozy 1 Bedroom house With fireplace on a
well situated R·2 lot SOUTH·OF·THE HIGH·
W ~ Y. An ideal investment for the buy now-
bu1ld later crowd . AND the owner will carry
a 90 % 1st T.D. With onlv IO o/o down to a
qµaliJied buyer. Only $36,500.
SECLUDED HIDEAWAY
Just a few doors from big Corona beach. A
2 Bedroom guest apartQient with bay view
on the far rear of a choice R-1,lot. Ideal for
a weekend retreat as is and sensational for
that "Dream Home" you want to build
"Someday". For those who think in terms
of future. Only $45 ,000.
PHONE 673-8550 TO INSPECT
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
52 Linda Isl• Dr.
Cust 6 BR., study, 5 bath home w /3 !rplcs.
circular stairway, decorator selected carp:
& drapes. Shown by appt. .......... $210,000
60 Linda Isle Drive
Newly listed. Prestige waterfront home. 4
extra lg. Br., 4 ba. pwdr. rm. Lge. Jiv. rm. &
den ; 3 car gar. Beaut. patio/ garden. Deck
& dock. By Appl. .................... $220,000
107 Linda Isle Drive
5 BR. 3 baths; fam. rm ., form. din. rm. i
Fplcs., Rm. for pool. Dock. By appt $145,000
WATERFRONT LOTS
No. 76 : 3 car garage. Reduced to .... $77,000
No. 44 : 108 Ft. on \vater ............. $150.000
For complete information on
all homes & lots, please call:
COATS
WAtLACE
· REALTORS
Open Evenings
• 962-4454 •
A HORSE , A BOY
and his dog. Just waiting to
romp on this 12 x 289 lot.
Lovely 3 bedroom farm
hoUSC In C.Ounty Corridor.
Lgc. eating area In ltitchen
plus formal dining room.
Living room fea.tures lge
slump stone fireplace, Ask·
Ing $25, 750.
PAUL•WIDIB
CARNAHAN
•IALTT CO.
1093 Baker. C.M ,
Doll Hou5e
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 NE\\'PORT HEIGHTS • just ': r('(fuccd lo $29.950. Cute first
BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR
833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.8 . 642-4620
G:;;'•"';;';;'~I ~~i!!!i!i!i!lOOO~~G~e~n~o~ro~l~ilij~iiiii~l~OOO~I ho• for young couple or I===::::::::::::::::::::::--'.==::::::::==::::= • "green thumbcr". Profusion
1000 DANA POINT INCOME HOMES ol rrc&"; plants, shrubs, General 1000 General 1 ~---~----'
HARBOR·
HIGHLANDS
$39,500
4 BR + FR
+POOL
Newport B<'ach lovers look
at th is • 4 big bdrms • fan\·
lly room • 11parkling pool •
plus H11 rbor High School •
\VestcliH Shopping • All lhlt
anc' only rnlnule5 to-the
beach • Prl~d under market
for quick sale. Belter hurry.
DIAL 64;;...rool
FOREST E. OLSON
REALTORS
2'299 HARBOR, CM
SWINGING
GRANDPARENTS
Anxious to liquidate elegant
pad in Ordt'r to Jive clostr
lo grandchildren. Near UCI,
it has 3 bcdr1ns, 3 baths,
cornt'r lot, upgraded crpts,
drps, patki & terrace off
master suite. Ful l priOI'
$34,950.
;ca. co:Ts
~WALLACE
REALTORS
'546 4141-
(0poo Evenings)
2 DUPLEXES .. , ............ ~L-D I I Will Trade
2 TRIPLEXES , , . , , , . , .... $63,950 • $66,500 Lo\·cly big 4 and !amily v.·ith
t FOURPLEX ...................... $69,SOO sparkling pool in Back Bay
(2) 3 BEDROOM HOMES .......... $30,950 on quil't cul-de-sac. \Van t
Brand new. Large buildings w/deluxe own-lriplcx Cosla l\.fesa or Nu'Pt
ers units. ocean vie,vs, xlnt location. Take ad-Bch,
vantag.e of good rental jncorne + property ~ 5'6·51811
value increases due to the ne\v Dana Point (llhfcinlrnl thtltftll
Yacht Harbor. ' LLEGE REALTY
OPEN HOUSE WEEKEND 1soo-.11-.CM
PHONE BUILDER 642-4905 OR
SEE AT 33792 COPPER LANTERN
OANA POINT
EASTSIOE FHA-VA
Largt' IWD &inn. horn(' "''ith
HRD\V. FLOORS and fire-
place. New carpets & paint
General 1000 General 1000 lhru-ottt. Copper plumbing
thr6ughout. Kitchen range, ,*'*'*'•' t VA-FHA rcfrill'erator, Jll)\\'er mower, 11• ... -·-•.,. 2 0 and clothes washer inc. De· 6 2 tach<d Dbl, gat"age, patio,
WILLO LANE •"" .,.,. ""'°'· 1.arg, ""' DISTRESS y11.rd with assorted fruit
3 View lots on 100 !{OU cour!lf! OPEN HOUSE 1.rees. Alley atttss for boat BARGAIN
4 Bedroom
Just $25, 995.
Fixer Upper at P.1l'Sa Verd(' are current· SAT & SUN 1·5 or U'ailer storage, Full price
Back Bay . big 5 bedroom, lY on lhe markrt. Due to 4 Bed . only $25,000.
Absolult'I)' Immaculate. Ne"'·
ty painted throughOut, r.10.
del horn~ condition, 2 NI
Baths • B/J Kltchtn, forced
air Mal~. BcauUfWly land·
ICl.Pfd large_ lot. •• almost
too iood 10 be tnie, but own-
er haa bought a.not.her homt,
say1, "SELL". Low down,
tll)' p&)'mt:nt1.. M1,y ""
lhow you throuah? 546-8MO
Needs pa int, yard y,·ork. clrcum.stanccs owners will room~. l~ baths, buil t-M M LiBORDE Rltr
Some repair. Lisled $34,""" ICll at S24,500. Excellenl In kitc~n ancl larg~ l!Vlng 64~ ~s. ~548-~
HN priC('s on fhe5c large view roon1 uuh brl<:k f1ttplace -·'--~~---
hue "your" ofrcr may take honicsites. ~r" a fr1v of the niany hilh· Costa Mesa
II. Also for LEASE wrrn: Hi;::hls of lhla brlg:ht airy
OPTION. home. Add to that a huge Fixer•upptr
Ronl•I ovonized garaae wllh WOl'k· $23,500.
Lease 6 months or longer, •hoi> area, pool sized yard Clean ft up -you'll have neat, vacant, 4 a: famUy Jn and boAt &: camper access.
Meaa Verdt', $260 l'nclUdlna -S~A~C~R=IF~l~C~E-.-$~1-1,-1-00-1 PRtCED AT '25,500 VA AP-:~cy,:ng ~u ~~A::
prdencr, 3 BR. l..ar&t fenced 101. Extra PRAISAL o I SC w th """"" s
aharp • m\111 9ell NOW • all CALL ~ • &S&-nn Bedrooms. a l~e ~'. ln 541·$110 a q u I e I neighborhood . ........_1 le.mu! T•ma . .,. -~ ,............., heM!lt • Call Patrick Wood $15-1100 ..__ I • 'THE REAL
·R_EsTATERS L~~t~~ • 8111 Hoven, Rtoltor
_ _::2629;::_H:.:•:;'::;bt>;:_r.,_:C:;:.M:;:;,· --I '~'""'""'""'""'""'""'"""' I :zu; £'., Coast, Cd~t 673-32ll, _:::::::::::::=::::::::::::::I
Pilot Clusifi~. 642-0678 Oas.sltled'1 acUon po11o-er,. DlaJ 6U-$7B & cha.rit IL S&.turda,y -DIME-A-LlNES!
' . ' ' ·,
2629 Harbor, C.M:
'
,,
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi!
1000 General
6.75-3000
The number to call whether
buying, selling or leasing
CAMEO HIGHLANDS
Spacious 4 BR ., fain. rm. home. Owner leav•
ing area. Asking $45,950 .. make offer!
LIDO ISLE
Decorator's own home. 4 BR ., luxurious!
Price just reduced $5,000-NOW $69,500.
* 3 SPECIAL OPEN HOUSES *
OPEN SAT. & SUN. l·S
I. SHORECLIFFS. 319 Driltwood. You own
the land. 3 BR., 2 baths. $69,000
2. IRVINE TE RRACE •2. 1807 Galatea. Un·
usual 3 BR. & guest suite home. XJ.nt
view. Lge. pool. $77,500.
3. BAYCREST, 1800 Irvine Ave. Price re-
duced $4500. 4 BR., 3 ba. Room for pool.
Spacious home thruout. Owner anxious
Price now $45,000.
BAY & BEACH REALTY, INC.
675-3000
Open Houses
THIS WEEKEND
lllOO
KHp this ha11d., dlr.ctory '"itti .,011 this wMtllllHI •
y•• •• hollM-lri11•rln9. All tM locotloM li1Ncl Mlew
•re cMKribff hi trecrtat' det•ll by •dvertl'I .. et ...
wtt.re hi '9dlr'f''• DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. ,...,..
aAowilNJ o,.. Mi.,.. for solo or te r9"t ore •rted te
llst 1iteft lnt.nMtio• I• ttti• col11m11 OCICll Frilky.
HOUSES FOR SALE
(2 Bedrooms)
4313 Channel Place, Newport Beach
673-6642 ; 675-&159 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
2511 Crestview (Bayshores) N.B.
642-8235 (Sat & Sun)
(2 Br. Family or Den)
2021 Port Weybridge (Har. View l-Iomes)
CdM, 642-6472 ; 673-3488 eve. (Sat & Sun
1-5)
(3 Bedroom}
1506 Dolphin Terr. (Irvine Terrace) CdM
6444910 (Sun 1·5)
2039 Irvine Ave., Costa Mesa
6~910 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
**17041 Balero Lane (Davenport Island)
Huntington Harbour, 644-2430, 833-0700
(3 Br. & Family or Den)
2990 Country Club (Mesa Verde) CM
642-5200 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
1915 Mariners Drive (Westcliff) NB
642-5200 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
324 Poinsettia, Corona del Mar
673-8550
216 Orchid, Corona de! Mar
673-8550 (Sal & Sun 1-5)
(4 Bedroom)
109 Via Ravenna (Lido Isle) NB
673-7300 (Sun 1·5)
1130 Santiago Dr. (Dover Shores ) N.B.
642-8235 · (Sat & Sun)
*4627 Camden (Cameo Shores) CdM
642-8235 (Sat & Sun)
**11 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) NB
675-3210 (Sat & Sun)
2101 lUghland Drive, Newport Beach
644-2430, 833-0700 !Sun. afternoon)
2244 Alta Vista (Easlbluff) NB ,.
644-2430, 833-0700 (Sun 1-!i}
(4 Br. & Family or Den)
3814 Topside Lane (Harbor View lfills}
CdM. 644-1494 (Sat & Sun all day)
*1749 Skylark Lane, Ne\vport Beach
5411-8281 (Sat & Sun 1-4)
1718 Antigua \Vay (Dover Shores) NB
646-3255 (Sat & Sun 2-5)
1124 Santiago (Dover Shores) NB
642-5200 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
2602 Willow Lane, Costa Mesa
673-8550 (Sat & Sun 1·5) * 1424 Lincoln Lane, Newpo rt Beach
673-8550 (Sun 1-5)
1912 Port, \Veybridge , Ne\vport Beach
642-8235 (Sunday)
*1721 Galatea Terr. (Irvine Terr.) CdM
642-8235 (Sat & Sun)
**505 Morning Star Lane (Dover Shor-
es) NB, 642-8235 (Sat & Sun)
2716 Windover Dr., Corona del Mar
644-4910 (Sun 1·5)
1606 Antigua (Dover Shores) NB
644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
410 Morning Star (Dover Shores) NB
6444910 (Sat 1·5)
(5 Bedrooms)
**218 Via Lido Nord (Lido Isle) NB
642-8235 (Sat & Sun)
(5 Br. & Family or Den)
*1033 Mariners Dr., (Dover Shores) NB
646-1550 (Open Daily)
**58 Linda Isle, Newport Beach
642·5200 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
*1033 Mariners Dr .. (Dover Shores) NB
646-1550 (Open Daily)
DUPLEXES FOR SALE
(2 a.cf room eech)
501 Marguerite, Corona det Mar
673-8550 (Sat 2-S, Sun 1~)
(2 BR & 1 BR)
422-422\>I Fernleaf, Corona de! Mar
67$-2101 (Sat & Sun l·~) .....
• •
l~H;;;O'-'U:.:S.;;.ES;._FO,..R_SA_L...;E;__H;.;.O:.:U:.:S:.::E.::S .:..F.::O:::.R ..:S,:::Al=:l!:_. i:H;.:O:;:U:::,S l~S::..:...'O:::R~SA:::L:.:1!:......:H;.:O:;:U:::,S::;ES::..:...'O:::R~SA:::l:::E:.__ 1..:HO=U:.:l.:E:.S .;_F::;OR::_::sA:::l:.:E:.__:H:.::OU=l:.:E:.S :...FO::;R::.SA=(:.:I~-l-IOUSI S FOR SAL I HOU IS l'OR SAL I
1:o~·~"'ii;ii'•~1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1~ooo~G~•~n~•~~t~liiiiiiiiiiii.il1~oae~1i:G~·~,.~·!•:•:&:°~':::1:-11 .. ~~o..:-~,..~-:·•~~':::1:-~11111~~T~°"""~=-~·~1::::~:::::~1too0~~":~:••~1==:::::::::~1111~ ~c~oot::;:::•~M~"::::"~~....:;1~100~ c ....... c1e1Mtr 12!0 .;;;;:.:o.:.::.;;._~~--'~l
Frld1y, Octobtr 30, 1'70
H
11
. * * * * * * * Opon Houte Dtlly l·S 216 ORCHID 222 Noni, B"'nd Now Bay.
_Pete Barrell _f<eaft'J * JA YLOR * NICE! NEAT! Nim! :::::··'•'~: ~~~~~! ;~; :::~:~~~·
P' ~tMen l' 1 , OPEN SAT & SUN "' i One of the sharpest hom es in lttesa Verde. l.OVELY 4 Bil, 2i BA, btaut. 1 5 PRIVATE llAY ISLAND landocaplnr. maey <UStom •
Hunllngton llttch 1400
EX9UISITE LINDA ISLE
PLUSH carpets, lush decor, immaculate con·
diUon. ~11 the amenities of the very finest
of Bayfront homes. Just vacated -immedJ-
ate occupancy.
· 58 Linda Isle Open Sit & Sun I to S
JUST VACATED-WESTCUFF
NEWLY LISTED 3 bedroom, 2 balh. family
rm home across from park. Perfect location
for children , li brary-goers or Westcliff shop·
pers
1915 Mlriner$ Drive Open Sat & Sun 1 to 5
DOVER SHORES
MOUNTAIN -BAY VIEWS 3300 sq. ft. o(
~pacious living, 4 bedroom, dining room. !am·
ily room.
1124 Santiago Open Sat & Sun 1 to S
Offic e Open Saturdays & Sund1ys
PETE BARRETT REAL TY
1605 Westcliff Dr., N.B.
642-5200
General IOOOGeneral 1000
TRICK & TREAT
The trick is to find a quality built 2 storv
4 bedrm, 3 bath home in Dover Shores with
a view fr om every room . The treat is the
price of this one, $89,500.
LARGE & LOVELY
5 Bedroom, 31h bath. family room with 2nd
fireplace. Formal dining room. island kit-
chen. spectacular view. E:{cellently crptd,
draped & landscaped, $95,000:--'
SPANISH TILE
roof & garden ·court entry + panoramic view
of the Bay lends a fl1ed iterranean flavor to
this unique 4 bedroom, 31h baths in Dover
Shores. Large fam ily room '\'ith \\·et bar ,.
takes pool tab I e. Formal dining room +
breakfast 'foom, $98,500.
ROY J. WARD CO., Realtors
1033 Mariners Drive, N.B. 646-1550
Dover Shores Office
Gener1t 1000 General IDOO
f;;,;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;= Large and Livable Eastbluff Enjoy ont> or ··c o s T A
OPEN DAILY 1-S t.IESA'S FJNEST" located
2615 Bamboo, N.B. near \VESTCLI~4f SHOP.
You'IJ be happy when you see I PING CENTER. Amp I e
'this 5 bednn. 3 balh home. room for your large turni.
Redecora1ed in & ou1. Bci:t lure. T~e GIGANTIC BED.
ol financing available. f ast ROOMS, fll'W golden harveat
eSCl'O\\'! Vacant! shag cal'p('I. Double LOG
Enjoy tfle peace & quiet of a ~outh Sea Js.. 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, family room with an ad· feature11• Auume S19,900, 1-~0, lllC»le who lo\•e U\C charm
land atmosphere. Tennis court & private ded screened in almuminum patio. Large S%% fHA. Princlp•I• only. •nd. \\'t0mth ot an older
park w/till trees surrounded by only . 24 corner lot with room for boat. Has a $18,000, s.u,900 551-75.U daya or property, A spi.ciOus home ,_
home. See this older 5-bedroom home with MG-0027 eVH A wk-ends. and iueat cottage to provide
WEED AND
REAP
HOME + POOL
$26,000
5% % assumable loan. There's much more an exciting chall•nte to the
pier & slJp. Call for appt. $187,~ for only ,80,MO. Mes• V•n:I• 1110 df'l'Orator mind~. You'll
NAUTICAL BUT NICEI $69,500 DIVORCE SALE '°" the "'" Clow oc 11"' Hear the :i:urf. See the sea! New offering of Spac 5 bednn lt family 3 fireplaces in living room and
this canyon home of unusual charm in Coro-bath home on lge earner lot. family room and you'll be
na del Mar. Overlooks famous "Arch Rock". ''OWNER WILL CARRY'' 6¥.'ner 13.Ys .tell NOW! SU~ thrilled at the roomy 6'JX1 18
Perfect hideaway and you own the land. mh offers 4 askin& S42,950. ~:!. ;~~i~n~ ct play room
SEe,you ON SUNDAY! PERRON M2·l77I A RARE OFFERING AT
Stop in at isOO Dolphin TeTrace. Corona del A 8% loan with l Oo/o dov.'n on the east side ONLY $79,000
Mar, 1-5 PM. Quality 3 bdim home w/great 2 bedroom home on an R-2 lot. lt's a bargain Newport Be•ch 1200 CAU... 613-sa.iO
warmth & appeal. The fireplace will be lit & al $25,000. NEWPORT BEACH
coffee waiting. $54,900 o THEREAL
'""-ESTATERS
FORMAL DINING ROOM? CALL 546-2313 FOR DETAILS Yl~-$30,700
Yes! & Much more! A view from the "Out-
rigger Room". Sep. master ste, lge !am rm
&: gounnet kitchen. Fabulous garden. Broad-
moor beauty. Just reduced to sell. ,77,500
2716 Windover Dr. . Open Sun 14 5:00
SEE WHAT u.ooa DOWN
WILL IUY
OPPORTUNITY I
Here is your chance! Just receiv,ed the CRV
for this 2 bdrm, l ba home. East side of
Costa Mesa. CalJ us today for appt. $19,500
IN THE SPANISH MANNER I
3 Bdrm. DR home. Courtyard assures priva-
cy. Owner says ''make offer". $41.750
2039 lrvlne Open Sal-Sun 1-5 :00
\D]THE REAL
~ESTATERS
Value pack~. Cuatom built.
Lath & plaster. King sized
BR's, Formal dining rm.
Huge; rich pine paneled den
y,•it h heavy beamed ceilinp.
2 lireplacell + BBQ. B1•igbt.
cheery ki1che11, TeJTaced
~r yrt. With aec:IUded brick
patio. Huny, •vn't lasl! Call
1114) 962.551;,,
S21 CAINATION
Onf' ()f those cornf'r Pro·
vincial duplexrs b I!: I o 1v
Coast H"·y, 2 Bdrm. ('ach
(room to addJ. $46.000.
OPf'n Sunda1·.
154 SANDCASnE
FOREST E. OLSON Ocl'an Ir. bay vl~v. spa-
. dou' 3 bd<m., fomily, 2 II General 1000 General IOOI ba.. 2 frplcs .. rNiuced to 1.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;=;;;;; Inc, Realtcn $49,500, ()pen Sat/Sun. 1·5.
Steal a 4 bedroom l91n Brookhon1 •"· 321 POPPY
0 I $24 900 l:luntington Beach n .y , • ,.. ... ...,.,. ......... --.1 Ifill " •'"'" "''"°• com· Move right in on thlr. 5%~~ PRIVATE ROAD pletcly reru1·blshtd 2 bd·
Annual IJ;; ra1'! Joan. p ay. rm., shake &: used brick.
' Take ove:r low intel'f!st Ioan.Z.. ,
no qualifying! Jlome te :
on tree shaded k>t. Rane :
•t)'lc living room. •hll' car. : pets. Genuirlf! beam ce ·
Step -Silver kitcM:n ..
built·illlf. Huge divided yard
with »park.ling pool, Cowl'l'd'
patio. A little pa.Int can· .. ve '
you many m . Set tor your;
llf'lf!
O!At. ITI4) 89.J.7521.
FOREST E. OLSON
&19.l EDINGER, H.B. ~
STOP MRYTHING!!
$139 per mo pays a~
J ust assume the lo\v 514 %
pt. annum VA Joan. Extra
wtde corner Jot, boat gat~.
& play area, beaut crp!J, 3_
large bednng, famjly rm, all
bltn kitchen. plus a POOL,
full price $2.6,400. No dowrl
\'els, low down t'HA. •
COMPLETE ELEGANCE! $129,500
Romanesqu~ beauty is exemplified in this
gracious 4 bdrm home w /inner court. View
from most rooms. Formal DR. den & model
kitchen. Lux cptng &: finest appointments.
Desirable
Duplex
Located on Eutside Costa
Meaa; neu aolf coune A
upper Ba.y, 2 8edrms each
unit with lge ~LOCI<; WALL
enclo&ed yard (70xl~). Pric.
ed to tell -
Immac. 3 BR., den, din. rm'., P.fay Jease/opllnn. Open
ments. total just $129. per 3 hath home on lge. fenced dally, aftrrnoons. REAL ESTATE ..
month ill£L taxE"s and in. lot._l.ight_airy rooms, mani· HUNTINGTON BEAOI OFC:; 1606 Antigua Open Sal-Sun 1·5:00
DOVER SHORES -$108,000
Beautiful NEW 4 & den home built just for
you! Spectacular living rm & lge formal DR
410 Morning ~tar Open Sat 1·5:00 • A RARE FIND -$62,500
"Lusk" 4 ·bdrm home w/view .• Co nvenient to
shopping and schools. Pool a rea designed
for easy maintenance. Great 'family home.
NEWPORT HEIGHTS -$25,950 ,
Immaculate 2 bdrm home w/beamed ceil-
ings, extra closets & storage space. Original
owner. Lge yd. Just reduced to sell!
WHITE WATER VIEWI $115,000
2 Story 4 BR, 4 balh farm style. Wann &
friendly. Custom quality & steps to beach.
OTHER FINE HOMES
Weslcliff 4 & F . R. Large yd ......... S49,950
Large 3 B.R. executive home ....•... $69,950
81 ' 3 BR walerfrt. Pier & float •..•.. $85,000
Lux . walerfrt duplex-3 BR ea ...... $160,000
LINDA ISLE LOTS
Call us regarding 2 fine wat,rfront sites.
Leasehold. Choice location. '69,500 & $75,000
"Our 25th Veer'' -
$29,950
Terrific
Triplex
Privacy for all three 2 bed·
rm units, Owner will sell to
veteram, NO DOWN. Ha'lf)
2 tenants help pay YOUR .....
sura.nop. 3 (count •em~ University Realty 673-6.ilO ._5311 , CUred law111 " beaut, gar. •ro-Bathrooms make1 thi• just dens; dbl. gan."e 6 8i...... Dll E; Coast lhvy., Cdl\l
I h f I I II • ·~ :n4Pi0i~5En~~l,~o;. .. ~"~r;;•·~';·~·;';'"';'°;;;'~'"";!: r a: t or your arge: am y. Ai;soc. pool It putUn1 Veen. 324 POINSEmA
Call us for df'lalls today. Beet buy in aren, $64,500.
'46-8640 Call 642-<620 '"' opp'J CORONA ' PAY $112 MO. R£NJ?:
Biii Grundy. Rttltor DEL MAR
OPEN_SAT/SUN. l·S OPEN SAT 1-5 OWN FOR LESS
2629 Harbor, C.!\t. · 4313 Ch1nnel Place
------'---'---·I Beach cottage. 2 BR.; xlnt
BE WITH THE '°' ,,..... ""''"" """'" LEADER ---1-Steprto beacli-li: ChanMI;
Xln1 cood, Asking $28,500.
Earn commlsslo'n d o 11 • r 1 Good lenns!
while )'OU leam .• ,lndivid-MORGAN REAL TY
ual.lzed t1n-the-job training. 673-6642 675-6459
Learn more • earn matt in
Owner will flna~ this beau.
ttlully decoraled home wilh
Of!.ly 1J% down, On a desir-
able: 4a toot lot cklse to the
~an. 3 bedrooms, family
room, low malntenance yard
and oU street parking for 4
vehicles. See: it and yo1.fll
love it.
RPlax & enjoy carefree Jiv. :
Ing, Beach cual.om town-;
home. 4 Queen sized BR's. '
GourmE-1 kitchen Incl. refrig.
J ~~ bath!. Private pool and
clubhoose. Desirable area.
Very low dn and ~ over
Vacanl Full price: $19,!Q).
11U1Ty Dial (114) 962-558S, an exciting, pleuant Sur-BY OWNER $40,950 round'"& .• s.tG-2316 WESTCLIFF ·AREA
4 br, tt,>Jc, bltns. crplt:, drp11, FOREST E. OLSON
Fl.nest •PrinklPrs, poo1.1izec:1 yard. Nr schools, You own land .
.ACANl'.,....... - --·-·
O THE REAL
• , ESTATI:RS
Four·plex l======I 640,.~.~~ ;3!·~:. LINDA ISLE LOT 1\1eAa Verde area with ownen
l bednn, 2 ha.th unit. Live
In "high iirade" quarten
and still have rentals !or
tax shelter.
S6B.OOO
Luge watertroot Joi wilh 71)40)0.4 BR-POOL
108 II. on wall'I'. Spectacular
O THE REAL
'""-ESTATI:RS
OUTSTANDING
OPEN HOUSES
SAT . & SUN. l·S
•1911 SEADRIFT
Irvine Ten". 3 BR. + pool
$62,000
Inc. RE'altora
19131 Brookhur1n Ave.
Huntinglon Beach
SANTA CLAUS
IS ALIVE
Lachenmyer Rlty SIZE fireplace in the (am.
ily roon1, fresh spark11ng WESLEY N TAYLOR co R Ito CALL 64&3928 ., '1~34'3 white deco< i"'ide and oot. ' '' H n . Newport
Jong water hay view. Room owner's d ivorce sacrifice In
to. pool a: exceptK:lnally Baycrest near wchools a,
large boat"sllp, Will consKI· stores. Fee title, New car.
iec trade for Dit'!!el long Pf'L~ A drape11,, family rm,
range cniising yachl. Price xJnt cond, game nn.
$145,000. 541-1211 t
2715 WAVECREST
Broadmoor. 4 BR., view,
and 11·orking ror you on thitt
5 bedroom, 2 bath charm.er
with SEPARATE 20 x 30
BonUll Room and seller wilJ.
irnt lo pay your coets. Tow.
eri ng rree-shlltlrd street In
executive neighborhood. No
down GI or low FHA terms
available. Move in by Christ·
mas. $30,00 ruu... PRICE.
Bright. chttrful kitchen 2111 San JMquin Hills Road
with garden view! $2!01. in. NEWPORT CENTER 644-4911 Investment Minded
Bill Grundy, Rltr.
R.13 Dvver Dr., NB 642-4620 CUSTOM 4-PLEX $6.l.5ll0 Choice Newport &ach area, 2421 VISTA HOGAR
itial 1'"1-IA Investment . OUR * * * * * J'riplex, $425 inC'Ome. try $42j() BEST VALUE! 133.950. * *
·down. 4 Blocks 10 beach. liM~-~M~-~L~•~B~or~d;::e~,~R~ll~r~. ,;;'.::::':;=====;;;;;r::;::=:~=====;:;.:j
••
Fairview
646-1111
(anytime)
3 BR .l 2 BR units • exctl· The Blufil. 3 BR .• $32,500
PORT WEYBRIOGE Jent t1wner occupied & lax CORBIN• Walker & Lee
·Call 847·&>31 I ~46--05.15 Eves: 6<16-4~79
SPANISH STYLE 1;G;;;;•"';;;;';;;;•1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1000;;,;;; _o._._.,_•• ___ 1000_1:::::::::::::::::::::
Harbor View home, Monaco •helter proper1y. $l2,000 Dn, ReaJtor3
model. C111domized roof, en· PERRONS7'J,OOO '42•1771 MAR·TIN 7682 Edinger
REAL ESTATE
MART
COTIAGE
3 Blocks to cool Pa.cific . try
S21XXJ down -t1wner 11·H1 fin-
a.nce. Call 847-8531
REAL ESTATE
MART
r."''"'"' "'""" '"'"Lion, 3 0 NL y $26 900 Open oa,·... TRANSFERRED
l.al'ge bedroom,, family • I 'J EAmLUFF
mode rn ki~chen. Short walk VA No Down ?.loved out or state to catholic church·school, 328 All'SO park and public schools. A . and left this
try; carpet & lndacpg. Qulck 1 C-"'-'-"-'--------842.4455 or 54G-514D
occupancy, See •2021. Low Interest & T1xes REAL TORS 644-7662' l'"iiiO'""'""'""'""'""'"" ...
co .. •m 3 "· 'I> ... pool, -~B=v~ow=N=E=R~-~ $8. 50 TOTAL INVEST l!IJlai, sprinklers, $46.500.
54S-03S.l TRI-LEVEL
PLUSH DOUBLE DELUXE 4 BR. 3 BA. Formal living & not le more! dining room. All elec. kftcn.
CURT DOSH, Realtor
642..6472 Eve1t 673-3468
1130 W. Coasl Highway \\·onderful value at $31.500. Th ~ trees. covered patio ~ lowly, lovely home
Call :.15-8424 the excellent care 01 this Newport Heights at 2200 Anilia REPOSSESSIONS home makes this tndy en. COm.!r of Beacon In convenient Eastbluff
f.1obile Home. Fumi!lhed, ON en. Breakfast rqo.m. family
the WATERFRONT. $14,150. room. ;~ireP.la<'I'. \\'/W car-
or Rst. Ofr, 6'13-8152. 6'f5.JZ77 peting complete. Beautifully
joyable living. Located on 1 short block from .( Bedroom. family room Sparkling clean homes, some
quiet cul-<le-sac street -Cliff Dr. Formal dining area newly painted & carpeted. 2, Newport Heights
please c:nll us right away on By Owner $36,500 Spacious yard ". J & 5 bdrms. Some wi1h ---------
121D
of Larre bedrms, 2 ful l baths,
covered patio, boat & trlr
rate, tuU price $23.750. Va.
cant &. ready, IIurry on th4
·~-thi! good buy. Anxious ov.'n-Spacious 3 bedroom :i bath, Open this wttkend pools. FllA-VA conv. terms, E•rly Americen Charm I~~~~~~~~~· 1 -~~~~~~:::~-1 er will evf'n pay )'OW' dos-llving room 1'\<llh fireplace, $47,950 from $17,000 to $40,000. . . 3 R f J··• '-ha r -JJ!n, • Wall• I-. 1n this B , am rm, sty~ COLLEGE Park-3 br, pool, e WANT TRADE e u1g costs 90 you dO not ve large dining &r!a overlook-""' '"' '"' ho Lo f -• · · 8843 Adams Ave. ooz.5523 me. 11 o natu • .., pine
landscaped w/11prinkler sY'-
tem 2 yrs old. lmmediale
possestion! lAisk Home. Har-
bor View Hills. 3814 To~
side Lant', 64-1-1494 -rarr-...W-
21h: ba, covered patio w/in & l BR .• 1%, bath hoir.e in Al. even one penny move.in ex. ing lovely 11ecluded Jana!, woodwrk, used brick l'l'plc,
out crpt, Finished gar., ladcna {Pasa. areal. For pense. carpeting, drapes, built.Jn NR. Newport •lgl8 $21,900. 3 J1hlnglei1. Big tree• w/easy
frplc. FHA or VA. Doyl<' similar in Costa Mesa. Tus. Nl'ChOIS Real [slate electric kitchen. Garage ott br on R-2 lot. Take ever upk"P yd. Drive by 435 Ir. r., P..,allo", '18-116t Alie< JI 'th J t ' 115 000 °"" FHA I ......., tin area. D. J, Feenstra, a ey W1 e ec nc eye open. • . ..,. "' oa.n vif14! Av,.., call for appt. ~'" ~;.. Cr.ris Terr g is Reallor. 1979 No. Lake A~.. 546-9521 er. Nicely landscaped cor. Real to"' w/$3000 down .\ arrange • SJO.im. xlnt terms. Onr
REAL ESTATE
HUNTINGTON BEACH OFC,
194-5311
()pen 7 days -8:30 to 8:30
,,..,....,.,.,., Altadena. f11 31 798-9166. ne r lot. ''Our 25th Ye1r 2nd T.D. Deel. Kingaa.rd 543-5106. DAILY PILOT DIME -A 646-4002 548-1444 R.E. M.I 2-2222 _::::..::::::; _____ _
_ LINES cost yoo i·ust .... n-Business 0'100rtunities In the H1rbor Are1'' CO"EGE ~-k~ b ---.. TAX SHELTER-TRIPLEX
*DUPLEX*
OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-S
422-4221/2 FERNLEAF
So_ of H\vy, SHAKE roof.
used bMck, CHARr-1. Home
I.-income. 2 BR. le. 1-BR.
\YaJled palio. Lo\-ely Jard.
ICllpi~g. $44.000.
4 BEDROOM
$24.000. Large kitchen with
attached family room au
bhn appliance!!, 5 yn 'ntw,
2 baths, Wall to Wal) crpts,
drps. 11':20 patio, fenced,
land.leaped, oversl!ed db'e
garagP, walk to aehools A
shopping, pa.yments lt'lllJ
lhan rent, $2400 doY.'n,
nies a day. ~ · ~ in Today·s Want Ads. 673•4400 lAJ Joi '.';;. 000 Ur • .a,.,.c 2 br unilll leasehold land. 1 ;;::::;====~~~~~~===~~~1.::;;;;;:;;;;; I PAINT & SAVE comer · ~"· ae )'Our $39,500 by owner. SEMPLE ''!'!~~~~~~~~~I GI or mA tftms. E:iccl. G I loooG I 1000 W\Yll Veterar.:1 can qoalityl: __ _.RE 1 .. .....,.. R33-1494 aft 6 pm Wkd)'I' 1~;;••;;•;;';'=======',,.;;;';•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=il BIG LOAN · ror thi1 large 4 bedroom COMFORT-CHARM l=Kl=·~=-="=· =·=M=-="=":::: I
Reil Estate 675-2101
2513 E. Coa1t Hwy., Cd~I
II Take title to th is ppty sub-home in Harbor Area. Pay-Cozy ~ comlortabll! thrte bd. Dover Shere1
ject to fllA high loan with menta would bf leu than rm1, two bath home on
low pricP. Corne.r lot. Oni.4 rent, SO STOP LOOKING • JIARDWOOD FLOORS with
1227
PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEW
Sparkling clean 3 Bedroom on
acre completely fenced. Brand
room. Quiel cul·de·sac location.
FH'A or VA Terms.
almost th
new bath·
$27,500 -
EASTBLUFF-5 BEDROOM
\Vith ·sparkling pool completely fenced from
hu ge back yard. 3 luxury baths, formal din·
ing r oom, elem. & hi~h school in walking
di stance -$52.000.
CUSTOM DESIGNED-
POOL HOME
Executive type home with Mission Tile roof.
Top quality thruout. Formal Dlnlng + Fam-
ily Room + Spacious Master Bedroom +
S.Car Garage. On quiet street with ,Park and
Schools close by. $69,950.
CALL 646-7171 TO INSPECT
I \.13)THE REAL
, ~ESTATERS
'
NEWPORT BEACH
1700 N•"P"" Bl•d. 646-7171
COSTA MESA
2790 Harbor BIYd,
546-231 l
CORONA DEL MAR INVESTMENTS 278'4 Harbor BIYd .,
Suite 20 I, Co•I• Me11
546-23 16
312 Marq uerite
67l-8S50
Experien ce El iminates Experiment
llDD I--------
metlc entry hall. Calhedral CALL NOW. U!ti! our trade. larae din/nn, BIN kit. and ---------
ceiling complete v.·ith Span-plan lor dov"n payment. breakfut area. Covered pa. WHERE ELSE "Estate-Uk•"
4 BMnn, family home. BIR
yard, sonny bridal area, be!lt
or schools etc. tor "n!aring"
1amil)' ..
BAYFRONT LOT
211t B1ylide Drive
SS Fl. bulkhead. y,•ilh piiir
arPn. $2Xl,OOO <J.'ee 11irnple). i~h interior and gorgeous CALL • :e !lo • Dbl. gani.ge • \\'ell land.
lireplat"e, See It nov.• before w I k & L scaped . aSM>rtell fruit tree11.
;r, "11d! CALL a er e 1"'atod on TWO '1JLL SJZ.
W lk & L ED Wl'S. E AS TSIDE
l\fonticello condo. Where f'l se
can )'Otl get a beautiful 3 BR.
2 Ba. ho1ne with carefree: JEAN SMITH, RL TR
Bill Grundy, Rltr.
8.13 Do\'l'r Dr .• N.B. 642-4620 I' '62-4471 ( =i !l46-llOJ a er ee Re•ltm COSTA MESA. Pri°"' to"" 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams at only $37 ,500 • NO FIN· POOL tor only $22, 7f".JO! Stt
this anytime.
400 E, 11th, C.M, &l&-3255 ~L:;ld;:•:...;:l•:;lt:._ ___ _:1;:35:;1 Try Thlt
P1ck•1•
for
Christm•t
$25,650
Real ton
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
545-!M91 Open 'Ill 9:00 PM
MESA DEL MAR New Lllitlng. 3 Bedroom ,
family room, flrt'pla<'e, I ~~
Baths, w/w crptg,. 20x20
rumpus rm., dble gar with
aulo opener. Pro~rty clear,
OWntr Will fine. $31 ,9:iO.
Pm BARRETI
REALTY
545-0465 ()pen 'ti.I I PM ANCE PROBLEMS,
M. M, Lt llonle, Rltr.
Newport Beac
1 Block from Ocean
5t6-0Si5 Evn: 642-7431
Nea< oow 3 klog ""' bed-JUST LISTED
rnv, 2~ii bath!, extra lge llv. ~ Sq ft ~ bedrm family
ing rm .. 2 flrepliuies. bltnJ, A dtning.'' drapetr it shag
~erorated. new Cll>IS, dble crptc Sprinklen front A
gar., will lrade, vacant. ftar · $.15,995 rnA. Don'I
Lachenmyer Rlty • ••~ .... , c1111 Ray
eau 646.3928 er 545-3483 Gault, 540.llSI, Herit•IE'
Rell Eltate.
CALL e , ,4,·1414 l}utldc. alALTY Nt1r Ne•pert Pe1t Office
$22,950
eCUSTOM DESIGNED
Built tor utility 6 permanent
wain & mnt view, 5000 911
11, c:onttmp EuroPffJ\, S ba,
lge rms " hi ctilings, kar
gn.r. $169,000. 548-7249
University Perk 12J7
s,,_cious lido Home
Prime-l Br. 2 be. 11inglt
1tory, 3 Sunny patios. On
•t:ttet tc 1t:rttt corner Joi
4 ~'-Reduttd fO Stll.500, I.gr 2 :o1rory. 4 he1!rm w/
Prime Lido Norcl J11a11ter ~Ire. Sh1tg crpts, din
!i Br. 4-Ai ba. n e 1v walt.r rn , BBQ in IJ1tck yard, 9.+al k
front home. Beall!. decor to beach, This can't last!!
Deck, pier &: noot, Foo ap-MARINER REAL TY
Unbelievably low price t1n 4 S.. Forever View p't. Call : 842.j.').U anytime
bedrm, 2 balh, dble garage, From ~po.tic of this lovely BUI Grundy, R11ltor BUILDERS
lull bltN including dllhwaah. 4 BR. 211 b wnhCI 1.13 Dover Dr., N.B. &tZ-4631 CLOSEOUT er, &hag ttptl', SUpt!l' sharp! • •. to UR.
Near Orange 0..t College. Very ckltie to h~nnia cl•, '" PRIME TIP Crmit tt.lection11plaet!1 born.
$23,950 LIDO WATERFRONT For all dPtalls call 540-USl. pool. In immac. mnd, A OF LIDO ISLE ek• on ~Ice 1o,1son the mar:
S -DO N UNITS UNITS Heritage, Rtal!ors. rood buy al $35,000, n. 4 R IL ba. h ct Rp.rn! ! 3-Bednm, 1 ~
4 Bdrm.+ F1mlly Rm. APT .•.11o1v LI ORD I"'""'""""'""'""'""''"""" • d h II '"""aut 8 .• 4,. . ome 4 bait\.", bttmr, crp(g, aha~ Huge Palo• Vt.rd« stone I.ire· SlS0.000 Price wllh 7% 1st 6 Great money making unlt11, l•t TIME ON MARl\Tr re •1 with 66 ft. water fron1:i.ge. roof etc. from $33,SllO , ,
pla<:t> ln 'Jiving ronm, hlg T.D. 6 Beaut. furn. \lnil•: full price $73.800. All 2 bed. FOR SALE *' BY O\VNER Room for IArgc bollt sH~. RANCHO LA CUE:ST_t\
family rm .. full dining rm .. 6 <:Ar gmrs & u1il. f'OOm. roont1 . Firs t Mlle locaOon Custoni buiH F;xpcutive type PrB'",·11SG500ru'OOOnd.y, RI". llrookhur~1 Ir Atlanta, H.8 ( bulll·in.~. no 00,...,n ltrma. Ro t'I, on s•i mming beach. Nonh Coiita Men.. Don'! de. Mine. Panriramlc \'iCY.'. Im-REALTY 9('.8.1~ ()prn 10 am-& plft •~1--. \Vlil COn.!iide:r lrade for boll! 1~v. 1tt tod&y. Call S40-ll51 t t o BR • BA Uoi,·. Po<k CE'nlPr, Jrvinr L13 Oc>\.'t'r Dr., NB &U4620 ~ ·~ ... OOO . ..., mnc:u a e a • · ASSU 1\1E 5-1. tllA motl"a'"" TARBELL 2tSSH1rbor orllmaximu m ..,.., lge. '4 Heritage Rf'alto~ Gigantic rec rm y,•/wel bar. Call An_ytlme 133-0'20 -~Jo'l'.'<ER UPPEl-,--o( $2+,im. Cash out"J~
B ..house. -:""irn:::---I!!!!~~!"'!~~~~~~ I 2 frplci, 3 stall a:ar. On •1~ 000 H "' J BUSY-BUSY-BUSY Biii Onmdy, Rllr. CORONA DR. MAR """""' •• Meaa Vt.00 oolf Spaelou• hom• 00 50· tot. Out • '· . ... ... • t WO
II-• __ .. ,_. ...... , 833 Dom Or N.8 &l2-4620 , --'-...__ ,___ 1,. -·-. M•• """'"' fill« Irvine 1231 of town owner will aJlow glory, 3 bedrooms, 2~ batbl, ""P as • , • &JIU. ac~ ut·~p ~iiii::iiii::iiii::~·~· ;:;;::~· ;:;;::;:;;:::;!~ ......... e + .,.....,,II:' un... ........,_ -v .. -,., !:.:.::=.. ____ ....:;=I -~ 1 •·-ti •--~-· din;..,. ,... ~-~ -1 ~ ..,. ....... -'" L.--. M··•f ,.. Jo •"-........, or '"""vra re. """' ':"'"..... u"" m., ~ yOU reach your "'"' P*D-On -..,.., near ~.. IQ(l.JI ... rr·~-BY ndo Co 11•-~-~-546-2378.. . own• r, co , nr this locky! Vottl • 2661 room w u~..-ce. -t""ts a tiaJ, Call, today for an lnttr'-$135,<m Unlwnity, 2 Br, bltns, S. Ea1t co a 1 t Jlwy,. CdM dnpe11, Vicinity Brooldianl
view. 54%!1& DUPLEX Geor .. Wllllemson IT'S GROOVY tlU' t8t, 2 patios, $2S,SOO. '13-»20. le tndlAnapolls, By 0 .'
Rttltor p1 ... h .... , ..... 1 & ...... s.u.%176. ~0~,:::E:::N;,...:s"u=-=1--=-I '"" ,,oo PM 962-76.15 .•• :
67J.41SO 64S.15'4 Eves vinyl. VA·.nlA or 10% Down cDfd:::'°"::::c.,-.,..-,-,-h,-ok-of-"-,-.-p. -N. ..5 DtliST SELL! 2~ yr~ THI: REA!, R LSTATERS "1th aarag~ '3).51Xl. ~1l. &c::k Ray, S.A. Hgt•. $22,950, ~r: 548-J691 \nf!: that \Vhile Elephant In lot VIA RAVENNA Extctill"'e tiome:. 9000• '°I•
Wella.McC1rdie, Rltrs. $23.j(IQ. 3 br, hnt11.·d floors. EASTiltDE dt,rty 3 BR. 2 BA. the atUc for somelhint you 4 BR. 3 ba, l'i'sr ch,1b r.tany bta1.11. extras! S31.50IX
SEE YOUR REALTOR I mo· NCl"''l>O•t Slvd., c.M. top cond. U11 your Cl or \Ylth h~ 51.f f"l1A. \\fill 1tll can uM? Try the Traden SM.;:.oo \VIU allnw $1500 for lndtcpir,•
i'OR YOUR BIG FR.EE rnn n!A ttnns. Exel. J(lrpard low down ti!'? Owncr/~nt Paradlse cotwnn ln the Dal· LIDO REALTY INC. Otani Cardtn "A" Pbo --:=NEW:-:=CO:=:M'&::::RS::::KJT~·--·""'""'~!!lii_,.,..,.,..,...,[~ft~.E~-!Ml~_i>-~2222~:....~-~ _133-'34.-;;...l~o-vu,;;;... ____ 1 ~'-"P~llot:;;.W~an:;;.IA~do.:;;. __ ...c.~»~77,;__V~l~•-l~l~d~o.....:~~7~~~7300~,-'_"'-'-•-ru~•-·9&8-3M __ r_._. __ ,~·:
:~:
I -
"" .
:; DAILY PILO T Frldat, Oclobtr 30, I()JO
1 SE FOR LE j "OUSES FOil SALi RE TALS RENTALS RENTALS I ' Huntlntton a.ach 1400 Aporlmltlll for -FurnlshM -u.m.rnlshM -· u.m.rnlshM
:a BUfLO'EllS & lnveston . I s.1. . 1980 Laguna Be1ch 2705 G.neral 3000· Ntwpart 811ch 3200
RENTALS H..,_ U.m.mlshM
RENTALS
Apto. F11t11lthM
IUi NTAU RINTALS
Apto. PurnlshM Aplo. p...,1 ......
Huntl~ llaodo -Hunll~ -44IO Laguna Nlguel 3707 c .. ,. Ml••
I ·h ou,. • """'"' lot. 100· Wutboy Income Homa• ~GLISH "''' home, LANDLORDSl,I, BEACON BAY BEAUT. Golf '°""' view •*• •s•u!U!.P • II I .h'ont-.it. R.3, downtown TRlPLEX-$51.500 chtstnut panellni. 2 trplc., BAYFRONT from covered pa1 !0 . NNT W ofa Q. JJ. I ntar beaches_ . Broker , &st E.astskle Costa Meu. to. vie~· trom all room', N ~-d i•lew Tropical o&lrlun1, Auto Oood CRES * • t SJ&.115< n • •w. ~"" " "P"' 11 * A utn a "rmoJa · · cation. "Hornet with an 11n.. baa.,..,1one •-paA~ oMut-door Vacancy Problems Ended ot the entire bay. 2 Car aar. g:hting, mu.sic & lntem>itt ISO
i . come·•. 356 G.. 20th St.. Coita r cue "" , .. """· a'ure -3 BR 2 b t ' I It ,_ aysl~m. Garage dr opt~r. 3 * Motel A.... * La Quinta H • Fount•in Vall•y 1C10 adults only. Rff. Avail Nov l FREE gupply oJ qualified All ·• a, ;xqu !i e uile.t. br & 2 ba, crpts, dTpt I • r•-CuuaJ estate llv1ng. Enter e~
:· tlft'S8 . Builder 6fZ-4905, '49&-4ll2 tenantis at no COt;t lo )'OU. uUI. pakl. ;500 Per prdener inc~ S325 I mo. Studio a 1 Bedrooms mosa's lush green atm01phere & stroll tree-' 20X20 HOBBY ROOM RENTALS "'lo• LEE o< 01.A month. Adulto, "'""· •99-2306, •LOW RATES lined walk WO}'I to your apL l-, . HouH1 Furnished D•n• Point 2740 832·6600 • , '7S.60SO 0 Day, Week "' Moalh ALL UTILITIES. INCLUDED
I · T 11· L I ti . --Capistrano BHch :17311 e Colo< TY. Al• Cond. I lllt. Unf. '''° -furn. $110 , •rr •< 0::' n Ganeral 2000 TOOTHBRUSH ALL U NEED * PENNY SAVER -Ml''M-11.,llC. • Pool & Pho 5' Incl Pl\13 3 Bed.rm, • b&, moar/ •o ,.~. m• beautllu! 2 b< RENT· 3 bdt 2 ~ ~ • M•'d •--·1!.':, .. a"'u. . 2 IR. Unf. $175 -Fum. $210 If & I. Priced ~"bl" * MOVE INll 'IJU.. ... . 'HURRY FOR THIS ONE1 • ' . ., ... , -r· ..., -· .. ...., • 3 Sp llr I d f··-'·'in ]j "° par..., • '!; '· •• 2 ha + den home Finest . · BEAUTIFUL hume sweepmg blt•lns, frpl c., lndscpd, Yd 2 l Signal So t o c IC. • P ans, ecor. WWMJ p : VI
jl ,~ HAFF~2~5EAL TY C01'1Pl.ETELY lurnished 2 ~t vu from priv, 'patio I: ~EtT d2 BR&, '!~vee r~~~~~ view of bay. 3 Bel~ .• J bath, ch}Jd. $225 mo, 496-9613 ior Fa-1 · · within n>manUc aetting w/fun or privacy.
n·r. Crpts, drp8, slove·, f'e'. hv, rrn. Adult1; no pet.I. rp s,k fi35 g ag · huge !amlly rm., 2 pallos al· appt. 2316 Newpott Blvd. Terraced pool1 pri. sunken-gu BBQ'• W/
1612 hi~: Fe~.yard. 2 car gar, S315/mo, Jpase. <t96-9563 one~·& S ·SpeNy so _\,\i~h view, luU dining nn., ="'======== 548-9755 seculded seaUn& compl. w/Ramada & Foun·
1.W...c.•.;.•l_m __ ln-'•-le'-r---"-'O $18.l. NEA1 . RENTALS e S41-tl6S bu11t-1ns. BRK $-425 mo. Dan• Point 3740 CLIP THIS AD. • • lain.
BY O\\'ll('r, 3 BR. Sm <lo\\•n, C & S Speedy Vac•tlon R•ntall 2900 54()..1720 good for S2 on nlt:hl'• * Color co-ord. kit w/ indirect li9htin9.
payn1ents under S200. xlnt RENTALS e S48-936S PALM DESERT. Furnished * 2 BR. $120 2 STORY, 3 br. 2~, ba condo. F'~~P:e~;c,' =~· 2 c='. rent or $5 on week'• rent. * Deluxe r1n9e I ov1n1 * Plush 1h•9 crpt 9.
\Vt>sl1ninster loc. A\'8.il Im· 2·BEOROO~t cab 1 n al 2 hr. 2 ba condo. on SEPARATE 2 Ek>droom, Immaculale. ~ w i mm in g drps, $275, mo. 496-5323, • • • • • • • • • I * lonut stor•t• spece * Cov. cerport ·
nted. 714/ll!H-Oi16. Stone man t...ake Jn norlhern Shadow Mtn Country CJub crpts drps garage Child & pool le. beautiful g~. 67"';>-7348. REMARKABLY * Sculptured merble pulllnan I .t ile beth1
1===·======0 1 Arizona near Flagstaff , fa frv.·ay. By Wk. or Mo. Pt'I ok. CA.LL NO\V! Adullt. $275/lse. 646-2740. UNBELIEVABLY * Elegent tl(.teetion room.
Midway City 1616 Comple1ely furnished exCt'pt 2JJ::.SZ..2077 eves. * BLUE BEACON * Newport ShOrt"s-3 br, 2 ba, Duplexu Untum. 3915 EXTRAORDINARILY FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY B-U-,-.-o-,~,-.1-!E-.~\\-'E-.E-.K-,-,-B-r, ~~~sn~er:nl~~·~e~rt.";:~ RENTALS * 645-0111 * ,".'.'.'1,1,',;1"68'""1121Psriv.J240/mo, DUPLEX 2 BR. CLEAN & Val D'i~:.6~nApll BFrlkwyfr .• oGmoldHen""wline.slgtCoonlle~ee.nter, San Diego
2 ha, h11d nr.. lg din'g Hou••• Unfurnished * 2 LEVEL ....-. . QUIET! New y;/w ca.rptlng .... area. Obi I Gar. bllc I \\'.:ill, 4
1"1',,'"', 5',""mlalls call 6+&-3730 * THE BLUFFS. 4 BR. 2 lhniouL Blt·i·o 0.,,. , Putti"noAdg~~."°•"'at~.U & San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. OD
alltoy-In rear. $21.500. * W ·
1
k· B General 3000 LARGE 3 BR, 2 BA home , BA. Pool. $325/mo. Call range, gubage dis~~ •tre~. 0•0 .. ;;ne~;;.here, Beach 3 b1ks. to Holli W. on Holt to •••
893-0526 Bkr. a to -ch Srove , retrig, fenced patio. 644-4869, an 5. wkndl w.,,, • -M·-· pd, L " . t H 714 ••7 ... I -POOL. REC !!ALL T •-" ·-'" pool, ""·room, billl&nb, • .,,.,. • ormo.. : .... ""'" NICE 3 Bedroom Duplex. p 8• 1 BR prlv home ·········· S6.5 · · ! een. )'.Jature couple pref. No
Santa An• 1620 tlo garage Chlld or singles 2 BR fenced for kids •••• S120 agers wclcome, ~-J B~, 3hll~ t~~·nhse, f~, ehildrtn or pets. $150 mo :~~:~. ~~':,· l~~··ini:::~: I ==~=~=~~=='F==.i=======~I 1----------ok '$li0 AVA!l.ABLF. NO\V' 2 BR klds/pe!s OK •••• S1 25 C & S Speedy :t· ~732 "'e come. · plus security deposit, ori~ 2 BR. From $135. See tt! Newport Be.ch 4200 Huntington Be•dt 4400
susTOM BUI ~ T *.BLUE BEACON * 3 BR kid.11/pets OK •••• $150 RENTALS • 548-9365 by 75.1 Scott Pl, then call ~ -L~ .. bedrn1s, h.rdv.d ON, * 645 Ol I 1 * 14 BR swim pool, kids/ $200 RENT 3 bdnn near • BLUFFS • 54&-3036 aft 5 for app't to Be Parsons Rd., 6.fi2..86TO. BACHELOR, tum + u.til,
$137.50. 1525 Placentia, alk
about our discount. 548-2682
FURNISHED 2 BR · apt
S14a/mu. 933'11 W. Balboa.
Yearly, Ad ults, no pets.
'33-0038
e DEL LAKE t.lANOR e
2 BR sep house $160
I;rg 1 BR apt. $140
POOi. Patio. Adlts, SJ6.6Tl7
FREE Util. FUrn 1 &: 2 BR
apts, blpck to beach. S85 }.o
s100. 536-3m, 536·728:z
fTpl.e, Jlkt> 11e1v crpls, drps, I · pets •.•••••..•••••••.• $195 l·larbor shoppg cente~. very 3 B!.t/l~ BA, pool IMMAC! see. • 21;~nN~;~~~ &: Newport
paUo, I~ fn txi yd, Assume RENT e A • HOME 4 BR delxe hOrse ranch .. $225 neat condition. ~9521 S2t5. 644--2432 _R_E_N_T_A_L-~-----~=-----~~
t 1, FJIA loan. Tola! mo.; $138 $95.00 & UP \ STAR •LET 776-7330 ALSO 3 BR. 2 Ba., cyts, drps., 1 BR. Lra cloffta. Pool.
IW7-S507 Eves: 64~-0427 ALL SIZES . ALL AREAS RENT e A e HOME 3 B<lnn, v.•/huge game rm. frpt, pallo. 3 Car p.rqe. Apts. Furnished Shuf fleboard . Ne ·1 m P 1',URN. OR UNFURN. v.•/pool table-, $236 mo. REALTOR 548-6966. cpt/drps, Util pd, 1884 ;Q: f J:, 1l,I AS!( FOR JODI $95. & UP Resp. studen•s OK. 546-9521. General 4000 f\"onrov\a Ave, cr.1 L:A,..l 111:,_1• 832-7800 AL~J~~oRAJ;~~~ CHARMING2bedrm,lbalh, University Park 3237 --------*WINTER RATES*
-•• Ill $105-UTIL PO. B ac he I 0 r ASK FOR JODI Newport Hghls. erpts, drps, J st F 1 BR. furn $125. Bachelor'• Apt. Avail ll/1. 832 7800 !!OW, refrig., aduJ!Ji, no 3 BR, 2 ba .............. $300 U or SllS. Adults, no pets. Stt
Laguna Beach 1705 Broker, S34-6980 • pet!. $175. 64;~2423, 642·5200 3 BR, & din. rm., 2 ba •• S325 Mgr. 2135 Elden, No. 6 CM.
l--"-'"-3--U-N..:..:ITS____ VERY CLEAN & spacious 3 $18.l-REDEC 3 BR. Nl"W 4 BR., tam. rm. & dltl. rm, S1"ngle Adults " NASSAU Palms. 2 BR. ~ Rent•ls to Share 2005 bednn ~me with large v.·/w & drps. Avail Jl/t.:i. air-cotld., Turtle Rock S3tiO apt, Furn. &. Unt Pool
Y.ant, sprinklers, b 1 t n 5 • Chlldre-n & pet ok. Broker 3 BR, 21.t ba • • • •• "· .. $295 South Bay Club i, a whole Ping.pong, BBQ.., 1 had>' i\:Qrth end of IO"'"· 2·2 Bed·
roon1s, each \\'ilh ocean view
, •decks. bu ilt.in kitchens, 1~all
•lo 1vaJJ carpeting & open
beam cetlings. !·Studio, RE.
DUCED . 0011· only $54.51)).
..AO tan
REAL ESTATE
BAClfELOR to share t...aguna. fireplace for $240 Pt'r mo. 5.'W-6980 ' new 'A'ay of lite designed lawns. Children <1k.
Bcach-frnt apt tH May 15th. Familles only. Call Ager1i · · 1 1 1 -JTI E. 22tld St. 642-3645 * K'd p d• Just or s na: e people. It's ==~~~--~~ Straighr only. $l25, Aft 7 546-4t4t I 5 Gra ISe fun living with warm, dy. FURN. Bachelor Apt. Frpl.
pm : 494-2764 * Family Special LOVE I: LAUGllTER needed namie neighbors. Jt's a Util pd, SII5/mo. 1 adult
PARTY . Hm.' $98 per mo. CHILDREN & PETS ARE to ring rhi.s 4 BR, + rum· $750,000 Clubhouse with or1Jy, E-skle 20th St .
n1en. Kit priv, 5 min lo tx;h I \VELCOME ! in this 2 level pus rm, 2 ~th h<Jme. Fenc. health club. saunas, swim· 64~.
& ','.~~!'s, Cir TV +. 4 Br. + fa.mily rm home. ed yard. Children&: pets ok. lsl \Vestern Bank Bldg. fl'llng pool, party room, bll-NOW Renting-2 Br furn, gd 968-6 .., ........ University P1trk · · },rple, 2~ car gar BEACH .-... D IJ3-0lOI N" h liards, Indoor goll driving loc, rec rm, hid pool. No
GIR L 21 lo la lo look for and I AREA. $250. ' C & S Speedy ay 'SI ts range, tennis courts, pro chlldren. $140/mo. 646-5824.
share ni1,-. house or apt. C & S Speedy RENTALS e 548-9365 DON'T DELAY! ·stwpandresidenttennlspro. BACHELOR Ap!. Furn .
1190 Clrnneyre SL 714/626-~SH RENTALS e S41-9365 Single, 1 &: 2 Bedroom Jux. drps, v,•/w crpts, pool. priv.
4!)..l.947:! 549-0316 F' E :0.1 A LE Roommate * Br1'ck r·1replace Costa Met• 3100 CALL us TODAY I Ul"Y apartments with all the balcony. $135/mo. 557~.
2• ST\'. Ne"' E·gl•"' •lyle 2 $13/mo. Californian Apt!, 3 BR., mo. lo mo .•••••• $350 modern conveniences avail· d bl " " "' 3 BR •I' ba h $300 2 BR, v.•/w cpl!, rps, ln Br. & gsl. apt, lor 3rd Br.I 11.B. Call 842-7002. TAK E YOUR CHOICE 2 • :.:,1 ts••······ able. Furnished and unfum. R/0 . f I
FOR Cl!R!STMAS STOCK. Bea ti I 3 bed
· Lease/<1ption 3 BR , ••••• $325 ished, , sp1r strcse, rp c. Ct'<lar shingle & olde brll'k; ut u -ho $195 145 E 18th 551-6682
N B ~ 2200 !NGS Sha-3 B' 2 Ba • . l h 1 .1 ........ m mes 3 BR. 2 Ba. tnhouse ••.• $340 · · · · 2 Ba., paneling, trtes, patio. ewport eaa"l • .,. , . w 1 am 1 y rooms , 2 BR 1 ba ho $2".JJ e BEAUT. Bach &: l Br.
kit. w/appl1ances, brldst. D 1 , D I' hll home. Slove-, erpts, drps, fireplaces, full y crptd, all · · use '""' · ?o.10DELS OPEN DAILY apt. $29.SO wkly 1 up.
bar. Ocean viev.•: lc>w blks. .e~ora ors • 19 fenced yard. Children&: pets bltn!I, and excellent family • d h•11 lO A.M. • 9 P.M. to beach. Only $28.950. Ong1n111 n1odrl hOU:;e, 2 br. v.·elrome, $210. residential IU'l'U. (1) :..t S775 re I . f'urn., incl util. 546-0451.
':t!ISSION REALTY 494-0131 spltt. l<'\'<'1, 1 b~, 2 car g11 r., C & S Sf)ffdy mo. and the other at $300. RENTS FROM Slli-2 BR Trailer, 1 or 2
.OCEAN \'lE\V J~ome. 2 Bl'.. Al'ail on lease 1mmed. East· RENTALS · e S41-9365 Call 5'15-8-i24 South Coast $150 to $350 adults only, no pets. Ulil in.
2 Ba. 11 /multi·uSC' room. bluff. $295, 644·0~'.">8
1
-Realtors REALTY t'luded. 642-3375. 1
Bllns. appliances, rompl. ON THE BEACH * OLE! * ~i OVI~G TO HONG Univ. Ptu·k Cenler , Irvine NEWPORT BEACH 2 ROOMS, prl\'. Bath. pr!v.
carpeted Ba!ant:·l'd po11·rr Nice 2 BR winter rental. $225/ CHARMING older Spanish KONG?! Call Anytime 833-0820 880 Irv ine Ave. entrance, Furnished S90 mo.
1; hon1e. SJJ,7j(), 10+ do11·n. mo. Near Jelly. Good beach. homr, rustic fireplace. din Lt't the Property Manage.J~~~~~~~~~: J Irvine & I bth 5-18-8906.
l023 Katl·lla. 49'J..3006 or Dlc:k Berg Renlly 962·2-121 1·m. palio, garage & v.·ork· mf'nl Division or · South Corona dei Mar 3250 •I BR duplex, aduHs. Quiet.
492-40St shop, Children & pets v.·eJ. Coast Reallors solve you r (714) 645-0550 Garage, $130. 382H1 Cotta ~M.c-=E~R~A~L~D~B~A~Y,--Corona del Mar 2150 ron1e. '185. problcms. For appoinlmen11----------1 Me-Sit St. 54~128.
2 Bedroom furnished Mobile I "°5J&."'°"l366=,,· ,-,-,,--..,.,.,,--,--
Home. $150/mo. Elderly • LARGE studio, block to
adul!s. Bayside Villqe. 213; ocean, FM, Inquire 219 15th
245-4763. St., HB.
OCEANFRONT -3 Br, 1%
Ba, mv. patio, gar.
$235/mo. Wntr. ·Family o~
ly. TI.fi..7465.
*OCEANFRONT • Winter
rentals, 2, 3 &: 4 BR's.
Adults only, * Call 613-S088
OCEANF'RONT 3 BR. Yelll'-
ly lease. * 67a....4724 *
BALBOA BAY CLUB
Furr bachelor. 548-3268
SAI!,..INN MIJTEL
Adj &,y & Beach. Deluxe
rms Ir $37.50 wk. 67:>-1841
2 BR.: % bl.k. to beach. $185
Month, thru June ls.th.
OWNER 6T;>-1642
NEWLY furn, 3 BR, 2 ba, IJ1
blk from water. Ask for
Anita, Jones Realty 673-QlO
e AT CX::EAN SlOO & $120 for
bu1ines1 men, also lower
duplex $225. 67rH>922
DEWXE 1 BR apt
Sl.25 mo. * OR 3-26Tl *
3 BR, 21,~ BA, lamily room ,
frpl e, bit-ins, pool, S250. mo.
645-20.S9 or 642-0:!00.
1 BR, $151l. pool, walk to
ocean. fre3h paint. Adults.
220 12th' St., HB
$US. MOO. 1 & 2 BR cpll,
drp1, nr beach. 409 Calif.
536-4'61 or 847-5169
2 BR furn, downtown HB, no
children. no pets, * 536-7396 *
BACHELOR Apt. Util pd. ·
NEAR OCEAN!
LINDBORG CO. 53(,.-2579
4705
THE Beach Motor Jnn has a
beautiful Inner courtyard
which leads down to !he
lnn'1 full sUe heated pool.
Continental Breakfast ls
served to ruests ln this pr.
den setting. Units range
from SlOD per mo, & up.
Daily maid service. 494-5294
1 BR N. end, ~ bl.k shop/
bch, ldry facil . AdUfts, $175
up. 494-4488, 831>-4237.
DELUXE baehl!lor a p t ,
clean, carport, !dry. Util.
fum. 497·1056 or -494-5810
Just Ji!flt'd! Attr, traditional ---------* BLUE BEACON * ca.II 54.'r8424. COZ\' 2 Br, 11i Ba, !rplr, SOUJH BAY CLUB 1 BR FURN $150/mo. incl
J BR J 8 I. CLEAN & CHAR i\flNG * 645-0111 * J BR 2 BA d forced air heal, part furn, ut'I Pool g d' ....... 1 LRG I BR G-M , ---------. a., sep, iv. rm., 2 BR. huge frplr, beam Cf!il· • . • erpts, rps, Gardener & water pd. View, 1 • ' ar, isl"""". ' ,..uen apta on 1
D•n• Point 4740
din. Tm .• t lam, rm, ing, new ept. r-.1a1ure adults, Someth1'm Spec1'al f.rplc, family rm. SZ'lD._ v.·nlk to beach. $425, ino. APARTMENTS Adults, no pell. 642-2383. Bly. Furn SJ'.IO. Unturn $00
'16 Enierald Bay ;75,000 no pE'ts. $225 n10, 6i3-7796. "& 3 BR. 2 BA Apt.~. $160. Call 67:>.1163 Sat <Jr Sun. • • • NICE lge furn 1 br apt in+, _r_nc_l_u_H~l ._&_73-6_7_4_1. __ _
· Sho11•n by app't. ·• Wells McC•rdle Rltrs · ple11:. Garag" Quiet E·side 1 Bedroom furn,
SINGLE, 'IV, healed pool, 2
blk, from bch. $35. wk. • $135.
mO. Dana Marina Inn, 34.111
Col.It Hwy., Dana Pt. Bill Grundy, Realtor 2 BR v.•/nimpus or gar S:n'.l GREAT VA LUE FOR Sl8S. 1810 °NP"1>0rt Bl~d., 0.1° 3 BDRi\f, 2 ba fll"'nhouse, live where the fun isl atta. SUI. 548-1517. $150. rponth yeuly 2202
833 Ooi·rr Dr., NA 6'1Z-4620 n10. Avail Nov 1, r rly. Sharp :I BR, stove-, crpu, :l'l!i-i729 shag crpts, drps. elec kH, Ocean front Apt. 0 NB Center of tov.•n 5-1~2086 drps, fcnced yard, Children patio, S. of hwJ. $250 yr lR. FURN Bachelor & I Br. I :-,,.--,--,-7..,-,--7 FABULOUS Occlin V i c"' & pels ok. 2 BR. DUPLEX A1·1 11/l. 67;).5!!!12. RENT fURNIJUR£ Exceptionally nice I 1 Br apt, also Bachelor apt.
pareel, lOOx lOO "'/util & Balboa. ______ 2_3GO_ I C & S Snaedy Cpts, drps, bltins 2 BR. + lam. rm. 2 Blks. to 2110 Newport Blvd CM S75-$160 mo. Evea " am
LG. Dix 1 &. 2 Bdrm. 2 Ba.
$145 to SHiO, 24681 Oxdova
Dr. OPEN. 492.-4225.
paving unck-r \1·ay. $27,500: 1--•-$ l RG FENCED YARD ~==OC-----·~-494-2250, 67~7876. RENTALS e 541-936 ' OC't'an, on Larkspur. $235 * DIRECT TO TENANT BACHELOR apt for adult . . $5,000 dn 1\•/good !erms on 2 BR. Dbl gar. Washer, FOR CHILDREN & PETS :\lo .. util . included. v.·ork'g per!!O n, nr 171b St. J Br turn. Utilllle1 paid.
RENTALS
Apls. Unfvmllhed balance. Bkr. 4!»-8100 or rlryrr. j 225/mo, Yearly. * L~AS1F. OnlJ,bCltollt'~eb1 P1k.1 :I Priv. gar. $150. Scenic Properties G?S-5'126 24-Hr. Delivery Shop'g, 195 incl util. Yearly $150.
497-1011 r1·es. Sec Sat at 1734 Mframilr Dr ur, am rn1, ns," rp c, 811 Paiilarino CM 5'19-1746 . 100% P\u'thase Option 646-7582 ~1793 G.naral JOOO -~$1500 DOWN or J-:l'l'S 593-425.5 Im mac. Ne1•:ly pa f n led . . ' NR . Beach-Charming l Br. Complete I BR Apt as
Covered patio, sf' par a I e SUPER CLEAN & s~rp, 3 yrly $111.'i, Wn1r $150. Avail Low a5 $22/mo. l er. SIZ>-pool, spac. AduJts, 2 BR, l ba. CompJ turn. Has
fagn1!iCt>nt Ocean Vlr11· ln1, Lido Isle 2351 v.-ash area. All K!KJOls & bt>drm, 2 ba1h, family & Nov.·. 309 Golde nrod . 30-Day Minimum kleaJ for Bachelor, 1993 everything, linens dishes. APARTMENT
small but Je\·et. $9,!JOO. Bkr. ---------i;hop'g. Doyle Co, Realton, :i;eparale dining rm, hlln~. 6i?,.;j748. * \\'!DE VARU.IY Chtll'th. 548-96.13. OC'eanfmt. $17:;. 6T>1562. 497·1210 or 4!H-6632 ('\'l's. 5 BR., 41; ba, v.•aterlninl 548-1168. Art 6 pm, Chris dble garast:. Eas~slde Costal'L'"A~R"c"E,_-,4-B=R.-..,3~B~A"".-,,=u1 CUSTOM FURNITURE 2 BR, 1 Ba furn, upstaln, Yrly n50, 1 BR apt, RENTAL
·•\\"AS S~l.500 now $:l!l.!l00 hon1e v.1/dock. on Lido Tl'ttgis 548-96:.9 ~1t'S8. $250 mo. Ca I I 1 I s I h , $37-RENTAL Utilities ....,id $70.00 & UP
A • · ' II ·1 It ll ~IG-llr.I e1·e · pans ul"ror. · J. bltn range, crpls. No pets. ,... * Rr.121 ~ B ' F'ani/Rn1. Nord. Sl ~iOO Mon!h H c tt e rri Ilg'(' l'll or.~. . ,) . 1111 Ille d . 0 cc up an c y. 517 \\', 19tb St., CM, 548-J.181 Sl45/mo. 673-TI78. * 304 3Jrd St. * ALL SIZES • ALL AR.EAS C1~p~···., bl tins, I; Io t · r 3 BR. 3 Ba. olf·11·ater home oneymoon Q ag 2 BR. Gar. Patio. Crpts, 646--0911. 642-1771 ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio "'°"====~~=~ ========='I FURN. OR UNflJRN.
49.">-Jl:?3. furnished, .. S·lj() month drps. sto\'e I refrig. Quirt 2 DR de d. . lrpl Y" fr $35 Wk BEAUTIFULLY FURN . Coron• del M•I' 4250 ASK FOR BONNIE
S J
Bill Grundy RHr. 6'12-4620 CllARr-.ll NG 1 BR hOme . tropical selling for adults .1· ,..._"· 1'"1 gA,dml · lc. om • 2 BR. Hid pool, adults, no 132-7800
F I · I --' ai·ai ....,e. 5 • IS on y, Cl . n. f I & v· -u $160 * 642 """"" OCEANVU D I 1800 f ----'---,.,,C..::::=-1 a n uan . rp c, p
0
1cturesque .a•KJ!ICfl~ only, 1 blk to shops. S2J:i mo. 673-6974 eve~. 1Rrm1ng ...... ean r 1ev.· ...-. -,,,,_. p x, sq rt. 3
Capistrano 1725 \\'INTER Renlats. 2 BR, 2 1ng. Garrlrner 1ncluded ,1ll'!Cl6~9~/m~o~64~6-4~4~3tl~-~-1;-~:cr1"':-d;p;:--;;n;;;;;;: apartments: linen & maid Sl2S • 2 BR l\.fobile Home. BR, 2 ba, pvt dbl gar, pvt bath, {rplc. 1-'A ht., $285, 4 BEAClf AREA $155 I: · . · 3 BR, crpts, drps, sm vard. sef'\', hid pool, all util, Adulla. no pets. pat balcofl)', imm oec, ret'1.
BR & dE'n, 31li BA, $450. C & S S~ed·y· 3 BR, 2 BA. fireplace. Near So. of ll"·y. Yr iease SngJs, sml family &. tot ok. 132 w. Wil!<Jn, CM. 548-9577 ~7. RENTAL FINDERS I ACRE r~ta1c land or horse 67~ 2~'59. 213'. -~ "°~~ ,.. shopping Center. school, $22j/mo 673-9179 VILLAGE INN ranch, nil.'e view, and olhrr .,. "' ~~....., RENTALS e SU-9365 e-l c. $225 mo. Contact I.L's · · $85 & Up. NICE 1 & 2 BR FOR Leaee-Lovely fl.Im. apt. PrH To L1ndlord1
p11reels. $48,000: $15.000 rin. I========= * Z BR $l 40 Joun:len 545-5239. 204 \Vake 3 BR, 2 Ba. ne"·ly dee. Lrg 2 LAGUNA BEACH 494-9436 Trailers. Adults, no pets. 1 Br. Bay view. $240 mo. '4S.Ol l I
11•ill relt'aSt' clear bldg. site
1
Balboa Island 2355 • }"ores! Rd ear gar, frplr, ne11· crpts &. BALBOA INN 133 E. JGth St, CM. 642--1265 Avail Nov, J, "4·8097
for 100"~ fiooncinJ:". Bkr. CLEAN 2 Bedroom home. 2 BR h · _ __, stove. S2!15/mo, 675-2672. BALBOA 675-8740 I;;:..,:=:,.::=c:::.;:::::.::::::.;::::1 -,.;-;;:ni".,..-.;;-;..,.-4JJ W, 1trll. c-. M ..
4Q· 1210 193-li06 <' e I . T se, garage, ~·•ruenrr r ..,,.,.!!!!!!"'"!!!!!!"'"!!!!!!!!!!!"'"~I SMALL clean Bachelor cot. 1 BDRM, $160 MO. ~~~~;;.:..;~:.;~1 · f-nr · ' 1· s. 1010 SO. Ba.)·front: 4 Br. 3~1 IO\•e\y y11rd .,,,. 1'll'W
0
• ots & i\·aier "-~id. <pl, 1 sm 2 BR & den, 2 BA, flf'arl y \'a· 1: QI Nev.·ly decora ttd * 644-4423 n
Cond<1minium
Im. v.·aterfron! hl;ti1e & 2 br. k MOVF. TODAY .. -l Th! k APARTMENT !age. dtr 11urking mlln . BRAND NEW dlx 2 br 1950 ° · · ' chilrl, Z75 Knox SL 642..s338 ean · e carpet~. $26.l S7j/mo. util pd. * 548+2'752. triplex apts. Priv patioll,
1 ha. i,:aragc apt. Dock. * BLUE BEACON * aft 7 pni or Sa! & sun. • n10. fRear unlll. 646-2523 RENTAL B•lboa 4300 i.hag C""'ts, gar. $!75 356 E .
l.JU"\1'i n's "TA1\Gl.E\\IOOD''
a sharp 1 li!ory, 2 brdrm .~.
S bet1rn1, ;i1'ailabl~ no11•
"lake O\'('r" lnans. Possible
lt'ase-0pnon on 2 hedrn1 nr
!ry S15t'XI d-01~-n & 01,ner \\'ill
carry 2nd TO.
Larwin Realty, Inc.
962-6988 anytime
Apartments fo f
Sale 1980
Bill Grundy Rl!r. 642-4620 * 645-0111 * --. LC E, attr11c. btlchelor near . ,. ,~s=R~1-.,-,-,-..,-,.-.,~,1~1-,.-,~,-m~i-"--*~~.~Uc~N-G,,.-A~LOW ~}~~;, v.·~Rbar. 22 1r:1~s: Huntington Beach 3400 ALL~~~£~ .&A~r!' AREAS ~~~;~!~~~~ u!il. 995 -B-ACH_E_L_O_R--,-P-,--, ,-,-,-. ="'='="=S=t.=C="=M=. ="=Z-4=905:;;,. ==I
ly only until June 1:;. S250 \\'ITT! A l!UGE FE"CED !ep. outside pool bath. Balboa Penin. nr ocean. Lge Cost• Mes• J100 nin inrl ut il. 209 Opal, Call ~•' 9G.'--02t9 HUNTINGTON H b FURN. OR UNF'URN. !QUIET &chelor Apt, wl sundec:k. Sl2S/mo. 842-8148
673-45'1-i. YARD 1 BR hom~ crpts S . a r o 11 r ASK FOR BONNIE gar, Util pd. Cioie to shop. f 5 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J
4 CHARr-.1JNG Winter renlAls,
One So. Baylronl. 2 To~ BR.
St~ to S350. Agt , 67J.12Q)
drps• Pe-ts ok Sl2S ' , 3 BR. 2 BA. i\1eu. Verde. \\'a1erlrnr , 3 BR, 2 b11. frplc 132-7800 ping.* 543-3365. 7'~'="'""'"'·=,-.,.-===--1 •
(: & 5 'spffd Fam rm. 2 frpl("!I, covered ,ir. ~t'Ck I: .dock. Lse or lse 1 --,---::==~=:--=-::--~.,.:;,...~=~'-.,,-~-* PENNINSULA POINT. * * * * *
RENTALS e Ja.9365 patio, bit-Ins. Avsil Nov l. oprion, S550. 6 4 4-4 2 21, * ONLY $115 ·~~lo:.UNNY Furnished Lr& 2 Br. 2 Ba. C&rpor1, El Puerto Mat• Apt1.
STJO/mo lsE', Call 847·7004. 846-5041 FOR TI~JS BACHELOR APT. 642--2550, Y'l!&riy, $215/mo. 1S4 4 * * * * NEAR OCEAN l ~t BR, yard, , J BR. 2 BA 'l'v.'nhse. Nr bch. 546-6836 Miramar Dr. 67:>-1358. 1 B.droom Apl"
24r11o RIO. n>lrig, rhiltlren & pel 2 ~R Freshly painted & de.. Refri /R11.n e. N KlteMn w/bl!n!I, drl.'ssinc I BR Carde $!18 ~ • Nice yard Older couple g g e-w crpt. room. CALL NO\V! · n Apt. · YEARLY • Bache Io r S130 up inCI. Utilities ok. Broker. 534-6980. prt'l'd. Call. 646-4:>50 64No2 y:.;.,s. Pool. Ava il now Cl~n. Quiet adult, Ref's. 1125/mo. 1 BR. SlG5/mo. Also furn. PooJ &. Recreation
Seal Beach
OCf-:AN t'RONT ~11.acious 2 ....,,,., C & S Spet-u: 2643 Ol'llnfie Ave. 548-8007. Incl ulil. By the 10th St. bch. atta. Quiet Environment
Fo: RESULTS )'OU can De--4 BR, 2 ba, cuiitm Collri;:c SPACIOUS 4 br ho1ne nr RENTALS • ~9365 SIOO • JNCL. utll. Small apt 673-1109. OU street pa.rklnk. No pell.
V.'ATERF"RONT-Thrt'e 1 hr Brt, 2 BA. 2 car ga_ragr. pend on, Call the Super· Park home, i\1any extras, "'-aeh I I L ti CHATEAU LA POINTE for adull ma•. N<. 1,-,h & ~-=,---~---19'" 1961 M•pl, A·-. S251J. 11·in1rr ls1•., al~ a1•Ril · 1 D ·1 pu t 1 s29· 5-lo.-037-t "" • SC IOO 5 uxory I'· " 2 Br. $250 monthly, yearly ~ '5
'units v.•/dock. SGJ.000. Prin· .vear 'round. ,2131 592-14...,, ~a e ~man. · ai Y 0 ca:oie, a mo. · · in!!; Bl1ns ete .1 yr llll' $2.;o Deluxe furn. 2 Br. apt, Pool. NewporL 642-5583 b · Costa Mesa
,elples only. Owner 6i3-2662 °" Classified 642-5678, • place DELUX ne"' 2 Br duplf':t, 1st 96i.:..i53. ' ' · · · Close 10 shoPs. $160. Adults, I '°'""''=-=~'--":....,.--~ 8818' 31!) E. Bay St. lnq. '"'~""'!'l"'!"'""!'~'i"'"'""'I B:ft 6 pm. l'\'l"s 213/ 592-~1i6. your ad & charge ii. Jlr, beaut palio, yd, encl 2 t $115. l BR. f"ur. Utils pd. Apl C. 67J-.1521 or 543-7771. 1 Like Livi~ in Your j,!~~'.'.:.------~=========~'====="====-1 i::ar, nr \\lt'slclitr 67:,..1849. BR Condo, unfurn or furn. ll. pe s. Near stores, Quiet adult. BAYFRONT l A 2 Br furn ~General 2000 Gener•I 2000 General 2000 . Bit-Ins, ivashl'r/dryer. epts. 1941 PomonA Avf', CM 1985 Pomona, Cl\1. 5'1~28 apt. Utll pd. Winter or yrly. OWN HO E • • • I I 1i;;.:;.;.:.;.;;.;._ ____ -'-.;__;_=;..;:.;.._ ___ __:;:;;.:...:.:;.;::;.;:;_ ____ ::;;:.ll BR, dE'n i\1<>n1 1 c el Io dr1>5, frple. <213) 430-5506 or HOLIDAY PLAZAj Crey Goole Apts. 6"1>6491 Wh)' pay $175 for an apt! •
.$©\\~1A-°' r-trs~
The Puzzle wilh the Bui/f./n Chuckle
'"O l!eorro"ge lenea of lh• four ,i;romb!ed words be·
low to f0<m four sJmpl1 words.
e r::~lp~UMB~lfEO Ir ,, ~ 11 I' 11 I' I' 1· ,. I
I I 1-1 I I I I 1· I I
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 9000
. ('
to\~'Tlhouse. V8':ant. 642-4280 1213l 4.31·1152. DELUXE Spat'iou~ l BR Vt'hen we ean rent You one i',-"~'~P~M~·-~..,---~.-l4 BR 1,_ bli · Frplc, ;\1nt furn apt Sl.35. 2 BR + den Newport Beech 4200 Lkfo Isle 4351 for SJ.to. 2 BR., newly dee,
3 BR, 2 ha, flreplae., pa!!I), Loe, S240/mo(L~E $160. lleat~ pool. Ample 1--------------------crpt/drp, encl palios. 1pac
dbl garage. $225. 2257 ++846-3941 •• parking. No children· no COUNTRY CLUB DELUXE &ach Apia, Furn. grnds .2Pools! Adulls nnly,
Avalon ~1715 6 --pcts. 1965 Pomona, C:'lr. LIVING St o v r, re ( r l i, II' a r , 228.l Fountain Wav E. !Har. · · Bdrm, 2 &. den. bbq, .1 3 BR. Ne"· crpt~. nt'~' paint. bl!ns. Nr. i\1arlna Hi sch!. Luxury garden 11pt1, oUer\nf a20l)..S2.10/mo. 320 Nord. bor, turn \V, on Wilsonl.
gardclll"r. $210/mo. 1988 Avail now $28.5. 9fi8..jlOO alt 5 Cotta Met• 4100 compl, privacy, beaut. Ind. 642-4097 or 535-669&.
Po1nona.. * a40.9001 sep1 I unparalleled recrea-1 =========; 2 BR. UNFURN APTS e $135 TO $145 e
Cpts, drps, bltna; Weatslde
Stephens It ~ 645-0122
A1TRACTTVE 3 'BR. 2 ba, Fountain Velley 3410 $lO WE EK & UP Uonal facilities In a oountey , _11_al_boo __ 1_1l_•-"nd'----4:'-'l-'-"S5 club atmosphett. Furn or condo. patio, balcony, pool, 1 BR. or Studios, furn w/kil. Unf. Model• open 10 am·S ~ pr, S22S. 968-2647 DELUXE Condominium 3 Daily. Wkly, ~tonthly. Util. pm. Rent8 from S145 111 $310.
3 BR, 2 BA, bltns,' incl Br, 2\.i-hath, livirJR Ir dining Linerut & ph, serv Incl, N<J OAKWOOD GARDEN
2 BR. compl rum. Bltn kit,
new cpta l drps. No chldrn,
no pets. sns yrly, 673--6945.
dshwhr. S720/mo. lmmed. area. .kitchen , all bltM. childn!n Or pets. Hid Pool. APARTMENTS
ava il. ~IJ51 or !i..17-7648. \\'asher $..dryer, doublt< gar. 2080 Newport Bll'd, a1 21JI 1700 1Slh St., NB Huntington Be•ch 4400 e Quiet Adult Living
l==========I Close 10 ~hop'g lr: schls. S23l •• * &42-2611 * 642-11170
Newport Beech 3200 !!ct &: las! n1o. 968-1530. t B flml'rieard • MICharge
2 BR. Shag cpt1, bltns, beau!, ---------1 Jnd&epd, $170 mo incJ all
Acapu!C'l:I Apls, anractlve,
Cl.lf.F1-IAVEN. 3 Bdnn~. S•nta Ana Htighfs 3630 Pool, Ulll Pllid. G11rden
yearly, • .$325 Including l!vlng. Adull ~. no pets.
gar1:h;ner 4 BR, lrplc, crpis, drps. Ill? I BR • S145 &: Sl50
3 BDRi.\IS .• \'i<'~· homt. trnced ynl, nr ichJs. lfl'XI \\'al11C'@ A\'t, C.~f.
trvinc Te rra ce, $550 rhlldren ok. mo mn .1,,; 2: BR. FURN. $Ill l~Sludhinir aard•n~r Cal 5'3-9930 ews. Pool, bltnt, epts, dl'J)tl, no
f! 11·e others • I us chlld~n. no pets. m.J E.
LAguna Buch. .J705 17th Pl., CM. ~ Salisbury
R••llv
NEW ddwc 2 BR duplex,
PRIDf: ol~~ 1"3hlp. 3 Br, encl star. pallo, b I 1 n s,
211 bl uni , Occ11n viev.•., \\·es1cnff area. $195.
315 ~IAKINE AVE. 673--6!KIO N<'llr C\' lhlrur:. $325/n10. 61~18111.
BALBOA 151..AND .±_!14-6409 r 4!'M-j16i. -$.ll w-~.-.-,-... -.. -•. ~,.-11~133-.
2 BR tum, S-100 mo 2 & den or 3 BR, 2 BA Se1Lllrk ~lolt'I 2301 Npt
\\1ATF.RF'ROl\'T • E:'>ff;R AT.D BJ\\" * I l\tald se_r, llnt:ns, TV.' t~\e.
Pe1r 8-rrrtt Rlt,y 642~3;).1 SJon mo. 494.g.cu Rlvd a.t 81&-?J~
• I
AVAILABLE NOWI
()c(oantront 2 BR . $215 1\lo.
P1trtl1JI)' ru rn. 4 BR.. 2 bf..
Chnnnclfronl, SJ'i5 1\lo.
3 BR. 2\t ba, Bltn1, dbl.
Cllllrpot'1 , $m t.to,
Cell: 673-3663 642-W Eves.
associated
8110~ FR S. • g E 11. L TOR S
l 01S W Bolboo •"l 166)
* 1 BR • $1JS/mo. ulll, Adults on1y, no P"b. '
f'umiahed-0verlookina: bf-aut. 241 Avocado St. 646-0979
garden p.11110 & hid PoOI. NEW TOWNHOUSE
AduJts. 1035 12th SI. {acrou 2 BR, 11" Ba, A 2 BR. Crpta.
trom Lake Pa.rkl . 11&-4900 df"P', self cleanlnr cu qv.
NEW J Br. al Sch! QUJET en, enel pr, Patiot. 54MIOO
PSO. bal of mo FRE6. Look 337 W, Wthon.
!,.,,r:!. ,.~ i.~'. HARIOlt GltHNS
173-!734, 5J&.1319. GA!Uml A Sl'UDIO APl'S
OCEANrn.vr vn Sttndk. Bach. l, 2, 3 UR'•. trom mo.
Nt,.•er 1p1e. dlJc 2 Br. 2'1UO Pebn1CH1 Wt¥, QM.
Elegant rum.. bltna. patio, 546-0310
lndry. Nr 1hop1 A pier. $193. LRGt ~B"'R.,....,A-v1~ll.-N"o_v_8:-.~Lrt
• LOW WEtKLY R.\TES • Adulls. Infant OK. 5.]6..2131. 2 BR. Avall Nov lS. Carporl
Kllehen, iv·, ma.Id str'\'kt. 2-8' '\S 111 beach I BR. It pool.. From S135. Mic our
BA YCUFF MOTEL
tltatcd Pool. I Adull... S150/mo. d!IOOllnt plJ!n. Ll46 PlaO!n-
&46-3263 lJ&.-0166 • R46-02t6 llA, Set Mer 1pt ff. ___ ....... ..:.... __ _
•
-
------------------------------~------.... -.... --~-..,.--,.,..~-...,~~--.... " .. ' ~,,.~,,,._......,._,..,..,_.......,.. __ ,..... ___ ...... _______ ,,_ . .,,., __ ·-· ····-· ··-.-~·· ..
•
fridQ, Octobu 30, 1970
RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS * * *
OAILY PILOT
RE LE TA
. Unluml"'""' Apia, Unlu.....,,... Apls. Unfvml"'4d Apls. Unluml...... -Aplo. Unluml•o.i Apts. Unfuml"'4d • * lrvlne 52311rvlno, 5231 Hunll!!Jlan INch S400Huntlntl0n hoch 5400 HW1tlftl1an lleoch 5400 S•nl• An• 5620
... ~
~·' -· . .. . J;. " "'-'1 f~ . "' -' -, ..J.: .. . .. •'· f.: ' ' ·'t ·,~Park West Ap artment s
'""·t I(,
NOW LEASING! Park-like fiving for fomi·
lies with children ond odults. I, 2 ond 3 bod·
rooms, furnished or unfurnished. Shoq car~
pets, drapes, air conditioned, with self~
cleaning ovens. Complete $400,000 recrea-
tion club in three acre perk. Pools, tenni s,
volleyboll, heolth club, teen focilities end e
pro· school! Next to shopping end golf
course, near U.C.I. and Newport Beach.
From $150 per mo. At Son Diogo Fwy. end
Culver Drive in Irvine. Phone 833-3733.
Ownod ind m•nogod by Tho lrvl .. Compony
fiunlinglo1i
Custom Garden Apartments
I, 2 I, 3 BEDROOM -
FAMILY UNIT NOW OPEN
CUSTOM FEATURES:
Cantrel Recr•1fion Ar••-:-S.,..immin9 Poo11
Wading Pools & S1un1s-Pvt G•rden Pities
Color Coordineted Orepa5 & C1rp•ting-
Soundproof Wills & Floorinq-Blt-in Ra ng e
& Ovan-Oishw1 sha,._Ceramic Tila Ba ths
Opan Beem & V1ulted Ceilings-1/J Mile
To The B11ch,
21551 BROOKHURST STREET
15. of Hemilton) HUNTINGTON BEACH
PHONE: 962-4458
ON BEACH!
GI 2 DR unt. From $225
0 2 BR Furn. From $285
C. rpets-Orape§-dlsh~·asher
\ heated pool-suuna-tenn i$
11!(: room«&:11,n, vic""1i
P:'~ ample: parkill&".
Security guards.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
7U OCEAN AVE., H.B.
(7111) 536-1"87
Ofc, open 10 em-6 pn1 Do.U,y
Managed by
WILLIAM \\'ALTERS CO.
Huntington Granada
ALL NEW
PARK PLAZA
Separate. Family Stclion
1 BR. S137 e 2 BR $167
3824. Soutl'I ·flower St, SA
2 blka E, Briltol & M•c-
ArU1ur. nr S, Coe.st Plaza
(714) 545-3114
Tustin 5640
DOWNING APTS
OORNElt. o 'IWA~lS &
ALLIANCE. 11~. 2 Bii.
2 BA.1200 sq. tt, soundproof,
F /A heat, pvt P.,'tlio. AdullJ.
Mgr -16507 All iance
or phone Owner 646-5501
L•guna Beach 5705
"" Whoddyo W•nt? Wh•ddy• Got?
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Spec:i•I Re ..
S Lfn11 -5 times -5 buck•
IULIS -AD Mun IMCl.UD B 1-Wfllt ,... ......... tr.... ._.,.., ,. • ..,, ... tl'Mt. .._Y()UA ~ IM/tr 1..-rttt. ..._, 11.ftft tll .. Vt rtitlllf. .._NOTIUlrtO l'Oll U.LI -TllAOBI OHL YI
To Place Your Trader's-Paradise Ad
MODERN garden tO\vnhnuse, PHONE 642-5671
l BR . From $135 N. end, Z.story 2 BR 1n DA.
Costa Mesa 5100 East Bluff 2 BR, 2 BA. From $155 patio, sundeck, 1 blk sho~ O\VNER. Granada lfUla •;
1.;..;.;;.;.'-'==---''--' 5242 Sep FAMILY SECTION for ping/beach. Adul!s. Re!s. slY' view home, like new,
2 br hse, Jge lot, Riverside
area Ior small l br hse, H.B.
or C.,..t. sultable for retired
couple.
*LG 2 Br, bltns, refrig, children under 5. ""'=·=$250~·~m~o"'.~4""9982 __ ~-$51,750 val, 4 Br, 3 Ba. tam.
patio, gas pd, free laundry, NEWPORT BEACH Just South or \Varner SPECTACULAR oceanlront rm. F'or Duplex 01· Hmt.> NB
nu cpts. 2'18 E. 16th St, Villa Gra nade Apts. on Golden \Vest. H.B. 2 BR, 2 BA, putting green, or Cdt-1. 644-4571, 646-04:39.
548-9469 or 642-0265. Ad.Its , Furnished. i-~ive bcd~ms & <714> 8474 IOSS pool, adults no pets. $350. Santa Barb. 12 unil s turn'd
962-1940 er 714/653-1420
FOR Lao-5300 sq ft prime
ware h • e 11>ace-.ll/put.
Irvine Ind, ~tr. Bulla.rd
546-80>'1.
2800 IQ. ft. new bldg. wfta
ovt'rhtad door J~ mo. 2!liiO
Grace, 0.f. ~Q.0281
NEW Bldg, 1368 to 2300 ft.
Nr. Baker & F'atrvie..,., l )T
lea1e. Sullivan. MG--4429.
Lots '100
VIEW LOT ·
$2,950 FULL PRICE
Owner Must Sen
Lot 24, Block 45
Arch Bo1ch H•ltht1
Lagun• Be•ch
l'!!!!'!l!~!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!!!!'!l!~~!"!~!"!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!"!~lri"i;f."°~"'ij·;-o;~;a;;;a,,.:-;;;;c[ den, with balconies above ,•· CASA deJ SOL 499-2354 or 499-2851. Isl Vista for clear-rl't't' +tome I'.--2 BR, 11~ ba studio apt. encl, PaUO'belo\v,~era-ctous living DELUXE 2 BR, 2 BA, vie"'• 10 $100.000 Cnpis, San Clem,
Cost• Me1i1 5100 Costa Met• 5100 gar., trplc, pvt pat io , & quiet surroundings for Charm' al ts elcc eye garage, !dry. LH11. Ne\\'P1, Cd~1.
Tum. fl.2 1ot $14,950, Lok• Write 18140 W. Avo.
Matthe\\'S view (2 Jot11) T acr
$20,000. Klamath Falls 2~ D, lanchaster 93534
aer, Sl.500. Exchange all or ~NJOY The winier iil Pall'n
pt for Orng Co. Agt 640-325-i Springs-WU! aell my lot in
'62 Chev Van, rcblt eng .. Desert Park E1late1.
rew 1ires, panelled, crptd, Aliume valuation $3560.
toilet, relrig, bed. Value ~lake oller. * 54S..212S.
$1250. Exchange for land. El\1ER.ALD Ba,y, ocean view
!--------"'-'~ parkng !or camper or bo.:1t. family with clilldren. NC'ar the'"i!; c~su · new ap 497-1056 or 49.J-5810 213-222-4309 / 71'1-673-~19
LRG. 2 BR * $155 DUPLEX 2 BR. CLEAN & Children OK, no pe-ts. 634 Corona dcl Mar High School. at ac ·
W/w crpts, drps, disposal, QUIET! New w/w carptiDg Hamilton, or call 548-938() Fireplace wet bAr & built-; BR, From S152 *DELUXE 2 BR. Ocean llave $10,000 equity in
prv patio, adults, no pets. thruout. Bii-in own & LRG 2 & 3 Br. Crpts, drps, in k.i1c~~ ap~iances. \Vilt Zllif;t :~rh~~t S~~ HB :w :~:·Jr:~~~~~~ ~~;~;, ~r'l.'.0~~ °'::~~~= ~~le St. 54H030 or ~· &gubagarde dlspo&al.. encl patio, kids welcome, CC·naider unfurrusbcd or furn. (714) 962-6653' _l='"'='m='=·='=......,,==·=== as dO\Vll pay1nent on furn. · ater g ener pcl. 1998 Apt l Maple Ave. ilure purchase. ___.. -
NEW 2 BDRM. Beam cell· M~lure couple pret. No 642-6344 835 AMIGOS WAY 644-2991 * HE=R=1T=A~G~E~A~P~T=S~ Rent•ll Wanted 5990 house or condo. 673-0802
ings, wood paneling. AU rec children or pets. $150 mo Cold"'ell Banker & Co. AVAILABLE NOW 3( Ft. Cabin Cruiser: tip top
features. $165. Adults. no plus security deposit. Drive NEW DELUXE 1 BR ~fanaglng ~gent 833-D700 17401 Keelson Lil, H.B. SEMI-Retired En.glish cou-cond.; twin sere"·; loaded
pets. Call oow 616-0073. by 753 Scott Pl, then call Range, dlsh"1ihr, shag erpts, Lrg Attmc 2 Br $139-$159 pie with 2 very \\'ell behav-v"lth l'Xlrn!!. FOR house,
• 387 w Bay s-1 e 5'18-3036 aft 5 for app'l lo drps, garg, $150 & up. . p p •• d · h n1 TD · · "'°"' see. 540-1973 or 54>2321 e NEW DELUXE e Kid!!_ ok. AU extras. ool. vt ni ogs wis to rent or u IS Ol" .. 1.
1 BR. unf. $150/mo. Pool. 3 BR 2 BA Apt tor lr.lse patio aren. Rec bldg. lease unfurn 2 Bcdrm house 0\VNER 6Th-6259
Elee & wtr pd. Adlta, no e MARTIN19UE e * TOWNHOUSE * Incl 'spac master suite d~ 847-8l35 or 847-7-146 or cottage In So. Orange COSTA rv1ESA c.1 COR
pets. MESA 1'1ANOR. 241 Park-Like Surroundings 2 B~. ~ulBA, $~~ts,J!rp~, nn & db( g~,...aulo 1door NEW 1 Br at Beh! QU[ET ~~~~a. m::· $l!:gi.i..= !l0xll7-2 bldgs val SG.~.CXX>.
Wilson A\o'e, CM. 543-7405 DELU>..'E 1-2 & 3 BR API'S. :-~oody. Ln lJ548_17~ · opener avail. Pool k Rec. SlUI, bal
0
of mo FREE. Look very clean &. qu iet; Eq $42,000. Income W5 mo, * Lg 2 Br. WI pat lo. Also FURN. BACHELOR c · area, & you U rent!! Pv I references avail, .f96-lll3 or For hi desert, Cal or out-ot-
Crpt.s/dA""df•-stoN'° "'pfrig, Prv patios * Hid Pools FAJ0~VIEWt .•
2
T0a!be2rtL.~l~..:e e FROM $265 e 6d~~:tJo~13~A 14th. 642-3875, ;tate. O\VNER 6-16-8558
gar. ...,, o els Nr shop'g • Adults only pa 0 ap -r, """• n-SSS Amigos Way, NB · ·, · '6~ Corvair, '69 n1tr. I'f)bit
646-2768. 1777 Santa Ana Ave CM dividual garage. $l 7 o. Managl'd by SPACIOUS NE\V 2 br, 2 ba, fR1EE ll'BM;--xlnt-hody1....$.400Jal-
2 BR. l~ BA, sharp, crpts, Mgr. Apt ll3 • ~2 968-6726 or 546-6399. Wil.LlAM WALTERS CO. frplc, lge closets. shag Nickle amusement machine,
drps. approx 1200 &q ft 3 BR, 2 ba, modem, cpts, crpts, drps, bltns". Elee con-RENTALS SERVICE orig cost $80 ea, Trade for
Avail now. $160 m 0·1, ,_ DUPLEX 2 Br. y;alk ln drps & bltns, $Ii;j mo, nr Coron• del Mar 5250 I.rolled gar. Nr beach. $1i5. TO P/U or ! ? 77·1·1698 aft 5.
545-1879 closets, w/w crpts, drps, everything, no pets . 646--0841 or S.18--0131 OWNERS &
stove, d!shmasler, priv e.n-540-4165. MANAGERS Lnguna Niguel Golf Cours<' 3 BR, 2 8.A, walk in c!OSl'tS,
w/w crpts, drps. Adults.
$165/mo. ~f's. 540--0134,
·MI &6922 er 548-9457.
trance-Adults only;--no pet..-l'T~N=r=CE=-~=-~~-CALL 675-3000 3 Br,· 1 ~1 ba townhouse lot, St>cluded cun)IOn vu of Sl50 mo. ht & last + see.,.. 1 BJ!l .. tf-n·f-urn-.. FOR RENTALS w/frplc, waslw-r/dryer, Call 548-9365
harg • ,_ ,,.,,. .,.,.,, FlrePlace. Util incl. 2 Bdrm. Apts. vlith g•rog('S, ell'C range, ove.n & re_ frig. ==~"""'-'"-'..:."'--~ 6 fairways, lake & clbhse. c e reu . ..._eves •Cati "'"l6'<• 1.-tATIJRE Reliable coople, Thi for con1m. TD's, mllplx only. .no-Avail. Nov. 1st. From $185 $lTa mo. Phone 2ll1645-991D no child or pet will IS<' un-if' Hbr area. Q\\'her 645-1021 * DELUXE 1 &: 2 BR.
Carden Apta. IDt-ins, priv.
paUo, heated pool, frplc.
Adults $145 mo. ~63
* STUDIO APT, e 2 BEDROOM
DELUXE 2 BR. 1% ba, cpts, to $2'l5 per month. RE D ECO.RAT E D 2 br tum. 2 or 3 BR l 1tory home * drps, studio apt. Adults:, hld duplex, crpts, drps, stove, OI' apt w/2 BA. d('n or D.R. Have vacant & Improved
pool, $180. 54.S..9341. ear. No pets, Refs req'd, 2 car encl. gar. Older home ~n incoml" WANT: Rl lot -
e 2 BATH e ADULTS ONLY 2 BR. 1613 Sanfa Ana Ave.
$150/mo. Crpts, drps, s1o\'e/ DELUXE 2 Br, 1% Ba e HEATED POOL
Studio. Bltns, new cplJ. 1024 Mission Apt D, C~f ref. 543-8512 or 64&679.1.
$160. No -pets. 1 c:hild ok. 540-9608 540-l559 $165 _ 2 BR, lge Jiv rm, lge 1~546--04--51~. -------===-"'' ==·~-=-~tSuMeck. cpts, d~. bltns, r.1ARRJEDS -Children $5 MODERN 2 BEDROOM disp. Adults. 54&-.7234.
mu.\\ ,\ llLU'll
Ill: \I.I')' 1:\1 '.
._fs~ 1•·9 •6'S·l0l'O.
2407 E. Coast HY!'Y .. Cdr-1
5-10-4925,eves. OK. So. CM or NB. Loca.J or hO•ne, co'nstal area, New-
e Sl.30 • 2 BR, crpts, drps, rer. 548--8355 pol'! Beach lhru Dana Point.
bl~, dshMhr, garage. Aft "yo"UN","G,,,_. "1-es,--,-,..,..-,,-,-ki'°.,.-00-=u-=67""19_,.~·~~....,---.,...,-
4 pm. 847-3727 ple v.'8.nl yrly apt. unfurn, on Tn1 <I br, 3 ba. fain rm, Ir\.
1 & 2 BR New apts. Frplc'i, Newport Penin. or in Cd.\J level homr, La Paz sec,
Near Ocean! Palio. Adults. for $150 mo. 64t'.HiT34 eve!!. f.1ission Vi<'Jo for similar or
oU. Nassau Palms -2 BR. Patio, shag carpets, drapes, 2 BR U · bit RID -
Card Pool 11~1160 GE kitchl'n, enc l osed .· psta.i~, n • ~ LINDBORG CO. 536-2579 e LANDLORDS e sm home In C~1. E·slde, or
FREE RENTAL SERVlCE ~lesa Verde. 837.8920 ens, · ~ · re,.,... No hildren or t 177 E. 22nd St. 642-3645 garage. Laundry. Color "'6· ~-pe s. 'Q.
antennas. Near bus. $148. Sl40. !168-14:>;J ,
1 BR, near beach. crp!Ji,
drps, pool. adults, no pets. Broker. 534-6982 1111.ve 8~ Ac., com., ma1n
~LEAN l br apt. for l Tra.dewinds Rlty IH?-35ll.
worldng or college girl only. AdultJ. l.ZJ E. 20th ON TEN ACRF.S Rooms for Rent 5995
950-D\V.17thSt.,CM. VILLA MESA APTS. Newport Beach 5200 11: 2 BR. Furn I: Untum2~!~y ~1~~.d~·;::,vejl----------
$125. Mature adults. 2 BR, 2 BR, Priv ·pa.tio Hid pool. W llff R. =:,1;~ -~i:n~~ child ok. $125. 962--3886. ROOl\f tor employed man
bltlns, c11>ts, drps. Close to 2 car encl'd pi., Children . !stc tVeT'• 1 BR APT 3 blks tro near Douglas plant, J1un-Ahops, no pets. 540-3100. welcom~. bO pets please! 2" 1JR. Unfum. Bltns;-c11>t5,-900 Sea I...aDI! CdM 6ft.2b1J ' m ungt.on Bch. s l 4 / w.k,
$165 mo, 719 W. Wilson. drps. Htd Pool. (MacArthur~-Colst Hwy) 84~~i $135. or 536-1710 892-1293 * LRG 2 BR, pvt patio, 646-l25L 1800 Westclif! Dr, NB l~~~~-=_,..,~::::c:..:~1;;;,;,.--";;=-:::--=::;-;:::-
thorolare Apple Val.; 20 fl .
BahiA Mor pwr. crusr. \Vant
lge, 2 Br. or sin. 3 Br. hse.
pyramid Exchangol'l!
i;r.;.r.ooo.
w/w crpts, drps, bltns, gar. -:-;-NE'wf&:-fiiiiuihWil-:--::*;..,..;642-~~5388~~·;....,.... f CORONA DEL MAR e LGE 2 br apt.Crpts, drps, WELL Fum. rm, pri. ba. $135/mo. 548-1867. * * NEW 2 & 3 BR. Shag NE\V 3 Br. 3 Ba. lower du -bltns. Avail Nov 1. Kitchen priv., sep retr. 13,~LG~=Br-.-2~,,.,~-,,.-w-<_p_t._, crpts, dwhhr. gar. Only 3 * BAYFRONT * plex. Frplc .. washer/dryer, 962..SS78 Close in. MeFi. No smokers. *
Whal do you hove to trade!
List It herP -In Orange
County's largest read !rad·
Ing post -and make a deal,
* *
_536-_1!_3_1 _____ ~· 1 lot ln pvt commun1ty. AP,
~VANT: 4 unltJ (or less). Or. prox T:>Xl.12 for sal~ or
ar.gc County. J1av~ Costa trade. $18,500. Pvt Pf1,
Mesa home, vaI, $30.000, or 1 ~•~1&-~1_535~·~~~-~-~•
T.D."s. Realtor l 1\11 C.l\'1. $21,000. Comm'Ll
546.1698 494-5488 lot. JOO' tmtg Beach m . .:\ ~11.:.AV~E~lg~,-.-. 7be_•_u_t._<_u-,t~,-m· I Stanton, $38,000. 646-003l ,
tiome, N'pt. Beach. \Vant Vlnco JUiy.
improved in\'eslment prop..
ertY. Equity $40,000. Pyra-
n1ld Exchangot'I 675-8800.
44· HOUSEBOAT. Xlnt. Live
aboll11!:. slip avail \Vill Ink~
car sn1aller boat in tradt!
tor equity.
• 548-2434 •
Ranch11 6150 .
DELUX: l\fin-rancb ,
Riverside, 1~ Ac., lge
!Kime, pool, barn, stalls,
$47:500.-685==6482
Acreqie 6200
2~2 acre rancho nr Corona. JIEMET 80 AC M·l ZONE
Underground ut\I. Gr ea I S.E. Area • Moblle Home ;
\'iew! $10.000 equity, Trade Park • SUbdlv. Gun C1ub-
for income, TDs or ?' nenr Hwy & Stores. $2500
Owner/Broker 547-6469 Acre. Tenns {)p<!n. f'.
l.o\'ely high desert ho!Tl('. 6 •lousholder, 26555 Alarsball,
acres $30,CXX> vaJue. Ex-tlemt't, Calif.
chanie lor your property =~=n~•~·-977-=-·2260~--,,---I
Ne\\'J)Ort, Lnguna areA. l~i ACRES or 3 lob. Ocean
<194-4746 or 499-1331 view. Se\\'er, water meter,
==----~-:-""=:::::I nr schools. Lo price. Mov-COIN operated & cleaning Ing, will sacrifice. Phone
agency in new shopping \Vkdys art 6 &: all wknd
center. \VIII trade equity for 714/12!H66t. ·Owner. 3931
home. real estate or 7?? p k ~ c " '"' ar ...... , a .. s . 5'13-4102; 962-9125. 10 Ac. &l, Calif. $10 dn, $10 Commereial 4 lsd units Slau-mo. S9!15 F/P. L. ShewfeU,
son !Inglewood) $55,000 326 w. 3rd St, LA
clear. Ta.kl" Orange Co. 213:623-5101 .
prop, or TD1. Roy J, Arni-40""A.,.C~."'Zo~,,.~,~,"ro~b~il,..e~H"'o_mo_s.1
son, Rltr. 494-7200. Paved frontage, Next to $50
lloml', Mesa Woods C.M. 10 1.lillion development. SACI
m~·1 old SS.00'.J e<t FHA for $1900/per acre.
$2(000 loon at 71Ai%. Trade TERMS: 714: 682-llaf
for Pasadena area home, Jot 10 AC., orange1; 8 ml. So. of
or T.D.'11. 557-7653, Riverside. 6 Yr. old trees in
* * * xlnt cond. $35,tXXJ. Si.lb.
Tnns. 54&-.3263
drps, no pets, chldrn ok. Av! neighbors in )Ullr Bldg. Furnished & unfurnish-complete blt-imi. EnclOOl'd 2 BR $l3S 6\16--0439.
Nov. l $165, Mfr724S aft s. Child ok. Nr. S. Coast ecf starting $295 palio k garage, Beautifully Near 'school ' &f6.2547 I Am a Japa.nelt' student I ~~!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!•!'l~~!'~"-!""!!!!!!11!
Plaza. ' 642 2202 • landscaped. \"ear Jease all~=~~~·-~---doing housework Instead of l ~ REAL ESTATE 3 BR, 21Ai BA, sharp, crpts, 540-1973 or 5-15-2321 • $300permo Contact 2 BR. Crp1s, drps, range. paying -rent <2131 7l4-635l REAL ESrATE
GOV'T Land, $5 acre. Write:
Land Package, ll85 No. A1'"
rowhead Ave , .S an
Bernardino, Ca. ! drps, fncd. Avail now. $UG -.-NOW RENTING e 2 B~. Unlurn, Q-J>ts, drps, . Closed gar, Chlldr.en_ &,_. ·,,.:,,P..cM~·--~---l-'G_1'-n_1_r•_I ____ ~ l·-"G;.:•;:;n::;or:.;a;;;I ____ _
Mesa Verde Area. NEW Du-Seaclill Manor Apts 1525 • • . ROOM " bath for employed Income Property 6000 ce en • mo. MS--4879 patio, pool, bltns. $160. , , '75..&050 o small pet ok. $140, 842-8365. ~ Offl R 1 I 6070
If~ Ji:~~~: ~~~i plexes, ~ & 3 BR, bltns, encl PlacenUa. 548-2682 ' ask -RW'""M A.,& Fountain Valley 5410 lady or student. Kitchen * DELUXE 1-room office.
shap'g. $145. 962-1545 gar, pat1os, wshr I d3ryer about our discount plan. DELUXE 2 B be -• II priv. H.B .. ~ alt 8 pm • ASSU?tlE 7% LOAN • Adjacent to Airporter Inn &
Out of St1t• Prop. 6208
1 10 Level ac So. Utah. $2S DN·
$25 1.Io-$2500 Full Price.
Owoer: 847-9982 hookup. AJso lrg 2 & BR • r, am.:u ce • ALL NE\V LRG·AIRY room, near 2 BR H O'J A· t **SPACIOUS 2 BR, 2 Ba. in 4-plexcs. 546-1034 LARGE delxe 2 BR, 2 BA, lngs.' frplc, bilns. .No VALLEY PARK "-h' t• M F t Costa. ~esa: ouse Orange . ty. I rpor , · ._.,,~°""':=-=-;;-,-,,.,.-= 1 _.. •-• bltns D/IV ~c · poo · rs. en on. + < 41 I BR apts Room 2 ea-drape• mus'• air· patlO!!, crpts, drps, bltns. ~; ~ ,,...,, ·,, • • • child/pets. 001 carnation. 642-9933 or 673-2ll0 · • "" ' ... ,
S150. 417-<: Ford Rd, C.M. N!i~t!.:~. l~rp~~ ~g~ bl~~ ~~=T. ~~i~ infant $210 F;ix:;~~i~ns on~!th pre-•SB per \\·rek-up w/kit· I =~=tH="=Os9=156=· =·ooo=.=G=""'='=16=,500=., 1 -~,"",.1oc'i'iet'i'·.,1_0125cR'iM>Aool~'c-"-44 Mountain & Desert 6210
3 Bdrm, 2 Bath SZ?O/mo. w/ patio. \Vtr pd. Gardnt. 00 y ha 3 t . d? F * ~ROUOO APTS • 2 BR 2 & 3 BR and 2 BR Studio chens. $30 J)l'r ~'N!k·UP1· DESK SPACE 5 ACRES -$3500, Te!Tific'
l22-A 4Sth St, NB or 636-4120. s75 e°: llvevein be"a~t s~iv~ Studto, unfurn, all elect • $160 to $Z15 Apts. rilOTEL. ~8-9755. Business Rent•I 6060 buy. Also, view lots, all ulil.[
• Agent * 673-7420 • 26U-E Santa Ana Ave. $15.i • • dshwhr. dbl carport & rg 1-, Soutt· Eu<l'•d FV ='='~'-'-"""'-~-·I 222 ~. o rest A venuo ~-Writ ft~ •-=~,,.....,.,.,:-c-oc--BR 2 BA frplc 2 car gor Pool 1100 • 673-3378 •klV NICE Room, priv. home. ,. '""" maps. e: nuu.:~•5• I 11 BR apt, carpels, drapes, 667-K Victoria St $l55 · ' ' · · up. * (Just South of \V~erJ kt! h · ·1 + N ho • Box 431, Yucca Valley or · bay & beach apt. 673-9352. 1 1 11 c .. pr1v1 • ears Pg Laguna Be ach '--al <•tt <n<l 557 ,169 · I bit-Ins, garage. Close in. Sll5-Sl55 LRG 2 Br, 1 Ba. b tns, u Y (7141 54G-478S & transp, CM. 549-1061 a,.,; -..
$125/mo. 548-3209. 2 Br. unfurn.' Orps, crpts, YEARLY -3 BR. 2 Ba'. y,:/,w crpt'd, encl porch, TIE'arl========= ~=~'-=-'-~~==' IFOR LEASE Gt-9466
LG'. • 2 Br Garden Apt. Pallo. s!ove, re.rrlg, ALSO 1 Br. cpbtk'" tdrps, bltn!i, Nr'-00· i beach. s225 unfurn. $l25 ~-nta Ana 5620 FU Rf N ·-~I m~t ••• r~, 1-BEAUTIFUL offices, air, , _R-".'-E.;.._W_•.;.nt_od ___ 6_2_4Cl
newly dee, central ht, gu, avail Nov 3rd. Ask about o ocean. -o pe1s. ''".'"'"~·~675~~~~-;:::::;;:-c::o-·!,-;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:; Preer ,_..,.ege su ent. 11 carpets. paneled. Factng 1-
bltns. Adlts $140. 543-6956. our di1COUnt plan. 741-\V. SZ1S/mo. G42-!J.lS5 4 Br, 2~~ ba Studio apr. ~S~t·7"=·..,"~· .,. .. ,..,_.,_,._ . .,..,-.,..,--* BARBER Beach Blvd. Call 842-2525 or BALBOA Ji. \\'afl(ed from
18th St. 642-1158. , 2 BR, crpl'd, drp'd, dshwhr, Clcam, 714 G 01 d c n r od . VILLA MARSEILLES ~fALE-Entire use of hou&e, ,..,11 owner (2l3J EX 4-00lS owner home&. income, must
1 BR. Apt. Furn or Unfllrn. bt-· f I D B h BRAND NEW C t M $15 kl SHOP * .... ~ xlnt cond. 213: 247-2121 * $170 * u .... , rp' gar. n rac . $375/ mo. yr lse, 540-7573, os a esa. wee y, <:Ollect. ~1~1. ~~n. 820 3 BR, l~ BA, patio, bll-lns, !.~l~s642-3978 aft 5 pm & ,_.i_t~57.008-8658=,...,,·=-===·I SPACIOUS can 645-1982 DESK SPACE BUSINESS •nd * 2 BR, I~ BA SfUDJO crpU, drps. Ask about our ~.,~OO~ERN=· ~.~-~--* IMJ\IAC. 3 BR DUPLEX 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. • SLEEPING room, n!Sl AIRPORTER· 305 N El C • R I FINANCIAL discount plan. 880 Center Sr. " Bd. 2 Ba. patio. 2'2 BA. convenien! Joe. Adult Living room facWtle1. Older adult. o. em1no e•
XI.NT OOND! Crpts, drps. 642-8.140 garage. No pets. Buill-ins 644$199 Furn. & Unfurn. 64&-8464 INN HOTEL Son Clemente Business
Pool! si 45imo. S46--049S. 1 & 2 BR unf. Sl::.O & Sl70 util ~~25 4217 Dana Rd. I ~~~--~-~~ Dishwasher_ color coordlnat. ========= 492-4.fZ> Opportunltl11
NEWLY dee 2 br, upslairs. incl, Children ok. 3 0 7 . • LGE 3 br. 2 ba duplex. ed appliances • plush shag Misc. Rent•ls 5999 CALL FOR 188 E 17th SI, Of .. AdJacenl 1----------I
Cl'pll, drps, dbl gar. Adults, A\IOCado Apt 9. 645--0984 * G 0 L D MEDALLION-2 Bltns, dshw shr, new crpls, carpet -chOlce of 2 color to Sc<:. PaciCic Nal'I Bank. 2 ABLE PERSON
$165.1814 Viola Pl, 673-7909. 8 2 Ba CID ht 1 drps, fTplc, encl sundeck & h 2 •• h t ll APPOINTMENT 1 .. ~ ,, full u·rnel 1.;c:;::o..:;:;c:..;.:::;:.:.;::...:;::,.::::;:...==========-r, , , tns, enc garage. 644-8302. 1c emes -.... 1 s • •a SINGLE car ~ge w/eltt· * l3l-2no * room office ava.11. lncls all ,_., ljpN~.ojiw~por-jitjiBjiejiejicjihiiiijj5ji2jj00iiii~N~ojiw~poiiiirtiiiilloiiiiiociihiiiiiiii52jj00jjl;~f;~I,~·23~~1:~~5'.°'. jj*;;[Ji54ii8ru-... 3o1ii0;,;:8' NOW $16j/rno. lse. Lg upper :i.:'t~~ ~ii~~~~ bieity, ~~ ~~13~.B. STORE 23X40 for t 1e • ~L21~~cept pOOne. Call ~~li:~~r:ntio:i t~=~~:.
3 B 2 B U f Bl 2 Br cpts/dl"p!/refr/range, ing in kitchen • breakfast presenlly fallhion hide-away tion of COFFEE and hot dr:;~. $isot~~. ln~, ct~i gar,
0
Adlts. 704 Narcissus bar. huge private Jenccd REAL ES~TE dress shop. Some fixtures, ~!.P:!~rl~~ so!t:C:i~o; drlnk products In company
PARK NEWPORT
H igh on a bluff overlooking tho water, 7
pools, 7 tennis courts, $750,000 hea~h
club and Spo. Bachelors, I or 2 bedrooms.
Also 2-slory town houses with 2 or 3 bed-
rotlms. Electric ki~chens, private balcony
or p a t i o. From $175 lo $450. Subter-
ranean parking, elevators, optional tMid
service, convenience shopping. See 7
b e a utiful model apartments, open 9 a .m.
t o 6 p .m. daily. Other l imes by appoint-
ment. Located al JamborH and S•n
Joaquin HiUs Roods, in Newport,. just
north of Fashion. IJond. Phone (714)
644-1900 for loosing information.
Park Newport
Apartments
I
M0-7S73, aft 5 968-S658, SUNNY 2 Br. bui11-inl patio. plush landscaping. General Avail Dec 1. 333 E. l7th St., Incl. 2192 DuPont Dr, Suite securetf 11.ccount1 1 com-
ref/ca.rp/drap/gar. Adull!J, brick Bar-B-Q's . large heat.-6000 C.M. 646-8661 1l1 1rv·ne 833-354>1 me:reial and factory Joca-3 BR. 2 ba, cpts, drps, bltns. 117• 1 6-~275 Income· Property • 1 • tion1. We are a highly
refrig, S25CI, 2 doors 10 no pets. :> se. • . crl pools&: lnnal. 11ARBOR BLVD. fronl . *NEWPORT BEACH Civic referenced company. Ex-
ocean. &12-9242. 675-7179. 2 BR. 2 Ba. Ocean side of 3101 So. Bristol St. $81000 19 x 37' w I restroom. 2110 Center. 300 ft to 1000 ft. ct>llent immediate cash in-
\VESTCLTFF 2" br, J ho, Hwy. Nicely decorated. (1,; ~ti. N. ol So. Coas Plaza) W lb I ' H Harbor Blvd, CM. $200 mo. Answering " Secretarilll. come for 4 to 6 hrs. (weekly
crpfd, drp'd. frpl c. Adu lts. Morgan Realty 673-6642 S1nt• An• Pr~!te ~ybe::';!.~ide~:e: year's lease. 548--0783. 6/:i-1601 work days or eves.) Yoti
s175 mo. 642-98.iS. NE\V 2 BR. 2 ba & 3 Br, 3 J~!!!!!P"'H'!'O"'N"'E'!:~, ~55"'7'!-8'!:'2"'00~~J <'>. 2 bed.rm apt.I. Estimated OFFICE, STORE. nr, N'pt. 1741 WESTCLIFF DR. mny l'xpand to full t.in:i«; B South Of Hwv Bch. Post Ofc. & Greyhouoo l•t•r ·1h '"· 3 BR, 2 BA 8 • "~' lhl I $1010 Prim IOc., store or offiee1 .. WI our expans...,, · • rru crpl, paint. •Phona &«-1342• Turn those White Eleph.anls gross mon Y ncome · depot. l2XZ1. $75 mo. lse. program if you desire. No Sunclttk, gar. $250/yrly Jae. -.,,-=,,-=--=,.,--I into cash thru a Daily Pl1ol l5C E. 20th SI., Costa ~tesa. Grnh.am Rlty 64&-2414 :nlO SQ It (@ 20c, lrnd Door . 1 blk to oceari. GT:>-7623, 2 BR/1 BA w/frplc. Builder· 642--4905. Lots ol pkg. Wal/pan'I., cpts. experience llf'i·cssar')I, \Ve
No chldrn-no pebl, Sl'l5/mo1_D:;::::im:;e-a:::;..flne::;::_::•d:;t;.I ___ .:..;========:= Offlc1 Ronl•I 6070 drp!!, air-cond . Owner ~S.9586 will train. $1T.il total cash 3 BR, 2 BA unf. crpt11, drps, *673-9183* II required.· For more In· , blk to oceo.n, Yearly. $250. ___ _:_.:....:,:.:c:,~-~1 Fount•in V•lley 5410 Fountain V• ey 5410 * DOWNTOWN H.B. Iormatlon, 11•rite In11tnnl * 673-8088 LGE l br apt. Nl"W shag ;_;;==;;....==--"'-"-"-"=""'-"'--"-"-""'-_;-;.. _UPE ___ E_UXE ___ U--TY-Remocle1edofc or1hop.blkto food Su'f)ply. 225 21 -· crpt, drps, stove & Y'l"frlg, S R-D L . Q AlJ WESTCLfFF beaul\ful 2 BR. gar, Sl60 mo. 6#-7i92 J-2-3 mom, up to 3,000 11q. ocean. Undborg Co. 536-2579 Cn!n1haw Blvd .. Tomi.net',
2 BA 1250 ,. ft townhouse :JJ II. oUlce suites. Jmmed. oc. OFFICE SPACE avail. air Cal if. 90505 Include pho~ · · · · BESI' Location. 1 -new 2 ~ apt No. 1275. Mgr_ IH5--0252 ...,r; cu;mncy. Orange Cnty. eond, janitor. M"rv, music no.
BR, 2 BA. $225/yr..-around . -Airport Irvine Comm("fe, incl. ~ mo. 2043 Westclitl ~ANUFACTY.RING
1
·
Newport Heights 5210 1 _*~54-1\-~7'83~~· ------,t l!· Complex. adj. AJrportcr Dr. &iS:283:> Nffii man to 1upeivlte PTO! -
---------·!UNIQUE, lge, pvt, new 3 Hotel &: RM\11.urant, be.nkl, 2 FURNISHED Office suitn, ducllon, Engineering A: planj
NEWPORT llelght.s • 2 ~·:~ts ~ dJi>s, ~ San Diego & N'pL fo°W)'1. 250 sq .tt. $12.5/rm. Cop,gt supervision helpf'ld but no
Bedroom lmmed. posseMKln I _;•;.,·,,.;.;O":' ~-=-'C'-~-:---; . UNCROWDED PARKJNG •Iwy, N'wpt Bch. &1>-2182 recessary, wlU train, $15,000
_ enclOlled garage, S150. * (21 NE\V Deluxe 2 Br. 2 t • ~ A LO\VEST RATES 3CX).6()1).J.200 t Investment required, S&Jarj
5'18--9695 Bn. 'Valk to beach! , oun at,~ Owoor/mgr.2172DuPontDr., OF'FICES, ~4~·80• plu1 stia.r. <lf profits, For
5240
$27S/mo. * '644--0266. 'I·' S I.. L Rh, 8, Newport Beach. Cost11. MeSA. 646-71.30 appt .. (TI4) 8'19-1C3 ext. M. 1 .
t B&-Oinelli?: Gar. W(W n crulUrron.on ty u:r.ury 833-3223 Courlesy to Brokers -~=~~=~~~ GOING busineu for aale,I •
crpt. 3U C. r.targut'rilc PRESTIGE OFFICE CORONA DEL MAR Small coffee 1hop , ;
$155/mo: Shown Sef -sun. 16 z Bahooms-% Bathl .. or· THE BAY'' 5 RM suite, •tor & Pka:. 2 ha, Downtovm. Santa Ana loca· ~ -uoo sq ft.. and fir. 67:J...li1S7 tJo ·-F p T 3 Bdnn, 2 bath. Excellent It> Adolt Llvlnl At Lido yacht anchorage n. .,...,.,.,, -• erm1 •
cation. No children, no pets, ~ ..... _L.h-1 ,., u---•·bod l room • Ground Ooor Avail, Days 5C.l-3122. &"W :
• " 'H·.,,.--• IUW-""" ~3-56-tl. --retert'nct't, '°""nt 6'r>4930. Air colld., Cl'Pls. dl'pll. Commtrcl•I 6085
£.Z patklna, UUL pa.Id MAIL Order buslnea. MaM •
j ~ -
$1.2S per month COMMERCIAL-INDUSTRIAL $ yuu $ moneyl Total !rt-•
717 Udo Park ortve ~nta.Js 500 IQ. ft. to 2800 gq. ve11tment il95! Secured. '
Newpor: Beaeh 67~ ft 13c to lOC. 496-1840 SC. 6'1~2740.
DELUXE one, #Ult~, grnd. BEAUTICIANS. 1-2 or 3.
Door, has own ~ntranc:e s.nrt w/t<lU to take owr lhop. \V~1tcllU Dr. ti. add.rut. lndustrfal Rental 6090 Xlnt opp M&-Am 6:31).1 PM
4:iC &q. ft. wilh pvt, panel Bui II-Sell 11-1'radt It
ouc. O&"sk space IL. recc?PI. 001\f~l'L & lndustrW. ql8C'e. -tttk It -ll'a all avallatile
$185 mo on 1e11!t, Inc o.ir-far k'ftSe on Sen Diego Fwy thru Oa.O)' PUot a111l'k.d
Mnd., 111.U., crpt ., dra.pe1. nr t..agunn Niguel. Delta adt. Pl11.ce )'Dlrr •4
!HS.tlMS t.:lectrlc. 8.11-1400 now •• ealJ dlrec:t &eer11 '
•
"' I J t 'I'· -
ltl DAILV PILOT
"1Ul1NllS.... AMNOUliCIMIWl i Sl iVICI OIRICTORY llRYIC!I DIRICTORY JOaS a IMPLOYMINT JOIS a IMPl,OYMINT FINANCIAL ind NCJrlC!S . llllYICI DlllCTORY JOIS a IMPLOYMENT JOIS a IMPLOYMIN1 I
-,-----1 ;;..;,;;.....;.;..;.c.;..;.c.._,_,_ Contractwl 6'20 1,..a-'155 Joll1 Mer-.v Went. 7100Jebe Mer-4 w .... 7100 J1•1 lt\M, w..._ 7100 Jobe Men, Wem. 7100 1-J i•1 M.n. Wea 71111!1 .. -y to 'Loan 6HO Po.--la 6405 G~ ,._ . :::l!O • · ' · ' Ml"':L rtmode...._ Is malrit. IRONING, My home, S1 hr. • • • • • • I • -• • • • • LUMBER comJ)ln)' needs • PT-tlnM clt.rk typist to wk. TEL ~rinr St:rv. J:xp.
1st TD Loan llEALm Spa membership No .~_1"' •mall. Dre...WCUW • Aterallona qUal!lled ..,_ with tn oaJe• dept Hg. school pttl"d. n .. pt time. 1
for ale tor 2. Take ovtt Uc'w ln,IJUl'al, m.st.83 5'5-7ML lumber aiieNnce who bu P'l<f., type 50/&0 wpm. -fi11J11 witnl.ia qua1HMd slrt Oftl' •~ INTER.£Sl' pymts. U mo. ltlt. &i2-391S GEN'L mnoddl..-j; ma1nt. " • A done J>l,)TOll A accounts exp. nee. can tar intu. ~/Ph: 5«)...2m •
aft .• or --......... No ,.. ... • .. all . i....i.a--·-· M5-ll26 m.w.i -· Gomaln. THE DAILY PILOT ..i TD Loan ALCOHoucs -. IJc'd'._ 615-IW .. 1. !llALE/f'<malo• 111 ... ,,. PART -phtoaraphy -·-• i
• Phone. 542-12lf .. ...... .. Mclltlona * -"4< G,utDENEll -m n I h I y Golden '""' u CASHIER. VSH£R. fUhlon -•!nc .11 .. ocbool .......... ~. .. ......... I • tlued an eqq:ity. P.O. Bal 1223 ~MHL Genrick A SoQ, Uc. · malntenanee -di rn up ETTES, t>OORMAN. Apply tor attnetive, whOlesome enctd, journalfat 1n ti. ,.-~ I
'42-2171 .$4.S.1611 1t 50-2:110 -~ e1t., afttr I p.m -·• 'lllE THEATER (F 0 X), rtrl. LA.G. Pb: 83.>-J501 men' a~~
Serving Harbor vet 21 >""· Announctm.nt, 6'11 191-7735 Op rt 't South Cout Plua, C.M. RECEPnONIST ~or pro-n\lllt be ab'e to nport.
S.ttlor Mlrtit•I* Co. YOV Don"t baw I. ro .all the Clrpt! CIMftio. 6W po uni y 5'1>%112. -Iona! olll"' in Do""'town ::.w.ie:ri;-~:, 1·
331 E. lTth Strett "'&Y to Jamaica tor a F 6 M Cleanhw Service. MAID SERVICE 612J ·-MASSEUSE • Exp'd Cl.ilta Me-. For lntmilew A: layout, Top CllQ\PU1 bent-
M0...._ Jamaican shoe shifte~ Hctidl,y ~ial UnW Dec. . . Woi:nan. Abo trainee app't 548-5287. F.Qual op-fits, rood salary, attnctiw ·•••ft•, 8111'1 40c Jamaican ·Shine. 22nd. 6c a .er. ft. Sbar 'le. DOMESTICS Tb1 fiisteet growing company la the Call 847-78'73 portunUy employer. new QU&l'.ten. Afpbr_JQ writ···
T nn.t Deeds 6345 185 S. Collst, Laguna Beach. Certi-Fowner, drif:• ill 2 P'MI Lib • Queenl USA is looking for people like you. RELIABLE Woman to Ing ooly, cit1ne experience, -~
IF YOU ha""e $2700 It. deilrt. COTI'ON T-shirt fabric $1.49/ hn, 53&-351:1, ~2247. HaV8 a MAID Jn your home MATURE YJOm&D to work babysit 22/mo old boy, In backgrouncl ls education to ~
monthty lncm tJr 5 ynt, yd. Like a t old C.M. KnUttnc, Dlamond Carpet Cleaninc to live in for aa low as $140-~th pn!-echool IP retarded Laguna Beach. Tue ... Wl'd-Margaret Greenman Ptr. ·J ~ by ht m!J:'. call American Knits, 202S-A N. Autwnn Special $350 per mo. kviciet ren-No education requirements. Free and c Udntn. E>cp'd 5 hr/day. Thurs 7:3M:30. Must be sonnel Manaier, BoX 151o.
bkr, 6T>&03 Tustin, Orange. 63'11UJ. 400• U), . Free E!l dertd •t our omc. or tn frequent training available. M2-JJ'J3 or M&-3681 aft 6 respon&ible! Call 494-2171• Costa• Mtsa., Calli, 92GS. ,
\VE J-IAVE TRUST DEED hpair-InstaU. 66-1317. your home. Pliew-Call, PM. R .E. S•les 646 0033 * WATI'RESSES • Cocktill ~ ' *' _.BUYERS* * Tutoring Mfo STEAM Jet carpet clWtlnl. (ID) 266.6250-Collect. MEDICAi~ne.eds~-Full or pt time. 675-7414 and ste&khoule, Experlenc.i
!H&-8i50 or ~16 By ClarKue, natton..wide Local Girl wanta to clean Expect to earn '300. wffkly and over. ienced medical transcriber • ed only. l14Jual ~t;y.i ,
TUTORING In your bome. 1""1oe. Fne ... "42-<1153 apts I< priv. homes. Gd ref1 _ & '"""""" rht. Sabry & SALES TRAINEES "'°"'* & ........ Lapna'-1 ~
Money Wa nted 6350 Cert. teacher. Grades, 1-8, le reas. rates! 642-1224 hours open. 499-3055 9-5 MOD. Beach. ·~2'Jtl0 f ~
Reading systems, M r . C•rpet Laylnt & for Interview •ppolntment Fri. WAITRESS experte:ncedl !
PRJV. Party w•oll 2nd T.D. U.ilKlock, "6-UQ R-lr -P11n11,. .CALL msm ~ THE ~~ ... A~··. "2 w-· -: on ?.Iesa Verde home. Have --F t ~ 5 F Id -~ ~ -•t rom •.m. •• p.m. r •Y MEDICAL Ant. Wanted. St ""'-ta MeSL I lge, equity. Pay 10% int. SERVICE DIRECTORY e EXPERT e Paper11-.fnt1 AS0 Ask for Mr. McCvtchan Back otc.. Internal Medicine. ., ....,. . ' ~1~ 642--7000 carpet installations GR,ANT WAITRESS WANTED, •. t
Auto R•P9ir1 '530 *' 5.»8371 * * F.XTERIOJi.INTERJOR * --Mission Viejo. Exper./rel'I. SHAMROCK RESTAURAN'Fj· ~ ~.~N.::i~rsENTS TOP vw mecblnic worka~./ARPET LAYING ~ .... ~. 'i1.':: - - - - - -I •••• -• -• ;'""open. ll37--0<n. * BOYS l824\IN•,._Blvd.,C.M. ,.)
1---------1 ciays will fix your car even-, • Pa1e GU-~ p&inta. nee nt./ookll' con-Jolt W•nted, Men 1IOO Jo•• Men,·w-. 7100 MEN •nd WOMEN 1 .J
Found (Fr" Ads) 6400 ings. Call M~7986 EXPERT .WMg. Local refs. Uc, . e Perm.,..nt Position Schools-Instruction JjO(,! .. ;l
-------I CARPE:l" n;srALLATION Hood, Ina • .m.5.138, 5'9-08ll YOVNG man, 23. _,,.tor CARRIER e HHlth Pion
FOlf>llJ' O>Mg• & whli. Blbvslttfnt 6S5G & REPAIR. 641>-0n. . ifo wu..., any ...-.lo\>. Willi"' tn PART TIME e Profit Shiring TRAIN TO BE A ! ·;
l•mal• ti<er "1• Approx. 6 +WALLPAPER * W<rl....., Budd. 645-09GT BOYS FULL TIME • Full Tim. Only H E a...... ' mo. old, in Newport \Vest, NEWLY LICENSED Electrlc•I ..... ·When )QI call "Mac" eaYJ cpa.,..,~nt . !
Huotiogton Be•ch. 963-13'0. COSTA MfSA J'RE.SCHOOL ELECTRICIAN !>nall ~ 548-1444 646-lnJ Job W1ntod, WANTED REXAIR INC, APPLY JN PERSON OPERA T.OR S~tALL Black Poodle with lBlh & Moarovia.. Introductary · ,._, Women 7020 FROM 2 TO 6 MON-FR[ gtttn je"•eled collar. Vic, offer, lat Week Frtt! p~ ~~nance &: repai r s , INT-Ext pa!ntinr. State A cl-for the ANAHEIM DIV. 1150 NEWPORT BLVD. Approved Fer Veta J ~~n1:'on~A. na Country Club. ned programs, hot Junctiel. Lied &.Bonded.~-:mu:~~~~ ~na =-dft~~ DAILY PILOT OOSfA MFSA ~l~ operate bulldottn, • -~ :t:5w2:· ~::;am~ Floors . "'5 Htw) ans. 6*-S268.' i:dt =.ra::: .:= Dana~_JUU '."• ·~~·rrl~·=~~-iO-'Pif' sALE'sviOMAN. ~!ers.lM!'i,=~=-::;r-)i
<lr 838.5237, CARPET VINYL TILE f~r' oldocks, btoh~ts , 613-418'1. CapistranD Be~ NEW B~CH for tine je\.\"e:lry store. Full ~~Ii= ::.t:: BLACK Cockapoo found vie
Lr Paz Jr High,
-SJ0.2122 LICENSED Child care my LIC CONTR FREE EST. P ei ' Illy n I Contact Mr. Seay at . EXPANDING TO It part time eniployrnent.
FOUND: Small blaclt cat.
"'hi!e trim, wJOea collar.
Dover Shores. 1)46.31)91.
home ages 1 to 5, ?.ton thru * 540-7262 * everythinc reaton ably P~~ time' -=~Inc Ba;: DAILY PILOT OllANGE COUNTY Jewelry sales exper deslr. modem 1tcilitles in MlQJI,
Fri, i.unet1e1 &: snacks in-. painted. Free est. ~9'152. "'t''"~ able. Apply In pel'9Dn, 2:JOO F1orida, Highly paid C,ll'ett '
G -•--1 r 1NT EXTERlOR M-"63 Dally Pilo~ 3311 Wm San a.men .. olllce TOP STARTING PAY b opeo ambltJoug meo. tJn!. -
FOUND Near Lindbergh
-scboi:ll"'I small black POQdle
male, 548--0'/'46,
eluded. Vicinity ol Baker & .,_"I '6IO · or · na .. "'--6... Me,. _ N, El ~m•~ .,_, Harbor Blvd., C.M. v--• Heavy ~--·......,_ J_, Bristol. 549-4038. PAINTING. Loe. Rel. IM-~· ~ • ;iw -""' .._. We need 22 men and women 1---'---'---''--'----1 ~~ ~·•~•c-•
e LOOKING :lor * LANDSCAPING * Mil? Ser v I e e , 1'Jft AIDES -for mnvak~noe. ~ w:ith all types ol work back-SALE • Earn Quistmas Schools I>ePt. ll'.13, 501 N:
panlon For 2~ia ~ New lawns.. b.Wil:~1fi0\lal; nttmatn. ltl-0210 elderly care or Wnily care, aroundl. No experie~ ntt• money part time. Sarah Goldm Cir., suite 206, S.A.,
BRO\VN &: white shorthaired
puppy found vie Monrovia &
20th, C.i\1. 64~2522 days.
• my yr ·renovating. AU p hase 1 INT. a: Ext. Acoustic cell-Homemaken , 54~.fi681, COASTAL AGENCY essary, as company training Owe.ntry h~ now. No ~ Calit, 92105· or <area> n~ ·
Mn. * * S57-8M2 * landscape insta1J & dttignl, U:wa. $15 nn. Awrap rm •-L... M W 7100 A member <lf Is furnished. U )'OU qualify, vest, no del, Free training. _54.;.7--·1521.-'--''-------ll '
WILL '-b-lt ,.0 my ~-Lic'd contr. 12 yra loc, exp, $1(" + i-int. 5f8.2759 aft 4:30 --1 ,...,-, om. Snelling &: Snelllna: Inc. rapid advancement to key •F:_;or~lnfo:!'..::PH~1 ~962--0~:'.:556:.._ __ 1 __ ~~~~=---•i
...... JW """"' 536-1225 The World's L•rl*st ......itioo.· Mmt "'-ave 1s = I E tor infants or toddle.ts, day ' P A IN.TI N G: Ho ne•t ACCOUNTANT or F /C I''''" ur r · Sales AIRL N
ALTERED ~tale Siamese, or ni&:ht Vic Harbor &: Vlc-AL'S GARDENING Guaranteed work. Llc'd, BKKPR. e xper' d. in Profes~lon•I FOR INTERVIEW CAU. BE YOUR OWN BOSS. Full • SCHOOLS
flea collar. vie. Top of toria. Refs. 548-TI23 ror Gardeninl &: sman land-local !'d's. Call 615--S740 aft preparation of ft nan c I al Employment S.rvlc• SATURDAY 1JJ AM to 5 PM or part time, earn $200 • PACIFIC -·
~W~o~rl~de,, _:La~gu~""~·~·>t-~7~41~T·:...-. I •NEWiEiiV!romRl'iT,-HH•;;O!-.bhtl5;--;;8;;,..;;,:.1 scaping services can 5t0-5198 s. statements. Non-pro fit 2790 Harbor Bl, CM 5f0.6055 774-7253 $800 per mo. Call 347~ 1 n., a: Night a.-
LG. Variety young dog. J....a.rp yd &: 5 and box. Serving ?Jewi>ort, ~.Coe. PAINTING &:: Paiierhanalng. Oll[anization UKS Jund ac· Harbor Blvd. •t Adams * ii to 8 p.m. 543-6596 :t
Ch\•ner identify! JIB • FV Balanced lunch. Xln't care. ta Mesa. Dover Int I: Ext. Reuona.ble. counting VOUChtt system. SANTA a.AUS &: I need 61{t E, 17th St., Sarita Ani ;~
area. 847--022i eves. 64~2754. Westcli.H. F'tte estimate. ~1081 Ph: ~9990 DELICATESSEN man, full ~IDDLE AGED LADY help in tilling Chrirtrnas --;
I ".'.:;:::,;:==~-=--1--;;;;;r.;;:"<;::::;::::;u:;::;---f,,;:;:::;;:;:::;,:;:o..:.::..:.::;::.,,_ Ac time. Set: Terry, HI-Time •.: FOUND Engljsb P oi n er BABYSIITINGinmyHome. ~en.Garden Maint. INTER A Extu painting. counting Supervisor De~f95E.l7thSt FOR LITE CLEANING orders for the fabulous LEARNTO,fLY i ~n!~?';. Call aft. 6:30 Bay View "-Monte Vista Pr\lnine, trM work'. lpmJdr Free Ht Local ftl'L Llc'd Recen~ Gr:4~~ B.S. Ac:-C.M. • 3 T05 o'AYHSRS' PERWEEKDAY hS~M833-GYMll17• Hrs flex. lncin, Low rates private thnt ~
-"............, School .rea. REAS: .ltt\'1 ~ratmn. Iertllize, t\ ins. Call Chuck, M5-GI09 eoununc. --.a. Call Ann, "" '6" mercial Call· after 5:00 pm
1,-ii Grown white female cat 54&-6481 pelt, disease, weed cootrol. '4>1l10, Wl!9tcllff Perwonnel DENTAL aailttant, SCHOOL teacher needs Tues., Thur.WJ'rt.and ~ .: round~ n t i ng ton CiiiUiC;:Rif;;;;i;;;;;j;:;;;;;;l~a~e~'"~"~P~jo~b•!,._!646->893~~~-lq.lMEDIATE Elt. on quality Agency, *-1 We.tclitt Dr., ct.lnSde. Children'• den-The F ive Crowns babysitter & playmate for weekends. 83M370 , ·,~
Pier. 5.lG-4856. CHD.J> CARE my horne,,any AL'S • -~·-·•-T e ·inter A: o:ter pain~. Apt.I, NB tt-Dr H ht Ro1t•urant my 3 "'"· old Son, 3 dauc a 1~=~~~-~~-c age. Near Fai!view rlr lAUIU-........ r.e homnorjultaroom.Jaclt, . . ""'-T · • our on , .r~ <&.Ja • SI FOR ' \VlllTE Kitten found vie Adams, c .M. S49-m'S2 removal Yard mnodding. 831~ (2!3) ... 2866. APT. Oeanina: Wom·an 847-251i6. 3801 E. Pacific Cout Hwy., wk.,9to3:30 PM.67~23l9 MERCHANDI u
Visla Hogar, N.B. 644-5793. • w·n do bab si . Trash hauling lot cleanup. needed, expe:r. Own In.nip. D &.. /D fh Corona del Mar. No ph. calls, ee SEAMSI'RES.S wanted, SALE ANO TR.ADI .~ti Inquire~ Victork. t~; DI, ~ spmlderL 6l3-UG6. P~r. -1m~t!1~ Penonal ref's. 642-!224. w11:1~1"::per.r::rnt ~!~nr Nursing·· exp'd. SAILS BY SCHOCK. Fumlture IOOO -~
Loaf ~1
DOG. J\1iniature Schnauzer.
type blonde ooloretf male
with. protruding lower jaw.
Last seen <ln &aining leash
In Emerald Bay, Name Ar-
chie. Family bn>ken hearted.
494-9330
C.M. Ask for Millie NCI.EIAN UP SP~ est. Accoust. C e il ing s . BABYSl'ITER for church cond'i. Contact F.dward w, SUPERVISOR, RN. Call 615-1823 .. • ~
BABysrrrING d It ew ence I: repair. Mowma: 96&-'""" nunery, 9:15 to ll:lS am Joy-AJA or -J•an. 3 to 11:30 1hilt. * SOM~HING MAPLE din'g rm table &:;6 1 · • ay or n e, Led.,;.,.. Reu 54S-e955 .. """' ew-~.M ... St Joh the ... -..-, · ' · --·.r·• P k Lldo C al I c.i .. _. ..,.,.,. __.. .-.1:11 lg 1ncd bk yd, infant . ..--· • , * PAPERHANGING o,·.~:'.'.-...... ~. • Chn nie Adams at 642-4910 Ext ar onv escen DIFFERENT -cu.11n, ~" "'""'"" -· ,•
v.'f!lcome.&U-5200. LAWN Care, cleanups, trash I: P AINTING. * 968-2425 c M._,~.scopsl urch, '36 betwn. 8 AM Ir 5 PM Center, 6(2.$44, 21-25 yn-fun..$$$. =ng buf fet #$., l
EXP hom hau1ing. 7 .V., H.B., Ir · · rnominrs f<lr int. NURSES Needed for private Do you have a sense of · I
. /Mother, my ~· Nr. Westrnstr. area. Fm est. LABOR Ir Mat'l. Inter A Ex-* BANK TELLE-R * duty RN'• LVN's . Prac. • hum<1r! ~ need dancing 2 End tables $3.50 each. Very : Bristol I: Baku St • It. 847..s&o2 tu. $10 per :room. Free e.t. turd bl cmcb Sonora Sehl. 54&-lWJ. 557411.. M0-7ots . Experienced. . Ph: 53&9371 e DISHWASHER e Aides. All shiltr. Call any hr. &iris. We have aeveraI types s 'I aqua ue • -:
·MY home, fenced bk ~· J~~ ~,!INT A EXT -111· Ex· BEAUTY! P.e.ceptlohitt -FULL TIME Leacoolle.6:"U: 1tegistrJ' ·~·Call: ~ ~~~~=~ ! .. ~
HIMALAYAN-!\1m· cat. warm. meals. Heu. 358 , __ .,•--1e. u ·-er perlenced, neat a: refs. ~a. Girl F r iday. Lite """"-..'G __ ~ -"-~y Com 1 8 boo R-to • ~ looks like long hai r Hamillon. C.M. 642--0829. ~ ....... .._,_ per nn+paittt.M&-6629 . .., secretari al . Must be · ~ .. u0o»1 ....... ,.; i-~ SEC'Y, N.B.-Fashion Island. pete •m ...-~
Siamese: named "Lucifer'". beautitlJt, ambltiou!', It Apply br pmlOn only gentlemen. Stroke patient. Type 75 WPM, S.H. 80, aft.et 4. ~43 ~1:
Vic Baycrest, NB: Reward. BABY~~~ mn;d NEW Lawns ~ Compl McAdams Painting Serv. sharp. Exp'd or will train. In retllrn fer room It board Hospital •dmlnistrativt ex-MA~ Box sprinc, •
54S-5289. aft 3 pm. ~; :!,._ 'm..1182 pre lawn ~. bean u.; b)' job Intu. A Extttls. • .. ~~ rates Full or part time. P.O. Box TH£ RIGGER + small salary. 646-1717. per d e s Ir e a b 1 e. Xlnt .frame, Beaufyrest, Ml, Im-. t •-----~----1 · or mo. FrH nt, For info on ap .,._..,.,.,, 1003'i, Santa Arw. OPERA'IORS-Slilgle needle. benefits, Salary $650 min. or rnacu1ate, $49. 615-5507. , , •
LOST 10/20; blk. & fJ!.wn ~OTHER .would like trO care _897-2-117 or 8f6.0932. . PAINTING: Inter. a: Exler. Exp'd only, Top pay. open depending on present · ~
female Germ. Shep. fiup, 4 for working Jl'lOthers child. GENO I<-"'' ve.... -a••na"'-., .. ,, ....... 0 BEAUTICIANS, 1-2 or 3, No. 16 Fuhion !Aland ROLS'S MFG. 863 Procl\IC-Mlary. Send resume to: SOFA • 8' blue tweed • :t n1os., "Canada". V ic Lg fncd yd 646-mL eanup, tree. ._,_.. ·J •" ""' we. V"W"VO.a.o w/loll to take ovr shop. )'fewport Beach Herman Smith Assoc ot -.m~tching chair/otto, Vf!l'I • I
Corona del Mar. P.eward, ' serv. Rototill. ~ aft I PM Xlnt opp Mi-5753 S:»I pm. t.lon Pl., N.B. 646--0308 OOt-HoSpital Con6ultants, good cond, $125. 557-lSIO ;
·-· Brl..._ M11onry, odd job<. l!eaL <ji! 5'18 * PAPERHANGER * e BENCH PBX OPERATOR, 3-ll PM 359 •-· M;~~r Dr., Sul-ADMIRAL color TV, ~ 'I '"' Pro•--~·• ... "'"9 EXPER s.lel Help, Part or lhif' See Mr. Pill<lw alter 1 .-.... ... w~ '" 5._. TORQUE wnnch "Snap.on." etc 6560 GARDENI1"G • ..,.......,,..._ .._._. INSPECTOR full time needed by arowtnc " 202, ?ieWp'.l. Bdl. No calls aofa, chair', .rep tbl, -.me ~
w/bl.k diaJ face, fell off truck' ----------1 By Experienced 'J~· coricdn. Background in oon-~ 5::::" 1::.ch HI:-. . pleue, ofc. fum. ~ 5f:2--2603. }
Vic: C.~t. or N.B, Reward. Brick, block, atone. Patios, * 543-0228 * Plnterlftl, P•tch, Broad-experience: requir-structlon or che mistry H rrt:ington Bch SOFA&: LOVE SEAT $250. !
546-9805 entrance wm. No job too EXPER. Japanese Gardener Re,.lr MIO ierl In first article &: bench helpful. &Tl-1464 u ' Sec'y to $600 See at 276 Robin Hood Ln,
REWARD whl, b I ac k is h small. 646-782S, Ref turn. complete yd ~ice. Rella'. * PATCH PLASTERING ~tlon, with knowl-EXP. Gas station •ttendant RESJ'AURANT CHGtell Legal or R.E. bckgrnd, top (BTW 5 • S p.m.) 642-9241
splotches cat. fiuffy tail flea Carpentering '590 & neat. Free ell &e-4389 All types. Frff esttmates edge of MU-Specs and ~ work. Forest S skilla, beautiful ofc's. Fash-
collar Bal Penin, 673--2634: !:!~~!!!!~-_..:~!i •cGiiA~RRDDEE'iiNiiEfiRi:-:EEilXCiP>-'iiDll can 540-6825 familiarity With all pre. DoM.van Chevron Station. CA HIERS & ion Island.
673-8867 or coUeet 688-5159 CARPENTRY * 675-4!!62 * cision mechanlca) meas-26988,..0rtera Hwy. HOSTESSES Ml~S EXEC AGENCY
LOST: Beige male poodle. Pi.IINOR REPAffiS, ~o Job e EXP Japanese GIJ&ner. Plumblnt "90 uring lnstrumenta. Lay. 410 W. Coast Hwy, NB
Balboa Island, Sun. eve. Too Small. Cabinet 1n gar. Mtl\ntena~ " Oean-Up out experience In cutlnp F C loekkMper 646-3939
Plaid coll ar. ''Charlie", ages " other cabinet1, 12-6 pm-$.29lO ' PLUMBING REPAIR preterTed. Account•nt to $IOO COCKTAIL Also Fee Positi<lns
REWARD! 675-43TI 54>81'15 il no answer leave No job too •mall Corporate + manufacturing WAITRESSES
l\tALE Irish Setter, 16 mos, m.sg at 646-23'1'2. H. o. Complete Y1rd C•rel e 642-3128 e -9 HOUR DAY -exper. Fin&ncial stmb, jour.
Laguna. Beach, name Andef'S()n JIM 540-t83'1 HOMEREPAIRS -P45ROHnOTU1!u~ .. ~G-nal,
"Beau '", Large Reward. RE~fODELING & Repair e GARDENING ~ Ir Plmnbina~ectrical. S7.50 Hr. -•~UU\.l.n -Newport
5-18-5784. specialist. Comm'!, reside~ Cleanup. Frtt utlmate. 642-2755 or 543-0506 Personnel Agency
LG. Altered ?it/Grey & \Vht tial. Paneling, cabi n ets, ExpJapanese.M8-8255att & 2f HR. Plumbing, repair J .C. CARTER CO. 133 Dover Dr., N.I.
Cat. Lost 10/23 • Vic: marlite, formica. Call remodel .l stoppage. mW. l mt ST, 642.3170 ""
I "', .. ""'"". Gentr41 S.rvkea 6612 Call •-""' ......... Cdsr A MESA Go den\\'est & l\fcfadden,, ;;;~;,;;.·;;.;;-.;;----,,---,,;-:;:;=;-1:----'---------I;:;,.,-;""~---:.::.-::=;'=::.,.,,-tTI4) 548-3422 ll.B. Flea oollar. 892-6867 1R ;EPAIRS * A' -• o••~•s Pl"·~• llral·•-,.., c.nn· THINGS )IOur husband does IUUl" .._ .... • .... ,. Equal opportunity employu Fll.i.\I CO. needs extras for
non-unk:ln work, I • A . G •
8J5..350I LOST: Small blk kitten. Vic. TIONS * CABINETS. Any not have time to do! ~faint-slow? Expertly cleaned $9. BOATS: TRIMMER OR
Brookhurst &. Garfield. H.B. size job repair! Moat anything, 2t hr aerv. m.3SSt UPHOLSTERER for in-
Ov.-ner heartbroken. 968-~ 2Synexper.54S-6713 54~ terion I: canvas coven. GENERAL Electronic
BLACK toy poodle "Scamp" CUSTOM Cabl?K!ts, remodel-EXPERT leneral clean-up Reoflng 050 Penn pos, trlnl': ben's. Mltmbly. llOldering Ir
no collar l'l!tum 416 N. ing & additions. State llc'd gardenine, painting; . Lake Amlwbead Mal"l..m. p ack •1l n1. $1.15/hr.
Nev.·port. Reward contr. 548-6514, 646-5719 landscapin&. 645-2317 « LEE ROOFING CO: Reefing P h: cn4) 337-2501 --..,,,,,1021.=-===""'=,-
LO~: All whit~. long haired
cat. Fern . (DEAFI Vic:
'2nd St, NPT. 61j..35n .
LOST Blk & \\'hile HUSKY
w/Chain collar. Vk:. 18th SI,
C.l\t. 64&-0895.
CUS'JUM WOODWORK 531~ °' all t)'pel. r e cover, l----------1 HELP WANTED M/F: ~. 1 C b' repairs, roof coatings. Lie &:: SAIL LOFT
'urn tore & .:,..:." NEED typlnr done! We booded •Ince 1917. 64>-7:12:1 * BUSBOY * *S41).J684* St8-423S or can do. Speedy, •ccun.te, RE-ROOFING 9hincles .l
Carpentry·All Types reaJ100&ble, 646-4238. rock. Rep&ln' a: inc-coating. D•yl or Nlfht1 HOMEWORKERS WANTED
Call Syd, 847-2493 X·SECRFI'ARY wants typ. No job too small. 89'1-4223 Apply in penion ~~:~':'i7!~d-
S\tALL JOB ing. Spee'• a specialty, U • BEFORE you buy, call T. dressed envel o pe,
COFFEE SHOP
WArTRESSES
DINING ROOM
WArTRESS~S
& FRONT DESK
<Hotel>
No phone calls
APPLY IN PERSON
2pmto6pm
Friday, October 30th
SECRETARY-Exp'd. for '
1A1pervifmy po&. Must have
top typing &: SH speed, min
2 yn: rec job exp. Pttt. some coU. bkgmd, Xlnt saJ·
for qual glrl.
EMPWYEE BENEFIT
-CONSULTANTS-
1\tn, Sandenon 835-5217
SERVICE station salesman,
full time, experienced. Neat
In appea r ance. Lile
mechanical. Apply: 2590
Newport Blvd., C,M.
*STILL LOOKING *
for exper'd. housekttper with
xlnt ref's, ~fust be gd, mgr,
gd cook, capable of c:arq:
for me & family ot 5. Top
salary to qual, app1Jcant,
Live in beaut N.B, home.
67>-0l81
Person1l1 6405 SPECIALIST per I: rers. 5'9-0IS2 Guy Rooting Co. Rttovu REUIEN'S L ANG DON WORLD AIRPORTER·
INN HOTEL CallQordon .. 84&65-IS RAIN rutten installe d . spec, MS-27t1J. 541--8590 AfB-RT TRADEftS. P .O. Box W,-S:PH~~E hr~orkFul?::. * }"ULLY UCENSED * ROOFING lWny RUOll kre llOOl1. IU"V 112T·AZ1, Redondo Bet.ch, MacArthar Blvd.
Tlae
DAILYi
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
-.
"i •
I
~1 '• •• ' • i
j
I
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Remwned Ilindu Spiritualist le. All Home Improveme~~J.. F1ft nt. Reu! 968-2208 s.w-. .... CaUt 9027I part-time. Ca.II or come in
Advice on all matters. Free Est. 531)..:-1009 H•ul'-6730 QU~ You've al--f641 MAC ARTHUR, ''u"SKP""=RS~Em=-p1"',...--.,-,..-,,,--ee, (op,.,!t~b," Cn~ airpm1} ~ci.~ Ne•port Bhd, .
IAvc, Marrlage, Business "'W' wanted Dresamakbi...,.. NEWPORT BEACH Georp AlJen, Byland Agen-1 ·====;;;~;;~==========:;:~~~===:j
Marketplace . i
Rearllnp given 7 days a Cement, Concret. __ '600 .N.T. Lawn Ser vice . alien."''..-v-. ~-y, 1...,.; cy 1£1&.8 E, 16th, S.A. • w.-e k, 9 AM_ 9 PM ul .....,_ noo1 .,. •ow CASHIER, exp'd, for tine S47-0395
312 N. El Camloo Real, CONCRETE. All types.,.,.., c.,.... c1 .... ..,., bl Inc 6 On.nge Ave., Clo!. 66-Jm wom••• clolhlng 1tore, part,.., ... ,... ......... _..., ., ST' ""R G '""'Eu•11~'
San Oemenle est. Sawing, breaking, haul· light movina'. 54 1-51 &3, EUROPEAN ~ tlme/Xmu. Salet: poalUonl ' ~'\'! ~:,;... __ ~lf n"T L rs.~ .IL't.o ~1'.
492-91.16, 492.-0016 Ing &: Sklploading. Servk'e &:: !i.ll-3729 all custom fitted. 'Vtr)' .JIO open for ex,p'd. No _ . Ale ~.. , u.A.
MASSl\'OE SPECIAL quality.M8-8668Bob. MOVlNG,_Ga.raae-clean-up_A ftUOMble. m.-1349 p bone call1 p l••••· ~~~z 'f :~~~:= ~ ~.»rh
6 Oolla.r'1 MORE Concrete patio for lite haullne. Reuonable. Alter••*'• -'42..JMS Backltreet, No. 25 Fashion ~ ~ To .l.---1-. --· ""~-'-·, ~a~ leu money Artistic .ettinz Free e1Umate1. 645-1603 hland, NB • -·• _...., .. -·---,, ,_. lit" & She Health Club Lie:., call Mu at 64.f-068'1 ·YARD/Gar.· Cleanup. Neat, •ccurate, 29yearsexp. mad wcwdl C01 1 ......... ingto,..... "'16-17 ~
Sepa1'8te w1lk i.n Sauna'• ror 1 =====~-.~-• P.emove trees. Ivy trash e Dreamalinl ·Alteration& CASHIER-FULL Tl1"E • ~TMllUI of'fOl/Zcdoc~'9\ ..,.
Lfldit1 & Ckntlemtn 841-1879 ~WORK, no job too Gr.dt backhoe ~4S. · Deslsned to suit )'OU. $1.1$/hr, 13'1-3811 ~ Jf tw. 310.. ,.,,..,,. ""·"
17434 Beach BJvc:. <corner rn1aU. reuonabie. FrM • • Call J * "'""'"'i--;;;: NAJ Jt i •• ~ :n,,T""•· ".,".,--· -'-.n 01 :·~~1s~GE * *E~:c:;,;:~~:. :,.~:1,~~~s~ Tllo, Car:mlc-"14 R~:~E:~l~ llMNE l'ER.SOffl ~=· iE" 55'-• , !ik: ii~
SAUNA *-WHUU.POOL drvways, etc. Llcen1edl~*~*~RO~Y~1 !646"29~~~*~*'-1'-:::'.'.::--::-:-=:-::--:-Open!np tor enthullutlc SERYICES•:AGfl\CY fflwA1J1 1,r.e=•• 37S-•-,,~ Mlm'MM
t.ovdy Clrb. Plash fadlltlts. PhWlps Cement. 54~ TRASH I: Ga nae dWMlp, *Vtrne, The Tile~lan1t peoplt wantina to maJte a (}Ormtrly Abilities Uni.Im.) Jfl,;,, 'lo!M ~~i.., :: ::;._ '!':'r· .,".A.
O""n 7 d• ... noon-mlA .. ; .. ht . CU5I'O~l CONCRETE 1 days . .$10 • io.d. Free ffL om. "wk. Install repa_irs. minimum of 11000 per month I), .<Oj 10Y-«IU. 70.. .._ ml ,... "".., ..... ..., ..... nme 54&-503l No job too 11'n1 Fluter TRISH kOPKINS f.16-27~ 11 CO!ttldw •1~ 11s.-1.~:.. 2930 \Y, Coast 11W)', Newport PATIO-ORJV&S-ETC. ~uvw • t ,. I ~ ... 1...:. ............. anrl who are wllllna to work -.70-71 . II~ '2Car.t n w., w"··~-~,,,··!4 Beach..~ Fl'ff e11Jma!e. 6T~16 pa c 1111. ~ ........ ''"""" and leam. Need not be 11 .. tl9 E.17th Cat Irvine) C.M. ~CAHCl:l ;~;:.., ~::_.. ~St;f'-9u -CliPlllW
SHARE DECORATIVE CONCRETE tt.uMclHftlnt ~ repair, SfT·00/8*Gl6, «nsed UI apply, U llctl'IM!d !!!!!!'!!!!!!'42!!!!"-l!"470"l!l_,!!!!,.I lllrif1f 1s"'°""' ..su.. n~ NC.II
GAS E XPENSE DRIV~-WALKS ·PATIO HOUSE Of CLIAN T;;;°$;"'.:;·1-; ~ 6'il 111>ttlal program. excellent K punch 0,.-~.1&1li~ :J~iN'• ~~ ~~ 1AJ.,,
Nmlrldel•C..la_,..,,, CALL DCN, "2-SO!I DOES IVIRYTHING 1--------tralnuw _.....and )'OU Uil mo to.,.;, ~!!¥.3 """ --"""""" ... ._
t.quna, World ... hn. a to __ Oxrun1 1 Ra. OeMinc Ah1i'a)'I LM'• TNt Strvtce can earn while )"OI IMm. , --.. _, .... -....... _..___,,,, ~~~·• :=z i:_.._. f''iii~~ S. CaJl GUAJ2i (ext 210) Contractors --642 L ... 4 Artlstk prunlnc &:: rtmoval, ClU Walker I: Lee, Ret.Jton, .....,,. """' ~· .. -... ... ..-.... nnv UO " :i1 ~ s1 c.. 11 v-AOUMIW i .:da>o.~~494-S;,.;-'m"'-'an;;.;;;"';.c;s.,___1,.fyw,y. qualtt)' home -vu M· strtt.:l~ ~ and ut few' Man-;..,~tr· .. ~i!."' ::' :h!:; ~ ~:l,~' H~tfy ~J!INft g~ :i:
• SWINGERS! NN" Oran~ npalr. W..Us. ttlHna, noon WINDOWS I: walls walhed. c n.. a,tr. bencllts, Call Miu Laura, i1"1i_VIQ,0,1goo~ '1 ~=Cf .. ,'_ .).loii";.._:: ":i" ~-· ~·-1l!.,_.-":!: CD. Gulne. Free lnlo OCSC1 etc. No job too &mall. Firs. itrlpped, sealed & u-a...-•m "90 TIRED ot that old turnlbn? $S7-6122, Abigail Abbot Pfr. ~ '11-......-· .... ........... -
P.O. Bot 21ll, Alllibelm !M~1t94. \\'iU(f'd, f'rt.e nt. da.y or ...... ry lt'• rtally not that hard 10nnet Agtncy, 230 W. Wat. 2llnltltirlw SIWi!ti Ms..nl
121--0W. • RE ~f ODE t. J N O A· ntchl. 613-300d. czy;;-OSKI-.S~-(Coy----ke-y-) to nplace. Jl< watch the 'ner, Suite 211, Sanla Ana . ~AU,. 11 2'.,,.. "'""°''"' ";::::t. "'; t'
M)'ltery Jwnpcr MIGJTTY SPEClALJTY. Gf:Ml'ill Cnn-?..lesa Cleanlnc Sef\'ltt 1CU1tonl U~s-teey. U31 furniture I: mlsoellaneoul lJADY wanttd t9r houae~1ork ;,.1~ ! ~,,..... ®60W.ic-~ IOfll MALll
:i.10. TOS Mops after ttk1rla tractor. Francll P, VaalQ'. Carpels, •1rfdowa, Doors •k:. N t w port -Blvd, Of, columns hi thl Oaa:Ma.ct 2 days "'"'1Y· Own trant. I ___ _!~~~~"'~)SJ:!::Good:=~=M=·=-='l.l~=N=• :•:':· ::=~·~! ___ ,.) I bid Ju»>o ... third-. 1.-Ml..1811_..._ _____ ...__Re_•_•_eom_,,.mc;.;..;"-..;54..;18_•.,ln;;._,,_IG--..1'"451."'"'-----·••..,=-------.,,-,.,.,, m-4111S , , , _
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rr\do1, -30, 1910 * DAILY PILOT .J3
We hav. • 100C-dock cl :w.,
]Jm) GMC Cam.,. lrl1Cb.
Buy -. boat tho price
ralte. -Cam><r -aUont and med. trucks.
UNIVERSITY
OLDStllBD.£
OLDS
321152 Valle Road
San Juan Capistram
137 ..... /"""'51l/499-Zlll
'6 7 International
. ...-
" 3 DAILY PILOf Friday, O .. l..btr SJ, l•,.J ~n'"'<A"N"'~"-p"o"R"'T'"A"r"'10;.,N,,--,..,,ra;;m5iipg>iiiR'iJAATT10i'o"'N°"7TJiiR'AiAHSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 1
Imported Can
TRANSPORTATION TltANSPOllTATION TRANSPORTATION fllANSl'ORT ATION
c • ._,. 9520 • •"'°' 9600 •~.,.,tod Autos 96GCI Imported Autoa HOO Imported Au.... -Imported Au1ot -Imported Autoa -Imported A-MOO l'-'-''--"-'-'-'----'--l~=.;.:.;.;;_o.=;.;.__,;,;;.~1~;.;:..;.~.;...;.;.;.;..;_~-
FORD loclOI')' von oom:>"· AUSTIN -HEAl.EY FERRARI FIAT MGB PORSCHE TOYOTA TRIUMPH 4-tipd, alps $, pop top, r&h,
haa ev<rythj,._ 1!•75. Tul. 19;4 ~"'tin lltaley cluolo. · FERRARI '69 Flat 850 Spider '64 MOB '63 PORSCHE f & u '65 TRIUMPH -Sport 6 r.25 '64 YW
557-1540 Cood-"""""'< .:ond. Rd body Newport 1mporu Lid, Qr. 4<peed, new tU-.., AM/FM Wke whee~. ndlO, heator, •· COUPE ITIOIYIC)IT!OI RPH ID7, Pvt, Pty, GI""'"'" wtllto, with red
HUNTER'S Special! 8' & int, "'new paint. 673-tMO. ange County's only author-rll.dio, sport exbl.Ust. (XZU. 1peed. A fine aut<>moblle! • --646-4388 terlor, can flnance Ffvalt!
cabowr camper "9 llln ized dealer, 831) (J.SS.770) Hanttop, gleaming ~ ?1'1 HERE NOWI 1970 Triumph 500cc puty, Ue. (165..BEJ f, ~~Auto.,,.,,,, RdHr i---IBMW . -EA!!l'S _f--==!'!'!!...=.,.---i IU?t ~>ver with brand new Ii> 8"" A DRIVE THEM Excel-"°"' 3 mo okl. _ _ $799---r+-i·
, ~::IAlal;; :::;li.:o, --A-ut ____ D_lr-. --1 31~e~i>o~a!wy, ' "FRIEDLANDER" -"FRIEDLANDER" ~°';~, ~~dl':~ ·-~~~;7.T '36-1"" aft 5 PM CHICK IVERSO~l I
6 cy1, otlcl<. SUOO. <M-8371 o< SaJea • 5'rvlce •Parts 642-9411; !i<Q-1164 U 7N RACH <Hwy. 1'1 1'7H HACH !Hwy. Jtl Lie, PXW982.,, I L • VOLKSWAGEN YW ,
All MncleU to 0..... ,_ Authorued Ferrari Dealer 893-7566 • 531-6824 893-7566 • 531-6824 $2399 eaJl fmlA l-~.::~:..:;c:73vw.::1·-CM-w=rn.--Xln~t Servloe:~~'!,7'00 PM ........... ~CHICK IVERSON IMPORTS '65 YW 19711::JZvo. :i
•-"°=nd"" . .,"=s~"='i=' •="='=pm== I COAST IMPORTS FIAT '69 124 Sport Cpe, . YW 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 BUG LEASE !
1-O! Orango County !no:. 1--------1 '67 MGB, wire whl•. ndlal 549-0031 Ext. 66 or 67 '70· TOYOTA'S American """' wide t!fts
9525 ~Buggies UOO \V. Paciflc Coast Hwy -..____.._..._.. 4 ~-New paint. A beau-~~~~/FM radio, 1910 HARBOR BLVD, In stock. Immed.Late :Wery. ::.=.i m~:u~ ~ '71 VW BUG :
om: of the Original "'''""'I ::=..,_===·=-==5'9= •. -"T """HIN -K' -! • ''" tXL1$V22354)95 '66 MGB -COSTA MESA 901. ONL y
Towd'" Hu """' & flnl•h· I · Wire wheeb, ov .. drivo, both '69 911 'S' ~ •ar· ... ,. s.v.r.t other --$49 00 '. ' .. In 3 Baja""''· Complt DATSUN ~llllfl DON BURNS top,, radio, heater, ... ,_,.~., -"· • m .. ' .. vw to -fn>m • w/Ford V-4 eng, roll-cage, ~ A fine b\ly al thls low price . ....,.uw. 5700 actual nwes. " tll-' CHICK IVERSON Per Month
s gates, tires & spare p.ll"tl.1 --------Porsche Audi, LTD. C•71>814) speed trana: .. mag wheels, •llfS . AT
Needs ttwl.riqr & starter. '68 Datsun 13631 Harixll' Blvd. 636-2333 $1499 AM/FM. Special factory YW BILL YATES
"""""S950c!'l<-u,,, Alt 6. NEW 124$fi,r DEMO Justs. of Garden Grove""'· "FRIEDLANDER" oquipped. Yellow with blacl< Laguna llMch ~ Ext 1111 "' 67 :
• DffiT ONLY! RUNS Wagon g 2 SPORT CPl "'""°'· <•30122•1 . 900 So. Cot. Highway 1970 HARBOR BLVD. VOLKSWAGEN ,
GOOD. $.150. Low mlloage, ""tom•tio. Red ''fRIED.,.LANDER'' '6 1 4 . 13710 llACH !Hwy. lfl BILL YATES 494-7503 * ~100 =-~ii;::::i::C:;;:-,;.,=~ I " . * 675-M54 Aft S * with black interior. Excel· 893-7566 e 537-ti824 1970 VW Wettphalla camper, 32852 Valle Road
· tent condition.Priced to&el!. s speed, radio, heater. tm. ~· VOLKSWAGEN '68 Corona 8000 m.I, AM/FM radkl, San Juan capl~
lm-'ed Autot t600 (WAH 191) 1J710 llACH ILYD. mecula•· condition, (YXZ-Xlnt condltkln, $3400, S3T-48.l1/493-4511/49S-2361 ' (Hwy. ltl "" 32852 Valle Road 4 Door, automatic. radio, ~9076 aft 3 PM
ALFA ROMEO
'63 ALF A ROMEO 1600
Spyder conv .. 45,000 ml. on
e~. R-H, trans. top xlnt ,
very well cared (or. can 4.0
492--0520 collecl.
·59 Spyder, red, stereo tape.
LIKE NE\V, $3500
• 64&-8590 *
AllSTIN HEALEY
'68 Austin America
$1395 · 893-7566 • 531-6124 121> s.n Ju.n eap1s1rano ,,.., ... (VHH m> '69 VW BUCJ · NEW-USEP.SERV. $2395 OPEL !37-4800/493-45111499-2261 $1199 '67 vw Bug • Lo ml, Ex-.
&l'Vll"l.r'l.I BILL JONE See' '64 PoRscHE BILL y ATES "'~="n,.1•;;;":.:.:;;,:1;,:~:...9att='::.;•,,$1250=·1 "..'i:,;, ~:i ;;:~n,'zzi
'68-850 Sp d BJ, Sportscar nter '66 OPEL Bal.!' •• ~ :i;..beel,, VOLKSWAGEN ~::.. ":..!"" -AM/FM, 2171 $1495
y er 2833 H"""'. C.M. ~91 WAGON radial ""''· ''""""'"' oon-32852 Vallo Rood $USO. 675-4349
Italian racing red, MagJ===='=====~IAutomatic, radio, heater. Li-dUion. Uc. XOG997 San Juan Capistrano e·oo VW Bug. Xlnt cond.
$ whee~, rodlo, h"tcr, 4 JAGUAR oen,. TAX065. $3099 a:J7-4800/49345ll/499-2261 185(), QUICK SALE
,... DATSIUI ..,,., =· rodta1 "'"· <YQX. $988 CHICK IVERSON TRIUMPH e '62 ~~' <:0nd .
$1695" JAGUARTERS MIKE YW sunroof. Original owner, lo
"Loader In The B<aohCitlea" BILL JONES' HEADfj>UAR 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 mi. $195. 675--0781
ZIMMERM AN J C · Theonlyauthorhed JAGUAR McCARTHY ·-HARBOR BLVD '68 TR 250 '64 vw Bn•, .unroot, ,-eblt .. B ' Sportscar enter dealtt .. the entire Harbor ~ .. COSTA MESI. • ea,,.,,, yollow, 6 cyl., m•g eng. New'""" ..-dutch.
---1 '68 VW Bug i
2145 HARBOR BLVO. AreL BUICK 1--====--I Make ofier. 64"""'4!, 540-6410 · 2833 H-~--. C.M. .,, "91 Comple'·· '64 PORSCHE type wheels, radio, ski rack, , Sedan. Automatic. Excellent --.,,=-=--~===--~ ~' ~ ~ I ' boo + to '"' vw B '67 "•" 15550 ,Beach Blvd. $2395 onneau l convert. p. va us. eng . .x • oondition. (XIX 416J Pri«d DOT DATSUN '61 FIN 150 SPIDER SALES ,1 S.n Dl"8o Frwy, (S IJ062 J ndio, xtru. Very cl.,n.
Needs soap & water.
(YXR '191)
$1199
BILL YATES i
VOLKSWAGEN i
lo "U. OPEN DAILY 24.ooo Jnu.,. 1mmaoul"'' SERVICE 1194-3341 • 531-2450 $2295 11025. 544-8134 Tustin.
AND Radio, heater, 4 • speed. PARTS '64 vw Bus, new 1500 eng &
SUNDAYS -txtJB.mJ BAUER _ '68 Opel DON BURNS """· Xln't .:ond. M"'' .. u.
1&!35 lle•cb Blvd. $1299 BUICK Wanon Porsche Audi, LTD. 1875 or oil'. 546-5619 328.12 Valle Road Huntlnt<too Beaoh "FRIEDLANDER" lN ~ 13631 H.roo, Blvd. 636-2333 • '67 VW Bug-Good .:ond.
--M2c118l or~ 1J710 llACH IHwy. Jtl COSTA MESA Radio, heater, 4 speed._ 64~W. Cout Hwy.,S::.~7M Just S. of Garden Grove Fwy. New tires, tape deck.
'67 Datsun 893-7566 e 537-6824 234 E. 17th Street <WPM l06) Engine is in box, '66 TRIUMPH TR..4A $1200. Call 644-l24?
San Juan Capistrano
837-4800/493-451V499-226l ' .
-.. U~TI N AME RICA
Sa1ea, S>Nlce, Parts
lmmerl!ate Delivery
• All Models
.. j 1 r ttilJ b rt ;,.
• 31111µ01·15 .·
must be assembled. '67 PORSCHE 912, MINT '56 vw Bus, gd cond., . Wagon -----------=.. 548-m5 $699 cond. 46,000 ml. Lemon 4-s~. wire, wheels, new full seats, reblt engine.
Automatic. CUD~ 591) Sacrl· ~ '10 XKE Roadster yelloW: new radial, $4,100. paint & Interior. I.R.S. Ra-·Call 642-0504 Bl LL YATES 644-5290. ',RP''· ' he90'11''" R•al Shup. 1,,,,,65-:vw=--=-"'· i' ... = .. "'1500=-::::: fice! Will take trade oo fin-mamfl Loaded, with hardtop. .,,. _.-.... .. .... ,
ance private party. Call ~ Chrome wire wheels, AM/ VOLKSWAGEN '61 PORSCHE Cpe 1600, orig $l3'9 eng. $975 or best otter. Must ~or 494-6811. FM, •12'l57. Sacrifice! Will 32852 Valle Road ~. xintcan condft~~~'. ''FRIEDLANDER'' iell. K Block. 727 1969 4-DR ataUon wagon, take older car in trade or Yorktown, Apt 126, H.B .
Auto., r&h. Red wfblack auto 8port ftd finance Pvt Pty. ca.JI Sid dlr San Juan Capistrano 7I4/im-G716 11710 IUCH IHwy. lt) '66 VW CAMPER low nU.,
int 14,IXKl mi. l owner. Authorized Sales • Service 540-3100or 494-7506 aft 10 am, 83T4800/493-4Sll/499-2261 t ~.~.=63~P~o=R~SCHE=~co=NV=R=T.-1 893-7566 • 537-6824 veey clean $1775 or best of-
'66 vw
Camper i
Fully loaded, Pop top. eranJ
new engine. •PU658 •
$1795
BILL JONES'
BJ. Sportscar Center . ' 11595. 646-7849. 1311 Olli DEMO SALE '67 Jaguar 2X2. burgundy, •L9 'Opel REBLT/ENG. I - - - -.. fer. 536-8941 Dr NB I G * * 673-7200 * ·* ... ...-...... -l.=70,..-,Vl"'V,.-.,~"""-top,------,_=-· • · · ·1970 F1at 124 Sports Cpe. ~tfb~ leather, fl!~che In J;;;;T;a;;;:-;;;;~;;;rt;;;:N.;;J-=:;.;;~;:::;..;~-== , ..,., ""'°'"I""• ~3h-'O W. Out Hwy., N.B. -70 DATSUN RafilO heater spedal ex· tires WlJ'e whls, Io mis, Im-Wanon '63 S Xlnt cond. Extras. New ,65 S •tfi w/tent. 6500 mi'a, many fr.fl.~ 540-1784 haus:t,' pin striping. radial mac, $3700, pvt ply, 673-2222 ":I' tires, chrm rims. Otter. Will pl Ire xtras, Irnmac, Best otter.
2833 Harbor. C.M. 540-449'
VW LEASING
'67 Sprite 4 Door Sedan, used C603A\'.A) tires, :ow miles. or 494-3622 nltes. Fact. air cond. (BHT T:i8) trade for VW. IWT--5654 Radio, heater, 4 11peed. Clean! 642-3740.
dlr. will tako tr.de ... ""' $2795 51350 '66 912 Coupe •PU698 ~.,;;:,.;vw;;;:.:;•"""~·"'""=•""••"',,.~.""1m=-. O Tax &: Lie. Down ,
• $50.87 per month • I
4 speed. The color is red.
(356 BEL) ance private party, Call 9625 Goroen Grove Blvd. KARMANN GHIA $595 m" .:ond, radio, ""'tm ln-
54&-4052or491-611ll. 537.1177 Call Coll.ct DON BURNS One owner. (TAX 289) terior, 11595. 84&-7057.
• 36 month open end lea.sf .
19'11 vw Bug : I
$1295
D.ON BURNS
MUST sell 1.,, Datsun 1600 ,67 SPYDER $3595 BILL JONES' * '6' V\V Squar.bacl<. Coan,
..,iscar.Red.117110oronor. '63 YW GHIA '"~"oroch• Audi, LTD. D.ON BURNS B.J. Sportscar Center xin1oond*·.!1'5
7308
-*
AT :
CHICK IVERSON;:
646-0479 or 64fr7898. Super Sharp 4 speed dlr. Convertible. Recent engine .l.,)Wl Harbor Blvd. 636-2333 '"°'"
1970 DATSUN 2~Z. Air, <TQC 558) Ww take Car in overhauJ, hard to find mo-Justs. of Garden Grove Fwy, Porsche Audi, LTD. 2833 Harbor, C.M. 54CJ.4491 ;61 VW FASTBACK
vw ·I
1970 HARBOR BLVD. ! I Porsche Audi, LTD.
136r. Harbor Blvd. 636-m1
Just S. of Garden Gtove Fwy.
1964 Mark Ill 3000. O/D.
Rad1o. Xlnt tires. Good
cond. $1350 firm. 673-4169.
mag whill. 1700 mllea. trade or finance private par-del. Radio, heater, 4 speed, '68 Opel 13631 Harbor Blvd. 636-2311 ,68 T • h GT $1400. MS-2505 eve/wknds
Perfect cond. ~2379. ty. 546-4052 or 494-S811. etc. Just S. of Garden Grove Fwy. rlUmp e ,64 VW-Radlo, 4 speed,
• '69 DATSUN 2CXXI $1400. 1969 850 Sports C:OUpe. $1099 Chrome wheels, new tires & • '66 PORSCHE Good cond. 1000 eng. $595.
COSTA MESA ,
'67 vw CAMPER ' I $1~5 . ROADSTER. $23'.XI Good condiHon. CHICK IVERSON paint • Metallic blue, low Will consider any olfer. Fdla!astba:k. 6 cyL engine, ta· After 4 pm, 642-3293
* * 642-3579 * * *89'1-!1731* mu ...... (l<B~) Will take 557-9018. ""''· (ZSP 637) '66-v·=-w=--=s"'u-=-G~ J2rlUPLlll
31111por1~,
YW trade or finan<:e privato ,,... $1799
9600 Imported Autot 9600 Imported Autot -549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 ty. 5464D52 or <94-68ll RENAULT Dorsa Motors
1970 HARBOR BLVD. e '70 OPEL .GT: IMMAC.
Imported Co1n ?.1edlterranean ereen. Radio,
whlte 'Nllll tltts. CXEW493)
Insurance Too High?
DRIVE FIAT!
fiat 850 Spider'.
e Whtn you dth·• tht Fitt l!iO Spidtr ~u t •t tfrit feel of 1pDtf e1r dr!¥ln9 .;,.nliout
dt•fl119 your l:.ud91t, You ftel the ro•cl •ncl enjoy ii. P1rticip1t1 in tht tngin1ert119 of t
re.tlly fi11e t port1 cer ride. Ancl you •now why t Spider 1teh only tw-1t'1 the piece
.. lte e co11ple! Good to ltnow tfiet when you dri•t e Fi1t 11'1 111 there; the new 51 hp
e¥#ht1d 'tel'te engine, de1h l•chomeler. the f11llv eclj1uteble bucket ieeh, the front ...... r di1c brelte1, redi1l lite1 end the full't' 1ynchrom11ht lll four-1p1ed 1ticl 1hift. 6 ef
the joy of driving-owl
fi•ts cost l•ss to Insur•. How do•• Fia t dolt for th• pric•?
Hurry! Only 7 Executive Demo's Left
l l •lmR NIW
1970 850
SPORT COUPE
AM Reel!•, Redi•I Ttr..1, AU
Fief fdre1 At No ftlre
C<l1t. 6 2t771. 4,700 •tfuel
1111ilt1.
SAU PllCl
$1895
am Jones'
l lGISDR NEW
1970 124
SPORT. COUPE
AM /FM R•dio, Rtdl•I Tirtt,
All Fitf Equiprnt~t. $0127· ,,.
SALi PllCI
$2995
llGISTIR NlW
1970 FIAT
124 ''$"
AM/FM Reclio. lt•cliel Tittl,
All Fief Eq11ipment, #717•
1-40,
SALi PRICI
$1895
F I A T
B. J. SPORTCAR CENTER
2133 HARBOR, COSTA MESA 540-4491
Vi1lt Our Hutt New Parts & Se rvice Dept.
16 Sltll1 Servicing All Sporto & Foreign Cars
COSTA MESA Jlust Sell Thill Weekend! 1--------18621 Beach Blvd., Hunt. Bch.
llo======== J Best Offer: 675-6197 • 1967 RENAULT R-10, xlnt. 1424340 142-8640 $1195
DON BURNS
3100 W, Cout Hwy., N.B .• I
MERCEDES BENZ '70 OPEL GT, 4-spd, R/H, .:ond. ~S.,.2006 *
Bi&: eng, asking $2900. Pvtl.,,-=,-:==-=--::=I pty. ~1097 or 646-3333 e 1962 RENAULT • R&H.
'67 TR4A
$1595
642-9405 540-1~.
WANTED : I ' rn pay 1op dolla· ~ ,_
MG
"'========I Good transportation. -1175. 4!>1-TI76 all 5
PORSCHE SAAB
Authorized Dealer
J1rtttport
J\ 11 Ip Ll r 15
31~ W, Cou\ Hwy., N.B.
642-9405 540-1764
s.ie. • Servi"' • p"" '66 TR 4A 5 speed. Low mileage. Tape Sonet Coupes in Stock •
deck, (700 AK'I') Priced to Orange Cou nty'11 Newest Dlr. Roadster. British r acing
'68 912 Targa
Poncho Audi, LTD.
13631 Harbor Blvd. 636-2333
Just S. of Garden Grove Fwy.
'59 VW .Bug
VOLKSWAGEN 1oday, ~
and ask for Ron Pincbot. ·
549-3031 Exl 66-f,'. 673-0000.:
1962 VW Baja type. New int.
Rad io, heatr?r, 4 speed, dlr. new tires, 50 b.p. engin¢
(IZF 649) ?.lust sell by Sun.. 548-4040
d•y. Will tako tr.de or fin-,66 YW BUG ance private party. 546-4052
or 494-68ll. Competition orange w Ith "'Sl~49~5 ~F~or--'1~,.,~~vw~. '"'JO°'n-.t bJack interior. UOH144
m""h & ph,..lcol <:0nd. New $1099 ""· s4 995 COAST IMPORTS green. '$1595
'67 MG 1100 DON BURNS ~ ~w~':!t~wy. DON BURNS
42,00) miles 4-speed, radlo, Porsche Audi, LTD. &l2-0406 e 546-4529 Porsche Audi, LTD.
titts ...... & shooks. CHICK IVERSON , 962-2.170.
"'66~VW"'°'D"'1x-.'"'B'°"u-,.-, -,."'bl'"t ':'.en-=g I VW
heater. Immaculate. An un-13631 Harbor Blvd. 636-2333 1363! Harbor Blvd. 636-2333 believable price! (UNA-689) Ju~t S of G~-'cn Grove Fwy
&: elec sys .. conv lo camper, 549-3031 Ext. 66 Of' 61 }
w/gear. Xlnt 11hape. Pvt 1970 HARBOR BLVD. -• .uu • SUNBEAM Just S. of Garden Grove Fwy.
"FRIEDi1NDER" '62 Porsche Cabriolet '61 TR 250
'66 Sunbeam Roadster '2295
pty. $1485. 342-8651. COSTA MESA
1966 VW BUG, rad io ,
sunroof, xlnt mechanical.
$900. 675-5015, 675-8137.
1970 Ton VW Bug
Must sell $1900. ~ 11750 llACH I Hwy. JtJ
893-75(,6 • 537-6824
NEW-USED-SE RV.
W'U'VV'l.I
'67 MINI
$1995
.J1rtuµort ·
31111port5
31«1 W. C.OOSt Hwy., N.B.
642-9405 540-1764
~
~THINK m"t!"
~'FRIEDLANDER''
tm. l •ACM CMW"I'. '9)
893-751i6 • 537-6S:24
NEW-USED-SE RV.
~
MG
Sales, Service, Parts
Immrdlate Delivery,
All Model.a
.J2rluporl
31111por1"
Bille finish. AM/FM.
(131 BLO) '70 VW. SACRIFICE
N . * '55VW SURF BUG. Reblt ** 4""""'6 ** , BILL YATES ew paint. new top, new "..--u.i.
""'· ISTZ134) Only Pf,lne~ running oond. ~.63~vw=.-,..~.-uU~t -engine~-. ---I
VOLKSWAGEN $1295 . 4 . clutoh, low mileage, .....
.J1rll1Pllt I
JI 111 p Ll 1 I ~'
ITS Beach hou9e time. Big-cond $675 536-3344 '
32852 Valle Road DON BURNS 311)) W, Cout Hwy., N.B. .. .. selectlon evvl Seo the · · San Juan Capistrano . 642-9405 546-1764 ledion DD'llfl DAILY PIIDr WANT ADS!
837-4800/493-451 V499-22Gl Porsche Audi, LTD. Dia! &U-5678 A cbaf&e lt.
•64 Porsche Cpe. \~1~363~1~H:::"~"'~r~B~··~··~6J6.~2333g;lrlm;;;;;po;;rt;;od;;;;;;A;•;;loa;;;;;;;;;HOO;;;;;;;lm;;;;;po;;rt;;od;;;;;;A;;utot;;;;;;;;;;'600;;;;;;;;;1;;m;po;;;;";;od;;;;A;;ut;;;oa;;;;;;;;;ffOO;;;;;i\ Just S. of Garden Grove Fwy.
Red finish. AJl.f!FM. :J~:f,~~~~ .~~~~;;;,~!"" @USED. CARS ~
83~~;~<;8J,,~::i ~~~x~~~81n;t· Lowmlle. '69 vw SEDAN 100;!,'!a;.;•nty $1788
s-=~~!~.=,~~.~~C,_..~-upe-w-,1 D0~1 ~9~RNS '69 VW SEDAN 100fu.w;;nty $)775
Prl«d '$2s95 ~~r~:.,.A~•-L~iJ33 '68 KARMAN GHIA 100Jizw~•nty $1699
DON BURNS Ju~S.ofG•nlen GrovefWy. '68 vw SQUAREBACK lOO~~·~~~nty $)650
Porsche Audi, L TO. '68 Toyota
13631 """'°' ""~-.,._2333 Automatio. Sharp• <XDM244> '68 VW SEDAN 100x"'1zW2•1r1r•nty $ J 514 Jost S. of Garden Grove fWy. $ l l 99
'
59 Ps~~~cHE Dorsa Motors '67 VW SEDAN 100-isFw;,r;•nly $)287
.J2rlupor1
31111por1 ~-,
18621 Beach Blvd., Hunt. Bch .
142-8340 142-16411
'70 Toyota MKll
4 door. Loaded, factory 11ir.
166 VW SEDAN 100~u~~;•nly $)077
3100 W, Coast Hwy., N.B. 31~ W. Coast Hwy., N.B. Only S,000 mUes, •RT'63t47
642-9405 54().176(" 642-9405 541>-1764 Still under v.•an'ftnly, Taki!'
$899 '62 KARMAN GHIA ~;:1o3"
'63 VW SEDAN :t~·634 '66 f.tGB Compett t ton
prepared. Ottr $4500 in-
vested. Sacrtlleel l $1500 or
Best olfe.r. &l2-J62S or
S.18-8667 eve.
'61 ?ttGA 1600. New painl &
II.rel!. al5o ne• eng. I tt-blt
tranl. new tnL A roll bar.
1375. 897-9731
1961 ?o1GA. Good condition.
$350. Priva • pa.tty, Ph:
6'6--am al!tt I P~.
-.
'9> PORSCHE Cabriolet, 1600 oldtr trade or small down.
super, w1th hard top. New WUJ. tlnance Pvt. Pt:1. Call
f!n,eine, new dutch, new dli . Maury aft 10 am 541).&00
" •• ~ ... /FM or 49f.7506. urtl, new l'<L"''t• "'" ·1--------·ll just like new, can be attn
at 2089 Harbor Blvd., or
phone 645-1982, 9am 10 6pm
'66-911 Red: Nu Michelin
ttrts chrome whls. JU11
tslren ln trade for bolt, but
11t'l'd cub. \VIII MC! at
l)iOO. Pvt ""'' """161.
BILL MAXEY
!TIOfVJOJT(Al
111111 BEACH llL VIJ •.
Huni. llaach 147.WS
1.m H. ot OUt ""'7. •Bell
•, ..
$799
::-:,io 191 $48 7 ------:..:... '62 VW CONVERTIBLE
HARBOUR V.W.
AUTHORIHO SALIS & SERVICE
18711-IMch Blvd. Huntlntton BNch, 842-4435
..
'"° ano
X&
Cl
' 1
•
De
1167.
I
Li
Of ,
Bu
h•
Cl
l
I
31
642'
1969
Bil
Li~
Afl
I .,
'"' 67:!
196!
tio
"" •It
••
AF
i ~
"''
I •
'
In
rRAHSPORTATION
~ Imported Aut9I: MOO
-· VOLKSWAGEN
'68 YW
AUTOMATIC
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ••• TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
' F tlday, Octobef 30, 1970 DAILY PlLGT
TRANSPORTATION
Autot Want.,:t '700 Used C•n 9900 UMd Cars 9900 Ut td Cart 1 --------1------~ "100 Used C1r1 t900 -t900 UMCI Cars 9900 Used Cars
WE PAY TOP
CASH BUICK CADILLAC CHEVROLET CHEVROLET
'61 COUPE DeVILLE., --------1·-------e Cad. '69 Seel. de Ville ,.,II """'"·factory air,..... '63 Nova '70 Ch•velle '66 CAPRICE r"ACTORY ed tori, IPathcr interior. sler. .,..
CO 0 " d U w • Coo fl·~ A t · 2·Door H.T. S.S. Auto., radlr'
f'ull po .. 1:cr, vinyl top, Lw1ur-hit wheel, po11·cr dOor locks, JIO"'tt' steering, Af.1 I F?ll po .. iier bra s, factory alt
C HEVROLET CADILLAC CADILLAC
'66 RIVIERA • C•d. '67 Convertible
. FACTORY Auto., R&H, power 1teer1ng AlR CONDITIONING
& brakes, air, chrome 1 w~ls, License SYR 928 ,Full power, plush !ult leather ' Black with black interior,
economy apeclal, will fin.
ance priVata parbi. Uc.
XEU-224.
S1499
CHICK IVERSON
YW
A.&k for, Salu Manqer
18211 Beech Blvd.
Hun-Beacb
S2~88 Interior, stereo, tilt y.•heel,
--~ -ooorroacs--~-n~t-sentlnel,
MIKE etc .. etc. IVCU0'14J
SALE $2888 PRICE
A tit N JTIONING eo "''t-FM ra lo, t t steer-GCJ0ft " r .._..,top. u omat1c, healer, p je r ateerin:
ious clo!h & leather inll•rior. t1vi~lht ~nUnal, auto dim-6 cyl., au!omatic, Ell'.cellcnt stereo, bucket seats, vinyl
Dual comf~lJ;-Sterw -..rne ~low____milrw._ trans rtaUon car (BSU292) top, (026AGB) ~~ n 1 top. Lie,
multiplex, po .... ·er door Jocks. (TFll567) I e ra e ·neet-jfilflllVX'l'l:l::~r $ 8 ---·I----'
Tlit & tclcscoplc wheel, twi-SALE $3111 PRICE private party, 54~\ or 1 · 8
549-3031 Ext. 66 or 61
1970 HARBOR .9LVD.
COSTA-~-
847<!087 Kl 9-'3!1
LATE MODEL
CADILLACS
WANTED·
& ANY OTIIER
'67 VW ,IUCJ GENF'::: :~~ CAR
Clean! (VOW 1661 SEE CHUCK TRAPP OR
MCCARTHY 0
"""' "°'"'"'·· Ure:•" Selection of Quality tadillaes
BUICK Nobers Cadillac
15550 Beach Blvd. 2600 HARBOP. BLVD.,
at San Diego f)wy. 541).9100 Open Sunday
894-3341 • 5'l1·2450 1969 COUPE de V1 11 e . e BUICK ,68 RIVIERA Nutme& Firemist color, tan
FACTORY landau top, A~l/FM stereo
AIR CONDITIONING \\'/tape deck, leather upho.I.
light se~tl~, power trunk Orange County's Largest 4&4-68ll, VOLKSWAGEN .. JllK. E 'f~'E ·$49"'';.~':'c"ic' ,.N~b~~ Quc~dnl:~" '67 Chevy SS 32852 v.11o Road Mccr"'ARTHY
Orange County's La""'est San Juan Capistrano ·• 2600 HARBOR BLVD 427 V8, 'power stetritll', p<I\\'• 837 ·-/49• •n •;4~ -Selection of Qualitv Cadillacs " --..... ......,_... .,.,..4'.:UJ. BUICK " Costa Mesa er brakes, rally wheels, 11('W
Nabers Codillac 5'10·9100 Open s"'"'"' "''"' Low mileo , Clean! '64 Chevy SS 1'550 Boacb BtYd.
2600 llARBOJt BLVD.,
Costa ?itesn
546-9100 Open Sunday
{1VK164) '7!1 cad iliac El l>Jrado. Glen-327 VS · ~ po 1-r at 00n o,·-~ •••
Do rs a Motors
, air co ...... , \\'er s = · ,,a, ~ .. ~ 00 • .. 3.
1nore ~rey, 1.-ompl equip, Ing, vinyl top, deep dish 89Q-3341 -531-2450
l0 ,000 m i's , $6 ,750 18621Beach8lvd.,Hunt.Bch, chrome \\'hC<'ls, ne1v wide 1953 CHE V Y . G ood
$899 . BILL MAC CRACKEN
Dorsa Motors Nabers Cadilloc 2600 HARBOR BLVD.,
Full po\\'<!r, vinyl lop, stralo
bucket sc11.ts, chrome sport
\\'heels! A~t: I F~1 stereo.
Full pwr. New &-ply tires
\\'/l\1onroe load levelers &
front stabillzer shocks. Xlnt
cond. Priced to sell. $4700.
'70 El Dorado
Full Po .... 'er' .-Loaded.
j521 ADC)
(H01869-1SI Call Bayshore 841-1340--842-16-tO oval tires. <HGM 843) transportation car. $50.
-="="=
0
"="='...,=u=. === --=~=,.----..-i Dorsa Motors 1 _"''sa'°-"'ClicaI'°_•_"'~"~"'·"'~l.16"'_"· • .,.-, •• , =.,1 __ _ '66 Chevy II 1'621 Beach Blvd .. """t. Bch. ., --· -
18621 Be11.ch Blvd., Hun!. Sch, Costa M~
842-1340 10-N40 540-9100 Open SUod•y
•-La~rg-e~Se~lec~ti-on-WE PAY CASH
Of YW Campers,
Vons, Kombis, FOR YOUR CAR
Buses, New & Used CONNEU
lmrnecll•te Delivery CHEVROLET
CHICK IVERSON 2828 """"' Blvd. YW ea.ta ...,. 546-l>lO
pov,.er door locks, tilt & tcJe. 54~1000
scopic steer ing wheel. Load. I=~~=~-~=~ I
ed w/extras. (XDl..584) e Cad. '64 Cpe. d• VIII•
SALE $3111 PRICE >"ACTORY
Orange County's Largest AIR CONDITJONING
Selection of Quality cadillacs Full leather interior. Cruise
Nabers Cadillac ~ntrol, tilt wheel. Automa. tic dimmer. Fu.II power. An 2tiOO HARBOR BLVD., exceptional va1uc. CI\Vl.673)
Costa Me" SALE $1111 PRICE
$6988
MIKE
tficCARTHY
BUICK
155.~ Beach Bl\'d.
at San Diego r~t'\ly.
894.3341 • 531-2-t50 ,._~_9_100 __ =0"'=n ~Sun_ .. _,, Nabers Cadillac
'65 BUICK 2600 1-lARBOR BLVD. '66 CAD. conv, El Dorado -
CHEVROLET s ,,1.. , '"""· "''"""· •"· 942~2-• J._~;., * rod~. !SST ''" Will take '70 Malibu SS '10 CHEVEU.E P..1 a Ii bu
Super SpL 454., Ansen mags.
Going overseas. l\take oner.
67J...154S * '63 NOVA SS. Clean, r&h,
runs ok. S195 as is.
s.15-7498 eve~.
e '5,g EL CAl\ItN0-4 SPD &
STEREO. 15,000 ntl. * AF'T: 3:30/008--0353 *-
trade or finance private par-
ty. Must sell by Sunday. VS, loaded + air cond., pow. -5'1~6-4002~~°'~'-,...,,~ll~·~=~I er windows. 1872 AGO) --------
ATTENTION euYERs S2995 '62 Imperial Let us help you find a
car at no cost to you, BILL JONES' Loo.dee!~ Must sell by Sunday.
Selle ... 8"" wolcome. BJ Sport••ar Center dlr. CFWZ 076> Will take
Call now &12-4431 • • .J4.I trade or finance private par.
CHRYSLER
Auto. Referral Service 2833 Harbor, c.M. 510-4491 ty. ~052 or 494-6811.
~.6~9 ~C~A~M~A~RO~ Eld:. 4-Dr. Sed. V-8, auto., COSTA ~t~ all pwr, climate control,
RA:.H, P .S., P .B, tac air OPEN SUNDAY Ai\1/Fi\1 stereo. rruisc con-'68 El Camino M a libu
EJR 672 r-_,tlft"'ElrOOR-ADO eGN . trol-tilt .tr tele.__stcfring Air. 642-3729 VS, air cond., power strering.
5C9-3m Ext_ IS or 67 WE PAY TOP DOU.AR
1970 HARBOR BLVD, FOR TOP USED CARS
'66 El C11.mino. 4-spd VS,
J\1ag "'·his, facrory air, COMET
AM/FJ\1 radio. $1195 . 1---------1 $ 1488 A ir, AM /FM, A 11 \vhl. guide-matic, lwilite ·55 Chevy 2-dr Impala, 283 dlr. (UYB 942) \Viii take 1960 Ford Chmet
leather/Int. Gd. Cond. A &en!, $1995. 642-2413 or eng, p.s .. Clean, $750. trade or fin11.nee priv.ilt par. 1---------I Good cond. $275.
COST.A MESA 11 your c:ar is extra clean,
'64' GHIA see us firsL
642-53&3.
MIKE ReaJ Buy at $1795 Pvt Pty: 543--0348. * 536-3002 * ty. 5'16-4052 or 4~11. 1964 CHEVY Impala convert. * 646-9059 * SS. New top & tires. Good I;========: BAUER BUICK $'9S 234 E. 17th St.
J1rtuporr
31111porr~.
Costa Mesa MS--7765 M CART. HY 645-2317 '66 FLEET\VOOD: XI n t ·;,7 Chevy W8£0n. Xlnt trans. '56 OfEVY 327: 3-s pd , cond. $750 or Best Offer . C '68 C&d El Dur11.do, Silver Cond! Nu/tires, 47,000 n1i. Alwa~s starts, 11C\'er falls~ \V/Hursr linkage . NU 673-3700, 11.sk for Shlll'On. CONTINENTAL
Auto Leasing 9110 BUICK !\!isl, comp! equip. Stereo Pvt Pty: 644-8292/644-592·1. S200 MG-0&-14 . Polyglass GT tires. l\fANY •66 ThfPALA Dlx Sta Wgn. l---------I
tape deck, 4 nu tires, $4,375. '62 CADia..AC 4 dr HT. Full e '67 Impala 2 rir, beige, Xtras! $650. Pvt PI Y: .Air, PS, R&H, Good cond, '62 Continental sedan. Ex-LEASE
A NEW 19n
PINTO
15550 Beach Blvd. {WPH597) C&ll Bayshore P\\T, air. pwr stri::/brks, fact. a ir.61 "~,.,,,.~~~~~---I i\lust sell, s 13 s o I 0 f fer , ecutive'• pel'90nai car in
at San Diego Frwy. Motors, 642-4£111. $450. 548--2318 Beau!. cond. 675-3087 '65 Chev Sia Wag. One owner , c.5'1c;s..&..cct0c.8______ simply outstanding com . 3100 W, Coast Hwy,, N.B.
642-9405 540-1764 $50.00 mo.
894-3341 • 531-2450 • LEAVING <:c>UNTRY '65 '57 N0:-01AD. J-lighest offer car. While. Perfrc• ron-1 • Black w/black Jeathtr ~
1969 VW Bug: Red/Ext
Blk/int. 4 spd. Xlnt c:ond .
Like New! $1600. 548-8861
Aft 5
69 BUICK Electra 225, 4 dr. CAD CONVRT. Very clean. TRADER'S PARADISE 5 132 \\'. Wilson, Apt. l , Ct-.1 dition $775. 642-1638. 12'1 THE SUN NEVER SETS on terior, fully equlpped. $1000.
{36 mo.)
open end
RENT
Air coOO. nesertg ord:-Tilll -$1595:-675-~ lines-5.tlmes'5.bucks __ ._~.l:~ !_(te~n. A-E. 23rd, Of. Pilot Clas.sltltd &M-7014 11.tt 6
p\\T. Tilt strg \\'hl. 4 '>'.'ay seat. Sharp! Pvt Pty . _N_•w_C_e_r_1 ____ 9IOO __ N_e_w_C_1r_s ____ ,_aoo __ N_•_w_C_1_r_1 ____ 9_SOO __ N_•_w_C_1_r1 ____ 9_800_N_e_w_C_•_rs ____ 9_800 __ N_e_w_C_a_r_1 _____ _
I '66 VW camper bubble tor
good engirl(' and body. $1600
673-7182 N.B.
1968 VW-Xlnt c:ond. New w/w
tires, coco ma!s, auto tran!I.
26,CKM> mi. $1600. cau 846-1on
aft 5.
VOLVO
VOLVO
A NEW 1971
PINTO
54 DAY
AND
4¢ MILE
PUT A LIITLE
KICK IN YOUR
LIFE!
THEODORE
ROBINS FORD
2060 HARBOR BLVD.,
COSTA MESA
642-0010
"41>J086
e 1968 Riviera & 1968 Sport
Wagpn, Both clean, man}'
options, $3.000 eaj P\1 pty.
644--5576 alt 6 pm
'5,g RIVIERA, fac air & all
xtra.s. Xlnt cond, new bltd
tires $3195. 642.1634, 8-5 ~1-F'.
'70 SPORT WAGON ·Like
new, ps/pb, 11.ir. $3500.
545-9419 or 644.-0637
'67 Riviera. Excellent con-
dition. Vinyl top & extras •
$2450. 54{)-{)206. '71 '1 HERE NOWI
SEE & DRIVE TI-IEi\1
A FE\V RE?.1AlNING 70':1 AT ========= CLO~ootrr PRICES Used Ci.rs 9900 '68 RIVIERA -f'ull p'>'.T, air,
loaded. Leaving counlry.
$3100. 496-4533 Dana Pt. . Me.rut Lewu w~A:~y
\.IMPORTS ~~ 2 DR. SpoM Coupe V-8, P/S,
R&H, lo mi tires, xlnt cond.
$1350/offer 644-5699
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 llOO Harbor Blvd. 645-0466
l.l"l.l"Ll'I.
THINI
CADILLAC '66 V\V Bug hi-back seals,
new paint $950. '64 Chevy El
Camino 283 stick, $795. l·.-c-.-d-.-,66-c---.-d-.-V-ll-le-I ~'VO~O'
"FRIEDLANDER"
549-4039 or 533-1023 FACTORY
BUICK Affi CONDITIONING
Full po"'-er, a.II leather inter-
ior, tilt & telescopic wheel.
'69 Electro 225 AM I FM. light dlmm ... (SBBTI4) 4 to choose from. 1l1J41 IUC" (HWY, 2')
893-7566 • 537-6824
NEW-USED-SE RV. Full power, air cond., vinyl· Take your pick, only ..•
top, AM/FM. (•10604), SALE $2333 PRICE ~
Autos Wanted 9700
IMPORTS WANTED
Orange Counlies
TOP $ BUYER
BILL l'o1AXEY TOYOTA
18881 Beach Blvd.
H. Beach. Ph. 847-8555
CASH FDR CARS
RUNNING OR NOT * 548-4634 aft 3:30 pm *
$3788 Orange County's Largest
MIKE
Selecljon Quality cadill&cs
Nabers Cadillac
McCARTHY 2600 HARBOR BLVD.,
Costa ~1esa
BUICK "4~9100 o,.,n SUhdoy
15550 Beath Blvd. '70 CAD Coupe de Ville ·
11.t San Diego r~~. 7500 mi. Like ne"''·
894-3341 -531-2450 $60'.l0.
'7-0-S~PO~R-T_W_A~G~O~N~-~Lik~. -e CAD '6.5 CDV, Uhr int, am/
new, ps/pb, air. $Jj()(). fm, f air. f pwr, loaded, ex
545-9419 or 64~7 cond. $1850. 499-3652
Imported Autos 96001mported Autos 9600 fmDOrted Autos
WE HAVE THE
BEST SELECTION OF
BMW's
IN ORANGE COUNTY
• 1600'•
• 2002 • 2500
• 2100
REPEAT PERFORMANCE
'
e 2IOO C
96"'/o of BMW own•r1 repti•t th• purch•••·
Maybe you should find out why. Se• u1 for
the free bookl•t, "33 R•ason1 Why BMW i1
htt•r". Or ask for the key you'll get the
m•11a9e.
e ALL COLORS
e ALL MODELS e IMMEDIATI DELIVIRY
'67 FIAT WAGON
Sp•ci•I 8uid1 V/6 •ngi"'·
R•ll io, h11t1r, 11,1ton11tic.
IUYT-560)
'66 SIMCA s399 s599 !:ti.'.'.~;,;·;:,::~~·
eq11ipped. C CSJ-OJ l I
------------111 ov AC/DC 011tl•h , '70 vw CAMPER $AVE
'65 TOYOTA s1395· ::'.~::· b':;: .. \~1·::~,.,, l:e11d Cr11i1er H1tdlop. 4 . Low ,;,a01 fJltlltNI
wheel drive, redio, =~==..----:--=--=-==
h••t•1. r11gg•d r••dv for '68 TllUMPH $1495 elmo.+ 1nythin9, A reel be1ulyl (AIZ-21 3) Spitfire M~ Ill ... 111! •
remov1b!e htrdlop,
'61 FIAT
I SO Spider. 2 dr.,
r1dio, he•l•r. 11llre
•herpJ IWTZ-6161
wire wh1el1, overdri••·
l ZNJ.2t4J
TWO TD CHOOSE FROM
Two '69 BMW1 2002 011d lt.00. 4·1peed.
fully equipped. Rediel t ire1, pricoed 10 low,
y1111 wo11ld11't believe it. (S)647 ! 1•497011
'61 MHCIDIS $2195 2000. Compl1tely r1 ~uill
0119i110. Roel le, he•ler. 4-
1pe1d, fine m1coh 1nic;1t
co11d. IYXU.tl51
$AYE
PLUS A LARGE SELECTION OF
DOMESTIC TRADIS TD
DEALERS AND THI PUILIC
AT WHOLESALE PRICH
loe Berlottl'•
T&M MOTORS
1081 GARDEN GROVE BLVD.
SALB 9PIN SUNDAY
P4•TS. Sl lllYICI tu1s .. THUlllS .. TILL •:M
IU.JU4 (Va 9111. I. ef ..._., ltJ0llll
YOU'VE GOTI A DRIVE COMET!
POR A NIW DRIYINe THRILL COMI
AND MllT THI BITTIR SMALL CAR
POR 1971 •• MIRCURY COMO. Lowest
Priced Mercury. Easy Maintenance. Great Gas Mileage. Short
Wheelbase Far Parking Eas1. Family-Sized Interiors. Sporty
Looks.
3ALLNIW
MODILS
INCLUDING A
302¥-81
ORDIRTODJlYI
I !·I'~ Im! I~ I iEl I ·l;J ~·~ 11t:1 ~ ·l!m! iE • ·
'69 Cont. o.r "" •••• SHI "'" c•r ••rni•ty cowtrs Nth '69 Riviera ... ~*"'~ ,.rts ••• t•Mr for 100 •oys er4,000 •iltsl 2-0001 Hf •
y •• , ........... '-'"".;, , ................. "'*". .-......, w ,... .... -look I~ tho 1•01 on 1he wind1hleld. It meant tn. 11t1-.d ~ .... -..... :.:;•:;;,;;;::::..::;•~! 'or you buy ho1 brond 1"1ew ti•e1. bottll'"f, .pork plvg1, ~ •• ,.,. w1',1ow1n •i•to. ti•yl
nini c~on10•, ond po<ntt, ond l.o1 boen re<:ondition1d to $3544 l5"4.0991 po11 OYor 100 dio91101fic tests for poflormonco, and
1ofety.
Treolllt frH •Mwi111 hts•rff ot ••ti IN cost I
.
'68 Continental $3166 '64 Continental $1099 C-OOOll ~DAN, Y·C, ""lo. lrOl!I .. Is· '·~~DAM. Y·I. 111110. 1<1111., Is-
-,. ff condo! ....... lull-· r..:f~ lao"f' fir COl\dl!icifti"'l, lu(I p(IWOt, rtodOO,
"""'· ............... ""'¥'""'·Ml· hto!•, ~ IO"ft.. fJ!led tio\I,
"''''""' ..... ,_,_ \llAUl7 ..... C-1.(J.W710
'66 FORD '67 COUGAR $1356 ,.....,,... ............... $1 0 , ••• -· ·--powtr 1-.;,. ""'" •• MO. lnlM~ lodory oir tondiliofl..
iflg, F'GYl'fl" ueering, ~ broltes, .. tfi.sc btolin. radii!, """"'· .... 1"""4 '""· .... ~ ............ .:.......... 5 rirK, tir>ltd g4m1, ... llfel UM!'I. wt.
glMs. .......i to¥m. SAE643 '"
'67 MUSTANG '66 FORD '-·~'····~~.-~ $1222 ""-~·'···i~·-·· $1066 ..,. Oii' <""6il""'9. ~ ·-""l· N<'"*' ...... -l-11'9-'""""· ,.._.tioDk•s. ro0oi,heot9<.~ Now,~ ,...,. lirtled "°'"' ....... ¥ir¥ IOlll, -.cl Pft1. """"' wllttj<•..,.., 1,USJ (0_,,_Wil71] ,
:~~2'~:~!!! ...... $966 ~!'1o!~!'! ...... $922 ,., ... (~,,......-"'II,,_., tOl'ldrliol!irlg, ,,,_ ....-w.g, "°"'"' ..,,..,, irlllo..i rodio, lleal1r, ~I 1j,u, •j,,yl todio, "'°'•· ~ lira. ""'" t'MI. ...... _,_....,z,•2 rwt-....g1o1i.....ic-t.ltfl713 •
•
'.~~~4U!_T~~.-$822 '66 PONTIAC $822 lt Mont c-in.oit. \14. IMO. 11'11111" PO,... "'""i"I, ,....,,., k •k•1, rff,., ll•o!lr, ·
••• Mlillf, ~ "'"-..... "°'"' .......... lo'ft.. tilllM tlen. ....... C-L ..,...~osc •~t WA,1()62
OPEN SUNDAYS
' •
$
•
SEE All THE NEW
1971 's IN OUR SHOW ROOMS
T W:y1""
FULL
PRICE
NEW 1978 MONTEG
2DOOR
~~~~E . $2j§T5
l"'-T.:NEW;:;o:nl~
MARQUIS
4-DOOR HARDTOP $1103 Wl~~~W . STICKER
FULL
PRICE
0 COUGAR ·
2DOo•
HARlltTOI' $2995
\
. ;
I
• ., .. ~ I• 4\fli:!& 'E!>tAAJi>tOM>f:A',.tt .. 1;># , •
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
CORVAIR
'63 CORVAIR
HAVE YOU
Been • ID Johnson & Son's
LINCOLN· MERCURY
SHOWROOM LATELY
YOU WILL BE AMAZED
AT THE BEAUTIFUL CARS WE
OFFER FOR 1971. PRESTIGE & QUALITY_ FROM
TO OVER
•Mark Ill's • Lincoln Continental
•
• Mercury Marquis • Mercury Monterey
Mercury Montego • Mercury Cougar • Mercury
• Mercury Capri
Comet
'
'69
'69
'65
'67
'68
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
ON ALL
1971 LINCOLN· MERCURYS!
WE HAVE A GOOD SELECTION
NICEST USED CARS IN ORANGE COUNTY
Over 50 To Choose From
CONTINENTAL
C1W'. T he CSSf'llC(' or luxury,
fully po1\·er equipped, Jeathcr
CADILLAC DE VILLE SAVE Sedan. Luxury equip. thru out
Full power including factory
air, tilt steering \vhecl, etc.
Driven only 11.000 by original
O\vner. Show room n C\\J,
tYCM467)
'68 53555 intrrior, factory Rif. Landau top.
CONTINENTAL
2 door Hardtop. Ji'ull po1ver
& ractory air. Landau roof.
Lie. XSR 852
CCMET CALIENTE
Convertible, automatic trans·
mission, radio. heater, po1vrr
slf!erln2, po\vrr brakes, v<'ry
clean. W AB 885.
COUIOAR
Automatic tran5miMion. IX•ll'·
tor stf!t'ring. fa ctory Air. rarllo,
h<'alf'r. xtnl rlran. {TUXI90!
OLDSMOBILE Dolto 88 s2333 2 Dr. Hardtop. Automatic
transmission, rndlo, hf!a tcr,
pou·er slet"rini. fnctory alr,
Londau roof. llnmaculate thru-out
VGY 989.
. S lt'rro t:ipc tilt st••rring
\l"hf'el. Lie. XE\V :;:H.
I
'67 FO RD GALAXIE 500
'I dr hnrdtop. A11torn11t.ic lrnns·
inissi.1n. radi o. hf'R lr r. po11·f'r
.!>lf'C'1·in!!'.. po11•rr brakr!'. landau
roof. J'O"·er 1vindo1vs. IVAZ107J
I
r 65 OLDS 98 4 Dr. Jl~rdtop. Full & C'Otn·
11lr l.r !1011·rr inc!udin1; lilt
11'ht>rl. REG 736
I
'68 CADILLAC
Convc1·tiblt'. Full po111pr includ·
ing factory air. Lie. VZO 123
I
'66 FORD GALAXIE
4 Dr. Autom11.tic tnu1smission,
radio, heater, fXl"'<'r i-tcerinf.(,
fl'lclory air. (RTR487) ~
BETTER IDEAS MAKE BETTER CARS AT
•
51333
s11ss
s3591
s999
.Johnson-. son
---1.D ~©®I!.~ ©®~'ii'O~ ~~'ii'~!!. • lfll~lffifil lIIfil • I~ lfil©l!!JOOW • ©®l!!JffilU
540·5630 COSTA MUA
2626 Harbor Blvd. 642-0981
THREE GENERATIONS ''" THE AlJTOiUOBJLE B lJSI NESS
THE OLDEST ESTAILISHlll "f,ACTORY DIRECI " LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY
l ' ·~
,
9900 Used Cart 9900 Used Cars 9900 Used Cars
..tleoJt Lewi&
.IMPORT S
196Ei llarbor, C.l'.I. 616-930.1
'65 Fairlane
MUSTANG
-BRAND NEW '70
MUSTANG
MACH 1
•OR05HJ47819. VS, C'n!~
mnl il', Po\.\·er Steering, Pow.
t'r Oise Brakt'S, Air Cond,,
Glass &lled Tires, Radio,
Tinted Glass, Deluxe Belts
& Warning Llghb, Argenl :
Styled Steel \Vheels. \Vindow
Sticker price $4329.95. Dis-
count
$760
Automatic. rt!!fb.:~.
{RVK 844),
$988
MIKE
McCARTHY
BUICK
VR, power steering, new tires.J..:==~~~=== Clean! COZD 534J '69 DEMO
15550 Beach Blvd.
at San Diego Frwy,
894-3.'Wl -5.11-2450
$699 MUST ANG
'65 MUSTANG. VS, 14,000 mi.
Estate sale. See •I
Bayshore Richfield, 200 E.
Coast H1vy. Bid,$ accepted
thru Security Bank Trust ,
Dept til noon, Nov. 2. Attn:
l'.1. \V, Fairchild, Details on
window sticker.
Dorsa M t FASTBACK 0 OrS •9R02>,,19>; Cru;,-0.m"i<
18621 Beach Blvd., Hunt. Bch. whitewall tires, rocker pan'.
842-8340--Ml-8640 el moldings, con.sole, po1ver '66 FAIRLANE WAGON ,..,,,.;.,., alr rooo., .,,;., tinted glass, wire wheel oov. '10 l\tUSTANG .BOSS.302
Must SC'I!! Xtras. Automatic, !>Ower steering,
air cond, stereo tape, dlr.
(TAY 279) \Vil! take car in
lradc or fin.'\nCe privale par.
ty. 546-4052 or 494-6811.
FORD Countlt Squire '68
\\'wi. JD-pass. Xlnt rol'kl.
loadrd 11·/xtr11s. p\.\T brks·
steering • "·indnws • seats.
New lires. 1 nwlll'r, $1800.
ers. \Vindow sticker price
$3825.28. Discount
$1330
South Coast
Ford • Mercury
303 llroodwoy, logvno lhh.
549-3851 or 494-8S15
• 496-49.:19. 496--5584 •
OLDSMOBILE
'61 Cutlass Wagon
See to appreciate. Aftlcc=====-,-,-,~
1 "7~P~m~l•~·knd_,_. _,,._....,,,. ____ * '69 MUSTANG Mach 1. 351,
Radio, heater. dlr. (IE L 925)
\Viii take car in trade or fin -
ance private party, Musi
i;ell by Sun. 516-4052 or
49-1-6811
'61 FORD Sta. \Vag. 9 pass. air, 4·spd, full pwr, stereo. '1968=-ooO-L°"D,...,~,,~,-~,-,llT-,I
New tires, brks. '4.000 on Reas. 642-2886. vinyl/top, fabric/int, air,
valves, Good transp. 250 NE;ED HELP'.1 Look for it P/Seats, AM / Fi\f, till/
AIDert Pl., Cl'.f. in the Service Directory vinyl/top. fabric/int, air,
'64 GALAXY 500XL: Bucket cl.assiJications. 644-70:?2 Mon-Fri
seats, auto/flr shiJt, P1s..i=========-~=======~I P/B &.. air. $525/\Vhsl. $475. Used Cars 9900Used Cars
54S-7920
'61 FAlRLA.VE conv. Sharp
inl. 42.000 mi. P/S, r&h.
Xlnt mech. $950 1 i rm ,
S46-l165
1962 Ford statio n \.\'agon. R&
J(, automatic. ?.1echanics
Special. Phone 968-5214 after
6 P.M.
'70 MAVERICK
less than 90CXJ mi'll, auto &
radio, $189:i, 645-1970, eves:
5'1S-1Sl1,
1965 Fairlane automatic. 289
eng, New paint, reaJ clean.
See to appn!ciate, $700/of.
fer. 64&.5265 aft 6.
'6.'i FORD Country Sedan
\Vgn, S.pass. Ps/Pb, r & h,
air, 1lt'\.\' trans. $800.
673-fil97
e·r.o FORD R.anchero, Good
tires & brakes, Clean, $295.
646-2613
1967 FORD Econolinc, needs
paint, $1100. or best offer.
fl03 Iris, Cdl\T.
INTERNATIONAL
'66
International
Scout
4 \\'heel drive, hubs, Ar.1/n.l
radio. "'hlsalf! Kelley Blue
Book $1200. On sale this
"·ec-k only $1099.
CHICK IVERSON vw
549-3031 E)(t. G6 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
LINCOLN
LINCOLi'IJ Cont'!, bill<'.
p.s., p.b., air, good cone!.
S.~32J.'l
e '69 Conrincntal, All t'xlras.
Excellent conrl.
$1200 * * * 495-4924
MERCURY
'6S Colony Park sta. \\'ag.
Fully t"<llJipped! Good cond.
$&j(), 64&-TIXl7.
MUST~NG
BRAND NEW '70
MUSTANG
Sport! rool, •OF02Fl~03.
302 VID VS, Instrument
gall8", Cru.lsomatic, Belted
\\'hilC' \Vnll Tires, PO\.\'Cr
Steering, Alr Conditioning,
Radio, Tinted Glass, \Vhce:l
CO\'E't"!!. \Vinrtow s I i c k@ r
$3892. Discount
S711
\'ll. aulomatic. r1ulk> cllr.
nt'IV lirts. IQT'Y 1241° ~hl~I
j{'ll by Sunday, \\'ill lakf!
I Ira.du or finance private par.
t>'. S4fi.40.U or 49U8ll. .
1969 PLYMOUTH GTX 2 dr. H.T.
Only I B,000 m<l11 o" thi1 b11 utiful 9old
1t1r. '440 VI, .. inyl top, buck1t 11•h. r•·
dio, h11t1r, 1uto., pow1r 1t11ring. IXV H.
818)
$2895
1968 LE MANS 2 DR. H.T.
Vi11vl top, power 1!11ring, low mil 111j1••
!YPY0601
$2195
1969 CHEV. MALIBU 396
F1ct. 1ir, bl1clc: .. invl top, 1p1rldin9 .,.,r.
low 1xt1rior, IZKF597)
$3195
1970 G.T.O.
2 dr. H.T. 811utiful gold with 1el!d1lwoed
vin~I top & int1rior. F1c;lorv 1ir c;ond i-
tio11in9. !Zl27765l
S3895
1969 CUSTOM "S" 2 DR. H.T.
Vinvl top, power 1t1erin9 & br1k11, turbo
hv~ramatie lt1n1m!11ion, li9ht v1Uow, El•
c1plio11 11I cir. !ZLHOlb!
$2595
1970 LE MANS SPORT 4 dr H.T.
Ev1rv c;onc;1iv1bl1 1Jlr1 011 th;, ••~culi ••
cir. Onlv 4.000 mife1. I I 17209 I
$4195
1967 MUSTANG 2 + 2
390 1n9., radio. h11t1r, pow1r 1t11r. Ex•
c1plio111lly nic1 lo·mil1191 cir. !TXT941)
$1895
1969 PONTIAC CUSTOM S
'2 doot h1 rdtop. F1ctory t ir, pow1r 1t11r•
i119, h.rbe hydr1m•tic, 1il~1r with bl1clr
iRt•rior. I ZDX6 72 l
$2795
1969 GTO 4 SPEED
0 11ly 12,000 mil11 011 !hi1 b11utiful V1r•
doro 9r11n 1ulomobll1. t 71 4AFXl
$2795
1968 BONNEVILLE 2 DR. H.T.
F•ctory •ir, loc•I e1r with low mll••9••
Gold with 9old i"l1rPor. IWXG•2 1 I
$2695
CLOSID SUNDATS
~ROY CARVER
~ROLLS -ROYCE
2915 HARBOR SOU l.E\IARO, COSTA MESA
54(,.444-4
' '
-
'7 ,,, ,. .h.
~;~
"
,,
d; ,;
bl
'"
,,
d;
" ..
c • • ;, • ,,
' p
;,
• ;,
' 5 ; • t
•
•
Fdda)', Odobor Jll, 1970 DAILY PILOT 37
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIOM -,.i:NC:AC':N"'~"'~o"'R"'r,.;;A,.T"'1o"N:-----.r"RA"'N"'s"PO"'"R"'T A"'T"'l"O"'N-"-'-'
'liiiiii~iii!i!ii!~iii-~;1~U=1~od;;C;•~rs~j;;;j;~-= UHCI Cert ttoo Uted C•rt tfOO UMCI C•r1 tt00 UMCI C•r1 '900 UMCI C11r1 t900 Uted Cart 9900 Used Cars 9900
·11 --.---OLDSMOBILE OLD.SMQlll,.ll PLYMOUTH 'PONTIAC PONTIAC RAMBLER T·BIRD TORINO BAUER •OLDSMOBILE '68 ·;. 01<U F.115. Now · lltt• ·tGs.1. ;;,, .;:;,, .,lde.tU.s. '69 Catalina '61 RAMBLER s111100 '70 2-dr LANDAU
CUTLASS "S" brakes, tuneup. Reasonable, b/1, COOiOle, aulo, Xlnt. '67 BONNEVILLE Wagon. Good transporta· Alr,lfull pwr. A~t/FM &tereo, BRAND NEW '70
•. Autumn gold wit.h black vinyl 49-1-8430 Geo~ $1195, 54S.2l'l6 2 Door llardtop, Red. VR, 2 ~r ~top, Autom~tlc, tion. $199. 492-8289 after 5 I:a ance or unlln1llOO h t yr
· interior, VS, aulornatJe, ra-1 =,P""'=='===== "===-=i==== automatic, power steering, air co , power steering, pm warra~ty + 5150. Powder
dio. heater, ne1v &Jass bell PLYMOUTH PONTIAC air rond., radio. (YPZ 849) b s & , indow1'. (TEY982) 1---::.61:--::R".'"::1:::BLE:-::::R:--blue w/rlch blue !OP. Lo ml.
tires, powe r 1teerlng, under $2499 $ 1888 XLNT COND. $l9S Can assist w/flnanclng, Call
BUICK TORINO GT
•ORJ5H167002. 351 CID V8,
Ai· Conditioning. Po\\·~r
S:ctr!i\g, Power Front Di~
Brakes, Tinted Glass, Radio,
81\cket Seabt, Glass Belted
\Vhilewal; Tires, Visibility
C.roup, Laser Stt:lpe, Win-
dow 111icker $4215, DLscount
lN
COSTA
···MESA
~:;;~i'3~w~~~~k '6 Pfymout\1 Wagon ·~.;;~~EB;:i~m:''" w~~:'; BILL y ATES MIKE 273 SHERWOOD. CM afJ 6 pm, &f l~l77
Nabers Cadillac Rad;o, au1omat1c, powor ::t~..;i;~:;:ii~'~.~ VOLKSWAGEN McCARTHY ·~1.:.:1·~··~.·~i
2600 lfARBOR BLVD., steering, power windows, miles. ~96-3535 32852 Valle Road '-lerrill PL, O f
"'"°'00 Costa MO•pe,.o Su-'•Y air condltlonini;. (HFX87-) 1-----------1 San Juan Capistrano BUICK
TORINO
~~ •E $ '69 Grand Prix Pontiac, Lan-BRAND NEW 170 799 dau lop, AM/FM •lereo, 831~S00/4!13-45ll/<!J9.226! lS<l Bea<h Blvd, T·BIRD TORINO GT '66 · Cutlass
2 Door Hardtop-Coupe. Auto.
matie, power 1teerin&", ra-
dio, heater. ISLU524l
BILL YATES elec w;odow" 11.000 mr" al San D~go Frwy,
13,5"1 IXSX343l C • II $1.19 5 '"'·3341 • 5.11·>150
VOLKSW-A. GEN. ..,.,.,.. Moto" &!,...ll. --------T·BIRD '56 Clu•k, xln'I OOR35.,04286. HOOd Sroop, -~-------11967 Pont GTO R H ~ _ _, f II · I 351 V8, Crulsomatic, Bucket BANK REPOSSESSION · · ·· ., e Po I '67 9 p W COnu ., u pwr, new pain, 32352 Valle Road speed. air cond. Priced to n · ass ag. remov. top iv / portholes. Scats. Air Conditioning, Ra-
San Jua·i Capilllrano 19u'1 Pontiac Tempest L(' sell. Ser. # 9620. FACTORY Cont'! kit. Orig. ownr. dio, Tintf'd Glass, Po\\~r
837-4S00/493-45U/499=2261 t.1ans 2 door hard top, ...... Call. _ AIR CONDITIONING 673-3178. Steering. Power Front Dlsc "Sp-ei:~tatizin~---$9.9-9--
. BILL YATES
$751 -
642·3lll ext. 241 or 242. fJ••u lnin:• Dlx. G:talina Station \\lagon, ---,------1 BrakeR, Visibility Grou p, e •57 Pontiac sta wgn. 2911 Ulll tAMIO V-8 engine, power steer., T-BIRD '69 4 dr. Landau, full Glass Bell"<! Tires, Laser
en;g, American mags. $200. .. JM PORTS pov.·er brakes. Auto. trans., pwr & air, lilt '''hi. am/fm Stripe. Window sticker $4370.1 ---------
6 cyl., radio, heater, stand-Kim 646-6472. rad., htr., wsw tires. tilt stereo. S3195. 675-2927 evts, Discount TIME FOR m VOLKSWAGEN '67 Miry
Quality'' 32852 Valle Road ard. Belonged to little old 1966 Harbor, C.l\f. 6-16-9303 wheel, electric re .r \\indo1v, or 64•1-0550 days. $l80
San Juan C8plstrano baoker, extra clean! (UKN. CLEAN '62 TEJ\1PEST sta etc. ('J'SA.273) --;.;-c;.,.e:. °'T"·B"IR""o"'°'e:--1 "'UICK CASH 1-.------••l;m83n74i'"'°ns1r',,.,;;;;;;5;-ll/;;;;-<!J9.R;;2'6;;I;r.;-l 108) Sacrifice $899 Full y,•ag. R&H-ne\v paint $300 or ·r.• PONTlAC , . 'fa"' SALE $2111 PRICE Nu: Paint, Tires, Brakes, T
I• '69 OLDS n-1 88 Ro I Price. Will flnanc0 "''· pl•.·. best. ~7082 '" a.e .. · O C ...., ta ya e. =~,-~--~--I White v.·/ turquolire Interior, range ounty's Largest Etc. Call for Info: &t2-m4 THROUGH A
BUICK
CORNER
We Hne
T1te Finest
Selection
Of Previously
Ow1ed Late
Model lulcks
0. Tllo °"""Jo
Coast. Choose
-From Mny
Models -J .. 1 Tho Rl9ht
Equl pnoont For
You.
'70 RIVIERA G.S.
F11U pow•r, f•clorv •ir, AM·
FM r•dio, pow1• door lock1,
chrom1 wh11l1. 5,000 mil11.
vinyl roof. J111t 1poll111,
19108491
$4995
'69 RIVIERA
.fvll pow1r, f1cl ory 1ir con•
ditioni119, AM-FM r•dio,
vi11yl roof. 1ilv1r 9r1y ;;.Ith
bl1ck vinyl roof •11d m•lch.
i119 i11!1rior !XRS768)
Sp1ci:f~ •• ·~~=•~c. r•·
dio, h1•i1r, pow1r 1!11rin9,
cr••m color with m:.tchin9 ill•
t1rior. (WFTS6 0l
'68 LE SABRE
Coup1 f,.rdtop. Autom•lic,
R&H. pow1r 1t11rin9 &
br•k11, f•clory •i• condition-
in9. S1pphir• blu 1 with clolh
& ¥inyl inl1rior. I own1r •U·
tomobil1. tXDL440 )
'68 SKYLARK
Cu1tom coup1. v.t , •ulom•·
tic, r1dio, h1•I••· pow1r
1l11rin9, low mil11. Nici cir.
!WEF1971
$2195
'66 ELECTRA
4 door cu1tom h1rdtop. Full
power, f•cfory 1ir co11dition-
i119, c1ui1• control. low milt ·
•9•· Gold with cu1tom cloth
inl•rior.
'63 LE SABRE
Cu1tom 4 cir, H.T. I owner,
50,0.00' '"il11. Autom•tic, ••·
d io, h••l1r, pow•r ll11ring
& br•k11, f•ctory •i• condi-
tioning. IFU0191
$1095
BAUER
BUICK
IN
COSTA
MESA
234 E. 17th St.
COSTA MESA
548-7765
Loaded! l\fust sell. Asking Call Sid dlr. 540.3100 or 1963 Catalina wgn. S.-pass. bucket ~ats, 11.uto., power Selection of Quality cadWacs •55 T-Bird, orig. equip. Hard
only $3390. 54&.1313; eves 494-7506 aft 10 am. f>S/PB, air cond. lo mi. strg. xlnt mechanical con-Nabers Cadi'llac & rofl tops. Good cond.
646-4568 '66 BARRACUDA V-8 auto. Very clean. S750. 548-4903. dition. Very clean Inside &: $1200. 644-6074. DAILY PILOT
'69 OLDS Station Wagon. Air, air cond, pfs. disc brks, '65 Ca!alina Ventura, air, out! SIJO. 16985 Edgewater 2QJo HARBOR BLVD., WANT AD
psfpb, 2 seats. $3000 . new tires $975. 96S-5358 etc. Xlnt cond. $795 Lane, Huntington H'arbour, Costa Mesa e '62 T·BIRD e ~7~155 eves. • 548-6310 * . 846-4285 54(}.9100 Open Sunday GOOD COND * ~
The SALE Is Oil at
1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA 1969 PONTIAC 1964 CHRYSLER
GTO Cp1. Orenge cer has •ufo., Crown lmp1ri1I Coupe. Hai 1v•· 2 Or. Herd Top Sport Coupe. R., rything. I 00 -;. original thruout. In H., sfick, 23,000 miles remaining radio, P.S. Sure worth the money. condition to restore. A collectors feet. w1rtanty. IXTK909) IZDT6301 pi1ce •. l PBBl 1 I I
s1599 s2399 s1099
CONNELL 111
CHEVROLET•••
1970 IMPALA I 1969 MALIBU
2 Or. Hard Top. V8, euto., P.5 .. 2 Ooo r Herd Top Cp1. Auto., P.S., P.8., radio, factory e ir. strong cer
Low, low mile~some with vinyl P.B., radio. f'actory a ir, strona car
roofs. I 339ACG I with I 00 -;. 30 Dey Connell uer·
entee. Be•utiful green c.ar with
vinyl roof. IYlV078)
s3199 s2599
9900
1965 DODGE PICKUP
VI 1/1 Ton Pickup. New Paint, high
rubber, 1trong cer, radio, stick.
15457721
ONLY AT CONNELL fHEVROLET 1968 OPEL
sggg
1969 CHEVROLET PICKUP
1/1 Ton Pickup. P.S .• 1ir cond., ra·
dio, auto., 350 cu. in, Has factory
warranty book 21 ,000 'miles.
IP2 171 I
2 Door Station Wagon. 4
R., H., oice. IZKM545 I
s1099
1968 CHEVROLET PICKUP
~ Ton. Auto. tren1., hvy. duty
camp•r equipm•nt, radio, with
near n1w rubb1r, e1tcellent concfr.
tion, h•s 8 ft. Westways side cfj.
nette camper. Sleeps 4. Nice.
IP22071
*THESE CARS CARRY CONNELL'S 100o/o -30 DAY
GUARANTEE IN PARTS AND LABOR
1969 CHEVROLET PICKUP
112 Ton Pickup. V8, stick, R., H.,
nice. (22779E I
s2299
1967 MUSTANG 2 DR. H.T.
A .. R., H., P. steering, factory air,
Week end speci1I, IUTL3091
s1599
1967 PONTIAC
Fir1bircf 2 Or. H.T. R., H., auto.,
P.S ., right miles -strong car,
. IVCJI 181
s1499
1967 OLDSMOBILE
4.4.2 • VS. 4 speed, P.S. Nice,
needs a home. H urry. (VFV07 1 l
s1499
196J IUICK $4H 19U CADILLAC $7H 1965 CO.VAIR
1968" FORD
Va Ranchero. l ike showroom con-
dition, has P.S., auto., radio, a ir
cond. You should 1ee this. Sure
its 100 ':I. guaranteed. 1973 r 48 )
1970 NOVA
Coupe. 6 cyl. Auto. trans., 7,500
miles. Showroom fresh. Remaining
factory w1rrantf 5 yr.~50,000
miles. Last time or this IP2209 1
s2499
$6'9 2 Or. SPKlll, 1Fr. P.5 .• ltl.H. fHll3t!' CPI. dl\'1111, 1lr, jll!Wer. fOAI tlll no H.P .. 2 cw. CPI., ~ (PIG 110 1970 EL CAMINO
1964 Y.W. $599 1960 CADILLAC $499 1965 CHEVROLET $9" J50 CV. In. VI. P.S .• lll;&H, fief •Ir, 4 1pd., 1#1/J mlllt. R1m1ln-Stlet . r1d!o, I rllll gOOd cir. Cpl O.Vl!lt, 1lr. lull pOWf'r, fJKX tOOJ .,. ion Pfc~up umper ~ulPPtd (SJMlll 1119 l•tt. w1rr1n1y. un53F)
196S IUICK $5H 1'64 COMn $JH 1965 CHEVROLET $89' $3499 11.H. P.$,, lllf'O.. 1lr. fHOM 4.JH W•oon. 11.H, Au!o. (Ol(P 1921 h ton. 11110 .• lt&H, VI. CSUOJfl
•
1969 CAMARO
Gorgeous or1nge 2 Or. Hard Top.
One owner, new car trad1 in. R.,
H., stick, take advantage of the
warranty book on this one. !VNW.
025 1
1969 CHEVROLET
4 Door Sedan. VS. auto., P.S., re·
dio, f1ctory •ir, high rubber. A lot
of cir for only $1899. IXVH4081
s1999
1966 CHEVROLET PICKUP
l/J Ton V8 Pic kup with st end up
shell camper. P.S., radio. new rub.
ber. Sure is • sharp truck •
15465001
s1399
1963 RIVIERA
Extremely nice with every goodi•
including tilt wheel, full electric,
good 1ir. White car with beige in·
terior, near new rubber. You will
1ur1 like this one. INZAOl4)
s1199
1968 V.W. BUG 1961 International 1966 BEL AIR
11:~1o • ....,.ttr, ••lck. auv Who $(out, 4 wtlftt d•lVI. l odt 2 door $1d1n. ltl.H, P.S., fKlory
Mii. (VGJ'121 ftubl, flll f'llll Cl l\Ofl'f lop WI 1lr, low, low prlc1. (ltP~l com1n1rcl1I tires I. 1pllt rlmt.
CSllOJtl
$999 $799 _ _$899
I 2828 HARBOR BLVD ~
546-11·03
' •
' • ' I
I •I
J
111' SHARPEST ·.PENCIL IN THE WEST • • • LET US PROVE It!
• . ' •
Have a Nice Day!
u SW ER TO BETTER BUYS! .
We Stock More! We Sell More! You Save More! Buy Yours Today!!
52 5 TOTAL
DOWN
PAYMENT
MONTH
$250 h th• fofal down paymant and $63 i1 tP'ia total 1nonthly paymant including tax, '70 11·
caMa end all fina11ca char9a1 0111 appro".d er.di+ for 36 month1. Dafarrad paymant prii!:a 11
$2511.00 incluclin9 all finance c.ha111e1, taxa1, '70 lican1a or If yov prafar to p•v cash, the full
ct1h pric.1 i• only $2172.17 including 111111 tax, '70 lic an1a. Order Your Favorita Color Toda y.
ANNUAL PIRCINTAll U.TI 11.01 %
FOR A NEW DRIVI NG THRILL, TEST DRIVE
FORD'S NEWEST BETIER IDEA FOR 1971 ! ·
VISIT OUR B ~G ECREAYIOrf CEfJYER
WE ARE THE
SHO\V(A E £11.[~
FOR
El Dorado Campen, Mini Homes,
Chassis Mounts-and -Balboa Motor Homes.
CHOOSE FROM
SHELLS TO COMPLETELY SELF·
CONTAINED MODELS
$21 o.o@ TO $f&~SoC~
Try Before You Buy With Our Reason1ble R1nt1I Service
MUST ANG SALE
20 to chooM from. '65 thru '70 models. Coupes, h1rdtops, con.
vertibl1 ind 2 + 2 F11tblckL ~with 4 1peed'1, also 1lr con-
ditioning 1n~ 1utom1tlc mod1IL
,EXAMPLE:
'65
'67
'69
'66
'70
1965 MUSTANG HARDTOP
Autom1tie, power 1t11~ing, 1ir conditioning. Ciioood mil11. IPCT059 )
@UR Pfi!(! $11 C~6
MUSTANG H.T.
R1clio, li11!1r, 1ir conclition1d,
low mil11. (lYB977)
MUSTANG 2+2
\'I, 11,lio., R&H, pow1r sl11ring,
1ir conditioning. ITSR6451
MACH I
R1dio, h11t1r, 1utom11ic, pow1r
1!11rint. tXSS464 1
CHAlGER
Fully 1quipp1cl, 1ul~m1lic, 9oocl
mi11, !TZM23,l
COUGAR 2·D'OOR
VOLKSWAGEN
AppJ. 14,000 miles. f ull y.equipp.cl
I041AGHI
.:
-_ ..
NEW
1971
IM ·~E D~ATE
DELIVERY
Large Selection
Of Colors and
Equipment.
USED CARS
I
A THEODORE ROllNS EXCLUSIVE
LOOK FOR THE DIAGNOSTIC
CENTER SEAL ON THE WINDSHIELD!
-100% PARTS AND LAllOR
WARRANTY 4000 MILES OR 90 DAYS
STILL · MANY 1J70's. lEFT TO · CLEAR
Ex•mplo S.Vinp: Eomplo S.Vings: Ex1mpl1 S.vfnga:
IRAND ·NEW BRAND NEW BRAND NEW
1970 1970 1970 -
MUSTANG TORINO GT T·BIRD 2-DR. LANDAU
SPORTSROOF 2 DOOR ·HARDTO,
$4149.20 PACTOIY ·$4696.95 PACT. $6679.00 UST LIS?
$3411.91 SALi $3851.25 . SALi $5267.02 PllCI PllCI
(121161) 11117111 IM14NI J J 7Dtl
FINAL 1970 DEMO DISCOUNTS
MUSTANGS TORINOS GALAXIE S
2 DOORS . 2 DR. HDTPS • 2 DR. HDTPS • .
FASTBACKS 4 DR. HDTPS. • XL HDTPS.
MACH l's 2 DR. GTs CNTY. SEDAN
LTD's T·BIRDS RANCHERO
2 DR. LANDAUS GT WITH AUTO.
TRANS., POWER 2 Dr. Hcltps. STR. & BRAKES,
FOUR AIR CONDITIONING
4 Dr. Hcltps. TO CHOOSE ONE
Cnty Squires FROM ONLY
LTD·GALAXIE·TORINO SALE
Mlny to choose from. '65 thru ?O Models. Sport roofs, form1l1,
2 dMr Ii 4 door honltops. ·Full ...,..r, •Ir conditioning. W•r-
rantlM 1v1ll1ble.
EXAMPLE:
Ce..,. .ii .._.... .. ,... laclMI ......... Ii h'I• llihe P-.
,... -. PLUS .,....__ HtMry ...S ...... .,.._, Al ,..ir wd
1969 FORD LTD 2 DOOR HARDTOP
..... I• en ........... lllfSJIWWWt.
C@
TRADES ACCEPTED
PAID FOR OR NOT
'67 FALCON SEDAN Factory equipped.
Radio, heater. <ZXWB22) '65 MElCURT 4 DR. H.T. R&:H, auto., air, power steerlni,
(RFR973).
1
'66
'68
'69
'65 6 '69 ,-6~7---c'=o=NT~IA~C~G=To,..-~~~~$~9~9,...,...6
4 11peed. good miles:
CFPP9041
I {;A ~~~~~P~s.~!di~ .. ~~ater, 89 1 69 Qll air conditionln&'. (055780)
.. -• .... -.... ---.. •n•-.-..,•--•.•_•_--.. : 67
Air col!clitlonittt, AM -FM r1clio, L1nG'1u, pow•r, 9oocl ll'lil11. IXTJ26l l
OUR PRICE $2196
LTD 2 DR. H.T.
v.1, •11to., k&H, ,.s ..
1ir concl,. IVCJl92l
GALAXIE 500
2 dr. H.T. k&H, 1uto., P.S.
vinyl roof, 1ir c:o!'ld. IZUT921)
TORINO FORMAL H.T.
klH, 111to., VI, power 1!11rin9,
1ir col!ditionin9. !XSP72 I)
LTD HARDTOP
\'I, 1wto"'lfic, P.S., R&H, 1ir
c0Mitionin9, fWIG560)
GALAXIE 4 DR. H.T.
\'.t, 111!0., P.S., r1dio, h11t1r,.
air co1Hi'itionin9, W1rr1nty 1v1il1bl1. IZAC212l
FORD WAGON
Country 11d. V-1, 1uto., P.S.,
·R&H, 1ir concl. 60°' mil11. !XVF015)
PARTS-SERVICE 7 AM Ta t PM MON I PARTS DEPT. ONLY
8 AM to 6 PM SATURDAYS HOURS ' 7 AM To 6 PM TUE-FRI
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