HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-11-10 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17
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Newport Do11bles
Rosiness Li~ense
Fee~ :fteje~ts Tax-
DAILY PILOT
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 1(),)970
VOL. 4 NO. Hf, I llCTIONI, • 1'A81 1
De Gaulle's
Death Ends
Long Career
COLOMBEY • LES • DEUX • EGL!SES,
France (UPI) -Gen. aia'ftes de GauJle
died Monday night of a heart attack in
his country home here where he had lived
in seclusion since he was rejected by the
natio n he had thrice saved from disaster.
De Galille, who would have celebrated
his llOtb bil;thd,'Y on Nov. 2Z. made his
mark on hilt&y in World• War -Il along
with Franklin D. Roosevllt, Josef Stalin,
Winston Qlurchill and Chiang Kai·shtk.
Only Chiang, DOW 83; 1111"Ylves.
The former president bad just dealt
himself a hind of soli~ while ~aitin1
in front of the television set for tbe even·
ing news when be slumped forwar d. His
wife. Yvonne, called a doctor and a priest
but be was dead when they arrived.
He had left his own testament, calling
for a simple funeral with . "no music , no
fanfare, no bell ringing.'' The funeral
Thursday will be just that, but the
government was holding m e m o r i a I
services at the same time in Notre Dame
Cathedral in Paris and President Nixon
was among world leaden wbo said they
would attend.
Messages of condolence poured in from
statesmen throughout the world -from
Nixon who hailed his quality of vision,
from the leaders of France's former col·
onies in-Africa, from the Pope. from the
Germans with whom he restored Franco--
German friendship.
De Gaulle had lived In aloof retirement
1n Colombey-les-Deux-Eglises since April,
1969, when French voters rejected his pet
proposal for administrative reform. He
worked quietly on his memoirs and lived
the simple life of a villager.
Father Claude Jaughey, the village
priest who administered the last rites,
said, "the general will receive a plain
funeral, like any other villager or a
lumberjack. This will be a classless
fUlleral as the genera l always wished."
Jaughey said following the simple
church ceremony De Gaulle's coffin will
be taken to his family plot at one side of
the nea rby village churchyard and 1 be
buried next to his daughter Anne . 1.tt
will be a plain village funeral," he said.
"There will be no funeral oration,
because the general did not .want
'
(See DE GAULLE, Pare J)
Coast
Weatlter
You 1houldn't need your sun·
glai&e1 wedoe~y· since ' the low
clouds ind fog will 1hroud much
of the 10lar lhimmer. Tempera-
tures of 66 on the coa.11t and 72
inland will prevail.
. INSiDE TODAY
Orange Countv 1chools ore
2-_laving "21 Qiustiona" to /ind
out which studen!.8 need the
most ·help, and tome 6D,OOO
pupill will be qui:ze.d. See Page
8.
•
UPI~
FRENCH· LEA:DER ·DIES
Gen. Charles de o:.une'
Northern County
Site Proposed .
For N e·w J etpQrt
A possible site for an Orange County
jetport that has never been seriou.11ly
studied by the various a>nsult.a.nLs hired
by the county is .waiting f~ action, a.c-
~rdlng to Supervisor David L. Baker.
He proposes use of the area between
Cfrbop Canyon on the north 8n9 Prado
Oarfi on the Santa Ana River on the
south.
"There is a ridge that can be levelled
lo. fill an adjoining canyon and it wou ld
make an ideal jetpotl for several
reasons," says Baker.
"The cost of the land would run about ' . ' $2,000 to $4,000 an acre, the fill although
expensive would not bring the cost
anywhere near the value of most other
coutitY land pro~, ,and. it .is .a clear.
area."
By "clear'' I.he supe~isor exp1ain9 that
zoning control is available In the takeoff
area of· the proposed· fac!Jity and in the
ipproach .area . .
"nte. surrounding al'ea is•noW used;for
livestock grazing and oil production,"
Baker adds. "Land which can easily be'
zoned for a future use compatible to jet
p_!anes." •·
Baker does not think the proposed Bell
Canyon site in the southeast part of. O>e
county Ls "bad." It was the selection of
the Parsons. report whkh comes before
the board of 1upervl10r1 for public ~
Ing Nov. 17.
"Thert Is .11tlll plenty of open space
around 'the B.U canyon Ille ai>d I thlnk
annoyance to ruidenta In the coastal
area would be minimal. The jets should
be very hlah before they reach bullt up
areu," Baker II.id.
Newestllike -.....
Mari Yet Fall
Mobs or angry taxpayers were berating
the Orange County Board or Supervisors
as an early·moming session ground on to-
day on the board's action in proposing to
~irtually double supervisorial salaries
from $1S,OOO to more than $29,000.
Late in the going, supervisors voted to
Increase their own pay to near the level
of state legislators at about $19,000 but It
remained an open question on whether or
not that action would hold. '
After the vote. the board was taking a
real working over from what veteran
observers called one of the angriest
crowds ever seen to jam the county
board's usualJy placid meeting ball.
U.S. Generals
Freed, by Russ
After 3 Weeks
ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -Two U.S.
Army generals and a Turkish colonel
returned to Turkey from Soviet Armenia
today, three weeks aft.er their light plane
landed 12 miles across the border and
they were interned.
The Turkish Foreign Ministry said the
men were "healthy "and in good shape."
Tass, the Soviet news agency, said the
generals' U.S. Army pilot also was
released .and would Dy back their six-
seat, t~gine plane as soon as
weather ·permitted.
A Fcreign Ministry .!IOW'ct said Turkish
and Soviet generals and civilian officials
negotiated at the border town 0£
Kizilcakcak for nine hours, presumably
working oul details of the release. The of-
ficers were freed at 7 a.m. and were
driven to J<ars, 40 miles souQ?wesl of the
Soviet frontier, to take a Turkl 1 h
military plane to Ankara.
· J<izilcakcak is halfway between Kars
and Leninakan , in Soviet Arn\enia, where
the offieera' plane Janded and they were
held .
Maj. Geri. 'Edward c. 0. Scherrer. 57,
chief of the U.S. military mission in
Turke-y; Brig.,. Gen. Glaude M. McQuarrle
Jr., 46, head o( Scherrer'• Army section,
and Col.· Cevat Denll, a Turkls:h liaison
offietr, were inspecting m:llltary Lrf..
1tallations near the Soviet border on Oct.
21 and were on 1 flight. from Enurum to
Kan. Tbe pilot, Army Maj. James P.
Russell. 42, told consular olliclals high
winds cauted him to mllcalculate his
course. Tht U.S. government contended
the plane strayed acrou the border.
Tass said the Soviet government decld·
eel to releue the offleen after "a
(See GENERALa, Pap II
• ,
e
' New North County
'
Site · Under Study
For Huge Jetport
SAGA OF VANISHING SUSPECT -Newport Offic-
er Patrick O'Sullivan (left), shouts through keyhole
in efiort to get suspect to surrender i Locksmith
DAILY ,ILOr ,i.t.s "° '.fr1dr O'o.-11
Fi'ank Gibbon.s (center) oPens hideaway ; but all
that's inside is "Justin" the original canine of·
fender.
'
Fugitive Flees Into Thin Air
A fugitive holed up in a record store
mysteriously slipf!ed through a police
dragnet that had closed on him in a
drama that unfolded on the streets of
Newport Beach Tuesday afternoon.
A suspect identified only as Kenny had
allegedly fled inside The Groove Compa-
ny, 2303 Balboa Boulevard, shortly af-
ter noon to escape a1Test by Officer Ed
Motley. He locked the door and refused to
come out. The proprietor had just step-
ped next door. ·
Motley called headquarters f o r
assistance. A squad was immediately
disp&tched.
As poilce surrounded the storefront, a
German Shepherd named Justin growled
lhroujh the glass "door.
Police vowed to wait it out until Kenny
came ou t. A crowd of passersby, mostly
street people, vowed to .throw him food
through. the transom. •
Police then decided to knock the door
down , but a plea by the owner of the
bu'ilding to save the expense prompted a
calLlo the Ace Key Company, who&e man
Frank Gibbon.11 was on the ICeot 1 half
hour later. He piCked the loclt in short
erder. A youth who lives ln the area but who
declined to' identify himself volunteered
to· take charge of the gtowling'dog before
police went inside.
Three officers entered the building but
after a thorough search, declared that
Kenny bad e5Caped. They didn't know
how ; because there apparently is no rear
door and lhere are bars on the windows
in the back.
Most unhappy ls Officer Motley, the
city's dog catcher, who .11till pas the
unsigned· summons be· was tr)'ing to give
Kenny for allowing allegedly Justin loose
on the streets in violation of the lea.11b
Jaw. -'
Opera Star Marries . ' ' MEMPHIS (UPI) -Marguerite,
Plazza , forriter star of the Metropolilan
Opera in New York, has been married to
San Francisco Industrialist Harry Bet1·
thodt. Miss Plazza wa.11 aUended by her
thr~ 'daughter.11 and three sons by pre·
vlous marria1es in the privitt cere.-
monies. Sunday •t the singer' a M!mphiJ home.
' NeWJ>on Double,s
Bnsiness Fee,
But Rejects Tax
By L. PETER J(JIJEG
01 Ille Dflllr ,1191 ltlff
Exasperated Newport Beach city cowt-
cilmen Monday night took the political
football that lhe city's busine6s tu ~
become and called the only play . tbeY,
seemed to have ldt. They dropped back
18 months and punted.
The council unanimously voted to doa-
ble the exl.11tlng $25 fee Newport Beach
charges for doing btllineas in the city.
The aclion came after more lhan tlDI
and orie-balf yea.rs of st'udy1 irfildl ~
precipitated because the council had ·felt
the Oat fee structure wll ineq~ te
the small huslnes!lman. , :
Sub9e<1uently, the complex cwteim'
system wu developed ~at tnc1~· tbe
controversial gross receipb tu OD mlll
commercial ehtt.rprises.
There was furor owr the plan from ...
moment It was unveiled tut A\llUlt.
the pressure from nearly aa. c:orben
lllO)lriled until the whnle pla como
crashing down at Monday'• publk 1*f.
ing when lonnal protata .-kldpd i.,
IJle, Newport Harbor Cbambor of c:oa;.
merce, lhe DAILY PILOT, all.I _,.al
!See IMlNElll, Pip II
(
/'
s Tu~, N0vtmbtr 10, 1970
U.S~ Orders
More Riot
Training
WASHINGTON (APl -Secretary ol
Defense Melvin R. Laird today ordered
additional riot control training for Na•
Uonal Guardsmen and Reservists and the
insurance of protective face masks and
riot batons for riot uslgnments.
Pentagon officials said Laird will ask
Congrtss for an additional $20 million to
pay for th~ new equipment and e1tra
training.
"p entag on spokeaman Jerry W.
P'riedheim wu asked whether this action
was taken as a result of a Guard.student
tonfrontation last May at Kent Slate
lJnjversity.
The May incident "obviously heighten.
ed the concern for the protection Of the
guardsmen," he replied.
Four Kent State students were killed at
a time when guardsmen on the Otµo cam·
pus said they feared for their Uves.
A state grand jury absolved the
guardsmen of blame for the deaths, but a
presidential commission called t h e
guards' action <!unnecessary, unwar•
ranted and une:1cus1ble. ''
Alked if the Guardsmen would be pro-
vided with other nonlethal weapona in ad·
ditlon to tbe batons he replied that
although research is continuing in this
area, authorities feel that there isn't
anything safer or more effective than the
tear gas now used in riot situations.
Only those Guard and Reserve units
with a civil disturbance mission will be
affected by the new orders and under1e
the extra training.
Thil will affect units in moat ol the na·
tion'1 major cities. It is the first time
they will receive special equipment for
use in riot si tuations.
Friedbelm said tbe a~ training will •
mean extra drills and will about dpubl!!
the time now devoted to riot control
training.
If Congress approves the Pentagon's
request, Guardsme n will recelve 140,000
face shields and batons and 120,000 pro-
tective vests. The Guard will also receive
~ter quantities of equipment of the
kinds now n their armories, including
shotguns, public address s y 1 t e m s ,
f'foodlights:, radios, anUsnlper rifles and
cbemJcall such as tear 1u.
From Pagel
BUSINESS ...
other key figures in the business com·
munity.
•
The new tax will nol go into effect until
mid-January following introduction of the
new ordinance Nov. 2S and adoption after
a second roading Jp pecenmer.
II will ralle an iddltlooal '2»,000, th*
ume amount the categoried tu: . plan
would have produced. ·
Opponents uaed this as a major argu.
ment qainlt the city'a propoaal. Charles Currey, Chamber president:
Jack R. CUrley, vice president and
general manager of the DAILY PILOT
apd Dee Cook, fonner city councilman,
all flayed the plan.
Currey called the gross receipts plan
an invasion of privacy. Curley cited the
loopholes on tuaUon of the media saying
the proposal simply left "too many
unanswered questions." Cook said the
new plan is more equitable than the flat
lee.
There were others, too, like Blackie
Gadarian of Blackie's Bo at yard ,
Hush Mynatt of ruchard's Lido Market,
Bruce Blackman of the Lido Shops
Aslodation.
Councilman Carl Kymla offered the
motion dire~ing the staff to redraw the
ordinance establishing the $50 fee. urging
the tu be retained in the contei:t as a
regulatory tool.
"We must answer the question, do we
want a tai: or a fee that is regulatory,
that determines who you are, what you
are and what you are doing.
"J oppose the gross receipts concept,"
Kym]a said, "it should be a fee.
DAILY PILOT
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J1id1: R. Curley
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Menl91!11 If.Iller
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'
UPI T1l11hota
PARISIANS READ NEWS HEADLINES OF OE GAULLE DEATH
Former French Leader Dies of Heart Attack at Country Home
From Page 1
DE GUALLE SUCCUMBS • • •
anything of the sort." cival 'A'ar. He gave Fra nc e her in·
Tonight the body of the former presi· slitutions, hl!r place in the world.
dent was laid out in the living room of the "Jn this hour of mourning for the coun·
house in the brigadier general's uniform try. lel us bo11· to the grief of Mme. de
he had treasured since World War 11. Gaulle, of her chi Id re n and
The national ceremonies, for govern· grandchildren.
ment leaders and foreign dignitaries, will "Let us promise to France not to be
be held in Paris at th e same time. undignified of the lessons whi ch. ha ve
French government officials said De been given to us, and that, in the national
Gaulle was stri cken by a heart attack et soul , De Gaulle wi!l live former."
7:30 p.m. (1 :30 p.m. EST Monday) just Members of De Gaulle's family told
as · the evening news program was government officials De Gaulle suddenly
starting on network No. 1 of the French fell forward in his chair before the
radio and television broadcasting system. television set and came to rest on a
Word of his death was delayed until bridge table where he had laid out the
morning when gendarmes in the tiny C'ards for his evening game of solitaire,
village telephoned the Elysee Palace in the only game he allowed himse lf. ·
Paris. President Georges Pompidou His son-in·la"" Gen. Alain de Boissieu,
broke the news to the nation with the told of De Gaulle's last minutes and said,
words: General de Gaulle is dead. France ''General de Gaulle died as he wished:
is a widow." standing up, still working.'' He meant
"Le Grand Charles," who consid~red that De Gaulle had worked until the end
himself the incarnation of France, rallied of the filUi volume of bis "Memoirs of
tbf: defeated nation in World War II . He Hope.'.'
saved France from civil war in 1958 when De Boissieu said De Gaulle spent his
he emerged from retirement to become last days working .harder than be bad
'preiideaf''and end a military revolt stem. ever wotted htfore;. He began at 9:30
ming from the Algerian war. And be sav· a.m. each day in his office ove rlooking
ed It again in 1968 wheo student·labor the countryside and be worked Monday
uprising., again brought France close to as usual. finishing two chapters of the
civil war. fifth volume.
He was president for 11 years until he Afler writ ing in the morning he lunched
quit in April, 1969, when the voters re-with his wife and then took his customary
jected his plan for administrative reform. walk through Coiombey Park under a
In World War II he took his place In gray, overcast sky. He wrote for a few
histo ry with Sir Winston Churchill, Josef more hours in the afternoon and then
Stalin and Franklin D. Roosevelt. In the stopped to watch the evening news.
postwar years he helped s hape the
course of European history for three
decades as he struggled to restore the
grandeur of France.
On Jan. 16, 1952, he took note of the
fact that he, too. would someday die and
he gave Pompiiiou a handwrjtten docu·
ment that called for a simple funeral
with •·no music, no fanfare, nor bell·
ringing."
In death his wishes were lo be
disobeyed. The funeral in Colombey-les·
Deux·Eglises was to be simple as he
wished , but the government proclaimed
w·ednesday, Nov. 11 - Armistice Day -
a day of national mourning. The cabinet
met in urgent session and announced
there would be a religious ceremony at
Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris parallel·
ing the simple country services.
Pompidou led the nation in mourning
and in a lunchlime television speech he
told Frenchmen :
"In 1940. General de Gaulle saved our
honor. In 1944, he Jed us to the liberation
and to victory. In 1958 he saved us from
From Page 1
GENERALS. • •
t horough investigatlol'!I Into the
circumstances of the violation of the
state frontier of the USSR and the degree
of guilt of the persons >M'ho "'ere on
board."
It said their release was ordered in
view of "the resul.ts of lhe investlgallon
and the r egret. expressed by I he
governments of the United Slates and
Turkey, and also taking into con-
sideration appropriate assurances from
their side."
The Soviet ambassador lo the United
States. Anatoly F. Dobrynin, informed
Secretary of State \Viltiam P. Rogers
about 12 hours before the generals were
released.
Relations between the countries were
strained during the detention. The Soviet.,
.refused to allow U.S. officials to vl!it the
officers for five days In violation of a con-
sular treaty. The St.ale Department sent
a series of complaints and last 11·eekcnd
to~level U.S. diplomatJ stayed away
from Soviet observances of the 53rd nn·
ni versary of the Bolshevik Revolution on
orders from the White House.
But President NiJon's press secretary,
Ronald L. Zlegltr, told reporters r.fnn-
day nlght after the release was an·
nounced :
"The President. Is pleased and COil·
sidcrs It a constructive step in Sovlet-tJ.S.
relations."
-i:l -i:l -i:l
Nixon 'Shocked'
Over De Gaulle,
Sets Paris Trip_ .,
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UP I) -Pres!·
dent Nixon, "shocked and grieved" over
the death of Gen. Charles de Gaulle, cut
short a Florida vacation today and
prepared to fl y to Paris to attend state
n1e1noria! services for the former French
president.
The Florida White House said Nixon
would break Qff his vacation and head
back to Washington about 8 p.m. EST
tonight lo get ready for hls twoda y trip
to Paris.
Presidenti al Press Secretary Ronal d L.
Ziegler stressed that Nixon is going to
France "lo pay his respects to a great
leader "·ho \Va s a personal friend and a
man of great stature.·· He emphasized
Nixon will not conduct any official
business 1vith the other world leaders \11ho
will attend-the services, including Soviet
Premier Alexei Kosygin.
The \Vhile 'House sa id De Gaulle's 2D-
yearo()id grandson. who also is named
Charles de Gaulle. will accompany the
Presidenl aboard Air Force One on lhc
trip to France. f.lrs. Nixon 1vill not attend
the services "because it is not a state
funeral.'' an aide said.
The President, in a personal letter to
French President Georges Pompidou,
said: "l was deeply shocked and grieved
at the passing of Gen. de Gaulle. This
country knew Gen. de Gaulle as a stead·
fa st ally in \\•ar and a true friend in
peace. Gre8tness knO\VS no national boun-
daries and therefore France's loss is the
loss of mankind.
"The people of France and you, f..1r .
President, have the heartfel t sympathy of
all Americans in your hour of mourning."
Nixon Y.'ill leave for Paris at 11 :15 a.m.
EST, \\lednesday. arriving in the French
capilal about midnight Paris time. He
\\'ill return to \Vash.ington Thursday even·
Ing after the services In the Cathedral o(
Notre Dame.
The president 1\'lll pay a courtesy caU
on President Pompidou.
The \\1hite l~ouse said that the inform al
luncheon in honor of Mexico's president·
elect Luis Echeverria, "'hi ch was set tor
Thursday at Key Biscayne, has been
rescheduled for Friday at the White
House in \\lnshington. Nixon "h1 very
grateful" that an agreeabl~ time for the
meelln& \\'3J worked out, Ziegler sald.
Kialoa Bidding for Recoi;d :
Newport Yacht Runaway Leader • in Md.zatlan Race
' the Class B fleet was Stan Williams (rom . By ALJllON LOCKABEY
ot 1111 Diii)' 1'11111 51111
Klaloa II, Jim KUroy's 7 3 ·root
alum inum ya wl from Newport Harbor
Yat!ht Club was making noises like a new
elapsed time record in the 93G-mile J.,o.s
Angeles to Mazatlan race as she was
averaging 200 miles a day on her run
down the coast of Baja California.
Al the 8 a.m. rollcall Monday Kialoa II
was south of Cedros Island and reporting
winds of 15 knots from the north·
northwest. Since the Saturday noon start
at Los Angeles Hilrbor she had covered
380 miles and was 50 miles ahead of her
nearest competitor.
Second boat in the fleet was John
i1clntire's 72-foot )'awl Baruna from Hun-
Firm Unveils
'Spot Remover'
'
For Oceans
SAN DIEGO {BW) -.A system whi~n
may soon be In use to 'clean up oil slicks
on oceans and bays was put through its
paces for newsmen Modday by Lockheed.
The system consists mainly of a clever•
Jy designed paddlew"heel device which
ski ms oil off the surface and pumps it
into containers or other disposal systems.
Large versions may soon be deployed
along the nation's coasts aboard simple
catamaran-type vessels wh ich can be
towed through massive oil slicks.
Lockheed scientists and engineers in·
vented the system and now are under
contract to the Coast Guard lo determine
its appicability.
Company officials are in San Diego this
week to show a working model to Navy
and Am erican Petroleum I n s t i t u I e
representatives.
In the demonstration of the model for
newsmen, crude oil was poured inW a
s1nall tank of water straddled by the
removal system. A switch was thrown
and the paddlewheel began to turn, its
unique vanes scoopinri up the oil, which
then was piped away.
Barrett Bruch, Lockheed's project
leader, said larger models and prototypes
of the system are undergoing tests at
Lockheed Missiles & Space Co. head·
quarters in Sunnyvale, near San Fran·
cisco.
"'Many approaches to the oil-s pill pro-
blem have been advanced since the 'Tor.
rey Canyon' and Santa Barbara in·
cidents," Bruch said.
"From the data we've gathered so far,
our system appears to hold more promise
than others. pa rticularly for really
serious situations -large slicks in heavy
seas."
Bruch said Lockheed has worked with
many oil companies to determine their
oil-handling operations and requirements.
Next month the firm will present its fin·
dings to the Coast Guard, which is stu·
dying the oil·spi ll problem on a na·
tionwide basis.
Abandoned Hair
Burglary Clue
RE A DI NG . England (AP) -John
Ellen. 39, mad e the mistake of wearing
his toupee when he burglarized a bakery.
He got away with 6 pounds -$14.40 -
but lost his $425 hairpiece when the
\vatchman tried unsuccessfully to detain
him.
The wig ·was made by an in-
ternationally known maker and was
stamped with a serial numbe r. It led
detectives to Ellen. and a judge sen·
tenced him to live years Monday for
armed robbery.
tington Harbour, sailing 10 miles north of
Cedros Island .
The remainder of the 5()..boal fleet was
bunched within a GO-mile radius between
Guadalupe Jsl.aod and the Baja peninsula.
Kialoa Il's performance during the
first two days of the race gave her the
overall and Class A handicap lead.
Elapsed time reeord for the race is 5
days, 20 hours, 32 minutes and 20 seco nds
set by the 83.foot M·boat Sirius II in 1964.
Don Gumpertz, skipper of the official
escort vessel Windward reported he was
anchored at Turtle Bay at 8 a.m. today
and that the winds were getting light.
Second overall and Class C leader was
George Griffith's new Cal-39 Tabasco
from Los Angeles Yacht Club. Leading
Newport Harbor Yacht Club In the.
Columbla·SI> yawl, Intermezzo. Class Dr.
leader was Alerion, a Bristol· 38 skip-~
pered by Bill Dublllcr of San l"rancisco t.
YC. ~
' Foll-Ina '" Ill• h1nGk:•11 1!1nOl11111 •I ol • ··'"·• Mondi~: OVERALL C1l l(l1I01 llj <1! T_111&1<;j' \'l lthllMfl,
E""''' l(rut(I!'• LAYC; ( f lerl!Wll l / nt,rmtl!j> 1•1 B•nma: n P1rlcu,, w. V. Wrklll, HHYC; I I t Y1 Turko, GtorQ-e Anl1rr. PMYC; !ti Af>I Mlr l• JI,
Al Schoellt•men. BCYC: (101 Vtc!or II, Htrt.'" JOlll'ltO!I SOY(,
r.t•si ,_ -(ll l(l•lo• 111 Ul lcll!lllni Cl> l•f~l\ll l~l VKlllt Ill IJ) W1rrlo,., Al Cautl, BYC. 'lo
Cl.ASS I -Cl) lnlt rm11101 U) YI Turll.01 U) lllOf'l.r, L" H•rltftder. llldlmo!ld YC; <•> Flcll;ll t; Dvt11;, G-at kl!mi.I, w¥e; <JJ SIHICl1nctr, I'd
su"<1""'"· eve • CLASS c -en T1toa11;111 !21 AMI M1rl1 II U ) I ··~"'• <;eora~ fflOtHfl, LAYC1 (4) Sf>lb\11, TM~ RoeUsma, L.AYC; 151 VJ~1n1, Mori H111Ctll, LI YC.
Cl.ASS O -(1) Al.,lon; l~P.,kllu 1"1 l11!retlld II, l.orry Btrli;ul, L8YC ; Ul lkmf. Wl!lllm JllO\l t, C0tlt11N1n YC, Sin Fr111C $COi UI L'All",_
Rocler.U e. P•rtl, Ridlmond YC.
FLOURISHED AT HOTEL BUT A POTTED PALM IT'S NOT
Officer Jeff Reynolds Measures Hom9-1rown Marijuan.--
Illegal Gar~en Greenery
Found in Laguna Hotel
For a few hours on Monday, the decor
of the Laguna Beac h police department
was livened with a touch of illegal
greenery - two thriving marijuana
plants.
The attractive plants had attained a
tidy height of three and four feet, respec·
tively, bespeaking lhe IOVing care given
them, said police, by an innocent hotel
manager.
The ''pot" plants were harvested and
taken into custody by officer Jeff
Reynolds after an anonymous caller in·
qu ired, "Is it legal to grow marijuana in
Laguna Beach?"
Assured it was not. the caller suggested
Reynolds take a look at the contents of a
planter on a rear balcony at the €lift
Hotel, 741 South Coast Highway.
A look wali enough. A pair of cannabi s
saliva plants added their feathery touch
to other assorted greenery in the well
kept planter,
"The manager had no idea what they
were," said Reynolds. "In fact he'd been
watering them regularly since they
started to grow in the planter."
Whether they were planted deliberately
or sprang from seeds in a hastily con -
cealed marijuana "joint'' probably will
remain a mystery.
''The stuff grows like a weed around
here," commented Reynolds, as he
prepared to take bis trophies over to the
Fire Department for official cremation
ceremonies.
Truth.
or Consequences?
Sometimes the truth hurts! We have lost an occasional sale by not telling a customer what
he wonted to hoer.
We might point out that a custom er would be better off to pay a little more for our rub-
bor podd ing then buy • cheoper, mushy pod th•t feels like you are wolkin9 on bolloons. The "bol·
loon" pad hurts the carpet backing, causes stretchin g, and ruins seams. Also , this padding often
flottens out ofter • while.
Additionally, we might tell you that some carpet fibers are more practical than others. A
fiber that works in one texture, might 11 bomb in another.
Feel free to call for advice. All of our sales people have had extensive experience in the
service end of this business -and after all -the most important thing we can offer, that hardly
anyone else does ••• is service!
SANTA ANA. Oa.t.N•I
TUSTIN Cefl •••
ALDIN'$
RID HILL CARP'm
" DUPIRllS
11174 lrrlll!t, T•tta. C•llf,
lll·lJ44
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placen,tla Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to S:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -S•t., 9:30 le S
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Bontiiigton . Beaeh
EDITION
. . VO~. 63, NO. 269, 2 S~TIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY; CALIFORNIA , JUESDA-Y, NOVEMBER ·10, 1970 •
• oar a a.1ses
FRENCH LEI.DER Dlfl h: Chorleo .... Gaull9
Scllool District .
T-o Consider
Budget Failure .
·Some·deft-financia1 thinking appears to
be in prder tonight as trustees of the
HW1Ungton Beach Union High School
Di!trict try to figure out how to live
within , budget resU:iction1 imposed by
Jut week's tax hike.failure.
During the 7:30 p.m~ meeting In the
Huntington Beach Higb School cafeteria,
the five -member board may consider
these'1wo alternatives:
-Either go bark to the voters and try
their luck for the third time in a tax elec·
tion they believe is necessary to maintain
their educational program.
-Or tighten their belts in expectation
()[ a starvation budget of 85-cents per $100
cf assessed valuation they will face Qy
next July. ~
Failure of the district's 69.cent tax hike
1t the polls last 'Tuesday appears to force
a decision for one or the other, according
to local schoolmen.
The district currently enjoys a $L39 tax
rate which several experts clai m is not
enough. Thlt amount will decrease to the
legislative minimum in July since the
override failed .
At the present time there is no district
ln·the State of California operating at the
85-cent level, although there are two or
three small, rural districts ln the north-
ern portion of the state who are working
with 88 or 89 cents. The HunlingJ,on Beach district, ·which
serves an estimated 15.000 students with
five comprehensive high schools, main-
tains however, that it cannot exist uttder
those terfn~. Several cuts have already been foreseen
by administrators, which may include all
student . bwiing, interschool athletics an4
speclal programs for the girted and han-
djcapped.
Dr. Ethan Y. Fullmer, the district's ac-
t.in& superintendent, said t o n I g ht ' 1
meeting wOuld primarily· be devoted to a
discussion of the problem.
He added that the administration had
not yet.made ·any specific suggestions to
l)ll! board about whjcb coune they ahouk!
pursue.
79 Years Old
De Gaulle D·ead
Of Heart Attack
~
COLOMBEY -LES· DEUX • EGLISES,
France (UPI) -Gen. Charles de Gaulle
died Monday night of a heart attack in
his country home here where he had lived
in seclusion since he was rejected by the
nation be had thrice saved from disaster.
De Gaulle, who would have celebrated
his 80th birthday on Nov. 22, made his
mark on history in World WaJ JI along
with FranklinD. Roosevelt, Josef Stalin,
Winston Churchill and Chiang Kai·shek-
Only Chiang, now 83, survives.
The former president had just dealt
himself a hand of solitaire while waiting
in front of the television set for the.even-
. ing news when he slumped forward. His
wife. Yvonne, called a doctor and a priest
but he was dead when they arrived.
He had left his own testament, calling
for a simple funeral with "no music, no
fanfare, no bell ringing." .The funeral
Thursday will be just that, but the
government was holding m e m o r i a J
services at the sa me time in Notre Dame
Cathedral in Paris and President Nixon
was among world leaders who said they
would attend.
Messages of condolen~ poured in from
statesmen throughout the world -from
N~on who hailed his quality of vision,
from the leaden of France's former col·
enies in AfriCa, from the ~. from~tbe pennw with wbom ......... ,. FraDC9-
Ge.rman friendship.
De Gaulle. had lived In aloof retirement
1n Colombey-Jes-Deu1-Eg.ii1e1 since April ,
1969, when Frtnch voten rejected his pet
proposa] for administrative reform. He
worked quietly on his memoirs and lived
the 1imple life of a villager.
Father Claude Jaughey, the village
priest who administered the last ritel,
said, "the general will receive a plaln
funeral , like any other villager or a
lumberjack. This will be _ a classleu
fUM:ral as the general alway1 wished."
Jaugbey said following the simple
church ceremony De Gaulle's coffin will
be-taken-to his family plot at one aide of
the neirb)r village churchyard and be
buried next to h.is daughter Anne. "It
will be a plain village funeral," be said.
Mentally Gifted
Program Studied
A special program for mentally gifted
students will be considered by trustees of
the Huntingtlln ·Beach City School District
at 7:30 o'clock tonight at Dwyer School.
The City School District does not cur·
rently participate in the state-supported
"gifted" program, but several parents
have asked trustees to join it.
A report on the details of the gifted
program will be given by Miss Betty
Funkhouser, assistant superintendent for
instruction.
A mentally gifted student is one with a
measured intelli1trxe (li.!Otient of 13Z
(with some exceptions). Students are
found to be mentally gifted by state
standards through written test.s and a
psychologist's report.
Testing is paid for by the stale if a
district has established special activities
to provide extra learning experiences for
the gifted children.
Trustees of the city district have not in-.
dicated if they plan to adopt auch a pro-
gram. Tonight's discussion 11 primarily
to learn about the state regulations.
''There will be no funeral oration,
because the general did not wan\
anything of the sort."
Tonight the body of the former presl·
dent was laid out in the living room of the
house-in-the brigadier-genera:J'!Uiilf:,,;,rm~
be had treasured since World War II.
The national ceremonies, for govern.
ment leaders and foreign dignitariea will
be held in Paris at the aame tiine. '
French government officials said De
Gaul.le was strlcke.n by a he!lft attack at
7:30 p.m. (1:30 p.m. F.ST Monday) just
as the evening news program was
starting on network No. 1 of .the French
(See DE GAULLE, Page I)
Beach Youths
Arraignment
Slated TodaJi
.
Detectlv .. blvestigoting Ille olaylnc of
HunUnpon Beacb 11~ Rob• r .t
Hermann -·io Ille dlitrict a~'• offkt-lh~ -moniliil-W-cl•filY diirtes
ag_linat three to.n-agen orrm.d Sunday.
The trio -ool! ii' I g~l, -WU oel for
arraignment at 2 o'Clock this 1f~ in
West .Orange County Munldpol C1ii1rt on
chaiges •iominlilc fl'Cllll Jlmilinn'1
death.
Capt. Grover L. Payne, Hunllqlon
Beach de~ve chief, oald 11111 mor'nlng
he wa not ..,.. ii all three -.Id foce
murder cbar1es.
"We won't know what . the exact,
charges are until we 'discuss It with the
dilltrict attorney's office, ... Payne said.
He woulda't comment .on what char1ei
police· would request. -
Hermann, 11,,waa found by·hia'parents
Saturday night -dead,•lylng bl a Pool ol
blood on hia bed with'two llugs from a .22
caliber pistol in him. ffe 'lived•with his
parents at 411 15th St., Huntington Beach.
Ironically, HermaM wu supposed to
appear m court today . with one of the
suspects in bis death, Martha E. Riggs,
19, of 11124 Park St.,. Hunliniton Beach.
Both faced narcotics charges.
Police have hinted that the motive for
the slaying may have stemmed fnxn a
local narcotics raid laJt week.
Miss Riggs is currently lodged at
Orange County Jail. The two mile youths
arrested Sunday, Robert E. Williams, II, or 1504 Pecan Ave., Huntington Beach
and Arthur A. Odden, JI, of 111957 Santa
Madrina St ... Fountaia Valley, are being
held at Huntington Beach's revamped ci·
ty jail.
No bail has been tel for any of the
three youths.
New Bands
For Vallley
Sought-
Dances
Young Fountain Valley dancers are
searching for new blind! to play ,at their
Friday night dances.
Any band which· might like to try out
should phone the city J'f:creation depart4
meot at 912·2424. to arrance an audition.
Banda are needed twice a •month for the
clty'1 JUnlor hiJ:h. Aehool dince1 held at
the community center, 10200 Slater Ave.
. , . ... ·~it .ti'
M~f.QHe.en Cathie · )· .... -< ~ .. . ' ' . . . This year's, hoIJ.lecOming beroirfe of Huntington BeacJi High School
· OU~rs is Cathie~Crouse who bas the srriile, roses and crown to pf(!Ve
it. Cathie and •her.princesses,~J41in Botgerson, De~bi Cienil!ns, S8.ndy
COntreras and Nancie Robins ·wereleted· at·tbe school's recent.foot·
·ball game' with., Marina High.
. .
New System. t~ Skim Up
. . .
Ocean Oil Slick Tested
SAN.DIEGO (BW) -A system which
may soon be in use u, clean up oil 'slicks
on oceans 'and bays,was put through its
paces for newsmen Monday by Lockheed.
The syStem coniists.mainly of a clever·
ly designed paddlewheel · device w~ch
11kimJ ·oil olf ~ surface and pumps it
lnto ·contain.ers or other disposal systems.
Large , versioris may soon be deployed
alpng Uie.nation's coasts. aboard 'simple
catamaran-fype vessels which can be
tQwed through1 masSive oil slicks.
Lockheed sciehtists and engineers In·
vented the system' and now are und~
contract .to the Coast Guard to determine
its appicabillty.
Company officials are in San· Diego this
week to show a w6rldng mOOer to Navy
and American Petroleum I n s t i t u t e
represent8(ives. ·
Jn ·,the demonstration of tbe model for
newsmen , crude oil was poured into •
· mall tank of water straddled by the
removal system. A twitch was' thrown
8nd the paddlewheel "began to turn, its
unlque vanes scooping up the oil,, whiCh
then was piped away.
Barrett Bruch, Lockheed's project
leader, said 1111er modtb and prototypes
of the system are undergoing tests at
Lock..'leed Missiles & Space Co. he1d-
q"uarters in Sunnyvale, near San Fran--
cisco.
"Many approaches to the oil-spill pro-
blem have been advanced· since. the 'Tor-
rey Canyon' and Santa Barbara in-
cidents," Bruch said.
"From the data we've gathered·so far,
our system appearsjto hold more promise
than Oll'iers, particularly for ·really
settous.Bituationa -lar1e slicks in heavy
seas. '1
Charilher Passes
Drug Petition
In ·Huntington
. . ' . .
1be Huntington . Beach Chamber of
Commerce is inviting its member! to
.. sign a petitiOn ur•ing strict eitforcement
of narcotics li Ws. fbe · chamber'• current bulletin e1·
plains ·that the• petition calls on the
district attorney to prosecute ·dope ped-
dlers for the max,imum Pfllalty and lo
rtsilt probation and sua~ terite:nce
2 U.S. Generals Freed requests. ~
The petition, whJch is a joint Production
of tbe Huntinlilon Beacb Cbaml><r ond
the La Habra Chlmber of Commerce.
. will be ,aen.t to the ~stritt l'tt.omey's of·
fice and to , Lbe -off!Ces of all M'unidpal Soviets Rewase Pair, Turk · Pilot After 3 Weeks and Superior Court J\¥11es. -
ANKARA. TW'l<ey (AP) -Two U.S.
. The petition ' ....... Superior . Court
officer, were lnspeding mJ!illrY ""-Judflu• to ... 1ence -convlcled of
ltallatloqs near the Soviet tiOrder on"Ocl aelllnc·narcolic:s to ttat.e pr\i0n 1wll.h I.he
•
Today's Final •
TEN CEJilIS_
•
Supervisors-
Set Salary
At $19,200
By JACK BROBACIC
otllltDe""l'IW'*'
Orange County supervilon thll IDCll'I>
lng voted themselvea a raile to $11,JOO a
year, and then listened to 1 barrqe of
criticism unprecedented in c o u n t Y.
history.
For the 11ext two and one-half htlurs,
the board wu subjected to acid ammeitt
by citiuns punctuated with boo:I. cbelrl
and cat.calla.
The move to rlise the supervi.lora
1;1lary $4,200 a year from the· preaent
SIS,000 wu made by suPervisor Wllllam
PhiWps ol Fullerton.
Supervi10r David Baker of Gardeet
Grove tried to blpck the move, offer:lhl a
substitute motion to send the problem to
the Grand Jury and anolber moUcm &o
table the aa1a.ry" raise move.
Both motions died for lack of a aecond.
Janice Boer of Santa Ana, long time
critic of the board, led the attack.
She charged that County Coomel
Adrian Kuyper bad not told the board the
whole truth when he advised them that
they must pass a 1alary ordinance tm.
mediately because of the paaage of cm-
stitutional amendment Proposi.Uon 11.
"This ia not true," ~d Mrs, "Boef' •
''Let the'peolple set YQW' ul.:ry throqe,h
an .iiµ~Uve~ They will decl~ -~you
art worth." ' . ,
She cont.-Uiat 'Ibo Graiid Jllrf la
not a Nii Eseut:ative ll"OUP· ·
'"l'bey oro1119P.<>bited by a JOdr: who
hu blo job becauoe'be wu • frlenif of Iba gove'mor .. " . ' -
Del! Cook. former Newport Beach ""'°"
cilinen, urged board m!mben to
poolpone oct.lpn ahd take up the oaluy
subject in a plibUc 1e11ion.later. •
Clare • Kelly, chaJrman of \the Run-
lington Beach Cuuncil for Seaalble . Tu·
atioo (COST>. charged 'that s...,.rv;-
Robert Battin, ''holds the taxpayers of
the county i,n contempt. 'Ibis will nOt go
unnoticed in tho future," she Uruteaed.
Jim Townaend, president of the
Telephone T~ayers Association of
Aoaheim, threaten..i. that ll auperviaors
did not repeal their action there would be
a taxpayers aui.l
Only two peraor:is In the audien;ce ~
ported· the aupervl.SOl's. Norman. Brock ol
Orange char1ed that "tbele people are
asking you to take Ille pay ol a plumber.
Voll are entitled to more th:an $1),«IO a
year.". .
His remarks were greeted with loud
boo" . The other . .uppoi-ter WU Lee Podolak
of Orange, who cballqed the audience
with. "Where were . you when · the
legislature was refusing to r~ise the
superviaors' 8'larles ye1r· after year!"
He, tOo, was roundly booed.
Opera Star Marries
MEMPlUS (UPJ) - M I r I u e·r l•t e
Piaua. former st.Ir< of tbe Metropolitan
Opera in New York, haa been married to
Son Francilco i ndullriatist · HaiTy Berg.. thodt. Miss Pim.a was attended by her
thiee-dau'ghters and three' .ons by Jl'e-
vlous marriages in the private cere-
moioies Sundoy at Ille 1blger'1 ·Mempi11a
home.
C:.11&
1fe•tller·
I·
i
You ahouldn't Med your lllft>o"
11 .... , Wedneodoy olnca Ille '°"
cloud• •nd , .. wtll -.......
ol the 10iar a!iimmer. Temtior•
lures of 16 Oii the COOll and 71
Inland will prevail .
JNSmE TOQAY
Beach Stu~ent Cited
In Record Magazine
Anny generals and a Turkish colonel
returned lo Turkey from Soviet Armenia
today, three weeks after their light plane
la nded 11 miles ..,... Ille border and
they were interned,
negotiated at I.he border Ulwn of
KWlcakcak fer ·nine houri, pmum11bly
working out detallo ol the rtleue. The of·
fleer• wen freed et 7 a.wn. and wei;e
driven to Kon, 40 11111eo.-_. of tlie
Soviet r ro 11 t I er, te tUi a T'u·r k I ~h
ti-and •ttti on a night fron,.Enunun .to reqmunendetloa that the J mlximWD ·
' ltan .· The pilot. ·Army Maj: Jarhel P. , ~ntencu "be: aervtd '~ti\'ety •. -I~ ~ tqld c•1111!lar-olliclah ,blih · Munjdplf CoUrt jud(a ore onjoined lo
·Orange CountV ' aehoOll " art
pfa..,.g •21 Qut1d'"'" to fim_
ou' which studentl nttd the
most http. end 1ome $0,poo
p•pii.f will be quiued. Sec l'aflC
Tom Teague. son ol Mr. and Mrs.
~tl11m J. Teague, 5451 El Dorado Drive,
HunUneton B..,ch: Ii one of J5 Abilene
Christian Colle1e seniors to be named to
the 1970-71 edition of "Who's Who Among
1tudent1 in American tJnivenities and
colleges." Teague is 11 rommunications major •l
Abllene-ond ·I• pr,.ident of the •bodenll
asaoctaUon. He Is also a t~year let•
tenlllD In football.
' (
The Turkilh Foreign Mlnbtry said the
men were "healthy and in good shape.''
Tau. the Soviet newa qency, aald the
general!' U.S. Army pilot allo Wll
released and would fly bac..k their 1ix-
se1t. tW~ncine plane as 110011 11
weather permitted.
A Foreign Ministry aource. uld Turkish
and Soviet ....,a1a and civlllon oUiciala
'
mWtory c: .. -· KldlCa .. bolllray' -· Kan and Lenlnatori, bl Sot'tet -· wbere
the olll""' pllllo -and 1hey ...... held. I
Maj. Gtn. F.dwanf C. D. Schert'1, 17,
chid of the U.S. military -bl
Turkey; Brig. Gtn. Olaude M. MoQllarrie
Jr .• 441. heod of Sc:hemr'1 Anny -1
ond Col. C.val DonU. • Turkiob llalloo
'(
· wlncio ,calllOd him to milcalculote' hla ICCtf",llO 'loooer ·p!ou> il • -Jo
• ""'""· :nie, U,S. govUnment ccinteodOd · dlarpd 'trill! •'falooy .ablfto tilftd o..r to
theJl!one'llll''Y<d ,_,the b6rder. , Sujlerior ·Court llUdl ,.,-r"wbere
'Tw oald tba .SOViet -government decld· "Ibero ii prcboble cauoe tbaL they are
ed to ' relW. the olflcm . after ;,• ' RUUIY of <o ftlOnY In Ille ll1'lal •I• of
t I\ o r o u 1 'h • lnvestiptloft I n to the nercotics." • . ~ 1 , •
cir-of the vidotion of the Tbe peUticlo io' ·ov1lloble • ol ; the
· ltlt.e fron6er1of1the US8R aritt tht dtgrfe · clt'lmber officts,1 1*2 ·Beath Blvd.'. tutte
of guilt of the pemM wbo _. on 221 bl· Ille !!'own ud °""">' Sboppbl1
bovd." cent.er.
T l
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2 DAILY PILOT • H
U.S. Orders
More IUot
:Training
· JASllJNGTON (AP) -Secretary of
Defenae Melvin R. Lal(d today ordered
add1tlon&l riot conlrOJ. \raining for Na·
tiena1 Guardsmen and Reservists and the
insurance of protective face masks and
riot batons for riot assignments.
Pentagon officials said Laird will ask
Coniress for an &ddiUonal S20 million to
pay for the new equipment and e~a
lrainlJll.
Pent a Ion spokesman Jerry W.
Frledbeim was asked whether this action
was taken as a result of a Guard-student
confrontation last May at Kent State
University.
The May incident "obviously heighten-
ed the c<incem for the protection ol the aul('dspien," be replied.
P'our Kent State students were killed at
a time when guardsmen on the Ohio cam·
pus said they feared for their lives.
A state arand jury absolved the
cuardsmeb of blame for the deaths, but a
p-esidential comJnission catled t h e
iUards' action "unnecessary, unwar·
ranted and unexcusable."
Alktd U the Guardsmen would be p~
vided 11r'itb other DonlelbaJ weapons in ad·
dltion to the batons he replied that
although research is continuing in this
area, authorities feel that there isn't
anything safer or more eflective than the
tear gas now used in riot situations.
OnJy tbose Guar.d and Reserve units
with a civil disturbance missioo_ will be
affected by the new orders and undergo
the extra trahting.
This will affect units in most of the na·
lion's major ciUes. It is the first time
they will receive 1pecial equipment for
use in riot situations.
Frlidhelm said the added training will
mean extra drills and will about double
the Ume now devoted to riot ·control
lralning.
If Con.area approves the Penta1on'1
request, Guardsmen will receive 140,000
lo<e ~Ids and bal4ns and ll0,000 pr ..
tectlve vests.
Veterans Day
Beach Holiday
Wednesday, Veterans Day·, will be a p:ay of rest for postal workers, city
employea and schooJ teachers in Hun-
tington Beach and Fountain Valley.
Both city halls will be shut tight as
municipal employu iobserve tbe holiday.
All ocbools will •\Ille! "" ~· ' ; ' The J>Oll office will iun~M a ilOUday
llChedule with apecial , deliverY nmnlng,
but no window ot normal deUv.-y:
oervlc:e. Mail will be picked up on,bollllay
llChedules and pasta! boz patrona tan
enter the lobby for their mail.
V eteram Day ceremonies will be
celebrated by American Le&lon ~Oii 133
•t Memorial Hall OD Fifth Street. Hun-
tington Beach. The public ii invited to at·
tend the 1bort legion ceremonies at 11
a.m., Wednesday.
Flood Control
System Finished
Completion of a $295,194 fiood control
project which will protect portloru1 of
Weatmlnlter, Garden Grove and Stanton
from win~ flooding has been announced
by Second District Supervisor David L.
Baker.
Involved was the construction of a rein-
forced concrete pipe for one half mile un·
der Garden Grove Boulevard from
Hoover $treet on the east to the
Anaheim·Barber City Flood Control
Channel at Knott Street on the west.
Baker said the completion is timely
liince winter rains have so often caused
severe discomfort and !iOme dang er to
the residents, businessmen and motorists
in the area.
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WITH NO KIDNEYS, HER LIFE DEPENDS ON A MACHINE
Mrs. Poncy, Good-n1tured Mother Con61de1 In "Bird", Her Kitten
Life~ No Kidneys
Housewife Lives 01ie Day to Next
By ALAN DIJIXIN
OI tfll 0.llY ,1191 lllft
For Mrs. Mareie Poncy, 44, life begins
one day and alrriost ends the next.
lt'1 a -machine and people that enable
her to live this day-to-day e:iistence.
Three times a week, for six houn at a
time, Mrs. Poney goes to hO!pital to have
her blood cleansed by a dialy11is machine.
Mrs. Poncy, an attractive, good
natured mother and wife, ba! no kidneys.
WiUlout the machine she would dlt. With
it, llhe llvu.
"It's a confining life but I am
thankful." she said at her home at 9032
Christine Drive, Huntington Beach.
"I'm too tired to do much after recelv· Ina the treatment. But the next day I feel
all right and I am able to do light
housework, drive to the market and cook.
Then the following day I have to go tor
tbe liutJnent again. '.I -1mr tt· ii not-jUst the machine-at-Palm
Harbor Gen.er.al H°'pitat, Garden Grove,
tl!Jt Jiiieps '}In. P<>ncy alive. It Is the peoplr who put it there.
Thele people are those who donate to
the Artificial Kidney Foundation, which
provided the costly apparatus Mrs. Poncy
uses. ".They also include donors to the
HuntiDgton Beach United Crusade for the
foundation· ls a member agency.
It is in Ille-supporting causes like this
that donations to the United Crusade end
up. . •
Mrs. Poncy is one of 75 patients in
Orange County who rely on dialysis
machines. The only way they can get oft
the machine is to receive a kidney
transplant, a still tare operation with on·
ly a moderate success rate.
"I want one," Mrs. Poncy says eagerly,
talking of a transplant. "My doctor tells
me that even if everything matches, the
chances of the transplant being suc·
cessful are only 50 to 60 percent, and it is
a dangerol!S operation. But I would jump
at the chance,"
Where do you find a donor? Usually
from the patients' families but the
disease that afflicted Mrs. Poncy,
polycystic kidneys, wu considered in-
herited and doctors have ruled out a
family transplant.
Accident .victims are the othre source.
"I undentand that computers at UCLA
have been fed all the blood and tissue
details on kidney patients in Southern
California and when a donor is found the
lnfonnatlon is given to the machine to
find a match," Mrs. Poncy said. "I'm
alwaya waiting for the phone to ring."
While she waits and hopes, Mrs. Poncy
busies herself with crochet and cooking
for her husband, Pat, and daughters,
SbQlly_._17._wl'.I!(_ ill ~tum do the heavy
"household chores.
Mrs. Poncy's olher chance for a less
restricted life is to get a home-use
di.i.Jysis machine which cost between
SS,l'.J00.$10,000 to buy and about $3,000 a
y~r to operate. Family members can be
trained to operate the machine.
But the Poncys realize this is wishful
thinking for them at present.
"Since Margie had her second kidney
removed a year ago we have bad a hard
time financially ,'' Pat Poncy
said. "Insurance, Medi.Cal and the
hospital people have helped greatly but.
believe me, we don't have much to live
on."
But Mrs. Poncy and many others like
her do live on, hoping for a transplant or
a home machine.
From Page J
DE GAULLE SUCCUMBS • ••
radio-and telev1.Sion broaOcisting system.
Word of his death was delayed until
morning when gendarmes in the tiny
village telephoned the Elysee Palace in
Paris. President Georges Pompidou
broke the nem to the nation with the
words: General de Gaulle is dead. France
is a widow."
"Le Grand Charles," who considered
himself the incarnation of France, rallied
the defeated nation in World War II. He
saved France from civil war In 1958 when
he emerged from retirement to become
president and end a military revolt stem·
ming from the Algerian war. And he aav·
ed it again in 1968 when student-labor
uprisings again brought Franet" cl06e to
civil war.
He was president for 11 years until he
quit in April, 1969. when the voters re-
jected his plan tor administrative reform.
In World War fl he took his place in
history with Sir Winston OlurchiU. Josef
Stalin and Franklin D. Roosevelt. In the
Postwar years he helped s h a p e the
course of European history for three
decades at1 he struggled to restore the
grandeur of France.
On Jan. 16. 1952. he toot note of the
fact that he. too, would someday die and
he gave Pompidou a handwritten docu·
ment that called for a simple funeral
with 'too music, no fanfare, nor bell·
ringing."
In death his wishes were to be
disobeyed. The funeral in Colombey-les·
Deux-Eglises was to be simple as be
wilhed, but the-government proclaimed
Wednesday, Nov. 11 -Armlltlce Day -
1 day of national moumlna. The cabinet
met ln urcent session and tnnounced
there would be a rellg1ous ceremony at
Notre Dame Cathedril In Paris parallel· Ina the 1lmple country services.
Pompldou led the nation In mounting
and In a lunchtime tele:vlllon speech ht
told Frendunen:
"In JMO, General de Gaulle saved our
honor. In 1944, he led us to the llbtraUon
and to victory. In 1958 be aaved us from
dval war. He 11ve: F r 1 n e e her in·
ltlllltlons, ber p_l.lce In the -1c1.
"In this·hour of mourning for the coun-
try, let us bow to the grief of Mme. de
Gaulle, of her children and
grandchildren.
"Let us promise to France not to be
undignified of the lessons which have
been given to us, and Utat, in the national
!iOul, De Gaulle will live former."
Members of De Gaulle's family told
government officials De Gaulle suddenly
tell forward in his chair before the
television set and came to rest on a
bridge table where he had laid out the
cards for his evening game of solitaire,
the only game he allowed himself.
His son-in-law, Gen. Alain de Boissieu,
told of De Gaulle 's last minutes and said,
"General de Gaulle died as he wished :
standing up, still working." He meant
that De Gaulle had worked until the end
of the fifth volume of his "Memoirs of
Hope."
De Boissieu said De Gaulle spent his
last days working harder than he bad
ever worked before. He be&an at 9:30
a.m. each day in his office overlooking
the countryside and he worked Monday
as usual, finishing two chapters of lhe
fifth volume.
After writing in the morning he lunched
with his wife and then took his customary
walk through Colombey Park under a
gray, overcast sky. He wrote for a few
more hours in the afternoon 'and then
stopped to watch the evening news.
Except for two vacation lrips abroad -
the rirsl" to Ireland during the election
campaign to choose his successor and the
secon.d to ~in to meet Generalissimo
Francisco Franco--:_ De Gaufle never Jett
Colombey. He had staked his PoHUcal
future on a referendum on April 1.8, 1169.
and y.then he lost he faded from public
\llew.
Hi1 death brouaht an era to an end -
an era not only In the history of France
but In the history of the world. There bad
betn many highliglJ.U:, the flrsl of which
was his creation of the Free French
resistanct movement when he flew
a"""' the English ChaMel ,. London in a BrlUsh alrpl1111 so low of fuel that the
1•111• read empty. •
Sewage Costs Divided
Industry Will Share Tabs Under New Law
" •1 RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
..... OllW 1'11111 Stiff
Industry will iioon be sharing some of
the costs of excessive sewage t.reatmen\
with local taxpayers under the terms or a
new county-wide law te go on the books
by Jan. 1.
That was the message delivered to a
group of Huntington Beach businessmen
and industrialists Monday by Robert A.
Webber, chief of the industrial and
permit division of the Orange County
Sanitation Districts.
Basically,, the sewage law sets up
specificaUons of "reasonable use" of the
county'11 two treatment plants . and
charges the individual operator any costs
beyond that.
Jn addition, the new ordinance will pro·
vide quality requirements for sewage
discharge to deter the system's users
from plugging it up with waste materials
that cannot be efficiently treated.
Council Opens
Downtown Plan
For Hearing
City Councilmen will open a public
discussion at 8 o'clock tonight on creation
of an an::hitectural control zone which
will give Fountain Valley its first
downtown .
The young city's planning department
has suggested that tight architectural
controls be placed on construction along
Brookhurst Street from Edinger Avenue
to Garfield Avenue.
This "core of the city" would be the
show piece of the town, planners say.
The area will feature commercial and
professional buildings as well as a few
apartments.
Planners want more control over this
area to eliminate items they term
unsightly such as free standing signs and
"gimmick" buildings.
These controls would apply only to the
area along Brookhurst Street.
After listening to public comments on
the proposal, city councilmen will decide
if such a di.strict will be established.
"The ordinance is malnly geared to
large indUstry," uid Webber. ,;and we
don't think it will be too bard to live
~·ith.J'
The formula for computing 11reasonable
use" is based on the assessed valuation of
the property at an allowable rate of 10
million gallons of sewage per $100,000.
"It costs us about $42 to treat a million
gallons of sewage and that is exactly
what eact'! industry will be charged for
their excesses," said Webber.
The law also establishes stringent re·
quiremcnts for the quality of sew11ge so
that individual users know the limits of
toxicity and suspended solids they may
diScharge.
"Actually. sewage treatment is an in·
dustry like any other. We use raw
materials and deliver a final product. But
unlike other industries, we have no con·
trol over our raw materials and tbat ii
what the new law defines," Wfbber
pointed out. ~
"In the East and Midwest, industry i:i
really the big ba.d bully. They're the ones.
who are doing all the polluting. In Orange
County we·re fortunate because indusfry
bas indicated a willil)gness to work with.
us in solving our problems."
Next year, he said. the county's vast
system of feed lines wlll be patrolled by ~
crew of "sewer policemen" who will be
taking quality samples to make sure no
violations occur.
"If there have been obvious violaUons
of our discharge requirements, we can
simply shut off their service," he ex·
plained. "But just the knowledge that we
are doing this should serve as a deter·
rent."
The new ordinance, he said, should aid
in keeping harmful materials out of the
ocean where the treated sewage is
dischareed.
Building Permits Drop
Sharply in Huntington
From chain link fen ces to large
apartments, ~he building industry has
taken a sharp drop in Huntington Beach,
this year.
The total value of ·construction for
October -as shown by building perm.Its
issued by the city -was $6.8 million less
than the same month last year.
Construction is down nearly $46 million
for the ten-month period which ended in
October, compared to the same period
for 1969.
"You can see the .difference in the
figures," Jack Cleveland, director o( the
Scout Leaders Named
New officers have taken over the
leadership of Explorer Post 294 based at
Edison High School, Huntington Beach.
Dan Winchell is the new president: Dan
Simpson, vice preaident; and Charles
Grant, secretary-treasurer. The post is a
general interest outfit.
building department, said today. 11But '37
million is still a respectable amount. of
constru ction.''
The figures listed represent asseased
valuation of the structure alone, whether
it is a swimming pool or an office
building.
"I guess the economy Is down all
over," Cleveland said. "But compared to
other cities we're doing good."
The building department Issued 194
permits in October and collected $8,180 in
fees for them.
Commercial construction represented
the largest single assessed valuation at
$501,820 for October. The second highest
assessed valuation for the month was
turned in on two building permits for city
fire stations. Those structures were
valued at $442,000.
Total apartment construction - a big
factor in the 1969 figures -was only
$523,596 in value for five duplexes and
three small apartment units.
The least assessed valuation recorded
was '394 for two chain link fences.
Mush You Sa"-'oyeds
Mike Van Doren of Fountain Valley practices in
Costa Mesa field fo_r sled racing season. A member
of the California Sled Dog Club, he races his
Samoyed dogs at Big Bear and atop Tram Way at
Palm Springs. Sled is on wheels since there Wl!i no
snow in Costa Mesa that day.
Truth
or Consequences?
Sometimes !he lruth hurts! We ~ave lost an occasional sele liy no! felin9 a anfomet "•NI
ho wam.d to hNr.
We mi9hl point out th•! a customer would 0. O.tter off lo pay a tittle more for -ruli-
ber paddin9 th•n buy • cheaper, mu.hy pad th1f fMls like you are wa•lnci on bolloons. Tho "bo~
looo" p•d hurts the c•rpal backing , cau .. , stretching, ind ruin• •Hm•. Also, !hi• paddinq oft.,
flett•ns out 1fter • while.
AdditionaTiy, we might Iott you !hat ~m• corpat filien are more preeiical Ilion otliws. A
fiber that works in one texture, might "bomb' in ano+her •
•
F .. I free lo can for 1dvico. An of our .. 1es people h•vo hail ext-ive experience in !lie
service end of this business -and after an -the most.important thi"g we can off.r1 that htrdJy
anyone else does ... is service!
\
ALDEN'S ...------IANTA AMA. OU.IMI
TUSTIN Cell • , •
ALDIN'S
110 HILL CAIPITS
& DUNllft
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CARP ET S e DRAPES
16'3 Placentia Awe.
COSTA M!SA
646-4131
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H DAIL V l'ILOT 3
New Arrests Made in County Drug Ring Case
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
ot IM Dlllr 1'1111 ll•lt
A new series of arresu stem1ning from
the Oct. l raid on a palatial Modjeska
canyon headquarters of what authorities
11llege y.·as tne largest drug smuggling
ring in California history 11.•as announced
today.
The latest suspects are charged with
e<inspiracy in warrants issued by the
Orange County District Attorney's office
and announced by Newport Beach police.
They were identified as: ·
Susan Seminar 1nd Dlant Norri!. both
of 202 Rose Lane, Cost.a Mesa, Lloyd Ort
Jr., of San Clemente, and George Casas,
who was arrested at a Modjeska Canyon
residence.
Investigators said lt v.·as not the horne
of principal suspec t Thoma~ J. Skelly Jr.,
52, who maintained the alleged narcotics
ring headqu arters at 28.S.12 Modjeska Can-
yon Road .
Police claim a cache of bombs and
other illegal weapons was cor.fiscated
during the raid :staged jointly by federal ,
stale and local la~· enforcement agencies.
Newport Beacb poUce saki comp lete
details of ages and addresses for the
latest among a total of a defe.nda1.~ COl'l-
nected witb_the C!l~ were not available.
Ort's San Clemente home yieldet4 .:i kilo
of marijuana, according to invesllgators,
who said they also found a small amount
at Casas' canyon residence .
The newest arrests came one day after
10 of the original 39 arrestees allegedly
involved in the '500.000-per-week In
ternational operation appeared in conr! to
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SANTA ANA REAL ESTATE DEVELOPER PROPOSES AIRPORT (ARROW) OVER FUTURE FREEWAY
Developer R99 Wood Will Offer Design for Jet Tr•ffic to Supervisors Nov. 17
Northern County
Site Proposed
For N e·w Jetport
Real Estate Mru1 to Off e1·
Cl1ino Hills Site f 01· Airpoi·t
A possible site for an Orange County
jetport that has never been serious ly
studied by the various consultants hired
bJ'--~ county' is "~'!&'.·for adion, ac-
cordlng to Supervisor David L. Baker.
He proposes use of U\t area between
Carbon Canyon on the north and Pra.do
Dam on J.he Santa Ana River on the
south ..
"There is a ridge that can be levelled
to .fill' an adjoining canyon and it would
nlake an ideal jetporl for several
reasons," says Baker.
"The cost of the land would run abo ut
$2,000 to $4,000 an acre, the fill although
expensive would not bring the cost
anywhere near the value of most other
county land proposed, and it is a clear
area." .
By "clear" the supervisor expla ins that
wning control is available in lhe takeoff
area of the proposed facility and in the
approach area. •
"The surrounding area is now used for
livestock grazing and oil production,"
Baker adds. "Land which can easily be
wned for a future use compatible to jet
planes."
Baker does not think the proposed Bell
Canyon site in the southeast part of the
county is "bad." It was the selection of
the Parsons report which comes before
the board of supervisors for public hear·
ing Nov. 17.
"There is still plenty of open space
around the Bell Canyon site and I think
annoyance to residents in the coastal
area would be minimal. The jets 11hould
be very high before they reach built up
areas," Baker said.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OF llM O•llY ~iltt ll•N
While Orange Cou,nty supervisors study
the Parsons report on Jlirport :sites, a
Santa Ana real estate broker has come
up with a site for a regional airport in the
Chino Hills area near tbe San Bernardino
County line.
Reg Wood: deve loper of the plan. said
he will present his proposal to the
supervisors at their Nov. 17 hearing on
the Parsons study.
As outlined by Wood , the airport. wh ich
"'ould be capable of handling 747 jet traf-
fic, would be located in the pasture lands
on the Orange County side of the line,
midwa)'. between Carbon Can>:on Road
and the Riverside Freeway. ·
In a brief report prepared on the site
for Wood 's firm by engineering con·
sultants Voorheis, Trindle and Nelson,
selection of the site is explained:
"The Olino Hill:s area as depicted in
this study was selected as a primary site
due to its geographical proximity to four
counUes. It is remote from densely
populated areas. even though readily ac-
cessible to the metropolitan area which it
will serve.
"The Chino Hills area contains nearly
25.000 available acres which will provide
adequate property for the airport proper
and supporting industries and services.
"It contains a minimum of fixed struc·
tures to be arrected by the construction of
an airport. The proposed elevation of the
runways (l,000 feet) will produce
minimum noise pollution to the sur-
r,ounding populated areas from take-off
and landing operations."
He said he ha:s not tried lo project lhe
cost of the proposed airport. "l imagine
Judge Rules Lt. Calley
May Testify at Tri.al
FT. BENNING. Ga. (AP) -A military
Judge denied today a prosecution motion
jntended to keep Army Lt. William L.
Calley Jr .• from testifying at his court·
martial that he was following orders in
the alleged massacre at My Lai.
The prosecutor. Capt. Aubrey M.
Daniel Ill, argued at a pretrial bearing
lhat the defense should not be allowed to
tntroduce any evidence contending that
Calley acted on order.; from his C?m·
manding officer, Capt. Ernest L. Medina.
The. Army prosecutor said evidence will fhOw that "the defendant f'O\ll'lded up.
tnarmecl. unresisting old men, women
nd children-and by his own acts and the
els of his subordinates summarily e1·
fcuted them."
The military judge, Col. Reid W. Ke,,. ~edy. agreed that such testimony would
, ~ relevant.
ln denying the motion. he said that
1uch a motion "would cut the heart out of
JOUr defense. which I don't propose to
Go."
Calley's civilian altorncy. Citorgr \\'.
t.a1lmer of Sall Lake City. declared, ··1
might 11i well 10 home If the judge grants
this motion." lie cilled it a "gaa rule."
I
"Just why can't we go Into the fact s
and climate under which this platoon was
Opefating?" the· attorney a:sked, "For the
court to bar me from entering pleas or to
bar me from relevancy -1 cannot work
under thest kinds cf restrictions."
Latimer said he needed to 'tsk
members of the platoon, "Were you
ordered to search and destroy and kill
everything in that village?"
He said if he could not raise this qucs·
lion at the trial which gets under way
nexl "'eek, "thtn you have hanutrung me .·•
Girl 1:3,_ Succumbs
To Wreck Injuries
~tetinda McKinley, 13. of Santa Ana
died Monday at Ol1pnu1n Gtneral
Hospktal of injurle11 suffered in a lr11fflc
accident Saturday.
Tht clrl "'as a passenger In a car that
struck a camper on the Newpori
Freeway near Fairhavtin Street in
Orange.
it will be very expensive. but that's the
klnd o( thing that can be done if the plan
is going to be given serious con·
sideration." he explained.
Wood. wbo rep resents property owners
in the area, frankly admits his plan is
being proffered for economic reasons.
"My firm is on retainer to the owners
of about 12,000 acres on or near the pro-
posed airport.
"Consi dering the t r o u b I e the
supervisors are having with the airport
situation, there is an altruistic motive in-
volved here. Granted, we stand to make
money if the deal is accepted, but that's
our interpretation of the free enterprise
system.
··Jn our judgment. it is a logical Inca·
tlon in lhat the land Is available relative·
Jy inexpensive," he said.
One of the focal issues of Wood's plan ,
is a free way \\'hich he calls the airport-to-
airport route. Without it, there is no
direct access to the airport site, and a
drawing of the proposed airport sh,,•.•:s
the taxiways stradling the freeway.
He admitted the freeway, which would
run parallel to the Riverside Freeway
th rough Telegraph Canyon, as yet hai; no
official status with the state Division of
Jiighways.
The airport to airport freewa y, running
from Los Angeles International to
Ontario International is a reality in thtil
lhe Division of Highways has budgeted
$?.67 million for its construction.
But highway officials have not set th e
route it would follow through northern
Oranie County, and Wood is hoping for
lhe backing of county and municipal of-
ficia ls to push for the Telegraph Canyon
route .
"So far Yorba Linda, Brea and
Fullerton have approved our routes. If
the division of highways bypasses
'l'etegraph Canyon and dumps the airport
freeway into lhe Riverside Freeway in
lhe Santa Ana Canyon, you·n have an
obsolete freeway before you stari .
"Not only the: sheer bulk of lhe cars
"'ould cause problems. but that portion of
lhe freeway has been closed to traffic
because oC fires and fioods and it would
just make more sense lo have a parallel
route ," Wood said.
Wood, who has been a broker and
counselor in Orange County real estate
for 12 years, said he has presented hi s
idea to state and federal officials during
the past two years. He said he received
support from the la te Congressman J im-
my lilt and is getting support from north
county Congressman James Wiggini;.
He Is optimistic about support for his
plan on the local level.
''An airport such as this would take the
heat off Orange County Airport and the
proposed site in the Bell Canyon area.
Quite honestly, I ?Im hoping the ~le
\\'l'IO have -organtred-again!t thc!e
afrports will support my plan.
"Thb: airport will only be displacing
c1U.lc, not homes," he said,
Cheap Kidney Units
J\1ay Increase 1\id
WASHI NGTON IAP ) -Simpler and
cheaper artificial kidney equipment m11y
help double the number nf pcr!On~ no\v
receiving aid from ~uch devicts by 1977,
• aovernment medical scientist s1ys.
• offer pleu.
Skelly, the alle&~ ringleader, was
schedu1ed for trial Dec. I in Orange
County Superior Court after enterin& a
plea of innocent. ..
He has been held at Orange County Jail
since tbe raid ill lieu of $100,000, one of
!he highest ball bond figures set in county
history. .....
They and 6tbtrs """' lndlcied by the
Orange County Grand Jury Oct. t~ on a
series of chara:es Including ·posse:Slion
and possession for · aale. of nar~t1c'•·
danc:erous druas. marijuana and ul)l1wful
weapl)lls.
,,,.,. tw .. wetk period before ~ Ibo
residence.
si.wred by the 11cope or tJJe •lleeld
drug dealenhfp, invesUgators uid ,.11
tentacles reached to agents and a11e11Utn,
in AfghanistM, Russia, Gennany. andl
South America. a1 we.II as Canada and
MexiCo.
Wendy S. Desserich, also known by the
last name of Prenty. entered a similar
plea and was ordered to appear Feb. 24
to st.and trial.
Offlcetl of the State Bureau of
Narootics F.nforcement a'na 9il)er agen-
cies cOnfiscated bombs, ammWliUon and
a machincgun from the ca.sfle·like com·
mune in the picturesque canyon.
Huge quantities or marijuana, cocaine,
hashish and thousands of drug pllll of all
k"inds were seized in the Modjest.a Can-They al:io monitored more than 1,()1).1
telephone calls to the premises dUf'in&: a yon raJ.d . ·
Going Ho·me for Christmas
U1iiversity High Stude1its Ready to Move In
Posting of signs at Orange c.ounty's Game C.Omrnission "to provide adequate tStablisbed two y~s •10. m November.
rive marine refuges has Jlot stopped the surveillance of the five established 1968, so the period of education abould be .. r th rd Is" din to John marine refuges within Orange County." over. It took about sli: months to prepare
rape 0 e 1 epoo a~r g . Killeter said he does not know what ac-brochures on the law and.aet the •icnl K~lle~er, exe~tlve assistant to F1fUt tion the commission will take. "It could posted, but J feel it's about time to crack
D1str1ct Supervisor Alton E. Allen. be anything from assigning more down."
''The organized groups or specimen col-wardens to patrol the refuges to alerting Vedder noted that most of thOle who
lectors, school:s and the li,~e, ~n't. come lifeguards, through ~al authorities,. to disregard tbe warning :sians appear to~
down so much any more. said K1llefer. be on the watch for violators and advtae from outside Orange County, or even
"but so far a:s individual collectors are them of the law." outside the state and fail to realize th't:
concerned , the problem is as bad as ever. Former Laguna Beach mayor Glenn value of the tidei>ooL'I.
They s~nd right there reading the s!gn, Vedder, who initiated th~ first coastal Tbe marine refuges in Orange County
bucket in hand , then go out to the tide· marine refuge off Laguna Beach said he . Cor·· d 1 M f · Uttl pools and start collecting." regularly observes a doten or more viola· are in ona e ar, rpm e
Last week, in response to complainti; lions each weekend Jn the area near his Corona to Arch R~k, Lagwia Beach U-
from beachfront residents who have Shaw's Cove home . tending one mile north from VK:tOr Hueo
observed continuing violations, the Board •·1 feel the enforcement problem is oot • noint, in South Laguna between Alilo
of Supervisors unanimously adopted a being taken care or properly." said Ved-Beach and Three Arch Bay ~ in two
resolution asking the State Fish and der. "After all the refuges were cffshore areas at Dana Point.
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,,
1. A gutsy, "expensive'' look plus
luxuries you don't pay extra for.
We thought you'd like
st)' ling to wink al, not wince
at. Nice lines, smooth, solid
looking, sculptured.
Unlike "stripped" smaJJ cars,
Comet offers many luxuries. At no extra charge:
1003 nylon carpeting both front
and rear. Wheel lip moldings. Deluie steering
wheel.
Plus a cigarette light.er. Rear armrest;;
and ashtray. Foam-padded front seat cushion.
Lighted front ashtray. Dual body paint stripes.
2. Real roam for 4 adult1-nat juit 3'h.
Front hip room and
shoulder room are much
greater than in most other
smallcars.
In fact, Comet's front
head room and leg room
are within a fraction of
an inch of big cars like Chrysler Imperial, Dodge
Charger and Chrysler Newport.
3. Zippy ''6" or V-1 performance-
100 ta 210 hanepa-r.
Comet's
standard
engine has
over 50% greater
power I.ban many amall
imports.
If that's not enough, choose from 2 optiona!
"aixes.''.115 and 145 hp. Or a 210 hp. V-8. By
the way, Comet is America's Jowest priced V-8.
.
And C-tlws Y011 . ....,,ih"'9
.. you boJy a .....U -
for: Ea1y hancll ... Ga
ecott•1'1Y• Low prlmi.
Tumingd-il
only 36.9 feet-Comet'•
juat aa deft in a PBl'kine
lot .. Gil the bigbway.
Gas mileage rivala importa-sbout 22 milm
per gallon based on aimulated
city/suburban driving tests.. ,.~s:ttJC~ And look at t.beoe
low prices. Remember f
these are manufacturer's
•uggested retail prices. Why not eee what ,_.
Mercury dealer auggest.i. Get him lo 811 in Ille
right band _column below. · ·
Jf•nfadsrer'• ..... 8 . Mt.cl ~
I a.~Priaa• rm.
Comet. 2-daor Md••········· tu17.ll ....... .
Co•el •-door ..... , . • • • • • • • U71.M •••••••
Co•et GT • • • . • • • • . • • . • . • • • 1*.11 •• --,,,_ _
Aatowiatk ln ... 1..-• •• •• fla.50
Whlta·1ide..U til'M . .... . ..•• JI.JI
AM Radie ................. tt.:at
25t n . tn. "'r nsi•
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(ffet ltd ...... ) ' . . . . . • ... • • 1L7t
JtZ <•·in. V0 8 ~
(O't'er Zit e.. ia. ... -,..... MM ·---.•
• M1nufact"Ure:r'1 au,neat.ed retaD prices fot> can allll
t1_ptions liat.ed or -.Down. EuJm. ~
........ dealc ....... --If-· -and local ~ ... lican:M _. tide l-.
Better idou make bette ears. M:__,.
mak"' better c:ani-to buy, nnt er ......
A botler W.. fw safetr.
Buckle •pl
NeraJry. &Her ideas ndce better CXIL
JOHNSON & SON LINCOLN-MERCURY, lNC;
2626 Harbor Boulevard, Co1ta Mna, 'callfonila
-
,
•
t
I Feels Low
In the Sky
•
By DICK WEIT
My friend P'urbis Branlow confided
111' otlier day that he bod llllrtoQ ,..bll
an anal)'Jt. I was IUIPriled to tiear it.
Br1nlow had alw1y1 lmprenH me u
belnc one of tho moot -Uonllly •ta-
ble penoog lrOllnd.
I II.id, "in what way ire you
J>07chleally dborlentod, Fur~~?"
'11 Af PAREN'fL Y have a ptfSl)f'lllty
Uerrtlion thtt renders me UQ•ble to
rejoto to airline "'1Mlm:ioll," ht npliod
-111btjy.
"It'• not partjcularly &ood for ... to
bow I'm on Americtn and ~)tew
-TWA douo't neceaaarlly mike me feel
1110fe in)poif.lnl P'UrtMnnore, I hove
O!!vtr -the Pinc .... t 1Ve11 on Pan-
Am."
I llld, "do your splrlta ooar on
Nortbwtat Orient?"
8ronlow buq hla beod and didn't "Y
anytblo(.
I 11ve • lJttle aympathetic whiatle.
"You rully are ia bad ahape," I cem·
mllented.
•·rrs TIAIUNG rae apart inaide.''
Braniow llld. Ills velco btolr. and It took
blm a 1.,. momenta to rtJlln_ his com·
potUre.
u1 bad always considered m)'NU a
..,,,,11 penon with oormll lnltlncta and
nacuom. You can't .tmaatne whit men-
tal tormeot it ti not to lbare bl the
j~ of jet tr1vel belq H•
perlenced by -...... bl the airline tornmercllla.
"I'll tell you 90methln& I he.ven't evtn
told my 1nalylt yet. I don't feel that
BOAC tatea sood care of me any dlf·
fm!ntly from any other a I r 1 I n e .
Basically. all of the airlines treat me
pretty much alike."
1 PA'lTED 1111 lhoulder re1nut1nal>7
"Go ahead tnd 1et It off your chtJt," I
uid. "You'll feel better for it."
"I arrive at the airport etpecling
1amethlni &lorioua to happen. It never
does. I limply board tho plone, a
15tewardeu .insptctl my ticket and directs
me to the proper compartment tnd I find
a vacant MIL
"The plane taku off, a ltewardell
takes my drink order 1nd brinp me 1
tray of food. I est and we land. That's
it. ••
I said, "do you mean lo tell me you ire
never tramported with ecslu)'?"
"I GET ABOUT the same 1tnaallon I
get riding a bus," Branlow confeued.
Poor fellow! Maybe therapy will help,
bul I doubt IL It appears that Branlow is
patho~ incapable of IOlinc touch
with reality.
' . ' '(
GEN. CHARLES DE GAULLE, LIN DAU NTED IN DARKEST DAYS OF FRANCE
Here He ln1pect1 French Comm1ndo Troops Jn Landen en B1still1 D1y, 1942
U,I Tet•11h1t1
T a ll, Haughty ... France
De Gaulle L01?ed His Country as Few Men Have
Richard K. O'Mal~y. chitf of tha
A..ssociated Prts& bureau in Frankfurt,
wa& AP lturtou chief in Paris from
1959 to 1968, during most of Charlt1
ch G1ulle'1 ttmure as pr11idlnt
By RICHAllD K. O!MAILEY
FllANKFUllT (AP) -He wu a t.ll,
baqhty old man with a wJntry am.tie and
a forbidding •~· But WI man was France.
Chari,. de G1Uile fru1tr1tod hla Illies,
irritated bis atallllChQt supporters and
made enemies of PotenUal -lritnda. But
above all, thia man loved hia c:ountry u
few men have.
ffjJ departure leaves • ragtd aap In
the fabric of a nation atW IW'cbinc for
ita place in the world'• affair&.
To meet CJw'Jea de Gaulle wa1 an n:·
pttltoc:e in itlelf. From hla t btllbt he looked __ bonianly, 1f."1 lither
pnald1nc ovu itle funlly table. He always "°"" IO!Uy and with a concern thol made 1 man feel be wu wtJcome. But ht
De. Gaulle Memo
Issued Orde rs
About Funercil
PARIS (AP) -Eighteen years •a&
Charles de Gaulle gave Georges Pom·
pidJu a tw~paae. handwritten memoran--
dwn of instructlens for his funeral . This
is what he wrote:
"General de Gaulle
"Jan. 115, 19~2
"I wish that my funeral be held at
CoJombey ler Deua: Eglists. lf I die
elsewhere, my body should be
transported to my home, without the
slight.eat public ceremony.
"My tomb will be there where my
dau1hter Anne alteady lies, and where,
one day, my wlfe will lie. lpacription :
"Charles de Gaulle 18~ . Nothing
else.
"The ceremMy will be arranged by my
son, my d1ucbter, my son-in-law, my
dauihter-ln-law, aided by my Heretariat.
in such a way that 1t should be extremely
simple. I do not w1lb a naticQal tunera.t."
also could be coldly angry.
That he w._. brave hu been well
documented.
But there are a few things about his
bravery that have not been publicly men-
tioned.
His: conduct during one of the attempts
on his life wu perh4pa the best il-
lustratlen of the supreme cour11e of
Charles de Gaulle.
He was on bi.s way to his helicopter pad
at Villaooublay.
The Secret Army or1anizatlon had
planned hl1 death, and that of hi• wife.
All his car sped 1lq, the machine gun-
ner1 opened fire from two side roads. At
the sound, the old man remained upright
but turned to hi• wife aJ\d said, "&w
your head." Mme. de Gaulle, herself ef
the ume metUe, did not. Then another
burst 1truct the car, and she did bow b~r
head. But the old 1eneral remained
upright and said. with aome asperity:
"Why aren't the police ahootin1 back?"
When they arrived safely a t
Villacoublay. the old man said with the
patient resignation he chose when
displeased : '·The people who are charged
with protecting me are as bad shots as
those who are trying to kill me."
Anyone who saw the old man in public
would never suspect that he had any time
for light-heartedness. This was not so. An
aide once said that he enjoyed humor
provided It came from an intelligent man
and not from a buffoon.
One of his favorites was George Brown ,
the former British foreign minister who
often got into hot water by ignoring
diplomatic ni~ties.
"He likes Brown," an aide once said.
"He likes the airy humor of the man and
he respects his mentality."
Charles de Gaulle seemed ponderous to
many, thrashing them with the "glory or
France." But when De Gaulle spoke of
the glory of France, it lived again, lily
banners, ships of the line and all.
Not. only a man has died. Part of a
country died with him.
Reds Launch Huge At tacks
Against .Camb odia Forces
PHNOM PEHN (AP) -The heaviest
North Vietnamese-Viet Cong att.ackS in
two months threw the Cambodian
government's northern front into di~ar
ray today and cut jt off from Phnom
Penh.
Two townt, an airport and two bridges
were hlt. Thousancla of reinforcements
trying to reach the battle zone were
rtporttd blocked by deatrueUon or a
large bridge during the niJht.
A Cambodian communique said North
Vietnamese troops attacked the airport
at Kompong Cham, the country's third
largest city which is 47 miles northeast of
Phnom Penh, and simultaneously made
assaults aaainat the district capitals or
Prey Toutong Troeung and Skoun, on a
line running west of Kompong Cham
some 32 miles.
A spokesman said lhe government
troops at Troeut1g wue nearly sur·
rounded and in danger of being overrun
before they fled in confusion, bill to the
east and half to the west.
Skoun, 35 miles north of Phnom Penh
at the junction of Highwaya fi and 7,
ca me under attack for the seoohd time in
lw than 24 hours. Earlier Monday,
before dawn, North Vienamese troops had
fought their way to within 50 yards of the
Cambodian army's command post before
they were driven out.
Fighter-bombers flew heavy strikes
against enemy assa ult formations along
Highway 7, which was closed between
Skoun and Kompong Cham, 25 miles to
the east.
Rain,. Win d P o·u n d Alaham a
One brida:e near Troeung w a s
destroyed by enemy saboteurs in skin-
divina gear. A second span, on Highway
8 and 25 miles north of Phnom Penh, was
reported knocked out by· mines. This
blocked the advance of reinforcement.!
sent north from Phnom Penh. but the
spokesman expressed confidence they
would aet through.
The Cambodian command said SS
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops
were killed during the attack on Kom-
pong Cham airport. Al least fi ve Cam·
bodians were also reported killed, ln-
cludin& the wife of a soldier. Trees Blowrt Down During Night-time Thunderstorrn It was the aecond day ef heavy attack!
aJona the northern front.
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British, Soviet
Warships Ram;
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LONDON (APl -Britain's biggest
warship, the aircraft carrier Ark Royal,
and a Soviet destroyer collided Monday
night during British maneuvers in the
Mediterranean. the Admiralty Hid todty. ..
M
d
" ..
"
" __, .. ..
" "
A spokesman stld there were no ~-·-=ooo"'•u"'a'ttles aboartf1hel3~ carrier
bul thal two of the Soviet sailors were
ml.!llng. ,.
" " " " " " .. " " ..
" • ..
" .. .. • " " " » .. " " " " ...
" ...
" " • "
.» .,
·"
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The Ark Royal and the. British frigate
Vannouth rescued tome other Russian
crewmen who were knocked overboard,
the spolt.uman said.
Ttit c:clllslon toek place east of Milt.a
as the Ark Royal was on maneuvers with
the Royal Air Foret.
"F't.111 details are not yet to hand , but
the indlt:atlona are thtt neither 1hlp wa~
seriously damaged," the Admiral!7
1poteaman ,talc!.
• •
37% Hike Spurned
National Rail
Strike Hinted·
WASHINGTON (UP!) -A railroad
union president loday rejected the
recommendations of a presidential board
for a 37 percent pay raise for rail
workers and thre1tened a strike for Dec,
11.
C. L. Dennis. head of the Brotherhood
of Airline and Railw~ Clerks, said the
conlrat't recommendations of the White
House panel were inadequate from
several standpoints.
Denn is said he would order the 200,000
railroad members of his union on Strike
jusl two weeks before Christmas if there
were no contract agreement or prospect
of agreement by then .
The Presidential board Monday recom-
mended a pay raise over three years of
32.5 percent. Compounded, however. it
would come to 37 percent, officials
pointed out today.
The recommendations also called for
changes in work rules that the industry......,
says are outmoded and inefficient. The
unions have resisted work rule changes.
In rejecting the proposals, Dennis said
they did not contain "enough money,"
and also fell short in other areas workers
deemed vital. He cited absence of ade-
<iua1e improvements in va c ations,
holidays, job security and ot her fringe
areas.
The Presidential board recommend ed
creation pf a joint labor-industry panel to
seek Jong-range reforms and solutions to
railr~d labor problems which h!lve
prt1mpted Congress to imos contract set-
tlements three times since World WJr JJ.
Dennis"s union represents about a third
ef the workers affected.
At a news conference, Dennis was ask-
Marathon Talks
In Auto Strike
End Temporarily
DETROIT (UPI) -A 17 • hour
bargaining session expected to continue
until tentative settlement was reached in
the 56-<lay-old United Auto Workers strike
against General Motors broke up unex-
pectedly early today with no e:rplanations
from the weary negotiators.
Maintaining the silence which has beeii
in effect at the GM building here since a
news . blackout was imposed on the talks
Oct. 30, bargaintrs would only say that
the negotialions would resume a11ain t~
day at 9:30 a.m. EST.
ed whether he would still call a strike tf
Congress or the courts stepped in before
Dec. 11 and imposed a settlement Gr ex-
tended the present no.strike period, en4
ding Dec. 9, that was ordered by Presi·
dent Nixon.
Dennis sidestepped the question but
said once his men were on strike, they
might defy any order to return to work,
and said "I doubt very much I would
order them back to work."
Arab Plane
Hijacked
T o Damascus
DAMASCUS (UPI) -A Saudi Arabian
DC3 airliner on a flight from Jordan to
Saudi Arabia was hijacked to Damascus
· tOOay, the official Syrian AAB News
Agency announced.
The agency said Syrian authorities
released the plane two hours later and
detained the hijacker for interrogation.
It was the second hij ack in the Middle
East in two days. Monday iln Iranian
plane wa s forced to land in Baghdad by
six armed persons but w11_s later allowed
to resiifue its flight to Iran.
The Syrian News Agency said the Saudi
pla ne, carrying 10 passengers. landed in
Damascus at Intemiltional Airport at
11:10 a.m. (1:10 a.m. PDT) after radioing
permission to make an emergency Ian·
ding.
"But after il landed, it turned out that
the plane had been forced to change its
course by an armed person," the agency
said.
It said the passengers were given lunch
at the airport and ''all facilities were ex-
tended to the plane during the two hours
and 15 minutes it stayed in Damascus
Airport. Later it took off at the request of
its captain but without the hijacker who
was detained by au thorities for in·
terrogation," the agency 'Said.
It said the plane was on a Oight frOm
Amman to Tarif in Saudi Arabia but was
forced to change course 30 minutes alter
it left Amman.
The agency gave no details about the
nationality of the hijacker or his motives.
The marathon session, which began
Monday igniting speculation that a set·
tlement was at hand, had been ea:pected
to result in tentative agreement on a new
national contract which would cost GM
well over $2 billion ill wages alone in the
next three years.
The Iranian airliner -also a DC3 -
almost ran out of fuel Monday before lan-
ding safely in Baghdad. It also was
threatened with destruction by the hi·
jackers and wu menaced by Kuwait
1 Jiiilltary planes.
'1tnerican Beauty
The DC3 was allowed to return to Abid·
jan from Baghdad Monday and the
eight passengers and crew of three W@l't
flown the rest of the way to Tehran on a
special Iran NaUon.111 Airlines flight.
Kathleen Denise Arnett, 19, of Los • .\ngeles. poses prettily after being
chosen queen of the 82 nd annuaJ Tourna.ment of Roses on New Year'.s
Day. She's 5-foot-4, 125 pounds, and is a home economics maj<fr at
Pasadena City College. Janet Hagemeier. 18, of Buena Park, was one
of seven finalists and will grace the queen's court.
I
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Fouttiai11. Valley
•
VO~. 63, NO. 269,. 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNT,Y;·O.LIFORNflt. ·
• RJESDA Y, N()VEMIER Io·, 1970 ..
.• • oar a a .1ses
•
Ul"I :r ......
FRENCH LEADE R DIES'
Gen. Charles ,_de G•ulle
• • . . .
~1l001 District
To Consider
Q.udget Failure
Sqme deft financial think ing appears to
bt 'in 'order· tonight as . truslees: of •the
H:Qntqton Beach Union High , School
District try-to -figure -out how to ·live withtil~ budget restrictions imposed-by
lalt week'a tax ·Jiike·failure.
During the 7-:30 p.m. meeting in the
Huntington Beach Htgh. School cafeteriai
tfle five-member' board ;may consider
these "two alternatives:
-Either go bark 'to the voters and try
their'luck for the third time in a tax elec-
t.ion they believe is neceSsary to maintarn
their educational program.
-Or tighten their belts in expectation
of a.starvation budget of 85-cents per $1.00
of · assessed valuation they will face by
neXt 'July, :..
Failure of the district's 69-cent tax hike
at the poUs lasl Tuesday appears to force
a decision for one or the other, according
to local schoolmen.
The district currently enjoys a $1.39 tax
rate which several experts claim is not
enough. That amount will decrease to the
legislative minimum in July since the
override failed.
Al the present lime there is no district
In the State of California operating al the
85-eent level., although there are two or
thi'ee" small, rural dlsU'lcfs'in thTffiirlh·
ern'portion of the state who are working
with"88 or 89 ·cents.
The Hwitington Beach district,, which
serves an eStimated 15,oOO students ·with
fl\re comprehensive high schools, main--
t.Alns however, that it cannot exist uader
those teems.
Several <:Ufs have Already been foreseen
by admtnislrators, which' may include all
student busing, int'erschool athletics and
ipeciall progra'ms for the gifted and han-
dicapped. Or. Ethan Y. Fullmer. the district's ac-
ting sui;>erintendent, sa;d, tonight's
meeting .would.·printarily be devoted to a
di!eussion of the problem.
He added that the administration had
not•yet r:pade, any s~ific sugg~stio~s to ,
th< bolnl.aboot'wllich coune lhey'shoUld
punue.
-. . . -.~
79 Years Old
De Gaulle D·ead
Of Heart Attack·
~
COLOMBEY • LES -DEUX • EGLISES,
France (UPI) -Gen. Charles de Gaulle
died Monday night of a heart attack in
his country home here where he had lived
in seclusion since he was rejected by the
nation he had thrice saved from disaster.
De Gaulle, whol would have celebrated
his 80th birthday on Nov. 22. made his
mark on history in World War JI along
with Franklin D. Roosevelt, Josef Stalin,
Winston Churchill and Chiang Kai-shek.
Onl y Chiang, now 83, survives.
The former president had just dealt
hlmself a hand of solitaire while waiting
in front of the television set for the even·
ing news when he slumped forward . His
wife, Yvonne, called a doctor and a priest
but he was dead when they arrived.
He had left his own testament, calling
for a simple funeral with "no music, no
fanfare , no bell ringing ," The funeral
Thursday wii1 be just that, but the
government was, holding memo r i a I
services at the same time in Notre Dame
Cathedral in Paris and President Nixon
was among world leaders who said they
would attend.
Messages of ctindolence poured in from
statesmen throughout the world -from
Nixon who hailed his quality of vision,
from the leaders of France's former col·
onies in Africa, from the Pope, from the
Germans with whom he restored Franco-
German ftiendlhlp. '
Qe Gaulle had lived in aloof r.etirement
In Colombey-la-lltux-Eglilenlnce April,
1969, .when French voiers rejected his pet
proposal for administrative reform. He
worked quietly on his memoin I.Del lived
the· simple life of a villager.
Father Claude Jaughey, the villa1e
priest who admJnistered the last rites,
said, "the general will receive a plain
funeral , like any other -villager or a
lumberjack. This will be a claliless
flJlleral as the general always wished."
Jaughey said following the almple
church ceremony De Gaulle's coffin will
tie taken to his family pl9t 1t one skte ·of~
the nearby village churchyard and be
buried next to his daughter Al'lne. "Jt
will be a plain village funeral," he said.
Mentally Gif ted
Program Studied
A special program for mentally gifted
students will be considered by trustees of
the Huntington Beach City School District
at 7:30 o'clock tonight al Dwyer School.
The City School District does not cur-
rently participate in the state-supported
"gifled" program , but several ·parents
have asked trustees to join it.
A report on the details of the gifted
program will be given by Miss Betty
Funkhouser, assistant superintendent for
instruction.
A mentally gifted student is one with a
measured intellige~ quotient of 132
(with sorile ex ceptions). Studeii'Ls ate
found to be mentally gifted by state
standards through written tests and 1
psychologisrs report.
Testing is paid for by the state if 1
district has established special activities
to provide extra learning experiences for
_jhe gifted children.
-Trustees of the city district have not in-
dicated if they plan to adopt such a pro-
gram. Tonight's dlscuasion is primarily
to learn about the state regulatiou.
"There will be no funeral oration,
because the general did not want
anything of the sort."
Tonight the body or the former presi!
dent was laid out in the living room of the
house in the brigadier .1eneral's uniform
he had treasured since World War U.
The national ceremomes, for govern-
ment leaders and foreign dignitaries will
be held in Paris at the same time. '_ ·
French governmeni ·officills said De
Gaulle was stricken by a heart attack at
7:30' p.m. (1:30 p.m. aT Monday) just
as the evening news program was
starting on network 'No. l of the French
(St< DE GAUILE, Pi .. %)
Beach Y ouths
A rraign1ne11 t
Slawd Today
Detectives investigaUng the slaying of
Huntington Beach laborer R.o .b·e r t
Hermann went te tDe dimict attorney's
off!~ this mornlDJ, _to 'clarify-dililes •g•IAll,lhM·~··y:
~ trio -one is a '1ir1 -w11 111tifor
MTalgnment at 2 o\clock ttlia afternoon In w .. t Orange _\lollnlY b!l\lllcipe!·a.un on
charg~ 1Wiunin1 fram Humann's
death. ,
Capt. Grover L. Payne, Huntington
Beach detective chief, 11id this-morning
he was not sure if all three would face
murder charges. -
"We won't know what the n:act
charges are until we ditcusa It with tht
disb:ict attorney's ofllce,"' Payne Aid.
He .woufda't comment on what charses
police woo.Id request ·
Hermann, 19, was found by-hla parents
Saturday night -dead, lying.in a J'l)Ol of
blood on his bed with two slues from•• .22
caliber pistol in him. He lived with his
parents at 418 15th St., Huntington Beach.
Ironically, Hermann Wl:J suppoeec:( to
appear in court today with one of the
suspects in his death, Mirtha E. Riggs,
19, of 1824 Park St., Huntington Beach.
Both faced narcotics chai-gei. •
Police have hinted that the motive for
the slaying may have stemmed from a
local narcotlCJ raid 'Jut week.
Miss Riggs is Cl\rrenUy lodged _ at
Orange County Jail. The two male youths
arres~ Sunday, Robert E. Williams, 18,
of 1504 Pecan Ave., Huntington Be11.ch
and Arthur A. Ckiden, 18, of 18957 Santa
Madrina St., Fountai11 Valley, are being
held at Huntington Beach 's revamped: cl·
ty jail.
No bail hag been set · ror any ·of the
three youths.
. ' ~~et·. e.f~ Cathie. . ' . . -' ' ' . --i '
. 'f,His year'~ 'hprnecomlpg h•ro!Jie of Huntington eeach High >Schop!
~il~r~ j~ ~ath~e;crou~e who has the smile, roses .and cr~Wn to, PJ1?Y!
1t. Cathie a9d,b~r prn:icesse·s, Jan Borgerson~ Debbi 'Clemens~··Saridy
.Contrerls .a,nd: Nancie .Robins .were feted at•the' S:chool's 11ec'ent'!0ot~ ~'!II· gaz,ne with M.i\rlna High. · · ·' !
! I • ' ~ .. .
I ; I ' ! , ' ' . , , ' ' ' ,
~ ~~· Sys~e,tn to .Skint. pp
Ocean Oil · Slic-k Te sted;
SAN DIEGO (BW) - A system which · I;ockheed ~ Miuiles &. Space CQ. ~aff·
may soon be in' use to·Clean up t<1ll 'slicks quarters· in Sunnyvale, near •San ·Fra~
cisct1. on qceans ·and .bays, was put.through .its "Many approaches to the·oil•spill ·pro-
pac-es.for newsmen ¥<>¥aY by Lockheed. blem have been advanced.since the "tor.
The systei'n:consists·mainly of a .. clever· rey Canyoo' and Sanla: Bafbara in-
ly designed paddlewheel de vice which cidents," Bruch said. ' ·
skims oil ' off the surf8ce and pumps it •\From the data we've gathered 50,far,
into containers or other diiposal systems. our aystem appears to hold more pi:omise
Large versions mlliy soon be deployed :than others, particqlarly for · really
along the nation's coasts aboard simple .aerious .situatiom -large sl~ks in heavy
catamaran-type vesseJs ·which can be seas.,"
towed. through massive oil slicks. . ' Liockheed ·scientists and engineers _In·
vented the system and now are under
contract to the Coast Guard to determine Chamber Passes
New Bands
For Vallley
Its appieability. .
S h Company officllls are in San Dieao-lhis Druu p ti' ti' ougm_ ., .. .Ll>-~•'Jf~~J"'"oc1eL1aJ1uy · . e. ·e . on .
and American PetroleWn Jn s t·I t·u t·e Dances representatives. • , . 'I n Hun' ti' gt n In the demonstration of the model !or ' ' ll 0
Young Fountain V1lley dancen are newsmen, crude oil· was poured into 'a . . ·
h. r am-'I tank· of water str•d.dl~ by ·~ 1n>e .}{~tl~gtofi Beien Chamber of searc mg or new banda to play at their ai ~ u~ Friday night dances. removal system. A switch was· thro~ · .Commerce ls .'lnv.iUng 'its· members to
Any band which might like to try out and the paddle wheel ·begin· to · tur.n. Its aign a petition •uraing ,strict ehforcemen't
should phone the city recre1Uon depart-unique: vanes. acooping up the oil, which of nafcotiCl!J Jaws.
ment at 912-2424 to arrange .an audition. then was piped awi.y. , The chamber's current 'bUJJeiin er·
Bands are'needed t~ice a month for the Barrell Bn.i~h. Lockht¢'s pfOjett
city's junior high achobl daneea held at IUder, said larger modelll and prototy~ plains. that the petition calis ' or1 ·t.he
the conµnunity center, tm Slater Ave. of the ayatem an undergoing testa at diltrict ... ttomey to prosecute dope ~
2 U.S. ·Generals Freed •
dlers for the maximum penalty and to
~s&t probaUon arid suspended aentence
requeirts. •
'lbe petition, whiCh, ls. 1 jOint productioft
of the HunUngton' Beach Chamber a.rKI
the La · Habra Chambef. of· Conimerce,
will be 1ent to the diatr\d 1~tOrney'1 of~
flee and to the·offQs' of all Municipal
.
Soviets Release Pair, T urk P ilot After. 3 ·Weeks · and Sqperior Co9rt Judie!.' ' · ·• . . . ' , '
S d C• d The petllfon ·urges Superior Court Beach tu ent Jle ANKARA, TUrl<ey (AP) -Two U.S. negotiated at the border town ol officer, were lnspi!cjiiig mllitll')' In-Judg" ta senlen<e -· conlllcted o!
· Army generals and a Turkish colonel Kizilcak~k for .rune houri, ~ -sbllaUom-nW U.:SO~iet border~on OcL--HIU~nar.cotics-to-ata.tt~prilon with the
e. cord---Ma:"aazin-e -returned""lo'Turl<ey"!rnm Sovie rmenia '!""ilng out -ill of tlle-. TIM .,_ manc!Weie on. a fi"''i11iom'Emuum -recommeridation'--lhat the muiniuiit '" •-•· th ··•-!'· lh . . f1cers were freed at 7 a.m. ~ were .. : ..,,.. · .... be -• • ., 1y' • wut1Y, ree Wt%Ni a 1-1:r etr light plane driven to Xan, 40 mlles IOUthw.t of the Kan.~ Tbe pilot.· Army Maj. Jarnea P. sefl~~ , .serv~ copsecuuve . ,.
Tom. Tugue, son of Mr. and Mn.
William J. Teague, 5451 El Dor~ Driw,
Huntington Stach, Is one of M. Abilene
f]irjsUan COUtge seniors to be named to
tht'tl?i)..71 edition of ''Who's Who Among
Students in American Universities and
COiieges." . . . Teague is a commu.rucat1ons maJor At
Abilene and is president of the studen ls
aSIOC'f1tlon. He 11 also a two-year let·
ierman In football.
I •
---'
landed 12 ~lies across lhe border and Sovitt. fro• tier, to take a·'l"u·r ·k I 1 h1 Russell, 42,~told consular officiall high MuniClpal Court.Judgrs ',are.enJOV>ed to
they were interned. military plane to Ankara. wlads• caulrd 1him · ur mtSci.lcWate his ,accept, f!O .leaser. pleas i•f· 1 pe.rlOll is
The Turkish Foreign Ministry said the Kizilcakclk is halfway bet•..$Kafsi · coane:' 'lbe· U.S. llgovernment c:ont.ended • char&ed-~th.a 1.ny ind to bind ovfr to
men were "'healthy and in gOQd shlpe." arwi Leniftl.kan, in Soviet ~. wllteih tlie/plant .Rra~·acnss the bofdtt. . ~:' Cou1:t such ... peraons __ "wbett
Tass, the Soviet news agency, .. 1d the the olfl<m' plane lanclad aod,,lhlJ ""'\' t .. ouid Ille Sqvtet:~ decld-there: b,,probablt cause that they ue
generals' U.S. Army pilot · allo was held. , " ' ed tto <ftleue" the officen after a •ta · pilty of 1,,-f1lony-ln the illejal ule of
released and would Oy hick ttielr .tix· Ma): Gen~Ed'trard'€.'D·. ti.irrwr,'.57,-thoreugh in\l'~aUOll Into ' Use .narcot,lca.'' • •
!!Cat. twin-inglne plaM as ' IOOll as chief of the U.S. military """" Jn clttu:mftanctl, of Uw: viol1tioo d , UJe The. petition ·ls available . at the
W<alher permitted. Turkey ; Brig. Gen. Claude M. ~ , al41e ll'!llllfer .ol,tll< USSR and the~ .chamber olfk:es,•I~ BeOch Blvd., sullt
A Foreign Mlnl•lry !QUtce 11id.Tur Jr • .,41. bead of Scbemt's Anriy~,c of. g\lllt of Ille per,oN .!'IJo ...,., !I'. ,221 in-Ille-'l1!W9 1anc! C<llJDtry. Sboppln&
and Soviet 1enerals and civilian oUh:iala •nd COi. Ctvat ,DenU, a 'l'llrldlb' !lallon ' board." • " c.nter. ' · ·
.. ., .. . , . : '
' ' '
' ..
I ,
Today'li Fl•ill
N.Y. Steelm
TEN CENTS'
-•
SuperVisors
Set Salary
At$·19,200
'
By JACK · BROBACK
Of * Dellr•P""' ...,,._
Or~ge County supervilon this morn-
ing voted themselves a raise to tlt,200 a
year, and then listened to a barrage of
criticism unprecedented in c o u n t Y.
history.
For the next two and one-hall hours.
tt.e board wu subjected to add Comtneni:
by citizeris punctuated with booi; cheers
and catcall!.
The , move to raise the supervilon:
18.lary if.Mo a year from the-pre1ent
41$,000 was made by supervW>r William
P hillips of Fullerton.
Supervisor David Baker of Garden
Grove tried to block the move, offtring a
substitute motion to send the problem to
. the Grand Jury and another l'l\ot.ion to
table the salary raise move.
Bott. motions died for Jack of ·1 second.
Janice Boer or Santa Ana, long thnl
critic of the board, led the attack ..
She charged that County Coun>el
Adrian Kuyper had not told the board the
whble ·truth when he advised them that
they must pass 1 salary ordinance 'im·
mediately becauae of the passage of con-
stitutional amendment Proposition U.
"This ii not true," saill. Mrs. Boer.
•
11..et the people set your' sa.11rY through
an initiative. They will decide what you
are wdrtb ." / ·
,She .contendod ol!fat,tbo Gr'and Jiley la
lllllt. ., 1'99'll Mth.-grwp .. • •
''They_ ue appointed by • judp:..wbo
ha! 1¥a job -... ,he ..... friend·ol.llle governor." _ .
·Dee ·C.OOk, former Newport Beach 'ooan-
~n, urged • board mttnberl to
~ne action and ,take ·up lhe aalary 1t1bj~l in a•pubJic aession later .. ,
Clare Ke.Uy, chairman of . the, Hun-ungion Beach CUuiicil for Sensible Tu·
ation (COST), charged that SupeNlaor
Robert Battin, "holds the taxpayers of
the county in contempt. This will not go
unnoticed in ~ ftitun," she thrutened.
Jim Townsend, president of the
Telephoni Tl!lpayers Assotj,ation oC
Anaheim, threatened that if supervbors
dii:I not repeal thefr aCtiOn there would be
·• tai:pa~ers suit. ~
Only two persons in the audience aup-
ported. the stipervi.Jors.·.Norman' Brock ol.
Orange charged that "~ people are
asking you to take the pay of a plumber.
You are entitled to ·more qtan $20,000 a
year." , · ·
His remarks wue greeted with toud
boos.
The other supporter was Lee PodOlak:
of Orange, who challenged the audience
witli, · "Where were you when the
legislature was refusing to raise the
rupervisors' salaries year after year?"
He, too, was roun!fiy booed.
Opera Star Marries
MEMPJUS (UP.I) -Marguerite
Piazza, former star of lbe Metropolitan
Opera In New. York, bu been married te
San Franciaco industriallst Harry Berg4
thodt. Miss' Piuu.-was attended by her
three daughters and· three • sons by Pfe->
vious marriages In . the private cere.
mo~es Sunday at the singer's Mem~
home.
Oruf• Ceew
lt'eatlter
You shouldn't ·.~ your rUn..
1lasaes Wedoeaday aince .the low
. clouds and fog. will, shroud much
· ol. the 10l1r lhimmer •. Tt:mptra4
lures ol 16 on the coast and 72
inland will prevail
INSm tJ TODAY
Oronoe Countu . sch.ool.J · art
: pla)ling "21 Qiustioni" to .fmd
"' out which 1tudenti uttt-1~
-most Mlp, and IOtM-S0,000 -
~ J>t4Plll will bt qidutd.. Ste Paac B. , ....... -: MlrtWttl "''-'• Jt CNcflllt Ufl -.. --=--. ,_ " -.. ~i.:·~ " ...... CWlltt', •
I ·--• ·-• .,.,... 1 ..... ...... , ... I ............. ... .......... • ·-.. ·-... -• -.. = .... ,,.,:.--=~ .. • --..
-I
,,
• I OAJtV PU.OT H
U.S. Orders
More Riot
. 'T . __ , raining
WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary of
Defena MelYin R. Lalrd today ordered
llddltlooal riot cootrol tratruna for N ..
tlonal Guardsmen and Reservist.. and the
insurance of protective face masks and
riot 111.tw for riot assignments.
Peataion officials said Laird will ask
Cci,.,-eu for an addiUonal GO million to
pay for the new eqWpment and eitra
lrainlnc. . -. Penta&on •Poktaman Jerry W. Friedbeim wu asked whether this 1ction
was taken u a result of a Guard~tudent
confrontation last May at Kent State
University.
The May incident "obviously beighlt:ll*
ed the -. for the prvlecllon Of the
guardsmen," be replied.
Four Kent State student.a were killed at
a time when guardsmen on the Ohio cam-
pus said tbey feared fOr their lives.
A state erand jwy absolved the·
guardlmen of blame for the deaths, but a
presldenUal commission called th e
guar'ds' action "unnecessary, unwar•
ranted and unexcuaable."
. Asked if the Guardamen would be pr.._o-
v1ded ,with other non1etha1 weapons in ad-
dition to the batons he replied that
although research is continuing in this
area, autbotiUes feel that there isn't
anything safer or more effective than the
tear gas now used in riot aituaUons.
WITH NO KIDNEYS, HER LIFE DEPENDS ON A MACHINE ·
Mrs. Poncy, Good-n1turMI Mother Confides In "Bird'', Her Kitten.
Only those Guard and Reserve units
With a civil diaturbance m.Wion will be
affected by the new erders and under&•
the extra training.
This will affect units in m'll!lt of the na-
tion'• major clues. It ii the first time
they will receive special equipment for
use in riot 1ituaUons.
FriedbeJm said the added training will
mean extra drills and will about double
the time now devoted to riot control lrainlnc.
U Congress approvea the Pentagon's
request: Guardamen will receive 140,000
f~ shields ·and batons and 120,000 pro. ~ves11.
Veteran& Day
Beach Holmay
Wednelday, Veterans Day, will be a
day ol rm for postal worbrs, city
employea and IChool teachers in 1fun-
tingtoo Beach and Fountaln Valley.
Both city balb will be llhut tifht ••
munk:lpal employea obaerve the holiday.
All acboola will alao be clooed.
The post offlce will run oo a holiday
IChedule with lfi«tal dallvery numtng,
but no "'1ndow or mrmal dellTttY
oervico. Mall will be picked up oq holiday
ICl>edtila and postal box pati•1•r'Cil!
enter the lobby for their mail.
Veterana Day ceremonies will be
cel~brated by American Leatcin Poot 133
at Memorial Hall on Flfth Street, Hun-
tinctoo Beach. The public la invited lo al·
tend the short legion ceremonies at 11
1.m., Wednesday.
Flood Control
System Finished
CompleUon of a '295,lM Oood control
project which will protect portions of
Weatminlter, Garden Grove and Stanton
from winter flooding haa been aMOunced
by Second District Supervisor David L.
Baker.
Involved wa11 the conatrucUon of a rein-
forced concrete pipe for one half mile un-
der Garden Grove Boulevard from
Hoover Street on the ea!t to the
Anaheim-Barber City Flood Control
Chan11el at Knott Street on the wen.
Baker a.id the compleUon is timely
zince winter ralna have to often caused
severe discomfort and some d&nger to
the residents, businen.men and molorillts
in tht area.
DAILY PILOT
OlANOI. CDAIT PUaLllttlMG CQIU'AlfY
R•Mft H.. W.H .....................
Jeck L Curl..,
Vkt PtwllMnl ft °"'9ret M1Mttr
TII01t111 Kff't'il . ., ...
11it11111 A.. M"""i•t
M .... lnSEllM
IJ111 DitklA
W•1 0...,. Qunty hnw
AIMrt W. l1t11 -... .. H ..... 1 ...... °""9
17175 ........ ,,,..,..
M1lll11 AU,....i P.O. ••• 7t0, t2MI ' --""""' hldlr tn "'""''A-.,. Ca• Miiii mW.I 91y.a11wt """"a.di: 21'11 W.t ..... etullWl't
.. OMwdll • """' &l Clllft ... ,
Life~ No Kidneys
Housewife Lives One Day to Next
By ALAN lllJUON
Of "" Delt't ....... ..,.
For Mrs. Margie Poncy, "' life begina
one day and almost endl the nut.
It's a machine and people that enable
her to live thla day-to-day existence.
Three Umes a week, for sq: hours at a
time, Mr11. Poocy goes to hospital to have
her blood cleansed by a dialysis machine.
Mrs. Poncy, an attractive, a:ood
natured mother and wife, bu no kidneys.
Without the machine Ille would die. With
I~ abe live!.
"It's . a confining life but I am
thankful," she said at her home at 9lm
Cbrlatine Drive, Hunllnglon Beach.
"I'm too Ured to do much after receiv·
Ing the treatment. But the next day I feel
all right and I am able to do light
housework,. drive to the market and cook.
Then the following day I have te go for
the treatment a1ain."
But it is not· just the machine at Palm
Harbor General Hospital, Garden Grove,
that. U. Mn. Poacy alive. It ii the
peopla.wbo put it there.
Theat people are those who don1te to
the Artificial Kidney Foundation, which
provided the costly apparatus Mrs. Poncy
,uses. They allo include donon to the
Huntington Beach United Crusade for the
!OUJdation i11 a member a1ency.
It is in life-supporting caW1e11 llke this
that donations to the United Crusade end
up.
Mrs. Poncy is one of 75 patients in
Orange County who rely on dialysis
machine.s. The only way they can get off
the machine is to receive a kidney
transplant, a still rare operation with on·
ly a moderate succes11 rate.
"l want one," Mn. Poocy uys eagerly,
talkiq of a transplant. "My doctor tells
me that even if everything matches, the
ch&nctl of the transplant being suc-
cellful are only 50 tc 60 percent, and it is
a dangerow operaUon. But I would jump
at the chance."
Where do you find a donor? Usually
from the patients' families but the
disease that afflicted Mrs. Poncy,
polycy1Uc kidneys, wa11 considered in-
herited and doctor11 have ruled out a
family transplant.
Accident victims are the othre source.
"I underatand that computers at UCLA
have been fed alJ the blood and U.uue
details on kidney patients in Southern
Cllllomia and when a donor is found the
tnfonnaUon is given to the machine to
find a match," Mrs. Poncy aid. "I'm
always waiting for the phone to ring."
While ahe waits and hopes, Mr11. Poncy
buaies herself with crochet and cooking
for her husband, Pat, and daughters,
Shelly, 17, who in return do the heavy
household chores.
Mrs. Poncy's other chance for a less
ratrlcted life is to get a home-u11e
dialysis machine which CQSt between
$8,000-$10,000 to buy and about $.1,000 a
year to operate. Family members can be
trained to operate the machine.
But the Poncys realize this is wishful
th!Ming for them at present.
"Since MargJe bad her second kidney
removed a year ago we have had a hard
time financially ,'' Pat Poncy
said . "Insurance, Medi-Cal and the
hospital people have helped greatly but,
believe me, we don't have much to live
on."
But Mrs. Poncy and many others like
her do live on, hoping for a transplant or
• borne m1cbine.
From Pqe 1
DE GAULLE SUCCUMBS • • •
radio and television broadcasting system.
Word of his death was delayed until
morning when 1endarmes in .the Uny
village telephoned lhe Elysee Palace in
Paris. President Georges Pompldou
broke the news to the nation with the
words: General de Gaulle ls dead. France
is a widow."
"Le Grand Charles," who considered
himself the incarnation of France, rallied
the defeated nation in World War II. He
saved France from civil war in 1958 when
he emerged from retirement to become
president and end a military revolt atem-
ming from the Algerian war. And he llV·
ed it again in 1968 when student-labor
uprisings again brought France c!Ol!le to
civil war.
He was presidtmt for 11 year11 until he
quit in April, 1969. when the voters re-
jected his plan for adminlstraUve reform.
In World War 11 he took his place in
history with Sir Winston Cllurchlll, Josef
Stalin and Franklin D. Rooatvell. In the
pastwar years he helped shape the
course of European hi.story for three
decades as he strug1led to rt1tore the
grandeur of France.
On Jan. 16. 1952, he took note of the
fact that he, too, would someday die and
he gave Pompldou a handwritten docu·
rt1ent that called for a 1imple funeral
with "no musJc, no fanfare, nor bell·
rinlint."
In death his wishes were to be.
d!Jobeyed. The funeral In Colombey·lea-
Dtux·Eglises was to be almple as he
wtahed, but the government proclaimed
Wednesday, Nov. 11-Armlstlce Day -
a day of nations! mournlna:. 1be cabinet
-1TIO!-ln-urrent session an<1·-llUIOll1ICed
thert would be a rellgloua certmony at
Notre Dame Cathedral In Parl1 par1llel-
1nJ1: the simple country servtces.
Pompldou led the natlon in rnournin1
and in a lunchtime television speech he
told Frenchmen:
"ln JMO, Gtneral de Gaulle s1ved our
honor. In 1944, he led us to tht llbtr1Uon
•nd to victory. J'n 1968 he saved vs from
cival wll'. Ht 11v1 Fran C-e her ln·
ltJtulloor,ber place tn the~world.
f
"In this hour of mourning for the coun-
try, let us bow to the grief of Mme. de
Gaulle, of her children and
1T•ndchlldren.
"Let us promise to France not to be
Wldilni£led of the lessons which have
been given to us, and that, in the national
soul, De Gaulle will live former."
Members of De Gaulle's family told
government officials De Gaulle suddenly
fell forward in hiJ chair be.fore the
television set and came to rtst on a
bridge table wJiere he had laid out the
cards for his evening 1ame of aolitaire,
the only game he allowed himaell.
His IM·in-law, Gen. Alain de Boissieu,
told of De Gaulle's last minutes and said,
"General de Gaulle died as he wished :
standing up, still working." He meant
that De Gaulle hid worked unUI the end
of the fUlh volume of his ''Memoirs of
Hope."
De Bolssieu said De Gaulle spent his
last days working harder than he had
ever worked before. He begin at 9:30
1.m. each day in his office overlooking
the countryside and he worked Monday
11 usual, finishing two' chapters of the
fifth volume.
· After writing In the morning he lunched
with his wife and then took his customary
walk through Colombey Park under a
gray, overcait sky. He wrote for a few
more hour11 in the afternoon and then
stopped to watch the evening news.
Except for two vacation trips abroad -
the first to Ireland during the election
campaign to choose bis succeMOr and the
second to Spain to meet Generalissimo
Franclxo Franco -De Gaulle never left
Colombey. He hid staked his polltk!al
-future on a refmodwn on Aprll-21, 1Mt,
and when he lost be faded from publk:
view.
His death brought an era to an end -
an era not only in the history of Fraoce·
but in the hlstory cl the world. There hid
been many hlah!iihta. the !int Of which
was bb creation of the Free French
resistanct movement when he new
acroa the English Channel to Lendon Jn
• Brltlsh airplane to low of fuel thlt the
, • .,. nad empty,
I
•
Sewage Costs Divide.d
lndustry~ill Share Tabs Vnder, New ia~
BJ RUDI NIEDZIELBIU
Of .. DtllY l'llitl Sltff
Industry wUI soon be sharing some of
the costs of ucesslve sewage treatment
with local taxpayers under the terms of a
new county-wide law to .go on the books
by Jan. l.
That wa11 the message delivered to a
a:roup of H1111tington Beach businessmen
and industrialists Monday by Robert A.
Webber, chief of the industrial and
permit division of the Orange County
SanltaUon Districts.
· Basically, the sewage law sets up
specifications of "reasonable use " of the
county's two treatment plants and
charges the individual operatcr any ~ts
beyond that.
Jn addition, the new ordinance will pro-
vide quality requirements for sewage
discharge to deter the system's users
from plugging it up with waste materials
that cannot be efficiently treated.
Council Opens
Downtown Plan
For Hearing
City Councilmen will open a public
discussion at 8 o'clock tcnight on creation
of an architectural control zone which
will give Fountain Valley its first
downtown.
The young city's planning department
has suggested that tight architectural
controls be placed on construction along
Brookhurst Street from Edinger Avenue
lo Garfield Avenue.
This "core of the city" would be the
ahow piece of the town, planners say.
The area will feature commercial and
professional buildings as well as a few
apartments.
Planner11 want more control over this
area to eliminate items they term
unsightly such as free stan~ing signs and
"gimmick" buildings.
These controls would apply only to the
area along Brookhurst Street.
After listening to public comments on
the proposal, city councilmen will decide
if such a district will be established.
"The ordinance la mainly geared to ·
large induslry," said Webber, "and we
don't think it will be too hard to live
with."
The formula for computing "reasonable
use" is based on the assessed valuaUon of
the property at an allowable rate of 10
million gallons or sewage per $100,000.
"It costs us about $42 to treat a milli on
gallons of sewage and that is exactly
what each , industry will be charged for
lheir .. excesses," .said Webber.
The law also establishes stringent re-
quirements for the quality of sewage so
that individual users know the limits of
toxicity and suspended solids they may
discharge.
"Actually, sewage treatmeDt is an in·
duslry like any other. We use raw
materials and deliver a final product. But
unlike other industries. we have no con·
trol otler our raw materials and that is
--.
what the new law deflnes, '1 Wtbbtr
pointed out. ,
"In the East and Midwest, Industry I!
really the big bad bully. They're the ones
who are doing all the polluting, Jn Oraug9
County we're fortunate because industry
has indicated a willingness to work wiijl
us in solving our problems."
Next year. he said, the county's vasl
system of feed lines will be patrolled by •
crew of "sewer policemen" who will be
taking quality samples to make sure no
violations occur.
"If there have been obvious viol1tl~
of our discharge requirements. we can
simply shut off their service," he ei·
plained. "Bui just the knowledge that we
are doing thi3 should serve as a deter·
rent."
The new ordinance, he said, should aid
in keeping harmful materials out or the
ocean where the treated sewage ls
discharged. r
Building Permits Drop
Sharply in Huntington
From · chain link fen ces to large
apartments, aie building industry has
taken a sharp drop in Huntington Beach
this year.
The total value of construction for
October -as shown by building pennits
issued by the city -was $6.I million less
than the same month last year.
Construction Is down nearly $46 million
for the ten-month period which ended in
October, compared to the same period
for 1969.
"You can see the difference in the
figures," Jack Cleveland, director of the
Scout Leaders Named
New officers have taken over the
leadership of Explorer Post 294 based at
Edison High School, Huntington Beach.
Dan Winchell is the new president; Dan
Simpson, vice president ; and Charles
Grant, secretary-treasurer. The post is a
general interest outfit.
building department, said today. 11But $37
million is still a respectable amount of
construction.''
The figures listed represent assessed
valuation of the structure alone, whether
it is a swimming pool or an office
building.
"I guess the economy 111 down all
over," Cleveland said. "But compared to
other cities we're doing good."
The building department Issued 194
permits in October and collected $8,180 in
fees for them.
Commercial construction represented
the largest single assessed . valuation at
$501 ,820 for October. The second highest
assessed valuation for .the month was
turned in on.two building permits 'for city
fire stations. Thote ztructures were
valued at $442,000.
Total apartment construction -a big
factor in the 1969 figures -was only
$S23,596 in value for five duplexes and
three small apartment units.
The least assessed valuation recorded
was $394 for two chain link fen ces. '
Mush You Samoyeds
Mike Van Doren of Fountain Valley practices in
Costa Mesa field for sled racing season. A member
of the California Sled Dog Club, he races his
Samoyed dogs at Big Bear and atop Tram Way at
Palm Springs. Sled is on wheels since there was no
snow in Costa Mesa that day.
Truth
or Consequences?
Somotimes the truth hurts! We hove lost on occasional sale oy not t18i119 a cvst-wfio!
he wanted to heor.
Wa might point out that a customer would 0. O.tter off to P•Y a rtttle ,,,.... lor..,. ru!>-
ber F>Odding than buy a chHper. muihy pad that fHls lika you ara w•lking on balloons. n,. ''bal.
loon" F>Od hum tha carF>OI bocki119, causos 1lretching, and ruin• .. ams. Also, this padding oft.,
Aattens out after a while.
•
I '
• l •
" ' Addition•Dy, we might ten you th.t 1ome corF>Ot lib.rs are more prectiul lf»n otlien. A .•
fiber that worlis in one texture, might "bomb in another.
• F .. I free lo. can ~or •dvice. AO of our ,.r., people h••• heel extensive oxperi.nce in ii;.
1erV1c1 "'d of this business -end ofter all -the most important lhi119 we un offer , th.I hard!
anyone else does .•. is s.rvice! y
U.HTA ANA, OU.NII
TUSTIN C.tt •••
ALDIN'S
110 NILL CAINTI
& DlA"llD
11J74 t ....... ~ c.nt.
IJWJ44
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Plllcentia A wt.
COSTA MESA
646-4131
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs.; 9 h> 5:30 -Fri., 9 h> 9 -Sat .• t:30 h> 5
I
a c es;:e tM a< J t ;;,,13.s:::: 0 • .T ..... _ ·--
Ne ri ·Beaeh
VO[ 63, NO. 269, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY~ CALIFORNIA JUESDA Y, NOVE.MBE• 10, 1970
oar
79 Years Old
De Gaulle Dead
Of Heart Attack
COLOMBEY • LES • DEUX • EGLISES,
France (UPI) -Gen. Charles de Gaulle
died Monday night of a heart attack in
his country home here where he had lived
in seclusion since he was rejected by the
nation he bad thrice saved from -disaster.
De Gaulle, who would have celebrated
bis 80tb birthday on Nov. 22, made bis
mark on history in World War II along
with Franklin D. Roosevelt, Josef Stalin,
Winston Churchill and Chiang Kai·shek.
On1y Chiang, now 83, survives.
a
• • ..
a~1s .e .s
• •
DAILY l'ILOT ....... n-•k Ml"lll ,Ktlllllw
The former president had just dealt
himseU a hand of solitaire while waiting
in front of the television set for the i:,ven-
ing news when he slumped forward. His
wife, Yvonne, called a doctor and a priest
but he was dead when they arrived.
He had left his own testament, calling
for a simple funeral with "no music, no
fanfare , no bell ringing." The funeral
Thursday will be just that, but \he
government was holding m e m o r i a I
services at the same time in Notre Dame
Cathedral in Paris and President Nixon
was among world leaders who said they
wou1d attend.
IT WAS STANDING ROOM ONLY TODAY IN THE BATTLE OVER SUPERVISORIAL PAYCHECKS
Carl A. Llvlng1ton (gesturing left) Added futl to the Fires of S•l•ry Protests
. lWIT .......
Fll.ENCll. LEA_DER DIE~·
: -Gen. Chiirln· de Gaulle ..
'SpQt R.emover'
For Oil Slick
On Ocean Bared
SAN DIEGO (BW) - A system which
may soon be in use to clean up oil slicks
on oceans and bays was put tltrough its
paces for newsmen Monday by Lockheed. The system consisls mainly of a cl.ever·
ly designed paddlewheel device Which
skims oil off the surface and pumps it
into containers or other disposal systems.
Large versions may soon be deployed
along the nation's coasts aboard simple
catamaran.type vessels which can· be
towed through massive oil slicks.
Lockheed scientists and engineers in·
vented the system and now are under
contract to the Coast Guard to determine
its appicability.--•
Company officials are in San Di.ego this
week to show a working model to Navy
and American Petroleum I n s t i t u t e
(See SIJCK, Pa1e Z)
Messages of condolence poured in from
statesmen throughout the world -from
Nixon who hailed his quality of vision,
from the leaders of France's former col-.
onie:t in Africa, from the Pope, from the
Germans with whom h""e restored Franco-
German friendship.
De Gaulle had lived in &loaf retirement
In Colombey-ies-Deux-Eglises since April,
1969, when French voters rejected his pet
proposal for administrative reform . He
worked quietly on his memoirs and lived
the simple life or a villager.
Father Claude Jaughey, the village
priest who administered the last rites,
said, "the general will receive a plain
funeral, like any other villager or a
lumberjack. This will be a classless
fwieral as the general always wished."
Ja\lghey said following the simple
church ceremony De Gaulle's coffin will
be taken to his /amlly plot at one side of
the nearby village churchyard and be
buried next to his daughter Anne. "It
wµI be a plain village funeral." be said.
"There will be no funeral oration,
because the general did not want
anything of the sort."
Tonight the body of the former presi-
dent was laid out in the living room oJ: the
house in the brigadier general's unif'orm
he had treasured since World War II.
The national ceremonies, for govern·
ment leaders and foreign dignitaries, will
be held in Paris at the same time.
French government officials said De
Gaulle was stricken by a heart attack at
7:30 p.m. (1:30 p.m. ~T Monday) just
as the evening news program was
starting on network No. l of the French
radio and television broadcasting system.
Word of his death was delayed until
morning. when gendarmes in the tiny
village telephoned the Elysee Palace In
Paris. President Georges Pompldou
broke the news to the nation with the
words: General de Gaulle is dead. France
ls a widow."
"Le Grand Charles," who considered
himself the incarnation of France. rallied
(See DE GAUILE, Page Z)
Newport Council
Votes to Amend
•
Bay Swap Policy
Newport ,Beaeb. ~· ~n~ilme~ Met.•
d8y night voted to tmend their f®t-·year-
old policy which approved, In principle,
the Upper Newpmt~ Bay tidelands ex-
change between the' Irvine Company and
Ora111ge County.
The action came as councilmen re-
viewed their standing policies during a
session that Jasted . into early morning
hours.
The a.mended policy now reads that the
city supports the objectives of the Upper
Newport Bay Cooperative Planning Proj-
ect to produce comprehensive general
plans "to guide the pattern of growth ia
the Upper Bay area."
. The new policy suggests the city, the
County of Orange, the Irvine Company
and the state work together to produce the
plans which "will be developed on the
basis of the proposed land exchange and
other alternatives."
City officials could nOt be reached for
comment today, but Irvine Company
spokesman Gilbert Ferguson, vice pres-
ident of the company, said corporate
communications is in agreement with the
new policy.
"We can't make any substantive com·
ment until we see the precise ·wording
of the city resolution but from what you
said it appears that what the city wishes
ta do is to establish a master pla11 for
the Upper Bay including consideratiORs
of all the alternatives.
"We're in agreement with that and
have been working with a city study com·
mittee established for the purpose. The
exchange, of course. provides the basis
for a master plan of the area."
As outlined in the policy, the studies
will include channel development and
use; land developme11t and use; trans-
portation and traffic needs: public facil·
ities plan, including reereational and eco-
logical factors; a public utilities plan:
public land acquisition requirements and
a suggested funding schedule.
Cou,n.cil OKs Bounda-ries
Irvine Backs Off on Collins Annex Opposition
'ftle u.ne.asy peaeei between the Irvine
Company and city or Newport Beach
rep:>rted Monday has developed until a
formal truce.
'lbe city council Monday night ap-
proved the proposed ·boundaries for lhe
planned ctty of Irvine and five minutes
Jater the Irvine Company backed off on
its op)X!silion to the Collins annexation.
In a.'-unanlmou.s vote., the council
adopted a policy statement submitted by
Councilman Carl Kymla approving the
reviled 1rvlne boundaries filed last
month with the Local Agency Formation
C.aunlsslon.
tn tum. Robert Shc.lb:Jn, governmental
alftlrs consultant for the Irvine Com·
ptny, then read a prepared statement
11yihg "The Collins annexation will not
be protaltd" by the Irvine Industrial
COlnplex, /ee...owner of tbt property,
A cootrovor1y over the clly'1 efloru to
lllDU tho 177..at lract on M1cArthur
I • \
Boulevard has raged for several months
and includ~ a threat by Irvine officials
that would take Newport Beach to court
if the annexation was approved.
The company had maintained It did not
want the property in Newport Beach, but
rather in its new city and that it had the
right to make that determinaliqn.
Collins Radio Company and Newport
Beach officials said that Collins' long-
term (BS-year) lease on the land gave it
the authority necessary to request the an· .
nexatlon.
The Newport Beach cooncll policy
statement contained a number of other
stipW.atlons, bowever.
It Indicates there may nol be
wholehearted agreement yet on the
ultimate southerly boundary of the new
city.
'lbe 1lltement provides 11that the
uJUtn1te bowldlry In the vlcinlly of s.n
J oequln HiJls Road be revised oo u to
-
assure conformance·with-IOWld planning
principles." •
The city lllso pledged not lo ectlvtly
pu.rsue aMexation of a.py property in the
induptrial complex north ot the Collins
property, but reserved the riaht to act
favorably on any annexation requested by
"landowners and occupletl of the land."
It also promises !'to remain neutral in
all. other matten t'OnC'tT'Dln& ID\lnicipal
boundaries within the nbjld aru tn the
vicinity of the Oranp Collll1~''.
ShellAln, In hl1 ·-~ nla he wanttld to "express lfpnall*-for the ~
•fforta of council momb<rl ln-4eftlopina
the policy."
H• aald the Irvine Indultrtll comp!er,
"recoptilts that a policy staternlnt is not
le@-~illdlng, but II willing lo ~
the one JUSI •dopltd .. I flrln, pd-faith
declor1tloo of cttrCOllllcll "'-snd to
lllS\llM thll Ille city c:ouncll wUl.JlbwlM
respect lt.''
DOUBLE-PLAY OUTtRY
Huntington's Stan Cammer
r ' ' ' • . '01U9Es 'HOME POINT
· · Nzwport'1 0., CoOk
License. Fee DoUbled .
Newport Council Junks
•
Bus.i~ess Tax . Proposal
By L. PETER •. KRIBG
Of. lllt 0.11• PU" lteff
Exasperated Newport Beach city co.un-
cilmen Monday night took the ·poliUcal
football' that the city's -businesa tu had
become and called the only · play they
seemed to have left. They dropped back
18 months and punted.
The council unanimously voted to dou-
ble the existing $25 fee Newport Beach
charges for doing business in the city.
·The action came after more than one
and one-haJf years of study, which was
precipitated because the councif had felt
tht flat fee structure .wu Inequitable to
the small businessman.
Subsequently, the complex category
system · was developed that included the
controversial gross receipts "tax On molt
commercial enterprises.
There was furor over the plan from the
moment Jt was unveiled last August.
The pressure from nearly aU'·CCll'Mn
mounted • u.ntiL the whole plan came
crashing down at Monday's public hear· lni When formal prot.sta ·were lodged by ·
the Newport' Harbor Chamber ·of' Com·
merce, the DAILY Pllm, and several ·
other key figur" In the. bul'-com-
mullll)o. · · . '
The new la~ will not go Into effect unlil
mld-Jllllllr)' following inln>dudlon of the •
new Qllllnlnce Mov. 21 llld oclop\loll Iller
a second reading in December , .L
It w111 raise an eddiUoual sm,ooo, the
ume 1mounl the catqo<led Ill plln ·
w6uJd ""~ produced .. Opponents ulled this u a major lfl""
ment ac•inat the' cHy's propoal.
Cllarl" Currey, Chamber Jftlident:
Jack R. Cllrley, vice president snd
general manager of the DAILY PtLOT
and 'Dee· Coot, former city C<MIDCthnln;
all 01yed the pl111.
,CUmy celled the 1f011 roceipla pil•
an in•al;lort of privacy. Curley cl~ tbe
loophols--..r.tanllon of the medlrl£1IDI
the ~ 1lmply left "loo , ~
· unauWtrid · quatioris.'' Cook llid ·the
•
new plan is mor.e eq~table·~p t4e 'flit
f ...
There were others, t.oo, like Blackie
Gadarlan .of Blackie'• B o at ya r,d, HUJh • Mynatt of Richard's Lido MaJkti,
Bruce Bl1ckmin .of . the IJdo Shopo
Astoclation.
Councilman Carl Kymla offered the
mptiqn djrectln& the staff to redraw the
ordln~e establishing the $50 fee, urging
the tax be retained in the conttn as a
reiulatory tool. ~
"We mu.st answer the question, do .we
want a ·tu or a fee that is regulatory,
that determines who you are, what you
are and what you are doirig. ·
"I oppote the gn>ss receipt.a -concept,''
Kymla said, "it should be a fee.
"1be gross receipts system penalizea
success, partlcularly··~r small b\llineu
people." he said.
Kymla pointed out that the small
businessmen ·in the city bad ,nbt cOm-
plaln.ed a&out .the inequ,ities ol.~e nat.fee '
and aCi'eed there is likely more inequity
In the propo..ed plan.
nie1counCil action came aa 1 bitter pUl
ldr Clo/ Manager Harvey L. HilrlbUrl,
w00 campalJned I«· pe111p cl the-dtnm tkx:. . .,. '
IHurlbUrt and other members Of the city ·
staff worked long,11nd hard creatm, the .
catecorized structure. and Hurlburt at .
least per1001ily ... med lo ..-
es~lally the Chamber's penlllent op-
1,:....• ' . ' , pos ..,u. .
He had maintained all along that the
opposJUoo w11 not wtdelpmd throuabout
the b-community, but "" limited
IA\ the extent thltcould bt-whl~ up by
Jock B'.srnett, uecuUve direct« of the
Chamber.
11urlburt pointed out that "ro.percenl ol
Ille buslnesln In ·the clly, the omall
bus-, woold only be peyil)I the l4tl
aod llO minimums In the ~ lai. The bl& bullneues making the bi( ·
nion~ld1>e piytng """"· 'Hurlbu!\, 1t Mondly ntcbl'• meetia(,
tlloo 11.ISINEllll; Pap I)
• •
•
'J'oday'• ......
TEN ~ENTS
Supervisors
Set Salary
'
At $19,200
By JACK BROBACK
Of 1t1e ~fir l'lttf Sftfl
Orange County supervisors thit morn-
ing voted themselves a raise" to SI9,D) a
year, and then ~ned to a battace of
criticism unprecedented In c O'\t a t 1.'
history. -
For the next two and one.hall hours.
the board wu subjected to acid comment
by citizens punctuated with bool, cheers
at1d catcalls.
The move to raise the supervisors
salary $4,200 a year from the present
$15,000 was made by supervisor William
Phillips of Fullerton.
Supervisor David Baker of Garden
Grove tried to block the move, offering 1
substitute motion to send the problem to
the Grand Jury and another motion to
table the salary raise move.
Both motions died for lack of a second."
Janice Boer of Santa Ana, long time
critic of the board, led the attack.
She charged · that County C4unsel
Adrian Kuyper had not told the board the
whoie truth ·when he advised them tbat
they must pass a salary ordinance im·
mediately becauae of the" passage of con·
stituUonal amendment Proposition 12.
"Thil is not true," aaid Mra. Boer.
"Lei the people aet your sallry through
an inWative.. They will deeide what Y9'l
are worUL"
Sbe•clinwided lhll the Grsnd Jirr lz
not •.rt-\a_Uve group. .
' '
''Tbef-ire lppolnted by a ·Judge who
bas b1a job becauae be wu a lriend of tbe 1 ~
governor."
. Dee Cook. former Newport Beach coun-
cilmen, urged " board members to
poStpone action and take up the aalary
1Ubject in a public session later.
Clare Kelly, chairman of the Hun-
tingtOn Beach Cuuncil for sensible Tu·
. 1tion (COST), charged lhll .Supervlaoo
Robert Bottin, "holds tbe taxpayers of
; the county· in contempt. nu. will not 10
unnoticed in the /uture," she threatened.
Jim _ Townsend, president of the
Telephone Taxpayers Aw>cialion. of
Anaheim, threatened that if supervilorl
did not repeal their action there would be
a taxpayers suit.
Only two persons in the audience su~
ported the supervisors. Norman Brock ol
Orange charged that "these people are l
asking you to lake the pay of a plumber.
YQu are entiUed to more than $20,000 a
year." .
, ~ remarks . were greeted with loud I
The other supporter was Lee Podolak
of Orange, who challenged the audience
with, . "Where were you when · the
Jeiislature was. refUSing to raise the
supervisors' salaries year after year?" -
H~, too, wu r~undly booed. · ·
Opera Star Marries
MEMPIUS (UPI) -M er I u er I le
Piazza, former star of the Metropolitan
Opera in NeW York, has been married to
San Francisco industrialist Harry Berg• •
thodt. Miss Piazza was attended by her .
three daughters and three sons by pre-
vioos marriages in the· private cere-
moaiea Sunday at \he singer's Memphia
home.
. .
You ahouldn'( need your sun-• '
1la11es Wedneaday since the low
cloud•· llicl fOfl will shroud much
' cl Ille oollr shimmer. Tempon-
1 tutti of II on the coast and '72
Inland will preVaU.
INSmE TODAY
Oran.gt Countv schooll are.
playing "21 Q¥t1tiom" to find 1 OJ't 10h4ch •tudnt.r !Wtd tM
moit help, and 1ome 50.000
pupf/J wiU b1 quizud.' St• Paot
B.
'
r
,_
, , ,, ..
I-
I
l
. . .
H
RELEASED BY RUSSIANS
'Brig. Gen. McCluarrle
RETURNS TO TURKEY
Mti). G•. Scherrer
·soviet Armenia Returns
U.S. Generals to Turkey
ANKARA. Tutl<ey (AP) -Two U.S. course. The U.S. 1overnment contended
Anny generals and a Turkish ' colonel the plane strayed attou the border.
d Tur• fro So · t Ar · Tass said the Soviet 1overnment decJIJ. returne to aey m vie merua ed to releue tbe officers after "a
today. three weeks after their light plane thorough invesliaauoa into the
landed 12 miles aQ"oss the border and circumstances of tile violation of the
tbey were interned. state frontier of the USSR and the degree
The Turkish Foreign Ministry said the of guilt of the peraona: who were on
men were "healthy and in good shape." board."
Tass, tbe Soviet news agency, aa.id the It said their releue wu ordered in
geileralS' U.S. Army pilot also was view of "the resulta of the inveatigaUon
released and would Oy baclr their •ix· and the r e gr e t, expressed by t be
seat, ~gtne plane u IOOD as governments of the United States and
weather permitted. Turkey, and lllo tUlng Into coo-
AL<>rmn.MioWll'.source.said.Iurkilb~Pll'9PNle .Mllll'.lllW..lrom
and Soviet &enerals and civilian officiala I.be.tr side."
negotiated at the_ border town of The Soviet ambuaador to the United
Kizilcakcak for nine bOlll'S, preaumably States, Anatoly F. Dobrynin, Informed
working out details of the release. The of-Secretary of State William P. Racers
ficers were freed at 7 a.m. and were about 12 houri before the 1ener&11 nre
driven to Kara, 40 miles southwest of the released.
Soviet fron ti er, to take a Turk i 1 b RelaUona between the countries were
military plane to Ankara. •trained durinl th< detenUon. The SOVlete
KJzilcakcak ls hallway between Kars relueed to allow U.S. officials to villt the
1nd Leninakan. in Soviet Armenia, where officers for five days In viol1tion of a con--
the offictrs•· plane landed and they were sular treaty. The State Department tent
beJd. a series of complaints and Jut weekend
Maj. Gen. Edward C. D. Scherrer, 57, top-level U.S. diplomata atayed away
ehief of the U.S. military mission in from Soviet observances of the 53rd an-
I'tukty; Brig. Gen. Claude M. McQuarrle niversary of the Bolshevik RevoluUon on
Jr.; 46, bead of Scherrer'• Army section, orders from the White House.
Ind. C.01. Cevat Denll, a Turkish lialaon: But President NJ.ton's preu secretary,
oflicer, wa-e llllpectlng military In-.Rooald L. Zlesler, told reporters Mon-
stallations near the Soviet border on Oct. day nfght after the rtleue wu an·
tl and were on a flight from Enurum to nounced:
Kara. Tbe pilot, Army Maj. Jama P. "The Prealdent b 'pleaaed and cm-flliosell, 42, told consular official> high sidera it a COllllrudlve1tep In SOVlet-U.S. wi8ds cauaed him to mi.scalculate his relaUons."
-. -.
No · Decision
Yet .in Hunt .
MutderCa8e . '
An Oraoge County Superior Court jury
went into its second day of deliberations
today with no verdict to offer in tho
murder trial of Willia Dean Hunt a New·
port Beach socialite. '
The panel emerged from tbe jury room
this mo~ning just long enough to ask
Judie William Murray for clarification of
eome of the lengthy inrtructlona they
received abortly before retiring Monda,y
afternoon.
There wu no lndkaUon during their
return that they were anywhere near
reaching a verdict. 1be pan'! took a
lunch recess at noon.
Mrs. Hunt, 44, accused of the butcher
l\nlfe, kl1llnc of her wealthy huaband dur·
1Qa: ,. domeatic dilpute at their Corona
del Mir home, appeared outwardly calm
today and chatted WJth friends and
dtferm attorney Sidney Irmu outside
Judie Mu?Tay's courtroom.
The attracuve, raven-haired woman
allegedly •tabbed yacht b r o k e T.
lpOrtsman Willis D. Hunt, 56, to climax a
quarrel that erupted over conduct of their
13-year-old daughter Dru.
Irmu has asked for acquittal of bis
client, or, at the most, a verdict of in·
voluntary manslaughter.
Deputy District Attorney Melvin Jensen
uked the jury to return a verdict of se.
cond degree murder in a trial that began
with the ltipulation' that the ' death
penalty would not he applied.
Judie MWTay aent the jury to a Santa
Ana motel Monday nlghLHe-wtlLdo '°
apln lhll evenlnl U the pa11el fa111 to
reach a verdlct by th< supper hour.
Funeral Slawd
For Executive
Arthur Davis
A memorial funeral ~rvice for promi-
nent Orange County industrial executive
and Shriner Arthur C. Davis, of Newport
Beach, who died Saturday at a, wilt be
held in Anaheim Wedeaday.
Mr. Davis, ol 111 VJa Genoa, Lido Isle
wa, vice president d. the Audio ConlrOI~
DiYialon ol LTV Lins Allee which is headquartered. In Anlheim. •
Mame rltOI will he at S p.m. at Bag.
Sot!'• Cbspel ol the Belb, with Mt. Olive
MalOlllc Lodae IOe, of Burbank, official·
1__;1•r• , ........ J I,-"; I t r trw, .... ' f:~j • : -0._ _____ · 'llie lamllj ~ iJ6' vbltaUon prior
From Page 1
SLICK ...
DE GAU 1 .1 v S~ CUMB~ w t11e 1etvtce •hd .uueJQ-memor1a1 ;. ·~ ~ • • • • ., t ;" -~~" .Al Mala!.ltab Shrine l ;!'1 1 :li',a •• . ~:/. 1" ~ .. 9&1iillit.\QI HlilPltal or the Sil· aw defeated nation Iii W'arM , ., ' Be. · J>oinpldou led awl nation In illounlllll vatrOO Mrtly, 'lit' ol flowers . · ~Francefromclvilwartn'1111iwhen , add In ii hmcl>llme taloVistM apeecll he Mr. Davb waa 'aloo a member of Al
be emerged from reUrement to 1-0me told Frenchmen:., Malalkah Shrine. . , pr:Htdent and end a mWtary revolt Item· · -t•1n lMO, General de Gaulle saved our He leaves his Wife, Vtrgima ; eons, An· mini from th< Algerian war. An4be .. .,_ • honor. In lMI, he led ua to the liberation drew, ol Buena Park and Leonard, of
ecf·tt aaaln In 1968 when student·labor and to victory. In 11511 he aaved ua from Ne~ Be_a<h; dauillten, !\In. Sharon
u,;,.isings qaln bn<lght France c1 ... to cl val war. He pve FT an c e ber In· ~rl( ~ of Maryland and Mn. Melody ti.tit war. stitutlons, her place 1n the world. aimer, Of COila Mesa: ~ brother, Ken-
H. -•d t I 11 until be "In lhll hour of-··-'-• for tho COW> neth Davi1, ol Paoadena, otstera, Mrs. e was tn'-' en or years .. IV>Ol...... V~a Hamer of Wen Los Angeles and
quit in AprU, 1969, when the voters re. try, let UI bow to the 'O".lef of Mme. de Mn. Benllce ~er. ot Fairoata ud two
fected his plan for administrative refcnn. Gaulle, . of her c h 1 l d r e n and grandchildren.
In World War II be took his place In grandchildren.
history with Sir Winston Qiurchill, Josef "Let us promlse to France not to be
Stalin and Franklin D. Roosevelt. In the undignified of the lessoos which have
postwar ye an · he helped . s h a p e the 'been given to us, and that, in the national
course of European biltory for three soul, De Gaulle will live former."
. .
SAGA OF VANISHING SUSPECT -Newport Offic-
er Patrick O'Sullivan (left), shouts through keyhole
in effort to get suspect to surrender; Locksmith
DALl.Y ,JLOT Plltlfl 111 l'•frklt O'DIMtll
Frank Gibbons (center) opens hideaway; but alt
that's inside is -"Justin" the original canine of·
fender.
• Students Oppose
Coast Freeway
The high school students in the Harbor
Area, at least a goodly number of them,
'Houdini' Es~ape
Fugitive Flees Into Thin Air
don't want the Pacific Coast Freeway to A fugitive holed up in a record store_ he· built:~----------They said so to the Newport Beach City mystUfously slipped-throllgh a police
Council Monday night as a delegation of dragnet that had closed on him in a
Newport Harbor ·High seniors presented drama that unfolded on the streets of
petitions signed by more than 1,700 Newport Beach Tuesday afternoon.
1tudents. A suspect identified only as Kenny had Brad Johnson, NHJ{S student leader allegedly fled inside The Groove Compa-
who presented the petitions, said most of ny, 2.103 Balboa Boulevard, shortly af·
the signatures were oD4J,ined at Newport ter noon to escape an-est by Officer Ed
Harbor and Costa Mesa High School. Motley. He locked the door and refused to
Although asking the city "to protect come out. The proprietor had just step.
our environment" and "preserve the ped next door.
small town atmosphere," and saying a Motley called headquarters f 11 r
freeway would allow the automobile to assistance. A squad was immediately
"dominate our society," the petition did dis patched.
endorse the forthcoming relerendwn on As police surrounded the storefront, a
the superhighway. German Shepherd named Justin growled
through the glass door. ,
Police vowed to wait lt out until Kenny
came out. A crowd of passersby, mostly
street people. vowed to throw him food
through the transom.
·Police then decided to knock the door
down, but a plea by the ownerGf the
building to save· the expense prompted a
call to the Ace Key Company, whose man
Frank Gibbons was on the scene a balf ·
hour later, He picked the lock in short
order.
A youth who lives in the area but who
declined to JdentUy himself volunteered
to take charge of the growling dog before
police went inside.
Three· officers entered the building but
afte.r a lhorotljh :search, declared that
KeMy had escaped. They didn't know
how; because there apparently is no rear
door and there are bars on the windows
in the back.
Most unhappy is Officer Motley, the
city's dog catcher, who still bas the
unsigned summons he was trying to give
KeMy for allowing allegedly Juatin loose
on the streets in. violation of the leub
law.
New Optimist
Club Organizes
A new Optimist International service
club branch formed by Japanese.
Americans~ but not ·Jin:iited to them,-is
now meeting weekly . and will stage its
charter installation next month.
Kialoa II Heads . Toward
. "
Ti~ the Orange Coast Optimist Club,
the chapter will meet Dec. 6 to be in·
ducted into the worldWide organization,
led by President Russ Yamaga. "Friefld
of the Boy" is the Optimist motto.
Record in Mazatlan Race'
Other officers are Make Tatata and
Mas Miyake, vice presidents ; Ken
Yonemura, treasurer; Bob Tanaka,
secretary-director, and remaining direc-
tors James Okada, Lucky Yamaga, Tam
Maruyama, Sho Mukai and Tom Takata.
Roy Hirata will be sergeant-at-arms
and in charge of club equipment.
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Of Tiit Diii.,-1"1191 SI•"
Kialoa II, J im Kilroy's 7 3 . f o o t
aluminum yawl from Newport Harbor
Yacht Club was making noises like a new
elapsed time record in the 930-mlle Los
Angeles to Mazatlan race as she was
averaging 200 miles a day on her run
down the coast of Baja California.
At the 8 a.m. rollcall Monday Kialoa II
was south of Cedros Island and reporting Boy Leaves Mes g winds or is knots from the nortti-83 e northwest. Since the Saturday noon start
Elapsed Ume record for the race ts I
days, 20 hours, 32 minutes and 20 seconds
set by th< 13-foot M-boat Sirius II In 1184.
Don Gumpertz, skipper of the official
escort vessel Windward reported he was
anchored at Turtle Bay at 8 a.m. today
and that the winds were getting light.
decades as he struggled to restore the Members of De Gaulle's family told
grandeur of France. government officials De Gaulle sudde~ly
On Jan. 18, 1952, he took note of the fell forward in his chair before the
npresentatives. Before Slaying Self at Los Angeles Harbor she had covered
In the demonstration of the mOOel for 380 miles and was 50 miles ahead of her
Second overall and Class C leader was
George Griffith's new Cal-39 Tabasco
from Los Angeles Yacht Club. Leading
the Class B fleet was Stan Williams from
Newport Harbor Yacht Club in the
Columbia-50 yawl, lnterme:r.zo. Class D
leader was Alerion, a Bristol . 38 ski~
pered by Bill Dubilier of San Franc.i!co
YC. Fact that he, too, would someday die and television set and Came to rest on a
be gave Pompidou a handwritten docu· bridge table where he had laid out the
ment that called for a simple funeral cards for his evening game of solitaire,
with "no music, no fanfare, nor bell· the only game be allowed himself.
ringing." His son-in-law, Gen. Alain de Blissieu,
In death hls wishes were to be told of De Gaulle-'s last minutes and said
disobeyed. Tiie funeral in <?olombey.Jes· "General de Gaulle died as ht wished;
DeUJ·Egli.ses was to be sunple as he standing up still working." He meant
wished, but ~e govmunent proclaimed that De Gauile had worked until the end
Wednesday, Nov. 11 ·-Armistice Day -of the filth volume of his "Memoirs of
a day of national mournin&· The cabinet Hope "
met in urgent seulon and announced De· Bot I 'd · there would be a religious ceremony at ss eu sa1 De Gaulle spent his
Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris parallel· last days working harder than he had • . pl -.-A--1 ever worked before. He beaan at 9:31> 1ng the alttl e country .eav,ceL a.m. each day in his offiee overlooking
the countryside and he worked Monday
DAILY PILOT
011.ANGt toMT 'Ull.llHIHG COM,ANY
Robert N. Weed
ThoM•• K11Yil
l!dtlol"
Tli•m•s A. Muri-hin•
M•n11l1111 IOltor
l. Pete, Krlet
MtwJIO(t •teOI City Editor
N ........... Offtee
2211 w .. t lell~•• lo11le¥1rd
M•lli119 Addr•••T P,.0. l•1 1175, t264J --
as usual, flnishfna two chapters of the fifth volume.
After writing in the morning he lunched
with his wlfe and then took his customary
walk through Colombey Park under a
gray, overcast 1ky. He wrote for a few
more hours in the afternoon and then
stopped to watch the evening news.
Except for two vacation trips abroad -
the first to Ireland during the t.lection
campaign to chooae his successor and the
second to Spain to meet Generalissimo
Francltco Franco -De Gaulle never left
Colomhey. He hld staked his poUUcal
future on a refenindwn on April 1.8, 11169,
and when he lost he faded fn>m publlc
view.
His death brought an era to an end -
an era not rm1y in the history of France
but 1n the history ol the world. Thert had
been maoy highlights, tho flrat of which
was his creation of the Free French
resistance movement when be new
acroos the Encliah ChanMl to London In
a British ailplana oo low of luol that the
1auc• rud empty.
Mesa Police Alerted
But Problem Small
· A report of a man with 1 sun aent
Coata M... police rolllns to a bicycle
dealmhlp Monday nigh~ but both the In-
dividual and th< weapoll were of omall
caliber. , .
Offictr Dtnnb Houftld arrived al 1n1
Tullln-Ave., to-flnd-a-youth-wtth·a 1·11
gun who ,aid he lhoutht he heard a prowl·
er •nd w11 lookinc around with the on-
ly _..., bt bid.
newsmen, crude" oil was poured into a JOLIET, Ill. (AP) -"Life-it's a great neartst competitor.
llll.11 tank of water straddled by the trip. Try it before it's too late," an 18· Second boat in the fleet was John F 11 1 I I hef Mono.,:; no ••t ttlt h•ncl!teD ll1"'lllna1 1s ot 1 1.rn. removal system. A switch was thrown year-o d youth wrote in a etter ore he Mclntire's 72-foot yawl Baruna from Hun-E ov5R ... LL ui Kl•IOll 111. 111 T•t1e11;!/ l31 lchlben.
and the paddlewheel began to turn, its died during the weekend. tington Harbour, sailing 10 miles north of rne• KrueQir, L,t,YC ; ( J ,1,1er1on1 1 nt••rneuo·
. · Coroner Willard Blood of Will County Cedros Island. ~~ f~;::,·h~JJA:'f~~~:r. ~M~c;""f~'n,.:,:~~~{, \,! unth ique vaneJlpeclscoop1ng up the oil, which said the youth, Percy Patrick Pilon of The remainder of the SO.boat fleet was f~n~~oeJlrv'E~~, ecvc, c10> Vitetor 11. H••"
en was p away. J 1· t d . d f If ·n11· ~ h bU11ched w1'thm' a ••m1'le rad1'us between c1.,1,s$"' -en Kltloe •1: ci i lcnlben; 131 81run11 B tt B h , AAkb ed' · t o 1e , I e o a se ·I IC<;U guns ot UV" I•> Vttltlr 111 (JI w1rr1cr, Al cautr. eve. arre rue • ~ e s pro]et wound. In a Jetter released Monday by GuadaJun.o. Island and the Baja peninsula. CL.Ass 8 -en 1n11rmtirc1 12> v, rurkt1 n1 le.ader said lar1er mode'• and pro••types "" t'\Cblr, Lt• H••l•nd••· Rlenmtnd vc, <o Fkkl• • i:. w Blood at the request of Pilon's family, the Kialoa Irs· performance during the ouct1. Gtor1e scnmldt, SMVc1 1n suM•~r. E•
of the system are undergoing tests at youth urged others to "say no" if offered first two days of the race gave her the 5"c~l;$0'(c::. n1 T1b1Jct1 121 ""' M•rl• 11 u> Lockheed Mlsalles &r: Spice Co head-dru II d Cl A h d' I d "''•n•, GeO!'ot Thorwn. LAYC; c•l 'nlbul, Ttc1 . S 1 · gs. overa an ass an 1cap ea .· Roe111m1, L.AYCi (5> v1v1n1, MOrt H•tktll, 1.ivc.
quarten in unnyva e, near San Fran· Jr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ cisco.
· "Many approaches to the oil-spill p~
blein hive been advanced alnet the 'Tor.
rey Canyon' and Santa Barbara in·
cidents," Bruch said.
"From the data we've lathered so far,
our system appears to hold more promise
than others, particularly for really
serious situaUons -large slicks in heavy
seas."
Bruch said Lockheed has worked with
many oil companies to determine their
oil-handling operations and requirements.
Next month the firm will present its fin·
din1s to the Coast Guard, which is stu·
dyin1 tht oil-splll problem on a na·
tionwide basil.
From Page 1
BUSINESS .••
waa prepared with altem1Uves that
would blve placed ceJJlnp "" !lie
graduated cate1orie1 and bracketed
reporttni flgmes.
A third plan, originally sune.ted by
Coundlm1n Donald MclMls, wauld have
combined the commerctal and lnduatrial
CltelOflel, tlllnl them both on l!'Oll
payroll.
It was app1rtnt from the at.art of the
hearing that Hurlburt'• altemallvu, con·
,.~qions tr you will , were beln& offered
too late.
The handwrltlnf, 1s they 111. w1s
already on the waU.
'Actor Burton Feted
bONDON (UPl)-·Queen-Ellnbeth In--
vetted attor PUcbard Burton 11 I Cotn·
mander of Ille Brltllh EmpU. leday 11
bll wtlo Ellzabtth .T011« looked on. .
Truth
or Coftfequences?
Sometimes the truth hurts! We have lost an occasional sale by not tefting a customer wliat
he wanted to hear.
We might point out that • customer would be b.ttor off to pay a littl. more for.,... rglj.
ber padding than buy a eh0<1per, mushy pad that feel• like you are walking on balloon•. The 'W
loon" pad hum the carpel bacJcing, ea""'' .trek:hing, and ruins seams. Ako, lliis podding olt.n
flattens out ofter • whilo.
Addition1Dy, -might ton you thot some carpet fibers oro moro procfieal tlion otlion. A
fiber that works in ont texture, might "bomb in another.
FMI lreo lo can for 1dvica. An of our .. i.. people ~ .. e ho~ erlonsivo exporionco in tlio
service ond of th is business -ind altor an -tho most Important thing we con offer, tlt.ot htrdly
anyone else does ••. is &ervicel
'
~·_ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 l'lllc9lltla An.
SANTA AiNA, OIA"ll
TUSTIN c•,,.
ALDIN'S
llD Hill CA•NTI
& DU.,.llD
lll74 Inf ... T ...... c.Rf.
IJl-JJ44
COSTA MISA
_MMl31
HOURS1 Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 le 5:30 -Fri., 9 le 9 -Sat.,· 9:30 le S
,/
7
l
. . -... . ........... .. .. .. -.... ~ ................. ...
. -
~osiB ·Mesa
voe. 63, ·NO. 269,. 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORAN&E COUNTY, CAL~RNIA TUESDAY, ·NOVEMBER 10, ·19~
•
• .•. oar a1s .e··s
' • • •• r •
79 Years Old
De Gaulle Dead
Of Heart Attack
COLOMBEY • LES -DEUX • EGLISES.
France (UPI) -Gen. Charles de Gaulle
died Monday night or a heart attack in
his country borne here where he had lived
in seclusion since be was rejected by the
nation he bad thrice saved from disaster.
De Gaulle, who would have celebrated
his 80th birthday on Nov. 22, made his
mark on history in World War 11 along
with Franklin D. Roosevelt. J~f Stalin,
Winston Churchill and Chiang Kai-shek.
Only Chiang, now 83, Survives.
The foniier president had just dealt
himsell a hand of solitaire while waiting
in front of the television set for the even·
ing news when he slumped forward. His
wife. Yvonne, called a doctor and a priest
but he was dead when they arrived.
He had left his own testament, calling
for a simple funeral wiUt "no music, no
fanfare, no bell ringing." The .funeral
'Thursday will be just that, but the
government was holding m e m o r i a I
services at the same time in Notre Dame
Cathedral in Paris and President Nixon
was among world leaders who said they
would attend.
DAIL 't PILOT ........ .,_ tic~ l(M!llw
IT WAS-STANDING ROOM ONLY TODllY IN THE BATILE OVER SUPERVUORIAL PAYCHECKS
C1rl A. Livingston (gesturin9 left) Added FUel to the Flr11 of·S1l1ry Prot11ts
After 3 Weeks • Man Killed·
Soviet,s . R.e"lease Two
· Messages ef condolence poured in from G J._ 'f' ... k
Wife, Given
Jail Term . ~1f.~n::~ u:.:~~ ~.r:;'~f-vl~~~ · enera~ to .... · ,ur ~y_
-trom \he leaden of France's former col· ~ A:"~-M . . ;..,.,""11tdiila ri.-•UJQw 111.lnln • , .
·'·i UPIT ......
FRENCH LEADER oDIES
Gon. Charlt1. elf G•ullo
•
H~p~tal W or~er
Gets · Jail . Term
In Knifing Case
Hoipital janitor Albert !l:ut.eri of Costa
Me~ was sentenced Mond~ to six
moI\lhs in Orange Cou.nty JaU for the
stabbing of a female co-worker at
Bayrie}! ConvalesCent Hospital.
Scuteri, 55. of 2028 Santa Ana Ave.,
returned to court to draw his sentence
from Superior Court Judge James F.
Judge after undergoing a three-month
diagnostic study at the Department of
Corrections facility in Chino.
He pleaded guilty to charges of assault
with a deadly weapon. . -
Scuteri was arrested last April 29 after
be stabbed Mrs. Virginia Kerby, 41, of
Anaheim, five times with a pocket knife
during a quarrel over a camper truck
~ointly owned by lhe dating couple.
Mrs.· Kerby, lhe head house keeper at
the Thurln Avenue hospital, was treated
for chest and back wounds al a Costa
Mesa h05pital after a fellow janitor pull·
ed the: berserk Scuteri 1way from her.
She has sirce .recovered from her
wounds.
Holiday Decor
To Win Prizes
'!Dies: in Africa, from the Pope, from u.--_ ~ ~-
Germans wttla wtxim..bt restored Franco-ANKARA, Turley (Af): -Twt U.S.
German friendship. Army generals and a Turkish cokmel
De Gaulle had lived in aloof retiremE:nt returned to Turkey from.. So~iet Armelrla
tn Colombey-Jes·Oeux-Eglises since A'pril, today, three ~eeks after their light plane
1969, when French voters rejected hi s pet landed 12 miles acrpss the· border .al)(f
proposal for administrative re£orm. He they were inU:rned.
worked q~i~Uy on his memoirs and lived The Turkish Foreign· Ministry said the
the simple life of a villager. men were "healthy and in good shapf!."
'Father Claude Jaughey, the village Tass, the Soviet news ''ency, aald·the
priest who administered the last" rites generals' U.S. Army pilot' also was
said, "the general wiU receive a plai~ released .and ~ould fly ·back their .1ix-
funeral, like any other villager or 1 seat, twm-en,me plane as IOOD as
lumberjack. This will be a classless weather perrm_tt~. . .
funeral as the general always wished." A For~1gn Ministry sour~.sa1d ~~
Jaughey said following the simple and 5:0v1et geherals and civilian ofha s
church ceremony De Gaulle's coffin will n~~t1ated at ~e border town of
be tak . . . Kwlcakcak for nine hours, presumably en to h1~ fam ily plot at one side of working out'details of the release. The 0£·
the . nearby v11la~e churchyard and .!>8 ficers were freed at 7 a.m. and· .were ~led next _to ~s daughter .~nne. . It driven to Kars, 40 miles southweat of the ~Ill be a p~a1n village funeril. he s~1d. Soviet 1 r 0 R t i e r. to take a T u r It I I· b
There will be no fu~eral oration, military plane to Ankara.
because the general did not want Kizilcakcak is hallway between Kars
(Ste DE GAUILE, Pa1e %) and Leninakan, in Soviet Armenia, where
the officers' plane landed and they were
Cyclist Injured
In Mesa Crash
Riding his machine on a busy street at
dusk, another Costa Mesa motorcyclist
bit the dust Monda y when his cycle col·
lided with a vehicle making a left tum at
an intersection.
William A. Dugas Jr .. 19. of 1953 Meyer
Plaei!, was admitted to Hoag Memorial
HOlpiµ.t with l1cerations and a cruahed
right knee, but listed in good condition to-
day.
Police said Dugas was eastbound on
17th Street at Orange Avenue when the
collision involving a car driven by Gene
G. Sagon, 64, of 1750 Santa Ana Ave., oc-
curred.
held. · .
Maj. Gen: Edward C. o: Scherrer. 57,
chief of the U.S. military mission in
Turkey; Brig. Gen. Claude M. McQuarrle
Instant Replay Set
At Estancia Meeting
Instant replay with coaches' com·
ment.aries will highlight the Est.Inda
High School Booster Club meeting
tonight, in the -wake of the Eqles' 21 to
19 upset win Friday over Fountain
Valley.
Coach Phil Brown and his staff will
show movies and discuss the victory at a
p.m. in the Costa Mesa Golf and Country
Club, plus prospects for CIF clwn·
pionshlp ·play.
Jr., 48, head of Scherrer'• Army teetiOn,
and Col •. C.v1t ·~i, • Turldllt llallon
officer, were inspecting .military in-
stallAtlOM near the Soviet bOrder ,Oil Oct.
21 and were on a flight from Erzurum to
Kiira. The pilot, Army Mij. James P.
Ru.saell, 42, told .consular officials high
winds caused him to miscalculate hiS
course. The U.S. government contended
the plane atra'yed acron the .border.
TasJ" said the SoVlet government decid·
ed to release the officers · after • "a
t h o r o u g h investigatioR 1 n to the
circumstances of the violation of the
(See GENERALS, Pip IJ
Calm Mesa Girl
Thwarts Rapist .
•
A calm and observant Costa Meaa girl
was.jumped In her apertment·early today
by a would-be rapist and shoved onto a
couch at knifepolnt, but eacaped injury.
She su ffered a small cut inalde the
mouth when the inlruder clamped his
hand over it'to smother any screams.dur·
ing the 1:30 a.m. incident on Joann
Street. ,
"He said several times he wanted food
and I tried , to offer him soine, but he
never let me finish my sentences,'·' the
lS.year.Qld aa1esgirl told poUce.
The sex offender finally left. saying he
was going to get aomething to eat, 1be
said. ,
"Hill hands were 'grubby and he smell-
ed gaHllticrtY," ahe wrote in her own
detaUed noport. which led poUce to pick
up ·a service station attendant walking
home from work in the nearl>y area.
he ultl: ht wu atilfat work 15 minutes
before the aSHult, how!ver, and ·fellow
employ,. confirmed hla· story.
Planners N.ix Reque-st
.... ' l,j,I'-~ aad,1'Gllldld tbe -.-.. W,_ __ -t
ber boyfriend la datlttod f~ five yW. to
l~e 1n:prllon ·today, .after pltodiq·pllt1
Monda~ to reduced charges. '
RUJ>en Coi-rltes, 37, fonperly of 'B
Fairway Place, appeared befOre 1J'udge
James F. Judge in Orange County
Superior Court and 1cknowlfl!lfled be
committed' second degree mll'der · tnd
assault with a deadly weapon.
He was captured without incldent by
Newport Beach pollce Aug. 2 · after a
murderous· m'iS11ion that took blm from
Costa Mesa to Huntington Beach and
back down the coast.
Shots heard by a neighbor sent one into
the· Fairway Plaei! ·home· eArller that
morning, where Mn. Sylvia CorrOO, 37·
year.Qld mother of· two, Jay dead in the
bedroom.
Corrale!, a reztaurant employe, had
been seen leaving, calmly b u t
purposefully.
She had been shot twice wllb a .32
caliber piztol that her husband then used
to pump two bullets into swimming pool
contractor Thomas Newhard, of l l315
Santi Maria St., Fountain Valley.
Wounded in · the 1tomacb and arm· -
after Corrales bad already threatened to
kill Mrs. Newhird -the victim bu sibce ...
re.covered.
Corrales became tnra&ed durirW a
quarrel with his wire over 1 belief that
she was romanti.cally involved with
Newhard and fina11y killed her.
Ironically, he had slipped her in their
home the night-before, leading oe!lbbon
to call Colla Meu po~. .
Mrs: Corrales was urged 1t the time to
stay ovemlgbt with friends, ~ ~l~ed
and said 1he wmJld Come to he1dquarters
tbe following morning to dilC1llS ftUnf a
·complaint cbar1lng uuult.ancl battery.
Trash Collector
Commission Asks De11;ial in Chinchilla Controversy .Gets Plck¢--.Up .
John Culler Jr. will have a home where directly, adding th al he btlleved no at 211 ind m W. Wlllon St., for salt of · A ~·-M truh · · ~·~~ the chincblllu don't roam and the special permit was•needed. tropical fish . ' . _ \NDW ea . . mao-wu. ~"".""
CheerY holiday decorations w i 11 neigbbora can brealhe deeply ell day. ll He ha• been. b~ 1.nd aelUng Ille -Held over a request· bY'Dolt Btll1 snd · -hlrilalll _by pollce Monday, when tbey
brighten downtown Colta M e • 1 it'• oolely up to tbe Calta M ... Plannlng chlnchillas whlcb are houled 1n. a ~ BIU Slwnbely to 111e • oll-slto parking at diacovettd while lnveatl1ating ·a routine
gtorefronts thl! Christmu sea;on and .• Commission. backyard hutch u a bome CJ!CCUPIUon 1911 Wallece Ave., for patrom Gt tbeif traffic accident tnlt.he wu allegedly liV·
group of merthantJ is offering.three big A zone exception permit requested so and hobby. · ' blr 'lbe Outer Lim.Its, at 772 to 771 W. in& and wor_klrw~ln the U.S. Wtaally ..
cash prizes for !he be>t. Cutler can keep on raising Ille furry little A llf<Olld -exceptioo perml~ llOU~I !Ith St .. for lurlber 1tudy. • ; • JeM-A. >.muon6, 43; who Hved at
Judgin&.--bY a three-member panel beasts -up to 150 at • given time -at b9 the fiock of Prince of p~ Luthenn -Held over 1 zone uceptJoa permil re-1209 Goklenwest St., Santa Ana, untll tUs
picked b)' the Cos.la Mesa B~srnrll' 395 Hamilton St., in i ~y realdenUal Chtltth, 2917 Meu Verde Drive, wu q&aeA b)' Lillian W. '9u0er to-build 1 arrnt at S::IO p.m'., was booked on
Asaoclallon ,rilLQcair the night of Dec. ?, zone wa1 considtted Mond1y night. unanlmoualy recommended for approval atoraae carace at 1431 Newport Blvd., ch1rp1 of illepl enb'y Ind turned over
coverin& the area from 17th to ltth The item waa first on 1 b"'ftif age:nda with i 1llght modtftclUOn. with a rMnction of nine paRinc 1peae1 to lminilr•Uon fUtborilieJ for depOrt&•
streets on Newport and H a r b o r and commialloners voted 5 to o to recom· Tbe church plans to enlarge lls from ihf: 23 required.. tlon to Mexico.
lloulevarda. mend it be· denied when the city council tanetuaey IDd build 111 educotiooal f1cll1--Held over a zone exceptJOn permit Officer Georp SperHng Ilk! Ar-
-.. • ••
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'
Teday'• Fba1
N.Y. Steeb
TEN CENTS
• • Supervisors
Set Salary
At $19,200
By JAClt BROBACK
Of tM DIJlt' l"Li.t ltaff'
Orange County supervisors this morn-
ing voted themselvee a raiae to f19,200 a
year, and then listened to a barrqe of
criticism. unprecedented in c o u n t 1.
history.
Jl:or_tbe_nen two and one-half houri,
the board was subjected to acid comment
by citizens Punctuated with boos, cheert
and catcalls.
The move to raise the supervilort
ulary $4,200 a year from the praent
tlS,000 was made by supervisor Wllllam
Phillips of Fullerton.
Supervisor David Baker of Garden
Grove tried to block the move, offerlnc a
substitute motion to send the problem to
the Grand Jury and another motion to
table the salary raise move.
. Both·motion1 died for lack or a se:cond:-
Janice Boer of Santa Ana, lone timt
critic of the board, led the attack.
Sbe charged that •County COunael
Adrian Kuyper had not told the board the
whole truth when he advised them that
they must pass a salary .ordinance im·
mediately because of the pauage of coo-
atituUonal 1mendment Proposition 12.
"1bis ii not true," said Mn. Boer. •r..t tbe people set your lllary through
an initiative. They will decide what you
are artb.''
Sbe contended that tbe Grand Jury la
.. u.npraeotallY.e_-2. _
. '""'-Ile a"""'•'"" l!l' a= wbo lfaf-hi'JOb ~ .... i'!f~(t-r
•~emor." 'jiee Cook, lomier N~ Beicb coun-
cilmen, urged bomf membert to
~Pli'ne acijon and take up the aalarY.
subjeet In a public session later.
Oare KeUy, chairman of Ille ·Hun-
tington Beach Cuuncll for Sen!ibl!. Tu·
ation (COST), charged !hat Sul*\'laot
Robert Battin, "holds Ille taxpayetl of
the county in contempt. 1bil will' nck So
unnoticed in the future,'' she threlttfted.
. Jim Townsend, president of the
Telephone Taxpayers Association of
Anaheim, threatened that if supervl!ort
did not repeal their action there would be
• taxpayers suit.
Only two penonA In the audience sup-
ported the supervisors. Norman Brock ol
Or~e charged that "these peoplt are aakina you to take the pay of a plumber.
You' are entitled to more than. $20)000 a
year."
His · remarks were greeted with loud
boos.
The other iupporter was Lee Podotat
of Orange, who challenged the audience
with, "Where were you when the
legi!lature wu refUJlng to raise the
supervisor!' salaries year after year'?"
He, too; was roundly booed. ·
Costa M-esa Lilfr~ry
Shut For Inventory
Bookworl!UI take not<: !he Caito M,..
downtown branch of the Orange County
Public Library will be cloeed Nov. 23
through Dec. 5 for annual inventory.
Librarian Gertrude Pearce says no
checked-out · materials will be due until
the facility at 566 Center St. reopens Dec.
7, but may be returned via the book drop
during the inventory closure.
0r ....
..
Weadler
YOU ahouldn 't need your ! IUD-
11 .... s Wednad1y sln<e tM IOll'
ctoudi and 'fOI ' will ahroud much
of Ille IOlu tlllmmer. Tempero.
ture1 of et on the • COi.it and 72
Inland wW pm-all.
JNSmE TOD.4. Y
Orange Countv tchooll are
:plo¢na "Zl Qturlion1" to . find
out-tollicA 1tudt!'tl Med tlw
mo&t help, ond 1ome .W,000
puplll will be quizzed. S<c Pogo B. •
'· •• --· -D
;
Catefotlel "'11 Include 1100 for a ...,. ·takes-formal actlO!I. ty or six claslrooms servtnc day lchool IOUlht by Poul R. Wllllama • fO< relluo~ penonol wu northboUnd on
lmum of 25 (rontage feet; $200 for stores Cutler went l.hrough a lengthy proctSS pupils, but the limit was tet •t S30 permlulon to operatt a ltOrage lot. 1t 218 ·Clll)'On Drive ne place of employ· •
with a maximum of Ml feet and '300 for of zubmittinl plans and appllcatlorui re-children. Vlctori1 St., for bOal.11 trailers and ment wtte,n it p out and collldtd 'ffth
... .. .. --. =-.. ...... =' .: 50 feet and ur. quired for the permit after a neighbor In other action Monday n1gbt, com-campers. 1nother hea westbound on Victoria
Judge! wll be pioneer Cost.I Mesan couple went before cowicilmen three _missioners: The qile1llon will be considertd a11in Stmt. ·. ,
M;rs. Goldie TeWlnkle, retiring City >lloiiths ago to emtrplaln. -Recomm.e tCf approval or I COi'" lfl tWo weekl, afier"'pl,llDtln( dtpiffinent...-.u'nll ntlt Ina: I kneir; I WI! 1\ttin1 in
Mon1ger Arthur R. McKWie and Cu~er claimed Ille 11"ipe took him noctlon In 1 ...,. .. e<ptlon permit IP' . autrlea to !he State Division of Hipw1ya a lleld," 1 d Sylvia K. Brsnnon. 16. or
Jonitime busineuman and former County totally by au.rprhtt, since they never p~ proved once before, aUowtn1 !dear o. 1bout l\ow much of t6e property Involved 2209 Amert 1n Ave,, Coata Mal, wbo
Suplnllor Cairo M. NelJOll. tealed tbt chloch1Ua ralslq to bJm Haiil>ll to COOltru<t a coautlltdal buildiNI 1'111 bt taliea for tbt NewPOrl P'rftway. manqecl to -Pl lnJlll"l' In 1J>a411h.
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....,. ..... ............. " -" -. -. ............. .,.,, --..
I
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•
RILEASED BY RUSSIANS
lrJf. Gett. McQuarri•
l'rom Page I
GENERALS. • • .. ' ''Nie frontier of the USSR IJld the d-"Pf iullt of tbe persona ·who ~ on
'board."
It said their re1eue waa ordered in
view of "the results of the investipUon
,..and · the r e g r e t. eiprtSled by t b e
)overnmenta of the United States and
':I:urkey; and also tatting into eon·
~ideration appropriate assurances from
their side."
· The Soviet ambasAdor to the United
.States. Aoatoly F. Dobrynin, informed
Secretary of State William P . Ros:ers
about 12 hours before the generals were
released.
Relations between the countries were
·strained during the detenUon. The SOviet.s
refused to ailo". U.S. officialJ to visit the
officers for five days in violation of a con-
sular treaty. ~ State Department sent
a aeries of complaints and last weekend
top-level U.S. diplomata stayed away
f""!' .S!>viel oblervanoes of the lllrd an-
'niveraary of the Bolsbevlk Rewlutioa on
llrden from the Whlte H,_,
;Newport Council
·:Votes to Amend
Bay Swap Policy
. '.
RETURNS TO TURKEY
M•I· Gen. Scherrer
Firm Unveils
'Spot Remover'
For Oceans
SAN DIEGO (BWJ -A syolem which
may IOOll be in use to clean up oil .Ueki
on .cceans and bays wu put lhrOUlb Ill
paces for newsmen Monday by Lockheed.
The system COftli~ mainly of a clever·
ly designed paddlewheel device which
skims oU of( the IW'face and pumps it
into ocntainers or other disposal l)'ltema.
Lar1e verllona: may soon be deployed
almg the nation'• coull 1board afmple
catamaran-type veuell which can be
towed tbroucb massive oil ellc:U.
Lockheed --and eniJneen • vented the system. IDd ~ are under
conlrad to the Gout Guard to detennJne
lta applcabll!ty.
Company olllcla!J ... In Sin rn.,. thta
.... t lo lhow a -ldni model to Navy
and AmerlCID Petroleum I n 1 t I t u t e
re~ntattves.
Iri the demonstraUon of the model for
newsmen, cnide oil wu poured into a
amall tank of w1te:r Jtraddled by the
No Decision
Yet in Hunt
Murder Case.
An Orange County §uperlor CoW't jury
we:nt into llll second day of deliberations
today with no verdict to ofrer in the
murder trial of Wiiiia Dean Hunt, a New·
port Beach socialite.
The panel emerged from the jury room
this morning just Jong enough to ask
Judge William Murray for clarification of
10me of the lengthy lnitructions they
received shortly before retiring Monday
afternoon.
There wl1 no indication during their
return that they were anywhere near
reaching a verdict. The panel too k a ,
lunch receu at noon.
Mrs. Hunt, 44, accuaed of the butcher
kn11e ldlllnc of bu wU!llzy bulband dur· lni a domestic diapute al their Corona
del Mir home, appeared outwardly calm
today and chatted with friends and
def-attorney Sidney lrmu oulalde
Judge Murray's courtroom.
Tbe aUr1ctlve, riven-haired woman
allegedly stabbed yacht b r o k e r •
sportsman Willis D. Hunt, 58, to clima1 1
quarrel that erupted over conduct of their
13-year-old d1ughte:r Dru.
Irmu has 1s.ked for 1cquittal of his
client, or, at the most, a verd1ct of in-
voluntary manslaughter.
Deputy Dblrlct Attorney Me1vin Jensen
asked the jury to return a verdict of se-
cond degree murder in a trial that began
with the stipul1Uon that the death
penalty woold not be applied.
Judj:e Murray 1e11t the jury to a Santa
Ana -mole! -y-nllfht. He wUI do ao
apln thil tvenlni H the panel faill to
ruch a verdict by the •upper hour.
Cooking Grease
Prompts B'laze
In Mesa Home
removal system. A .witch wu thrown· Blues caused when greue used In
and the paddlewheel begin to turn, its cooking Ignited from stove heat sent
• Newport Beach city councilmec Mo• unique vanes scoopina; up the oil, which Colta Mesa firemen racing to two homes
F.Y n1&ht voted to amend their four-year-then was piped away. Monday , the second alann coming just
Old policy whlch approved, Jn principle, Barrett Bruch, Lockheed's project moments after they had returned from
leader, said larger modell Ind prctotypes the first. the Upper Newp:rt Bly tidelands U· of the system are undergoing tuts at Damage to the home of Mrs. Harold
ebange between the Irvine Company and Lockheed Miasiles & Space Co. held-Hoopowitz, at 284 Bowling' Green Drive,
ORqe County. quarters Jn Sunnyvale, nev San Fran-was estimated at Sl,500, while the second
" The action came as councilmen re-· fire was considerably smaller. ; ' CISCO. • , ~ed their ltandlui po).k:iM durin& a "Many approaches to the oil-spill pr. Fire Departmen~ Battalion Chief Ron .moo thlt luted into early morntni blem have been advanced llnce the "Tor· Coleman said Jgnited ll'ease atop the
[Jkiun -· · ·i _ "-Y~' and &ant.I Barbara u.; stove at .the HoopowU1 home aent flames
1 ,,,;~;d po11 · ,;c;,,liadaJ;.;'~,-~i•"Briiit iillif."" -~ -;---~-llll ~ ceUlng and Into the
r • <!1 ' "From the data we've 11thend ao far aUic. · ~ mpporta tbe ~-~.the UP,Pef our system ippean to-hold more ~i.; A te~m of.t 14 firemen controlled the
,N"'POrt Bly ~~-P . IMI•....., . ..,.r!ICu!ariJ ; :fllt ""111 .W,J!i.il" "'1•teo. .
• lo produce _ . vs ' ...,...,._,Wlarpall<bflllliiTy· "'"Pillpli"liave to be almnely cardul
"to ,wde fbe. pattern · . RU,. when cooking with grease," Oilef
pper Bly art1.'' · . ~ llld ·Loclcheed bu worUd wtth Colem1n 1dded, uying molt 11uch fires
new:!!: WU-*" .the c;Uy, ~ riiany oU coriipanlU to dtttrmlne tbe1r ire rel1Uvely minor, bUt stlll 1 problem.
o1. ange. the Irvine Company oil-~ operations and requirementa. Victlm.s are mu1Uy preaent in cooking f.'!I.~ atate ~-k tosetber to produce the Nut month the firm will praeni ita fin-fires ond Immediately cail the Fire ~·:"": lllil be i:r-:m °: .':d dinff• to the Gout Guard, wilJclr II 1111-Departm<nl
Giber altema~ challlf dyln& the oil-oplll problem 00 a ... The earlier -· fire cauoed no sc-. ves. 11 .,. bu'-tual deatrudlon to the hom• cf Mn. Belle City dflclaJ.a could not be reached for onw1uoe: w. BlOllO?D it 2100 Federal Ave but smoke comment today, but Irvlne Company b • ed the ••lch ., opokesman Giibert FerllUIOll, vice pres-locaen N en, requirJni a touah
.. .
Mula You Samoyed_s
Mike Vkn Doren of Fountain Valley practices in
Costa M,esa field for sled racing season. A member
of lhe California Sled Dog Club, he races his
Samoyed dogs at Big Bear and atop Tram Way at
Palm Springs. Sled is on wheels since there was no
snow in Costa Mesa that day.
From Page I
DE GAULLE SUCCUMBS •••
anythlng of the sert."
Tonight the body of the former pres!·
dent was laid out in the living room of the
house in the brigadier general's uniform
be had treasured since World War IL
'The national ceremonies, for govern-
ment leaders and foreign dignitaries, will
be held In Paris at the same time.
French gqvernment officials aald De
G-ulle was stricken by a heart attack at
7:30 p.m. (1:30 p.m. EST Monday) just
u the evening news program was
•tarting on network No. 1 of the French
radio and television broadca.stlng system.
Word of his death was delayed until
morning when gendarmes In the tiny
village telephoned the Elysee Palace in
Parb:. Pruldent Georges Pompldou
broke the news to the nation with the
words : General de Gaulle is dead. France
Is a widow."
"Le Grand Charles," who considered
himself the incarnation of France, rallied
the defeated nation in World War II. He
saved France from civil war in 191)8 when
he emerged from retirement to become
president and end a military revolt stem·
ming [rom the Algerian war. And he sav·
ed It qain In 1968 when student-labor
uprisings again brought France close to
civil war.
He was president for It years unlil he
quit in April , 1969, when the voters re-
jected h1I plan for administrative reform.
In World War II be took. bis place In
history with Sir Winston Churchilt,-Josef
Stalin and Franklin D. Roosevelt. In the
postwar years he helped s h a p e the
course of European history for three
decades as he struggled to restore the
II'•ndeur of France.
On Jan. 16, 1952, he took note of the
fact that he, too, would someday die and
he gave Pompidou a handwritten docu-
ment that called for a simple fuueral
with "no music, no fanfare, nor bell·
ringing."
Jn death hi.a: wishes were to be
disobeyed. The funeral in Colombey-les·
Deux-Eglises: was to be simple as he
wl.lhed, but the government proclaimed
try. let us bow to the grief of Mme . de
Gaulle, of her chi ldren and
grandchildren.
"Let us promise to france not to be
undignified of the lessons which have
been given to us, and that, in the national
soul, De Gaulle will live former."
Members of De Gaulle's family told
government officials De Gaulle suddenly
fell forward in bis chair before the
television set and came to rest on a
bridge table where he had laid out the
cards for his evening game of solitaire,
the only game he allowed himself.
His son-In-law, Gen. Alain de Boissieu ,
told of De Gaulle's last minutes and said,
"General de Gaulle died as he wished :
standing up, still working." He meant
that De Gaulle had worked until the end
of the fifth volume of his "Memoirs of
Hope."
De Boissieu said De Gaulle spent his
last days working harder than he had
ever worked before. He began at 9:30
a.m. each day in his office ov!:rlooking
the countryside ami he worked Monday
as usual , finishing two chapters of the
fifth volume.
After writing In the morning he lunched
with his wife and then took his customary
walk through Colombey Park under a
gray, overcast sky. He wrote for a few
more hours in the afternoon and then
stopped to watch the evening news.
* * * Nixon 'Shocked'
Over De Gaulle,
Sets Paris Trip
New Irvine
Lines OK'd
By Neipport
The uneasy peace· between the Irvine
Company and city of Newport Beach
reported Monday h11 developed uhW a
formal truce.
The city council Monday night ap-
proved the proposed boundaries for the
planned city of Irvine and five minutes
later the Irvine Company backed off OD
it• opposition to the Collins anneuUon.
In a unanimous Vote, the councll
adopted a policy statement'zubmltted by
Councilman Carl Kymla approving the
revised Irvine boundaries filed last
month with the Local Agency Formation
Commission. .
In turn, Robert .Shelton, governmi!ntal
affairs consultant for the Irvine Co~
pany, then read a prepared statement
saying "The Collins annexation will not
be protested" by· th~ Irvine Iodusbill
Comple:i, fee owner of the property:
A controversy ovet the city's efforts to
aMex the 177-acre tract on MacArthur
Boulevard has raged for several mOnths
and included a threat by Irvine officials
that would take Newport Beach to court
if the anne'lation was approved.
The company had' mainta\fled it did not
want the property in Newport Beach, but
rather in it.. new city and tbal it bad tbe
right to make that deterrninaUon.
€olliris -Radio ·Company and _Newport
Beach cfficlals said lbat Collins' long-
tenn{(85-year) lease on the land gave it
the a.uthority necessary to nque1t the an·
nexation. •
The Newport Beach COW1Cil policy
statement contained a number of other
atipulatiops, however.
It indicates ,there may not be
wholehearted agr'ee.ment yet on the
ultimate southerly boundary of the new
city.
Idem of the company, said corporate Students Oppose cieallinl Job. communJcatiom: ta in agreement with tht
new policy.
"We can~t .make any aubltlntive com-C F Funeral Slate"d m"'I unW we ,.. the precl,. wonlln& OaSt reeway
of the city reeofution but from what you
nld It appean that what the city wllhes
to dO ii to estlblllh a master plan for
the Upper Bay includln& con1lderatioa1
The hi&h achool student! in the Harbor
Area, at lelit a 1oodly number of them,
don't want the Pacllk Coast Freeway to
be built.
For Executive
Arthur Davis
, Wednesday, Nov. 11 -Armistice. Day -
a day or national mourning. The cabinet
met In urgent session and .announced
there would be a religious ceremony 1t
Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris paraJlel-ini the simple country services.
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UP!l -Pres!·
dect Nixon, "shocked and grieved" over
the death of Gen. Charles de Gaulle, cut
short a Florida vacation today and
prepared to fly to Paris to attend state
memorial services for the former Frtnch
president.
T~e Florida White House said Nj1on
would break off his vacation and bead
back to Washington about B p.m. EST
tonight to get re1dy for hi.s twoday trip
to Paris.
The statement provides i'that the
ultimate boundary in the vicinity of San
Joaquin Hills Road be revised ao 11 to
assure conformance with sound plaMing
principles.''
The city also pledged not to actively
pursue annexation or any property in the
industrial complex north of the Collini
property, but reserved the right tO act
favorably on any annexation requested by
.. la ndowners and occupiers of the land."
ol all the alternatives.
"We're in agreement with that and
have been working with a city study com-
mittee eslablilbed for the purpose. The
acbange, ol course, provides the basl1
for a mister plan of the 1rea."
Aa outlined In the policy, the studies
will Include channel development and
use; land developme•t and use ; trans-
portation and traffic needs; public facil·
ities plan. including recreational and eco-
logical factors; a public utilllla pion ;
public land aequlsitioo rtqulrements and
a suggested fUnding och.edule.
•
DAILY PI LOT
OlAM9a Cl»ilT PVIWMIM CQMPAlf't
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M ...... Eftlflr c..--310 W.t ,.., StrMt
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They said so to the Newport Beach City
Council Monday nl1ht as a dele1ation of
Newport Harbor Hlgh ae.nion presented
petiUons signed by more than 1,700
students.
Brad Johnlon, NHHS student leader
who presented the pet1Uons, aald most of
the signaturu: were obtained at Newport
Harbor and Costa Mesa Hl&h School.
Althou1h alklna the city "to proteet
our environment" ~ "preserve the
small town atmolphere," and 11yina a
freeway would allow the automobile to
"dominate: our soclety," the peUUon did endone the fortha>ming nlf.-dum on
the superh11bway.
Escaped Youths
Turn Selves In
A pair of oranae County Juvenile Hall
uc1pee1 turned themltlves in to Costa
Meu. police Monday, after one ni&ht of
cold, hungry freedom .
The boys, one 14, from TulUn, and the
other 13, from Fullerton, telephoned the
station and were picked up at 191.b Street
and Monrovia Avenue by Officer Harlin
Paule)'. ,
Orup County SherlH'1 depuU11 """'
notified to canctl a pner1I bro11dc11t for
tht eacape11, who Wtrt returned to
Juvonlle Hall lo await adilUonal charlll
of escape.
A-uto at OCC Looted;
Losa Put at 8800
One of the hMvleot loltel IUltalnld In
lhe contlnulnl rub of car bur1larlt1 1t
the Or1n1a Coest Colltc• parklnc lol wu
logod 1ry Costa M ... pollcl Monday,
with llllO In loot atol .. .
Torry f\. WhlllOtd. of Anaheim, told Jn.
vestigatorl he left a '500 t1pe rteerdtr
and ilOO camtra hidden .under 1 blatlktt
on the IUL of hfl vtblcle, wbieb w u
imlocbd.
A mtmorl1l funeral ttrvlce for promi-
nent Orqe Cciunty industrial executive
and Shriner Arthur C. Divis, of Newport
Be1ch, wlio died Saturday 1t 12, will be
held in Anaheim Wed1eaday.
Mr. Davia, Of 111 Via Geno1, Lido Isle,
was vice prealdent of. the Audio Controls
Division of LTV Lin( Allee, which Is
headquarteftd Jn Anaheim ,
M1IOl'llc rttu will be at 2 p.m. at Baa:·
aott'• Chapel of the Bello, with_ Ml Oliva
Maoonlc Lod11 IOI, of Burbank, olficllt·
"'fi.. family requtoll no vllltaUon prior
to the •rvloe ind sugMta memorW
contrlbuUOlll to the Al Malalkah Shrine
Crippled Chlldrel'• H01pital or the Sal··
vatlon Army, in lieu ot flowen.
Mr. Divis w11 also a member of Al
Malalkah Shrine.
He leavM hit wife, Vlr1ini1 : J0111. An· drew, ol Buena Park ind Leonard, of
Newport Beach: d1upter1, Mr1. Sharon
Wright, or Maryl1nd and Mrs. Melody
Palmer, of Colla Men: a brother, Ken·
neth Davis, of Pasadena: sisters, Mrs.
Vir1inia H1mtr, of Wt1t Los An1eles and
Mrs. Bttnice CUrler, of P'alrolk1 1-.d two
tT•ndchildren.
New Optimist
Club Organizes
A -Opllmlot lnttmaUoaal lll'VICO
club branch fonnad by Ja-
Amarlcana, bul not Um!tad lo tham, Is
now meetlni -kly and will llqe Ill
charter lnat.lllaUon nett tll!)ftth.
TJUed the oranp eo.11 0pilmlll t!ub.
!ht chapter will meet Dee. I to bt Jn.
dudld lnlD the worldwide or1anhaUon,
led by l'Taldlnt Rua Yamqa. "Frland
of the Boy" ii the Optlmllt motto. Otha: omcer• ire Make Tat1t1 and
Mas Miyake, vice p,.sldentl; Ken
Vonemur1, trtuurer; Bob Tanaka,
aecretary-dlrector, ind remalnlnl ·dire<>
tors Jamtt Okld1, Lucky Yant1t11 Tam
Maruy1ma, Silo Muial and TOlll Takata. ROY-llfrata Will lit •rpant-awnm
Ind Iii cllfrl• of club equlpmut •
Pompldou led the nation in mourning
ind in a lunchtime television speech he
told Frenchmen :
"In 1940, General de Gaulle saved our
honor. In 1944, he led us to the liberation
and to victory. Jn 1958 he saved us from
civi l war. He gave France her ln-
sUtuUons, her place in the world .
"Jn this hour of mourning for the coun·
Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler stressed that Ni xon is going to
France "to pay his respects to a great
leader who was a personal friend and a
man of greal stature." He emphasiied
Nixon will not conduct any official
business with the other world leaders·who
will attend the services, including Soviet
Premier Alexei Kosygin.
Truth
It also promises "to remain neutral In
all other matters concerning municipal
boundaries within the subject area in the
vicinity of the Orange County Airport."
Shelton, in his sLatement, said he
wanted to "express appreciation for the
efforts of council membera In developin1
the policy."
or Consequences?
Somatim•• tha truth hurts! Wa h•·· loot .. OCCHion•I 1tla oy not te!ing • cuslornor wlitt
ht w•nttd fo hHr.
Wo might point out thot • customer would be better off to P•Y • r.ttle more for our ,..i;.
Der podding than buy • chHpar. mushy pod Iha~ fMk like you ore walking oo b.lloons. The '"b.~
loon" pad hurts tha corpet b•cking, couses stretchin<J, end ruins seems. Ako, this ~ding often
fltttens out after a while.
AdditionoUy, we might +.ft you that some corpet. fibers .,.
fiber th•t worh in ona "tarlura, might "bomb in •nothtr.
more prectic:ol tlion otliars. A
Feel frH to con for advico. An of Our .. i.. people havt hoil ulonsive' nperiance in !fie
1arvic:a and of this b~int11 :-end •l+.r al -ihe mori lmporiant lhlo9 wa """ offer, ih•t hardly
•nyooa else d-••• ii 1trv•c•I
.-------~
•,
UNTA ANA, OU.N•I tultlN C.it •• ,
ALllN'I
llD HIL-L CAINTI
I DMHtln
1U74 Jm.., T ...... c.lf.
••Wm
ALDEN's--
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663' l"lllcelltlti Ave.
COSTA MISA
'46-4838
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Saddlehaek
voe. 63, NO. 269, 2 SECTIONS. 28 PAGeS ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1970 TEN CENTS
Beleaguered Supervisors· Hike Pay to $19,200
By JACK BROBACK
01 tlte Dtllly ,1111 Iliff
Orange County supervisors this morn·
ing voted themselves a raise to $19,200 a
year, and then listened to a barrage of
criticism unprecedented ln c o u n t y
history .
For the next two and one-hall hours,
the board was subjected to acid comment
by citizens punctuated with boos, cheers
and catcalls.
, The move to raise the supervisors
ea
•
Developers
Of· Hospital
Ask.Waive~
Developers for San Clemente General
Hospital will come before city officials'
officially for the first time Wednesday in
a pair of bearings on waiving some park-
ing requirements and a perm.it for a 12&-
bed convalescent hospital.
The developers, ·representing the group
which bu deveJoped Chapman General
Hoapital in Orange, seek a variance that
would erase 167 ·parking spaces.
The remaining 32l planned parkinl
j. lloUI would be adequate they have said.
Under existing city regulations a
separate number of spaces would be
needed for an acute hospital section and
• convalescent hospila.I.
San Clemente general spokesmen have
Aid that many would not be needed.
Th e second hearing deals with a use
permit to allow a convalescent hospital in
a commercial zone. ·
The proposed hospital-developel'JI
piomise opening by the end of next yeilr
-would be built at ~ Camino de los
Mares on the northerly city limits of San
Clemente.
The land measures 30 acres near an ex·
lsting utility storage yard. The Parcel i.s
aplit by los Mares and the yard.
Vacant land left after initial phases of
hospital construclion will be put to in·
terim use.
Besides city approvals for their
development,, San C1emente General will
require a host of state approvals which
are expected within weeks.
Dr. Ralph Graham, head of the
development group, bas said the basic
plans for the San Clemente facility
follows the existing hospital in Orange,
thus allowing rapid plan approval by the
State Department of Public Health.
Fresh plans require several months
before approval .
Groundbreaking for the 136-bed board·
and care facility and the convalescent
hospital is expe(:ted in December.
•
Hairdresser Slain
LONOON (UPI) -Hairdresser Andre
"Harry" Mizelas, whose cUentele in·
eluded queen.s and princesses, was found
shot to delth Monday in hia red Triumph
sports car in Hyde Park. He was the se·
cond prominent businessman slain in
London in a month.
Weather
You shouldn't need your sun-
glasses Wednesday sin~ the lolf
cloud! and fog will shro1id much
ol the solar shimmer. Tempera-
tures of 66 on the coast and 72
inland will prevail.
INSWE TODAY
Orange Countu schools art
-trnlo11h1g...,!!.21-Quu.tian.s" to ftnL
out whicla 1tuden.tl nttd tht
mOJt Mlp, and 1omt 50,000
pupiU wtll bt qviutd. Set Page
8. _..__, -. Mlltffl ,..... •
H•lltfltl .._ •..I _ ........ ,.,.,.i. ...,... • """' , .. " IMldl Mtrtl.tl »11 Tlllft\lllll 11 -. -·• ....._. ....... ,.,. --..
salJJ')' $4,200 a year from the prese nt
$1~,000 was made by .supervisor William
Phillips of Fullerton.
Supervisor Daviq Baker o( Garden
Grove tried to block the move, offering a
substitute motion to send the problem to
the "Grand Jury and another motion to
table the salary raise move.
&th motions died fo r lack of a second.
Janice Boer of Santa Ana, long time
critic of the board, led the attack.
She charged llllll County Counsel
Adrian Kuyper had not told the board the
whole truth when he advised them that
they must pass a salary ordlnanct lm·
mediately because of the passage or con--
stituti<>nal amendment Proposition 12.
"This Ls . not true," said Mrs. Boer.
"Let the people set your salary through
an initiative. They will decide what you
are worth."
She cootended that 'tbe Grand Jury is
not a representative group.
"They are appointed by a judge who
ha.s his job because he was a friend of the
governor."
Dee Cook, former Newport Belch coun--
cilmen, urged board members to
postpone action and take up· tht salary
subject in a public session later ..
Clare Kelly, chairman of the Hun-
tington Beach Cu uncll for . Sensible Tu·
ation (COST), charged that. Supervisor
Robert Battin, "holds the taxpayers of
the county in contempt. This will not go
UMoUced in the futtfre;" she threatened.
Jim Townsend , president of the
Telephone Tupayers Associ8tkm of
Anaheim, threatened that if supervisors
did not repeal their .action there would be
a taxpayers suit.
Only two persons. in the audience au~
ported lhf;: aupervllors. Norman Brock of
Ora.n&e charged tblit "these people are
uking you to lake Ille pay ol •·plum!Mr.
You .are entitled to more than '20,000 a
year."
His remark.! were greeted ·witb Joad
boos.
The· other supporter wu Lee P~
of Orange; who challenged the ~
with, "Where were you ~ ~
legislature was refusing to ral8e the
supervisors' aalaries year aft.er year?"
He, too, WU round!)' booed.
s e -au e
•
Nixon'• Sigti On lee
San Clemente city councilmen have agreed to
change the name of Via de Frente to Avenida Del
Presidente. That's because Mr. Nixon 's ·Western
White House is located there. The fetching signs are
ready. Marci Erickson, city manager's secretar.y;
displays one. But they're stored, waiting peorbe.ps
for the President to dedicate his street? '
Serra School
Auditorium
OnWayDown
Serra School's auditorium-a Ca pistrano
Beach commu11ity meeting hall for more
than 50 years -will be demolished soon
to make way for expansion of the school
district's transportation center.
San Clemente architect Leon Hyzen is
planning the redevelopment of the Serra
School site, now serving as adminstrative
center of Capistrano Unified School
District
The old building -which does not meet
state standards of construction to with-
stand earthquakes -was abandone.d for
classroom use six years ago. and became
the central administrative offices at that
time.
Two newer buildings had been ll.!ed for
classrooms for lower primary and
kirKtergarten until this -year. They now
house a pre-school cl a SS temporarily, W)·
ti.I. the demolition project begins.
Adminstrators will move into portable
office buildings and the two newer
classroom structures. ·
District spokesman Joe Wimer at·
tributed the demolition projtd to "ex-
treme insurance costs" and to a tw<>-year
limit alloWed by the atate· for destruction
of .the condemned building.
Wimer said he especta the project. to
begin in February.
Soviet Armenia Returns
U.S. Generals :to Turkey
'
ANKARA, Turley (AP ) -Two U:S.
Army generals and a Turkish colorieJ
returned to Turkey from Soviet Armenia
today, three weeks after their light plane .
landed 12 miles across the border and
they were interned.
The Turkish Foreign Ministry said the
men were "heaJthy and in good shape."
Tass:, the Soviet news agency, said the
generals' U.S. Army pilot also was
Cotmty Planners
OK Mobile Park
A mobile home park has been approved
for El Toro by the Orange County Plan·
ning Commission and two more are being
requested despite attempts by the All.so
Homeowners Association to block trailer
w ning.
The commission has granted a use
permit lo Raymond Prothero Jr. to build
a 492-space trailer park on 60 .acres on
either ;side of a planned extension of
~uirlands boulevar<I tbrolllh El Toro.
. ' released and would fiy back .. their .1ix-
seat, twin-engine plane as sOO-n as
weather permitted.
A Foreign Ministry source said Turknh
and Soviet generals and civilian officials
negotiated at the border town of
Kizilcakcak for nine hours, pfesumably
working out details of the release. The Of·
fictrs were freed at 7 a.m. and ·were
~riven to Kars, 40 miles southw.est of the
Soviet front I er, to take a Turk i 1 h
military plane to Ankara.
'Kiz.ilcakcak is halfway ' between Kars
and Leniqakan, in Soviet Armenia, where ltie officers' pla'ne landed · and they· were
held .
Maj. Gen. Edward C. D. Scherrer, 57,
chief of the U.S. military misaion in
Turkey; Brig. Gen. Claude M. McQuarrie
Jr., 46, head of Scherrer's Army aectlofi,
and Col. Cevat Denli, a Turkish liaison
officer, were inspecting .fnllitary in·
s.tallations near the Soviet border on Oct.
21 and were on a flight from Erzurum to I~ars. The pilot, Arrity Maj.· James P.
Russell, 42, told con11ular officiall· high
windJ caused him to miJcalculate h!J
course. The U.S. government contended
the plane 1trayed aaoas the-border.
'Speed' Used • Ill
De Gaulle's
Death Ends
Long Ca1·ee~
COLOMBEY • LES • DEUX · EGLISES,
France (UPI) -Gen. Charles de Gaulle
died Monday night of a heart attack in
his country home here where he had lived
1n seclusion since he was rejected by the
nation he had thrice saved from disaster.
De Gaulle, who would have celebrated
his 80th birthdl1 on Nov. 22, made his
mark on history in World War JI along
with· Franklin D. Roosevelt, Josef Stalin,
Winston ctilirchill and Chiang Kai-sbek.
otily Chlant,11'oW 83\ •ui-vlves. ·
.;he.:tormer-pre·sident had just dealt _· _
himsell a hand of solitaire while waltipl
in, front of the television aet for the, evu-
lng news when. he alumped forward. Hll wife;Yvb~ne:called ~·doctor and'a priept
btlt be was dealt when they arrived.
He had ltft:his own testament, calling
for a :iiimple fune;ral . with "no music, no
fanfare, no bell ringing." The funeral
Tburaday. will be just that, .but 'lbe
government was holding m e m o r 1 a I
ae'.rvicei.it.the !lame time In Notre Dame
Cathedral io 'Paris and President Nixon
was among world leaden who said they
would attend.-
1Measage1 of condolence poured in from
1tatesmen throughout the world -from
N,ixon who ha.iled his qual jty of vision,
fr.om the leaders of France'• former col·
onies in Africa, from the Pope, from tha
Germans with whom he reatored Franco-
German friendship. ·
De Gaulle had lived in aloof retirement
In Colombey-les·Deux-Egli.ses since April,
1969, when French voters rejected his pet
proposal for administrative reform. He
worked quieUy en his memoirs and lived
the simple life cf a· villager.
Father Claude Jaughey. the village
priest who administered the last' ritu,
said, "the general will receive ·a plain
funeral , like any ether villager or a
lumberjack. This will be a ·classless
fuaeral as the general always wished."
Vicinino al Mar Chili
Hosts Autumn Ball
·San Clemente's ttali~Amerlcan social
club will hold ita amual autumn ball
Saturday in the Elks Lodge featuring
awing music by the Rcyal Knights.
'lbt thinHnnual affair sponsored b)'
Vlclnino al Mar will begin • at t p.m. A
midnight buffet alao will be featured .
Tickets, at $3 per person, are ayallable
by calllna; Lou Poncino at 492-2055 or Lee
Derenil al 412-7111.
WWII
. ' . liPl .T ......
· • FRENCH kEAD!R DIES
Gen. Charles de Gaulle
Asse~bly GOP
Votes ·for Unity
In .Speaker Post
SACRAMENTO, "(UPI) -A!semb)y
~pubilcaris have voted to.stand,united in
the current spea.i.enhip fight in an effort
to-make the best dtal for themselves.
But GOP leadets said Monday· Jt-would
be nearly impossible to get all YT
Republicans to b.lck the· 1 a m e
oe~atic candidate.
'Democrats: won 43=J7 control of the Asse~btY In lasi week's. e1ec:ti0n. • ' ' t Rep'lblil:ans . had held a 4().39 ~· wilh . . . one vaca,ncy.
With the rrew m(jotity, Democrats
received · tbe · I?Ower · to · elect :their own
speaker replacing : Re p.u.b 11 can
Allembl)'llWI -T •. MOIUlllD. of
Tracy. .
Thue are seven oemocrauc candidates
for the apukei-ship. j It takes 41 votes to
elect a speaker: The election will be held
when the 1971 ·legislative setaion ~
vents .in January.
Democ:r1tic candidates for th e Recycle Project
Initiative Told Japanese Used Pills to Bolst.er 'Fighting Spirit' speakership have ·been aolic:lting both
Repul>lican and llomocrallc votes In an
effort to win tho leoderiblp pool.
ANN ARBOR, Mich. AP -A Japanese when Japanese pharmaceuUca1 com-
Collecting of paper,.c:ans and botues lclentist aak! MondAy the world'1 nrst. panles were left with huge atockl of
for recycling Is a current competiUon of epidemic of modern ctruc abuse was trig· amphetamines unued by the. alr force
Crown Va.JID'Ji<h®blu~enUl,_wilh .. • ""=~ge<ed-by-un-d-olocicplieo-ol-"cpeed ••II.other nil!ltary uni!J whith had been
au graphed baseball! the ptiu1. pills" u~ to_stimulate JJ!pan~ soldiers..-i8suin& the aruc-t-O::Inlit:e r-n1ttttn
Angel CNUlelde.r Bill Voss has pro-in World War It. IJ)irit. ~
m!Jed lbe aulographed ball for the stu-Dr. Masaaki Kate ol lbe Japaneae Na-Kato added ' "'l'hel< -ponio, ttlod to
den~ who co!lecla the most aluminum. · tiooal JnaUMe «Mental Heelth made tell the.e large stocb of metbam·'
The. newspaper, aluminum and glass the report lo • "Piper preeented at the. pbetamints, propagandising thatithta wu
colleclioo ii. a aludeal and teadlor effoil Jn1ernallooal S)'lllpoollun on DnlC Abule a drug ,ti) Inspire the liflhl)llJ splrt!J In
to improve lhe oovlronment al the Unlvtl'lity of Michlpa. dally life, without klloW!ng ft bad lertible
Teacher Elaine Stork notes °"' ton ol Kato explained llllll hit C0W1ley was dependency producing olfeda." ·
newspapm recycled uves 17 tree.. "We Jett with huge ttocks of amphet"mlnt1 He said the drup' .benefit. were a·
know wbal .,..,. dmo to our oarlh. our when Ille war mded. The drup, he ,.Id, tolled by returning war veterana and Its
alr, ourlelve1; we are taklnt the first w~to the air force and other u.ae spread among the toclal frift&t
ilfps In Ill• loo& walk loward the goal of Japa...., military unill to bolilirllie groups, such 11 "Bo-lana;-rmdllle,
maldng the -Id fit for our cblldr<n," ligbllng oplrlL ontelllner1, racial mlnortllal a• 4 ~ Kato Aid hla..111-1 -lt3111tt • ·, J!!Voollt cldlllq~
... ,. '
Drug abuse and suicidt ratea in Japan
~ked luring the 10 years following
World W1r1 II , Kato Wd. Accompainyint
thil: trend. he added, was a growing
-~~..J.-· 01poclalJy lbe youlh. ,
The epidemic · pealced In JIM , when , there wore ilq,000 · 1bulen In Japan ..
10me , 200,000 of ·whom ahowtd llXM
paychoUc 1ymptoms, he slated. , · LacaJ oonlrola,coupled wlfll Improving
naUonal morale may have ended tbe c:trua 1
epidemic Kato spoculaled. Bot, he added:
"'J'be v1oltDt, 1ilfeujve behavior among
:y<111lh became manliest since llllll Umo,
end the nuinbor..olevloienl crlma lll10l!J
!hem . lncreUed after Ille reducUoa of
atlmW..1 -and llliclclo. .,
...
Republicans, ·meeting • bthilld clwed
doon •sunday, in a Loa .~el,el, hotel,
voted to remain wtllied and 1ot toplller
again )rithin a few .... b to try' to )Oil
-•-llttile ---dote.; But one Repul>llcan -wllo aaked not to
he lilonli!iOd -· polnled out Ult .. ,...,..
of unlty"•wu ''relatttely rmMr\in&~"
bt<ause ii ~ bt almaj ~;tO
l•l t,...lhirdl ot Ult GOP caocua lo -
port Ille wne Domoc:raUC Cllldldalo.
The Domocrolic -.r.jen' (O< U.,.jab
aro AllOmblyman Bob ·-Ill y111 Nuys. Kon Cory ol Ganlea GrOvt, Coi1o1
Bee ol Haywar<I; Jolin T. KnOI al. lljdlo
mond, Johll L. -al. S.. y,......,
Vlnconr 'l110iiiu 11f s.. """° .llld•ir.i llocllonald al. OJai. . ,.
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SC
New Arrests Made in County Drug Ring Ca$C
87 ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Ot .. o.ir, '""' siJrt
A MW -·a111roots .. mm!J>I from
lhe .Od. I nld C>1 a ...iat1at ModjeW
~ headquarte ot what authorities aUta:e was the largest drug smuggling
riDC in California history was aMOUnCed
loday.
abe latest suspects are charged with
owpltaey in warrants Issued by the
<>ranae (:ounty District Attorney's office
Md announced by Newport Beach police.
They wtto Identified as:
City Chief
Studying
Fire Units
By JORN V ALTEJtZA
Of !IHI Dal~ Pl»! lltft
A proprietary fire department similar
to the pioneering concept of Scottsdale
.\fiz., would be low on the priority list ol
tuggestions for San Clemente, City
Manager Ken Carr said today.
After touring the unusual department
In the Southwest city recentJy, Carr said
the Jdea there "is basically similar to
what we have in the city right now, ex·
ttpt for the unusual aspect of private
oWnership.''
The city manaeer is preparing a detail-
ed study on 111Uealed methods of Im·
proving and e'J)&llding fire aerivces in
San Clemen!<.
The Scottldale trip covered one of
R:Veral 11JUested IO}Utions.
in lhat city, Ille depsrtment Is owned
by its chief, who contracts with the city
of nearly 111,000 persons.
But that depsrtment bu only six full·
time R!!l'IOMel, Carr •IJ>lalned.
The re1t of the flrefl&btlng force Is a
basic volunteer unit whose members are
paid by Ille hour when they are flgbttni
fires. Equfpmen~ Carr added, ... ms to be
moetJy surplaa culled from cutofU from
military depols and other f I r e
depsrtmentl.
What seems atpraent on the top of the
list for San Clemente's fire department
&0lutlon ii the tradJUonal expansion of 1
deportment into a new headquarters.
San Clemente Fire Chief Merton W.
Hackett favors a l:' of building a new
headquarten but! · next to the exlsling
off1cel mxt pr-al the citlc cent<r. _ The bullcllbl. Jlacketl Aid, could be
liullt with funds already buclgeled for a
..... beadquarlm. ;
. 5alatlea for .... full.lilJ!O firemen.
""-· would ba ... 1o """" from ollllr --·· ,The ~ ot the department
buDdinp would allo serve another
.,..._ -.._ion of the police depart.
inent Into vacated fire offices.
Lana:·ranJe plans call for use of the ex·
flUng fire truck storage garage u more
jail cells and an expanded records and
detective Jeetion.
Stieb of records and de~ve offices
recently moved into Ille lut remaining
1pace of the department - a squad
meeting and storage room.
Carr said his report would be forthcom-
ing someUme within the next month or
two. Among the other alternatives being
eonsidered are contracting for a special
service district with the county -a plan
which already has drawn disfavor
because of ill high CO!l.
Actor Burton Feted
LONDON (UPI) -Queen Elizabeth in·
vest.eel actor Richard Burton as a Com·
mander of the British Empire today as
his wife Elizabeth Taylor looked on. The
orchestra of the Welsh Guards played
"'Men of Harlecb'' as Welshman Burton
accepted the decoration from the queen.
Today was Burton's 45th birthday.
DAILY PiLOT
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C .. '9 MIM S.. Cle•llte
oa:ANGE COAST rutLl$HING COMPANY
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J•cl: a. cm..,
Vlct ""*"'er.If o..a1 MIMttr'
lh6ni11 IC.ml EllUW
JhorriH A. Mur,llt111e
Ml!ll!lllW ••ltW'
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Susan Seminar ond Diane N•rrls-;--both
of 20I RoM Lue, Cool.I Meas, Lloyd Ort
Jr., of San Clemeni., and Georae Caw,
who WU amoted at a Modjelka Callyon
ruidence.
IavNt111ton 'aald tt waa not the home
ol prlocipal llUSpecl Thomas J. Skelly Jr ..
52, who maintained I.be allea:ed narcotics
ring headquarters at 28532 Modjeska Can-
J'Oll Road. .
Police claim 1 cache of bombs and
other illegal weapons was confiscated
during the raid staged joinUy by federal,
1t.te ana local law entorce·menhsenctea.
Newport llooch pollce said complel<
detalil al qea and •ddtulel for the lateat .._ a Iola! of 43 defeodantl ...,.
MOtld WUb tbt eue Wll't DO& a vailable.
Ort'• Sin Clemente ~e yttJded a kl.lo
of marijuana, according to investlgaton,
who said they also found a small amoW'lt
al Casas' canyon residence.
The newest arrests came one day after
10 of the original 39 arrestees allegedly
involved in the $500,IXJO.per-week in
ternational operation appeand in court to
offer pleas.--. ---..:!11le)'.~ othln -were lndicttd-by the
Skelly, the alleaecl rin&leader1 was Oranae County Grand Jury OCt. 15 oo a
sciledultd !or trial Dec. • in Oranae seriu of ciw1tt lncludlq -Ion
County Superior Court after enltthig a and pouealM lar ale al narcotics.
pit.a of Innocent • dangerous drug.I, marijuana and unlawful
He bu been he.Id at Orange County Jail weapons.
since the raJd in Ueu of $100,000, one oJ Officers or the State Bureau o(
the hiJbest bail bond figures set In coun(y Narcotics Enforcenierit and other agen-
history. · cies conliacated bombs, ammlUl.IUOn and
Wendy S. DeMericb1 also known by the· a machlnegun from the castle-like com·
last name of Prenty, entered a similar mune in the picturesque canyon.
plea and was ordered to appear Feb. 24 They allo monitored more than 1,00>
to stand trial. telephone calls to the premises during a
For Guard
mere--~-eet-perlocH>efore-..Jdlng~
residence..
Stagefed by the scope of ·the ,a!Jeled
dMI( d,.lershlp, tnvest11aton asfd Its
tentacles reached to age.11ts and suppliers
In Afghan!Stan, Russia. Gennany, and
South America, as well as Canada and
Mexico. ,
Huge quantities Of mai'ljuana', cocaine,
hashish and thousand.! of dru1 pills of all
kinds were seized in the Modjeska CM--
yon raid.
· lo· .,•
f-...... --.......... ..,.--1 •• , '•. J----------;~:------· Laird Imposes
Training Order
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WfST COVINA
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COMPTO 1::9 ---,J_ h<'·"'> r I Q '• --,. fm ,.,,, -."1 J I!",• ,
WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary ol
Defense t.1elv\n R. Laird today ordered
additional riot control training for Na·
tional Guardsmen and Reservists and the
insurance of protective face masks and
riot batons for riot assignments.
use in riot situations.
Friedheim said the added training will
mean extra drills and will about double
the time now devoted to riot control
training .
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Pentagon oUicials said Laird will ask
Congress for an additional S20 milDon to
pay for the new equipment and extra
training.
P e n t a go n spokesman Jerry W.
Friedheim was asked whether this action
was taken as a result of a Guard-student
confrontation last May at Kent State
University.
The May Incident "obviously heighten·
ed the C()ncem for the protection of the
guardsmen," he replied.
Four Kent State students were killed at
a time when guardsmen on tbe Ohio cam·
pus said they feared for their lives.
Ir Congress approves the PentagMl's
request, Guardsmen wiU receive 140,000
face shields and batons and U01tm· pro-
tective vests.
Firm Unveils
'Spot Remover'
For Oceans
SANTA ANA REAL ESTATE DEVELOPER PROPOSES AIRPORT (ARROW) OVER FUTURE FREEWAY
Developer Reg Wood Wiii Offer D11l9n for Jet Tr11fflc to Superviaor1 Nov. 17
A state grand jury absolved the
guardsmen of blame for the death!, but a
presldenUal ccmniission c.illed t h e
guards' action "unnecessary, unwar·
ranted and unexcusable."
Asked If the Guardsmen would be pro-
vided with other nonlethal weaporis in ad·
dition to th~ batons he replied that
although research is continuing in this
area, authorities feel that there isni
anything safer or more effective than the
tear gas now used in riot situations.
SAN DIEGO (BWJ -A sysl<m which
may soon be in use to clean up oil slicks
on oceans and bays was put through its
paces for newsmen Monday by Lockheed.
The system consists mainly or a clever-
ly designed paddlewheel device which
skims cil olf the surface and pumps it
into containers or other dl!posal systems.
Large versions may soon be deployed
a long the nation's coasts aboard simple
catamaran·type vessels which can be
towed through massive oil slicks.
Northern County
Site Proposed
For New Jetport
A possible . lite for an Orange County
jetport tliif-bas never been seriously
studied by the various conaultanta hired
hr. \he county is· waiting for action, .ac-
cording to·Superviaor David L. Baker.
He proposes use of the area betwetn
Carbon Canyon on the north and Prado
Dam on the Santa Ana River on the
aouth.
"There is a ridge that can be levelled
to fill an adjoining canyon and it wouJd
make an ideal jetport for several
reasons," says Baker.
"The cost of the land would run about
$2,000 to $4,000 an acre, the fill although
expensive would not bring the cost
anywhere near the value of most other
county land proposed, and it is a clear
area."
By "clear" the supervisor e1plaiM that
zoning control is available in the takeofr
area of the proposed facility and in the
approach area.
"'Ille s\trrounding area is now used for
livestock grazing and oil production,''
Baker adds. "Land which can easily be
zoned for a future use compatible to jet
planes."
Baker does not think the proposed Bell
Canyon site in the southeast part of the
county is "bad." It was the selection of
the Parsons report which comes before
the board of supervisors for public hear·
ing Nov. 17.
"There is still plenty cf open space
around the Bell Canyon site and I think
annoyance to residents In the coastal
area would be minimal. The jets should
be ve.ey high before lhey reach built up
areas," Baker sald.
Supreme Court
Urged to Rule
On Death Penalty
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Two attorneys
urged the Supreme Court Monday to set
new rules for jury practices in cap1tal
punishment case! that could affect the
fate of an estimated 550 prisoners new in
Death Row cells across the country.
But the federal government and
Callfomia told the court that the lawyers
failed lo show any cons11tutlonal reason
Ior cbanglng present Jury pracUces.
Two cases lnvolvlng death row defen-
dants in California and Ohio are im.
lilfdlililyarusue. But"NCOurl'l"tllltng.
which will be made later Jn thi11 term, Is
expected to affect all capltal penaJty
catet. In anticipation of the courl ruling,
ont of the 41 statts that have capital
punlsbment Jaws hu not carried out an
execution ii.Dee June 2. 1967. The Supreme Court heard Ihm boon
of argumtnt& Monday.
Attarnt)'I Herman F. Stlvin of Beverly
Hills and John J. Callahan of Tcledo.
Oblo, both represenUn& men on Deatb
Row. urged tht. court to 1pe.U out stan·
datcls for Jurlts in determlnlnJ when the
dealll penally ii •pPllcal1lt.
Real Estate Man to Offer
Chino Hills Site for Airport
Only those Guard and Reserve units
with a civil disturbance mission will be
affected by the new orders and undergo
the extra training.
This will affect units in most of the na-
tion's major cities. It is the first time
they will receive special equipment for
Lockheed scientists and engineers In·
vented the system and now are under
contract to the Coast Guard to determine
its appicability.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of lfll Dalrr Plllf St.ff
While Orange County supervison: study
the Parsons report 'on airport sites. a
Santa Ana real estate broker has come
up with a siU: for a regional airport in the
Chino Hills area near the San Bernardino
County line.
Reg Wood, developer of the plan, said
he will present his proposal to the
supervisors at their Nov. 17 hearing on
the Parsons study.
As outlined by Wood, the airport. which
would be capable ot handling 747 jet traf·
fie, would be located in the pasture lands
on the Orange County side ot the line.
midway between Carbon Canyon Road
and the Riverside Freeway.
In a brief report prepared on the site
for Wood's firm by engineering con·
sultants Voorheis, Trindle and Nelson,
selection of the site is explained:
"The Chino Hills area as depicted in
this study was selected as a primary site
due to Its geographical proximity to four
counties. It is remote from densely
populated areas, even though readily ac·
cessible to the metropolitan area which it
will serve.
"The Chino Hills area contains nearly
25,000 available acres which will provide
adequate property for the airport proper
and suppoi:ting industries and services.
"It oonlalns a minimum of fixed struc-
tures to be affected by the construction cf
an airport. The proPQ!ed elevation of the
runways (1,000 feet) will produce
minimum noise pollution to the sur-
rounding populated areas from take-Off
and landing operations."
He said he bas not tried to project the
cost of the proposed airport. "I imagine
it will be very expensive, but that's the
kind of thing that can be done lf the plan
is going to be given serious con·
sideratlon," he explained.
Wood, who represents property owners
in the area, frankly admits his plan is
being profrered for economic reasons.
"My firm Is on retainer lo the cwners
cf about 12,000 acres OD or near the pro-
posed airport.
"Considering the l r o u b I e the
supervisors are having with the airport
situation, there is an altruistic motive in·
volved here. Granted, we stand to make
money if the deal ia accepted, but that's
our Interpretation of I.he free enterprise
system.
··tn our judgment. it Is a logical loca·
lion In that the land is available relaUve--
ly Inexpensive," he said.
One of the focal issues of Wooers plan,
Is 1 freeway which he calls the 11irport·to-
alrport route. Without it, then= is no
dlrect access tn the airport site., and a
drawing of the proposed alrport shows
the taxiways stradllngJ.he rreeway.
He admitted the rreeway, which would
run parallel to lbt Riverside Freeway
through Telegraph Canyon, as yet has nn
ofUclal 1tt1lus with the state Division of
Hl1hw1ys.
The 11lrport to airport freeway, running
from Lcs Angelet Intematlonal to
Ont1trlo Jnterntitional ls a realitv In that
!he DlvlslOn cf Highways has budgeted
$267 mill/on !or Its constrocllon.
But highway officials have not '11el the
route It would follow through northern
Orange County. and Wood is hopln& for
the backlna of COWJ\y and munit:ipal el-
flcials te push for the Telegraph Canyon
route.
"So rar Yorba Linda, Brea and
Fullerton have approved our routes. If
the division cf highways bypasses
Telegraph Canyon and dumps the airport
freeway into the Riverside Freeway in
the Santa Ana Canyon. you'll have a n
obsolete freeway before you start.
"Not only the sheer bulk or the cars
would cause problems, but that pcrtion of
the freeway has been closed to traffic
because of fires and floods and it would
just make more sense to have a parallel
route," WooJ said.
Wood, who has been a broker and
counselor ln Orange County real estate
for 12 years, said he has presented his
idea to state and federal officials during
the past two years. He said he received
support rrom the late Congressman Jim·
my Utt and is getting support from north
ccunty Congressman James Wiggins.
He is optimistic about support for his
plan on the local level.
"An airport such as this would take the
heat off Orange County Airport and the
proposed site in the Bell Canyon area.
Quite honestly, I am hoping lbe people
who have organized against these
airports will suppcrt my plan.
"This airport will only be displacing
cattle, not homes.'' he said.
Nixon 'Shocked'
Over De Gaulle,
Sets Paris Trip
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UPI) -Presi·
dent Nixon, "shocked and grieved'' over
the death of Gen. Charles de Gaulle, cut
short a Florida vacation today and
prepared to fly to Paris to attend state
memorial services for the former French
president.
The Florida White House said Nixon
would break off his vacation and head
back to Washington about 8 p.m. EST
tonight to get ready for his twoday trip
to Paris.
Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler stressed that Nixon is going to
France "to pay his respects to a great
leader who was a personal friend and a
man of great stature." He emphasized
Nixon will not conduct any official
business with the other world leaders who
will attend the services, including Soviet
Premier Alexei Kosygin.
Company officials are in San Diego this
week to show a working model to Navy
and American Petroleum I n s ti t u t e
representatives .
In the demonstration of the model for
newsmen, crude cil was poured into a
small tank of water straddled by the
removal system. A switch was thrown
and the paddlewheel began to turn, its
unique vanes scooping up lhe oil, which
then was piped away.
Barrett Bruch, Lockheed's project
leader, said larger models and prototypes
of the system are undergoing tests at
Lockheed Missiles & Space Co. head-
quarters in Sunnyvale, near San Fra~
cisco.
"Many approaches lo the oil-spill pro-
blem have been advanced since the 'Tor--
rey Canyon' and Santa Barbara in·
cidents," Bruch said.
"From the data we've gathered se far,
our system appears to hold more promise:
than others, particularly for really
serious situations -large slicks in heavy
seas."
Bruch said Lockheed bas worked with
many oil companies lo determine the.ir
oil-handling operation..! and requinments.
Next month the firm will present its fin4
dings to the Coast Guard, which is stu·
dying the oil-spill problem on a na.
tionwide basis.
Truth
or Consequences?
Sometimes tho truth hurts! We liave lost ., -.sional wle liy not t-oling a c:urlorner-..ii.t
he wanted to hear.
We might point out the! a customer would !;. bettor off to poy a little .....,. fOI' °"' rul>-
ber podding !hon buy• cheaper, mushy pad the! fMls like you ore walking on balloons. Tho ''D.1-
loon" pad hum the cerpol backing, cou•es .stretching, ond ruins seoms. Al.o, this p.ddi09 often
flattens out after a while.
Add itioneny. we might ten you !hot some corpot fibeN oro more practiul Ilion otlion. A
fiber that worl:s in one texture, mi9ht "bomb in another.
FHI freo to call for advice. An of ·our wlo. peoplo have hoCI erleftsive nperienco in tlio
service ond of this business -and ofter on -the mod importont thing we con offor, that hardly
anyone else do.s ••• is S!trvice!
ALDEN'S .--.. -.-,.-.-..,-.,-u-N-.,~ CARPETS e DRAPES
tvmN C.-, ••
ALDIN'S ..._ • .. ""' .... rm 1663 ...... c....ia Aft.
1 ll74 ~mo::':!: c.nt. COSTA MESA
........ 646-4131
HOURS: -· ,Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Prl., 9 to 9 ·-S.t., 9::IO to 5
I
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La ilna Beaeh
voe. 63, NO. 269, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMIER 10, 1970
oar a
79 Year• Old
De Gaulle Dead
Of Heart Attack ..
COLOMBEY • LES • DEUX • EGL!SES,
Fl;'ance (UPI) -Gen. Charles de Gaullt
died Monday night of a heart attack in
bis country home here where be bad lived
in seclusion since be was rejected by the
nation be had thrice saved from .disaster.
De Gaulle, who would have celebrated
bis 80th blrtbday on Nov .. 22, made his
mark on history in World War ll alona:
with Franklin D. Roosevelt, Josef Stalin,
Winston Churchill and Oliang Kai-sbek.
Only Chiang, now 83, survives.
The former president bad just dealt
himself a hand of solitaire while waiting
in front of the television set for the even·
ing news when be slumped forward. His
wife, Yvonne, called a doctor and a priest
but he was dead lwhen they arrived.
anythin1 of the aort."
Tonight tbe body of the former pre&!·
dent was laid out in the living room of the
house in the brigadier general's uniform
he had treasured since World War ll.
The naUonal ceremonies, for govern-
ment leaders and forelp dignitaties will
be held in Paris at the same time. '
French government officials said De
Gaulle was stricken by a heart attack at
7:30 p.m. (1:30 p.m. F.ST Monday) just
as the evening news program was
starting on network No. 1 of the French
radio and television broadcasting system.
Niguel ~fan
Facing, Trial
In Assault
• a1ses
•
'' ' .
" '
• ~
Supervisors .
Set Salary
At $19;200
' .
By .JACK llROBACI[
Of .... °'"' ~· .....
'
Orange Collnty 111pervisors lhll ....,..
Ing voled theilllelvea 1 rlile to·•lt .. I
year,.and tben !Weed to. 1 barrlll' ~
criticism unprecedent..ed ln Co Ua t 1,
bi!tory.
For tbe ..p two llld ..e:.liall . ~
the board WU subjected to acid CWDIDllJ'l
by citizens ·punctuated With bool. ~,.
and catcalls.
The move to raile the · aupervlJtn
llliary '4,200 1 year from the pnaent
115,000 WU made by 111pervilor Willllm
Philllps of Fullerton.
Supervisor David Baker of Garden
Grove tried to block the move, ofterbl& a
subeUtute motion to send the problem lo
,the Grand Jury and another motion . te
table the salary raise move,
Both motlona died for lick Of 1 aec:aad.
Janloe Boer of Santa ADI, l!mt -· criUc of the board, fed the 1ttoei. ·
He had left bis own testament, calling
for a simple funeral with "no_ music, no
fanfare, no bell ringing." The funeral
Thursday will be just tha~ but \be
government was holding m e m o r 1 a I
services at the same time ln Notre Dame
Cathedral in Paris ~ President Nixon
was among world leaders wbt said they W0\114 attend.
By PATRICK · BOYLE '°''"" ... ,..... ..
siie ' cbOrged that CnUnty Ca-1
Adrtln Kuyper bad riot told tbe -illo
whole INth wllen be advlled tim ·11111
they .muat -a ~li'Y.·~ in.. . :=:.:~·~"~'. ~Tbk-:-lr ""' ..... ~~b-lem-; "Let"\be -1• Ill -·1111ry·-....
llftnllia!M. Tiiey will -wllfl ,... FRENCH LEADER DIES
cien. Chi1rlH de G~ulle
lJ .S. Generals
' '
Free<\ by Russ
After 3 Weeks
ANKARA, ·Turkey !AP) -Two U.S.
i\rmy generals and a Turkish colonel
retW'ned to ·Turkey from Soviet Armenia
today, three weeks after their light.plane
landed 12 miles across the .border and
they were int'e.rned.
The Turkish Foreign Minislry said the
men were "healthy and in good shape."
Tass, the Soviet news agency, said Ule
generals' U.S. Army pilot also was
released and would fl y back their six-
&eat, twin-engine plane as soon as
weather permitted.
A Foreign Ministry source said Turkish
end Soviet generals and civilian officials
negotiated at the border town of
Kizilcakcak fol" nine hours, presumably-
working out details of the release. The of-
ficers were freed at 7 a.m. and were
driven to Kars, 40 miles southwest of the
Soviet frontier, to take a Turk Is h
military plane to Ankara.
Kizilcakcak is halfway between Kars
and Leninakan. in Soviet Armenia, where
the officers' plane landed and they were
held.
Maj. Gen. Edward C. D. Scherrer, 57,
chief or the U.S. military mission in
Turkey; Brig. G;en. Claude M. McQua~rie
Jr., 46, head of Scherrcr's Army section,
and Col. Cevat Denli, a Turkish liaison
officer, were inspecting military in·
stallations near the Soviet border on Ocl
21 and were on a flight from Eriurum to
Kars. The pilot, Army Maj. Janies P.
Russell, 42. told consul ar. officials hlg.h
winds caused him to m1scalcu1ate his
course. The U.S. government ~~ended
the plane strayed aa:oss the border.
Tass said the Soviet government decid-
ed to 'release ·the officers afl.er "a
th o r o,u g Jll investigaUoa · ,i n t o the
clrcumstances of the violation of the
etate frontier of the USSR and the degree
of guilt of the persons who were on
board."
Messages af condolence poured in from
statesmen throughout ·the world -from
Nixon who bailed ldl quality of vision.
from the leaders of France'• former col·
<1nies ln Africa, froui the Pope, from lbe
Germans with whom be restored Franco-
German friendship.
De Gaulle bad lived in aloOf retirement
fn Coiombey-1es-Deu1-Egllse1 since April,
1969, when French voten rejected his pet
proposal for 'administrative reform. He
worked quietly on his memoirs and lived
the simple life of a villager.
Father Claude Jaugbey, the vlllqe
priest who administered the last rites,
said, "the general will receive a plain
funeral, like any other Villager or a
lumberjack. ThiJ will be a classless
fwieral as the general always wisbed."
Ja11&hey said following the, simple
church ceremony Oe Gaulle's coffin will
be taken to his famlly plot at one side of
the nearby village churchyard and be
buried next to his daughter Anne. "It
will be a plain village funeral," he said.
"'I'here will be no funeral oration,
because the general did not want
Artists Select
Four . to Serve
On Jury Board
Artists Herb Griswold, H e f n 1
Norhausen, A. Wellington Smith and
Philip Freeman have been elected by
artist members of Laguna's Festival af
Arts to serve on the jury for the 1171
grounds exhibit.
Results of the balloting, m;mounced at
Monday's general membershj.p meeting,
revealed that 159 of 253 ballots sent out to
1970 exhibitors and applicants were
returned, for a 62.8 percent vote.
The Festival board will name three
more jurors to complete the seven·
member panel lhat will judge applicants
f!>f )971 and jury the gr.....ia duriq the
FeStival run.
The artists named Griswold and
Norhausen to jud;t modern· art entries,
with Anne Reid Gordon u aJtemaW,
while Smith and Freeman, With Jacqulit
Moffett as alternate, wUl Judie trldi· u...r ort.
A Lquna l!f&lld man .. was ~ C[l(.lt..
to Or111Je County Superior Court • th&
mornln& f'!'. trial 911 cborltl of uau!t
with ·intent to commit rfuin1er iO t)M Oct.
14 1booting Of lli.s .. traqed•wlfe.
Judge Richard D. Haniiltoo Of Sooth
Or1111e Ccunly Munlclj>a! Court ordered
John 'Ibomas Reilly, rr, to appear ln
Superior Court in Santa Ana on Nov. 20 to
begin trial proce<dings. ReUly ii aC<llled
of •booting h.i8 wife, Llnd• Reilly,· 25, on
the nlpt Of Oct. 14 at htr Laguna Beach
home, 211 Cliff Drive.
At his arTllgnment on Nov. 3, Reilly
pleided Innocent to the dlarge by reuon
of lnsa.nity.
At this mornina'• preliminary i>W'ing, a neighbor Of Linda Reilly on tuU Driv.e
testified that John Reilly !>ad been al the
home on the night of OCt. 14.
_Gordon Brown, 210 Cliff Drive, told the
court · that he went nut door ·tc;i ffe·Mrs.
Reilly within a few minutes after stelng
Reilly. Brown said he found Mrs. Reilly
lying on the floor of her home with a IW1
1hct wound just below her chest.
Reilly was later captured in Huntington
Beach and turned over to Laguna Beach
police. A Huntington Beach police officer.
James Corley, tesUfied that a g\U1 had
been found in the car Reilly was riding in
when be was captured. O?rley uid that
Reilly attempted to run from the ar·
resUng officers but wu quickly over·
taken and transported to the police ltl·
lion.
Mrs. Reilly was taken . to the hospital
following tile II p.m. 1hooling and un-
derwent five hours of sura:ery. She is cur·
renUy recoverinC from the gun shot
wound and is said to be in aati!factory
condition at South Cout Gommunlty
Hospital.
Schools and Offices
Closed Ve~rans Day
Laguna ·Beach schools and city· offices
will be closed Wednadly In oblervance
of"Veteran~1 Day, but bank&, savtnp ud
loan firml and JnOll tt.orta: will remain
open.
The post offic:o will · be cl.,..i for the
holiday.
Saddleblcl< Collet• alao will obalrv•
\be holiday but cl-11 UC! will be
be!duachodul«L '
FLOURISHED ~T.MOTELIU1-A POTTIDcP~M l't.'S,NOT
~ J~-M····•r•..Nom• ,,..n-M•rlfuw
Illegal Gar,d~~ ·G~ee~~ry .
Found in L~a lI~tel '· ·
Foroa.few hours on Monday, the decor
of the Laguna Beach pollce de~ent
w.as livened with a toucll of lilegal
greenery -.two thrivin& marijuana
plants. ·
.The attractive plants had attalne,d a •
tipy height of;three and ,four feet , resptc·
lively, bespeaking the loving care given
therri, sa:id police, by :an innocent .hotel
manager.
'The "pot" plants were harvested and
taken into custody by officer Jeff
Reynold.! after an anonymoUJ caller in·
quired, "Is it Jegal to grow marijuana in
Laguna Beach?"
Assured it was not, the caller SU&&est.ed
Reynold.! take' a lOClk at the contents of a ·
planter on 1 rear balcony at the Clift
HoU!l, 741 South.'Coi1t Hi1hway.
·A look wu enough. A pair Ot cannabis
saliva plants idded the~ featliery toucta
to other assorted ·sreenery in the well
kept planter:
'"The manager had no ldi!!a what they
Were," said ReynoldJ. "ln.fact·he'd been
watering them regu1arly since they
&tarted to grow in 'the planter."
·whether they were plantei:f"delibe:rately
or sprang from seeds ln .a hastily con·
cealed marijuana "joint" problbly will
remain a. mystery.
•'''Ille stuff grows· like .a weed around
here," commented , Reynolds, as he
prepared to take his tri>pbies· Over to the
F·lre Department for official cremaUon
ceremonies.
New Festival of Arts .
Direcwrs Take PostS . -
Festiv1l of 'Arts members have elected votes In the election.
PauJ Griem David Young ancf 'Hal Akin! The new board w'ill meet nut Tuesday
to three·ye~r terms en the Festival at noon to ~lect officers and appoint com-
board mlttee chairmen. . · . Cont1nuing· to serve on the board art Griem and Young, running u in· William Martin, present chairman, O. •E. •
cumbents, garnered 565 and 531 votel Schroeder Mrs Helen Keeley· Stuart
respectively. Akins, high school art in· Durkee GleM Vedder and or.' Harold
ltructor and Festival exhibitor. was Burten.'
elected with W1 ,votes.
Defeated candidates for the thm
board .vacancies r'ftl't artiata ··Bennett:
Bradtuy &Del Davld Rosen. .
Fifty.fl .. per-Of \be l,!00 voting
members, Ill Orange County ruidentl,
-bellota, Cllllng • 1"W •Of 2.m
Holiday Closings
Vary o'!-S. C.oast
Vill~ge Variance · May Receive OK
· ~platrano Bay area poet olfice1 . lll!d
schooll will clooe Wedneadiy, obwvJns
the Veter1n'1 Day holiday.
But city halll, bank• and other pubUO"
Offices will rem1in open Utrouch. the,
mldweek o~auce'~---
After reviewing seven prior variances
granted to Loren Haneline since 1959 for
development of his Seas-Vacation Village
complex In Sleepy Hollow, Laguna Beach
planning CQmmissloners apparenUy will
recommend one more. :
At a study ....,1.. Monday evening,
planners looked over the pa,rking plan
jJroposed by Haneline to accommodate
tbe 13 addllional unlu.liufiabes to build.
1bey decided be apparently has one more
space than the 167 required for the enUre
cempleJ: Including the new unitl.
'Ibey 'allo learned from ihl betel
' ' '•
operator that overall development of the
Sleepy Hollow property -ii only 15
percent of what it could become under
lhe anUcipated new hotel zone witll lba
lfllOlln\ of ground available.
However, Haneline said, be dots not
know U ht will wilb to -IO to Ille h&U
density permittM under IUCh a 10M..
"You mllbt not belleTe ii," lie told the
conuniMlonen, "but the property ll only
about 20 ptretnt covered rlaht now~·
City pllnne!' Ai Autr)' told tbe com·
millioner \be only--In tbe -• vlrilnce requeot an -foal ol un .. -·
~
h<i&hl above Sleepy Hollow IAne Ind tbe icce~ble Wider loday'a otandlrds for
mati.r of adequate parilinl witllln 11111 aile. . .
feet of tbe new uan.. Haneline llkt hll eventull ~tlopmen\ plan lncludel 1 parting lllruclan, but
Autry Uicl Huelfne "°" llu t• this cannot be COMldered yet -It 1-. lnclu4inc Ylltl ........ I« bit ...Wd lilOct tbe wiy to the f1te· Wilert lie
Beach HouM IM, -· 117 required. niay ciJnltrucl an addliiotlll hotol
"-· .be llld, -ol tbe -i..tldl~ when tbe 'liotol -lo ldopte<I. cllimld .,.,. -"~" by tbe Such IOllln( -.Id elimln* the need
pl•aminl lloff. for. Mure'•-on Ille ipll~
Commu-J-. Scillllftl -property.
--fhe·~ bad -rtillv• ll Wll decided lo plact the Vll'UollC< r ..
eel 11'1111 _-d lW -reqalmMOI .~11 oo tbe aaoftda Of M-1'1 rqullt
lllal • --.............. ' -!Gr llCl1on, which pilmllra---.,. ltlw..,. ol Ibo,._,.. ed lo -would ill fonrabll.
•' ·'
. Bu1lneas bOurs •t San Clemente city
hill wUI be normal. Bank houri wW be
the same, phone· checks revuled th1I
'"""'""·
' Hairdie11ser Slain
LONDON (UPO .~ -Aadr9
"Hiii')'" Mlatlu, -cllentele m.:
eluded queeas--a.od prtne111•, ••' t..t
1bol to deltb M-y ilT ldl Hd Triwnpb.
aporta car in Hyde· Plrt. He wu \be ..,
cond prominent 1Wr'AIR'ID rla1n ..
Loudon In I tDOOtil.
\I' '
ate Worth:" · 1 :· •
8be CG11ten<!4 1bt.1 the Giud. .JiltJ ll not' ' repttseitai:IVr IJ'OUP; · ' 1 ·": : • -
'·'!'bey'.,. ilppOtlilecl by. •. Jollli6 wbo b,. .... jail-·~~ ... 1 lrimJ:at·t111 1cwernor." . ,. . r ' .
Dee Cook, fottrier Newport Buell -.
ciJmen, · urged board metnbm to
.,..._ ,-Ind. take Up tMe• ullt7.
IUtijed in • pubUc -liter.
Clari ' Kelly, chaJnnlJl Of.' tbe . -
tingtoOBeocll'· CUUncll lor ~ Tu·
aUon . (COST), .cl>aried that S\ljlerfllor
ROberl B.itUn, ';t>olds !h• tupay<n ol
tbO county ln·cOntempl Thia Wll!.liol IO
UllllOilced·ln tbe future," .lie lbrUi.ned.
Jim Towmenc!, praidenl ol \be
T'1epbcme Tupoyers Aaodition ol
Ariahelm, threatened that if 9Upen'il0n: dis! not.repeal their.action there would M
a taxpayers IUi~ · ' '. ·
Only two perlOM In tbe · ·~ aupo ~ the ·supervilbn. Nof?lln Brott ~
Orange charged tfl1t "tbeae people are
asking you to take the pay of a·plumbeir.
You are entitled to more than '20,000 a
year."
His remarks were greeted with loud
boos. ·'!'lie other 111pporter ·WU Lee· PodoWi
of· Orange, who challeqed the aUlllenee
with, "Where were you whm tM
legislature wu refuainl to rlile ijie
sllpervllon' -yur lfter y-t"
He, too, WU roundly booed.
Opera Star Marrie11
MEMPIDS (UPI) -·M •~I u er ft•
Piazza, former lllr ol. the Melropoi!lln
Oper1 in Ne'w York., ha• been ~an:ted.te
San •Francisco industrl1llst H1rty 11tr1 ..
thodt. Ml!s Pialza was atteftded .by"her three cllupten and three ,...., b7 pre-
vious marri11es In the. private • ~
mo,Ues Sunda;-at ·the singer's Memphis
home. ·
er .. , •. · Ceett
' :
You obooldn!I -yoar -ai-· w-., ..... 111a, low
cloud• and IOf ·wlll ·lbroud muclo
ol the IO!ar ahlmmer. Temporo-
tUr<1 Of M on tbe . coat and 71
lnllnd wUI pre\'llL
' .
• ·INS~E . TODA"'.
c11Hirw '"""'-U-' · c ........ 7 ...... ' i ·----c..... ........... ...
(,....., 1t I ..... ---
Dli9 -• ·e:-..__,, ....
.....,., ... •.I ...... ..
f•llWhl1AHf 9 , ........ ~ -...., --" -..... ~ .......... --' ---
•
•
•• . ..
•
St Tutldu, NovtmW lQ. l,70
New -Ariests Made in Collnty Drug Ring Cas
' . .
By Allretlll R. VINSEL
Of tM 0.111' ,lfllil Si.ff
A liew ser!oi of urW llemminC fn>m.
the OCI. 1 raid on a palalial ModjeJkl
C.nyon headquarte of what authorities
allege was the largest drug smuggling
ring in California history was announced
bl!lay.
. Tbe Jatelt su.spects are charged with
oonsplraey in warrants issued by the
orange COWtty District Attorney's office
and announced by Newport Beach police.
They were identilied as:
Sulln Seminar and DllM Norrla. both
of IOI !We Lano, Coota M ... , Lloyd Ort
Jr., of San Clemente, and Gtqrp C11u,
who wu arrested ot • Modl..U Clnyon
mldence.
lovestlplm said 11 wu not tht """1•
otpriJ\clpllaulpect Thomas J. Skelly Jr.,
52, wbo maintained the alleged narcotics
ring headquarters at 21532 Modjeska Can·
yon Rold.
PoUce claim a cache of bombs and
other illegal weapons was confiscated
during the raid staa:ed joinUy by federal,
atate and tocal law enforctment acencles.
Newport Beach police aald complete
detllls or •I'S and 1ddrtue1 f<ir th•
lalelt .._ I lotll of 4S defendants COD-
lllClld lfllb !lit cut "'!' llOl f•lllable.
Clrl'1 llln Cleminle "°"" YWded a kilo.
of marijuana. accordJni to invesllcators,
who said they also found a snlall amount
at Casas' canyon residence.
The newest arrests came one day after
10 of the original 39 arrestees allegedly
iftvolved in the $500,000.per-week in
temational operation appeared in court to
I
offer plea!.·
Skellyt the alleged ringleader; was ·
schedulod !or trial Dec. I in Orange
County Superior· Court alter enlertng a
pl11 of innocen~ .
He has been beld at Orange County Jail
since the re.id in lieu of $100,000, one or
the highest bail bond figures set 1n county
history.
Wendy S. Desserich, also known by the
last name of Prenty, entered a similar
plea and was ordered to appear Feb. 24
to stand trill.
fo· .,' .• ' ~ -------,!~--.... City Chief·
.Studying
Fire Units
Ji--,, --· .. ---.-----.. -:.~ I . ' :~ .,' . ~ ~· : 0 'J"OMONA "" '~, !'-..;.------·• ' /:. ~ ~ ..... ----_,y_ I
lwy.
WEIT COVINA
~ -r-... ' "1~----.....
I I
I p;~~,o IOUTHGATI
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of tllt O.llY' Pli.t 1'-"
0 I •• IO• lllt•I•• I '° 0 .. f" --·-· ' • . -~-C:OMPTO .:.J'"o•t •••n•• I CO••~o" ~C) 1"I J r
-----..J 11< '"> r-" I A proprietary fire department similar
to the pioneering concept of Scottsdale
Ariz., would be low on the priority list of
suggestions for San Clemente, City
Manager Ken Carr said today.
0 I 12 1111
"• ~ -'"'V· .. O'I J !! I
•, I 9._ '°"'""'-• I • • •
•,, l'l.1.C!NTl.1.f \~t~-::,.~·f"-· ..;<c;O;;;'O'(f}'\ I •
I LONG IEACH ~~==:i:~:::);I ~ ,,• \ 'J~· C'Q~ ~ ~ I ~~ t \ ,.. ~ .. , .
LOS AlAUITOt ...... 1 ! \ After tourilig the unusual department
ln the Southwest city recently, Carr said
the idea there "is basically similar to
what we have in the city right now, ex·
cept for the unusual aspect of private
ship .. ___ owner ··---~
The city manager is preparing a detail·
ed study on suggested methods of im·
proving and expanding fire serivces in
San Clemente.
Tbe Scottsdale trip covered one of
several suggested solutions.
In that city, the department is owned
by its chief, who contracts: with the city
ol nearly 80,000 persons.
But that department has only six full-
time personnel, Carr uplained.
\
'• '• --
The rest ·o1 tbe fireftghting force is a -
basic volunteer unit whose members are
paid by the hour when they are.fighting
fires.
SANTA ANA REAL ESTATE DEVELOPER PROPOSES AIRPORT (ARROW) OVER FUTURE FREEWAY
Developer Reg Wood Will Offtr Detlgn for Jet Traffic to Supervi1ar1 Nov. 17
· Equipment, Carr added, seems to be
IJlOStlY surplus culled from castoffs from
military clepots and other f I r e
deparbnents.
What seems at present on the top of the Northern County Real Estate Man to Off er
list for San Clement.e's fire department S, p d
oolution ts the traditional expansion of a ite ropose ~cF.:~:~E"Yt~?t~.! For New -Jetnnrt Chino HillsSitef or Airport
beadquadenJ>QiWng nezt to tlte Ulln.C . ' .. ~..i;·w, • • "*~' l. • ...,, ... f
offices and garages at the ~c center· A possible site foi' an Orange County ' •...-• The bulidlng, lla<kett ,.,d, could be . . By JOANNE REYNOLDS ~t with funds alrea~y brfeted f~~o:i\; . Jetport ; th~t has ~ver been ser1o~ly .. A. • • · •• ..;. ~ ,;.1111.,.. 111,, r headq""ltf'· =.;>,, :Ii* . ~~,Iba W'~ Cll~ .. ~ \. Wllllf~\P<>U~ supervisors study
o!_Sall!'te1 oulford .hanew, to Ir f th. ' by tliO <oulity 11"W1lt1ng for act/im, 10' the l'anona report 1on airport sites a !f.'wever w ve • o er-· ~ · • liicome iourc.es. · 1 -"" · • cording to §upervisor David L. Baker. . 5a$ .\n,I!.. real estate broke~ bas come
' The expansion of the dewtJnent He propoees use of tbe area betw~ up with,. site far a regional airport in ~he
buil.:1i-s would also aerve 8nother c bo Can 0 the north and Prado Ctlno m.ns area near the San Bernardino ._... . . ar n yon n C.Ounty bne.
purposet into-upantesdtonf' of thff~ pohct depart.. Dam on the Santa Ana River on the Reg Wood, developer of the plan, said en vaca U'e o ices. th h ·11 1 h' I t th Loog-range plans call for use of the ex-sou · e w1. presen . 1s proposa .o e
lating fire truck storage garage as more "There ii 1 ridge that c~ J>e tevell~ supervisors at their Nov. 17 hearing on
lail cella and an expanded records and to fill an adjoining canyon and it would the Parsc;ins study. . . detective section. As outhned by Wood, the airpor~. which
Stacks of records and detective offices make an ideal jetport for several ~ould be capable of ~dling 747 Jet traf-
recenUy moved into the last remaining reasons," says Baker. . · he, would be located tn t~e pasture la~ds
space of the department _ 8 squad "The cost cf the land would run about on. the Orange County side of the hne,
meeting and storage room. $2,000 to '4,000 an acre, the fill although midway ~twe,en Carbon Canyon Road
Carr said his report would be rorthcom-expensive would not bring the cost and the R;1vers1~e Freeway. .
Ing sometime within the next month or anywhere near the value of most other Jn a brief report prepar~d on. the site
two. county land proposed, and it is a clear for Wood 's ftrr:n by . engineering con-
Among the other alternatives being area.'' sultants Voorhe1~, '.ftindle. and Nelson,
considered are contracting for a special By "clear" the supervisor explains that se~~ction o~ the s~te IS explained: . . service district with the CClunty -a plan The Chino Hills area as ~p1cted 1n
which already bas drawn disfavor zoning control is available in the takeoff this study was selected as a primary site
because of its high cost. area of the proposed facility and in the due to its geograp~cal proximity to four
approach area. counties. It is remote from densely
Actor Burton Feted
"The surrounding area is now used for populated areas, e'ven though readily ac-
livestock grazing and oil production," cesslble to the metropolitan area which it
Baker adds. "Land which can easily be will serve.
zoned for a future use compatible to jet "The Chino Hills area contains nearly
planes." 25,000 available acres which will provide
adequate property for the airport proper Baker does not think the proposed Bell and supporting industries and services.
Canyon site in the southeast part of the "It contains a minimum of fixed struc-
county ·is "bad." It was the selection of tures to be affected by the construction of
the Parsons report which comes before an airport. The proposed elevation of the
ticlals to push for the Telegraph Canyon
route,
"So far Yorba Linda, Brea and
Fullerton have approved our routes . lf
the division of highways bypasses
Telegraph Canyon and dumps the airport
freeway into the Riverside Freeway in
the Santa Ana Canyon, you'll have an
obsolete freeway before you start.
"Not only the sheer bulk of the cars
would cause problems, but that portion of
the freeway has been closed to traffic
because of fires and floods and it would
just make more sense to have a parallel
route," Wool.I said.
Wood, who has been a broker and
counselOr in Orange County real estate
for 12 years, said he has prese nted his
idea to state and federal ofricllils during
the past two years. He s·aid he received
support from the late Congressman Jim·
my Utt and is getting support from north
county Congressman James Wiggins.
He is optimistic about support for his
plan on the local level.
"An airport such as this would lake the
beat off Orange County Airport and the
proposed site in the Bell Canyon area.
Quite honestly, I am hopiilg the people
who have organized against these
airports will support my plan.
"This airport will only be displacing
cattle, not homes," he said. /
They and others were Ind icted by tbe
Or1t1ge county Grand Jury Oct. 15 on a
series of clw1es tncludlJ!I -!On
and pouession for sale, of narcotlca.
dangerous drugs, marijuana and unlawful
weapons.
Officers of the State Bure.au of
Narcotics Enforce'ment and other agen .'
cies confiscated bombs, ammunition and
a machinegun from the castle-like com·
mune in the picturesque canyon.
They also monitored more than 1,9(kl
telephone calls to the premises during a
•
For Guard
mere two-week ·i>ttlod before raiding~
resi~cnce. _ _ ,..:r
stauertd by the ocope a1 the all@
drul dealership, lnvesUgalOrl said ~
tentacles reached· to qents and supJllilt
ln Afghanistan, l\usa~, Germany, ..
South America, as well .JS Canada •
Mexico. .
Huge quantities of marijuana, coc,.
hashish and thousands of drug pilla of.
kinds were seized in the Modjeska
yon raid. ..,.
:
Laird .Imposes
Training Order
..
.~
I • " •
rt
• • • ' ,
WASIIlNGTON (AP) -Secretary of
Defense Melvin R. Laird today ordered
additional riot control training for Na·
tional Guardsmerrand Reservists and the
insurance ef protective face masks and
riot batons for riot assignments.
Pentagon officials said Laird will ask
Congress for an additional $20 million to
pay for the new equipment and extra
training.
Pent ago n spokesman Jerry W.
Friedheim was asked whether this action
was filen as a result Cf 8 Guard-Student
confrontation last May at Kent State
University. ..
J'h~ f4ay incident "obviously heighten-
ed the concern for the protection of the
guardsmen," he replied.
Four Kent State students were killed at
a time when guardsmen on the Ohio cam-
pus said they feared for their Jives.
A stale grand jury absolved the
guardsmen of blame for the deaths, but a
presidential commission called the
guards' action "unnecessary, unwar-
ranted and unexcusable."
Asked if the Guardsmen would be pro-
vided with other nonlethal, weapons in ad·
dition to the batons he replied that
although research is continuing in this
area, authorities feel that there isn't
anything safer or more effective than the
tear gas now used in riot situations.
Only those Guard and Reserve units
with a civil disturbance mission will be
affected by the new <lrders and undergo
the extra training.
This will affect units in most of the na·
lion's major cities. It is the first time
they will receive speci~I equlpment for
Nixon 'Shocked'
Over De Gaulle,
Sets Paris Trip
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UPI) -Presi·
dent Nixon, "sQocked and grieved" over
the death of Gep. Charles de. Gaulle, .cut
short a Florida vacation today and
prepared to fly to Paris to attend stale
memorial services for the former French
president.
The Florida White House said Nixon
would break oU his vacation and head
back to Washington about 8 p.m. EST
tonight to get ready for his twoday trip
to Paris.
Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler stressed that Nixon is going to
France "to pay his respects to a great
leader who was a personal friend and a
man Of great stature!' He emphasized
Nixon will not conduct any official
business with the other world leaders who
will attend the services, including Soviet
Premier Alexei Koeygin.
,
use In riot situaUons. ~
Friedheim said the added trainini will
mean extra drills and will about doubff
tbe time now devoted to riot contrOl
training. 1. If Congress apJ)ripves the Pentagon &
request', Guardsme,1~~ receive 140,0(f)
face &hields and b and 120,000 pr~
tective vests.
Firm Unveils
'Spot Remover'
For Oceans
SAN DlEGO (BW) -A syslem which
may soon be in use to clean up oil slicks
on oceans and bays was put through its
paces for newsmen Monday by Lockheed.
The system consists mainly of a clever-
ly designed paddlewheel device which
skims oil off the surface and pumps it
into containers or other disposal systems.
Large versions may soon be deployed
along the nation's coasts aboard simple
catamaran-type vessels which can be
towed through massive oil slicks.
Lockheed scientists and engineers in·
vented the system and now are under
contract to the Coast Guard to determine
its appicability. .
Company officials are in San Diego this
week to show a working model to Navy
aliO American Petroleum I n s ti t u t-
repre&entatives.
In the demonstration of the model for
newsmen, crude oil was poured into a
small tank of water straddled by the
removal system. A switch was thrown
and the paddlewheel began to turn, it.
unique vanes scooping up the oil, which
then was piped away.
Barrett Bruch, Lockheed's project
leader, said larger models and prototypes
of the system are undergoing tests at
Lockheed Missiles & Space Co. head-
quarters in Sunnyvale, near San Fran-
cisco.
"Many approaches to the oil·spill pro-
blem have been advanced since the 'Tor.
rey Canyon' and Santa Barbara iJl.
cidents," Bruch said.
"From the data we've gathered so far,
our system appears to hold more promise
than others, particularly for really'
serious situations -large slicks in heavy
seas."
Bruch said Lockheed has worked witli
many oil companies to detennine their
oil·handling operations and requirements.
Next month the firm will present its fin-
dings to the Coast Guard, which is 1tu·
dying the oil·spill problem on a Ill·
tionwide basis.
LONDON (UPI) -Queen Elizabeth In-
vested actor Richard Burton as a Com-
mander of the British Emplre today as
bis wife Elfzabetb Taylor looked on. The
orchestra of the Welsh Guards played
"Men of Harlech" as Welshman Burton
accepted the decoration from the queen.
Today w.as Burton's 45tb birthday.
the board of supervisors for public hear-runways (1,000 feet) will produce
ing Nov. 17. minimum noise pollution to the sur·
"There is still plenty of open space rounding populated areas from take-0ff
around the Bell Canyon site and I think and landing operations."
annoyance to residents in tht coastal He said he has not tried to project the Truth
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DAILY PILOT
" ............ -·-.__
OltANOE COAST P'Ult.lSHIMQ COMP'AMY
lob•rt N. w,,4
Pre11dtnl tr.f P11•11.w
Jtck R. Curit'(
Viet '19sidtnl tr.II Genertl "-1111"'
Thomu Ketvil Mltor
Jhot11" A. M11,,t.lne
M•Mllnl Ed!Mr
ftiditr4 P. H•• leUUI Ct...-CN1tr MllW -C.fl Mm! m 'W.t "',,,...
}11"""°'1 l .. dll 2211 W•I ..... IOVIM"' • Le..-. ... ell~ 2D ,..,,., A_,.
t41111llllflOll IMcl'll 11'1J ~ IOU1111...il a.~ Cltffttl!Jt;I -Nlr111 If Carnlftt ft.Ml
area would be minimal. The jets should cost of the proposed airport. "I imagine
be ·very hfgh before they reach built up it will be very expensive, but that's the
areas," Baker said. kind of thing that can be done if the plan
is going to be given serious con-
Supreme Court
Urged to Rule
On Death Penalty
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Two attorneys
ureed the Supreme Court Monday to set
new rules for jury pracUces in capital
punishment cues that could affect the
fate of an esUmated SSO pri110ners now in
Death Row cells across the country,
But the federal gov~rnmtnt and
California told tbe court that the lawyers
failed to show any conatitutional rea19n
for <han&in& praent jury pracUces.
ho cues fnyolvlna death row dtfen-
dants-1n_C.Ufornla and Ohio_ are _im·
_mediately at issue, But the court'~(Ullng,
which wtll lie made later in this term, Is
expected to affect all ctpitaJ pentalty
cues. In anticipation of the court ruling,
one of the 41 1latcs that have capital
punishment laws has nOt carried out an
cxecuUon since June 2, 1967.
The Supreme Court btard thrt< hours
of argument.a Monday.
Attorneys Herron F. Selvin of Beverly
HUit and John J. Callahan of Toledo,
Ohio, bolb repmtDling mtn on Dtath
!low~ ur1ed the court to 1pell oul •tan·
darda for juries in determlnin& when tbe
dealb penalty II 1ppllc1bla.
sideration," he explained.
Wood. who represents property owners
in the area, frankly admits his plan is
being proffered for economic reasons,
"My firm is on retainer to the owners
of about 12,000 acres on or near the pro-
posed airport.
"Considering · the l r o u b I e the
supervisors are having with the airport
situation, there Is an altrulstlc motive in·
volved here. Granted, we stand to make
money if the deal is accepted, but that's
our interpretation of the fret enterprise
system.
"In our judgment, it is a logical loca-
tion in that the land is available relative·
ly inexpensive," he said.
One of the focal issues of Wood's plan,
Is a freeway which he calls the: airpcrt·to-
alrport route. Wi\hOIJt it, there is no
direct access to the airport site, and a
drawing of the proposed airport shows
the taxiways stradllng ihe freeway.
He admitted the frteway, which would
run parallel to the Rlvtr8ide Freeway
through Telegraph Canyon. as yet has no
official status with the slate Division of
Highways.
The airport to airport freeway, running
from Los Angeles lotmatlonal to
Ontario International IS a reality In that
the Division of HJghways has budgeted
$267 million for It.a construcUon.
But highway officials have not set the
rouft-il would follow-throush ..northern
Oranae County, and Wood is hcpinc for
the backlna al counl7 and municipal ti·
o·r Consequences?
Sometimes tho truth hurls! We ~ave lod ., occasional Hie l>y nol leDing e cusfoH• wliot
ho wanted lo hear.
We might point out that a customer would lie bettor off to pey a little mcn for cor rub-
ber pe'dding than buy a cheoper, mushy pad that feels liko you are walking on balloons. Tho ''Do~
loon" pad hurts the carpet backing, caus" sfrol<:hing, and ruins sHms. Also, this podding oft..,
flattens out efter • while.
Additio nany, we might teR you that some carpel fibers are more practical tlian otliers. A
fiber that wor~s in one texture, might 11bomb in another.
Foel free to caR for advice. AR of our salos pooplo li•ve ha(! erl..,ive nperienco in t1io
service end of this business -and a~er efl -the most important thing we ctn offer1 that herdly
anyone else does ..• is service! .
..-------~ SANTA· ANA, OIAHGI
TUSTIN C .. , ••
ALDIN'I
llD HILL CA1"'1
l DU.l'lllD
1 IJ14-Yma.. Twri .. C41tf.
IJWJ44
ALDEN'S
CARPET~ e DRAPES .
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-483_1
HOUR.S: Mon. Thru Thun., 9 lo 5'30 -Fri., 9 lo 9 -Sat., 9tJO lo S
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San Clemente
Capi~~r.ano
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EDITION
VOL. 63, NO. 269, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . '
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.TUESDAY; NOVEMBER: I 0, 1970 r TEN ~CENTs
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Beleaguered Supervisors Hike Pay to $i9~200
By JACILBROBACK
Of llM 'DI/tr PllM Stiff
Orange County supervisors this morn.
Ing voted themselves a raise to $19,200 a
year, and then listened to a barroge of
criticism unprecedented in c o u n l y
bistory.
For the Deit two and ~half hours,
the board wu subjected to acid comment
by citizens punctuated with 'boo6, cheers
and catcalls.
The move to raise. the supervisors
ea
Developers
Of Hospital
Ask Waiver
. Developers for San Clemente General
Hospital will come before city officials
officially for the first time Wednesday in
a pair of hearings on waiving some park·
lf'!g requirem~nts and a permit for a 120-
bed convalescent hospital.
The deVelope.rs, representing the group
which has developed Chapman General
Hospital in Orange, seek a variance that
'f<lllld erase-167 parking spaces.
·The remaining 32L planned · parking
1lot.s would be adequate they have said.
Under existing city . regulatk>ns a
aeparate nuinber of , apacu would be
needed fer an acute boapit.al 0aection and
• convalescent hospital.·
So Clemente general spokesmen have
1aid1thatmany would mt.be needed.
The aeeond hearing deals with a use
permit to allow a convalescent hospital in
a commercial wne.
The proposed hospital-developers
pf.omlle opening by the end 1of ne.i:t year
-would be built at ~ Camino de los
Mares on the northerly city limits of San
Clemente.
The land measures 30 acres near an ex·
!sting utility atora_&!)'jlid. The ~cel_is
tplil by,os 1Ylares and the yard.
Vacant land left after initial phases of
hollpital conatrucµon will be put to in-
terim use.
Besides city approvals for their
development, San C1emente General will
require a host of state approvals which
are upecled within week!.
Dr. Ralph Graham, head of the
development group, has said the basic
plans for the S3n Clemente facility
follows the existing hospital in Orange,
thus allowi9g rapid plan approval by the
state Department of Public Health.
Fresh plans require several months
before approval.
Groundbreaking for the 136-bed board-
and care facility and the convalescent
hollpltal ~expected In llec<mber.
Hairdresser Slain
LONDON (UPI) -Hairdresser Andre
''Harry'' Mlzelas,. whose clientele in·
eluded queens and princesses, was found
ahot to diath Monday in his reit Triumph
sports car In Hyde Park. He was the se·
cond · pi'ominent businessman slain in
London in 1 montll.
C.a1t
1\'eat•er
You shouldn't need your sun-
&lalli&eS Wednesday .since the low
clouds · and fog will shroud much
ol. the 110lat shimmer. Tempera·
tures of M on the cout and 72
lnJand will prevail.
· INSWE TODAY
Orange Countv school! are
pl4~ing "21 Q1~1tiotU" to find -ou wh.lcll. 1tudmtf rttrd h
moat help, and 1ome .S0,000
pupa. will b• qiiizud. s~• Pao• ,_
salary M,200 a year from lhe present
$15,000 was made by supervisor William
Phillips of Fullerton.
Supervisor David Baker of Garden
Grove tried to block the move, offering a
substitute mot.ion lo MOO the problem to
the Grand Jury aild another motion to
table the salary raise mov_e. .
Both motions died for lack of a second.
Janice Boer of Santa. Ana, long time
critic of the board, led the attack,
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She charged that County Counael
Adrian Kuyper had not told. the board the
whole truth when he advised them that
they must pa~ a salary ordinance im-
mediately because of the passage of con·
stitutional amendment Proposition 12.
"This is not true ," said Mrs. Boer.
''Let the people set your salary through
an iniUative. They will· decide what you
are worth." ~
She contended that the Grand Jury iJ
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not a rep™entaUve aroup.
"They are appointed by 1 judg! who
has his job becaose ht was a ,friend of the
governor."
Dee Cook, former Newport Beach.coun-
cilinen. urged . board membtrs lo
postpone action and ·take up the 1&1-rY
subject in a public session later.
CJ are Kelly, chalrman. of the Hun-
tington Beach CUwltjl for Sensible Tu-
atioa (COST), chOJ:ged. 'th•t 51!por.v.~
Robert Battin, "holds the taxpayers of
th~ county In contempt. Thls will not go
UMQliced In tht: fatitre," she th~eatened.
Jim Tpwn.stnd,. presi~ent of the
Telephone ;r~rers Aslociahon ~f
Anaheim, threatened that if supervisors
did not repeyal their-action there would be
a tupayen luil · ,
Only two persona in the,.ao.diepce aup-
~ the supervisor!. Norman Brock of
Qral'l1e cbaraed that "Lbtae people are •
e au e
De Gaulle's .-
Deatl1 Ends
Lo11g Career
COLOMBEV·-LES -DEUX -EGLISES,
France (UPI) -Gen. Charles de Gaulle
~ied Monday night of a heart attack in
his country· borne here.where he bad lived
in seclusion ~ he was rejected by tbe
nation be hall tlvlce saved from disaster.
De Gaulle, wt.c. would have celebrated
his aotb blrtbday on Nov. 22. made his
mart on history in World War II along
with Franklin D. ·Roosevelt, Josef Stalin,
Winston Churchlll -_nd piiang Kai-shek.
Only Chian1, now 13, survives.
' .-g you to tw. !be pay of 1 plumber.
You are .enUUed to more Ulan '20;000• a
year."
His remarks were greeted with· loud
booo.
The other' supporter was Lee Podo1lk
of. «)range, who chl~enced the a~
with. "Where 'were you when . tbe .
legislature was refusing to raise tbe
supervisors' salaries year after year?"
He, too, waaTOUndly.booed. ·
Nuon'• Sign on Ice " .
The fOrmer pruidenl had just dealt_
himaelf I band of..,IOl\taitt' wbtl• Waitifte In~ ol thO'ldrilsiaiuet ror Ille '""' tng news when hi alwnpecf fOl"flfard. ltis
wife, y.,om•,·e111.!d a dbcto!"'and a jiriesi
but he was-dead when they arrived. San Clemente city councilmen have agreed . to
change the name of Via de' F'rente to A venida Del
Presidente. That's because Mr. Nixon 's Western.
White House is located there. The fetching signs ate
ready. Marci Erickson, city manager's s~u'tary,
displays one. But they're stQrttd:. waiting per'ba"ps
foe ·the PresJdent to .dedicate his. street? , , . '
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He had left bi.I own tealament, 'calllnt
for a slmp1e funeral with "no music, no
t~~att. no beU ringing." The funeral
ThU!*Y will. be just that, but the
1over:nm;ent was holding m e m o r I a I
services at the same1Unte in Notre Dame
Cathedral in Paris and President Nixon
was among world leaders who said they Serra School
A uditoriu"m
OnWayDown
Serra School's auditorium-a Capistrano
Beach commu11ity meeting hall for more
than SO years -will be demolished soon
to make way for es:pansion of the school
district's transportation center.
San Clemente architect Leon Hfz.en is
planning the redevelopment of the Serra
School site, now serving as adminstratlve
center of Capistrano Unified School
District.
The old building -which does not meet
state standards of construction to with-
stand earthquakes -was abandOned for
classroom use sill: years ago, and became
the central administrative pffice! at that
time. ,
Two newer buildings had been used for
claaroorm for low.er primai:y and
kiodergarten until this> year •. They now
house a pre-school class temporarily, un-
til the demolition project begins.
Adminstrators will move into portable
office buildinp and the two newer
ciaSsroom strucfures.
District spokesman Jot Wimer at-
tributed the demolitlon project to "ex-
treme insurance•cosl!" and to a ·two-year
limit allowed by the s,tate for de.!!lrudlon
of the condemntd buiiding.
Wimer said tte expects the · project to
begin in February.
Recycle Project
Initiative Told
C.OllectJng of paper, cans and bottles
for recycling is a current competition of
Crown Valley School 1tudents, with slar-
autograpbed baseball• the pi:i.w.
Angel Oulflelder BUI Voss bas pro-
mised the 1ulographed ball for the st...
dent who colled.J the most aluminum.-
The newspaper, aluminum and gl1111
collection is a 1tudent and teacher effort
to Improve lhe environment. ·
Teacher Elaine Stark notes one ton of
newspepe_n recycled aaves 17 tree.:. "We
know what we've done to our earth, our
alt, ourselves : we are taking the first
steps in the long walk toward tbe 'coal.o[
maklll( the world fil I'!< our chlldren,"
lllt Hid.
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Soviet Armenia Returns':·
" U.S. Generals, to Turkey·-·
ANK~RA. Tw1tey IAP) -Two U.S.
Army generals and a Turkish colonel
returned to Turkey from Soviet Armenia
today, three weeks after their light plane
landed 12 miles acroas the border aod
they were interned.
The Turkish Foreign Ministry said · the·
men were "healthy and in gOod shape."
Tass, the Soviet news agency. aald 'the
generals' U.S. Army pilot also was
County Planners
OK Mobile Park,
A mobile home park has been approved
for El Toro by the Orange County Plan-
ning Commission and two more are being
requested despite attemp(s by the Aliao
Homeowners Associationtto block trailer
zoning.
per~t ~~~=d·~~~~~ w
1 bu1: a 492·space traile'r 'paik orr 60 aaes on
either side of a planned extension of
Muir lands boulevard , thmugb El Toro.
' ' released and . WQt.\ld" ny back their 1ix-
seat, twin-engine plane as soon as
weather permitted.
A Foreign Ministry.source said Turkish
and Soviet ge:Mra~ and civilian ofQclals
negotiated at the bord~: .town .of
Kizilcakcak for nine hours,...,prestimably
working,out details of the release. The of-
ficers were freed at 7 .a.m. and were
driven' to Kars,'40 mile! southwest Of,the
Soviet front I er, to take a Tur'k i s·h
military plane to Ankara. '
Kizilcakcak is hallway betWeen Kara
and Leninakan. in Soviet Armenia. where
the officers' plane landed and. ibey were
held. ·
Maj. Gen. Edttard C. D. Scherrer, 57,
chief of the U:S. militar.y 1misskx\,..in
Tudtey; Brig .. Gen. Claude M.· McQuarrie
Jr .. 46, head of Sc~er's A·r~y section ,
and Got. Cevat Denli, a Turkish liai!JOO
officer. were inapecting · m.ili\iry ·in-
stallations near the'Soviet·b!>rder on Oct.
21. and were on ·• flight fron;a·Erzurum to
Kars. The· pilot, Army Maj. James P.
Ruaell. 42, ttld consu.lar offtciala high
winds . ca.u.sed him to miscak:pl.ate his
course. The U.S. government .contended
tl)e plane atrayed aa... the bordef. :
would i•ttend. ·
Mesaages. ol condolence poured In from
statesa;en tM:lugh9ut the world -from
·Nixon who ·~ikd;bls quality of vision,
from the 1~,,.lof France's former col·
onles in Africa, from the Pope, from th&
Germans· with whbm be 1esiered, Fri.oco-
German frleEMiship. •
De ·Gaulle had Ilved in aloor reti rement
in. Colombey:;Jes-Deu1-Egli.se& fiQce APC'JJ,
11169, when Frenc~ voters rtjected,hiJ pet
proposal for administr:atlve reform. He
worked quietly on hiS meJTl<llrS and lived
the simple life of a Villager~
·Father Claude Jaughey, "the village
p~iest who adminis~{ed the last rites,
said, "~e geileral will r~lve ·a plain
funeral , like any· other villager or· a
lumberjack: This 'will ' be 1 clusleu
tuReril as the ·general always wished."
Vieinino al Mar Club
Hosts .:Auh1nin' Ball
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San ,Clemen'te's Italian-American social
cfub will hOld its. annuat auti)mh ban
Saturday in the Elka LodJ[e featuring
s•lng music by the Royal Knlghts.
The thlrd·aMual affati' 1porll0rfld by
Vfclnino al Mar will begin at t p.m. A
midnight buffet al9o will be fealw'ed.
Tickete:; al"Sii per person, are available
by calling Lou Pbncino at 492-2055 or Lee
Derenzi at 492-741&.
'Speed' U se.d _ i.n ·WWII
Japanese Used Pills to Bolst,er ~Fighting Spil'.it'
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' , ' l'RENCH' !!EADER o'IES , Cfen. Chu_le~ de Gaul.I.•
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As-semb.ly GOP
Vows for Uu.ity
ln .. Speaker Post
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SA£RAMENTO (UPI) -A,..mbly
ReP.Ulj)itans hive 'voted to stand' united in
u.e:"'airieat s~ak.ei-shiP fight in an effort
'to m~ke the be~t deal for ' themselves.
But GOP leaders said Monday it wolild
be ' nearly Impossible to get all J7
Republicans to back the s a·m,e
Democratic candidate. 1 J?emocr~ts won· 43-~ cqntrol. of; Uie
As¥!mbly,-. Jn . last week's cl~on.
Republicans had held a 40-39. edge •with
one v:acancy.
Wilh tht . new · ~~jofit).t ~ Demoa-ats
received the power··to. elect their own
speaker replacihg · · R. e p u·b·I i c a1n
Auemblyman Robett T. Monagan of
Tracy.
There are seven Democratic candidlitts
for 'the IJ)eakerahip. Jt takes ·41 votes. tp
elect a speaker. The election will be·btld
when ihe 1971 ' legislative aeiaion: •
venea ·in January.
Dtmocratie · · cani:Udates !or t h1•
speakership have been solicit~g ~
Republican and Democratic votes in 111
tffort to wtn tbe leadership post.
ANN ARBOR, Mich. AP -A Japanete when Japanese pharma·ceu.tical cam--J>rug•abUle and .Uldde rates tn Jlpah ~6licarui, meefing tietiiM-;-•,,.=-_ __,
scientist said Monday the world's fil'IL panits wer:e lert w:lth huge , tt.ocks or peaked f\lring the 10 years foUowiQg doOn · sUndAy in a ·Leis· AnCeles 1 tiot'I.
epidemLc-Of modem dru1 ab~ was trig· amphetamines unused by 'the. alr force World War n , Kato nkt. Accompanying vo,ted to1remaln unlfletl and~ ":IPlbft.
gered by unused stockpiles of "speed , and Other military unlta which had been · thla trend, he added, was a growtnc again within a .few wetb• to. 'tr, tO •
pill•" used to llimulat< Japanese '°ldien1_llSUIJli4he dnlg ~ lnW!• • fi&htl!!g _.-inli1tlc ~ 1111011g the Japa.-_ _._._bah:.; Ind a 1tngle Qemqcptlc candJdole'.I
Jn World War II. spirit. · espec a ly llii)Qijlh. -Bofone-Republicon-wtio-.-aot,.,-
Dr, Ma .. aki Kale ol the Japan.,. N•· Kalo added : "These cqmpani.,'1r1ad to The ·epidemic puked In 11154. -be ldenlilled ~ liOIJltad out'tbe ",.._.
tional-lnaUtu&t ol MentaUlealth made sell these large stocks of 'meuwi\-there wen ~.oOo abulert In Ja~. ol unity" was ' •1r:elaUVety .~1e1t1•
the report iJ1 I paper pmented al tfte pbetamines, propagani!izlng tJl1l'lhll Wll liOme lllO,llOll ol WliOm allowed -beaUIO It WiltDe ·-Jmpoa_We,,.
International Sympooium on Drug Abut< a drug to (l\lp~e the fighU1\c tplr,t11 In ~ydlotlc 1"'1ptoms, be stoled. ' get tl>o-thlrds ol the Gj)P ca,_ lo '"P-
it the University of M~hlgan. daily.life, without knowing It had terrible Lqal c:ontnoll coupled with improvlnJ port the 11me Dem0cr11lc cllldidlle-
Kato •"Piailled that h~ C<Jlmlry w11 de~ncy ·producing effecf.I," ' n1tlooll monle m•y hive ended the dnig :0.. DemOcraUc oontenden r... !lie lit>
id\ with huge 1tockl of amphetaml,,.. He aaicl the dnlp'Dendlll wer• ex· epidemic Kato IP<C!ll•ted. But, be 1dded: l(t. .A!Om\blrmon• Bob McnUl :·
when the-war 'ended. The drup, be .. Id, tolled by' returning Wll' veterans aod Ill "The vlolen~ aprad'ie behivlor'1mong Nuyi, 'Ken'Coey of-Oanlln,O.:O...
were Issued to the air force ind other uae spread among I.he IDclal fringe youth t>ecame manlfea:t slnoe that ' time, Bee of 'Hl}'Ward, Jolla 1\ Knot of
Japanese m11illiy unil3 to bolster tht1r -araups, such u~''Bohimiana.-1noveliltl, •nd lhe nwnber 'of violeflt crlmea llmong mood. John L: Bunoa of SID ~.
fi!htlng 1piri~ enlertalnen, racial rilillor!tles I n d them lncrmed after the reduction of Vincent •Thoma1 ol Mn ..... ml 11111
Kato Aid bit nation '• trouhl• c111uo ' juvenile delinquents." llbnwt •lNK aod llllclcf<." l4l<llOoa1d of OJI!.
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2 DAILY PILOT SC Tlltsd11, Nowmblr 10, 1910
New Arrests Made in County Drug Ring Case
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of 11M1 Oll1Y ,!Ill 11.tt
A -..n. ol urllll llflllmlz>C lrcim ~~.m ~1~ift1.m-
•llese was the largest dru.g smuggling
tine in California hlsrory was annoWlced
todoy.-
The latelt suspects are charged with
ooasplracy in warrants issued by the
Orange County Dlstr!ct i\ttomey's office
and announced by Newport Beach Police.
'Ibey were lde.ntifted as:
City Chief
Studying
Fire Units
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of llMI O•llY ,11111 Si.ff
A prqprietary fire department similar
to lhe pioneering concept of Scottadale
Ariz., would be low on tbe priority list of
suagestlons for San Clemente, City
Manager Ken Clrr aaid today.
After touring the unUIUIJ department
\ tn tht Southwett city recently, Carr 1aid
ttie idea there "is basically similar to
what ·we have in the city right now, ex·
cept for the unusual aspect of private
owrierahip."
Thi city manager b preparinl 1 detail·
eel 111U4y on 1u111elted methods of Im·
provlnc\ llld expanding fire IOrlVCOI Jn
San Clemente.
The sCottadale trip covered one of
several aula:eeted IOlutlw.
In that city, the department le owned
• by its cbfef, \fho contracts wlth the city
• ~ of nearly 80,~ persona.
But that cfer>il:lment bu only six lull·
time pel'IOD!lel, Carr explained.
8ulan lemlnar anti Diano Norrl1, both
ol IOI Rost Lino, CO.ta Mesa, LIO)'d Ort
Jr., of hn Clamtnll, aild OIClt'll CU.1,
who wu &meted at 1 M04)..U C1J11011 ruldlDCI. . lnv~iil<ln 11ld ir wl1 noOha llome ~ prlnclpel Mpoot Tbomu J. lilellr Jr.,
52, who l'nlint&ined the illeged narooUcs
ring headquarter1 at 28532 ModJeskl Can-
yon Road.
Police claim a cache ol bombs and
other illegal weapons was confiscated
during the raid staged jointly by federal,
•.
IOUTKOATf
0 •11!1••
COMPTO 0
ttlle and local law enforetment agencies.
Newport llHcb J<Ollce said <omplet•
detalJI of a... oJ\d 14dmHI for the
llloet ..,..,. a total ol " delandenta ....
-.d .wllb the -Wll'I nol 1v1U1blt.
Ort'• Sift Cllmenll horill yjoldod·1 kilo
of. morij .... , _,., to lnv111lp10r1,
who &aid they also round a small amoWlt
at Cuas' canyon residence.
The neweat arrests came one day after
10 of the original 39 arrestees allegedly
involved in the $500,000.per-week in
ternational operation 1ppt1red in court to
• ..
WllT COY I NA
"' •••
0 SANTA ANA
•• I
' .;OllOHA Dt: MAit
' ' ', I ' ' -... · ' ' •
offer plett.
Skelly. U1e 1ll1ftd ringleader, was
1ehocluled !or trio Dec. I In Oranp
C:Ounty 8uper!Ot Court after enterln1 a
pleo ol Innocent.
He hll bten-htld al Orange County Ji.Ii
alDCt 1be r1lcL lo Ueu, of $100,000. one of
the highest bail bOnct figures set ln county
hi1tory.
Wendy S. Desserich, also known by the
last name of Prenty, entered a si mila r
plea and was ordered to appear Feb. 24
to stand tri&J.
They and othcrt were Indicted by tht
Orange Coun ty Grand Jury Oct. lS·on a
urleo ol cllll'til lnollldin, polMMIOn
and ~dton for Nie 'of narcoUu 816l~f&ifa/Ufl, ftii11JUllll lft6•Uftl!Wrui
weapons.
Officers of the State Bureau of
Narcotics Enforcement and other agel'I·
cies confiscal.l?d bombs, ammunition and
a machine.gun from the castle-like com·
mune in the picturesque canyon.
They also monitored more than 1,00tl
telephone calls to the premises during a
For Guard
mere two-week period before raidlng the
residence.
s1111ertd by the """'* ol Jiit •Jltled •rus deel.,.hlp, 1n ... ~111ort 111d Ir.
tentacles reached to agents and suppliers
in Afghanistan, RUN:ia, Ge.nnany, and
South America . as well as Canada and
Mexico.
Huge quantities of marijuana, cocalnt.
hashish and thou.sands of drug pills of_ all
kinds were seized in Lhe Modjeska Can-
yon raid.
Laird Imposes
Training Order
WASHINGTON !AP) -secretary ·ol
Defense Melvin R, Laird today ordered
additional riot control training for Na·
tional Guardsmen and Reservists and the
insurance of protective face masks and
riot bttons !or riot assignments.
Pentagon officials said Laird will ask
Congress for an additional $20 million to
pay for the new equipment and extra
training .
pent a g 0 fl' swkesman Jerry \\o·.
Friedheim was askecl whether this action
was taken as a result of a Guard -student
confrontation last May at Kent State
University.
The May incident "obviously heighten-
ed the concern for the protecUon Of the
guardsmen," he replied.
Four Kent State students were killed at
1 time when guardsmen on the Ohio cam·
pus said they feared for their livea.
use In riot situations.
Friedheim said the added training will
mean extra drills and will about double
the time now devoted to riot con\l'Ol
training.
If Congress approves the Pentaaon's
request, Guardsmen wlll receive lf0,000
face shields and batona and 120,000 pro-
tective vests.
Firm Unveils
'Spot Remover'
For Oceans
" SAN DIEGO (BWJ -A l)'si.m which
The -ol the flreflghUng force II a ·
buJc volunteer unit. whole inembera are
pold by the hour when they are fighting
flret. \
SANTA ANA REAL ESTATE DEVELDl'ER PllDPOSES AIRPORT (ARROW) OV!R FUTURE FREEWAY
Developer Reg Wood Wlll ·Offer DMl9n for Jet Traffic to Supervl1or1 Nov. 17
A state grand Jury absolved the
guardsmen of blame for the deaths, but a
presidential commission called t h e
guards' action "unnecessary, unwar-
ranted and unexcusable."
Asked if the Guardsmen would be pro-
vided with other nonlethal weapons ln ad-
dition to the batons he replied that
although research ls continuing in1 this
area, authorities feel that there isn't
anything safer or more effectlve than the
tear ga.!I now used In riot situations.
may soon be in use to clean up oil slicks
on oceans and bays was put through its
paces for newlmen Monday by Lockhttd.
The system consists mainly of a clever-
ly designed paddlewheel device which
skims oil off the surface and pumps it
into containers or other diJposal iy1tems,
Large versions may soon be deployed
along the nation's coasUI aboard 1lmple
catamaran-type vessels which can be
towed through massive oil slicks.
Equipment, Carr 1dded, seems to be
moltly IUl'plUI culled fr'qm cutoff1 from
mWtary depota 'and \ other f I re deportments. .
What teem1 at present on .the top of the
lilt for San Clemente'• fire• department
eolutlon ll the tradJUonal expemlon of a
depirtment into a new headquarters.
S.. Clemente Fire Chief Merton W.
Hackett favon a plan of building a new
headquarten bulldlng nen to the exilltng
offices and·1araae1 attbe clvlc center.
The bulldlnf, Hackett .. Id, could be
built with_fundl alreody bw!«eted for •
.... beodquarten.
. Salarles for new full.tlme ftrtmen. however, would have to come from other
Income IOUroet.
-'l'bll upanelon of the department
buUdinc• would a1ao let'Ve another
_. -expansion of the police d-'"
ment into vaClted fire offices.
Loa1·rana:e pl&nl call for use of the e1-
tstlng fire truck 1t«age garaae as more
loll cells ond 111 expanded records ond
detecUve section.
StacU of. records and detective offices
recently moved Into the lut remaining
space of the department -a aquad
meeting and storage room.
Carr said his report would be forthcom-
ing someume-within the nest month or
two.
Among the other alternatives being
considered are contracting for a special
service c;listrict with the county -a plan
which already has drawn disfavor
becauae of its high cost.
Actor Burton Feted
LONDON (UPI) -Queen El~abeth In·
vested actor Richard Burton as a Com·
mander of the British Empire today as
hi1 wife Elizabeth Taylor looked on. The
orchestra of the Welsh Guards played
"'Men or Harlecb" as Welshman Burton
accepted the decoration from the queen.
Today was Burton's 45th birthday.
DAILY PILOT
Newp•rt le.a.
lat•H leaclt
C.M Mtt• ---....... ...,
S.cto-
OAAMGE 'OAST PUILISHlNG toM•AMV
lobett N. WeM
Pr111d"'t •r.C f>vlllltihtr
Jt~k It. Cwrl•y
Vkt 'n.lo11n1 •r.d °""'111 Manlttr
Tho'"'' Kee•:! Eolltor
7he1"•t A. Mvrphlne M•M01'11 EClllor
fl ith11d P. Htl
..,.h Oi.;\fO '-ity 1411111' -C•ta M-: D W11I aey SI"" fffW'llOl"t hlCft! 2211 W•I .. _, • ._....,.,.. t
~ ••c11: m ,_, """'u. Mllfllll\OtOll a..CIH ln,t htdl levW#t,. i.n CM1ntt1t11 au North ll """"° i .. 1
•
Northern County
Site Proposed
For New Jetport
A possible site for an Orange County
jetport that has never been iieriously
studied by the varlou1 cor11ultants hired
by the county ls walUng for action, ac-
cording to Supervisor David L. Baker.
He proposes use of the area between
Carbon Canyon on the north and Prado
Dam on the Santa Ana River on the
80Uth.
"There is a ridge that can be levelled
to fill an adjoining canyon and it would
make an ideal jetport for several
reuons," says Baker.
"The cost of the land would run about
$2,000 to $4,000 an acre, the fill although
expensive would not bring the cost
anywhere near the value of most other
county land proposed, and it is a clear
area."
By~"clear" the supervisor explains that
zoning control is available in the takeoff
area of the proposed facility and in the
approach area.
"The surrounding area is now used !or
livestock grazing and oil production."
Baker adds. "Land which can easily be
zoned for a future use compatible to jet
planes."
Baker does not think the proposed Bell
Canyon site in the southeast part of the
county ls "bad ." It was the selection of
the Parsons report which comes before
the board of supervisors for public hear-
ing Nov. 17.
"There is still plenty of open space
around the Bell Canyon site and I think
annoyance to residents tn the coastal
area would be minimal. The jets should
be very high before they reach built up
areas," Baker said,
Supreme Court
Urged to Rule
On Death Penalty
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Two attorneys
urged the Supreme Court Monday to set
new rules for jury practices in capi tal
punishment cases that could affect the
fate of an estimated 550 prisoners now in
Death Row cells across the country.
But the federal government and
California told the court that the lawyers
failed to show any constitutional reason
for changing present Jury practices.
Two cases involving death l'Qw defen·
danta in C.Ufornta and Ohio are im·
mediately al issue. But the court's rnUng,
which will·be made later 1n thl!I tem:r.ls:
-UJ>'Cted-to-lflect oil eopltal_pen,lly
cases. tn anticipation or the court ruUng.
one of the 41 states that have Capital
punishment laws bas not carrled out an
execution since June 2, 1967;
The Supreme Court heard three houn
of arcument.s Monday.
Altorntya Herma.n F. Se:lvln of Beverly
Hills and John J. C1llahan of Toledo,
Ohio, both representing men on Death
Row, urged the court to spell out st..,n-
denll for juries In determining wheo lhe
d,.lb penalty II 1ppllcobl1.
Real Estate Man to Off er
Chino HillsSitef or Airport
Only those Guard and Reserve units
with a civil disturbance mission will be
affected by the new orders and undergo
the extra training.
This will affect units in most of the na·
lion's major cities. It Is the first tlme
they ~Ill rece~e special equipment for
Lockheed scientists and engineer! in·
vented the: system and now are under
contract to the Coast Guard to determine
Its applcabillty.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of flle Dell¥ ,.Itel INN
While Orange County supervisors study
the ParlOns re"pOrt on airport sites, a
Santa Ana real estate broker has come
up with a site for a regional airport in the
Chino Hills area near the San Bernardino
County line.
Reg Wood, developer of the plan, said
he will present his propo!al to the
supervisors at their Nov. 17 he aring on
the Parsons study.
As outlined by Wood, the airport. which
would be capable of handling 747 jet traf-
fic. would be located in the pasture lands
on the Orange County side of the line,
midway between Carbon Canyon Road
and the Riversi de Freeway.
In a brief report prepared on the site
for Wood"s firm by engineering con·
sultants Voorheis. Trindle and Nelson,
selection of the site is explained :
"The Chino Hills area as depicted in
this study was selected as a primary site
due to its geographical proximity to four
cour.ties. It is remote from densely
populated areas, even though readily ac-
cessible to the metropolitan area which it
will serve.
"TI.e Chino Hilla area cont.a.in~ nearly
25,000 available acres which will provide
adequate property for the airport proper
and supporting industries and services.
"1t contains a minimum of fixed struc·
tures to be affected by the construction of
an airport. The proposed elevation of the
runways (1,000 feet) will produce
minimum noise pollution to the sur-
rounding populated areas from take-off
and landing operations."
He said he has not tried to pro~ct the
CQSt of the proposed airport. "I imagine
it will be very expensive, but that's the
kind of thing that can be done If the plan
is going to be given serious con-
slderatfon," he explained.
Wood, who represents property owners
in the area, frankly admits his plan is
being proffered for economic reasons.
"My firm is on retainer to the owners
of about 12,000 acres on or near the Pl=i"
posed airport.
"Considering the t r o u b l e the
supervisors ere having with the airport
situation, there is en altruistic motive in·
volved here. Granted. we stand to make
money if the deal Js accepted, but that's
our interpretaUon of the free enterprise
system .
"In our judgment, it is a logica l loca·
tion in that the land is avaihi.ble relative·
Jy inexpensive," he said.
One of the focal issues nf Wood':ii plan,
is a freeway which he calls the airport-to-
airport route. Without it, there js no
dlfea access to the Airport site, and a
drawing or the proposed alrport shows
the taxiways stradling the f.reeway.
He admitted the freeway, which would
tun parallel to the Riverside Freeway
through TC!f'gripli""tanyon. as yet l'ias no
official status wllh the state Division or
Highw5ys.
The airport to airport freeway, ruMlng
from Los Angeles tntemitlonal to
Ontario lnternatlonal Js a reality in that
the Division of Highways bas budgeted
$267 mllllon for Its construction.
But blghway officials have not set the
route It . \VOUld follow through northern
Orange County, and Wood is hoping for
the bicklaa of cotil!fy~aliil munldpal of·
flcials to push for the Telegraph Canyon
route ,
''So far Yorba Linde , Bl'ea and
Fullerton have approved our route s. J(
the division or highways bypasses
Telegraph Canyon and dumps the airport
freeway into the Riverside Freeway in
the Santa Ana Canyon, you 'll have an
obsolete freeway before you start.
"Not only the sheer bulk of the cars
would cause problems, but that portion of
the freeway has been closed to traffic
because of fires and rJoods and it would
just make more sense to have a parallel
route," WooJ said.
Wood, who has been a broker and
counselor in Orange County real estate
for i2 ·years, said he has presented hi s
idea to state and federal officials during
the past two years. He said he received
support from the late Congressman Jim·
my Utt and is getting support from north
county Congressman James Wiggi ns.
He is optimistic about support for his
plan on the local level .
"An airport such as this would take the
heat off Orange County Airport and the
proposed site in the Bell Canyon area.
Quite honestly. I am hoping the people
who have organized against these
air ports will support my plan.
"This airport will only be displacing
cattle, not homes.'' he said.
Nixon 'Shocked'
Over De Gaulle,
Sets Paris Trip
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UPI) -Presi-
dent Ni xon, "shocked and grieved " over
the death of Gen. Charles de Gaulle, cut
short a Florida vacation today and
prepared to fly to Paris to attend state
memorial services for the former French
president.
The Florida White House said Nixon
would break off his vacation and head
back to Washington about 8 p.m, EST
tonight to get ready for his twOOay trip
to Paris.
Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler stressed that Nixon is going to
France "to pay hi s respects to a great
leader who was a personal friend and a
man of great stature." He emphuized
Nixon will not conduct any official
business with the other world leaders who
will attend the services, including Soviet
Premier Alexei Kosygin.
Company officials are in San Diego this
week to show a working model to Na.vy
and American Petroleum J n s t i t u t t
representatives.
In the demonstratlon of the model for
newsmen, crude oil was poured Into a
small tank of water straddled by the
removal 1y1tem. A switch wu thrown
and the paddlewheel began to turn, II.I
unique vanes scooping up the oil, wb!ch
then was piped away,
Barrett Bruch, Lockheed's project
leader, said larger models and prototypes
of the system are undergoing tests at
Lockheed Missiles & Space Co, head-
·quarters in Sunnyvale, near San Fran-
cisco.
"Many approaches to the oil-spill pro-
blem have been advanced since the 'Tor-
rey Canyon' ind Santa Barbara in-
cidents," Bruch said.
"From the data we 've gathered so fer,
our system appears to hold more promlse
than others, particularly for really
serious situations -large sllckl in heavy
seas."
Bruch said Lockheed has worked with
many oil companies to determine their
oil-handling operations and requirements.
Next month the firm will present It! fin·
dings to the Coast Guard, which ls stu-
dying the oil-spill problem on a 111-
tionwlde bas.is.
Truth
or Consequences?
Sometimes the truth hurts! We have lost en oe<:esional sole liy not telin9 1 ourion., wfiet
he wonted to heer.
We might point out tho! ,·customer would lie l:ietter off to p•y a little mor. for our rulj..
ber padding then buy a cheoper, mu•hy pad that IHls lilo 'Y"" ero welling on balloon•. Tho "bef.
loon" pad hurts the carpet backing, causes stretching, and ruins seems. Also, this ~dcli"9 often
flattens out after a while.
AdditioneTiy, we might tell you th1t •om~ cerpat fibers ore more prociicol Ilion otliers. A
fiber th1t works in one texture, mi9ht "bomb in another.
Feel free ~o ceTI for edvic!· AO~oJ_our-soloLpaople.Jia.Lhoil extensive Hperie11ee in tlie--
service end of tJ;is business -end e~er 111 -the most important thing we can offer. thet hardly
anyone else does ... is service! I
=-ALIJEN-'S--
'
~-------SANTA ANA, OUNel
TUSTIN c.n , ..
ALDIN'S
llD HILL CA•Pm
& DlArtllD
1tJ74 tm-. Tlftff., Cellf. ., .... , ..
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 l'lac•ntia Awe.
COSTA MUA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thun., 9 lo S::IO -Fri., 9 lo 9 -Sot., 9:30 lo S
J l
11
I
20 DAIL V PILOT SC lutSdQ', Howtmber 10._}970
Co~plet~New York Stock List
HE• YClllW. fUl • Tlolttda't"• ~ ..... .. ~~I ... '-, ... :: ,,,,..,., 'Ywlr. 11.ca · I Xclt.t,... !N'kel ~ "• L.ft c-. a. -
Your Jt101aey's Worth
Some Tax B1·eak.s Still teft · OVER THE COUNTER
=:, .......... a.ct: "illtl" Clfrl'lf 1 .,,,.. 11 'k + \.\ = 1:~ 4 " ~ J1 ! ~ NASO Llatlng1 for Moncl•y1 Novembtr t, 1970 _._ &rft!° iii ,;: 11: 1:~ =·~ 1~~~ ~ ra : ~ i ! 1,. ....... ,.,..., ...... ., .......... ""'."" 11r-11 ~ .a lii; 1 ~ lnt. -"' no w n
For Merchandise Donations 21<~ "='!!ii~~ ~~IE!·!!?'. ' ' I 1.,, !liii& .,1!f'1r1 ::·7 ~i, n -m -a -m~t
• :e'N.1T:::"tNC£ = Ii '1~ 11~ ::: t: ~1'.11 u l~:' <~ : • ~ la1J • .t ,.,.. ""' -~ m M.l. ,... 141 ~ Jlft ,, .. -I~ 911 IMr ... ,, I™' II~ Ull -.. ~ Of Sk\lrltlft ·-= ttt J\li R= Ell :NI\ 11111 ''= G '~ 1N ], ••• ·~ J:t +·v, lt"'~.r1:~ 1 i:\i # ! « '~Ir.·~.: .1 ~ ~· .:.:·~ By SYLVIA PORTER fl'Om your tncOcne but pay no only your cist ol ~-And ,_1'~11"1;·111.!~ i:l1 cmt •~ ~ : .. 1o,, M 2!..a ~ ~~'*' 31 ~ I c!A ,.. • • -" '~!~ "» 'U ll, ff:: if.: + ~ """ """' 1 jj., .....
The maS!lve 1969 Ta :r tax on the profit. What method this would be so despite the ~=•ti:~'' 1:1-:. .1'1t.c 'l~ 1, :: f:.J ,.\,. ~ t;i:-.,: 'J ~"'--1F.'' I ft. fb t'~ 15"':::".:f.i1 47f F n n~ ~;ii -"'~ ,, ,.:: n! tt i !
n-'orm low ,...lly clamped you ~-makes no dlf~ fact that your uset was oe • ., ,. '-.~ :1Ltdt 1"" ~~It"*" ... ,.,,. • l'11M1r ,., '"' ,n;:;t'!:. '~ J!i: .---~ ••'•'~ I~ ' '* ,,.,,. ~ -" t '·'° 1!1 ff:t 1i\\ ·····
ne1 •PWo•lfft:1t1-, i. 'rtk: t:H• ) 31'.11 -)» 1, I 0 ".,. ~ •"j~ + ~"°' 0 ;: fl~ 1~ n-.. .. 'ii: . bUt rt 1'5.t ut I.JI r. •...• down, on, many ways o1 .. vt'ng ference to tbe charity. quoted al ~1.000. ::!;;1,,.. Whk:tl tlH! RI IE~.. 1,t: ~14 k..;:~ t~ :: :: H~j'Tf111m ! .. "' ·.~ •• •" ~.·.~ .... '".::~ + ~lltflll~ • '°" ... ~tt -! "Gell 9fr•ct It ~!ft -n"' .....
· Another lricky new -pro-"'"' llftn ow tel 1¥1 k l CIMI' ?\\ 2¥1 un McOll " ~ .. ·• lJ ~ 2'h 2 + 1Wl1111 :r. ,",· " isl\ lS\to .., o.,. "' 1·• ' ""' ~v. \.\ ····· tales via making charitable -You also can still get I vision appll!S to those or you ~= (•lk~!.uoho 22~ ,:"' ~~I~ ~~ .: Hf c:: ~~ ~r~ i=i: ~i' ·. r~ ~ Yr; :.:·~ l:tlf,.': ·" " r.' = rr.;· + ~ g;:!t~1-7:# ~}: ~;~ ~ ~ ~:~
contributions in appreciated lax break by giving the Stock W h o' -tribute palJl' tings, ~I 1119 .... dtY . .!!,"'-.,, 1' 1""1 SC:rlD!CI f'< ~ )Mo U$ .511tar .. -~ ,-, =lflll Si,..•' im' •, m:..... "'· '-i"5 NAP!fl .10 153 lffio I.._.. ~ + V. GT1tE;\<jl2.SO 2 ~ n· ... -·
Jock chand( nd · ""'' "" ""''""' "' 1~ StrlP• H II lt llS TrkL ,. .. -• '"*• . h ~ :is NA Al .10 ,",,' tl ~. 2 .... GTll 1\JD a» H\.\ WJo t•l-'I -Ill; a , mer se, etc. ln the to the charity a 1m· 9Culpture, other t 8 n 11 bl e .",'~-' ='~,!!:. c,•,e 1Jllt 1J);: 1tat1e " 1nM1m u. P.n,. .... "",., .. A 1ea <• 110. ~·' ' G•1 "' ~ '7 -t1loll G.n ,. o s1 1t N ~jS + • put, many Of YOU In the mediately buying the identical "' -, ... r 1~ ;t: S..h Cm11 t\lt J Ulth SLd ~ ,./;; 4Ali',,.'" .• , .\f ~ MV. Ill -'It 11s_q1 "1 .19 1 SO SO $0" .... 0-0 l.J't :n mt; »"-'j -~ personaJ property (machinery, ~~ftt I Iii ~ C~ J~ .... ~!Mi 7-ti., VIII Ind Ill 6 U\.'t 37 ~ + '4 OC;)fl.: Ii~ 1~ 17111 '}ll e~ :ti~ Gfla11r ·= ~ IWi 114 ••·•• higher brackets could actually stock in the open market for cat"• etc 1 to charity You A.Al cor, 3,, ..... ••ill! k 16"" 11 t~:·~ .. J ,il'.ll ~::..!~i. 1m 11\i ~111 '"c!"11 110 l,"n, »~11'4 ~ ,!J); .... ~ :r. ;;ir.l'.» .a ~ ;,,.,. : .. + :i'~ 8: .. :C« Pii . .-Tt flt ~ ~~ :.;·~ mak re b . . t 000 • d 'l '"' • • ' • ..F.tJ>r • 111.o 1tV.. IA Miii 1'V. <II* Sl'ltflCIOll ,.. ~ Vl "°"' 3'11> 3"' AlllMtlll A "" •• JV. TI kE j,O i1• •'ot 411 .... -~Pte ..... I u J.J ll e mo money Y gtvmg .,1, -assuming you on get a dedudion for the run ... 10 111c 1~ •v. ,_Me' 1' 1~Srn1t11,,. 1,,, w!cti 1t11 20\\tl "'15"'111 .1Sb 11 t•"' uv. .... • 1na•' 1 ... ~ 11 31~ i·1 311._..-GffW 1.10 .io V!4 J1'4 ,.,..:.:-·" away property lo charity than want to part with the stock. In . 'ITS Inc ~· •YI r'llfl It l~ 11\lo klld SI s 11' ,~ Wt<llW .. ,, lt All Id Pd M ll ..,.. I• i.!ll --,,;;, ~ • 14 Jt{O IM ... GltfYO I,* 21 .... ''"' ~ -....
by seJIJn.g il -but that's alJ this Way , YllU get the same tax · · '5G pf 1'4 111 rwltl 111 "41 1" SoNI! Ttl 21 '™' W ·-· l\Ai 3 "' I tr ff a m .fO 4'Vo . -n O r <I llUOO ,n r,,,\ 4t • • · • GlllltPC . .0. IG4ii 1~ 10\'t -¥> valueolthesegtftsonly 1flhe,.SG ·~ 3.,. .iv. ro..,. Pr ~ ~\'sc:a1 wet I• 10,w1tn ea. 111'1t••!r 1-.. 31 2:1+. n J!u ""' 11oi:;u '·"' • 3~111 "h )l.!1-4'Gett'I' ..ii.xi j 16\lt ''"' 1•'4 +ll
charity uses the paintings or ... v,,, ~p l \'o ' \llfd (11 3.~ 4 SW 4lC• 13\4. I~ w.....,... ' Alo Alld .ls.. lb f,.•, ..... ,,. +···;.: gn .., "' & + h Glbt1lt 1"111 JI 1~ lift IA + \i aone now. benefits of a contributioo for so'mo'lar ~rty In 8 way ~~1e ,", '•" •, ~nr -~ sw e:1s-.c it-. u 11o w1111 NG 11t\ 14\li "I"' •Im ~.... ..
01
1n .u.1s > '"" "~" T v. GlddL.., ~· 11 ... ~ 1111 ~ .,. I r•vr v _,,_ ,.....,, I"" t ~ Ju; nf1 With ll E ~ '""AA ....... 1' 1.114 l<l'f'o 1""' -l't a I 111 Pfl.611 1.!, !,'\!,. ·~ 11!" ••. GHi.111 IM 221 .QI\ .,"'° ~ ~ ~ While the law naM"nwed the full va ue and 00 tax on RELATED TO ITS EXEMPT '" si. 1\\ hi '"°"' s :io tt Sl•NIYn lt\i 10'.t wu Tr .... '""' kM n S5 ~ S4'ii -111 al .r.1.,. ...,
1
, ... ""' -"Glmbtl 81" 1 11 .n 11"" 11v. -111 ··~ 1. • Air INl«s 1-\lo :W. H1w1n In 1" I" S • ! 11 ltloli Webb It• 11 11'-A/Tla)S.,,. IM 1 2S li 2$ +\to 1" I •r..-. 11 ..... Gil'IOI /f'M: ti 1'14 II~ ti~_ 'Ii the PoSSibilities for 1ax sav-I.he profit. And by buying bac.. PURPOSE To illu~rate o'f "'ltt>rn F 11"' 1'"' Ht•mi 111 ~ s~ s\:11 =-: 1, 2sy, wekllr11 1 ,.. AM-••,c·.i-"-"• ?t~-1n..,1 ,"'..,-+ ~ ·=•1 ~t' '~ fl1• fii~. fl.._ .. i,· G1111 Aio.n ,1 ''• t~ t~ -1~ he l.-• __ .. 'ts . .,. • ... I.,.. 11 JV. 2"' HtNtcl F " " s Ill Sit' 11\,'j 12\lo Wellnt "' l•Vi 17 .... -.. . ... ..,. -Gltt!Ai pn.tt I " " " -"' Jngs through COnb'lbutions in t sJocg YOU '~" raJ~ I you contribute a painting Jo a "°'"' <h •• "'"' Co l: n: ,:::. Cl ~ B Woll ''° ><• '"' ~ 1:.. it ,,: ll .. l:... i:,, ;_:·· OI ' ';~~ Ii ::~ i: .. ~ .. '.;~&I:::' u'::''.~ ': :::: lJ,, ::.. = ~ ptopeMy, though, it did nol C0$1 W you from $500 to $1,000, for .l! "1co1ec: '" s iCIOC ~,: .)0 ,. su11te T., '"' '""' 'Nlrc:at '" ..., 11 ..i,rMH ll'll.JO '° .,.,, ~ ,,t; _ "' Fs:l"' ,,;,• s ,~~ 1,~ '"" _ '°' Goaclric:h i.n: in
2114
'""
21
+ ""
completely elt'minale them. at no tax cost to you. mtri~buto·omn t·s 1-ts' fuull"v'alyuoue_' -.:,:,~~Bl ... ,", '.~~ 1,l". :i:o11m1,,, ,,~ •~ ~~1 F: ~ = ~~~ :,~, ~ =t ~11i~1r~ ·':, ,ff = tl'4 ~ +: :Wet 1.:1 ,~ ll ;;\ii ~" + ~ ~•r .as "' ,... " " -\lo
lt's more imperative than But let me WARN )'OU if . tti . f Alpn Geo 3 '"' i 11• t"-m T:~.::r. l S'll ,,.,. w1 ... Wh ~ J14 A artldt J.1• 21J t.1 .,.,, 41" +·~ !mwE pfi.d: lt 21',\ !I!'" 21\i ..•. ~~': 1'.: .ll ~\Ai n. : ... +: oa. ,. "' 35"4 T ltJ 1" W11n 1"11b 111'4 10~ Afll Ill!, o,S. " l™o lllo\lo 1""-omE pf'f " 6 IDI 1on~ IOI + Vi Go.,t.;t-,A .1t n IJ\11 lJ 1.J + II<
. -~ hi-" . But ychou 111chve ehlpah111then1ng ~~"... ,! 1!t :!:~ ?~ ""' ~ T1y1w w •,l'.io ~~ w.•,•, .... '"~ 't.,.. ~ ~·da,•,•,..10 JO 24'4 " 2""' .•••. °""" 011 ·'° ,", •,,·~ ~t.~ •'•*-' "i\ Grtf!O'f '"° J 21\io 21v. 21h -~ .,er to make sure you aga111st P•~=ures w o" on Jo your ur , w c 4 ""' '" •• '"" "' .,, ,.. '"'"' ,. F. w,,;;, w ,. .., -;;·4~..,, " ?~ "" ll" t ~ ~~· "' ., .,;; .,· .,• t • ..... u, _., "' "lt "" u :I •
UNDERSTAND WHAT TAX the paBI. I reconunended for sells tt, yoor contribution~~ f:r, 1~ '!:: ~ ~:, r,. n, f::,,~:;" '"' "" '"~ • "' '"~&.; \-'lf ~ ;!;; ~!l! I~ :;·i\ i~-=~~1i~u! ~~ ~}i Jn? ~~ :i:?: 1~:~11.f 1~sn ff ll ~ftt ll-t lt BREAKS ARE LEFT and how tax savings but which will no deduction is only your cost AA .C:!~·', "••" ... ,, "'~~ ,•, ,m ~ ACrvSu• .• ..2 2~ 2 ' , •... Ol'lrt( II .60 " I.JV. 11'• 1»• •• ;" ... 'rit l· ff §ti iID n~ _1{t tak f 11 _, t f I ·ve tax b aks n-..lc .. .--. ........................ IA(:rf111d 1.2$ ~, JI ~ ~ ... ... on EG I I.IQ '"' 11,,. n, \i ''v. -" !Ho(lr I.. 7 ~II\ ff" IJ~ •··· YOU C8n e U .ruVan age 0 Onger gl YOU re • pJUS 50 percent ol any incf'ease Am Te!V 1• 16\11 HYtrl Int m 1~i• :m~~l~Y! 11 1~ 1 .•... z=~dl1 pf• S 14 ' 14 • •. IMOf'fetc 1. 10 if ~ ~ + :!
them. You can 00 longer sell your in the value of the painting::;;:~• 1~ 7!v. 'J~ r~~.• "~~ ,,"'. J~ A. Vt pt, ... , 2; ft11< fr-f~~ ~-~ Cone41:.C"J.,i 11~ tti~ lit: i1'h -li.i ilN~Ji1BJ;:f' 1<122 ''"\It 1 tt + ,,_
k Jo har·t t t wc1 l11d ~ 6\lo ''"' is .... MUTUAL Am rPw •.10 sis tfil ftV. 2tt? ..... ConFCICld \.119 'r 311'1 31~ ll'h + 141 twnu1111 .to 21 221-'1 -..
fia.Ving With philanthropy by deduct the excess o( the Value the g1Vet JS a corporatlon, the Arte MOP ll'llo l•Vo Inf Cont 1,,., n t H ,.t -U ''f: &V. 241' \lo on L .. 11111 14 5'* 5't. !loll -4\ retnGnt :,; 21._ 21~ 21'9 ••.•.
-You can still combine tax-sloe a c •ya your cos • since. you. bought it. (And if :~::;: ~ ~ 3fV. /::t,,':,uc1 ~04 'tv. A.•·.~~1',fn,~,'l 2:i l~ l~~ I~, -1 ~ i::~~.1="\' t ~ .... ;J, ;,..., + ·s ~~11fn11 :J; '!' '°~
1
v.
1
1_.<t = ~
making your contributions in Over the cost and not pay any deduction is only the cost plus :~::. H 2~ 2~t:. t:t'1w~~ ! ~~ A .... '\~ ~;:, Jf .f • .m tl~ 1" ~I~~~., l~l ~r .• ~ irt.= + ~ l~~nJ· I ,;. n~ ntt ~\t ·i· ~
,. 7ll t'-Avlo Sci ' 6Vi Int Sri 21 )tV, FUNDS Am HOIP.2t "1 »'4 ""° 2t* ..• ,, onPw pliJO 111» 51~ 511 53~--·~ rumtQl!Co I I 11~ I \~ "'
.Jock. real estate. 0 th. r ta• on the gao'n _ the SO-37., percent ol the an.. A•CC Bot 321'1 llY> 1111 Mu1111 11-. ltv, HQfnl irr 6 loo ,..,.. 1°" 11'> onPw •" 52 no n 5' s• •oll« .to 11 u [ l!s "
't I hi h •· CALLED "BARGAIN SALE" · t' ) Th T y B•lrd At ~ J Int Sr Ill U 1.'Vi Am lnv1l .5D U • .,_,.. • l"' ontAlr ,1511 1S 10\'J lD\i> 1011> + \< lrLIH1d ~~OC 71 21v. ,.
· · aJ d wh' h TO CHARITY If i the above h •t • explru'ned whati ·s '" Paint w. '"" 1on11:1 1'14 1s•1, A MtlCt• 1,ci »14 :11111'1 "" c.... ..,. 5t ••·" I'll '"° + ·~ "' lturef':s d •~ 11~ , -14
cap1a assets w ·c uove prec1a 1on . e reasur Bat ... 1614 1.\&1111,., tl'I'"' , AMtc11ca1 .11,,",." n=v.~ "'~','~.1..,~ l14.lli•\J11,» ,..,_. l'OHr.so <15221 2"' 1.11
risen JO v ue an IC you • . n asn ye. Btim Rn 20\.\o 20>.o 1, SoUUI ''"' 21;;, A M!ICI• "'' "' n:w. v. ~ -loll ont ,, 2 41 »·" Ul'• 32y, _ ~~ u tltn 111.10 1 ''~ 1'V. "~ -~ hav-e held more than six example, you sold the stick to meant by "related to the e1s1n P lv, 31" 11eot1 t :~ :t ~~ .. ~i'.10 1~ .o't? ,J,'4 ~ + U 1 ~: =:ii: ~ ~;z ll"'~ ~! ~ ~ IW~11r1\~ ,1 ~~ ~r" In: :f: !t
months. You can dedu ct as the charity for $500, you could charity's. exempt purpose,'' so!~\~ !fa J.~ Ji£}•1• ~~,I. •~-"' , """'" '·" s.n :EiS:.~: •fl ii: ~~ ~'di ~:•¥~',:;: ,1\ ~;; \I, II..• ~ ~:iill:,:":Jg 'll ffU l'.ll H~ = ~ your contribution the FULL s till deduct $500, the excess of check with a professional tax ae11e 111e u v, 1111o 1m11w '"" 1a NEW YORK <A•! 1no:111rJ i·~ :·:;Am ShlJ> .60b 12 n 21:v. 22 _ ~ ::froi cU.'f', 'lit ~\~ ~f-'ll ~~.,.. =.,v. ~~l~ :11:15? ,2 ).}.,., 1,' ~h..,, t ""
FAIR MARKET VALUE of $1,000 value over the $500 sales adviser before making th.is ~n':' ,:,r;: 11v,. 1:a J~Zn FP~ 1i"' 21: ;,1!:, kl~:W:r1~"": \~JGco4 1\.1112: .. ~~Ir 1·J: li'' w~: !!·A ~ + ¥: '" ... -:',,I.to ' :M!i :UV. :Ml'i +Ito ul!Oll ll>d 2L •,'4 1"' IV. •...•
the property -)'et y9u do price -U YOU JS, Un-type 0 COntrl <IOn. ~ti Ltb ltV. "1Yi IC1l1St pf lt"" 11'/o llkln Cl! Sfcllfllles Inv lflCllC .... 6 . .0 A $1~ PM.15 ll ts ~lo 1$11, -'Ii -llld DIAS m: r ... JI~ Jl~st: Httl llrl 1.ICll 4 ~ -~ ,.,.. -\~ b t if did th" [ 'bu•· Birk Ht 3"I. <fD'ito IC1 lur St lS\lo :U 11M Hlllon1 Assoc~ 111'1 GvlCI l.Ol I GI Arn Std 1 • 1l 2 2,.,._ 21 _loll .,.!~f~ ,;: 2' 2•-f('!;, 2'\.\o -I\ _,.,. -
NOT navl! to pay tax on the der the new rules, you would A r J t the Treasury B111u"" w &1\ ·~ "'1"1' nv. 2~ o.11ert. inc.. 1•• in...., ._ io.• ~'·"""' s11ri1 .• 11 20\Ai :iow. 204-••••. r TR 1 'n •.3~ ,"..,\" u~ + ~ ~::Uti:1 ~:itf" • '71? ,,."" ci + \\ ta! . 1na no e: &irCI Son 31"1. "" •le Gr11 ~ m Ille •ka ,, which ln~lort GrOllo .• ATA.T Y1 11 .... .... th "Jj' •l'ld 1.)0 -41 .. -~ H p I ,u 1:L. ,:w. I~ +·y; increase in value. The also pay a eapi gains tax on will now permit you to make ,a1~11r ._.1 ,?:! •'~ ~~:~T n! J~ '"'" 11CWm.. W NII i·U :1""' TA.T '·" .,, ~ '*'"' ...v. --f.li -"" ,, "" ""•~ ""-_ "• H:~nc11~..., ~t ff-1~ !~ ~
-If •ain ......,, .--. ,... .. ""' · 1
• CD\lltl 111... blfn • _Am WW1I -~ ·si tl>\.\ la>,. •o" -tt .tO ""?, INt j~ ir" .. ,~,-·" '' ,._ !' j '" -ch r.t bl• l'g'nu or other ha of ltie .......,, char,·table deductions up to SO Boaue E1 tv. 1~ "!!!!!!. ' TI~ --• lblcll ,.. bor.11hl Prog l .t2 1.~ AW '""12s 130 1a u ,, -"" 1nrh .lilt _ 3 "" ..... -... -a I a ., re I 1 s . 8CIOlhe c l J l]V, 1(..,,..,,. 26\~ 2'\i 'lllldl ""'""'y 5!0(); 1•.:ao 17.71 AW LID! 1.'3 zllO ~ .... 1•v. lfV. + " cwGW 1.. 12' 1 • I I +~.-.MCI H•r .12 ' ' N ' + "' organizalion will be just as Be careful ab o ut con--percent IJf your adJusted gross •O<ll AH 1~ uv, KMt i:, 1v. 1111 1 •1o1 ._,. ~11.c1 1.11 •.41""' z111( • • • • ..... ~"JI .:n J.16'' "•~ '?_..,,_ ... :..:.·;~ ~:::,Mc..,jg .J !~ •Jffi !"" :;·«
. • BOI c., 1\lr N ""'' F b rr~ ,~~ AMnlll 1.,, ~ .. Ill~·~~ !.tJ ~: := ·::. ~ r~ l1:t ~~ 1 ... \\ Olt 1~1~)0 2, 1nt. ,r-1r-*Ill-" , 1• ~'4. 1111 ~~ + .... well off as if you gave it cash. tributing stock, ]and or similar lllCOOle, against 30 percent Br.,,en 1 1\.'o I(''', 'i:'c' ,.. '" ... "'!!!.n' F,"u'"''• lilfli 1, .. 11,.,. AMF Inc .to ,.. jfil j!ii 2w. Iii PC 11111 1.10 ,. JI~ Jl'"'-
1
.,_ -rr11 1111 1 I -v. _.,. + 'ill I ll th rt d HELD FOR Six . I ch • f Brlllk1 Jn 3f ~ Keys JU l'-,,.,.. • .. IVY ....... Am16(; '° 1' >no. ~ r1111 1.6Clb 10 31 JOi; R +·~ .. •rwi Cp I .. ,, ~ 1t ... t can se e prope Y an ASSETS . pr_evrous Y, bu~ watth ouch~ .~~ :~ 5.-f~ 1?,. ':~ :=1 1~1 Pl! 3~ tnc11111 3.Y J.'1 J HftCOdt 1:02 1.13 ,.,,,, 1.;.; .ll 1" " S>l4 _ redllll Fin 1 11 ,,~ 11v.
19
..,. + h ~artSMr• .to s 2l ff n -~ convert the entire value, in-MONTHS OR LESS or con-this. If you give e an., Bru!Oft 15, 15"" uv. Kirt. cp s11o "" lnwr 1·" ,,,. 011M111 lt.H '*·" Am11a cor, " t•Y.11 1'111 i•11o + romvlCn .IO ,',! ',!.. •,r,, ',"',,, ..... H:C'ii ~\ l:Z
1
i rn?
71
~~ 4: i: lo Ital . BlJcker m '"' ICMf. \lot 27 21 M'tl111F• :·~ i·1! ICtrsl-Funds: Am1t1r _1',,..0 ~ )5 :M :U\• -lfl r-C•IJ._.1DJ li3 .,. ....,. · ..... 1-11,6 Alb I I 1~ tl\to U\6-_\lo eluding your untaxed profit, tributing inventory, stock in ng-term cap gain pro~ Bunn co 3 JVJ Kre ~r ~ 211o Attni · in APOiio l.ot 1.11 M'!Jlr ..-~AS I «'-......,. <IMli -~ ~ir"''"t ., 11,"' 1~1'1 l..'!1' ···~ H1relllne t3 m 1 ~ _ ._ lll
• to cash. "ade or any other property t ( h tock you held eurnup s ff\/o "'!.!. LMC o.1 ii.r. 1\4 ... 11m1t11 '·'~ ,·11 cv. Bl lt.1.i 11.u Nn~1• .,._.. » ~ 1~ ~ ·i·i ~ m •l.1!1: '] 1!" l' !~; :f:"' HCA lrHI .10.. u ~ 4\-io ~ + ,_.
u ery SUC BS S CIC Leal 6\lo a~LIM• In 2"'71v,Atulr1 f 4-! .. '.tl Cu1 8211.IOll.7$!!!.'...,edt_tO _' ... ' • T> o\40 1111; 1" 7'Ml -~l-ie(11Mn 17r 2' .25Uo 1.J'll. li"ll+~ be I f h, h Jd tt f th ' ths) U " I W S _,, , .. _ Lend RH J l V. All Am ·"" Cv. 14 1,15 l.57 ..,.,,.., .... .., • udaltv M t >•• > > Helnr HJ 1 $1 JS\.'I J5"° ~"" •-To illustrate, say you bought t sa e o w 1c wou reuu or more an six mon , yo c~bd!I ~ 1;% 1i\\ L•M w11 m S\li ,. 111111 t.at 10 20 cv. kl 7 09 , 14 ~°" "'° itt 2,.1~ 1,.111o ~-"• ""fP•" .. » ,~ ,1:-1 1~ :.:.·lei
11
,ie,.. ,.,,, """" -••
in ordinary income. lf you do cannot go from the 30 to 50 c1nori M t7 10 L•rMln 111o '" "'k>hl Fii t.M '0·" Cv• kl "'" .t'.15 Anc:hHcw;k 1 I 16y; 1,..,. lt\11 $" ufNl!h• .lllb 1U 21'4 21-\i j _ "11e11er 1n1 .t0 1~1 ~ ,:'.,? ~ +·;,.;, stock for $500 some years ago ·i1n 1 C•MM 8 ..,. ,1 L•rwn M 1•~ 111,1r Nr1C1• ,5·.?! il: Cu• s1 ''"" 11.u ~°tf....c •~, .!. St .....__. "" lm ,.., un110r110 .... 1 t •A 1 l't +\lo H•lltr pU.01 1t· 10v. toli toi• which is now worth $t ,ooo. if this in 1910, you COlltribution percentt cet' g duedn uctess. yobu §:~·~'°' .~ 1,m~ t:i...,c~r 't; 1: ~: B...'"1" ,·~ 10.:io ~~: ~~ :~~1,:n ~. ·u 11 1m: l.M'o in-. v. U•"•fl!' ., 1
2
ll"" il ~' + ij ~i~:P"•,,J l = M 15f. +·v.
"OU sell 'he slock --" g1· .. e the deduction will be Jimited to agree o cu your 1un Y ~11:1 5ow J•i 1 L•t•vr G-is ,, "'m" EJtllf"1· cu1 s. i . ., a.11 AocaD 1111 13' '~ ll'N 21 ..... ~~f., ~ ~.» lJ 'Mli 15 jnlr + HirmJ11111 •• f
1
l'A. ~ 20.ri! :::~
.1 • ...-ru y 12"'1 ll\l:r (IPll 7.21 7.U l"Clllr 31)$ l.M APL: -COl'p .. 10>4 20\/t 20"'1-"' \'Cklllf 1 to 21 -• 20'11 I -Hemline .• ,. • ~ ~ ~ charity the nroceccls, yiu will your cost. Again using the half of your unrealized paper §::T~tA ~~ l: tr.:,1•M,: 1.-1 1ncm1 1.n t.10 nlckb ,,23 6.13 APL.., c1 Ill i 1~ l~ l~ :;·\/. nir11iM i.ill s111o '5 .u _ "-rclll( 1.20, 1Q1 ~ JS\6
36
+·t,; have •o pay a ta• on ti.h •r..v1 above example, 1 you a no ,.. · :ir"' 8, , _, ,ot, cctv 1v. 2 SPKI 1.60 • • •• Gr111 1.10 1.n A As-, e · , •• ..
1
31 '3'-<IJ'4r + v1 " 'f h d t n•ofi'ts on yuur cuntr1'butinn :arr oev '"' 10 lobl1w s111 '"" ln.,111 1 oa 1·" nick Gt 1.65 1.31 A'L Pl •15&c 1 lit 111~ 112 :j: Ito -D-r Fd 1 •. 10 3t 211~ " ~' _ v. 1
... '"" .....,,r h t ,.. 1411i lSV. Stock 7.U 1.$11 •II It.at ll 65 1'.n Arctlt .1.. S' 11,.. 17'\lo 11.. ~ ~nlltlvr •ill 26 1 t''ir t;i -\lo 711 16111 ~ '" _"' long •-ga'on, But I[ you gi·ve held the stock for more than Use care, and ere 00, pnr ~•rtr /iP 21'111 'l'lVr Los E•r,11 1.,,.. uv. "'"' Ei!v , 3l 1.n _1btr1r 5.14 5.73 Aret. 0.111 •1• »tt lJ'4 J6 + ~ ,,,. c.. !' ff"' 2•t-. Jlllo + * ~ ~ • l\loo-.,, ~"' · J heJ · · · ~•te G-IO 1~ LVll(h l l'M 141'1 "''" Grlh 5.41 5.tl 111 Siie <I.ti 5.(M Atli PSv 1.0I IY 1~ lt 1"41 + V. ti llld • 1~·· ,.,~ •• ~,.::" ••.• , 17 3' lll! ;it + v, the stock to a charity and let six months (or if th.is was your fess1ona . P is m1nunum §:~;~~'·• ~~ s~~ =.:t CiT~ w. '"' ""' 111~ '·~ :.n ~Ill ,..,, 5 ,, •.5t :~:=fs1 ilJn 1;: :i:w 1~ to1t1o ::.~ r! 'Moc~? ,
7
-;; = :..:.·;.,\ 1e n t•I 'I • -,..-~ I -d merchandise ) your con· self-protectionloryou. :tnvps 11 t1v,Ma111tr1 "1C111>,.,mM11t 7·1 lrncHit 190913 ,. P1i10 i.1 11 ~21 +~ vcoeir1.14 .:1t 1~1s 1s~+~H•lldVlftl'l .n
21
,~,.V•f•"+"" the charity se!J t, you Win up t ks :ent LIO , .... 61lo Me1ml As 1" 1~ All'IN Giii 2.62 , ... lno 3.tl •.ot ,,rme r '" ' "' '5 .as -\t 11CCI "'·!! PO tO • "' -"Ho!ICIA 1,10ti ' Sl 12v. 2'A with Lbe same 11,000 deduction tribution deduction would be Next : Soc . :111m11 l it. l"-M111111 M ~~ 3,• '~,,...-., G~~ 7 ,. L~~d St~~J~"-" A4:::::", "c',·''• J sM sa ss ..... g,v111Ht.111 .so 31 2,v. 2n1o 26,.;, +1v. E,5:,' 1.111 11 ,,'Ill """
1
"" i ··~
:hl•t o n-. ti\ M•-c ...... 10 y c •• ':Jl '2 mu t1 ll .10\lt 30Yi -'Ill ol'tnPt.. 1.'° ll ~ 21!i """ + v. 1t1lk• .«i JI l""' 2•Vt :z.."' + \\
Industry Profits Dip
During 3rd Quarter
Cflm Ltl I t•~ "" MOo 12V. ll Grwth tM · I !' t. ._,., -'' •>IO --~ .. ,,.. PL pf8 S 7S i10CI "6 Mi Mi rl 1 "' -·· ,. >•• ''" _ •• C~i Ind 5 s\; M•rm Gr l\i t \\ lll(nlf 1,lt 1.11 Mvl I lt.U AiW."'11tu"i:'.o 21 i4 ;:;;; u ... +·4' IL PiCJ'.t0 tla av. ....... """...:iii; Hoov ar i'10 "'10 1"' :M :M\l t;; Clltt Uri! 13~ l•llo M Browr 2W. 19V, H l11V 7,11 l.D Lulh Br• ID.65 11 .f, Al"Y1" Ind I' 11 2Jlllr 25. 'J -'Ill e CCI 2 SS lSV. :u;o lS\lo -V, Host 11111 .l4 4 !~ 2o6U v._. l'o
(/II l!rll 61 '3 M111t LP '111 um Veflt 31·" "·°' Mlilltll In • II L 1 Alhld Oil lJI 10 11'0 16\lt 21 -\lo lmltl" 1.11 22 11 161/t 17 + "" Haud Ind .Ill n ~ .... tu ''" Christ $ 107 110 MIY., O IA!. lJV. ...,..,. ... F<I 7 16 I.St ,,.,..,hln '-Q •M Aud Brtw • 1\\ 1\.lr 1\4 -\'t •l Mnh! 1.10 ti 2S 2'14 2•\lt . . . Hou!11 Miff ,.., 'lot 1<1t1 1"'°' 1-N -\'? F. Christ "' " '°" MCIC11r 21 21 '111 >.saocl• 1.1( 1.U Miii Fd ,•.n.,10 .. Aud DG I 2' Jolt """' ,. '~ i t• Air j,O 1(1 2'111-,. 2Mir -14 t'IClll>d!F 1.10 <1\0, ·mi,,-... •'"·1:t1 t-l! • ClllMI t ' Melllc H 5* Jr. i\tlfOll '·" &.41 MIU Inc 1. IS.J: "*'" ,:,. l 7N 2'N 2'N "' IK 1111 .fO ~ 51.'J 5'111 + "'~F PU... "" mance C::lllI Mio 1~ 1111,, Med "''' 21 21'14 ..._ Hwe!Mn: Miii In., 10.7CI II. "1dtra11 -' .... I'll .... nn Mtw .• lS lfl'i. lt V. 1fflo + HClll1F pf?,50 'l.l l5YI ..,, (!Ill U A """1l\li -lrll J1 32~ F11ftd " <1.f<I 5.tl MIH Tr lS . .., 1'.6' AltlloM liid I• 15 l(V. lftOo V. §E")"!lli .N SS 1'4 IV. l '!lo -Vt HousF Pl'1.J1 ~6 JM.. '9 5t -V. Cltll U 8 :t.I"'-2' Mf,lcl In 17'4 lN F11NI • 6.11 7.40 Mll9I 1·7• J.7, AllCYEI 1.l6 10 21 ~ ~ "" t-.1lrit l 15 21 20\0 2Gvo -V, Hou1tLP I.to 21 4 <ll"lo 41 + ,._ ClfVln Ml 1-m. lSV. Midi(! C• t'lo 7~ Slodl 5.ll J.n Mlfl!ll"S 10.n 11.n Atl IUdlflG 2 MW aotlt Ml! 40 1\lo llGr 1.10 • 17"' 17\'t 11"' -'lo Hout1HG1 .Ill ", ~l"" J,... s .. ·~ ·-···-· Cltrll. Ml 19'V! ~ Mldlu 2l't m Sci C• .... <1..15 Merld F• 11.'213.1) "'llltth Ill JS t.Slll JO .. JO ... , ~ pf B J. '° ltV. "° ..... HC111G1 !)fl.SO -<l1l'o B . f Cl11ton 1'Mo llo\Mldw GT 11 11 Bf~ 1.1,.• ,•·!!:=...~i:..:-::11::r A,tl ltk!lpf'J ,, .... _ .," 1'!!. +,•. , .. ~ •. :!4 .. 11' ... 1""' , .......... ~.:!~,,.I' l!!: !~~ , .... ," ,','--"'t" cunt ~r 12v.11 ,,.1111 G•' '""'~ B1'tTdl J. ... ~· 11 '-" Alllldl ."2.11 -+ ~ ,,~ ..... '":.. 175 11v. In's 11 ...•. ~d 1..... ,. .. ... .,,, rle S c11111on 0 J J\\o 111 VIG-1'"" 15 e.acoro 11.76 l}·~ MIF F~ ,;:: 1, (M Atl•1C'-" I ,',", ""i" ".~ ",~ -_ "• .: 5t.:i'"'""" l\ n,1't!. n,,•. •,,':i ::· .. ·· H""l•r (Jo" '21 1~ r* ... ""u;-= .. By JACK LEFLER
NEW YORK (AP) -Profits
af 39Z corporations fell in the
third quarter under t h e
double-barreled impact of a
slugg ish economy and the
Ge neral Motors strike, a
survey showed recently.
lndications were that fourth
quarter earnings would be.
even more disappointing if the
seven-week GM strike hangs
on.
The profits tumble em-
braced a big majority of in·
dustry groups ana was blamed
jn part for the stock market's
recent decline.
A check by the Wall Street
Journal of 570 companies
showed 392 had declines and
178 had gains for the three
months ended SepL 30. This
represented an aggregate pro-
fit drop or 9.8 percent fr om a
Net Profit
Of Capital
Firm Given
Clow CD 1Wt 16'.lo Mo R)ch ~?VI kl ICnl 111 · MOF ·-<" ... "'"'' C°"' .-.. ,.,. ,.. -.. H '" > • c-..r 0 '~ 1 Mod 5cl •:v. So.lo B.rlc Glh 5.n !,?! MvUS G';, lG'ii 10 .. ,2 ATO 11'11: .OI " "'" "" -1'I ~r .24 " 1, 1J14 15V. -'lfr. ""' I .... 10 10 ····• year earlier, The Commer~ C11e1•• cp " 5' MM!""-11. ,..., 1.?rf =•,td lg 1'ii Mu Ot!'IG .. n 5:1, ~:::::;: b.:f: y Ji'-.J~ ~ ..... D :~t':r 1:: ll ~ ill! ~ ! :: ~~~ 1~ ~ lici~ ~v. ~ .... +1"' Department had reported that §gl~~. 5
; 1~"" 1~ on1 Co• '"' ... s1 1·21 7 '1 Mv °"''" t.2110,10 Allflomtll 1nc1 IXI 1v. ,~ "' + "' 8:1m 1111m 1 100 1i ~ 111o1o 11"' _ v. 1c1111 e.1 ..o 2t n1ti 12"'-IN -"' d I. NEW YORK (UPI) -There Cofol! Sir 21v. 21 ~. "'• 11 11 =~Flin t:to 1a:12 Mui Sllrs 1316U 16 -"'-<•Mt 1" 1D'I• 10"'-ICl'MI :;·y; t1S11,rt c2 1 11v. 1M 21'/ii-Vi> Ht Cmnt 1.1• ' !Ml :HV. 26\li +"' the second quarter ee 1nes c-t w. '"" .. =., , "" N 11o1to11 7.so , 'lt M11t Tro -111 "Wll .,, :io ,. 'l\ll 31io. 11.,., + ~ i D1.10 it 1~ 1sv. 1Sl4 -1.r. I" c1n PIJ.so tl .uv. '1 41'4 + \(, th I 200 ' · •-t C " -1th ltM ,. _ _. 51 11.911 1.JAt HEA_ Miit t.CQ I. lo\oWor l".i .ill 79 ,,V,, _.., +lllo ~ .'I ,.. ,.... l\.'I 1'4 -Vt 11 P-2.20 II UV. 21',lt 37* -\It Was 11.7 percent for e ma• are aCUVe JnveS .. uen Com If .0 4~'1.1 Ml" TrA ~ lnlo ;;....--I'• UMIVlll s•I Ind f.M t A'tllet In ,, JI 7\\-1\'lr IG ,4'11 267 t6 ,5 U -Vt Imp Cp Am 1,7 11"' ll\lo 111'1 + Ill bu · ' the -Com ~•s ~~Vo Ml17r wt ~~ '"' B 1:C-Cilvln· •t ln-,11 I n 7.tO Avlll'I flft' I II II Ii::+ l'9 lor1lo .o 21 11 IO'i 11 + v. IN"' Cp 1.<IO 107 31~ 3119 JlMr + '4 jorityofAmerican sinesses. com.panies a_mong 1,.-~=H~ 11,1o 1v.M .. o;ch,1.~ ,,.., St,io ~lkll 12 3'13 53 •1 SKvr Set· Avntt.PJ ,,, l!Hr 614 '""-" ~l-"""'m_,.,: .. u 11 11".4 11 1ncom1C••!t 20 t\~ ""' ......... .
The GM strike, wh.icb began ... g1stered with the SEC as or'"","•' '•'"'•'•111 Mvener"'" 1~ 1~ c~nc1n 17·" 11:11 l:::r ~·U 1lr.l ~= 01T 11)3 " 1'E' 1~ + ~ "'-1.10 1 ~ 1~ 1~ '~\! ::·~ l~~~Hd·~ :
10
':: ~~ 20~ +·~ . I da • .. . ~mo Cm •.• ,.~ ~lllRI E• 1 2"'1 Div Id 3 " 3-'1 Dlvld 1:1D .:o. . • IVlf'Sllld .l6 n !l'1 l'lio I~ -11*11PL I.SO .. ~ 2A!.9 ''II -" Sept.1
4
, was serJOUS y mag· June 30, 1970, according to Cmp Inst .. ~ m ~tr '~ 2~ 2m n~IWVrlf 1:::{:.-u jf'Tnc :·J'l t~ "a:kllw JO -;;-I !!!! i + ~ Dr",~ ... ",,:·s:e_,. ,u,, lit Ytt Jl~ t '! :="~~ r J !j~ la~ ~ 1 it ing to the auto and automotive w· be F • • J CmD Ttc; S\li 51'.11 H1rr11 c 1•1,1; l~".4 lu~ F• :·: :·1: '"""' ..,:., S.IS krOUT .'5 HI If" + Iii ~ ... I ''l'I ,,_ '2 -i l~RG Pi2.3S .,10 U.• ~ ~"' + __ .. ,'
equipment industries a n d icsen rger I n a n c J a ~::'~~ ,,-rv. 'JO"" :~''•~," ;~ 1~ ~:p.:r ,:!! ,1:,•,1 .Jr'ogir111 l·U l:J: 'U ~e.~:~ •'= j = = t;',;;r:., ·~~ 1: '~ ,J"" '~ :!: :% /~, ~~P2 '*' ':: ~ ':,.. ~ "' adversely affected suppliers in Services an authority en the con1r1d 1 •"-,,..;n~ .. u: lll'.ll • c1p11 111Y 2.7~ · ,,._ c11 "'" , ,. """"' .1so 1; •.• ,, ~le c,. 22 1,. 16 1.m is. _ \lo 111mont ,,.,,st
1
:io si
53
S> _
1 I bbe he -I 'f d d f' . I Conrrtn L ,,,.•• ,?... Hit G&O lS lflh C•Clll Shi' s.,.u,,",.'' H8'iw Fd I t4 t." .,..P •'.f ' ~' I ' _+ ,. r OUv1.~ 12 11'\ l \fo •14 t · 1111llco .70b S1 I'!\ 1.w; !J~ ..... the stee, ru r, c mica , mutual un an 1nanc1a ,'~, , '" ,~-::. H•t Lib ,. :m~ '"'' s11r 10. . Hew wi• n.• 1 n I a ~""' I~ "! ..,. ~ .-~ 111111c MAr.u ' 114 11~ \It ••••• ed bo ' ~ " N 11 Mid 25 2S\'> Challlllntl Fund,.•1•1 ts Ntwllll 1JM 1.t.17 ~INY'1: -;'l rtllO(., olO 111\i 2N 1tqj v, lru plr COP ,. 11 .cJ 4 •2 -1 copper and corrugat X lD· services industries.· ~~ ..... Yr ,•,. ,•,~ ,,.:1 P.i ,..,. .,_ e111n 10. · Nk:tl t~ '·" "'·" f'r 114 1J. se "" + .. cn.11,.., 1'.10 11 """ ,.~ ,. + * 1n11rco 1.10 ,,• ~ ~.1'_'.a JI'/);_ .. ·,: dus'•o'es, . . c::·-••" IV. i""H•I Stc:llt I V.114 Com St 147l.61H-.11 1t,l!IS 1'"5 6rb0?.:rl 1 J"9 +¥tDtHVDf1.'XI U ~ 32\i :lf'IQ J.lr lnlr lkJnc l.to ""'" , • .,. .,.. .. .. or the active companies, 80t ti:! ~: J ll'a s~ H•t Show !u J:.Z ?: :~ ~:;l ~":/.' t~J t~ ,~1":i• ~ 1# f ·,:~ 1'?:-~ &~~ Fr•f ~ n:: ri~ ni: Et: 1:,'th'·~uc1~ 3.;1: ~ ':~ A t+'1: Profitdeclinesamongmajor t Ir d 195 e Crvtch R s ~~rs~~ IW.1~ 5P«I l...SS l.6'1110Ft 1J.tJ11.0il lfl j..l~tl?DW•Pw 40 1D22'h22V.2:11'J+·y,ln1Fl9Fr .50& '6621/ttl\.'i'' .., 1 d d u s are mu ua un s, ar &':"'" c • •~ N 11
N G 11 11141 Ch••• Gr •oi,' , ., 101 Fd 1.34 t.n .,.. iii I 1, I + a ~1P Dlt.1d 121d 101 101i, ion.,,_,,_ Int H1,., 1.111 ,. ,, :n.. 2.o1 .., companies inc u e : · · closed •nd compani'es, 1~ are 0,•,•,•, '•" "'•·· ,'~ •.. !_ ... !', -,. c11t1 t.1 .. 81',I wms 11.tJ 12..n •Ill Ind "" , nBrd 11:io. u ""° 411>11 ..... • 1n1Ha1C1 IAJt 1' 13i. 12J"J 12i't -l'I .., '" •• " "...,_ •• _, 190 I 6J • 11 > •• .• •• 011Pll11 6111 I 11 )I•• ' _... -Inf lndUll 101 Uloll 121'.11 l:h'I -\t Steel,$33.6million.or62cents 't . tm t t t ndD111 Des 1~ sv.N ltll A >1 11~ ;~~i 17.u 70;u • ,,;s';:"1~~.1\0 1jl ~ S.£ :m:.1"c111ioon1 ,,,, 24ons'"1~1~ +·~1n1111C1 p11.10 J1 tiv. 21"° n\4 !" a Sha-. from "6.8 million, or uni mves en rus s a D111 Gtn M ii> 2w. Hl•b • 3,'11 3~ ShrM t..IO lO.Jl ~tM t.2110.lf ;;VVti~~ .,,, 1 ""' •N dvPon1 1>1•.JO s tot>1o ,... ,..._ +i 1n1 Ml1ttr :u,, 131, 11 1.m. 1" " " "en re fa Ce a m O U n t 01t1tn P I'll. 2 NA Rtse O $NCI 7 11 I 50 or( 'S.c t,it 10.l• M 1 I t f f :..:.· clvl"Clllt rll 541 I JOo1to 5D$i, 541+. 'Ii lnl Mrtt .JOii 2' '"" 13 I~ ~ 87 cents, in the 1969 third se. a 0t ¥1S FCI J~ •Ill NC•r NG-;:-: 1,v. Chen!CI l,·.1· 11:" P1ce Fnd 7.01 1.1• e Fell ' .. , \II + ""~LI " .. 21 '4 20h 21'4 +" \nlf'fldl l.ICll UI ...... ~ "' -II; certificate companies Wiesen-D•' Mtr ,,..,. 15\.!o NEur 011 •"· ••• co1on111: P1111 Rn 1.n 1.61 11 Fdl "'-' ,. .. Do 4.-..n.10 1«1 u. 2t u +"" n1 ''" 1.so ..s .uv. l21't n(to -1'11 Uarter Du Pont $ 7 7 7 ' 06Cor '" ~ 5?1' HP ... Gii ,.,,. E...,i., J u !H .. _ c... 111 111 min..... It -r .... OvCILt :CPI 2 U'llG 26 2, '' -"'Int P1p pf ' ZIG S1 $1 S1 +I q ; • . berger reports. Detr:lb "" " ~ NW NllG m l \.lr ' ···-..... • ' a.ct Did: JO " ~ •••• Dl'f"CI INI s JOU. ,, .. ,,., -" Intl 11~111 ID ~ "' •'Ill ·11· $' 60 sh f m 1 ' -· '' -· ,.~.., Im'°"' Fu"" '· J ·-I"• Miit J.11 i.11 • ,,. , -,..._ -.. .. ,. ,. , T• , " ,.. .. _ .,,. .,,, +"·,·,· ml !On, Or ~. 8 are, ro Dtlhl n ,., ,.., w~ ~ ''" Grwtft 5.20 J.tl Phllt 12.."' U.'1 11 ... ·· 'so" '' I l!Mto · ·· .. ,.., "'" _._ 31. 6 Jt. ~ + l't llf · -..... ll $1 76 A" ti Oe!Vll Cft St S1 Nucl lltK ••• •• lllCOlft '·°' f ,'3 Pllortrn 1.2, t.OI ,..,· .,... W~\ +Ill -1: F 1n1T .. T PIC 4 J:200 1.01'1 l.O\.'l l~J\.'i -..,,, $84.3 mi ion. or . ; uan c THE HAGUE (UPI) o" \•nT UtG "~ <>1111:1 ""' ,.. 11..,1 ,.12 , .. P,.. st 10 :11 lO.H n 22'4 II" + 14 ~ -lntT&T •fE .i 110 131 l:tJ 1D + v. d "3" ·11· 17 -Detar lt'll 20l,io01110W•I 21~.',"'• fol Grlh 11.1211.lt P"" '"' J.tl 4.:nlf•,,=-.., Ml lJ J ••... E111eio,1c .to IJ 22 ""° 22'9-v.•ntT&TplH• s t1 11111 u +1 Richliel , .,.. ·-nu ion, or Du h n b lb rts · ee_... E 3111 414 0o1 Sa11 "'7 -... p •--'''', • JM 21~ 11~ -v. E•11a1 • ·'° l ~n• into into + 14 ITT 1111 4.JO , 11v,. 11111 11~ _ '" le uower U expo In-Dllrn er llVt 1''" Drmot11 sv. ' oms Bd '·-.... _, ,... · 1· 11 1 eon 1 m. mi -v. 1!111 Air Lin m ''l't 1:w. i~ _ v. lntTA.'T •IJ • s n\'I 11VI ny, t ~ cents a share, from $$4.11 I 7933 d DI hie n'llllo ott TP ,,~~t7'11rCWNh .... 1.111.71P11n111., f.2410.1Da.m1.Ctr40 &.SIS l'""lj +"E•~OF111 M 3'\4 u.i,)614 +i..l11!T&T1t11C• 247S 7• JS 1 U . creased rom 1 , tons ur· Di~r CM :w. J'ill OV: NA .,. lVJ CWlth c 1.,2 1..s. ior1ca Fun111: Bflld1• 1 Mi 11 2"" 2Aloll ''"' _.,.. ,e. u111,1 . .eo ,, '"-l71'1 11\.!o _ ~ 111rr l>IL 5..511 1"' a.s ""' ,5 1 million, vr 97 cents; ruon th 1-t · ths fl969 Doeit1 sv. t "'"'' ll\41»1ComP "'' 1.s1 ,.,,.. Grw111 21.1ot1.10Blnd,11 ., i 1 ~"" ~+iv. 11 llld• 1• 1"' "!~'""ti"'!"' nTTpfN
1
.1f s10 /'°"' ~ J.1!6+:11 $3103 mill' 61 ing e u:s SIX mon 0 . Oftl~n L '"' ·~ PEC ·, .. , 11 17 ComNI t DO •. .51 H E•• t.GI •.DI BIMflCP 1.. lo ""'" .... .t4-16 + \'r '1tonY1 IA 313 ,, ~ .11~ ~ '"' Utll l.(Q 43 1"' Jf ' 31 -Vt
Carbide, ' ion, or to ~l ,330 .1n the corresponding 8=°1e J~ il: ~tt ::~Av~ 'f'~ 'I: ~=: ~ ::~: ::rs Pr~ ~~ 'i~ 1ijg ::::::: r.-'::.: .., ~ If~ Jj~ +·~ ::::;;, f,l;l.~I J i::jl;l Jtv. l}.!: +I~ I~:.~~. A, J ~'1 ffit ~ ! ~ ceots a sbare, from $43.
75
period this year D NL t•t. 1 e ,. lll1 com111t 3.N •.22 • Port! vn.v111 a.....i l>IJ.JO u10 .... 2t 2' -\Ai dl•~.21 <11 :M .. J.i + .,. tnterpc1 ,., s 1 11~ """ ll \lir _, nu-u·oon, or 72 cents; and Gulf · 0=11o o 11\1, 11"4' ::~ct'co ,~ JOt. COllCOl'd 11:11 11.21 Provdn1 .i.ts 1.0 .....,., ID .i .mo ~• ••••. dl..,,,aro1 1 3 '•'-2~ 24" +,,. rnr B•1nc1 ·'° 11 ''"' 14v. 1,..., _ ao Ourlron IS 15\t PIMOI 2 """CCll'llOI In 10.1111 10..10 PrvCI sv1 t.1110.0f B-fl Ill 1 s" S\4. .!It.····· G&G .lo 117 14-"""' 14111 +"' lnle~Pw 1.71 ' 1~~ """' ,,~ ... Oil $140.58 million, or 68 cents UP EZ Ptln• ' '"* t•'ir 7 COllU Ml •.n t.<111 Pv•111n '" ,.., llfHlfY 1111o s1 1v. !"" 7'>1o -/,\ IMu11c .211 16 4 ~ • + 1' 1nlt'r11s1r ·"' 12 131' 13 l314o + ~ ' SAN FRANCISCO ( I) -E..ilC wt 1Y,, 4 ;:~~DH '"" t \IJ Cont Gilt 7,l• 1.11 Pv, .... m,, '",dJ..: 1., Bllh 511 l..IO 112 11V. 2 V. 21\'r + \'r lie! Alsoc • 440 ~ ~ .... low1 a .. 1 " 2319 j2~ ,,,,. +1 t a share, from $148.7 million, red rd · e t Sh 1 1v. s•1o sv. corp Ld 11.•1•.11 C111 "~ .... e1,T11r .. ·.60 .sa """ 41 u -"'!I~"" M•1 ,... '"' tv. t\.\ · row1erL I.JO ,, 1,.... 7-ifo 1ni. + ~ Bank c it ca s were In· E:,, lib ,.14 2s ;::;-r; 11v. 131'1 cntY ca1 lo" 11.n Gp,w••' ",·,", ",~! <d! Dk ... u 5114. ioa1o s1 ..... M:r pf 1 t 11\/i 11»1r i~ ::·~ 1aw1111G-1.u 11 1,.,.. 11~ ltl't _ ~ or72cents. trod ed · I" -st furEd svi :m1u ll "-ll crnwo1v 5.lss.u • . ·""'Bl1rJolln • 111s 11V.1•1fi .a 11t j11H1 h1c1 tt s~ J\.\ 5\li .. , .. low1PL1 1.60 1'11 11~:m+ •.. ' UC nat1ona •.r JU f O d El "'~11i:1 1m 11~ ;:~11~~ Jll .. 31v. Crn WO•I 4.:ta 4.tt ncom 7.U 1.u Bllu L•v• 1 11 11\t ll 11 .. I ••1HG ' 11 tf'llo 16\.'I '•"lo l " low•PSv 1.M Jl 1.,.. u~ The best performance was a years ago, but have oun Etbl 1S111 • 1"' ,, e-on 11., ?Vio 111vlh M s..10u.10 ln,,nt t.11 s.n Bloct Hit .» ns '5 \.\ ,,I/lo -i~J 11r, " 1.21 u '~ 24 ~ "' 1~0 Hos• .u 30 1•11> ''"' 1 11o _ i,, b • ft Elc!et 11 51~ 6Vr ''" lll't ltV, D1l•w1rt Group: Vl1!e 1,t , 1.tl II_,. IM!I 1.21) 4 411/t M'lt l4\lio ... . mfr I l.(M1 317 Jt ll Hl4 411 ITE lm11 ,40 11 2Hir 731.'J 1~ -.,. gain of 82.9 percent Y a1rcra their way into one oul of three E1 Hile ' ?\.\ n; ::11nG~~c 2,... D1<i1 io :M 11 XI "'""~ 5.t:z t.'1 Robbie ert.1 11 13!~ I'.,.., l:N .+ '-" EmEI f' '·'° s 40'11 ,..,.. ,.,,. -1 Itek Ccwp 11 /i"' 31~ 11-i _ \0 makers. O'"er gai·ners we.•e A . h El Hue 1111i It ••••' •• ~\II 7..., Dllwr 11 ''112·~1 111-,er• •.n •.1s oel110 Co . .o '"' 14\olt •"' t•~ -"'
1
m.,., Ir .tO 111 S3l'. S2\.'i UI\ +111. --J "' merocan omes ,,..... , 1•J. ,, ,,.. 0,,, ,·30 i" R,1n1ru 'J·1a 13.111 !fl•C•• .:mo '°' 'i jlt :r;-~ ml\lrl 1.~ s 21\i 211'. 2114 + .... • -dru . ~·~P't .. Peffo!lt .. c '" 11... Oltnlh so ,,01 Ofld Ind ·'' ' ~ 'l'I -\lo ll'ICIOltt 1.1• 1 2"" 11'!'t 21l"t + \lj J1ckwiAtt .24 " .... ..... 114 + •1 chain stores 13.3 percent, g At least 60 m i 11 i 0 n ~11'CmSV$ t"' ~~ PhllG• "' ~I~ t~ 8~:11 °• 1J:,, u:n ~ttFd ,tn 1i~ a="',.l!.21 13l It"" ~ ~ +1"" !~=!~·";,,:~ 1~ 1if" 1ll~ 1ir" t 1"' i:~::1 :!'J·"'° l :~ m A . . manufacturers 10.7 percent. Americans now hold bank E1 D•lf •s """ ~~t~ub '" t\i Drf't'f Fd 10 51 11.!) ScuOdlr Funci--'' ·1-w•r 1 ?J JJ nv. lJ-llt 13"' ..... nn111111 . 2> 10 11Yo 1014 1~ _ y. J1n1>111 .tOtt s 1:n.. l:M.a
1
ltt :.;·\" · -16 9 r Et Mocrur 3 av. P!nkrtn 61\'J 61YI Ort'ff Lv 11.~ 11.'1 Int 1nr ati1v1n Mlf'tn1 .80 16 1214 l Ylo 11'4 .. , .. E011IG•1 1 20 1 31\.\ »14 311¥1 _ ,,. J1P1nFd .06e " 10\.\, 10 10 _ i.
cent, food producers 11 .2 per· 1'nclude travel, entertainment En••~ It• 11\ t P,•,!-•,•,", •• Grwth 1ot!11t1 c • ,,41, ,. ., ,,. , + 1~·1r• ... , ,, .. ,,
1
•• ,,,,_. -",,
cent, office equipment 4.5 per· or oil company cards. A stu Y eon corp 111t II/lo ~~): 1~ lP.4 !11e<I 7.•2 t,n .,...,,., tl'l· 109 l'ltsfM-, 1 :it ,. "' ff'!\ "'' +-. ,,..n..,, .-11 ao.. •1• l'I\ _"'Jim w11t ·• 1" 10,,., 2''!1. lo~ " Cent. petroleum products _ 1.3 d 'edb LouJS' Harri's nd E011ll O•I 111.1.11"'P OSHC t11o1a11o 5toct 12.111,.2, 1~,,.,t ,-2, ,·,1 r11Mvr42 1' ""' ,, d -"4 111r1 ir .1• n,..,., 1'"-""'-'1.Jlmw ""·"' n ,.,,. .u :1t.•~ ,
finance companies . pe -credit cards and this d~es not ~:i::, 0£ ll'A 11'~ P°"" HK 1~~ 1~ Ei~:i'."nHow•,~5 ,0_,, l:'i1 fl~ 11,,1' 1~:111n~2t tt ~l ~"t '!ft :':."".
1
En1vr,: i'.~ 1:: W: ~Yt li'"' +
1
11> j:r,~~11!;'·~ ~ ~or.I ~12"' ~:: ~.
, d E11twlll 6 A ""' jl~ '\\ IMPm 1:n s'.fll Sec~IYS!Fu~:.1·" B~Mist 1.,jijiii 1& <II"-'11'4 ...... .H~lnt°fflO SJ jliZ ~ Jl)1to=~J-.i'c;'11Q II~ SO =111
con UC1 Y a 1:r11 Tac: w. 5"' 11 1 hr !Rio , 1!:11t,.t 11.~1 lt.41 u11,, its t'JO Brit P.i .O• 10 TOV. HM IWi i \" ''"' on . .i :11 I'~ ""' 1n• + ~ JO'lflM1n 1.xi 25 .utlo. u" asi.:
14 percent, tobacco compan!e.4' Associates found that credit or ~:b \':: ~ f"' ~~t~• 1 1Vi 1!•11 11.lt 11,U Stl6C Am 1'.47 t:11 9'"""' Hile J Mi Ullo Jm = ~ urolnci .Cll t 7~ lf:Vi Alo -Iii Jo!l11 Jolin ,n ,6 ~ JN Mill •;;
•• ,_, percen• and u11·11·t1'es ,4 lilt · '"', P • ..,,.., '° :JO'llll!"''' se sen 5·'°Stt SPl'(s 1J21u~2 1D!!"YH"1 " "&,.,~ Bll u t• ~ ;~~1'(,f.t1, '~'•' •,;~ l,1•. /!l'_,f""", ... ~!,•,vc.:.M, "• ~ ?!~ ?!.~=-~ "' ., charge cards were most ey =•,!!I"",, ,1 ""'Purr,., st 11 l' El'llrrr 11.0511.flS Sentt Glfl '"' '°' f: .. ..,. ,.~ ,.11 """ 111 F bet'M ., ..;;: .. .... ... • ..., ... ...-a ;,.,,... ....... _ LOS ANGE LES Capital "" ,,,. '"°"' c 31\, E11t ... 11 5.111.tot'.:m Fci .£1.,:.11 tl'MJGc .rz v. ~ ~ 'ctorA 'PiOb J:z; 1n11 1 JOl'JLC111n AO 1' ~ u14 -~ +
14 All. Co ;wner ef percent. to be carried by p-ersons mat-~~7°1~., JOVt sr" Qoo1111 • ,r• .r~ ~=!\' Glfl i:~ I:~ 511 ·&:: T,.J n:: ,f!T'~P.··= • ' .J .,: = = ~ ~ c•m 1.rJ 21 .. ~::; ~ .:..:·~ =i ~~ J~ :~ ~i,,. ~ :.:.;·· tance rp., "Third quarter reports seem ing $15,000 or more a year. ~·.:ow~1~ ;v. i... :T'~sv~ ! .w Ewt Pro l..u s.n Side 1.41 '"' ;;;:._w;-10 tJ = 1'!! ~ -~ 1~ .1s. 22 •~ tit!-~ J:=n 1.» U 11:._ 11-. ""' + .,.
Mariners Savings and Loan to sugg ..... a bottomi"" out or =udt,. lt1<1o 1~ 1t111 OY11 tl4 1(11,6 I!,••, , •,•,.•. •,•,.n,, Sll:lfl\I l'"Ullds: ;ru.,.,r .-20 •• J;: ~ 'Iii :-'.'". ~:,.,," 1 1~ ~ 1~ 1~ 11lt ~.~ ~ .1111t13T.., ., "•llo ?~ ?~ -~ t Be ch c;,• .. ~~ Pl) •oocr Fl" ~ w. 1t111e11 c l•Vio '° ""'' 11 · · (•lltl 1,4 1.12 c, .;up MIJ t • -R f1m!ho' l'I .60 JI I' JIM!. l!N + !4 "•I...-Al 1 ,. Ji 2~ 11~'" + ~ Association of NewpOr a , lhe prolit decline aod e1cept MARLBORO, Mass. lU =ont 011 1a !Al 11-11 El tt\6 ttv. ~~ Bv l·:f I:~ ~~'::'· :::J 'l::f ..,. rn "'AO J ::l ~ ~ ! F~ 1~ f,
1
!N
1
= lf"' +· .. ~:~Af':l~rJ J ~1-l futw.oir ST~ +1 this week reported net earn-ror the General Motors 'strike -Computers that are com-Fte1 nrt11 11.1' i2.u 1mr111 1 1.n '·'' ::1#.,. ·:t 12 mi. 3~ n-11o F•rll'IMr .to& s ~ 'I"' 'I""' .... "•r. cem
111
J ~ ,_ • ··~ · f the 111e· months ended th bt fits I 'th •• de by "llf C•• 1a.M 11.11 Wit 111v 1.n 1.41 au'°""' w "° ' » • it v. "'~J...t11t1 .l., n -. 11o -~ k• 1c 1111.i1 , 1..._ 11 1
-
1
• lngll or n I would have oug pro I patib e WI wose ma ~= ~.= U:;;~:l: t:::: J't.'., 11.ts f;~ B1=~ ":i'lt 'r ,.a' .. ,.:-t+a ~:;r 11o 'il ~ ~. r :!:'ti kCIYPLI 2.0I to lOl4 so ...
Se9'7pt •. o30r 4~~~~~!~·· ~otlnldd befromoa • .... modeonr.~.te,u.~ another manufacturer, and L' d c Fl~::.··";~~ , .• lfr~GI i: 1-t :~..z1-~~ ~~ ... it r+:::~:=:..':t: .u B\11 P.: fl ·: ~;n~"\'.J 11 ~ R l:
• ~ g "" With n e W mcmOr)'•SIVIOg an ou.rse !Must J.42 3,75 Sit~ SI .eo.5011.JI 11r!Nof" ~ff t W11 •'Jo t\4o-\t FtCIP-.; Elec 1f 10,,.., 1o; llRll -"' ------"-'-=;_;;::.:_.:..,;: This compares to '305,7
4
• Frances Shott, chief economist systems, were recently ln· •-5·1• s.1t '"'°""n FP.1'' =.Vo·' .l: 111: ~,. 'll" ~ "r~"':=' .lo l! 1m'119 11'4"' l'F'"' ! ~ 37 -ts -·shore f•• the Lif A he vtt11 2.111 "·" A/l'I '"" 1 s.o •11111 At, .!..l,!_'" "+ _ ,,, ,_ ··-~ er ... ,.n _. "' ror Equitable e ssur1nce troduced re. S F 'd r:11F ..,, • 101e."1 l'IOuc ·• •.14 hlft ""'.... ... ~ ~,.,,,·-,, "• :!:: 'I"' 3m __ JCe slmllar period In 1969, which Society. Four new models, caeb er et n ay ~·:'n1118~ tJI IM ·11:1 •• 1t::l1n 12 ,,.., I\.\ -·r t
ts i ase. in per I':, 11Slt 1:•1 1.t7 ., °' 7.'1 ,: .. ~=.J·1i: M2 J§ ..... ~ :!: :: rew-I <If! I ;1 ... b7tl + ~ 1r•1 represen 1•n ncf 27re rce t "The strike bas delayed this which can be plugged into ;"•' •,•,,"' ',·• !_·,~ "~llldl:,__. ,'i:¥~ 11.t1 •":b•" '·" M~111 i! "° ~ JI..+_.• __ ~Wl"'". '·• , ll" ll"-+ ~ share earn ngs o pe n · up'-nd and probably fourth o"er e•lst1'ng s y s tem s • -• •• .., ~ \Ii F , ., .,.. f the .,..,. .,, .. • A one-day !emln1r on ,, ""• u.11 J1.1.i r111, •,I: ,-.... c L 1 tt " .¥1"' f 11 tt:11r11n lf 1~ ''" uv. + ~ S9tnhls Per share earnings or quarter reports will not look debuted, and RCA Otairman F"' ca11 s.6s .... um .1, · ,.,.,.., ... iilO " tm -.i + \II •••""' 1.~ s ... J.M ,.. +
71 three months ended Sept. 30 good for most sectors of Robert W. Sarnoff said the recreational land develO)Jmrnl ~e' lt:' !.~ ;:i.1 s~J~h Gt iff t.;: ~ 'J.7:' 2:1 'f Ji. to..,. mi + ~ :1 ~~ )~ 1'1 mt n"' ~ + "
were 19 cents compared Jo II business. 11171 is another story. new coniputers offer users of is being held by u~ Irvine~-i::.:tf tH rn 1=1· 'ti 'ti! :i:i:~M1' 1!!""' Jt"' ;~~~-~ f11~l1if1r.~ ~ ii= Uit «~ i·~ ""~ ... -...........
cents for the slmi.lar period in 1 expect roughly a 10 percent existing t · q u i p m e n t con· tension t •·~· lo , p,m. -: 'r ''tiw¥~ °'f,i:: '"' t=-' J: '!.U '1fl ,;::,trr.l .. J , = ~ ~ Mr ~1 ·'f: tiJ 1f~ lk. !ii~ :;1~ r. ,,. •!Vd ll'lltbt ,..,.. , l~imings for both periods ~~er a1se970i.~ profit& next year slderably greater memory day at Lhe Airportcr lM, 1'700 Gl'!lllh 5.n s.•2 ~~:: i;• :·it :; ·~~.,. c ·:S "' f !~ .::.·" ,. fi~ ·r f ,':t' 101,1, l" .::.·,~ t.11t "''"'" .,. ~ • • d th 8,9 ~1 .,. capacity and performance MacArthur Blvd. ~,:~ f;I: !•:~ •"• "·",'" ,'," ,',;i,· , P,: ••••• ~f1 M.• 11Y .. ~ ftv. ttv.-111 ~..._ .. ..,,..._.,IA,. were compute en e ' ,.., Newton D. ztnder. analyst than current systems !!tlldm ,,,, ·r. 1-'' s; ·
11
"° ll + lt ; 111t !!., 1 ti.,.. •tio JM '4:. ..,.. llfodl dMtlllllL ...U.._IN --...
tot.ti shares outstanding. for the brokerqe firm of E. . • Speakers will discuP flnan--~:.J.'~ J;~~ · • u11 ~ Hf :: :fw"fr'! a ~ f · l,i If. II ~ 12!.. + c11M. .__.,.. .... • ,,,.
"We anticipate an e1celleot F. Hutton & C,O •• commented: CARACAS (UPI) _ Dia-cing, invettment, new 1tate Cll'l'c 1..S t.ntJ: •lltt I:# J;f: .J.~ ·" '~~ m"' £~ ~I 'J # a +1~ diet.,.,.._, ..:.11 l•tt ...... ~ fourth -·-... as profits from ood I the third d t -v I f'Plnllations and planning of .·~ ,tu J:U U11lhd l'llNl-l ·-: J •. +• ... rll,~ l.lf' 1J = = ~ _ ... -_ .. "9d1---"" ~
our re:i-~te devel~mt,..n;;-1 -c"iuAartg ~-been ~~ou~312 1br~n:u~ p;:Iects fnim .. markel~~A"' f.: f:• ~ 1iJ1tff " :~ ~~~A~~~.: ~r:Yi.F':W ,3 ~i ~~:~ llofr .._ ':..o.c--: .. • ~t:•:;
program 3 acttfl!:f8tcu eft-more dJSlpPolnting than an• first. lix months 0( J970, COm• l'e$tarch to the finUhed pro-01i..z.c t:: 1::1 u1:'l i ff ,:» WI n11"'1 {•:: ,. mi .... • ~ ~.2' S ~._ a:;+ ~ !!tit rw. ......_,.,. ti' .... llflll
ding 1etJvltles (resulting from I I tr:d 1be r rth artr: pared with lfi&.801 karats In jed., including aa1tl, Id-01•111k ... &.II ve=r l"i.. ,S:1 ;,, .n l~·,~i, ~· 21 :: .. ! •11•. -.: ! ~ n: 'lt: +·" llldl: .......... -.... ll-.i' ..... our 1 u b s Id i a r y' • un-
1
c pa · OU qu ndr di ·00 ( vertising Ind management, A11• "'· 1.a 7.7t i~ ,..,s .i'n f11Mp;,,, .i. ~ "" + .. "" nn S to\I l!... If.! ""t; .,. .... w. "-• • u1t11111111w -.. I . ..., ftS dependJontheGMstrUtea the correspon ng pcr1 o coord'·•Jor Sanford R. M,.!.','••~.;,,~v!".,••..,• •.s .. ,.,,-~ ~1 ·1" i-iJii +tt~J~ •R''r.·~-~ . =-..~:1:.•~-;:r.:.•::;.,.te,.• Pteer:dent.ed inw.y
0
· per· probably -"II have 1~0 writ· JKG ..... "'" ,_,, "' ... ....... f.:
11
" :.Ill t ··
'< 1nc 6'-a .. , · U 11'111 -· saiJl GrthF• A ..... 7.ll V·-... I., M ••••• ,.. All "" .. "'"" W Ill ecftlft ... I/I .... -cent Of .av'••sJ reue w<; ten off., a poor qu-~-." "--11·•--'"' ,,-., ,.._,.. ... -tt!ii J; ..... " ~,. l o• 11'-nt
""'6 IQUOI ~I Oi11t ...... V•flOO!I l.1S "'! ~... .• ' ..... !"' ..i't .--''"" ll" i. """"""rcmcw ., ....... ... •-~-corporaUca'.s e.au 1 0:1-1
.,.. Gtiitfif'MOtors reporte<f en LUX:EMBOURG (UPJ) -Goodkin beads • research ~ ~:ll\.':B "':i'1n!,,.,. ti: ft! 1 ,n • 11 ._,,. + » :\::: ~· 1• ff" JI 11\.', + ~.,.. ~ ,_,.... 11 ... ..,_
Raphael Cballdn, Prt.sidcnL, Wednesday a llm of $77.l The giant American cor-corporation that pre Part• t11*1to1t: , .. "" •11s1 !11 •" 11.Ji ~ ,, !l! ~-• -a ='* tr .4 12 ,,. 11 t' ···~ m1o. ..ilfNfM c-. """" • ••1s • ..
._, DuPon d mar'-Ung wormaUon and ol:i' .iS1 l'·'n ::rr .... 't: q~i(l'"" _11 " + • , .. 1?.! J.':: ~ -~-.\It"' ~ ., ._..._ .., ..._ I ~ mllllon in the third quarter. porallon E. I. l e ...:: i '·" ·" l!J:W i It.SJ ". J ~W"i .., t • =:..I~ .: n ""' llh llt• -"' ~---~ ~ oompattd with • profit of Nemours has 11et up a new consultation fOf real estate TC.v ,l~ 'I.st twtt ti '::11 , * t' jl!? -1" --G-_.. .., •• "' Mt. •• ......
t ,111"1 OP Ofl PAINTINM $229.1 mllllon a year earller. 'lUbsidlary in the Grand Duchy d@\ielopments In 40 states aod ' o.r t:ii' t,I: r:'lv ~ .. \\ ~;~ ,. 1 .2•, f ~ i"'" = ~ f' ~ ':~ ~ !~Vt ~ ~ !: : ""'""" •-a ,.... _ ...,. ..,.
WMOUSAU WAUHOUll Sales slumped lo P,.S9 billion of Luxembourg.· The new com-J\t foreign counlrles. ~:;-" l:n 1t.u :,~t ·~i ~.d! ·~ JS+= l ii f:,':!O J '"" i~ i~-"....., ........... ......._ ........
OIDTOTHIPVIUC from"·"' bt'llion in the 19119 pany, DuPont Photolut Sa., En rollm en t ls opm ... u:::'n" 'ln1!:t1 :&:!&' ,Hl 1~ !!el t 'Gl ~' 1't ! ""l . .._ ,:,-~,'.ill 'G "i"' ~ ~+:: dldrllMM. ~--. ._ ..-w · Re.sttvatlorul may be madtrCM "'1111 ..... 1,n w,.1 \,,. s.ct s.n '"""0tt1o • .,. 1'111 q If 'Z • · l ~.. ~ ....... .,Pa..,...,,......
$5 ancl up ~h~: q~:::i~ 1!s ~:ce G~ :wm~~1~a'ct~~e m;n1:1~:~ lhrough the 6twlon off let 1t 1~1 r.: l= t~~ ~:r~· '!:~ '~.t 1"~~l ;! "lr." ~ ~ _ 1! .·;r; .. r: "J 'a lt~ ris 11~ ~ :-~-:::.. T.:
111' a.•01He111t,1&lfTA•N• and the worst quarter in the based product us-ed fn pro-833-54.14. A f.25 lea includes 11~ .. 't~~ l~ •. ,. w1" ,, "'t.:lJ':"~ '" (. ' 14\t 'fin:' ~.". ~111l•t. I ti ti ,\~ :.~ ctrnMllMll. ,.. .. ,.....,. .._ ...... •
PMOMI,.... m-1,, __ ,_" ••,•,•,h 1.01 &.-1 ,.""',.. ~1 ·-' .. !!'. ,'-,. P I • n 1• • "' 1111n I. 1 \1 ~Oh Ol"t t lt....,.., .... ....._ -_, DIALS•S WAMTID company'a a~year hl.st,ery. ducUoo Qf pbotoaraphlc lllUlo W,MI.; ... n Ml " ..... .... 11 ..
i '
T
'-'-•
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
0 1'ALf QJe:'JHIS IS A vi:RY
SPfCV\1-l\'1:1'.K fOR WE. ~WKS. ITS A 1iMcOF
""'" CLIWIN!< Of CRASS a.AN°"5TJN£Rl'..:fOR IT
15 SNEfiKV WEEK! ...
MUTI AND JEFF
I GAVEIT
T'M:> COATS.
MUTT!
"l"~ATS
ALIE!
GIVE
A
MANO
.:me. WJ:EK IW!J:N EWRV fl!lEll Of
OUR HOT U1TL1'WS CRl!'.S OOffOR SOME0Nc10 \Wl'OOR PENT-UP
GU/le IJPONl., YOO'J.L !!f: t!ONOR1'D
1ll KNO/flltA\ON CEA&AIN, I HAVE
ffi?.51'.lfYOO uPON WHm\ 70 /..flY
MV ANNUAL-SN!'AKV WECK SNfAKl
... YOUR CCHJPl'F,ATION WIL/.1lE
APPRl'.CIA'Tl'P.
/!·10
? .
I
SORR'i Ll'L I
FalA.
Wl\AT~nlAT
SUPPOSED
TOBE?
By Cliest« Gould
V<MEl!e'S THIS LOAD OF
PIPE HEADED?
WHO
CARES?
By Tom K. Ryan
By Al Smith
A
wHITE
LIE!
JUDGE PARKER By Harold Le Doux
IF I WERE YOU, l'P SER'IOOSLY PROMISE
Wl.fV WOOL1' W A.NP 8 INDUSmlES
OFFER 'WJll TMREE TIMES ™E AMOU NT oi: 11-IE CU~RENT APPRAISAL ~ICE
Of: SPENCER:: FARMS, A&l!EV?'
I EXPLAINED THAT I WASW'r INTER'-
ESTW IN SELllNG AT AV'I ~CE SO t
WASNi rNTERESTEP IN kNOWlNG WHY
TMEY WANTEP 10 BUY: WOW, LET~
STOP TALKI N6 A150 UT W AND 8
IN PUSTR/ES! I WA.NT TO TALK
START TMlNKING A&OOT PROl'OS-' TO KEEP ME
ING TO ME! ONE Of THESE PAYS INFORMED
I Mtc;MT J'UST l=A.ll IN LOVE 01= ANY SU~
WITH 50ME OPPOmNIST WM0 POU &TFUL
WANTS TO MARIN ME l=OR' PEVElDPMEWT! PID THEY SAY WMV THEY
WANTED ™E PROPElrrV?' ......... ~,. A&OUT as!
PLAIN JANE
]DAILY cRossw·o10 ::-::;-; •. POWER 1
ACR OSS 41 facial Ytsltrday's Puzz1t Solved:
rxpression ' l K1 fir 44 Family or Zulu member 6 Aclelily 45 Tra ined
10 Po!t 47 Refra in
14 Par ·-··= Sl Symbol in
By Air Mall reli9lous arl
15 Build up 52 Anti· a bani( ho1luti on is t 's account ope:
l fi Exchan;e 2 words
~em ium 54 Brin? !17 ha1ges toge her
l.8 Kind of 58 Civi l
school: ollens e l l/l lJ/71)
Informal 5'j Footwear
19 Sounded item 7 Fi sh Jfi Key
20 Lotteries: !il Task 8 Extr as 37 Girl
Informal f,2 T exan's 9 Kind of stud~t
22 Distinction neighbor ti1 earm 39 \liolently
24 Harvest f,3 ··-breve: llJ Mar~, Tony inclined
2b Fabric Musical or au1 ····-40 Less harsh
27 Person ins\tucllon 11 Once more 42 Painful
from higher 64 Uncanny 12 Slightly sound
' ~ound bS Rupt ure scorch 43 Relieved
31 ontainer bfi Caoust ic 1) Hard --·< 44 Oec!ared
32 Title compounds 2 words as I fact
33 Ran b7 Consumed Zl Morose 4b Old woman
35 Involuntary alcohol 23 Wall member 47 Enterta iner
movement 25 Dan~er 48 Fellow :
38 Goll club DOWN 21 use s foe Slan9
ltll\J't 28 Indoor game 49 Bird
39 -} •• -ln lhe 29 Sail ntarer 50 Wil ly's
ltagues be 1f1y 10 thew Ind partner
40 Ne ither 2 Declare JO Raves 53 Actor's pirt
iood nor bad J His toric 34 Ara 55 Israel I
41 an's r i~tr Parse~hian dance
nicknamt 4 FOfbe~ring er Ea11 e Day Sb Eir t
.4Z Mediterranean S Nol used JS "-· Jnd 57 Smtl1
is land b Snakt trouble " &O Fuel
11 ono
tr."!'111. MV MONEY!
PERKINS
.:~= .. J.{l!}:.nu ...
MISS PEACH
-AND YOULL FIND, AS YOU 00 THR'OLJ~ LIFE, T llAT
CHILDREN' owe THEi'R
PAAENTS EWRYTHING·
·--... -
STEVE ROPER
IOOOOSTOCK/S
UICKl'.1111\EN iUElS
1Wll a' \Jl\LX1iG
HE CAN .JV5T A.(
~A l!JUlf.
~.,,, ..... t
" V?t----1-~-
~M
Tuesd~. Novt1t1W 10, 1970 DAILY PILOT 19
u·i: ABNa
SALLY BANANAS
B..t~~
li ~&a Jtt-·
F~I .
By Charles llanoftl
o~ ~"""""" ~:ti-QM~.
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
By John Miles
OF
COURSE!.
By Men
-A NEWBORN KIP
DOESN'T KNOW w>iAT
H8'S Sl&NJNG-.
... ,__ ..
MR•MUM
By Roger Bollen
DENNIS THE MENACE
:·
·.
1
~------------------·---
Tlltldll, N0vtmbff 10, 1~70 SC DAILY •ILOT IJ
American Stock Exchange List
I
\
\
•
I• '
!"'l•ll!lPi&•'l' '""""""""·•"•;.· -·~· -· '"'·· -... .
"ONE OF THE YEAR'S
FUNNIEST COMEDIES.''·
•" . . .
o '4J.$'T l!Wl, -T •...cMTII~~ f~VO. • .eou KAQI • 144-QlfO
Pl.,._UM Ml•-11 i1
''Tell M• 1'"" Toi Lo" M•,
J11'9 Moo1."-GP
EXCLUSIV'E
RUN
"DEUGllTFUL!"
-1C ... 1i1r ........ l•1Anr,.,r_,
Phon• 639.ano
ALSO: Mori• n... kt .
"JENNY"-GP
" _,Monte Walsh.
,iS .what the West • .,..,as all aboul,
6'h AND
FINAL
WEEKI ENDS
TUES., NOV. 17
' ..
. "' "I ., .....
JEANNEMOREAU·.JACKPALANCE ,!I!
· •DWAllD.• · 2nd FEATURE.
01vid ·Hemmings .in :.
....,. ....... 005>'.-~-~''Qt ·-----------· "THE WALKING.
·snCK"·.
"'MAS;H'IS THE BEST
AMERICAN WAR
COMEDY SINCE
s0UNDC4ME
IN,,,_,,,., .. _.
e H~ Yor~tr
'•
14th BIG
W~EK!
•, ROSS HUllllR-
Al R PD RT\
)-IOIT UMCASTER. ow lllTll t
~EAK SEBERS •JACOUEUIE BISSET
.._ • lllllllW fCta • ncma .. • ,.... • ..,.. 4,
(IiJ "='=='Eli&
Pin 2MI Hit
DO'rid H9flH11h191
SoMOllthO' E990f I• .
'Tk Waiki*' Stict" ..... ,
•
·coUGAR
.<;OUNTR¥
I . IN C-OLOR .... ...,...,. ... ,., .... w-Ht , ... .
fUWwlttil .......... . ...,.... ...... ,,. .... ,,
A fll• let tk .,. fei1111,.
Wl!IKDAY$: 41JH:)M:)t
SAT. 12:•:1:1H:)H:Jt.I:»
•SUN, t :IH;JM: ... r•
Singers Set
•For Club Date
Saddleback College's
Chamber Singers, under the
direction of Donald A. Walker,
-will perfor"""'for-thMnembets
of the Laguna Hills Lawn
Bowling Cfub at their annual
dinner Friday night. ·
The program will be held at
Clubhouse No. 1 in Leisure
World at 8 p.m.
TV in Taiwan
TAIPEI, Taiwan (UPI} -
Every second household in this
capital of Nationalist China
owns a television set, ac·
cording to official statistics.
As of July, 1970, there WeJ:e
162,900 television sets in the
cil.y of l .5 million population.
The country <j.S a whole has
600.000 video sets.
. ·'. .. ·
.-r111m ..... ..... llltllml.llPEllfll
COMING
SOON
lmm~er 11111
THE MAN
FROM
IASYRIDER
AllfDSlll
WNMlll ·~ ~;a:.,_,_ • "FIVE \~ ........ JllllllWI __.,_.,,_IUI EASY
PIECES."
EXCLUSIVE
ORANGE
COUNTY
INDOOR
THEATRE .
ENGAGEMENT .
"GREAT
'MOVIE
MAKING"
-HEW YORK TIMES
NO RESERVED SEA TS
-ri ... 1.COl ,,lS
~ 1115-.1.Jll.~S-lrOO· lGdS
*"rl.C0·3'1S·S.311· 1~-IQ,OO
"A bold
uncompro-
mising look
at the
feelings and
facts of ·
marriage!'
-SATURDAV'
REVIEW
diary of a
mad housewHe
.11 .. ;,,g
a frank perry film
richard benjamin · frank langella
. carrie snodgress. 8':•••npl•y by eleanor perry
'"'"' 1he "°'el by 1<>1 ~tu!"""· ptodo<ad •nd ni•ec1..i_i:::,,!;Allk ~ry
1' UNI~ PCTUf*: • TECHNICOL~' li!J -,:;.,"::,...;:" Clll
NO RESfRVED 5EATS
Moft.· n.n.. ,7,JO & '' lS , ...... 1oOD,t.0, 11).:IG
W. '•'S.:1.:111.S.lS.·l.00.:t.tS lOJO
~ :Z.15,-.00,5.IS, 7,JO, "lS
"LOVERS AND OTHER
STRANGERS.. ''J ,, enny
-All().
"Where Eagles Oare"
"'"
1'The L•ndlord"
-4 "The Battle
of Brit1in"
UC Irvine Oreh.estra
Concerto Grosso Highlights Opener
.By tQM.J!AJILEY Of Tiie Oel,., , ... , ,..,,
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart'•
glorious music comprised the
major portion of the UC Irvine
orchestra's opening concert of
the 1970--71 season Saturday
night but its delivery by this
young and enthusiastic
ensemble will have to take se-
conCI place in tenn~ of this
review to a fresh and inspiring
work by a contemporary
Jewish composer.
Ernest Bloch's Concerto
Grosso for S.tring Orl'hestra
twk the last spot on a very
pleasing program but i t
brought Dr. Peter Odegard to
the podium for a performance
that js sure to rank very high
when 1 the time comes to
analyze this promising new
season.
Odegard read this com-
manding and deeply moving
work in very much. the way
that Bloch would have wanted
it with perhaps his best work
to be found in that magnificent
final movemen~ -a toweling
fugure, packed with passion
and the smoldering spirit of
the 1-Jewish people, and a
movement which made huge
demands on Odegard's young
performers.
'Those demands were very
capably met throughout this
brilliant Bloch and we had the
obviously inspired Odegard to
thank for an interpretation
that stre~ the impressionist
harmonies or the work while
ensuring qiat the passion and
pathos so inherent to Blodl's
TIU$ ma.tor Mozart. work had that it is not enough to nM!'rely
its problerruJ for the young mark time with the baton.
Grant. We found him capable tt is the prayer of eVtrJ
but· a trifle mechllt\ical in conscientious orchestra to
some key passages and it was have a good opening concert
our view that the closing ron-under its belt in the early days
do suffered considerably from of the new season. Odegard
his apparent inability to cope and his UCI players certainly
with the score. ensured this Saturday night
As in the Sere.nata, Mozart's and did it in the very pleasant
theme in thls earlier work was -decorative and acoustical-
essentially one of happiness and brand new concert ball
and we were not at all sure r~~~~~~~~· ~~ that every effort v.:as made to[~
extract from the orchestra
every nuance of gaiety in·
jected into the score by it.s
composer. music were brought to the
fore.
Guest conductor S t e v e ft
Warner had used Odegard's
baton for the work im-
Nonetheless, it was a pleas-
ing performance if not quite in
keeping with the stature o{ the
::.1.1perb Bloch and th e
Serenata. Grant w i 11 learn
mediately preceding t.h e17~~~;:::;;~~~S~
turna in D Major, and he gave fitii1 DIOI Bloch, Mozart's Serenata ~ot·/I 1! !{
us a dedicated and very ___ • :::JI
capable ir;terpretation of what •EwPORT IEACM • OA.3-&l!ill'"
we have always regarded as
one of the great German's ENDS TONIGHT
happiest pieces. Barbra Striesand
His bubbling hu mor came Walter Matthau
through very well in this· UCJ IN
airing or the work and "HELLO DOLLY"
nowhere more so than in the
sprightly second movement -STARTS WED.
an infectious menue!to that
brought sterling performances George Kennedy
from Odegard's feature d in
solosits. "ZicJ Zag" Odegard called on associate
conductor Kerry Grant to take ALSO
the podium chores on the
Serenade in B Major which Stacy Keach
opened what turned out to be a Mariana Hill
rewarding program. "The
Traveling
Executioner"
IA.RIU. STREISAND
1'0n A Clear Day You
C1n S.. Forever''
AND
CHARLTON HESTON
"The Haw1iians•
STARTS WED.
RlCHARD -BURTON
GENEVIEVE BIJJOLD
,[ft.:f Dert·
·J.1.11mtut ~'""· ~-Ttclnlicllw
ALSO
"THE FORBIN
PROJECT"
A cbildren's ·play based on King. Patty McQueeoey and
historical fact will be staged David Emmes. BALBOA
673-4048 this month when the Fountain Performances will be given
Valley Community Theater on Sunday, Nov. 15, at 2 and
presents "Caddie Woodlawn" 7:30 p.m.; Monday, Nov. 16, at
by carol Ryrie Brink. 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday, Nov.
18, at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday,
The production, to b e N 22 t 2 d 7 30 at ov. ,.4:1 an : p.m.
directed by Mickey Barbolak, the Fountain Valley Com·
dramatizes the story or a munity Center, 10200 Slater
young.girl who lived with her Ave.
family on a frontier farm in Admission is 50 cents for
Wisconsin in the l860's. Bob both adults and children, and
Pergrim is mucial director for reservations may be made by
the show. calling 847.(1500.
Principal members of the· ---'--------II
cast are Susan Peck, .Cassey
Miller, Vicki Barbolak, David
Kilpatrick, Ann Nieves, Jim
Kilpatrick, Mark Barbolak,
Dierdre Emmes, Cathy Hall
and Brian Smith.
Others in the Fountain
Valley production include Cary
and Colin Miller, Keit.b and
Kurt Kiss, Kimberly Gray,
Sam Wahnen, Victor and
Christy Bobrowski, Lynette
Yetter, Willa Bouwens, Vicki
Scavo, Greg Hanson, Craig
OPEN
6:45
'" r ... "'°' a.1'""9 ,.nlnsul1
••••••••••
..-r RE!lfORD
KATHARINE ROSS
ROBERT BLAKE
SUSANClAAK
~LL.fHEM
WLUE 80Y IS HERE"
!!!I • ......__ ..ctuO( ...,,
• • •
Mart Crowley's
""ffit:IDS
INffit:
B\NI)''
AOe.U.-.f-.P-rHcn
.... Nm..IG.r...1Pcluellei.-
Ghl¥~
\..!!!!~""'"'"",:::,;-;;:,,--' ~'--:C,~~=.~ .. =~~.~~~.~ ..... ~!!l!!'.J * Under 17 Mull I • Wltlt ''""" "' DIAllY OF A MAD HOUSliWlfll: '* plu1 Cllnt E11'-''TWO MULES
'A><l~ A><A
HARBOR BlVD
DRIVE IN
.. FOil 51$TEll SAllA" (GP)
Exdutlv1 Orlve In ShowillQI
--Jollll C1t.-vetn • Color ,,_ ''MACHINE GUN McCAIN" (0,)
.. '--PIUS • llo"l'f V1119h11 • COltr
U5.J52f )''THE MINO OF Mil. SOAMES" (G,J
E•(IUliVt Orlv•I" Showl119r
A M-.1tll To lltm•lllblr • Ctler "SCROOGE" IGI
......... !So.} p1UI .... Color 9'U·1•11 "ELEP'HANT CALLED SLOWLY" (GI
Under 11 Mull It With ''""" JM N1m11t1 • C1lor
"C. C. & CO." (RI
01111 • Wnttm • Color "MaCHO CANNAHAN" {RI
Elltlusl'ff Orlv•ln Show~! l"renk. 5!111tr1 e ColOr
"DIRTY DINGES MeGEll" Ctl'I pin • COIOr
''TME IN INCHILE SIX" IO'l
····~-==) '
Uncltr 17 UH II Wltll ,, .....
JMN t11e C11t!'
"C. C. CO." .f•I
''"' • Wn • Celor "MACHO CALLAHAN" UO
HENRY'S AEROPUERTO ~,tl~f GRAND OPENING SPECIAL
NOVEMBER :11·12 ONLY
-Any Mexlcan-DIM•r-... ~ .... , ...•....•....• , . . $2.50-
Any Steak in Houu I Ritg. $5.00) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3.00
Complete with salad and potato .
Blrria IBar·B·Cj)l, Beans, Ric• .................. $1.75
CHAMPAGNE WITH ALL DINNERS
ENTERTAINMENT -SHONA BISHOP DUO
Corner PaliNdet ind Birch, N .. r Orange County Airport
No ReMrv1tion1 545.5579
~ ~, (1l$'f t<IA1T --·" ~«111-on ..... •'•·•i"
SoMMy Deln Jr. 01d
,.._., Lowfol'd kt ---
1 o D~l"~1 --Alto Ploylllf
JOHN YOIGHT
Acadetllf Awtfd Wln•r IR
'THE REVOLUTIONARY'
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••
-~ ~:.;) -':s.'in,
E11d11s1ve Drl" I• ~ "JOI" (R_) All C...,.
"'TltE MACilC GARDIN 0.-STANLIY SWEETHllAllf.T" (It)
Ullcltf' 17 mftt .. Wll'll Hl'Wt
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
l~i'll.& ........
BROADWAY
WAll< IN
Miff' lt M1111t •t W11!1 ,, .....
Ytltrle S. JehJI • C.lw "THE SWA,l'EltS,. tit)
,,.,. • Coltr • lRI
"Wl:ll.IC.IMO WIT" IAIY llTTlll" '"
Owtr"<llM1rri""1-Mttre Ctw
"iotl1 It. S,ACI! 0DYS$1Y"-1Wt
lttdl. ~--'ICI STATIOM lllW
-----------------------=---------------------------------.....,=,-------
•
Saddlebaek Coronation DAILY "\LOT Siil! Piii'-
Diane Har~y .. 19, is crowned homecoming queen of
Saddleback College during half-time·. activities in
J?ame ae:ainst San Bernardino \'alley ~allege. Plac-
ing the crown is Gary Rupar, student body presi·
dent. William Bersenbugge of Laguna Hills Rotary
Club escorts the new queen.
Ousted Capo
I
Clerk Wants .
Private Probe
By PAMELA HAU.AN
Of llM DlllY Pllol 51111
San Juan Capistrano's ousted city ad-
minist.rator~lEirk Ernest Thompson has
changed his mind about a public hearing.
Members of the City Council, in·
lerpreting Thompson's written request
for a hearing to mean a public one, had
set the date for the hearing for Nov. 16.
But since the request left out the word
public, city attorney James Okazaki,
Lelephoned Thompson during an ex.-
ecutive session o[ the council ~1onday
just to make sure.
He was told by Thompson that the re-
quest was for a private hearing before
the council, not a public one.
The council had met in closed session
In order to study a proposal made by
John Reagan that the city retain
Thom pson during their recruitment for
his successor and for an additional 30
adys to train the successor.
He said the additional time and mon~y
spent would not only benefit the city by
providing continuity but would allow
Thompson time to prepare to find
another job.
''Let's show people that were more in·
terested in human beings than birds,"
1aid Reagan.
The council considered the proposal but
-made no decision pending Thompson·s
bearing.
Business Group
Maps Yule Plans
The Downtown Business Association o[
Laguna Beach will meet at 7:30 a.m.
tonight to discuss plans !or lhe Ui>"
coming holiday season.
The breakfast meeting will be held in
the Capri Room or the Hotel Laguna. The
group will decide on an advertising. pro-
gram for all OBA me1'lbers and make
plans for Hospitality Night on Dec. 4. On
that evening, all downtown stores will be
open until 9 p.m. in an effort to draw
Christmas shoppers to the Laguna Beach
area.
Another item to be discussed by the
association members will be the proposed
complex of art galleries on El Paseo now
pending before the Laguna Beach Plan·
ning Commission.
Funds, Volunteers Sought
For Patriots' Day Parade
Volunteers and some financial aid are
needE!'d for Laguna's Fifth Annual
Patriots' Day Parade, scheduled for
Saturday, Feb. 20, according to Robert H.
Huddleston, the Exchange Club's 1971
parade chairman.
Requests for entry blanks have been
received from throughout S o u t h e r n
California· since 700 invitations to bands
and other groups were mailed out in
June, Huddleston said.
Since its beginning in 1967. when the
goal was lo draw attention. among other
things, to the Laguna Beach High Sc;hool
b3nd 's need for new uniforms, the
Patriots' Day Parade has grown an·
nually.
The successful 1967 parade won •
Freec!oms foundation of Valley Forge
award for the city of Laguna Beach and
the foundation 's teacher's award for
former band director Karl Koe nig.
''Success of the 1971 parade,'' says
Huddleston, "as in all previous parades,
depends upon the .interest and coopera·
ti on of the community, either through ac-
tive participation as volunteers or in con-
tributions to its cost."
Because almost all the parade planning
and organization is carried out by
volunteers, cost is kept to a minimum ,
but last year $1,500 was needed to cover
the cost of trophies and incidental ex-
penses.
Contributions may be sent ta Robert
Huddleston, Parade Chairman, 'Laguna
Beach Exchange Club, 30808 Coast
Highway, South Laguna, 92677.
Parade entry blanks and additional in-
rormation may be obtained from Mrs.
Fred C. Ross. parade chairman for the
co-sponsoring Patience Wright Chapter of
the Daughters of the American Revolu-
tion, 494-8656.
Judge Rules Lt. C_alley
May Testify at Trial
FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -A military
judge denied today a presecution motion
intended lo keep Army Lt. William L.
Calley Jr., from testifying at his court·
martial that he was following orders in
the alleged massacre at My Lai.
The prosecutor, Capt. Aubrey M.
Daniel III, argued at a pretrial hearing
that the defense shoul d not be allowed to
introduce any evidence contending thal
Calley acted on orders from his com·
manding officer, Capt. Ernest L. Medina.
The Army prosecutor said evidence will
show that "the defendant rounded up,
unarmed, unresisting old men, women
and children and by his own acts and the
acls of his subordinates summarily ex-
ecuted them."
The military judge, Col. Reid W. Ken-
nedy. agreed that such testimony would
be relevant.
In denying the motion, he said that
such a motion "would cut the heart out of
your defense, which I don't propose to
do."
Calley's civilian attorney, George W.
Latimer of Salt Lake City, declared, "l
might as well go home if the judge grants
this motion." He called it a "gag rule."
''Just why can't we go into the facts
and climate under which this platoon was
€>perating?" the attorney asked. "For the
court to bar me from entering pleas or to
bar me from relevancy -I cannot werk
under these kinds of restrictions."
Latimer said he needed to ask
members of the platoon, "Were you
()rdered to search and destroy and kill
everything in tbat vi llage?"
He said if he could not raise this ques·
tion at the trial which gets under way
next week, "then you have hamstrung
me."
Girl, 13, Succumbs
To Wreck Injuries
Melinda McKinley, 13, of Santa Ana
died Monday at Chapman General
Hospktal of injuries suffered in a traffic
accident Saturday.
The girl was a passenger in a car that
struck a camper on the Newport
Freeway near Fairhaven Street in
Orange.
Tidepools Still Plundered
Supervisor Sa y s Sigris Don't Deter Collectors
Posting of signs at Orange County's
five marine refuges has l'IOt stopped the
"rape of the tidepools" according to John
Killefer. erecutive-assistant to Fifth
District Supervisor Alton E. Allen.
"The organized groups of specimen COi·
lectors. schools and the like. don't come
down so much any more." said Killefer.
'1>ut so far as individua l collectors are
concerntd, the problem is as bad as ever.
'j'hey stand right lhere reading the sign,
"°elect in hand. th en go out to the tide-
pools and start collecting."
Last week. In respvnse to complain!&
from beachlront residents who have
observed continuing violations. the Board
or Supervisors unanimously adopted a
resoh1Uon asking the Slate FiSb and
Game Commission "to provide adequate
surveillance of the five established
marine refuges within Orange C.Ounty."
K.illefer said he does not know what ac-uon-the commission-will-take. "It could
be anything from assigning more
wardens to patrol the refuges to alerting
lifeguards, through local authorities. to
be on' the watch for violators and advise
them of the law."
Former Laguna Beach mayor Glenn
Vedder. who initiated the first coastal
marine refuge off Laguna Beach said he
regularly observes a dozen or more ,·iola·
lions each weekend in the area near hil\
Shaw·s Cove home.
"I feel the enforctment problem is not
being t:iken care of properly, '1 said Ve<J.
dcr. "Aflt'!r all the refuges were
established two years ago, in November.
1968, so the period ol education should bt
over. lt took about six months to prepare
brochures on the law and get the signs
posted. but 1 fee l it's about Utne to crack
down ."
Vedder noted that mosl or those who
disregard the warning signs appear to be
from outside Orange County, or even
ouuidt ll'le state and fall to realize the
value ~f the tldepools.
The marine rtfuges In Orange County
111re in · Corona del Mar, from Little
Corona to Arch Rock, Laguna Beach ex4
tending one mile nOrth from Victor Hugo
point. ln South L.agurwt between Aliso
Buch and Three Arch Bay and in two
offshore areas at Dana PoloL
Tutsd4f, Mowmbft 10, 1~7Q s DAILY PI LOT IJ
Home for Chri.stmas
University High Students Set to Move In
By GEORGE LEIDA!.
ot "" Otflr """ Sltlf
Th< move into University High School
will be made over Christmas vacation,
Tustin Union High_ School District of·
ficialJ have decided.
"DelJys in delivery or interior door
fr ames have delayed sub-contractors . at
least three weeks," Supt. William Zogg
said today.
Following a two-hour meeting and
walk-through with lhe general contractor
on Monday, Zogg said classrooms will be
readied by Dec. 1, and'all other buildings
"but one shower and locker room" will
be completed by Dec. 14.
District classified staff will do con-~
centrated moving "at the outset of
Christmas vacation" including industrial
arts equipment, type\\Titers and furniture
being used al Mission Viejo where
University High students and faculty
have shared a duplicate facility since the
opening of school.
Although all or the Phase one corr
struction won't be complete until Dec. 14,
ZOgg said some furniture now being
stored will be moved as early as Dec. 1
into B building.
With the move-in date set, the district
has been able to notify vendors for
delivery of new furniture, Zogg said.
Although there will be "a lot of un·
packing to do", most of the school desks
and chairs will be un~cked by the ven·
dors, he noted. '
One question lingering in the minds of
district officials is whether or not the
contractor violated the terms or the con-
tract. Zogg said the contract called for
completion of classrooms and lavatories
by opening of ~hool Sept. 15.
''C.Onlractcrsl may request time ex-
tensions for legitimate reasons and we're
not sure how long an extension the ron-
tractor will seek," Zogg said. "The aix-
week sheetmetal workers strike certainly
is a legitimate reason."
Although the classroom portions were
to have been done in September. the COO·
tract gave the builder until Dec. 1 for
total completion of the school.
With the move-in planned o v e r
Christmas holidays, Jan. 3 will be the
first day or school in the new building.
That will end nearly a full semester of
shortened days, long bus rides that were
necessary by the delayed construction or
the 1,200 pupil school Double sessions at
Talk Planned
'
By Psychologist
A meeting of Spiritual Research
Associates of Laguna Beach will be held
Friday at 8 p.m. to hear psfchologist
Carroll Richardson talk about "Psychic
Discoveries Behind the Iron Curtain."
Richardson will discuss why the Soviet
Union is spending $13 million on psychic
research and some o[ the psychologica l
advances that have been made by the
communist govemments.
Mission Viejo will end when U!llvenit,.
High opens.
Meanwhile, trustees Monday accepted
a bid of $1.6 million from W. E. Lyons
Co. for Phase Two or University High
School, which will bring the school to a.
capacity of 2,000 students and flesh out .
the complex with lecture balls, a library.
cafeteria, gymnasium and musi c
building.
Zogg hopes history will not repeat
itself, noting the contract cans for com-
pletion by lat~ September of 1971.
Lyons submitted a $1,529,000 base bid ,
and the district accepted Lyon's bids on:
1'1 ree of five alternates: $26.000 for ·oota
door lighting. $36,000 for asphalt paving.
and $3,000 for sprinklers. Concrete work
and fencing will be rebid since the
district felt the Lyon bids were too high
for these items estimated at costing
$30,000 and $18,000 respectively.
Including the work done by Shirley
Brothers Constructien Co. on phase one ...
of the school, the total University High
complex will cost $4.5 million.
It will serve the growing Irvine ·
developments, El Toro and Tustin
Meadows, where students have been bus·/
ed to Mission Viejo since September. •.
The latest delay in Ute school which Ofa .
ficials had hoped would be complete Nov.
15, was , caused by late delivery of
''hollow metal frames for interior doors,''-
Zogg said.
Because they were late, painting and·
floor covering contractors were delayed.
as y,·ell as the carpenters who install the
doors.
1. A ptsy, w""""''"'"" look plvs hnnrries you doa, pay exfftl to..
And COllltl glws YM •ll'lf'lllif• '°" My. •lllDll -
'"" hs1 haadUng. Gas ecDllOIDy. l.ew prices.
We thought you'd like
styling to wink at, not wince
at. Nioe lines. smooth, aolid
looking, oculptured.
Unlike "stripped" small ears;
C-al!En many IUXllries. At oo er;tra charge:
100% nylon earpeting both lrcnt
and""'· Wheel fip moldinp,.Deluxe sU!ering
wheel
Plus a eigarette fighter. Rear armrests
ml ul!tray. Foam-padded front seat cushion.
Lighted !root aohtray. Dual body paint stripes.
2. ... _ ... 4llllull•-otivst3~.
Fnlat hip room and
""""1der room are mocb
l!'Wer than in -od>el' ....nears.
la fact, Comet's lr<m
bead room and leg room
... wit.hill a fradion of
an inch of big ears lib CllrJgkr llnperial, Dodge
Cbarger and Cluyslet Neapor ..
3. Zippy •6• or v.a pllformance-
100to210 ....._.
Comet's
standard
enginehM
"""' 00% greater
-lhall many small
impalis.
U that'• not enough. diooae Imm 2 optional w.ms. "-115 and 1'5 hp. Qr a 210 hp. V·S. By
Ille way, Comet is Amerlea'1 lowest priced V-8.
Turning diameler ia
only a6.9 feet-C<met'&
just aa deft in a~
lot .. Oil Ille high"3)'.
Gas mileage rift!s impotto• abcm Z! milei
per gallon ba....i on simolated
city/suburban driving test&. ~:s:ttt::'. And look at these d
low pricei. Remember '
these are manufacturer's
suggested ,.tail · prices. Why not see what your
Men:ury dealer suggests. Get"liim lo lill in the
right band column below.
llandattarer'• )len::my,
S•rrested l>ealer ' aei.n Pfitta• PriDle
Com« %-door eedaa ••••••••• $Ul7.0t a••·-·
Comet 4-door ..a.a .. ••••a••t zt76.Ge •••••••
c:o.et GT • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •. ut5.8I
Typleal optlta.
Antomatk tmmniu ioa •••• a, $181.50
While sidewall tirel.... ...•••. it.SO
AM Radio ...•••••••••• , .... • to.IO
251 cu. la. •r enrine
(o'fer •td. "'I") •. •••a •o••a 78.71
•••••a••
• •ooa ..
a,...,._
Sl2 cu. in. V-8 enrine
(o•cr 250 ca. in. ... ")..... 8'.11 ..... _.
•Manufacturer'• 1uggeated retail price1 f« ears aftd.
options listed or abDWD. Es:cladM traupodatloa:
charges,_ dealer t:::tfon charges if NT1 .._ and local Wea, . ud title l-..
Better ideas make better ..,., M•eatT
makes better .......to bay, 1"'1t er leaaeo
A better Idea for tohfr.
Buckle trpl
Mermy. BeHer ideas 1rde bettw a:as.
JOHNSON & SON LINCOl:N-MERCURY, ·1NC;
2626 Harbor Boulevard, Costa Mesa, California
•
-
•
I
f DAILV PILOT
Feels Low
In tlw Sky
1flelc•
By DICK WEST
My friend Furbis Branlow C<>llfided
tbe otber. day that be bad atarted ...mg
an analyst. I war aurprised to bear il
Branlow had always impressed me u
being one of the most emotionally sta-
ble persons around.
I said, "in what way are you
psychically disorieoled, Furbls!"
"I APPARENTLY have a personality
aberration that renders me unable to
relate to airline commercial&," be replied
dlstraughlly.
"It's not particularly good for me to
know J'm on American and IODlehow
TWA cloean't necessarily make me feel
more important. Furthermore, I have
never found the going great even oa Pan.
Am."
I Qid, "do your spirits soar on
" Nortbweat Orient?'"
Branlow bwig his bead and didn't ,.y
anytbing.
I gave a little sympathetic whistle. .
"You really are iD bad shape," I com-
mlseraltd.
"IT'S TEARING me apart Inside,"
Branlow said. Ills wloe broke and it took
him a few momenta: to regain bia com-
posure.
"I bad always cotllidered. myself a
normal peroon with normal lnstincta and
ructions. You can't im•gb'Jfl what men-
ial torment it la not to sbare In the
jo)'lllllllell of jet travel being ex-
perienced by -In the airline tommercials.
· "I'll tell you eomething I haven't even
told my analylt yet. I don't feel that
BOAC iakes good care of me any dit~
ferently from any other a I r l i n e •
Basically, all of the airlines treat me
pretty much alike."
I PATTED BIS !houlder reaaauringly.
''Go ahead and get jt off your chest," I
said. "You'll feel better for it.''
"I arrive at the airport expecting
something glorious to happen. It never
does. I simply board the plane, a
stewardess iMpects my ticket and directs
me to the proper compartment and I find
• vacant seat.
"The plane takes off, a llewardeaa
take! my drink order and brings me a
tray of food. I eat and we land. That'•
it."
I said, "do you mean to tell me you are
never transported with ecstasy?"
"I GET ABOUT the same sensation I
get riding a bus," Branlow confessed.
Poor .fellow! Maybe therapy will heJp,
but I doubt it. It appears that Branlow is
pathologically tocapeble of losing touch
with rulity.
U,1 Ttlfflloi.
GEN. CHARLES DE GAULLE, LINDAU NTED IN DARKEST DAYS OF FRANCE
Here He lnapects French Commando Troops in London on Bastille D1y, 1942
Tall, Haughty ... France
De Gaulk Loved His Country as Few Men Have
Richard K. O'Malley, chief of tht
Associated Press bureau in Frcrnkfurt,
was AP bureau chief in Pam from
2959 to 1966, during most of Charles
de Gaulle's ten.sure a.s president.
By RICHARD K. O'MALLEV
FRANKFURT (AP) -He was a tall.
haughty old man with a wintry smile and
a forbidding gaze. But this man was
France.
Charles de Gaulle frustrated his allies.
lmtated his staunchest supporters and
made enemies of potential friends. But
above all, this man loved hiii:" countrY as
few men have.
His departure leaves a ragged gap in
the fabric Qf a nation still searching for
its place in the world's affairs.
To meet Cliarles de Gaulle was an ex-
perience In illell. From his great heighl
he looked down benignly. like a father
presiding over the funUy table. He always
opoke llOIUy and with a concem thal
IOlde a man feel be wu welcome. But be
De Gaulk Memo
Issued Orders
About Funeral
PARIS (AP) -Eighteen years age
Charles de Gaulle gave Georges Pom·
pidou a two-page, handwritten memoran·
dum of instructions for his funeral. Tb.is
is what he wrote:
"General de Gaulle
"Jan. 16, 1952
''I wish that my funeral be held at
Colombey les Deux: Eglises. If I die
elsewhere, my body should h e
transported to my home, without the
11ightest public ceremony.
"My tomb wilt be there where my
daughter Anne already lies, and where,
one day, my wife will lie. Inscription:
"Charles de Gaulle 189(). • Nothing
else.
"The ceremony will be arranged by my
tion, 1ny daughter. my son-in-law, my
daughter-in-law, aided by my secretariat,
in such a way that it should be extremely
simple. I do not wish a national funeral.''
also could be coldly angry.
That he was brave has been well
documented.
But there are a few things about his
bravery that have not been publicly men·
tioned.
His conduct during one of the attempts
<lD -his life was perhaps the best ii·
Justration of the supreme courage of
Charles de Gaulle.
He was on his way to his helicopter pad
at Villacoublay. -
The Secret Army organization had
planned his death, and that of his wife.
As his car sped along, the machine gun·
ners opened fire from two side roads. At
the sound, the old man remained upright
but turned to his wife and said, "Bow
your head." Mme. de Gaulle, herself of
the same mettle, did not. Then another
burst struck the car, and she did bow her
head. But the old general remained
upright and said, with some asperity:.
"Why aren't tba police shooting back?"
When ' they arrived safely a t
Villacoublay, the old man said with the
patient resignation he chose when
displeased: ''The people who are charged
with protecting me are as bad shots as
those who are trying to kill me."
Anyone who saw the old man in public
would never suspect that he had any time
for light-heartedness. This was not so. An
aide" once said that he enjoyed humor
provided it came from an intelligent man
and not from.a-buffoon. -one of hls favorites was George Brown,
the former British foreign minister whet
often got into hot water by ignoring
diplomatic niceties.
"He likes Brown," an aide once said.
''He likes the airy humor of the man and
he .respects his mentality."
Charles de Gaulle seemed ponderous to
many, thrashing them with the "glory of
France." But when De Gaulle spoke of
the glory of France, it lived again, lily
banners, sh.iJ)s of the line and all.
Not only a man has died. Part of a
country died with him.
Reds Launch Huge Attacks
Against ,Cambodia Forces
PHNOM PEHN (AP) -The heaviest
North Vietnamese-Viet Cong attacks in
two months threw the Cambodian
government's northern fron t into disar·
ray today and cut it off from Phnom
Penh.
Two towns. an airport and two bridges
were hit. Thousands of reinforcements
trying to reach the battle zone were
reported blocked by destruction of a
large bridge during the night.
A Cambodian communique said North
Vietnamese troops attacked the airport
at Kompong Cham, the country's third
largest city which is 47 miles northeast of
Phnom Penh, and simultaneously made
assaults against the district capitals of
Prey Toutong Troeung and Skoun, on a
line running west of Kompong Cham
some 32 miles.
A spokesman said the government
troops at Troeung were nearly sur·
rounded and in danger of being. overrun
before they fled in confusion. half to the
east and half to the west.
Skoun, 35 miles north of Phnom Penh
at the junction of Highways 6 and 7,
came under attack for the second time in
less than 24 hours. Earlier Monday,
before dawn, North Vienamese troops had
fought their way to within 50 yards of the
Cambodian army's command post before
they were driven out.
Fighter·bombers flew heavy strikes
against enemy assault formations along
Highway 7, whlch was cletsed between
Skoun and Kompong Cham, 25 miles to
the east.
Rain,_ Wind Pound Alabama
One bridge near Troeung w a s
destroyed by enemy saboteurs in skin·
diving gear. A seco"d span, on Highway
6 and 25 miles north of Phnom Penh, was
reported knocked out by mines. This
blocked the advance of reinforcements
sent north from Phnom Penh, but the
spokesman expressed confidence theY.
would get through.
The Cambodian command said 85
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops
were killed during the attack on Korn·
pong Cham airport. At least five Cam-
bodians were also reported killed, in·
eluding the wife of a soldier. Trees Blown Down During Night-time Thu11ilerstor1n
Lo. ,..,..... owlellttll' d .. r lltit.
Temperatures
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It was the second day of heavy attacks
along I.he northern front.
British, Soviet
Warships . Ram;
2 Russ Missing
LONDON CAP) -Britain's biggest
warship. the aircraft carrier Ark Royal,
and a Soviet destroyer collided Monday
night during British maneuvers in the
Mediterranean, the Admiralty said today.
A spokesman said there \\'ere no
casualties aboard the 43.000.ton carrier
.37%. Hike Spurned
National Rail
Strike Hinted
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A railroad
union president today rejected the
recommendations of a presidential board
for a 37 percent pay raise for rail
workers and. threatened a strike for Dec.
11.
C. L. Dennis, bead of the Brotherhood
of Airline and Railway Clerks, said the
contract recommendations of the White
House panel were inadeajJate from
several standpoints .
Dennis said he would orde r the 200,000
railroad members of his union on strike
just two weeks before Christmas if there ·
were no contract agreement or prospect
of agreement by then.
The Presidential board Monday recom·
n\ended a pay raise over three years of
32.5 percent. Compounded, however, it
would come to 37 percept, officials
pointed out today.
The recommendations also called· for
changes in work rules that the industry
says are outmoded and inefficient. The
unions have resisted work rule changes.
In rejecting the proposals, Dennis said
they did not contain "enough money,'1
and also fell sho11 in other areas workers
deemed vital. He cited absence of· ad~
quate improvements in v a c a t j o n s ,
holidays, job security and <lther fringe
areas.
The Presidential board recommended
creation of a joint labor-industry panel to
seek long-range reforms and solutions to
railroad labor problems which have
prompted Congress to imos contract set-
tJements three times since World War II.
Dennis's union represents about a third
of the workers affected.
At a neWs conference, Dennis was ask·
Marathon Talks
In .Auto Strike
End Temporarilr:
DETROIT (UPI) -A 17 .. hour
bargaining session expected to continue
until tentative settlement was reached in
the 56-day-0ld United Auto Workers strike
against General Motors broke up unex-
pectedly early today with no explanations
from the weary negotiators.
Maintaining the silence which has been
in effect at the GM building here since a
news blackout was imposed on the talks ,
OcL 30, bargainers would only say that
the negotiations would resume again to-
day at 9:30 a.m. EST.
The marathon session, which began
Monday igniting speculation that a set-
tlement was at hand, had been expected
to result in tentative agreement on a new
national contract which would cost GM
well over $2 billion ia wages alone in the
next three years.
eel whether be would still call a strike if
Congress or the courts stepped in before
Dec. 11 and imposed a settlement or ex·
tended the present no-strike period, en·
ding Dec. 9, that was ordered by Preai·
dent Nixon.
Dennis sidestepped the question but
said once his men were on &trike, tbtY.
might defy any order to return to work,
and said "I doubt very much I would
1rder them back to work."
Arab Plane
Hijacked
To Damascus
DAMASCUS (UPI) -A Saudi Arabian
DC3 airliner on a flight from Jordan to
Saudi Arabia was hijacked to Damascus
today, the official Syrian AAB News
Agency announced.
The agency said Syrian authorities
released the plane two hours later and
detained the hijacker for interrogation.
lt was the sec<>nd hijack in the Middle
East in two days. Monday an Iranian
plane was forced to land in Baghdad by
six armed persons but was later allowed
to resume its flight to Iran.
The Syrian News Agency said the Saudi
plane, carrying 10 passengers, landed in
Damascus at International Airport at
11 : lit a.m. {l: 10 a.m. PDT) after radioing
permission to make an emergency Ian·
ding.
"But after it landed, It turned out that
the plane had been forced to change its
course by an armed person," the ageneY.
said.
It said the passengers were given lunch
at the airport and "ail facilities were ex·
tended to the plane during the two hours
and 15 minutes it stayed in Damascus
Airport. Later it took off at the request of
its caplain but without the hijacker who
was detained by authorities for in·
terrogation." the agency said.
It said the plane was on a flight from
Amman to Tarif in Saudi Arabia but was
forced to change course 30 minutes after
it left Amman.
The agency gave no details about the
nationality of the hijacker or his motives.
, The Iranian airliner -also a DC3 -'
almost ran out of fuel Monday before Ian·
ding safely in Baghdad. It also was
threatened with destruction by the hi·
jackers and was menaced by Kuwait
military planes.
The DC3 was allowed to return to Abid·
jan from Baghdad Monday and the
eight passengers and crew of three were
flown the rest of the way to Tehran on a
special Iran National Airlines flighL
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The Ark Royal and the British frigate
Yarmouth rescued some other Russian
tteW!llen who were knocked overboard,
the spokesman said.
The collision took place east or Malta
as the Ark Royal was on maneuvers with
tbe Royal.Air F'orce.
"Full details are not yet to h3nd, but
the Indications are that neither ship was
seriously damaged," the Admiralty
spokesman uid.
.1
American Beauty "'' T1""""9
Kathleen Denise Arnetl. 19, of Los Angeles. poses pretlily after being
chosen queen of the 82nd annual Tournament of Roses on New Year's
Day. She's 5-foot~4. 125 pounds, and is a home economics major al
Pasadena City College. Janet Hagemeier. 18, of Buena Park, was one
of 1even finalists and will grace the queen's court.
"
•
-. -- --...--..-----. . ---~~-. --_.:..-
Tutsda)', Novtmbtr 10, 1q10 DAILY PILOT IJ
No More Sliiing
Florida Lake Polluted Will the _Real. Amelia Stand Up?
QUEENIE By Phil lnlerlandl
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
(AP) -The accredited course
in water skiing at Palm Beach
Junior College has been
canceled after four years -
the lake is polluted.
Palm Beach County Health
-Department officials say Lake
Osborne is so dirty it is no
longer safe for water sports.
The physical education
course in water skiing was
"the only accredited water
skiing course in Florida and
one of a very few such courses
in the whole country," said
Elisabeth Erling, chairman of
the college's department of
health, physical education and
recreation.
"Jt was a practical course
that took advantage of our
marvelous Florida weather to
give the students something
tbey could continue to enjoy in
later lite alter they left col-
lege."
'Close Friend' of Aviatrix Slates News Conference
Lee Reed or the COWlty
health department said a re-
cent sampling of the lake
NEW YORK CUP!) -Two
former Air Force officers
published a book Monday
claim.Ing Amelia Earhart was
disclosed it con tained "some .~!1::::1"
effluent from sewage" but
"our primary coneern was the
high bacteria count a n d
organic leaching of I.he water.'
Mrs. Erling said 67 students
were enrolled in the course
when it closed.
The artificial lake. a mile
Jong and half a mile wide,
forms the east boundary of the
campus behind the gym-
nasium. It had been used for
years by local residents for
swimming, water~g and
boating.
captured 33 years ago by the
Japanese on a spy mi.ssJon,
survived eight years of cap-
tivity and may be Jiving today
Wlder the name ot. Irene
Bo lam.
Mrs. Irene Bolam o f
Monroe, N.J ., who said she
had been a close friend of
Miss Earhart, had 1·no com-
ment" on the book, "Amelia
Earhart Lives," But she said
she would hold a news con-
f~rence today after she and
her lawyer had a chance to
read the book.
Mr:;:. Bolam moved into the
fashionable "Leisure World"
apartment complex t h r e e
years ago and neighbor:;: said
she had kept to herself. Mrs.
Bolam said tier husband, Guy
Bolam. died "last spring."
!or President Franklin D.
Roosevelt.
They said Miss Earhart,
who would be 73 today, spent
eight years a captive in the
lmperial Palace in Tokyo. The
authors said she was released
secretly by Emperor Hirohito
in 1945 on condition he not be
tried as a war criminal and
that he be allowed to remain
in power, They showed a pic-
ture slide of a woman bearing
a resemblance to M i s s
Earhart wearing a kimono and
said the picture was taken at
the Imperial Palace.
33 years. Wittner also said the
flier's friends called her
"AE.'' not "Amelia" as writ.-
•ten in the book.
11~to ~~eia.. .. ~~~··Jll,.,, ... ..,..__..
"Yr. Beaa1ey l&J'I not to thlnk of It .. ~ fired,
but rather that you''l'o been Uhented.
V.S. Keeps Watch
World War II pilot Joe Klaas
and retired Air Force Major
Joseph Gervais, autt19rs of the
book, told a news conference
Miss Erhart and her navigator,
Fred Noonan, were captured
by the Japanese near Hull
Island while on a spy mission
Public Relations Executive l Fred Wittner, who said he had .
been closely as.sociated with · ·.
Miss Earhart for two years, (J
called the book a "tremendous I';:
fiction" and asked why the
authors had not compared
Miss Earhart's handwriting
with that of Mrs. Bolam with
whom they had exchanged
written communications. The
authors claimed handwriting
could change over a period of
Ramsey Clark Taking
Case of Kent Student
'
Soviet Sub Movement JAPANESE PRISONER?
Ul"I Ttl••"-lt•
HAS NO COMMENT
Mrt. Irene Bolam · Pilot Amelie Earhart T 0 Cuba Played Dow11 .,,, • .., • .,,._..,,.,, .. ,,, ........ ,,...,, .. _ .... ., .... ..,,,.,,.,,_..,...,,_,, __ ,.,.;:::!1D>l_.,.,,,.,,..,,,,™""""'-"''"'"""""""'-'"'""b!ll!"""U ... ,,.,,,....,..._ F~~~.y ~~p~~ r,, ~~=~~.:t''" U:"i'.~°7i
sa;d Pentagon spokesman Jer-Fatal Drug Dose 'Not in Candy' Arms Talks ~::~y"t~=~· lh:·~:~~r. ~~ ~,~.;:· cl:'.r'::.i c:~ ·~= WASHINGTON (AP)
Covernm-ent officials a re
playing down the movements
of two Soviet ships toward the
Cuban port where the United
States recently charged the
Russians were building a slib--
marine base. '
"I wouldn't want to
characterize any coocem. I'm
just advising where they are,"
ry W. Frialheim in reporting law prevail," agreed Monday• degree rioUng.
Monday that a submarine DETROIT (AP)_ A f>.year. tained the capsule. to hide the source of the dead· Last Hotlr to defend the president of the Ip;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
tender and a salvage tug were old boy who died of a heroin Initially, police said Kevin ly dose. Kent State University student NAME OF THE GAME
again nearing Cienfuegos. HELSINKI (UPI) _ U.S. body on rioting charges in con· IS MONEY 6UAIANTEID Moscow repeatedly has overdose apparenlly received got the fatal dose when he ate The po 11 c e investigation and Soviet negotia tors at the nection witb campus violeoc~ WOULD YOU WOllt • ,_
denied it is building a sub base the drug in a capsule and not Halloween trick.or-treat candy showed that the bo y's Strategic Arms Limitation last May. howrl a wed ef yo•f •pore fllM
in Cuba, but the constant from spiked Halloween candy, which had been sprinkled with grandmother had put away all Talks (SALT) held an hour· The Amer I can Civil ...._or w11kMdl .......... S..
presence of the two ships in police inve:;:tigators say. the narcotic. of his Halloween candy before Jong working session today Libert\es Union (ACLU) said c•I "°'"'" •toNa. we c-,c...
the Caribbean has otherwise Inspector Robert A. Slottke, Slott ke :;:aid Monday a his visit to his WlCle's, Slottke and U.S. delegation sources Cla rk and attorney N. K. ~H::'~H 'l4.:'1J~~H~G~
remained a my:;:tery. chief of the homicide bureau, medical analysis indicated the said. said the meeting was "marked Schwartz will be co-counselors mtA CASH.
The Pentagon Sept. 25 said Monday that the boy , amount of the drug in the Previously the boy's mother by the same serious approach for Craig Morgan, one of 25 11 you •re dnc.,. & a. .....
! '
Gun Battles
Claim Four
In New York
reported evidence of con· Kevin To sto n, apparently boy's stomach was the amount had said that Kevin went to as in the past." persons indicted by a special 1 ... 1MC11...ry wl .. •......., ....
st ruction on what it said could swallowed the capsule while normally found in one capsule. sleep on lhe night of Nov. 2 at "We are satisfied with the grand jury nn the violence 11.,..tftleltt. Sec. a •u•r. C4lll
be a Russian sub base, and the visiting an uncle's home. Slottke said the investigation his uncle's home after eating rate of progress considering that ended May 4 when four c.n.ct MW hr~ 1 ..
White House responded by Slottke said no warrants disclosed an unidentified some candy. When he could the complexity of the matters students were shot by Nationil ;•::;n '!;·write In ~ · ·
drawing a parallel with the were being sought and police person spriilk!ed heroin on not be awakened I.he next included in the talks,"· the Guardsmen. Delly Piiot.
l962 Cuban missile crisis, ...':di:'.d..'.n~o::_t kn~o:w~ho'.:':w'...t'.'.h'.".e.:c'.'.hil'.'.:d'..o".'.b-'.:......'.K~e~'.'.'."''.:'''..II'.'.:'.al'.'.lo'.::w'.'.e':en'.'...'.:can~d'.:y..'.l.'.'.at~e:_r_'.m'.'.o'.'.r'.'.n;:".ng~, .. h'.'.e:...:w:_as'....'.:h'.'.os~p'.'.:;ta:'.'.l:'.:iz:•'.'.d:... ~so".'."'.'.."::•:s_:s'.'.'.a~id:_. _______ ,'.:Ct'.'.''.'..'k'.'.:,~'pe~akl~ng~at:_•:._:news::::..!==========~
warning of serious con-
-NEW YORK (UPI) -A
policeman and three civilians
were killed in gun battles in
the city Monday. Another man
was shot and killed by a
policeman in a Long lslilnd
suburb.
The police gave t h e s e
details:
-In Harlem a police
sergeant, Henry Tustin, 45,
was shot by a man suspected
of impersonating a police of-
ficer. Tustin and his chauf·
feur, Patrolman W i 11 i a m
Ericson, fired at the attacker.
wounding him three tim es.
Tustin, hit by a bullet in the
chest, died more than three
hours after the 8 p.m. attack
in Harlem Hospital.
-A police ambush worked
again.st two alleged holdup
men at a drug store in the
Crown Heights section of
Brooklyn. Two patrolm en
were concealed in the rear of
the store, which had been rob-
bbed nine times in recent
years. They interrupted the
stickup at a signal from
Joseph Markowitz, the pro·
prietor. The robbers ran out
and the police .opened .~ire,
killing a man who was un1den·
tified and seriously wounding
Calvin Godette, 20. The holdup
attempt took place around 9
p.m. ........,
sequences.
But :;:ince then the ad-
ministration has tried to keep
the controversy . over Ute
episode in a low key.
~Thfre w~---re-po:ns-Jist·
month , · which th e ad·
ministration never coofirmed
publicly, of a secret U.S.·
Russian understanding 1 n
which the Soviets agreed to
stop their activities at Cien-
fuegos.
Ky to Visit
Next Week
WASHINGTON (AP)
Soulh Vietnamese Vice Presi-
dent Nguyen Cao Ky will visit
Ute United States next week on
a trip taking him to various
military i05tallations and the
While House, Washington Post
writer Marilyn B e r g er
reported today.
The Ky visit will be a
substitute for fiis plaMed trip
to attehd the Oct. 3 "March
for Victory" sponsored by the
Rev. Carl T. Mcintire, the
article said. Miss Berger did
not name her sources for the
:;:tory.
The precise schedule £or Ky
has not been decided upon, but
he i:;: expected to see President
Nixon around Nov. 23.
RND
OF THE
WEEK
•
Silverplated duck bank with knitted
scarf and cap. Blue for boys. Pink for
_girls~Ftn it .up11nd have a quacki_ng..__1.+
good time spending he proceeas. f
Cll8llOI A<<OVl'll• l!Wlllld. ""*'1<•11 E•~• t •n•,\.merlt •nl 11\d w..1i.r C~ll'llt. too.
SLA..VI'CICS
Jewelers Since 1917
J 8 FASH ION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH -644· !llO
Opeo MOftday ao<I Friday .. ,u !:30
I
They didn't !mow that the front pages of the telephone ,,,,._ -. ..
book cont.a.in lots of useful information that • ·
can help you get more from your telephone
service. Things -like Area Codes, emergency
numbers, how to dial long dist.a.nee calls, and lots
more information.
Now my friends aren't laughing
They're too busy reading.
any more.
@Pacific 'lelephone
We're' here to·help.
-'
... '-·
I,
I
i •
•
. • '
• -' '
• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
T
Intriguing Questions
Changes in the makeup of the Orange County Board
of Supervisors have led to speculation about what the
future may hold for government at the county level.
Alton Allen, 5th District supel'.llis~ will be replaced
by Ronald Cll~pers. William Hirstein is retiring from
bis 4th District post and will be replaced by Ralph
Clark.
Although under Call!ornia law the Board o! Super-visors is a non-partisan body, Republicans -both sen-
ior and junior -couldn't resist endorsing· Gordon Bis-
hop in last week's election. Bishop losL Clark, arf Ana-
heim city councilman and registered. Democrat, won.
without overt partisan intervention by his political par-
ty.
Thus, the five-member Board of Supervisors will
have two acknowledged Deroocrats in 1971 -Clark and
Robert Battin, an aggressively partisan Democrat. Cas~.
pers is a question mark in the minds of many. Winning
with the hefty help of the largest campaign expendi-
ture in county history, Caspers describes himself as p.
moderate Republican.
Not too much weight need be attached to the fact
Caspers actively campaigned for Alan Cranston when
he ran on the Democratic ticket for the U.S. Senate
ag,ainst Max Ralferty two years ago. ·After all, a great
many Republican-oriented person\ and institutions pre--
ferred Cranston to Rafferty.
Oranjl;e County's supervisors historically have been
a }!enerally conservative body. as might be expected
in 8.n area primarily concerned with specialized agri·
culture. Rapid change from rural to urban character
has impact in politics quite as much as in economics .
The impact in Orange County has been slower to take
on a liberal hue than might have been expected in the
circumstances.
Whether ll is beginning to do so now is an interest-
ing question which may find answer in supervisorial
actions in the corning year. For example, what will be"
the board's majority attitude toward lhe Irvine Com-
pany. the eounty's largest landholder now engaged In
extensive development on its o'nce virgin land's?
Another question intriguing observers of the coun-
ty scene is Telated.-to-the supervisors' relationship with
County Assessor Andrew Hinshaw. Will they and Coun·
ty Attorney Adrian Kuyper strike a truce with Hin·
shaw? And, it so, what effect might this have on the
fortunes of the Irvine C9mpany and other land de·
velopers?
· Answers will come only when the newly-con~tituted
Board of Supervisors acts when the chips are down
in 197L
Changing Vi ew of Rafferty
Speaking of Jame duck State Superintendent of Pub-
lic Instruction, Dr. Max Rafferty, as we were in the
preceding editorial, figures of more thaa passing inter·
est to Orange County voters have come out of Rafferty'.s
campaigns beginning in 1962.
In that year's general election, Rafferty won over
Dr. Ralph llichardson in Orange County by 169,000 to
98,000. In the 1966 primary, Rafferty won more voles
than all opponents combined-196,000 to 98,000. But
Orange county voters had a different view in 1970. Jt
was Rafferty, 237,564; Riles 203,292.
That margin Rafferty lost in Orange County from
previous years was a key to his loss statewide.
A .. Dollar a Minute ... Plus
United Airlines 747 pilots now receive $57.000 a
year for 80 working hours per month. But those "hours"
are deemed to have 64 minutes -so. a little more than
$63 per working hour in "the friendly skies."
Declaration of Independence llnrecogni:ed
A Hauntingly Sad Incident.
'Time to ' 'Outsiders' Are
one day last summer a reporter for the
Miami Herald stopped a Jot of people on
the atreetl of hI.s city and, without iden-
tifying him.self, asked them to read and
sip a typed copy of a document in peli·
tion form. _
The reporte r picked out middle.aged
pedestrians. He stood in the streeLs all
day:,
At the end only one person out of 50
agreed to sign the document, which was a.
typed copy of the
Declaration of Inde-
pendence.
One man said, "Be
ra refu I who you
show that kind of an-
ti • government stuff
to, buddy." Two men
called it 0 Commie
junk." a third thre.1t-
ened to call the copt.
r· .. 9_. ......... ~ ...... ;,;
i_ ~ -! : : : -. -. . -. ......................
Comment.I · from those who took the
trouble to read the first t h r e e
paragraphs: "This ls the work of a
raver.'' "Somebody ought to tell the FBJ
about this sort of rubbish." "The boss'll
have to read this before I can let you put
-it in the shop window. But politically I
can tell you he don 't lean that way. He's
• Republican."
J FIND TUE INCIDENT hauntingly
aad. Sad not so much because so few
Americans know or remember the con·
tent of the document on which their coun·
tey'1 freedom is based; but beause of
the widespread fee.ling that there is
something wrong with persons who seek
the redress of wrongs -that is, the kind
of people who solicit signatures to peti·
lions.
We do not like to be n!minded that
there are people who are dis.Ytisfied with
their lot. We hate protest. The language
of the Declaration was, of course, most
eloquenUy the language of protest.·
"But when a long train of abuses and
usurpations. pursulnc invariably the
same object, ev~ a desire to reduce
them under absolute despotism, it ls their
right. it is their duty, lie throw off such
government, and to provide new guards
for their future security."
THESE ARE FIGHTING words, as we
were fighting people at the beginning of
our Nationhood. Now, faced with these
~Mis. a great many people can only feel
paranoia -delusions of persecution and
-feellligs that we are above any form of
criticism. Too sad, really.
It was not only the middle-aged in
Miami who felt this. 'The same reporter,
on another occasion, confronted 300
young adults attending a Youth for Christ
gathering with the opening words of the
Declaration.
Twenty-eight percent of the youthg
t:1ought the excerpt had been written by
Lenin.
I reronunend we all read the Declara-
tion from time to time. At this time I
cannot say that the lessons to be learned
from reading it are more important than
the lessons to be learned from its re-
jection by a sizeable body of Americans.
The Miami results, l feel certain. CQUld
be reproduced anywhere in this country,
and easily.
THE WAY A REASONABLE and
patriotic AmeritrM might be expected to
feel about our primal document might be
the way Abraham Lincoln felt when he
made a speech in Independence Hall,
Philadelphia, In 1161;
"I have never had a feeling politically
that did ·not spring from the Declaration
or Independence ... I have often inquired
of myself what great principle it was that
kept this confederacy so long together.
"It was hot the mere matter of the
separation of the colonies from the
. mother land, but something in that
declaration giving liberty, not alone to
the people of this country, but hope for
the world for all future time.
"lt was that which gave promise that
in due lime the weights would be lifted
from the shoulders of all men, and that
they should have an equal chance. This i!
the sentiment embodied in the Declara-
tion of Independence.
" I ... l would rather be assassinated
on the spot than SWTeiider iL"
Fastest-growing Larceny
Some Amerlcans are doing their
Olristmas shoplifting early, Shoplifting
h.u become a major problem for the na·
tion's relailen who claim Ute wave of
ateallng and employe thefts cost stores
across the country nearly t3 billion last
year. And the 1oaes get paaed on to
honest customen who must pay higher
i:rlces for the goods they buy.
FBI Direct« J. Edgar Hoover has call-
ed lhopUftinc • 1 th e fastest-growing
W....y In the c:ounlry." c .... of shoplil·
ting hive trtpled 1ince 1159 -and
-dlim prica cwld be cul 15 per-cent U tt were not for thefts. Professional
tldeva have taken a good pa.rt of the
loot, bat drug addicts, store ~mployea. teeaqa and boUllwives are allO. help-
ing lllrip counl<n.
"'lbll hu been the wont year retailera
In the WuhlBaton area have ever had
concernlnc tbe problem of thievery ,"
1ay1 Edward H. Se:lo1dck, retail bureau
chairman of the city's Board of Trade.
He reportl that ohoplifUng hu reached
11 bill> u 7.7 percent of retail &ala.
I
----TUesday, November 10, 1970
The cdiloriol poo• Of Ult Doily
Pilot 1eelca to fn/orm ond 1tirn-
lllGU riadcr• br "'"enttng thll_
new1popcr'1 op:inionl end com-
tMtttary on topiu o/ Interest
and llgnjfican.ce, b~ providing a
1-for lhc "'"''"""' of olU' nad.en' opiniov, and , by
preHnttno the dlucrae v1tw-
pob1U of fnjomted observer1
encl IJ)Ol<umf• •• topia of •h• dor.
Jlollert N. Weed, Pub!Wler
.
[
•
•
Editorial
·Reaearch
1•we·re talking about an estimated '85 to
$150 million a year," Selonick adds.
SOME OF THE reports show the
audacity of 5hop1ifters b a I m o s t
unlimited. Police in one Chicago suburb
arrested a »year-old woman for shopijf.
ting in an expensive department 1\orf:.
"'She wore a mu.lcoat and not a stitch
underneath," said a detective. "She wu
going to get a whole new wardrobe l'.rom
the skin out." JnfiaUon has also hit
&hoplifting with the FBI reporllng tbe
average theft now amounts to $2&.
A team of shopper-watchen ktpt an
eye on about 500 persons, selected 1i ran-
dom. who entered a midtown Manhattan
department store not too Iona ago. One
out of every ten walked out with
merchandise I.hat was nol paid for. One w ashington ret.aUer told E d I t o r I 1 I
Resiearcb Reporll lhat he had to replace
most of his staff •Cler one sale beca111e
they were "pr•ctlcally alvinc the 1tuff
away to their friends."
SECURITY MEN say drug addicts who
steal lo support a $1(1().a-day habit must
-lifl.from l800 lo 11,000 worth of mftthan-
dist to gtt that from the fl.lie ol stolen
goods. A oew group of ahoplifttrt hu a~
peaced in localitie1 catering to the na·
lion's youth -such as Ctorgctown in
Wash.lngton and Crttnwich VUJsge. Some
New t.ert types rt:porltdly "rip off''
merchiuxlise not only becsuse they want
it and can't pay_f_or ll; they claim steal-
ing will also belp to destroy the establish·
menL
To combat the wave or shopllfliiig,
retailers a.rt abandonin& their rt:luctanC!t
to prosecute shoplifters. Some stores
have published announcements of the get
tough policy. "There was a Ume when we
used to talk &oflly about shoplifting,"
declares Howard Haimowitz, an ex-
ecutive of the Natiorial Retail Merchants
Association. ''Now we aee more arrests
and more convictions."
GREATER f.MPHASJS is al30 being
placed oh security. Selonick has stated
that some Washington area stores main-
tain security forces "as large or larger
than aome of our smaller suburban com-
munities." Mirrors and t e I e v J s ion
cameras have been put in place to detect
shoplifters. Some stores have installed
plastic tags on each piece of merchandise
which' aet off t1ectronic alarms if taken
out.side wilhout being removed by clerks
with special tools.
But shoplifting is part of the malaise of
our time, according to some observers.
Says Washington Police Chief Jerry
Wilson: There is "a mYth in the middle
class comnwnity th1t shopllfUng bn't a
crime.''
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
I can't worry-about BlC lasUtia like
Martha Mitchtll. J worry about
LITI'LE thinp like bank burnings,
bomb threats in my kids' class·
rooms. higher ta1t1, prices and in-
surance C<>Sts caused by arn.se.lw
waste and destruction.
-B. D. W.
Tlllt ... """ rwlttctl ,.....,. ,.,...,,. ...
_ .. tltr ..... .. .. .......... ....
"* "' "'" " .,..,,., .... IMltr '""·
•
Get To Root,
Demand End' Made Scapegoats
(-~-.... ~~·:~' '';!:~"'·"""' ~ ., ... ~";..~"l·>•''"'"•'\
' ' ' ; ~. MailhOx
'""';;;,,~--.. -.~-... ~ ...... .;. .............. _.
To the Editor:
So! The Jrvine Company and its
president, William R. Mason, are opposed
to the recommendations in the Parsons
Report. And why? Because it threatens
their plans to completely pollute the
dwindling area of the county by bringing
la more .and more people in more and
more Ucky-tacky subdivisions.
lt seems quite obvious that Orange
Counly Airport's problems never would
have happened if some measures to pre·
vent the indiscriminate people pollution
OO\V evident around the Back Bay had
been taken in the past.
OR DOES ANYONE stop to think
anymore that that airport was launching
P-38 fighter planes long before all those
subdivisions where complainers now
reside were even a gleam in the land
rapers' eyes?
Jt would be far more constructive for
all those anti-a irport people to focus their
wrath in support of county and state
regulations that would effectively halt
any further subdividing and erection of
wall-to-wall rabbit hutches in the county
-while it still is a reasonably liveable
place to stay.
A large number of readers wrote in ob-
jecting to my column early this summer,
where I spoke about "outside agitators"
and how the community uses this:
scapegoat to explain away unrest among
its own ciliz.ens. ·
Ye1, at the same
time I was receiving
these letters, the Chi·
cago police were ar-
resting s core s of
youths in Grant
Park, who had rioted
because ol fai lure of a famous rock group
to show up for the
perfonnance.
The first official reaction. expectedly
enough, was the "outside agitator" syn-
drome. It was, of course, disSident kids
from other parts of the country who had
come to Chicago to provoke a Wsturbance.
BUT THIS explanation fell apart the
next moming, when it turned out that of
the 50 or 60 youths booked for disorderly
conduct, every' one hailed from Chicago
or its suburbs.
Also. at the same time, the July issue
of Road and Track magazine printed a
revealing paragraph along the same
lines' "Iii Awsworth, England, the parish
council became impatient with road ac-
cidents said to be caused by drivers pass-
ing through, and asked police to make a
special check on speeders. In the first
week, police caught 20 residents."
IN COUNTRY towns, or rural areas, it
1s always some "tramp" or a passing
bum, who has committed a theft or bat·
•
tered one of the citizens. But if anyone Is
ever brought to book for these offenses, it
is most often some village or rustic
character no one ever dreamed could be
guilty of such conduct.
Every clan, or tr ibe, or community
ascribes hostile or anti-social conduct tet
"out.siders" and denies that its own
numbers can harbor such unlovely
creatures. But the fact remains that
almost all crime is endogenous; it
originates within a closed system, not
from without.
OUR FEAR OF J\fURDER, for instance,
is jui;t a sophisticated version of our
primitive fear of the stranger; yet all
homicide statistics everywhere, even in
the most populated cities, show that more
than 80 percent of murder.! are com-
mitted by relatives. friends or ac·
quaintances, and hardly ever b y
strangers. But we don't like to believe
this cold truth.
We prefer to blame most of our societal
woes on the outsider. for this reli eves us
of any responsibility in reforming our
own community. We blame the Russians
for what is wrong in the world today ; the
Russians blame us. Should we become
allies, we will jointly bla me the Chinese
for the greatest obstacle to human uni-
ty is our infantile need to blame the
other, and by blaming him, to deny that
he is in fact our brother. THE ONL y building that should be
allowed would be to replace those, in like
size and kind, which have been destroyed
or torn down. An emergency county
ordinance lo this effect should come out
o{ the County Board of Supervisors at the
soonest possible moment. It should be
backed by a state law from the
Legislature as soon as that can possibly
be achieved.
Bleeding the Taxpayer
(f could understand the guilt feelingi;
about backing this from those people who
have filed jet noise damage suits against
the county, instead of against the fast-
buck developers. tract builders, and real
estate people who suckered them in the
first place. But l can't understand how
anyone can sit back and watch the "city
of Irvine" take form without an acute
sense of terror.)
IT SEEMS OBVIOUS to me that if you
do not have three million more people
flooding Into the county, you won't need
to trlpJe the jet fligtits out of Orange
County Airport within 101ears. Jnstead·of·
treating the symptom, .attack the virus
before It can get a good toehold.
t readily admit that, as a plJot, J am
far more aware of the enhancement ()f
environment and the quality of living that
properly designed and operated airports
provide than are the average non-pilot.a.
But l also say, as one who has watcht:d
the 1ystematlc rape o( those beautiful
virgin hills behind Corona de! Mar txirore
the builders' bulldozer blades. It b time
lo get to the root of the problem and
WASfDNGTON -Soaring relief and
\7e!rare costs are arousing sharply
critical congressional attention.
A significant instance is the un-
publicized announcement by Rep. William
Bray, R·lnd., that he will demand a
sweeping investigation of "professional
welfare organizations" which h e
scathingly denounces on twet grounds:
··1 ha ve accumulated enough data to in-
dicate," declared the v e t e r a n GOP
legislator, "that professional 'welfare
organizations• are not only frying lo bleed
the American taxpayer with cries for
more billions for welfare, but are also
guilty of incredible callousness toward s
those they claim they are trying to help."
The National Welfare Rights Organiza-
tion, which has staged a series of stormy
demonstrations in Washington, was sin-
gled out for particular castigation.
BRAY, TfURD ranking Republican
member oC the House Armed Services
Committee, who wields considerable in-
fluence in inner party councilia, $tressed
he is not against relief and welfare
organliations as such.
"t.-1any are reputable, honest •nd
outstanding," he said, ''and con·
sclentlously trying lo help. But it is time demand : STOP!
GENE BOOTH to weed out the unscnipulous and the
publicity seeker!, es:peci11ly those who
Lttttrs from f'tcdert arc welcomt. cruelly use welflre mothers •nd chUdren to further their own schemes and Normall~ writert 111ould convty their ideologies."
messages in 300 word.a: or les1. Tha 11M!: National Welfart Rights Organ iza..
right to CO'Tldense letter' to fit .spa ca lion, according to Br~, falls in that
or eUminore libel is rtserved. All lei· category. " ·
£er1 m.usi ineludt :fgnaturt and mall-"A few wctks Jgo," he as.~erted, "it
ing address but namermay be wftPv-organlicd a dcmQnstratlon of weJfare • , . mothers around a D.C. government
hald Ol'l rcqtu41t if 1uf/1e1en& reason building. When things KOi l'lul of hand,
fs cpparen£. Poetr11 will 110& be pub-And some of the women were 11rrestP.d
lished. and jailed for disorderly conduct, the
Alleu-Go ldsmit!,,
leader or N\VRO told the rest there was
nothing could be done to help with bail
money. In essence, he said, it was just
their tough luck.
"IT IS TIME TO find just who And
what is behind this and similar groups. It
is also time to throw a spglligbt on their
operations and real purposes."
Striking directly at soaring welfare ex.
penditures, Bray declared "welfare ha.!i
became a way of life for many.''
"It is also true," he conlinued, ''that
there are leeches fattening on human
misery who see the welfare slluation as
an actual business. They incile the poor
lo 'marches' and 'sit-ins' and encourage
them to break the law. Then when some
are arrested, they callously withdraw aid
leave the victims to their fate."
By Robert S. Allen
ind Jobn A. Goldsmllb
By George ---.
Dear George:
I hav~ been readinc 1bout the
11Communicatlons Cap'' belweet
generations. J would like to know
where to buy a "Communic11tions
Gap" ai; my parents are always
trying to talk to me.
SAM SEVENTEEN
Otar Sam :
Vtah-I can understand Lhat.
I donJt 1tnow whert yw can cet a
communlcation:ii gap -maybe If
you Just 'l\.'ait a few years you won't
need one.
• ' ..
·cHECKING
•UP•
I in 4 U.S. Gals
Self -supporting
By L. M. BOYD
ARE LAWYERS lR general
~aest? Are they tr 'u I y
dedicated to thelr professions?
When pcllsters sampled the
public with the foregoing ques-
t.Ions, only 35 out of 100 people
says yes on both counts. The
others just smiled o r
something ... UNDERSTAND
the shortage or obstetricians
i.! getting pretty severe. Sa
severe, in fact, the pr~
gnosticatars figure two out or
every live of this counlry's
new mothers within the next
six years will give birth unat·
tended by physicians.
SOM E FOODS are
masculine, some foods are
feminine. That's the claim of
one expert. Sounds reasonable.
Sauerkraut is male, is it not:
Avocado salad is female.
Macaroni and cheese is male.
Creamed chicken is female.
Salmon steak Is male. Crab
Louie is female. Mince and
pumkln pies both are male,
lemon meringue and banana
cream pies both are female.
You try it. What's the gender
of corned beef and cabbage?
Tomato soup? Roast beef?
Mothers' Milk Sought
To Save Two Infants
STANFORD, Ca~f. (AP) -
More than 400 women have
responded to a public appeal
for mothers' milk to help two
baby boys survive at Stanford
University Hospital
The youngsters, identified
only as Jason and Tommy,
both 5 months old, are unable
to tolerate any formula the
Lost Plane,
2 Victims ·
Discovered
hospital can devise.
Mothers of the litile boys
both lacked the necessary
milk supplies and the infaaU!
have been kept alive by in-
travenous feeding.
The hospital has a limited
supply of frozen mothers' milk
but it is dwindling because the
little boys need so much, the
hospital reported.
Some of the donors came to
the hospital Monday and ar-
rangements are being made to
collect milk later from the
0~~~. who -Stn1 weighs what
be did at birth -nine pounds
-has undergone a major in·
testinal cpe raUon.
Tommy has gained only one
MONTEREY (UPI) pound above his birth weight
Coast Guardsmen hunted for a of 51h pounds. He was born
seventh day today for three with a major gastrointestinal
men missing since a San allergy.
Diego fishing boat sank in a A spokesman at t h e
storm . hospital's Premature Infants
A bunt In the same general Research Center said: "The
area for two missing Navy of· response has been just great.
flcers ended, however, Mon· We just hope we get enoogb
day with the discovery or their milk out of this appeal to lasl" jet trainer airplane in a moun-tainous coastal wilderness 30 The youngsters cannot COO·
miles south of Big Sur. tinue to be fed intravenously
The victims, whose bodies indefinitely, a spokesman ex·
were found in the wreckage, plained, because "you run out
Lt C dr J hn M of good veins -sooner or w.e~.-. m . o . Stump, 43. of Orange Park, later you have to get them on-
Fl d Lt Ed · R to mothers' milk."
a., an , win · r;:::=========-I Barnes, 29, of Durham, N.C. EVERY "BODY" SUM GYM Still hunted are t h e
crewmen who were aboard lhe
Siesta which sank during a
storm last Wednesday. A
nearby boat received a signal
that at least two had taken to
LOSE A Clttta l lzt
IN 2 WEIK.I
flll
a llferaft.
Give the watch with
tuning fork accuracy
Accutron• by Bulova
The most welcome gift of all Is an
Ac:cu tron by Bulova. So precise is
the Accutron tuning fork
movement that accuracr is
tu•ranteed to
withi n • minute
•month.•
Set our full
aelection of
Accutron
models now.
From $110.
... wlll lf)nt to IMI loltrt11tt, II ..c:_..,. Gui'*""' 11 • .. JIM'•
IOrtc._... e Memt C ..... e ..... ...._..·
ESTABLISHED iJ YEARS . ' MAltO• MUNT ... eTON
IM M'l'llff aiv... atM.11 IMI, a.,.....,
c-.4•.Mna -~-~. ~, _t.
1
Mllfllll!fMll l•cll ...,. ti2 e.IBiW10 fn·#lt
0,.. M• .. '11.n., M . 11 'Hf 9 p.-. ......., ... ......_
'
___ _.... __ ._ .. ., • 0 '• •P • • ..... ··-
T"ldl1, N-:::...::1•::.• .:.19:.:7.:.D_· ______ .:.DA:::U.::.Yc.:.;Pl.:.LO:.;T_ •
' Feared for Ber Life Tlwrese11
Widoiv
Tells 1'ale
Tate Case Witnes_s Says She ~ied
l'\tlll'
I I f'-.f t\ ~1t S\
Jj\\[Ll\Yl l< l,\~
George Washington:
'~erica .. mII be the most favorable
country of any in the world,
for persons of industry and · ty,
possessed of moderate capital:'
Right, Mt: Washington!
Just look at the high rates of
interest that moderate capital
earns in a California Federal
Savings Moneymaker account
Suppose that you have
$1,000 to invest On that mini·
mum deposit you'll earn
$59.19 a year in our 5.75%
Moneymaker certificate BC·
count (5.92 % annual yield)
Or $295.91 on $5,000.
5.75% Moneymakers
are available for one to ten·
year terms on deposits of
$1,000 or more. Withdrawals
may be made at any time with
some loas of interest.
We have other Money·
maker plans, too, that pay in·
terest from So/o up to 7.5%
depending upon the term and
the amount deposited.
Califo1nia Federal Savings
ud t.om.~Uoa ·Aaletl OTa $1.6Blllior!i
Nation's Largest Federal
"-mis .. inluttd up to $20,000 b:ran-of the Unit«! Stat.ctOovem=t. HudOBice: 5670 Willlhir< Boulovltd,Lot ........
--=--.Anaheim Office :-eoe-N. Euclid Ave.· 77 6-2222--
Costa Mesa Office: 2700 Harbor Blvd.· 546-2300
Orange Office: 4050 Metrop olitan Dr.· 639-3033
Other convenient ofllut throughout los }.ngtlts, Orong• and Ventura CounlSll.
p.se &e1• Pl-•··· .... 141
=-:: ... '125
lltoll'-COMPA•W
Ill UI PllUT
I •
. ·-•
:1 ~y l'ILOT
New S'f~t:lirae on VCI Scene
Engineering complex recently dedicated by consumer critic Ralph Nader juts
out on rolling hi11s of University of California Irvine campus attesting to con·
tinued growth of the campus above Corona del Mar. Plenty of open spaces r~
main for future additions.
De•th Notlres
CHILIMl'll
A-cnu:,...1 .. AH 76. d "7f c.or.11-
...,.,.1, Hvlltl,..tllll ll11dl. Diie of death,
How:nbwr t. S1ir\11"d b¥ two sons, Miio
tan al'ld Ttloma1. of Hllf!11ns:oro llnctu
d,11-Mers. llnsi. ChllJm.pi., Lal Vll'9&ll
Mlntn"I Pt(f'ltto. Hunll ... h>n fltldU ,, ...
te~. Pr.II''-K~bl~1, llMho1 l<lur
1r·-.~(tolldr.11 1-1 two ,...,1 ... randchll.
dr~n. Si!'Nlcn. Wr1netd"1'. 1 PM, C"t"'I
o" ..,., Cl'lf-n , ht••!-~ M..,.,orltl Parti:.
f"rlendl ft'.ay Cl'll 11 11•!1 l'lro""w"' Ch•'>t'I fro:n 6 ta f PM to-n'•"'• T,.., .... u. P•ll
II··• ...... ., r"•r>el. kl! llro11dwa1 Morlu-
lrY, Dlr«!ors.
DA"lt
"""""" e. !'I-VII. A•, , •• ef '" V11 c::........ p.t-·-rt .......... o ... of ....... .
Nl'Y:'IT'...,,. 7. Sl•NIY"'I tl"I' Wiii. Vltlllnla1 twn ....,~. A•"-.r-.;, of .,_,, P•-1(1 L-
, ..... ,_.,..,_ • ., P••"'1 twn "•u""teni. Mr1.
S.•t'ltn Wr'""'· of Mer'l'I"""' M.,,. M•!,...,, ,. •• -,,., ,...... Mr~f ....... 111,,,., ic ..... Afft
D• .. !s, P•··-•1 two 1l•t-ii, ,....,, vr.-.
1 1•11 H•..-•r, W. le1 A"""'f!'f .M..-. Pl'!f'o rt'-, C"r!..-, F•INllfllfll '-, •• ,, .. -111•,.._.
II•. D•vh ,. •• , a ,..,.,..~ flf Mt. f''l•...-
N··-•~ I•'•• ~ .... 9 .. ,... ••• 1 •"'" ,,,.
Al M•I•":•~ 5""'""' WI'• VI•• P-' .. -t et tM °"''1'° r.1'111'f""to1, Nv'•loll of lTV LI.,. Alf-. ,,._,., , • ..,,,... w"1 ...
""'"' 1t ,..,.....•t-1 0!111"1 of "'• fl•"•· W•'•••"•'" N<>o.....,.,...,. ti, t P•~. wl~
111-9 Mt, O!IY<t ,t,l•'"""k: l ...... """~ nff'· c•·••...,. F•..,11"1' ....,....,ts ""' 11l1'1•'"'"i ht
1tM rrom.a .... "'"'°'" ,,, ..,,. ....... Mi>-..... 1•1 ~··•''-•'kl--• "'"' ,,_ "'"°" le lh<t Al N·'•l"•h ~hr'!"" (.+-P11t"t 0!11""""' H•._ ~··-1 •• ~· .. ~·11111"!"'1 APfl"Y. lll•-otl'1
(ti.pet ol' t"-Oii ...... Menliar'I', Dlrltd«I.
"""'"~ ·~ l . M'""ll'lrl. '1' 15th SI., Ht'"'" ""11111 ~·di. Dete ol' de·'~, Nov......_.
7. S11N!wd b¥ _.,m, Mr. Ind M ....
L..-:8"1' L H~"1'Nllllll two 1kf.n. N'rs.
AJln S'-""~nle """' all!! Mr1. Anll• L01111>i1 t. ... i.r. ,...,left. w~. s
PM. P9lll: l'amll"I' °"""'1 .. l'llMrel twine.
lltt!ft•
Oo•'1n H. ~en'. 7" Pfll""1'!1t, '°"""
«"I ,.,.~r. Dnl1 ~ """'' Nw. t . $Hr\ll.-.d W wife, J-1 -. Ja.-II ., of Ce•t1
M•·•: davttit,,,., Audrft' ,,,__.., C~mn9
del M~•i and 11r11e 1rioftddoll"n!11. s~ .....
k"1, w~.w. 1 .,M. P~clllc v'"' Ch•·•!. 1·•~·11"•111, P~rll'c Vllw M•-r·
Ill Pa~ Dlrltdtd W "•clflc Vltw Mar-tu1,.,.. MACH•N
lll'f'fnond M11cflf!n. :m Cliff Orl\l"e, \.• •••!'II &r-,h. l'a•• ol' ftflth, NnY. f, 5.,.._
kn P«ld!llf al MCC:onnldt '-""""' llftdl -"· MD""l!I
SvPn 1'!. ~-Are 1ot1, of tt7 1'111 St ..
COlhl MHI. Date "" lie~'"· "~""" 5. S.....I~ ..-ndlllf .i 11•11 llf'Nclwl"I' Mor-,,."· MYllll
,._.... k...t M'fttl. Wt W. l.1-lf'tlllllll
D.:W, l'let1!'•1•. D·t• ol' _,,,, NOY. t.
s-kn Jlllt!ICfl"' II a.n lltotitwar Mor·
"""· 01sonto1•
Alfnid Olbor"M. ... .. ''· of ,,.., Wnt-
mlnster A ..... Coll• Mftll. D~I• al *"'"· N......,,.tler 7. 5,,,..,,ic. Mfl(lll!I 11 lkll
illwdW&Y Mortvr-. SfllN
Trnsll Shin. Ate 11, of 21 c11 ... ,,... 11aec1.
N..,_, llllCh. Dehl flf ctealll. N""""tler
t. SerYlcn flet'ld lM al kll llJMdwaY
"""""· TIMMlll
And~ Tflfttnlr. A" .. of ttn New-"°'' 111\'d., C.ost1 Mn&. Diii• ol deilll,
Nowmlllr 1. SUNl'ffd Ir/' da1111hkr. Helen
VOnlon. "' L1r111111 Hiii .. Stl"\lk•I will bl
held at 11111 llf'Oldwll' CN!MI, Wednea.-
d!"I', 10:• AM, with Rw. La,.... Fllck· ..._. ollkla:1..,. ln!ennenl, Pacific View
#Mmol'lal P1r1I. Ml BfWdw11 Mortll&rY•
D!r..:ion.
ARBUCKLE 6 SON
West·'iff Mortuary en E. 17th St., Colt.I Mesa
116~111 • BALTZ MORTUARIES
COto!la dtl Mar •.•. OR S-Mst
llosla Haa ........ ml I-WI • UIL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Bro-11. Costa M,.. uwm • McCORMICK LAGUNA I
BEACH MORTUARY
1'111 Lopu ClnytD Rod.
-Ii • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
' llemetery Mmury
Cllopel
• Padtlc View Drive
Newpwt Bet~, cautonla -• PEEK FAMILY
OOIAINIAL FUNERAL
HOME
New Survey Aids School
Counseling Personnel
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of TN D11ty rMet St.ff
SANTA ANA -To help
school guidance. counselors
find out which students need
most help, the Orange County
Department Of Education has
designed a 21-question survey.
Nearly 50,000 ninth and
eleventh grade pupils will
begin completing the ques-
tionnaires within the month.
When completed and scored
by a computer, a single sheet
loi:. each school will pinpoint
students needing direction in
their high school program, ac--
cording to Clarence Johmon,
coordinator of g u 1 d a n c e
se:vices for the county schools
office.
School ·counselors will be
able to scan the printout for
key clues that will allow them
to spend time with those
:students who most n e e d
BUldanc•, Johnson said.
The county Board or Educa-
tion bas approved speodlng
part of a '19,500 state grant,
!or the computerized guidance
survey, Johnson said.
App1ied Computer SoftWare
Inc. of Westminster, bas been
chosen to proceSs the survey
at a cost of·25 cents per stu-
dent, Assistant Superintendent
of county l!Cboo!J Robert B.
Sinclair said.
Noting that the average
district in the county has just
one counselor for every 400
student!, Dr. Sinclair termed
the project "the best bargain
I've been able to bring to the
board in a long time." With
ratios that high, counselors
freouently are m i s s i n "
students who need help and
who may not know it.
Trustee Dale Rallison ol
Santa Ana was concerned that
a possible invasion or privacy
might result from "putting
each student in the county on
a computer."
"Schools get back th e
master cards with t h e
students' names, and a print-
out. Only the program re-
mains in the hands of the
computer firm," J o h n so n
replied.
Further, the county schools
would have "contract control
over the use of information
gained from the survey,"
Sinclair noted.
''There can't be any in-
vasion or privacy," Sinclair
said. Names appear only on
the master card and the prin-
tout, not in the program. No
addresses are asked for,
either.
"Woa1dn\ It be simpler just
help?" Ralli.9on inquired.
Johnson replied that
studenb rarely are aware of a
need for counae!ing.
The 21-item survey was ai;
proved over Ralllson's no vote,
and could begin being used by
area schools within the month.
Big Brothers
Head Named
SANTA ANA -Edward
Sharp of Newport Beach has
been appointed to the Board of
Directors or the Big Brothers
of Orange County.
Sharp, 48, is the owner of
Edward E. Sharp Realty in
Newport Beach.
Big Brothers or Orange
County is an affiliate or Big
Brothers of America and of-
fers volunteer adult male
S•• 'Club guidance to boys from Ierra fatherless homes and counsel-
ing programs £or the mothers
Meeting Slated1,_or;;;the;;;s;;;e;;;bo;;;y'•· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I
SANTA ANA -The next
meeting of the Orange County
Sierra Club will be held Nov.
JO at a p.m. at Smedley Junior
High School, 2120 W. Edinger
Ave. here.
The guest speaker will be
Ken Olivier, who will show
slides of Pioneer Basin, Lake
Italy and Evolution Valley .
----.....
ON THE TUBE
f., t .. M1t t•lil• te wh1t'1
happ1fli119 1111 TV, r1ad TV
WEEK -di1tr!l,11t.d with th1
S1turday .ditl•111 of tfie DAILY
MLOT.
DIAMONDS
AND
ESTATE JEWELRY
PURCHASED
South Coast Pla11
lrhtol 1t 1he 5111 Die911 Fwy.
Co1fa Me11 540·9066
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e NOW JS THE TJr.tE .• , ?
To go Mlllng over the
clear blue ocean in your,
Brand Spanking New SO.
LING?? 11 ol Ifs priced
to sell!! See (Guess \Vhat),
"'1 Bolu A ...
-!------Wat h9'•~• am a "SA.,tBO" lg 1.tis.s~!
Mlett eoald She &'!' Y-ou-
ca.n ml!il "Dark Shado9'11"
for~. Can't You'!' Help
find cute Siamese, Feel
Gttat tor dolng aomethlng
aood .•. for someone else ... s.. 6401.
I
• .,_ ... "'l"'t•k MOBnJAJlY
'--·······•llJI .. a sd· ........... ,.
0
8G'IBI' MOllTUAllY
lr7 Mala It.
a.U.iJi<o --
Tho DAILY PILOT-
Tho 0... Thot Caret
e People. , .You do know
Wti&t'• At the end or a
pencUT OK then here's a
'FANTABULOUS' chancer
Don 't wait! Cause Points
do eo down. • .Soon or
Liller: See ClUi 4300.
-.......
•
Barrier to Justi~e
Emergency Language Booklet Publislied
By JOANNE REYNOI..00 Jife in South~Califomia that in Baja California.
Of TN oeltr '"'' stiff there art a lot of peopl~ who "The book was really ready
Police with drawn guns sur-onJy speak Spanish and very to go two years ago," Hayden
house f ll f e w emergency personnel, said, "but we got involved
' l'r• Cttristnias
SALE
1000 OIL PAINTINGS
with value• to $400.
NOW ONLY
s500 ,0 s,7500
o,.. ID •·•· Dell'(
540 W. 19th 5trHI
Co1t1 Mesi
• I round a u of people such as police and firemen, with the needs of other
they believe to be dope smug· who speak any Spanish. ' emergency personnel, such as
glef<r. A ltamlng to come out A Newport Beach fireman health de p a r t m e n t and
with hands up is shouted over and a Santa Ana college hospital personnel, and the
a bull horn. language professor Jiave pool· ~boo~k~st:".:arled~~gro~w~in!g·~"--~=========! But the occupants of the ed their talents to help correctl-
house are Mexican natk>nals . the language' barrier problem.
who can't Wlderstand English, Philip Hayden, a Batallion chief with 29 year's service "In so l;heY shout back ~n Spanish, Uie Newport fire department,
asking what the off1Cf:rs want. and Joho Moreno Santa Ana Th~ police,. who speak !Kl · College linguist~ h~ve just had
Spanish, .thlnk the s~ I!'" . t h e t r Spanish-English dlc-
tend .to make ~ f1ght of it. tionary for emergency person.
With no altemahv~ left, they nel published.
rus.h the·house and in the con-"This is a language book
fusion, two of the occupants that is not eonCf:rned with
are fatally sho~. . grammar or the cultures of
The whole 1nc1dent could the two countries. Jt is a col-
have been' prevented if the JecUon of · phrases in the
police spoke Spanish or the dialect of the English . that is
:suspects spoke English. spoken in Southern California
But it's one of the facts of an<l the Spanish that is :spoken
At11ertlMtM11I
Artificial Teeth Never
Felt So Natural Before
Now •. , • Plastic Cream Dl-ery
Revolutlonlzes lientun Wearln&
For the fint time, 1cience otrmi a •• , •"' _, c-f•1lNly. You may
pl1!tic (ft.am that holds dentures .bite harder, thew better, eat min
a1 thcy'11e ntllCt been beld before-natunilly.
form1an d.utic rnembtane that lulps F1mo£m lasts !or b0tn. Resi1tl "°" ym.1 flllll.t11a " tM "'1lt111U /u· moi.lturc. Dtnturei th1t fit are n-
JllO af ~ MOU//t. !lttltial to hcaJth. See yoUr" dentill
I t'• a re110\ution1ry di1eovcry ttiWarl,y. Get easy-to-uae FlxDDEr.T
called Fur:ODEN-r-for daily home Denture Adbcs1ve Cream It 111 Ult. (U.S. Patent #J,003,988)° dt\11 counters.
FIXODl!N.f bolds de:Dturn lirmu
I
YES! BUT 1 DAY ONLY-WEDNESDAY!
Bl'lllllls doesa't NII 11/21111 Siil lflrJ ... ..,_llllt's wllf ID-11w's (lllDnlls
DIJ) nmt Is SI lllpartlnt mast mm wlll lnl apea 12 IHlln 1rm BA• ID 9 ... 1
MEN'S $125 SUITS
I
&rodlns saws thl price In half on top-fashion shaped suHs ~ thl new and wider lapels that SIJ Sl25 thl
minute you slip one onl Yes, Ille quality of woolens, thl perfection of workmanship, and the depth of
selllCtlon all say $125 In honest-to-goodness Jalae-llecause this Is Brodlns, a stor1 you un blllne lnl
1/2 OFF! FAMOUS SWEATERS • LAMBSWOOL/MOHAIR
Short sleeve Reg. $14 Long sleeve Reg. $16 Sleeveless Reg. $12 se sa se
1/2 OFF!MEN'S
$55 SPORT COATS
27.50
112 OFF!WOMEN'S*$16
JEANS AND SWEATERS
"WOMEN'S ITEMS
AT MOST STORES 7.88each
So vast an event ••. most Grodins stores open 12 hours Wednesday 9AM to 9PM. Hurry! Limited quantities! No
relumsl No exchanges! No refunds! All sales finall Slight charge for alterations. No phone or mail ordersl No
C.O.D.'s. Shop early for best selections! Take advantage of these gilt buys ... free Grodins electric blue gilt boxes.
• lftl
USE YOUR OAOOfNS CHAAGE, BANKAMEAICARD OR MASTER CHAAQs::
SOUTH COAST PLAZA-COSTA MESA
Opon Week Nights
ANAHEIM CENTER -ANAHEIM
Open Thurscloy and Friday Evenings
'
• • ,
' •
t ..
--·
First of Their Kind
'
Tuesday, November 10, 1970 DAILY Pllt~ I
GOP Lost Po·wer Seats
Democrats Reclai1n Majority of State Gover1iorships
By RAYMOND LAHR
WASHINGTON (UPI)
When hard times beset the
GOP, it began its comeback in
the statehouses.
The Democrats now have
reclaimed a majority of the
governorships and can hope at
least to read lhe same meair
Ing into their domination of
more state capitols.
Governors' offices have long
been recognb;ed as seats o(
power vU4l to party organiza·
tion which Is supposed to see
that friendly voters register
and vote. The Democratic par·
ty organization decayed during
the 10005.
Even when governors lack
patronage po\"ers to give state
jobs to all county chairmen.
they usually have a corps or
troubleshooters to send to
areas where repair work is
needed.
not to the point that the
Democrats again would hold a
majority.
After their disaster in the
mid-term election of 1958, the
Republican share or gov"ernors
dropped to 14. It had crept up
only to 16 when the GOP suf.
fered another election debacle
in 1964, but they gained one
that year to raise their total to
17.
The Republicans drew even
with the Democrats Jn 1966
and kept going up until their
margin reached 32 lo 18 1n
1970.
National party labels have
l@ss meaning in ele c ting
governors than in the election
of a presidenl and Congress,
especially to the 3S states
picking governors in the mid·
die ·of presidential terms as in
1970.
a Maine Oemocr111t who got an less favorable to th e
Income tax in bis state, faces Repubtica..ns in tm.
a recount to confirm or 6f 34 to be elected in ttn,
reverse his re-election vote. the Democrats now hold 14
T h u s , w i n n i n g a and the Republicans 19. The
governorship can mean a other wilJ be held by James L.
short trip to political oblivion. Buckley, Conservative Party
'But there' are excepUons. nominee elected to a two-year
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller vacancy in New York. If ··
was elected Nov. 3 to a fourth Buckley formally joins the
four.year term. I! he com· RepubJican ranks, the GOP
pletes it, he will set a modern will be defending 20 seats ln
record. Gov. John Love of the 1972 presidential election
Colorado, another Republican, -;::Y='="=·=========; was elected to a third fout·•,
year term. DOWN TOWN
A political laW of averages .1'1_11:'11!~:.!l!!ll!lll!!llJ!l!!!ll!lll
was supposed to lift the el
Democrats to a net gain in
governorships this year. In 35
races, the Democrats held the
office In onlll 11 and the
Republicans in 24.
The same law was supposed
to help the GOP toward con·
trol of the Senate because they
were defending only 10 of the
seats and the Democrats 25 in
the Nov. 3 elections.
The first titter of baby pigs in the world conceived
from frozen semen were ·born early in October at
University of Minnesota laboratories, arid four of
five pigs have survived. The university plans to
breed 50 sows with frozen, semen in December and
another 50 in January.
The Democratic pickup of
governorships was the biggest
surprise in the Nov. 3 voting.
Leaders of both parties ex·
pected Democratic gains but
Voters want more services
but resist tax increases to pay
for them. Gov. Norbert T.
Tiemann, a Ne bra ska
Republican who was so bold as
to get a state income and
sales tax, failed to win re-elec·
lion. Gov. Keruieth M. Curtis,
Failure to win the seven
seats needed to cnntrol the
Senate was a Serious setback
because the Senate outlook isl
•
For the Be~ord
Dissolutions
Of Marriage
....... OdMitr 11
S11tth1n Jolln E. 1nd Jt•n Ann JlcQb)"'°' Jtal'lllllt M. Ind Gltn Vcrk. p.,.lene Htltne aMI W•vne Ncrman. Katfllnn-Or• and John Robert Kr,,..11, LllCY J . ll'ICI Mlchlel L. HumBhrey, M•rv Arm and Th•lne
R~rr~ T~res1 1nd Gr.ant Mlcll••• Owl"\6Q1nl Lg~n JM 1nd RoMrl Frenkl n Tt$ler, s.!IY J. Ind ELrl Ncwander: !ltvtrlY Joan 1nd Victor G. CjlM, Frlrte'5 a nd Tl\om11 John I( n.a, t<1rtn Rat tnd NtU EU<11n1 Giibert, Su111n Jane and Edward F. l!lrtha, Mtrv H. and Brl•n A. (1rltr N1oc:v t<•v Ind Jclln Phillie Stier, Jlnls Evllvn and John Frtnklln Wat>Cfl, M1ri1.<tret and E"rl Daongn, M1ry Lou •nd Et rl E. Shern1m.1n. Btvtrlv AM and Jolln Wllll..n Mi:l'lf"m•ck. Mlch•tl W .1nd P•lrkl•
Ovchf, C1rol D. •Ml Guv J. N~le, ll=crresl Warren. Jr .. atldKlrtn E!111beth W1U1, E~lhtr L. I nd oa.. Wlnslcn Wcrlev. 8trtiera J. arid W!nlcn l . J ICkMH'I, EdAI Flor.net Ind Mlurkl •"I SCWlll, Ccr.sllnct Lff tnd 1!1lrd A. Svlv•, Vlc:totll J11n and M1rc1 Rodrl·
ve':.':::f111on, P1tr!ck J. 1nd HtlfM Sleohtnte11. Jerrv Lou and Rebert Jtmes · Re11t, Sllaron A. Ind JE)1rd 0. J1rn1<1ln. l!ettv L. Ind >ale H, Pow•ll. M•rcl" J. •nd IHI e. Fl"11 Oc:fll'"r n ~uoam1lt. Gwen Ind M.lrk Arel!1no, Radtel L. ~In A. Fortino, Marv 1nd J Gal•ri•. L~rd R. • lt ne litl\Slfl, M•rlena J . 1nd L1wrne w!~ J ne 1nd Joh!I P1ut Htntn-.-Z.t!' Ann and RodneY R•loPI Powers, Auiinv Odeu• 11\(1 Rldllrd
AJ::::ri...r.111 l . al\d 1>1!11 R. S11nlev, Rlch1rd A. •NI Patrlc!1 Greer, Acnes Thom1n Ind Erv!n N. Settiv. Robert Flovd and Dt1nna Mae Bell, 01.na 1nd lv1n T. Thctm1s M•rY 11nd James H. Potts, Anne L. Ind !lernard IC. De LO<'IO. Jamt~ L. Uld Isabelle G. Miiier, Carole P. and Stwlrd S. Mackin, J1m11 H .• Jr, Ind Gtrald!nt " ~:~:~~. ~~~·J~: :;dd ,!id';fJdF~:~rkl~~
Collard. Arthur li1rbfrt •nd Wiim• Edith
Mikels, S.ndr• J ohnttnt
OoiJ!ll1$ Jeremiah. Shlr1t1 May and
cr..rln l"llM Od9btr 24
Scot!, ~llM 8. •nd Cllarles L.
Gullbut, G~rtte Pt'ler and AnNI
Stnlros Kun, Jtlnnl!tlt end Miiion
Nea1t, Sl'llr1n' Millf •nd Bruce Albo:'rl
J-i., Mariann!! Ind John 8. Hom•n, Laura M. and John M.
ROIS. Morltvn A. and~" J. Jr. Hua~s. Ra~ll R. and BetlV Lou
Br1ke, Jlltkle Arf arid Anto!Mlle Harrell, ElalM Edwards and George
AUrf'd
NOrton, Margaret and R~r1 C.
Herrera. Linda Jov a,,.;! Da~ld Ralpl'I
Helldrick1, Mllrl' P. and Donald 0 ,
GlllbOns, JacQuellne Ann .1rld Glenn
Arlllur
Sllrr, Loi! June and OennY Earl Stewert, Ma• Y, arid N1ncv Lee
Rome., Wiima Fa~ and. Ale•.e
V•n Skvock, K.1rln L. E. and Vlrtll'Jr.
Ai.derr.on: 6111 1nd DarlNie
Blc<lllell, Ml!IO•Y M. Ind L•"1ence F.
6ur1ch.lller, Fred Le<ov J r. and Beverly
'" K1y, At!N!rl Rav ind AIYl"I LU<llle
Sll11lle, Wiiiiam Wavne 1nd Rose Mlrv
Howerton, Ted J. 11'111 Lois A""
Locklhaw, Dorothy M1rle and Jolln
Edwin
Pl'OYOll. M.lrv L. 1tld Jaml'I It. ~k. K1thle Ann •nd Jackie Leon
W•llllft. Oliver Daniel .11'111 Jo AM
Gulmll, Jf!<lll'f and Javi..r Adl<lm;, Mirto E. aNI Jchn M.
Wrlg/11, Linda Laurttn 1NI K~""'" Duane Lrwtllen, Mariorle Ellen aMI Robert
Louie Dodt•• V!rtl,.11 ltt 1nd Rkh1rd
Carver. II Mee-Id, Ml'rtlle D. and Dartell s.
M!nnlcll. Sh4!rrr Lrnn •Ml Garv
Tl\om1s ' HenlOll, Chenrl Lr1111 Miii Jo/VI Devld, "· L1m1>h, G1rv 8. and Bev~rtv A.
Ptfr1nl, Lvdl• Tennustt a rid Auv uil
Peter Kidd, Charles R •• Jr. a!ld Carla I,
l!rv1n, Marlon V. and Carl J. Smith, Terrv R, end Carlene G.
Bowoen, Charle• T., Jr. arid M!thelle
'"' McPl\t<', Mery J1ne end Mlchotl P.
Jolly, !le11Y J . and Paul l .
Spies, Mitchell Thom•~ end Marla
Caridad
R\11111• Peggy Ann Ind DOU9le1 Joh!I
Alumbaugh, Jean C. arid Rlchnrd E.
Simmens. Rulnann arid Rober! Slayle,., Vlol1 M. and Cherin L.
Benl•ml!I, J1mes Cliffo rd I nd
Madel,nne Claire Ftbre, F1tC1erl(k J. ind Mcllr A.
P1tton, OOMld Robert I nd Je1Me
··~ Wllcuril, ScPhla Htltn1 and Stephfft
Louis , Powell, nmmv R1111n and l!tttv l!tllnd
Elli•, JOln'"' Ind Jtep HeclCll'" Vin Heese, Elbert Fr1nklln, Jr. Ind
Lind• K•Y Tonti, Cell"n M. and Mlch~I S. Fou11, M1r1 K•thtrlne 11nc1 Rhae e .. , ..
Mino, !la•barl A. ind Michael J.
$Inger. Genevlt YI A. •nd Gellrllf! w .•
Brkll•· ,,, YYonM E. •nd PreGr1g Jcsn>h
INTERLOCUTORY DECR EES Enl•rtd Octobtr 2' ~~~t~~~~ 1~'/i"tf.j~\~t9M.' v.,oon. Lorna Amv •nd Rlch1rd H~qh K(a!ochwlll. Jttk H, end Maod•leM F1snachl Mery JOln 1nd ROOtrt 11.1=:.i. Jatql>l'IYn Va! and Rlch'1rd W1Ulam ~:1~~~·i~1fn:11e~sf1"nea"adndWj~~';'r ~
Snow. Joan Ann •!ICI Robo!rt K1111 Kina. M•rl1n L. aMI lrvlna L. ~:r~~, J~H~·~h Jf;.n'~ CMrrtll Ltt
STew1r1, it.!ma·Ann •nd Paul Herbert Wise. JO'ICI Lvnn i nd Hl!lrv David Reu<11brlnk. Sandri L. and Mlrlno. A.' Mr.a•n, Carol Ann and R1vrnona'
harln Fll111 October 21
Motlu1. 111, P1trlcl1 Mtrr' and Frank Henry
!11rlle. Glor!• Vll'llln\1 Ind J1mn
Junior Bennen. T~rry L'nn •NI Jury W•Y..,.
Htrrtr1, Oltnne Oenli.e •nd Rockie
Louis Smllh, l!~rbatl Sur 1nd Glrv Liit!
Lyn<h. Florence M.lrl1 and R11uell , ..
(Orme,, Henr, Jo~eoPI •nd Doris
Et1!ne
LuHnul, Janice E. and J1mts A.
Condo, Ida Julie!~ Ind Harrv Geor11
0euti.s. Dl•ne .Louise •nd Wavnt
Mitchell Powel!, Jt!IY Bellndt 11nd Tlmrny
Ree on Fll111 Octobar 2t
Gnn:MM'hme, 8rlvllte R, 1nd L1nnon
Paul
KlmPlon, M•r!orl• M1rle Ind Dr~
Mor91n, John E1rl Ind C'nlhl1
Rc111m1rlt
Elll1, Jr., Carel Lee •tld E•rl Cllll'ef!(t H\111 R11yf'l'\Orld Otnnls and Nancy, !I.
lnor11m, Gre11cr' Jc~n •nd Cheryf Ann L•ar, Jr., GWt!ndolyn J. ind Harrv R. Wa1SC11, Janet F. end· Loren Anni•
Morin, Michael Norm1n and France Elo!s
Je1n. l oult D. and Ll"d1 A. C•111do, TOfll E. Ind JOl'ln C.
Ptllerson, Jutll 1nd Frtd Eue~!'f' W1lkrr, VICkl OU and Rlch•rd w. WltMr, Sul•nna l . •nd D•n!e1 I(. Heltls, Jtttnff H. and (orMll E. McN1ni•r•, Su11n Ann and Gtr1ld F. 0-SIMl,"(Of'IWaY M. •nd ~1ndr• M. Elk!ns Glorl1 I nd John Everett Sh11l11\, Dorolhf'• F. a"'1 Thom11 M.
1--
r._r~~~·~·~~~~ 1~1 0e;~ wPh11tio Mlchatt • M.cl.llrtn, WllU•m G ""' Pl'IYllll C. r-. C""4 Uk al\d Nr!Mlft w.
P.01vt., ~•"" 9"d •nd J""eoh Clvd9. CvrTlhlt L. arid Ro'l<>rt G. Weber. Su!.1111 Merit 1n'1 rit!lbfrl Artl\ur Church. H.tm Jf'~" 1nd Ernest L-llr K~~rns. Ill, M1rv G. •1'111 Gtoroe Th.oclor1 Wl•<t r, Rl~•,.rd Ind f:l""'I Wldht rdt. M1rk !lrv111 11"'1 l(~lhlttn
""'"""· Nor""' M. 1'111 J~h~ F, L1nbert1, 8on!l1 J. •nd Rlchltl'll J.
Aud-..cl, LI~ Aline Ind Gttiroe~!"''' Nlckei-.. Eleonore •nd Hu~ on
Rlcherd . l"li.tl Oclobtr 2l
Ven V1lktnllurt h. Grrald E. Ind Jud'
M. Crellln. Ronald Eugene and Kalhrvn
Fr1nc11 T~sh, Arnold S. 1nd AdrJrn• N.
lc:!n~. Annelle M1rlr uld Steven Lrrcw
N~vlnt, Mllrv Antolne11t and Larry
Gene Sh~klee, Chr11 G. •nd Ren• L.
11111, SUSO!I l 1ura Ind Jame• How••d Saor. Ll!lda J1ne 1nd P•ul Re111!d
Binkley, P1trlcJ1 Llr>da •r'ld R~rl Lee
Achz!oer. Lois El•ln1 1nd Donald
Fredtrlclr:
CO<'lr11d, B1wrl¥ Jr1n ind J11M1
Wllbllr • Rlcc1rdl, An~ and Jtoderlck !l•ucr
Andrew, Lrsler M . •nd !!1thfr H. Clerk, E. Jo and Frink S.
Ml>nl90n"lerv. Meta D. •lld C1mernon I.
Gorden, 1(1thleen Marlt 1nd M1rt Clif-
ford
t!·Ren. OtnM A, 1nd Gr"°•Y D. Vincent. ,Mar!Ofl D. •nd C1lv!n Lrr
Mclaine, Marv A. and W1rr1n E. Jr. I wuuams, Ml•lrnc Dl•nt 1nd w11n1m
R•vburn Storum, Kttl'llff!I s. and RodMY JIY O'Neill, 81rblr1 A. 11\d Jtdc L. wny11, Lti;ry R. tnd M•rl• R.
RevnoklJ, Slan lee 1nd Shtron Ann
Coodl:, ltlllb«I W. trod M•t v.
Schw1b.lutr. NI.Irv Jun and Linet
Rodney
Garver, C1ndf" J, •"" Harald T,
Chrlilemeft, C1ral'n Lo~ Ind Fr1nkl Ne!l1 it..s1m1. Ma,..lr M1e itnd Gr,,.. Jotfl>h
SchVfn1cfler,·J1mn T. 1nd C1rlllvn L.
'°'1kiJP, Wiiiiam Wtrne 1nd Laura
Louli.e TosPI. JeHla M. •nd Wll!ltm H. Atldrr1qn. Loul1 Ind & ... ftlrd T,
Wlsnlewllkl, Mare1rr1 G. 1nd !!d'tlll1rd w. tlucne, M1" Kalhrvn •Ml Rick Dt•n D11v11, Wlllfttn H. and M.lrv Vlr1lnl1
GeUnl S. Ch.lriel A. Ind Ltont E.
tor !tu thffl I dollar prr "r""
ls. good II will N1unl 19U 'Ill 11'1 G41M ll
.•. ~c•U'5e wt p"1nntG II 1n11wov. B, U!llng only 1r11n h1m1 I~ tuw1's
cor!I led pOrkers -OU'I" slow-dry c11rlnt ITlflhod, real Wl1c0fl1J" hk kor,
-applewood 1rnc1tl""1, JO.nour •van bl~lrlg, hen•Y 'n IPk• 111ze. So
lltllclous 1nd 1-lillfllit we 111s1 W011ldn't know now to lmorcve this pro-
duct we've ~ makl~ lor !he .,.." .).( veers. Splr•I slk«t too, lrom '°"
fO bottom tor e11v rtrnoval Cl! 1lk11, Vfl ret1ln1 'wile!• ham' a119tar11K11 for iarvlno. Ev1ry 1lke lfl.t u rne 01l""1abl1 !flld(nris. Cornplelaty biked 1nd read' 1IO 1'1'Yt . Order 'f'OUr Honey !laked Ham tcllly, In ldvtntura In lllm-IO'flTll'll Yo\''~ never lollfel.
WHOLI Ol HALF HAMS
CQMflt•MATION I .. ~DDIMG COMMUNION RICEl'TIONS I ll'ECIAL
GATNIRIM•I
RETAIL STOii.iS
I l'AltTY
l"ICNIC
1222 s. BROOKHURST I 3700 E. COAST HWY.
ANAHEIM CORONA DEL MAR ·
ftft ••II 111 Viii ... C111t.r) 6U.1ilt1 f1 1111 W. l'ln Cl'fttl'I) •1s.tt0t
Californi~~olle9e
I
Of Commerce ... ;.;,,,,, ........... ""' ··-· IJl.IJS PIM A.wt11••
L.,.. S-h, Ctlihft1it toll:t
CONTINUOUS ENROUMENT
TELEPHONE: 436'9767 or 43$.5367
"DAY OR EYENINI CLASSES"
TWO-YUi COUIS!S SHOll-THM COURSES Ofl!.Y!AI COURSES I
"*" &t!MittmiM St....,r.,llit MMiuol lnit1Kr.tittl.st Latal St<rtttrill
"'"' "'""' .. Cl.!Kll f.U.Cl11rt• ... ~ ..... MtJlc.11 Sttttftfitl
1["'1111(• lfllsh . ., (lt,111 S.c1etwrill
"''""'"" -hit ''""---· hM11111 Mechi11e1 ~-n4 tnlflt (Gr .. t tf AK SfttrtMMJ . (1~11fift Secretwrltl 0..ttf AHhi;,., (Grltf ,, AIC ~r11tt!ttl) J11~ltr "'''"tiflt
No tnatter what,
the m.arkets doing,
over 2.50,000 Savings
Investm.entAccounts
keep • tongro •
with us.
...
Original Investment $20,000 •January 1,1969
Average Worth of Investment• August 31,1970
$10,688
$15,291
$16,320
<.LLNDALE FEUERAL SAVIN(;<; AC.C.01/NT
5'',, l'ASSHOOK $21,739
...
$20,000
This is a 20-month comparison of Cll Dow Jones industrial averages,
(2) average prices of shares in leading mutual funds, (3) 20·year municipal bond,
and (4) Glendale Federal 5% passbook account.
NOTE: Our higher rate certificate accounts have pe!'for.med even better!
TRUST GI.ENDAI.E FF:DERAL •••
YOU CAN'T LOSE
6%
2·10yur
certlllcate
$5,000
Minimum
5%%
1·10 yeor
certific1t1
$1,000
Minimum
5%%
-3-month
certiflc.t1
$500
Minimum Clm.ul ftllMI. IA\IMI---
NeW})ort Beach
500 Newport Ccnt<r Drive •
Costa Mesa
1833 Newport Boulevard
.5%
Passbook
01y-1n,
Doy-Out
Any Amount
-
•
•
.. . .
••
I
,
~·
T11~. NMmbcr 10, 1970
LEGAL NOTICE Fairy Tales LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL Norics LEGAL NonCB LEGAL Nemes 1---..'.::::::;~;'..'..::~~--I ~=.=-~ .. ~·~oc~ai]io" IALI I .. ftOflCI Ofl Plf•LIC ...... ,... ,..,,,.. c••TU•ICA:.-: •Ul•NIU. 0 S c•11Tll'ICA; .. ~s: •USlllflSS 11::' :11·.::-:~ ·:n ..:~'::it' COIH ": NOTtCI ,, Hlllt:•Y Glv•N "'-f .. c••Tl,ICATI Ofl 1utn1111. fllCTITIOUI HAMI n ta ge ll'ICTITIOUt fllllM fllA.11\1 !tit Slt1-d C.llflOnllt tht llfldtrslt,,_ .. lttlfllnt toflvi\IMloll ef .,,. City " "ICTITIOUI MAMI ,,., Ul'ldtftt.ntd do C.l'fll'I' 'llfl! ~· ~ sefl ' HN9ol1 1 .. c:11 Will llold I ltlltllk ,_t!lw T1M \l!IOtnllnell dO otlltv 11Wf trt dudlrlt 1 bl.l1lneu II IO» I. ln11v" T/I• llNlttll•nfld CtrTlll11 Illa! the It P1t1 1.-..irfl Co. dlNi f'-'t'I Ofl ff1t tiPPltm!Oll''Clf Sllll!Nrd Oii c ...... ClfductllW 1 Ml,.... If Niii tMll ·-· It ,.,,.., C.llfotftla, undltf" "'-flt1111
IWl<llKl!nt I DullNW 11 2111 £1afn Avt Fll"9lt1t Glr hrvlU wlil .. 11 llt ""*"le '*1t ff C.iMornlt f# 1 UM hl'll'llt lilft ir-1t1Jn Vllit\', Orlntt C 0 u n Ir, firm Nmt of KBV CLU.NEllS •nd ffl A C II No. !•. C•I• MtM. C..Utornl•· u!ldlf' tht 111ell011. •t 207) w.,_ llvd.. C.t• Oii -..m ltc.tt" ,, "*' ~ C.ll~ .....,. tN flc'lltlolA llrnii ~ Nl4' firm i.. <°"'""""' ol' 1tl9 fol'""! ;t 0 ege fldl!IOUI firm l'W,... of VIYI•~ WOOO.nl Mt .. , C'lillfOrnl•, of t •.11'1. Oii Frkttv, _,, d "" J-uhl Nlll1 ...... W ti' A.l U.WN#!OWl" SllitVICE •llCI tflal ,.rtens. '#f'loM IWll'M6 In full ~ •l•t I~ f1llt (t;1 (:JO) Cotmtll~ •l'ld ttllf llld llrm It comotMd Ille' lOlh O.V ol' NllV9mbll", tf)O, t11e J.mllorM iltoff lo Mtmlt Ulllltrudloll d Mkl firm It ,..._. of ff1t follcrwl._ Of '"ldefl« 1r1 .. folloln: I '") ':,J11t1 lOll°!!lll9 :"::Mii r-i.'1;'...,. In lull IOllO'Wln• clltcflbtd ,, .. ,.,.,, -.w111 , 11.011111 MrYlq 1i•llon. ,.,...... WllOM '""* In 'VII •lld ''~ litClllllll' Plul Joh-. 11n towt $\ NI Clw • llt ........ \"" 1 11 Ke"' re• nci f •• OW9 I YMr ol Qr, 1HI,. Mab o1 Cat, NOTICE II HElllEIY l"UlitTHE" 9""" of ntldt!lce atf M fo11-I• Cotll MtM tUl'-Otlorft Arin JohtlloOll 1 .. 55-•~ dt -A children's story theater of Mltritll• N111v lit11ac111~1bl\t, 1111 vo111,•=t: MOttr No. »HOOFS2. JN• will .uM1c ,...,,,_ w111 .,. ""° °" ""---..... w •••• ..:... ,.. w 1147 low• '' eo.11 Mtll. ntlt ~ TUEC"iDAY
~ -Eh1tn •• ,...... No. JI, Cotti M111, ,..__ ' .... H .. .....,.,.'" • .....,.....,.._ • . " I ... ll ... ~·--(t) no) Grimm's favorJte fairy tales Cllllornlt L.......... '(llt .. J x_, I C.llf, ,.,. 1fllt tin'., Holt..,.,..,., 1'19. ., ~ pi.c., knit Anl, CllllON'lll, 011..:1 Qt!, JO,'"'
llJI 91-I" I) i.G• Odobff IS. 1t1'1 .... M1'9 II for !he .U!'JllOM flt Nlldllllll ,,_ d 1100 jk.11'1., In the Ceuncll Chern"'" 1(.-tfl E. lroQfllrr, ". S. Nt!fll ROClntr Ptul JohnlOn I • UM Ooualll ,,. calltd will be produced by Golden I • MldltJle lit•ltdllV•klhl Hen Ill th9 1,11'111t"'9ntd tor _, of ol""' ...__., IMdl c"" H•tt. ,, wlllc.PI A~;;. ""'' All&; C1!1l0t"l1. Ollo .... • ... M -JollNOll
upon to mlWt the IOVI pl"Cllltrrtt of w t College drama stud ..... ~ SUllM:rlb!KI Ind IWONI lo lltf0t1 ""' th11 fiiN!.r _. •1111 •tor ... dlt"" to< Onw llld •IM!t tnY llld ... "*"'°"4 lrto O.IW OC!eMt n. lfl't Sl•ll '11 C•lllofl'lll. Or•• Counlr!Not I Arnold IJM f'I el llarul l~lh cllV flt OClobtr lf?I) """" Wlth c:.ft (If ldVlrtlllfl9 lfld ,.,..'-! 1f11V .....,. Ind 11t 11Nrd l(enMltl W. Mteklnll• ()fl OCI. JO, ltlO. bl!Orl mt, • If both Cb and I· (~'" today and Saturday in the Evelrn M. til.m11tr111n fl-Gf .. 1,, lhfl'90n. kenntfh £, lrokolllkr, Publlc In Ind for Mid !t1i., Pll'WfMI~ B Ylrsfall lrAI• Slllw (C) _, A ,_, Pia bo ' ampus No!1rv P~bllc • C1Ulwnl1 Dlt.I tfllt tlft ff)' ti Nov, 1tl't Don lit, Mlllftlort. 1111t ot c1111om11, O••nte CO¥n:Jr1 •P!lffnc! litOCIJ!'!!_-f',:4..U~ .• -J~= to I $~1d11l1d fllltll llldudl Pit C~ S Y X on C , 0,.1191 Cou11tr Ctfldl1 I . ~ kret11Y Ot1 OC111D1t JS. 1'111.. bt1oA m1. • 0.llH"n Ann .,.,.,_, """''"" •v 0'8(1"1, Kii"' G1mtt. Ao• M•rtt. 157" Golden West St li""-MY C01Y1m1111on E:icPlret ........,. tor ,...,. N""6r't a .. dl Cl" Not•,., l"U~lc 111 •nd tw 111d &11t., Ille' ...,.,_ ~ '*""" 1r1 1vbKrl
'1 '" ·• ... .-~Y J, nn For.Ifft Ctr S.Vlct Pllrlftl111 Comll'llMIOfl ..-itr ......,.. Klfll'lllfh w , to Ille' wllllln lnstrull'lel'll 11111 •dl.llOlfrltdl "'*= s.. Daytime Movln. and l.ctraln• Bltcltt IJl¥fn1 llCI-Ungton Beach. f>ublllfled Of'1no1 Co.ti D11IY Pllol, flli*!lllflld or.. CMlt OtllV l"llot. P""41111td Ol'•ne• COlllt Dlllr Pllolf. Nole~ -' Ktnnefh E. .,..ofllty Id lllW tll.C:Ullcl ""' Hmt:,
..
-
liftinJ dtlll0nltrltlon1}. Sta ed I II f Ol;tolltr to. v 1nc1 Novtml:ltf 3, 10, N°""'°" 10. tm 21113.70 ..........,..,. to, 1'111 2DNo10 t-to me to bt the 11trtot1• WhOM !OFFICIAL sye~LlHENRY I f• T•ll ai. rmti (C) (30) g espec a y or area lM 1m.10 LEGAL NOTJCE ,,..,,.. ,,. .uMcrtbld to .,,. within In-w.• p· bllc c 111 1, f.. °"' Aldtwl (C) fllll ...., 1111111-"' (C) youngsters and their parents, LEGAL NOTICE ~"":.,.,... ~lldMO lfllr '""''-' :~11:C7i,,1 uDt11~ 1! om ....:~: = (C) la CMIUhldtfl (30) per{orman~s will bt. at 7:30 LEGAL NOTICE c1aTIF1CAT~4: autn•us. ,..,.. IOFFIC}:.';..~ L ll•W. ~:"l!.n=Zn e xt1rn
Tllll lllvuttn U5 (0 Rlt9llbfl& (55) p.m . tonJght and 10;30 a,m, O• ,_,_DlllDl.UTION O' l'tCTITIOVI llAMI ClaTIFICATll Oii' DllCOMnllUAllCI Not1rr l"Ubllc • ClllfDtl'llt Nov, JA, lt12 "'••I Pll ~Mio -(C) 1•30 ~' IJ) ...... ~ (~ ... ncf 2 S t d NOTICt: The Ulldltll""° cloll ClttttfY Pie I• ~ OF Ul•D ANO/Oa A•ANDO•MINJ PtillClNl Oftlco In Publltllod Or111H (Oflt """ 't I "41 ' 'fNI 8 p.m. 8 U f a Y • l'AlitTitlRtNIP dU(fl,.. • bu1I-•I llflOl Denl1or Rd., Ofll flllCJITIOV$ NA.Ml Or-• Countv Novtml>lr 3, ID, O, 24, lt10 2t4S·<! ...... $trttt (C) (R) • H1 I 1nd .Min Sheper flltll Admission will be 25 cents. Public rt11tlc1 11 h••elW 91ven t!lfot Se11t1 '-• Cllttorrd1, under IM t1ct1,11o""o. THI! UllOERSIGNl!:D cl"9 ,...... Mv comm1111on Eilllll"lt LEGAL N~CE lll1aitw fNllll'IS (C) CJ @r;)Jlllil (C} (3()) "Bowftd Frtcrtrltk J, Fib/I. '2.U Calor1do line, fl"" ~l'rll of FINE AlllJS ttrtltv tllot, tffel:'tlw Octebtr JO. ltJO Ht Mty 1,(, nn v.11
"' talll• "' hllrMI• D'ler." Juli• t1llli1 bowfl'11 IHlons Three stories "Snow Cott• Mn•, '"' tl'llln• L 01t0n. 31tl oucT10N1 11111 tlllt 11111 fl'"' It -uo• .,, do 111111.,... undlr .,.. nctltloUI ,.... Pllttra OrillflW I SI nd ""7 tfkH . ,. " coun!rv Club Or , Cost• Mou, 11..-1tofol'• POlld Of tllf tollowlnt ""°"' Wholl firm -of OLSON VAN AHO A""'111Y •I Low l"·Jtl" •:llll)Net"'"' S11w t.•,!1','",,.,,;10 •dltple•M, loc.ll White and Rose Red, Henny c1o1nu bu1rno11 11nc11r the 11e1111ou• 11rm n•m• In f\111 llld !Ktet .t rallllra k .. &TORAOE .t "" or..-n, ~ '"2 T.-rt A"' CllitTll'tCATt 011 •utlfillU .:JO -~ ... '" ••• , ... •-In. '" Penny " and "L1'ttle n • .I n1m1 Ind •h'ICI ot L•k• Plet. Deck Co., lollfwt: c1111orn1 .. •llldl but!--..._!¥ ... o .... Mf1 •ICTITIOUS filAMI _, "' bully · ' neu 11 31ta Countrv Club !)five, Cltv ol' Coll• A1btr'lo R.11_,.. 12'02 OanlMr llf., ~ of ,.... followllll .,.non, whoM l'Mllttlt v1111r, Ctlll. nM The 11nc1tnlell'lld 00 cerfllr ffltV e~ .... (C) 8111 Bonds. e @@~UC ...... el ... l\iding HOOd" -will make Up M111. Counl't' ot Or1nff, S1111 ot S•ntl .-,,,._ Ctl. 1111111 In furt lfld plKo « l'llldttlel It N l"ulllltllld Of11191 Coto! Dell't' Piiot, tonc1, 0<0
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IG~ -· bwG1-c'' U~~ • .-,~~ Alibltl I c..19111 (C) " (C) ~ (..,.dydr1m1·1 each bour-long performance c1n1oml1, did °" '"" Srh cl•r of O•IM OClolllt H, ,,,. foliOWI. to-wit· O<tobtr 21 •nd Novwnbtr ,_ 10, 11. ,,... ' • row, • , -(t) I !
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' • NOYefl'lber, 1910, IW ft'IU11111 cDMtnt, Alblfto ·-llolllrt' c' TlrnrTI&. Sl" Ol'eldln ltl'D JPH-10 !tit flC!lllous firm na1111 ot OLSON VA (C '70--01rrtn Mc:Gavl11, tart Holllmert, " th ,_ d t dlno1v1 the selcl p1r1ner&11lp •n<I lt•ll °' C1llfDml1. Or.,.. c-tvi typr"" C•tirwnl• ' AND STORAGE 111d Ito.ti Mf4 firm I E ., ,........ ) J1n·Mlch1tl Vlnctnt, John Grubtr, In story eai.c:r We 0 no terml11111 !Mir ~lellon• •• plrlMf'S On oet, u. lt10,. """" ""'' • Nohlrv CtrtlllClll for lrt'n...ctton of buslMH COINIOMll " 11\t fallowlnv """"'· Wllo:!t n. n ... StlOtn Dtnoy Goldm•• AlftoM Curtis. Rk:k follow a script. but act out the tMrtin. Publlc In •nd tor Nlcf 5111'• Ml'IOlllllY under tho '"°"' 11e1111ov, "'""' 11111 11· LEGAL NOTICE n1111t1 111 1u11 •nd Pl•«s or retldene• •rt JO • • • St!CI bu$!neu In the luturo will bt con-•-•!'Id Albarlo RlmPOllO kllD'Wl'I l<i "" f~vfl « Publl<•tlon thettOI', 1r1 on tlle •• followt: A.. ti Dnilrt9 Wtt't'tr. story, 1mprov1s1ng dialog as c111C1ed by F•edtrlck J, F1br1, """° wln to bt 1111 ""°" wtiOM -11 .utiacrltJ.. 111 the oflle. ot Ille COl.ll\tv Cl.nit °' 1. E. erennef', !Ito! 1a11r1, Apt, A •• _._ m Dnid fmt $11 ... (C) (90) Tin-we go " said Charles Mitchell P8V Ind clllt h1r11• 111 lltbOnles •NI Id~ Ille' Within Jrut.--nt Ind o-Qluntv. uno.r the Pf'OYl1icw. Gf <••n••c•',·.-.. •••••••• G1rd1n Grovt, Ctlll.1 CIVde Alll!01 U.W 1 Pol]~,. ltliff]J' 3Chedultd fUliltl lnelUdl ' . . ' dtbli ot the firm 1nd rttelv• t!I manft$ ilc lldlod Ill nlKtllld tho -· $1Ctlon 1466 f11 t1M Civil Codi *'32 Oudm1n, G1r11111 Grove, Cel!t
A ..,.. Aplrt (C) B•rb•t• Rush, Clrl Rtlntt, and Tbt director. "We have had oom e PIYllll• lo '"' firm. IOllFIC~AEL.1E:~Afil&TTI WITNESS mr lllnd thla :inti ..., " Tiie ·u..:~~r.::.1°::, ·~1'1 ll!ev ,,. :uu .:c~~u12!43 H•~P~· ts; ,., 8 KJllC 1'....-vlu (t) G11ss Roots. new and interesUng ideas -Of Fvr111tr noila-11 heribV 01""' that tile N011rv .. ·ubllc • C•Hloml• Ocfobtr, 1910· Qlllcl\ldlllll , t1u1tflftl 1t 161H l'ocUI< ..,::, Gan1en G'rove, Calif. • I'-I ..... (Cl Kevln ~ndtfS 1... (t) J30) . • under1l11ned will not be rffPOn5lble, !rem Prli"CIHI Offre. 111 litoberl C. Tlrnn'" C011it Hwr Hunll!llilton 9"ch CIUlorll1t Diltd October 30 IJ10. • ' pet interpretation and I think the lll!i CltV on fl>f 1nr ol)!l111llon1 ln...,rrld Or11111e COllntv Publlsl'led Or1ntt Co.111 Olllv Pilat. ullllef" Ille' "jlC!lllout fll'IT\ na,,;• or HUN'. I E Srann'er
H1I fiS!lmtn, f'aftlm for LIYlnl {3(1) audience Will find it a lw Ft~erlck J, Feb,..lrvl119 L. OllOl't ln My Comm!nlon E•Plres November!, 10, 17, 1•, ltlO 1<W7·70 TINGTON HAR80Ulit 80AT-TOWH tllll ilyc1& A!llSOll fl-(C) LI Ctildl lilll Crfadl (C) (30) , • ., 1115 own name or In I~ llll'M 01 t~t llrm. Stpt, 14. 1913 ltltt seld firm Is ~ of IN Jgllow-Ru$i Kono 1lill fliflbton• (t) 9·.00 .... .,:;:.,., rTIJR;W•rld ,,,.,,,, delightful experience. Oaltd •I Cos!• Me ... CtJUom11, lhl• Publlilled Ora1111e (O,,SI 01llv flllkl! I.EGA!. NOTICE 11111 Pft(!On, wllo .. Mm• 111 IUll Ind pllct Ha•n-P•O(lot U •Ill lllelld JC) """w 1•J • h Sll'I lllV or November, 1'70. O<fober 27 •nd NCIY&mbet :i. 10, 17, ol retldf!nee 19 •• 1o1iow.~ Stett ot cetllornle, Or"'" Ccuntr: llllll MIWili! (C) lntrMln" (drtmt) Seven students are UI t e lrvlnw I.. OllOl't lt10 1,,,.70 Mtrlne .-,ltoelalet Inc:., t6.9 "'1e•1t 011 OCtoblr 30, 1'70, ktort me, 1
lti'I Pld (C) 'J~n Murnr, Edmolld O'Bri111, t h f the rt · Frtder~ J. Fabre T..Ull elYcl., ltllflOWlr, bY w11111111 lit. Nol11Y Public 111 •nd for H id Stat~ (t) 11111 MllflUtrl John ''''" •• ,, r11"•· '"' ,,,.. cas ' eac 0 m po ray mg Publhlled Oren111 Co.Ill O.Hy Pll6t, LEGAL NCJI'JCE IUP•"•Ollt couaT Ofll ™• Setll~•· WI $N~ll $1., Ltkn.oocl, ""°"•llr epptlred I. E. 8r1nner, Clvd4 PllJ & Tilt (C) ·~"" ·~ several characters from the Novenroer 10, 1910 :2D99-10 &TATI Ofll CALlllOINIA l'Olt caut, Alli-., Ruq Kono •rid Hirrv Proctq c.. ll Deft If lltlll frontier tow111111en. when thty ltlfl B th G • CIRTIPICATt: TMI COUNTY Oii CMlAMOI Dlltd OCfobtr It, UJO kllOWn ta mt lo be lhil PeflOllS Wl'IO~ TM llft
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th1t lh1J ,,. I" the Pflh of a llw· ro ers rimm. LEGAL NOTICE IT is HEREIY CERTIFIED .-.s NOTIC• 011 ::a:i'.:o'" 011 fllt:TITIOM Mtrln1 A11oc111n tnt 1111Ms ••• s~blcrlbed ta 111eo within 111 ~.,...... leu 11ng. Cast members are Cherie FOLLOWS ; FOR Pll:OIATI! 01" WILL AND FOR av Wllllem A., SChlcor. tlrumtnl llld ICknowltdvf!d 11\ty •~ttufet --fl."" f•lltiw (C) (60) "The ShlfJ Bo I W ( . '· 0 e b · '"""' The U!'l.dt,.,ltntd, I Calltornl1 cor. LITTIRS TISTAMl!HTAlitY Sec· Trt11. I~ $Ome. ""$allopi111 Co1111d (C) "' k a. es m1ns1.t:r; I l"ICTITtOt/'S NAME PDret!on Ii clcln11 buslnets rn !ht STiie ol Eglale °' LEOA... II JOHNSON STATE OF CALIFORNI... ISEAI.) ce of Chi~alry." Kimble ism • • Chester Huntington Beach· CERTIFICATE OF 8USINl!$S, Cellfornle vndlr the llclllloug name Dec11i.td • ' ORANGE COUNTY: P1lrlcle K. Wei~ • 1:1S(H}(1.)Jkw1 (C) enly klenlilied IS I murderer while ' · . ' Tht undenlvMcl d6 ctrllfv Ille~ ert "PRECISION OPTICAL MANUFAC· NOTICE: IS HElitEllY GIVEN tfltl 011 O<;tober 19, 1970, before mt. I Molar~ Public· Cal<fol'nlt mn. frlllldlf C;~nt workinl[ IS a janitor Ill I slum. DI· Guy Cockerum, Westminster; conducting a builness 11 23282 Ttllalr, S.O. TUlllNG COMPANY, INC." Tiii •rln-CORA TOllADAY fl.ls lllfd l!ertfn 1 NOlilry PubUc In end for s1ld Sllt1, PrlllCIPl~ONltt ln l:JD ~ (jJ Ei) i'IC: Nl'n (C) vld Janssen ind Barry Morse star. Don Hayes Garden Grove· 1.1gune, Californl1, 1mder the 11ctlll011s cJpel piece of b!J5Jneu 111d lht Pl•c• or petition lor P"lbilt or will end fo• Hr:son•llY •-rtd Wllll1m R. Sc:hlcora Or1nee, in~ E
1 1!1-< ~ JC Bf ' • ' lirm nllmt of LAGUNA ALARM COM· tesldern:t Of Hld COl"POral!Cf\ 15 localed ISSYlll« of Lelters THllmtnllrY to fM known hi mt lo bt IN P1r.ort WhOH M~ omm ti Ol'I ~p rtS Didi ¥11'1 .,,,.t m ftloll)' $qllld ) (30) "A ue· Ray Jacobs, H Un t Jn gt O fl PANY and ll!al said firm I! coml>O"lecl o1 el "' WHI 11th Strttt, Coil& Mtse, i>el1Tlo11tr, merff\CI to which ho made fer nal'l'le Ts subscribed IO Ille wl!hln In· June 21l. 191'.
Mr fMtrile M1rti111 print for Dyini." A priv1le investl· B h •·-a N be g H tht lcllowlng per$<1<1•, whose names in lull orange Coun!v, Cttllornl•, lu•lher particulars ilnd that me flme Ind 1trume111 end ecknowleclgecl M 111eculed W11p<orm, Slhlll & c..-.11, httk:olt Junction (C) fl!Of (Ricardo Montalban). involved eac ; uuiiy ew r • Un· 111d ol•tts ct rtildence art as tcllcws: Dalecl: November t, 1t70 plat• of Mering !lie seme 1115 been set the 1ame. Anerr11v5 'i' nis D1f 1970 (C) in industrill espio1111e. murders tin gt-On Beach , and Larry Erne" P. Hem I en, 1m1 Te1t.1r, so. POMCO En!erprlsts Inc. for Novtmbl!L 27, 1t10, 11 t :)O '·"'···In 111e lOfllcllJ &111) L ~17 wrtutcntt ,,orC iu L•, ......... ~i . Leguna. Jatk T, Wllco~. 24'.>72 Estetla, Bv Cflester L, S.rrv, cOUrtroOm Of 01Partmenl No 3 of Hid J1111 · Jobsr .-«N 8tac • • ,.. Miltlftfll'S' 1'111 rnuuu 1" two men before Sam Stone (lioW· Goldberg; Huntmgton Beach . So. Lavuna Prtsklenl court, ,1 100 <;!vie Cent•• Drl~t west, 111 llot1ry Publlt • C1lltorn11 Publl1he<d Orenet Coest D1lft Jli!o•. m lllWl/Wuttltr/Sporb (C) ard Duff) and Jim Brigs (Denni• An extra touch for the young o.1ec1 November 6, 1t10 STATE OF CALIFORNIA 1 the Clfio 0, 51m1 Ana, caui ... nri. Pr1nc1.,.1 Off!e1 111 November J, 10, 11, 24, 1970 20.c6-11
hster'a Dnk/Fl11111 (C) Colai,:can atch him, Ernesl P. Hamltlf ) SS. D-1111 Hovember t, 197U Or111111 Counrv
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e. tiol'IH £'r.'I Adwocatll "') (60) T 1-audience will be a program J1ck T. WllcOll" COUNTY OF ORANGE ) w. E. St JOHN, My C~mbslCll Ellplrn LEGAL NIYfllCE 1 n IU:I 1" on I"' d • ned I rJn book b $111-ot Catlfornle, Or1111e Countri On November t 1970 before me e counfio Clerk Mitch 2, 1'73 • ., hlll WH90lt's Town T1I• (C) from Boston, lh1 Advocat• COfl· es1g as 8 CO 0 g Y On NC>Ytll'lber 6, 1910, btlort me. 1 Nolery Public In i~d tor said County ~rid N•NRY M. TURICK Publlilltcl Or1nvt CNrt 01llv Piiot' 1---,.,-cc-,,--,,,-,,,,,,,,,-.,::-:'O'"-
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NOYtlrllER 10
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llwildled (C) sider ''Should the S.11ele 1ppme Gary Bassin. Roland Bara1"as Nollrv Public In end for said st11e. s111e, Ptl"SOnallY e1>1111re.:1 c11arw L. 712 "'"" 0.,....111 Aw. Oclotllr 20. 27 11'111 Noveft'llllr 3, 10, NOTICI' 01' TRUST&l!'S SAL& · rt " t-11 .... • • , J>tr$0tlally IPPta•td Erl'leSI P, Htmll:'lt B~rrY known to f11t to be Ille' perlOI\ AIMlmlre, C•llftntl& '1.. 1J10 lf<ll).10 LOAIN lfO. A .. 1 .. 7ff.'I 1:'51!1!) Dtporln imPo quuilS Olf .... IS IN will handle hghttng. •nd Jack T, WIJtOll kllCWll lo me to be ll>e wf\off name 1, oubscrlbed lo the wlltolll T .. : (Ill}~ NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN .l<OO BI'< Ntwt (C) (60) Jerry Dunphy. shoes?" ~pe1rln1 for How1rd Mil· per:sons wf\ost names ert subtcr1btcl to ll!flrument, ind •cknowfedlled fo lhll hi An.r<n" ,_. l"ltlt...., LEGAL NOTICE Th1t on Monc11r, November 23. 1'70 el
•, .... •-•lu JC) J60) Tom ler is the newly announted Nobel LEGAL NOTICE tile wi1M11 IMtrument •fld 1cknowtedtld e11ecutecl lhe ume. Pvbll ll\ld 0r111111 coert 01rrv Piiot, 11 ,00 6'clock A.M. 1t t11e front tnlr1nce cl
Prile Winntr In Ec:onomlcs for 1970, tlle~ executed lM ••me, (OFFICIAL SEAL) Nov"""'r 10. fl, 17, lfl'D 11°"""70 CA&e Ht. l".,,11, the Nellonal FlrSI MOrt11•oe Cori> • S.11Jdet. p I p I S I ~ M,. T.....U (OFFICIAL SEAL) E>nlVll M Chilmberllln Clll:Tll"ICAT• 0" IUSIMll~ llultdlnt, 627 Swlh ~ncheslet Ave. ~. 1J Jk Melt SI!" (t:) _(90) Sid IO lllOf IU amve ton "' "• lfOT1C£ TO CiltEOITORS DOROTHY W. JOYCE Nolary Pu.bllc. Callfort1!1 .. ICTtTIOUI "IRM U.MI Anehelm, C1Jlklmla. ·CatYt. Leslie Nielsen, Did KerT, Testlfyln1 for Willl1m Rusher II SU,.l!lllOR COURT 01" Tiie Norer,v Public. Cellfornl• Or•"ll• Coun!v LEGAL NOTICE aAllt -AGENT'S ESCROW SERVIC!, •
·-.......... .161nne (Mrs. John· Asslst•nt Stcttllf)' of Commertt 1TATt: OF CALll'ORNIA Prine.pal OUlce Ill My CommlHICll E11plrn Th• lllldtrsloneo do lllrlbr urt1fr ""' TrUl!ff, Ot ., Sub1!1tulHI Trutlee. ulldt•
,.,., n.r " Stanley Hehmur and Fred Dini, llOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE Or1n11e County MilY $ lP1l p.,,,. thtv 1,.. cond!X"llno 11'1 .-,FRIC.-,N ART !ht Dffd of Truil ntculed b'I' REX Q
ny) Clrson is 1nnounctr. Choi•m>O Ol lht l"tm•t•· o•I T•adt INo. A-"'U ~!.,,co,1m.m,117•,slon Expires Publfshed Onl~Ot COiis! O•llY .Pllo!, CllllTllllCAT0•0ol" •1K1N•SI bullneu, 506 Forni AYe11uo, L1oun1 INGRAM ANO PH'tlLIS INGR.AM, hu1 0 GREGORY PECK and "' E1!1f1 fll' M. EORYS NAGLE, •Ito .....,. Decembir!t 1, FICTITI I filAMI Beaci'I, CIUfomlt, under Ille' fltllllous barlcl 1nd wl6t ree6rded on J1nu11Y 21. Commille1 Ame/fcan T1Iljf1 M1n11· known e1 MARY EORYS NAGL E, 0.-Publl1/\td Ora"ge Coa51 Dally Piiot rovimber lO. 17, 24 in4' 2l00.70 11!e unclertf1'1114 do cerll!Y """' ••I ffrm nttne Gf AFRICAN ART CENTER 1961, In 8<10k "97, PeDH '20 ol' Olllcllll *ANTHONY QUINN in ftctur111 1ilstttut1. Si)tlkllll fol 1111• '""'· November 10, 17, 2' •nd December 1, 910 Wldll(tl111 • bual11111 •I 111 G Wist 19th end m11 s1ld firm 11 «<nPOWd of Ille Records ol Or1noe Countv, c1n1om11, b~ "BEHOLD A PALE port -~,, • ,.., .... Ttto-•a 1 NOTICE IS HEREllV GIVEN te Ille 1'70 tOPS.l'D LEGAL NOTICE $1,, Cotll MeM, Cellfor"l1, under~ lie-fellow!nw "rJCnt, WhOsl nimn In full rt•SOI! ol' bre•ci'I or defeull In 11'.e PIY.
'!..... ''" ,.,... " Cl"!Klltors ol Ille above nernec1 d~tdent lltlout firm n1me Gf VILLAGE 8AR·8· end plice1 o1 rnldtnc.• 1ro .. fellows, to-mon1 Of" ,,.rlorm•nc• Of obllNllont HORSE"-Part 1--Color Mclnt)'le of lfew H1mpsl!J11. lhll 111 Pfl"SOl'lt h1v1n11 cl•lm1 1g11!nst the LEGAL NOTICE QUE •rid tMt 11ld firm Is tomPOSed of wrt: MCut"td tl'lertbY, Ind' Matice of Otlaul
0 ... _ ..... Movie· (t) • ..,,., I aa"",. (C) (30) 11ld dl(~nl Ire r111ulrecl lo !!It them, l'.JWJI !he !OllOWll'IO Nnons. wllolt nomn In full Ctl"OIYl'I H1mll11, "' Vl•I• Line, Ind benetlcll.,.'S elecllon to CIUlt ta ~ ....,... ' , frttrip (30) wUh tr.. ntcenarv Wl<H;hers, In lh<t ofllct T45SU (l!RTIFICATE 01' IUSllN2SI Ind 1'11ees ol roll"-•rt '1 tollowi: L1t111111 8e1ch, C1Uf. llOYd Hlml!n, 614 .Oki lht Pl"OH•tv herein below cletcrlbeli I hit HotM"' P1rt I (d1am1). 64 •• ~ ... (60) of me clerk of ·lht ebcwe tnlllle<I covrt, or SUl"ERIOll COURT OF THE FICTITIOUS lfAMI! V1111 Rv1n1, 112 Wnl COlll Hlohway Vl1!1 LIM, LtDUnl 8etch, C1lll, h1Yln11 been rocordtd es provided for b~
--Grqory Peck, Anthony Qumn, .,. to Pre1e~t them. wllh the net:tsseno STATE Of CALIFORNIA FOR Thi uncllr$1Dned does certify he Is <on.-H.t, N-rt 8Hdl, C111tort1la, Leora D1i..:t Oc!*r 15, lf10 law Ind mor• !hon th ree month' flevlnt
Om1r Sharif Mildred DunllOCk Ra1· 9:JO IJ ~ (j) ft lo-. Wiil lM (C) vouchers to the unde!'$!pntcf If The otfke THE COUNTY Of ORANGE ductlno • M inns •I 'X1' VJt Mento.n1, 9, Alden, 2"2 FIOWtr Slrtel. (oita C1rol'l'n H1111Un t11P5HI 1lr1<e such rtc0n11tlon, will sell •I ' ' JJO) G -• p 1tt •~ ( ·•t of flls •Ho vs THOMPSON AND MIL 'JI• A•7... NOWPOrl lle•ch, C•lllornla, under the Miii, Ctllfornle. 8o\O'd H1mfln P~bllt tuCllcn lo the l'llglllll bldclfr !or mond Pelleerin tl•NPI ru ..... II .... rp rne , • I of HO 00 s 011.r October 2J, 191'0 STATE OF CALIFORNIA, '""'h PAYABLE IN LAWFU L MONEY o~ ~lat .... rtJC) (30) "lfOD Dolle ol his fflnddllllhltrs whlfl Mike LER, 7'2' Petnter .-.v1nua, Whllller, NOTKI! OF HEARllNO 011 l"l!TITION llCl!llous Inn n~me A . Vena RYIM, G-el Ptrtlltl" COUNTY OF ORANGE ) is. THE UNITED STA TES OF .-,MERICA Al -V I k •rid C•llfornl1, which Is fht plKt_ of bu1l11ess l'Olit PROIATE 011 WILL AND P'Oilt SOCIATEI allll lhtl Hid firm Is Com· Leore B. Alden. llmlle<d P1rtMt On Oct, l$, lf1t, llllCll"f! ml, 1 Not&rY Tl~•E OF $ALE wllh0\11 cowt1enl or war. ll" Maxwell Smart •nd "8;tnt 99 fOtS ID en ct, 1111$ I lye 61 lht undenlgn..:t In 111 m1tlert Hrtaln-1.l!TTl!RS Tl!ITAMINTAlitY llOlld of the fol l!'IWll'IO Ptr50n, WhOM St111t of CtUfornle, Or•ng1 County: Pubt!t ill tnd for lllcl County •rid State, r1ntv, tX,•MJ or lmplltcf, ,, to tlll!I tetl'll up with thtir old frierld lnspec· on !ht (iris but tnlkts troublt him· lnw to t~ ellet1 ot 5-ld decede~I, wllhln Est&le ol CHAlitl.ES WILLIAM WALL, n1me In 11111 and PllCt o1 ttlldtnc• Is On OCtolltr 23. lfl'O, btfore me, a i>ertONlllY •l>Pl•nlll c1,01111 Himlln end P0$1eUICll or tncumbrirn:M, the lnleresr
tor Harry Hoo to sol~e 1 KAOS se!f-bJ' pl1~Fin1 com11 rtlll n1Mtio1n!I :ou,1,r ~,,',h' eller the nr1t PUCHcatlon cl ak~o~7t:L~~ WH~:~~yoe~~~s~. lllat es 1~~~~ w. Taylor, 107 Vii Mentone, Hott.,. 11Publlt 1n,.•"!.,,',o' ,u7010•, ",•~ 80\'d H•mlln knowt1 to ...,. lo bl the con, ve~tcr 10 el'l(I,
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now hlld by lllm 11 such .Id on , "'""'' Podl" lsl•nd. "'.tine_. Bflon1 arre po ,_ I It 0,1·.,-O<. , .. , ''· ino. Nrtona Y IP9fl•r • • 1>erllDl't1 wlloit namM •~ •ubscrlbed 10 ruslee, In en o lht tonowrnv descrlbtd "' "' ••1• DORIS A. HALL. eta Oorl• Angellllf! Hell. NewPOrl 81tcll, Cellf. • -8 A• known to 11'11 I bt lht I 1•· C 1 of O S
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--m•-• (Ci (30) ·11•f11ond. THOM••'· ROUSSELOT °"' 1 o '"' -~-10 11"' ~r• • 811• 0 the wllMn l11111Vtntn1, 1nd 1c~nowled8ed Pf'Ol>trTY n ""' O<ln v r•l'IDt. tat. or 1.,. n .. wn " ., hes lllK here!n e Pl!!l!IOI\ for pr ~ c 1 "'""""'r ' ·~ 111nons wholl ""mes •re 1ubtcrlbed lo to me 111&1 llleY fll(ttu!H the Wl'l'll. C•llforn!1: tt THn' Tliilif (C) (60) I MIW1 (t) (30) 8nt• Wtrd. Execulor wltl eno for h1ue11Ct of ltllers Holmei W. T1ylor Ille wltMn 1n51turnen1 •rid tcknowlldg!KI Witness mr lland ilnc:I sttl, AU that land •lluelecl Jn Ille Slat~ or .......... Udp ~) (30) hn1 .... (IO} ol the Wiii of !hi T•1l1menl1rv to lht pelillcner, rdere11c• STATE OF CALIFORNIA. 11\tr exttulld Ille Mmt. (OFFICIAL SEAL) Cal!fotn!1, Count.,. or Or•lllf<I, CITY Q "f ,, l" ....... ilbovt nlmed dKtd,nt lo whlcll 11 made lor lllrlher Plrlleulen, ORAN~~ COUNTY: I .__, (OFFICIAL SE.-.LI MAllTIN M COHEN Cos11 MtM, dtscr!bld 11 lortow1: f01$." THOMl"50N AND MILLl!lit onc:I 11'111 the time incl olect ol lle1rl1111 "" On ..... robtr 16, 91'0, ...,.,orr me, ' Su11n G. J1ec1un Not•rv Pubilc • Clllloml• Loi 61 ol Tree! No . .QU, es ...,. me~ I ni.. Fat11U,. (30) lllakll J l'."'1ln (C) (30) HU ll•llllw """'" wmt 1111 bffn set lcr November 17, H10, Notary P!Jbllc 11'1 •n<I for HICI Stale, Hotirv Publk-CtHloml1 Drlnn Counrv recordl<I 111 Book 1'9, ~ :19 to 32 1,,. ~ 3' (C> (60) . 9:45 ilr.'I Pntor'1 DIM "") WhJNl1t, Ctllhtnll• "6tt '' 9;3111.m., In lhe courtroom of OeP•rl· Ptr!IOnlllY IPPta•HI Ho!mei W. Tavlor fllrJl'ICl,11 Offlc1 111 MY Ccrnmlulon Expltn clu1!va of Mlscell1neou1 MIPJ. record1 C) (.,.,.. ~ l" Ttl UlJI 'ft.IUS n).JOIS ment No. 3 of se!d court, 1t J'OO Civic known lo me lo 1>t '~' person w~ost Or•ft9• countv M-~, tfn Of Oreno• Covntv. llUlda 111 1111 Sun ( ""' 10:00 R Qt (J) CIS ...... Helf (C) (60) A~•l'llrs for l!•ac:vllll" Center Drive we11, Jn the CllV ot S1nle n1m1 Is $ub$<rlbed lo 1~ wllllln In· Mv Cominluloll Elllll,... COMIH i'TOit'K• a OW•IN Attrs. eXCEP71NG THElitEFlitOM th•I "°" Tlltn • In Esttllln (30) Tlil Tl( 5 fhn (C) (60) Ktv• PYblWitcl oraove CDISI Dilly Piia!, Ane, Calltornl1. Slrument •nd iduwwlldlHI he tlet\lled Ji.-19, 1"1 1111 JI.·........,..~ No. 111 tkln thareol described 11 tollowt;
Miiia ii lill R.ollfld (t) (30), in Slnders, Hiil fLSfltnln. Cktober" 20. 21 Ind November 3, lD, Dated No~m~•s:· J~~~ ~~tiii:i'Stal) t•LIM I. FaANKLIN S.t11 Alli, Cllffwlilll tzm 8t0innlt1D 11 Ille' southe••I corner c1
kl ~l•ns, Glo111 Gree1, P11t1 Pi l'i'il /Tl -Maren ··-••••• 1f7D lf+l-~ c . ; Cl k • Reb• H c-111 Att.nn Tth lls.IJI$ se!d Loi 671 ftllnc;o North 25• lS' SO" ...... IUI 1.1.1 'iU -ooaDON o ~;;NK er Nolan> • Publ!c C1llfomt1 41t I!. 17tlli II., Publl1hecl 0r1,,.. Coast Dtllv Piiot, West 117.21 fffl ta tho NOf'1hnst corner ( ) (60) "lab)Tinlh." Dr. Welbf LEGAL NOTICE 762~ s I' 1"1 A 1 p 0 lol 190 Pr!11CIPel Offlcf In C..t1 MIU, C1lll. ftOf • 0 .... Pile! OCtober 27 •nd Nov1mber 3. I,, 1 r, of said Loi 67, said Nortlle•$f cor'* .:JOI •-~ C-.. (30) t1•"• •c1'onl1'ot "• Rlttr• ~ '""l------;:-;:;::-----'--I • • er v" · • 0 c ... Publl.ntd Otenoe COii '"' 1910 1"7·10 be1no ' POlnt In 1 wrv1 concave -""' " """ W"ltllfl', C•llf9mla f060I Mr•~e )u11
1•• EitPlr OcfDbtr 27 tnd NOY9mblr ), 10, 11, Nortl'lwesltrlr 111vl1111 • rlcllus of 1:111.ao TM FIJ'inl flu11 (C) (30) he Is dyina from drup ht llMd P·lf20l . Tel: c21" .... '",•u1•1,__ ,.',1 'ITmi,'n' Oii n 1tl'D 2<1»J'O feet, , •adl•l nne thl'lluth ,•Id pefnl Dilcoftf f!J&ll IC) (30) "Safe. r~searthina a tribe of Mexic#l'I In· CllitTll'ICATE OI' BUSINESS Artornev ,,.r 11 ....,.., • ' LEGAL NarICE beat1 sou111 25• 35' 50'' Et•fl 1111r1c1 I"-" ,. RI ~-M I lb ....o. FICTITIOUS NAM.E Published Ora~va Coast D1llY Pl!ol, PubHi.hHI Orentt Co.111 Oally PTiot, LEGAL-··'NOTJCE Sculh IJL> q W' Ell! S.'2 ffJft ta rha•. llfl!. Cl•"" one in au .... ~ The undel'lflgnHt does certify ht Is ccn· November 10, 11, 11, 1910 llDJ.10 OCTobor 211, 27 •rid NOYtmblr :n:i.1~ T-+17'1 POllllJ said PO!nf belnv
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..Oint
111
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s.ial StCllritJ (C) ITllt Sli11t (C) (60) du~llne • buslnt~s 11 P. 0 . Box tS6s, It~ fll4'1U NOTICE 01" SAL• 011' l'llitlOMAL 11111 Is ,•rellel wlm Ille' cllsfinl TH Dn"1 Rtp0rt (C) (30) Jltn (t) (60) George Putnltn. Fountain V111ev. Calllornla 9:!7ot, ullller LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE CllitTIFICAT• 01' IUllNHS PlOl"llitJY AT ,.RIYAT• SALE $0uttlwn1erlr 6.0lt Itel frCll'I seld ea•1
r1rftlvoS RI AlllDf (30) . Tiit Siii ftl11Ci"9 Mil (C) (60) llW fldlllous firm name or MYCO l TD. P'ICTITIOUS PIRM NAM• fft. A "'22 11ne, sild POlnl bl!lno Norlf\ :25" 3S' 50'' ,ut fvtnllll J111W1 (C) (30) LI ftm!lll J30) end that said firm Is comPO•ed of lht P·USOI p.Jt22J THE UNOERSIGNED does flereb\I In Ille SUP'ef"lol" Court of Ille Sl•le ot West t lllnll q!d peralltl llne IO.CIO feel followino Pfrson, Whose n•me In full Incl CERTIFICATE OF 01$CONTINUAHCI! CERTIFICATI Oii WVSINISS certify lhal 1he Is <Ollducfllll I r111111 Miii CaUfO!'nlt, for 1111 Cou~IY Of Or.anoe. frcrn lhe Soulll line of said lot 67: 1='5 I!} MusiCllt fldiwll MulClnl (60) Plltt of .-.ildtnct Is es lotlcws: 01' USI AND/OR A8ANOOINMl!HT OF FICTITIOUS HAMI! Or~r 11<.>SlntH •I P.O. Bo>I 1981, CITY of tn fht Meller of !hi E1lllt of menct seum 150 36' 50'' Ettl tlong q ld ·oo-C8$ ( I N (t) J30) 10·30 II! B• JollllS JllWI (t) J30) MelYln C. Orchard, 3098 A Corl! FICTITIOUS NAMI!: T~e undersltned does certify "e 11 eon. Hunnnvton Belch, Countr ol Or•1111e, BEll:NAOETTE l . HANCOCI(, DtceaMtl p1r11te1 Une to 00 fetl ro Mid SOllll'I nner 7: -nn hi m ' Avenue, Cot!• Mfta, C1lll. '2626. THE UNOERSJGNEO dots lllr•~Y CIUC!lfltl • b!Jill'lttl ill P. O. Bo• "6117, Stile ol Callfornl1, under Ille f1Clltloul Nolfe• 11 tlereb~ o!ven lhll lhe un-thern:t Ei•t .. long sakl Souttt 111'11 •• 6.S Willer Cronki!e. · Hor (30) Dttlld Oc!eber JO, 1910. nrl!ly thtt, efltcllvt October 19, 1910 Irvine, Ce!lforn!a, 926'4, ur1<1er !ht firm name of CU&TOMCRAFT STUOIO, denltried will ••II 11 Prlvtle 1111, to the Itel. le Ille PO!nl Of bealnnlnt. am"" "lthl" lfm (C) (30) 11:00 I B ~I""' I? Melvln c. Orelle-rd fMy Ctlsecl lo do b!Jtln•ss under Ille lie· flctlllous tlrm 11am1 or STOERMER LANO Ind that Mld firm Is cornPllMd Gf ll>e """""' Md best blcldtr. •ublect lo <Oii• for ll'le pUl1'0$t ot 1>11vlno !ht obl!ttlton• .. ,. 'e · "' f k McG Jc.hn ' - ) Stile of C•lltorn11, Or1noe Coun!y: lltlous flrlTI n•mt of SANTA ANA SECURITll!S end thel 11Jd firm 11 com· lolloWl111 peroon, wll<rlll Nll'M Ind IOd,.... flrl'MllO!\ ol slid SUPrr!or Court, on or ltCUred bV uild Oted o1 Tru!I lncludln1 Wou rin ... ey, tin ee, On October 30, 1910, l)lfort '"'' • C:lOTHING CMll ClliMT•ll 11 '°' w. ,.._. of tP>t fotlowrne pel'llen, wllose Is 11 follows. IO wit: C 1 tl'ler me 16th der Of Niwemlllr 1970, 11 fees, rl\at~ •nd UP1nt1es ot TrutlN t nd Cl\lnctllor. _ C.1 II T., 'lllb? (CJ (30) No!1rv Pvblle In Ind for Jl/d Stitt, 11th St., Slnll Ant, C1lllornr1. wlllcil narno fl'I fUll Ind olec1 o1 rt$1cltnce Is es Merv W. Keehne!, lf1'2 own n' lhl oflltt Gf CHARLES S. 8UCIC, 111' o1 Stle.
I Wbf1 MJ U.1! (C) (30) fD JlllWI (C) perscnellr appe1rtc1 Melvin C Orch1rC1 bu1!11na w•1 fCfllllrlV tolTlllOStcl f;tl 11\1 ftllowt: ltnl!. Hunllntlon Beech, C1tlf. '26-Ct SIYltle Ave., &oUlll Gett, Counfio Of Los 0A 7EO! OClober 11, ltl'D ......_. IT1 I LO'lt loq (30) Jh 9 .. Jolin Ct!ldJo" k.-n lo mt lo ba 11'1• 1>11r100 wh<llo folrOWlntl NtMllt w1'lo$I "'""" Ill #Ull 0.vlcf E. S!otrmer, 10141 Mslkll Or., WllNl!"SS m't hlrld ttllt 16lll d•Y Of Aft9lle$, Stale of Callfornll, 111 1~1 r!11lll, AGENT'S ESCll;OW SEllVICI
l.W ~ Cloe Ci J 0) ' utrt : llJ ntmt Is subscribed fl) the wllt'lln ln. •net ' .... tf rntilatlff ,,. •• Mlllwe. llo HVl!llntlon Beech, c 1 n1, 92'46 Octotier, IJ1MO W I( llMI 11111 end 1111ereS1 of 1.ald dece.ltd at Ille Br: Al Grthem. , INI: t9I ~ ( 3 (western) '56-f11nk S!n1lr1. 1trumen1 Ind •cknowltcrslld n1 ••tculed wit• Dltlcl November 2, 1J10 .... ,,, 0 , c'•"L•FO.llN~A trrnt Gf dtl!h ilnd 111 the r!9h1, title 11'111 An't. Viet President' llt:ll, fl1n Ind 011ie (C) (30) m llltvll: "SMtl Dap Ill flon" lht 11me. . Jotn S. Winburn, 1611 Cornwell L1n1, Divlcl StOl'rmer ,, • 1111-1 tt11t the< •1!1le of 1.ald dece11tc1 SPS·1$2SS
Cllfllt Ille liw\111 WQ (C) (30) (mystery) '50-81rry Jones, 011vt (SEAL) NtwPOrt lleacll. Cell I. Slate al Celllornla, Or~noe Couotv: C00~N~1:'f6~~Ni;,Eoctcbtr Ao !'70 1111 tCllufrecl by OPerallon or ltw or Publl1fltd Oranpe Coest D<r Plfcl,
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1" (30i SI • • h · ... th t Merv I(. Ht"n' Lloyd E. Winbu rn, 1111 C0<nwat1 On November 2 197~ before mt, 1 V · ·• ' oth11'Wl1e, other 1han or Jn addition to Octot>er 27 •~d November ), 1~. 1'1~ Ill . oane. "IOl'll!C P J'SICl.. fQ ens Not•r'f' Public· Callforn le Lant. NewP11tt Bl ach, Cl!U. Not I'll Publlc In' end 'tot-uld $Ille, before ,... Gabrltt S. LDY• • Nof(ll'Y m1t of seld dee'•*· et the llrne of lftO.le
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TUI: Ci1rl (C) (30) londcn with 1uplt·bomb. Prlll(IHI Olflte In Certificate for l•tnHdlcn ol business Pll"!..,,11y •PPMred oavrd E. s~rmer Publlt In 8r'tcl lot llld County •1111 $ti~ dHlf\, In 1nc1 to e!I tl\t c1rlal11 penont1,l----:-::::-:-::-:-o::=-:::::---7:JIJ!" r."I Tiit lmrfJ "nlbilr1ts m Maril· "BIHb of M•rltlllt"' Or111De Coullfv under the abcvt llt!lllous n~me, ena If· know11 fo me to bt lhe ,.,,on wllose rnldlll!I ll'lere1n, Clulv «<nmluloned 'w ,,._rfV llluHed In the Countv of Lot LEGAL NOTICE '. J ) ( O)~G 1 '' tlkU 1 ileepiOI (adftnture) •59 _ Stephen Boyd Mv CommlssiO!I EllPire~ Hdevn of 'ubllco!lon thereof, ire on Ille name Is ,ubf<rlbed to ttle within In· ·.~n, 1 o,ertonal!" '":''::! ,:!'':,,..,.; All!ltl11, s1111 of C1!110rn11, P•l"llcvltrlr • r n ' NOY, 2~. 1912 In !tit !"I'' ol TM Counrv Clerk Of tr mtf'rl • cl k le<c111td lie ••ttUltd .....,111 llOWll 0 ""' cltS<rlbed IS followl, to-wit· 1-------.,.-------potlon Ind drums tn lmprob&bll Ann.1 Gaylor, .ltmes Rob11bon. Pubfls/\td Or1n11 Coetf O•lf<f fllttot, Or1n111 o~nty, und•r th• Jrovl11c"' ot :11ou '''"' n ic now whose ""'"" Ii sublcrlbld to lllo wlthl~ One dlemonr:I rlno _ rt.riie. Ont di•· P·MS7
nil[html!I wh~niin Elly M1y marries fD R4alltia (C) (R) Novtmber '· 10. 17, 24, .,.,., 200-JO lac:116" '"'of Iha Civil (ocll. tOllP'JCIAl $EAL) ln1trvmenl Ind •ck-ledlled to ""' 1111 l'llOlld l"lllt -sm111. Old sUwr fQl11$ COii· Cl!lltTlflCATE o~ FICTITIOUS •11itM .. •"1ilnt110g" 11·30-~~M"' c-1 ... (t) LOfl'll WITNlll "" 1111111111!1 11111...," M1rv IC.Hmrv 111e,""~w1~~.~ .. .;~EREOF, I h1vt 11111"8., ltve (5) srrwr clclll1rs Ind NAMI! 01" . · ' -~ "" LEGAL NO'l1CE Ocl*r, 1ril0. Noli Publl .Ctllfornl1 " •lvht UI ~I llltctl THI! CALIFORNIAN GROUfll £)a;) hi ::notb (C) (60) 8111 Greene, II Ind luq Jluaent. Jrd; Joan S. Wlllbllt'fl •Prlnfr'pil 011'/u 11' ~~':"''° 'r' ,r;v ~·~ :::: ·~.::~ l:'t :i; Terms ot 111t ui.h tn °ltwflll rnonl!'I' of Wt certify Iha! we ire <0<1due!ln1 1
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Colby Flo1ttlct Hendeno" ind Delion I" l• Llovd E. Wlnbum Drtnui c ounfv c • sea e 1 Jlf !tit U11llH1 Stain on conflrmalkH'I of stl• reel estate lnveitmenl b!Jtlnea 1t 21n
Glen11' A.sh tuesl -~-~ -~ .... C.llOll (t) Cl!:litTll'ICAfE OF 8USINl!SS ~llllf'll Ore119e Cll<llst Oe!IY l"lklt Mr CommlnlOl'I Ei p1rn c,~\flf~1~ l!~I •bovt WI" tfl, 81cls or Olleri to bl In wrl!lno •1111 wlli DuPont Orlve, Su111 '• NtwPOrt Bt1ch, o' .. ~--ftl""'I Out~ .._. ~ CT T Octobl'r 20. 21 end November 3, JO, NC>Yember 2• 1972 c 1 ea l be r.ctrlV.cl 11 TM eh'lrtlilld office at •nv Ca!lloml1, Ulldef" the fkltlfcus fll'l'!I 111me 8 lfYftl (C) (~ ) ~ 1" . B~rt ~ Ira.ch is t.Ubltl1utt host. Tiit und:•'lvn!.., I= ~~~~;he It con-1910 l920-70 Pub!l51\ed Orange' Coa;f Delly Piiot. ~:~:::I :~bll~rn tflll for Nld rime •fler Ille If"! publlctllon hereof encl ot THE CALIFORNIAN 011.0U,, tlld met Band of utort16nl1h Ines to shake 01ny G11Jesp11, Willie Shoemaker, d1K.llnv b!lslnest 1 902 w l7tn St LEGAL N()1'JCE Novembtt ,, 10, 11, a-. 19111 1050-1'0 c "'"' •l'ld Slate befo"' dete Of 11re. the firm 11 compastd ol TM 101k!W!t1t i>er· nti&hbortlood bu owneri. Jadl Wat· James B1own Jimmy Webb Santa A• 8 cinklrn~• ul'ldt~ tf\e n~· ,J.~ commltslc~ exPlr" 011tc1 thll :191~ 4flv of OCI., 1970. SOM, wt.me neme' end 1ddl"!!Uet '"l ..
' '."'. ""~-F-nk "-nwrse 0. . ,· (Ci T . #1' n . • • LEGAL NOTICE ' ' It \97( CHARLES s. SUCK GENERAL l"AlitTHIRS • · ~. •• "" " CMI 11111 , tlm ' llllOUs llrm l'llmt of s-.NTA ANA CLOTH· C. 1 t ruin-' I Aclmlnlttrelor CT" of !he Est1t1 tea!l'lnrn G. A!phfn, 222( Ettl Franzen, 0 @rnm Mod Sqllld (t) (60) Red Butto111, Lt• MtnWtlhtt, Mf. ING CAiii C:liNTlilt ,,.,.. 11111 .. 1. , AJ:A:'"Ji"' 6 l'ublltl\fcl 0r1nn Co.1st DlllY Pl1:' Of Mid 01etdenl /.Pt. A. S1nt1 Ana, Celltarnlt .
"Welcome !Cl the Hum1n Rice, LIYi ch1e1 Ans•r•. Team #1: Lii firm Is C~l'Olld of Ill• fal!Owlnt ptrll)n, C•RTlflllCAT• OF DtlCOllTIMUANCI NOTIC• 01" INTENTION TO EHGAGI! ~ober 20, 27 •nd Novernblf :r,._.,o CMA.litll!S s. •Veit G. T~crnes Co•, 1776 Gltncrest. API.
Fu.reel" Ptte 11\d th1 squad try !Cl Grant, Don Adams Blrbtra Eden Wf\ol• namt 111 11111 11111 Jll-ol' All• 0, Ull ANDfOa IN THl SALi OF Al.COHOLJC 111't lftHll .-.v .. 11• 5, .-.n1helm, Cellforn!1.
1 I dlt IC LIWd ol i.. h ' .,.. ...; cltn~ 15 as tolktw•: " AaAINDOMM•Nf Ofll 'ICTITIOUI NA.Ml l1Vauo•5 LEGAL NOTICE SWiii •ate. c1111. fl2ll LIMITED fllARTINER1 Ctlr I younj II n c I Liff)' B,,den osts. ISSi .. , Jlmts w. Burton, "" c-V•nlt THE UNDi!ilSIONED do ht!'fb'I U1'11f\r November t.1t70 Tiii 111J) tft.lnt Kerhrvn G. Alphin. 212'1 e11t Fr1nim, murdtr 111 S/11111 desert town, Cl tolUmnlJt hmy /..rchtnl. Pl., Cosll M"'' C•llf. !Nil tflac:llvi Otloblr 15. 1110 llltY cu .. TO WHOM IT MAY CONC£RN: •A" 1111 ,&."'"'°' Ill !',. "" .-,Pl, A, $en!t A111, ClllfOtnfe.
Bellini l\IUll U FrtrH. [dl[lf U QI Did; CMft (t) Frid lllfllrw Ollfd Octj1~·t:': a rf6" tel t0 do tw'IMss ulldet 1~1 llclllloui firm 1:brf-;: :,11~:"'~~~.::., l~v~~c~~ i't!" SU~~~ll~~ T~0«i, ... ',.D~lit.:... Publl-'*I Or111H Co•d D•llY Plklf LlMr. In~ Mr:-~c~~if<I M\MIY, 3SO
8U<:hlfl0fl, Bo Sven.:>n l~d Veltka Is 101o 11Jtll. STATE OF CALI FORNI~ neme of African Ari Center al .sol ForP$1 :riders Iv;,_., proP05es 16 1.il •lcol>ollc STA Te OF CALlllOlitlOA PH M-ber S. 4. 111, 1,70 2048-70 .:z'"1'' nd ~f'll 11M~rllll H '"t·lltnlh r
GrlJ' lllO ru!11. , JZ:OIJ Q Movit· "T1M Ill D'9dly lallll" ORANGE COUNTY: :.,~ue, ';:::nf~r~:,~~· ~:::,~· ;h:~: beveraves 11 !!It Prtm1sei, clesttlbed a$ TH• COUNTY Ofll Oll:ANO& JIS 'H11nover • Drlvt, cint1r ~: QMMIM $ MOlil: (C) "Dtn'I ' ( I )•,54 11__. B "d On Oclobor U, 1910, before mt. I sness 1 1 1 follows : Mt...,.,.,,., J•'AL NOTICE Clll!Ornla. Jiil .... TJrll'I'" (COmtdy) 'G8 111)'1 ery -....,,., rl 11$. Nll1rv Public In •rid for teld Sltle, f°i:.,ll!Wl~ Ptrs~njd wflOst ':,"'1!~J0:a. 1"c:, 'U Nerlll N.....-1 I I u It Y 1 t II • ~rtltt of JULIE MAiltlE MANGAN, CA1 Frenk T. Slab!!1, ttf4 Com•hltk, •--• W • M•• T"• Moo WO!/!!"'"~-: "1M C.-Pflr.Ol\1lly -1rt<1 Jarno1 W, llurton :,11, 0 • 0 t•• tntt: 1"' Newport lltKh 1i.o kl'IOWl'I 15 JULIE M. M.-.NOAN, Ora11111, C1Ufor11f1. _,.,...,.,, ll[hu., ., 1' "• I o "I ·-ad kllVWn to me ta bl lhl Nl'IOll whow • Pur.wnt fl) 1\ICtl ln~tlon, the \Ill-Of!cellld NOTICI 01" THI TIMI AMO l"U.Ca Mr. eno Mr1. Ted C. Llovd, f111
Trwltl DI' ClltltqQllK• (C) (30) ( ._. 1lrumt111 Incl ICkflCWlldllld hi tltCllllKI r 'I "1 ni. 1 ' S ' ol AlcOllottc Br1ere9e Control lor lnvenct. ctldltal"l Of the tboYI n•ll'llcl cl.cf'dl!ll CY PORMATIOlt COMMllStOlf 011 lltobtl'I W. PolklnehQm, tt9:! At1Yle i ll Johm;, Hll'YIY Kotm•n. C) .... -~ _.. I' • n1m1 11 $Ulncrlti,d to m. Within In-0 ~~~ ~·z· 1°i1~1F •;::.,. C:..."'rt dlnl•lllCI ho 11111lylt19 ta Ille Oe!lertmtnl NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN fe "" Ofll N•AlitlNG OF THI: LOCAL AOl!Pf. .-.1~mtd1, Apt, '· An111ttm, Cel!IOl'ftll .
DHltl •--~i (60) 1:00 -lllwlr. "HI Ilda , .. (...i:. Ille llmf. ~04111f °'1 Clrt~Cll Ori ... , •nit "'"'· b't tn1nt1f.,. ol en tltoholft bever111e 11111 •II J>tl'Wll• lllwll'le cr1lm1 nal~•t 1111 01.A-.1 c o u If T Y , C:ALlllOiltlflA, Drive, Huntlnoloft Beech, Cellla,,,r•.
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"' U ·, n..-a (OfflClll St1I) 1 • Ileen~ IOI" lhnt J>remlits •• f11llcws: Mid clttldflnl 1re rMUfl'td lo Ille 11111111, WMl!M A l'll:Ol'OSl!D ANlfEXATtON lv•n E. Br1dley, 12162 G1lw1y $1 ... d, r11fm (C) (90) (R) "ft['f Pn· etn) 14-,. 0AJ YOllfl&. Dll _,_ Man< K. Hfmrv Ctrtlflclll tot lriri-.cll6" of llutl-ON SALE BEER a. WINI!" BONA wlfll lhil Ni«-rv YO!Khtrs. h'I Ille oflltl TO TH• CITY O" COSTA Ml!:SA OF G1rdm Gtcvt1. C11lf6<11l1.
&elllt llli:; fellJ lte." Q 0 .... (C) NOltrJ Pllbllc, Calllot'!ll& u,,"', "11 1~ '':!"' l~ldll~I ":mt, Ind f~ll-FIOE ~UBLIC EATING PLACE of the clerk of ftle tboYe entl!lfd wutr, « OllANO• COVNTY, AND Ol.IECTIOlfl Jlll'I" .... Korn1rt11, .SOI HOMh C°'"""
Prlnc!pal Office In I V "' l'U ca on ,,,erec • 1r1 Oii • Al'lv-de1lrlnt1 to Prolesl 1111 IHu1nce 19 ,,,....111 tNm with flto lllc:ftllTY O" Pll:OTllTS THElllno, WILL •I mf1n~1!1h, No, N, Fu 11 er ton
Otl/llt Counl'f ln Ille o!ll~e ol Ille Ccuntv Cl••-or ol' Juell llceMt m•r flte. vt!Tlllfcl J>tOl•SI VO\ldl«t fl) ~ lll'lclerflgned II (/O Jllitlllrtt•D llOlit HIARINIJ c:.a111o,,,1.. •
lh E 0 r~ E "i D A '
DAYTIME MOVIES
'~ir Ctdrk: H1~e, IM J,
Cobb. m (C) "'TM °'7dl'l911111" (COtn•
tdy) '66-R11 Bolatr, Jad. Oi(ford.
M1r11rrt -H1mlllon, P1ur O'KH!l.
Adve~ture' oi JJ.yw1r old Han1
thr1111Al'I M""1111 Ill -if! 1111·
m111c..
Mv C°""mlH>on E~ol'"" Ora"llt Counf't', u!lder the prov!slona of 11 1nv onJ~ of file Department of litOIElitiSON, HOWSEll: & GAiltLANO, NOTICE IS Hl!llE8Y GIVEN that 111 lit6"1kl C. Dunl-COll'lbll, 11M Codtltl"ow
Nev. 1•. 1'11 Secflon 2466 of lhe Clvll Codft. Alcof\ollt eever•Dt Control, or b'I mall to Atlornl'l's. ""'° C•mitus Or!Yo, NIWHrl 1ppllc111on h•• ~ fU..:t wrrh the LOc•I LIM, S..1111 Ana. Callfoml1. Publ!thed Or•nte C()flll 011ly Pile!, WITNESS our hlndl !his 1Srtl d•Y of lh• Oepe~nl ol Ak:oholle llevttHt l<ffch, Ctlltomft, wl'lk:ll b tile plloH of Altfl(Y Formt!IOll C6'"mlnlon « lh<I Mt, 11111 Mrs. ROb..-1 G. C11"1'°", 100
Octotier 20. 27 •nd Nov•mbar 1. 10, Octobef", 1'10. 1 Merit Control, 1115 0 Stmt, S1cr1mtnto, butlneu of 1111 unc:ftnlentd In 111 ll'ltlllrs County f1I Or1no1. Sleh! o1 C•Ufcrnta, ,. SOulh 0Vt<!n5bu,.,, Anelle!m, C•ltlornl1. 191'0 lt.11·70 ~llCen M k C•Ufornlt 95'11, to •s Ill be rtteJve<d Plrtaln!ft9 fl), ... OllllO of .. 111 dtc:«lflll, lluetflllll 11111 .. ld CommlHlon •l'PtOVI IN WITNE$$ WHEREOI", lho und,r·
1----:-=.:-,:--:c=:==:---lcoN•N ;~K~ a OWEN wllllln 30 devs o1 the .,.tt tfl• P"OD(llfd within tour monlfl11ner tfll llnt Miia-tile ,,,_HI 111M2allon dRS!11natecl 11 ~!91'1fd r.v• IK9ellle<d 11111 Ctrtlllaite. el· LEGAL NOTICE ' PtHnl~ WM"e flnt -'"' slitln• tlon of m11 notl«. S\lnflowlr No. 1 Anntx•llon, Ptt~I l and llCllvt Oclllbe• u. 1910. Ati.t"";,....... 11roundt for dtftlll •s Provkletl ~ ltw. Otld OCtobtr If, ltN Pim! I 10 111t (fly of eo.11 Meq ot GENERAL PARTNElitl
SUl"•litlOR COUii:' OF C.ALIPOlNIA, ~!1!1.-i,111 Cill~':· ~~I Tiit oremlles •rt iww llc-ec:I for "'-Robert T1vl1t Ml11911'1 Or'lft9' Otunf\r, C1lltornl1. Tht J>rOPOMI I V: K1lnl'Vll G. Alol'lln COUNTY 011 IAH •••NARDINO, Tel '"" ·.,,.,,., 1.111 ol •kohclllc bl'Vlf'llOt. Tiie f'onn Of Admlnl11r110t of lht Ell•tl of .. ~·-""' lolkr#l1111 -r•llY 8Y! G. Thoma1 COii
SAN 81!iltNAlitOIN01 CALll'ORNIA p1 bllshed O••llft Coast DlllY P'llcl v1r1Uc1tlcn l'lllY l>o l)bt1ll'lld ,,.,, 1n1 Tho abovl nalNd dle:ldtnl d•crlbtd l!'ft wllldl b rnor. PlrllCvlfrlv LIM11'EO fl'ARTllEJtS, by !Nit
CASE NUMOE" l'L 7'61 ~tier 21 i nd Nov mbtr l. 10 u ' Office ot 1111 Df'ollll'lmtl'I. litOlllitnON, NOWs•• a .... litU.IND ducrllltd by I leell Clletrlptlon C11 Ill• •1torn.Y·lll.ff(!, "'"'lllnl 10 SUMMONS !MARRIAGE I lt70 e 1fM.JC Ch1rl" E. & Ellll8111e M1rttkl 4Stl C1-DrtW with ll'lt Comml.,loll: I llDwtl" of •ttorntY •r111ted lot In re Ille 1111rrl1tt or P~lllloner: J UNE Ma•llYtl 8 & Tony G Oliveri N"'"" ._., C........ PAlitCEL ONE C"Onl•lM lflltnllllmalely lhl1 JUrPOM.
LED ERMAN •nd llffPOfld1nt: o. A.oss LEGAL NOTICE P11t1lfl"9i:I o"n'°' c°''' • Deltv-Pltc1. T....,..1 ,.,,.. ..,, K1" 11n11 oions•tt• °' tho rflllt.of· Bv: K11hrv11 G. Allohl~ ~:~R~:,.,.,.11,, November IG, 1110 mf.70 A=:.e .... t:'-"*=' DlllY l"llot. :r,,." :::.e~ ·= ~rlll~ STATE 'OF °C...tm~N~ ...
The HllllOl!lt ha• llltcl 1 H llllOn -SUl>EAlOR COUlitT OF CALIFORHI"" LEGAL NOTJCE Octolltr 20.. 21 ft Nov""blr 3. 18, FIOOd Con"' Cfl.tMll <rois•s 1 •.
no,,,lnt l'OU• m1rrl1Ve. Vov 1111r fllf • COUNTY OF Oll:ANOE, ltJO lnt-1'0 SUllllO'#tr Avenua llllf aJ111MI,,. .. llat· COUNTY OF Olt-.NGE I wrlllafl ~ w!rhln tlllr•v de~ or me 100 Wfft 8111 Sim i, Slfll1 A~1, C1tlt, LEGAL NOTJCE bi. Mlln St"l!tl and lht rt11fll>Ol·wtY 01 On thl1 IJth d1y of O<loblt. 1J'7', btf0t•
:;. D -r'1e '"*'1 Ciilf'" (musict~ "A?
•' ~IOlll Murphy, Annt Shirley,
Dtllnit Dey, 8trtt1Y Coodm1n,
l:OOG) <C> ""l\M ._. el tlm-
{admturt) '60 -Gur 5*klMll,
610111 Mitltncl,
dell lflet tflll tuml!'IOl'll 11 ffrvfCf on vou. $UMMQNS lMAlitRIAO•) IT 1$ HEREIY CElitTll'IED AS Mltn $1rtet frotn $unlloMr Avtnllt 1111 1(1thrvt1 G. Alfllllt1, 1terton1l1'1' 1.,.
11 YOU till lo Hit 1 wrl!1111 tt•POntt 0 Utlt FOlL0WS: T.-S toulhlr!V fD ... N_. "'"""'"" In Ht11111 l(tlhrYn Q;, .-.11111111, kncown lo mt •!thin Mh tll'Mt ·vovr Otfeull mar be In ,. fhO mllNl ... ol Ptlltlontr; JI~· The unctml11'1td Olrlntrf hl!ve tt&lllll INOTICI! TO Clltl!DIT09.S 1111 rt11r1t1 COii• MtM -· lo Ill the 1>1r'6rl wt.o.e Nolftt 1\ tl.lba(rtti.Cf
enttr..:t Ind the tOUrl ,...~ onttr 1 ludt-M1E DALE 'HILLIPS Ind R"'°ndtnl: dollllt b\l .. sl~.'..t!~--lhl &lllW '~P.CE•~:or •• ~: SU .. •lltlOll COUllT OP, TMll PAlitCEl TWO (DlllelM ... <'OXllNlllY le ll'lt wlll'llll inllf"Vmfll! 11 ttw. 11ttorn-rnenl t'Otllllrtlnt 1111111\CllVt or O!l'llr ltdtrs MAll:CIA M, PH IL.LIPS ulld!!r ... ""'' nemi STAT• OF CALll'OlllflA FOii: 1,1 t(l"i:I....., toMltl• of Ille' rtohf-of ... •Y It'/ fn l•CI ol Tiit C111tornt1n GIOUP, Ind ~1"8 dlvl1lon ot propft'f\r. lllO\l\•I To tile littleoncltnl: OPT!~AL MANUfl'ACTUlllNO COMP.-.NY TH• COUNT't 01' ORA.NOi ol $vnflo'Wer Avonua bl'tllnnlfltl 11 l1tr ldl .. llOWl"'911d 11'1 fllf lh1t 1he 111bterllled l:JO D.,.. ~ <•t•ml 'S4 '\;' Jofln Othntr, wm11m Conr1d. • ~~ D "1'1e .._ 11 ...._,. {dr1m1)
%:00 0 IC) "Slttinl lllr" (Wllfm) '54
-C1l1 Robtrtson, Miry Murpfly,
4:JO II "'Sep.sre• T......, (dr•m•) '59 ~bofth Klt'r, Dnld lflv.. lurt Llnc.1••·
1UPWH, Child OAIOclv, child IUPPOrl •• ,. T1-r>elltklnet Ill• 111111 • ,.nuon COii-IN C. ""'' prlnc!Pal tit« Of '*11-Is ......... .,,,. SITMf end ""'""r'"' '"'lwrlr to • "'"' -Ill K•lllryn 0.. Allhlll lhlfffo •• lorntrl' ,_ <0111, Ind IUCll Olhlf' r•Ufl Hrnl119 vour m8rrl1t•. You mtr fl!t I loclllKI II Nf W1tl ll'lh $1 .... 1, Cotti Ellllll « OllA.CE ANN MIU..l!N, 1 .. rc11rlrntlll't' IM fltl ... , of Hlrllor llrllll':IH! Ind l'llr lfl'll narnt It ittwner 11 m1r be t•an9" by tr. court. written ttt!IOrl)e within IMrtr dlYI of lh• M"9, Or11111t Counl'I", CallfOl'nl•. T'fle Dlctettd, .SeullYlfd. NI f11t north CCIII• Mtw In llC'f,
If "9 Wit lt .-1! 1i11t ...... ti 111 11· cltolto !I'll! lfllt t~mr110111 11 Mrvf!d on 'l'Ol.I. 111"'1\ In f~ll Ind OllCft !' ttl~ of NOTICE IS HEREBY 01\llN '9 tile 1re1, (OFFICIAL $EAL1
l9rMr 111 11111• "''""' '" 1llelrld .. s• 11 ""' lt!I to trte • written r1JD«11t Ille !!rtr;ars •rel u 91oi1ow1. 1111 C 1 <...Ol!Ofi Of the 1bovt!: named ctl'ctCltnl ,.,, tfll flrno If 11111 11Mrl111 notlctd H•llC'r 11. "°""'
.,_Mir ,. lllllt .,_ "'111111 ,-., II within t\ldl !lint. Your dll~un ll'ltV tt. .,.,," •r · erry, IU" !I'll! 111 M!IOllS Pllvt1111 <lllms .,.inst lhl hlr1ln Mid llaundotlll '"'' be ft'IOdlflH llot1ry Publl<-Celllomlt :~,F-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~-----------------1il'llY· fftllt' • 111111"' tlml.. 11rt1tm and "'' <OUrt ll'lllv fflt..-• luot-f.lewoorf lle•dl. C•
11
tarnl• ... 111 CleCldtnt ,,... rt1111ine 1o 111• i!wrn, by "" tc1c1 r11on ., 11111er "'"11or't 111 1111 Pr!ncl11•I Oftlct in ~•ltd Oct, 1" ltl'D. "'"" cont11nl119 ln!vfl(llvt or 1111\tt ~ Rvlll l . Btrrv, 111S Ca1tl1, N--1 Wiit! fM neu-rv YOU(lltf'I lfl ll\t oHlct vlclnltv of ff1t '"""°""' O'•nt~ C-IV
(11!>.U COM'Offtlnt od!vl1lcn ot Of'OPtrt't. -·· l!'l ... ·~o c·~~ru.t... ..... -,.,._ -°' IM·<Mk ................ on1i1iw.C>OVff ..... -NO.tlCl-lL.FU"THER-OIVEN, tMt fa,y CommlulOll E.GltM • JOB PRINTING v. Denn!• WMdW, Clt'11 $UPDOrt, clllld eu1IOCfl', Cllhd '"'-'· II· l -•• to """"' !Mm. •Ith !hi l'tlabl'V •IC Cernl9t1-foil ... flll:M Wactl'lttdn 1111 Metelt It, lf7)
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IV EIHnor Vin SChCIVCk. IOl'M'JIJ' !ft•, totli, Ind IUC'h olhtr rllltl Cllnlet L "'"tV ~rt. 10 t11f uflOtrsl•ntd tt fhl ofllel Ul'h Mr.If NoWfll'llllf, 1'1'.tt the llour 01 STATI! OF CALll'ORNIA ) o~~ty II "'"" be •••nfftl b'I fhll toUrt. o•Rlll~ L ... ,,~. ot lllr 1ltorneY1, E•ITlll' I/Id '"'""""' 2:• O'tlidl ~.M. « "'"" CllV Or •• -I L • PUBLICA TtQNS JIM u.trm111 11.1" wtM " IN • llW1tr llr tf¥l<t &T.-.TE u.LIFOR 1 1441 Wlllhl•• B011leV1td. Sul" fO<I, ...,,,.. •••kl m•tl., un bl lltent 111 ll:tom .tDJ COUNTY OF OltANGE
,,,. tf •• r .... Mlt!IWIY "'lhll ffllttw,.,..., tlllwtd .... 1rem11ry ) $S, Jy !'411~. ClllfOl'tlll «all, wllld't .. 1111 Ill tho °'"'" c-ir A"""1rolltr11lfoll Of! ttlll 1$111 Cl•r OI OClobtf, ••II" • ...,,.,
• NEWSPAPERS ,,..., ... T/'9t, c111t. tnJZ ... ""' '°"' ~""' r..-.-.11 ... ,. _, COUN1''1' OP O!l:ANGE I I lle. ... M rneu of ll'lt ~lllltnltlll'll '"'Ill lul!Clnt, SIS Nori!! 1¥<-. llt""· •• "' mt G. 'nlllft'llt Cot, "1'lOllllly ''°""'"
Tt4. n• -JMomJ Ill f\IH .... 11...... On NOVtmblor f , 1911), befftl"I ""' I l!'lllte" _..lnlnt "' 1119 "''" " Mlcf ,, """'· Clllhll'nll, .. lhf lllWI Ind a•au o. TMINt co:.. ~-lo -f'o '-' ""
Quaifty Prilrlil\9 anc!_ Deptndeble S1rvic•
for rnor• thin • qvarter of • century
PILOT PRINTING
Pul)ltlhtd Or111H Cotti D1l1V 'llol, °'81ed Mey 22. lf79 Not1rv Pvbllc 111 811d for _,.Id Caunf\r Incl ~1. w!tftln four monlhl '"" lhl for 1111 hnrlne ol MM ....,,..., ro.tlher ""'°" Wf\ole n11ne " wto.crlbect 1
0
1111
Hcrvtll'lbll" IO, 17, 2f .,,., Otcenlbtf 1, !SEAL) St.tit, l'tl'50flill!V llOllred C"'"t1r I., fll'llt ""'bll(lflon ot 111!1 notlc.,. •lfll 111 '"'"""' 1<1111 ollecllOllt IF!tttll'I Wlllll~ llltftllmet!l 11 th1 lllO'M~ In lld or
''" totNO W, E, ST JOHN, lltrrY •nil Ruth L. l orry k110wn lo mt to O.lfd OCTOW ''-If JO. Which "'"' bt fli.f lftO 11 wflh:fl 111111 •nd lht C.lllornl111 O!'OUo, t nlf ld~wltdlllfi Cl~!\ be rh• llltlonl Wl'\OM fllll'lfl Ir• IUbstr(~ M•nt•f1"1 lllllll Kllllt Plitt •II --lntofftlld nw.111 fMI' to 1111 IMI ,,. tubtoerl&toll il'lt ,,."", of G JANtCI! M, COLEM-.N, lld IO ll'lt wfthln ll'ltl""""""'• •fld l ••Mtl• IN>ll'I" ll'ld.. ......... Thornoi Cox l!lfr1h1 •1111 prlnt!llll Incl 111i
Dtl111Y •cknowltdeecl to 1!'11 !1111 lhlY ••tc11fed of the wm of 1111e DlfH.; N....,,.., 3, 1S1' ll'MI f!'lme 1s anOl"llf'l' In tict ,..,I A. HIMI the itmt. tboYt """"" dtc:ldtllf, •Y OlitDElit Of TH!; l.OCA1, AG[frlCY tOl'flCIAL SEALI ' Ane ..... r II LI• IOl'FICIAL SEAL! ...... AND •t:DIOSIAN ll'OlitMATION COMMISSIOH OF OlltANCU! MlllCY I, HOllOlt
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·,, ,,,,,,), T't•• Mlrllo• L1w •vllflllf E~lyn M. Clllmbtrl1ln •rt ,,_ I . l"llll(t COUNTY, C-ALl,OlitNlir. Not1ry,PUflllt>Gtllfllmlt
n .,, ••11 UI~ Sll'lll Noll.., 'llbllt . c.111omr1 ..., Wlllllllf't ........... "'"-"'CHAlitO T. TUalNEilt PtfnclPll Ofllct In thr11 •otdt '""" M~ f1cto•• iN Cetta Miu. C1U..,n1t Or•f'rf• C111~1y 11~ """car....... •n EllKUttw orncet o,,,.. ~tr
opirtflo11 0., tho DAILY PllOl Tt!t r71tl MloUtl .. ,_.14, Mv Commruron Eofrtt T"fli 11111 ..,,_,. Ucill AHl'O' I"• rm 111•11 Mv CommlHIDlt Enlr•
'' Atrw"'r t•r htltlllw M•v J. 1m .&."'""' frw bleeft111 C-'1iltorl Mlfcfl 11, lth
FAIR
ml -IALIOA ·--HIWl"OIT Ill.CH -142 . ...Clll ottlifot;11 ,., ...... cl1y. 'llb!!ll'IM Or•11t• c~ DlllY '"""' "1.lblllhH Ot'an• °"" Otl" ..... """'151\ed °''"" CHtf Dal!w "llOI. O! °""" COl/l!tY, Ctlltomll "'-'blt!lllH O•UIVt Co.11 0•11'1' P'llf71 11..:::...:~::~::.•.::::..::•:•:~..;;;,;;;.:::.:..::;:;;...;;;;..;:.;,_, !!::::=============IOCI009r 11 •nd Hov1rnl>rr J,,. 10, 11. N!l\1!nbef II. 11, tc Mii Otc:llll~ 1, Oeloblf 20, 11 IM Hovmbtt ~. 10. l"ubllshtd 0rl"81 (NII D•llY ,11111, Oc'-r 20. 21 Incl ~embtr J 10• 1Jl't U'1•10 lfll 1101•70 1t11 U0.11 Hovmlbtt 10. 191' aon,.10 ltJI ,;".,g
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Tuesday, Novtmbtr 10, l ~70 , DAIL V, PILOT. J J
Total
Discounts
EVERYDAY!
USDA CHOICE e OVEN TENDER .
BONILISS 8 I c
SHOULDIR ' CLOD ROAST . ~
UDSA CHOICE ·
BONE IN
ROUND
STEAK
•
·45:
.aa:
VICK'S MRS. PAUL •·FROZEN • SA.VE 6c ~ . _,,;.. · FORMULA 44 . \fj. ONION ,.oz 53c '" F'!f'f COUGH _, RINGS PACUGI
MIXTURE , SARA LEE . FROZEN• SAVE 7t
'-,;;;;;·••~;;, ~dil BREAKFAST 6. 2'
6-CZ. 1 ss ..,_iUNGS . ~~:.z.
t,i0l.TLE . . . ,.
SAVE40c . , JENOS e FROZEN • 70U.NCE
'
I •,.,.v .. ...
' .
I
'
BOX OF 'O •SAYE J7c
TAMPAX
Regular
' Or Super
149
6 OUNCE BOTTLE • SAVE 30c
VICK'S
1NYQUIL .
,
119
·.
fl, Pizza Snack sac .. Tray sAv111 c
SPRINGFIELD • 20 OZ. PKG.• SAVE 6c fj FROZEN: ::i~:o• CORN
.·. , VEGETABLES 29c
USDA ,,, SIW ., nlltl
c•o1c1 USN aaa • ~
FAD • EXTRA lEAN
SLICED
BACON
l·l8
PACKAGE
USDA CHOICE e TAILS REMOVED
T·Bone or Club
STIAKS 137,b.
FARMER JOHN QUAUTY e FAMILY PACK
SLICED PORK 79 c LOIN CHOPS lb .
USDA CHOICE •LEAN & MEATY
SHORT RIBS
of BEEF 49,i.
FARMER JOHN • 8 OZ. PKG e SICINLESS
PORK LINK 29C
SAUSAGE
USDA CHOICE • GOURMET'S FAVORITE
EYEO'ROUND
ROAST
.FARMER JOHN QUAUTY
PICNIC STYLE
PORK ROAST
FRESH
FILLET of
SOLE
FRESH • WHOLE
LEG OF
PORK
FRESH FROZEN • USDA Gli!ADE A
NOR BEST
Hen Turkeys .
~with pop-oul gauge)
1491b.
471t .
PRICES EFFECTIVE WED., THRU ITUES .. ..Ail 120UNCECAN•. SAYE9c 56c '
NOVEMBER 11through17 '1llJ SPAM LUMCH1o•MUT
STORE HOURS: Daily 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. "'. Goto MEDAL • . . •••H • <ING srzE • 1.ts. PKG.59
SAT .. & SUN:, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. • . FLOUR SAVI J 0 11. J 08 ,;Sal WIENERS s•v11« -C VETERAN'S DAY -WED .. NOV. 11 TS< 10 'illlJ'. .
10 a m to 7 pm ::.fliil --o·z--p CKAGE ~Cc -MANHATTAN . __ .. _ . . • B~CUIT MIX s~~I Uc . tfl slk~;r9~;;gna:::.r.55c:
fl oo6A~oo'DGi!:.zi •• 81 c rflJ C:'liEscENruRcoLLs 36c
lie ·•INSTANT MILK '
-,;.'Ail KNUDSEN • •B OUNCE
WI" ORANGE JUICE
~BIRDSEYE • FROZEN • 9-0Z, 55c • COOL WHIP SAVl6< .
. FAD • I 1/2 lB. lOAF
··GlANT BREAD 35c .:.flii't . KRA FT MINIATURE 16 OZ, PKG.29( ._..Marshmallows uvi ,,
P1LLSBURY e 18 OUNCE PACKAGE • 8 VARIETIES
•CAKI MIX SAVE
6c
AURORA • ASSORTED COLORS·& WHITE ' 2 ROLL PAC K •SAVE le
"IOILIT TISSUI
COMET • 211/20UN(EGIANT SIZE·• SAYl3c
_l_EllSl.R ~
!
•
, .
•
•
1% DAll.Y I'll.OT ~
FAMILY CIRCVS
•
•11 Bl&Keette
"Thel, h<>li many children's aspirin do I take lo
make two adult ones?•
Ripper Mystery
.Duke Cleared by Author
··LONDON (UPI) -The doc-
Urr, whose magazine article
tbtlcbed off speculation that
Jack the Ripper was the Duke
of Clarence, said today he in-
tended no such implication.
"'I have at no time
a"sSociated his royal b.igbness.
the late Duke of Oarence,
with the Wbitecharel.
murderer or suggested that
the murderer was of roral
blood." Dr. '11lomas E. A.
Stowell, 88, said in a letter to
the Times.
•'Stowell, an eminent author
and physician, wrote in the
oi'iminologist magazine that
Jack the Ripper was a yowig
man of noble blood and heir to
~title. He refused to name his
Suspect, saying be had too
much affection for t b e
saspect's family.
stowell said be had been col-
lecting evidence on the subject
-of-the~19tlrcfntur'yS!r1Uller
fi>r so years.
: ·The Sunday Times said last
.eek the evidence in Stowell's
article pointed to Albert Vlc--
tJ>r. the Duke of Clarence,
grandson cf Queen Victoria
.,.
and the present queen's great·
uncle. Stowell neither disputed
nor confinned this theory in a
television interview the follow-
ing day.
Buekingham Palace sources
produced newspaper clippings
and court circulars showing
the Duke was out of London
when two of the Ripper's pro-
s t it u f e vict i ms were
murdered. Stowell said in his
lttter to the Times that this
evideoce did not conflict with
lUs \'iews as to the identity of
tbe Ripper.
Jd tbe rupper terrorized
Victorian Loodon in 1888,
murdering prostnutes with a
knife and mutilating their
bodies. M many as 16
murders were attributed to
the Ripper, but police say only
seven were confirmed as
definitely ltls -·· Ooe theory said the Ripper
WIS__!_~y~opath _ _wboJlated
prostltutea, possibly because
of a bad experience with one.
Another said because of the
skilled way he cut up his vic-
tims be might have been a
mad medical student o r
surgeon.
Brink of Dlstaster
•.·
..
Family Fear: A Cry
Would K·ill Babies
··LEXINGTON, N.C. (AP) -that killed their year-old
The Mahlon Adams family has brother in 1989. It upsets the
lived in the shadow of personal chemical body process tb~t
and-fman·c1a1 di Sasrerfor-enibtes tlie nerves -to transmit
months because vf a rare impulses to the brain.
disease afflicting their twin The disease can affect any
daughters that could cause the skeletal muscle and make
death of the infants if they arms and legs weak. swallow-
cry. ing and speaking difficult and
· Now, partly because "~pl~ breathing labored. Doctors
are so thoughtful and ruce, who have treated the children
things are looking up. say excitement such a s
'.J'he eight-month-old girls. crying, could set ~ff a fatal al·
Sally and Betsy, are somewhat tack af choking and gasping.
improved from the disease. So that someone could be
, And from around the world with the babies at all times, peopl~ have sent the Adamses Mr. and Mrs. Adams, who also
donations to pay tho.usan~s of have a s.year-old daughter,
d.onars woi:"f.h of medical bills. moved in with Mrs. Adams'
: .1'he t.wms s~ffer f. r Cl m parents several months ago
i:i:iyasterua grav1s, a disease when the infants were releas-
New Type
Lifeboat
';Evaluated .
'NEW YORK (AP) -The
·Coast Guard is 1valu1Ung the
.~rformanct of a specially
~signed. lt·foot glass fiber
sphere as a possible successor
to the vpen lifeboat on U.S.
inerchant vessels.
' Known as the Brucker
stiryival capsule, the globe·
shaped hull provides enclosed
shelter for 28 persons. It is
a1ready in use at some fixed
qffhore structures such as oil
\
drilling platforms.
· A test capsuJe was loaded
1board the Coast Guard cutter <1 'Evergreen last September and
Js currenily being displayed to
the aervice's m a r i n e in-
spection personnel at Atlantic
doast iostall1Uons.
•• WaleJ1iChl hatdles on the
p-aft seal the c1btn from the
~ and prevent the occupants
lrOm lllfferlol.i-_elQ!OSUf•
:.. a prtneipal hazard with con·
VentiOnal lifeboat!. •
ed from a Winston.Salem
hospital.
Tht f.andparenLs, Mr. and
Mrt. A am1 and her hu1band,
1 11bor1tory techni<:lan, take
tum watching the infants day
and nltht to keep thtm happy
so &hey won 't cry.
Lately, the twins have had
fewer of the frightening chok-
inl ap11m1 that Hod Ute
1dult1 hurrying for 01y11n
tankl and medication.
And 1lnce the plia;ht of the
family became known, dona·
tions to them have poured in
from around the world. Neai:ly
$10,000 worth of bills for doc-
tor.!!' care and medical sup·
plies have been paid off and
$25,000 in surplus donations
was placed in a trust fund for
Sally and Besty. The bill for
inonths of care at Winston·
Salem's Baptist Hospital was
paid by an insurance company
and the hospital's Mothers
Day Fund.
some of the mai1 donations
came to the Lexington post of-
rice addressed simply to
"crying babies. 11 One envelope
malled to Lexington bore, in-
stead of an addms, a picture
or the twins that bad been
clipped from a newspaper and
pasted on.
STORE FOR MEN
VELOUR SHIRTS
8.99 18.00 value
Plush olt-c_otton shirts wl!h mock turt!e
necklines, long .sleeveJ. Wolhoble. Bl1Je,
green, beige or wine.
KNIT SHIRTS
6.99 '""· 12.00-14.00
Collor and p!ocket models with short
.sleeves.. All of washable Orlon® acrylic
in fall colors; S..M-L-XL
IMPORTED SWEATERS
1 /3 off reg. 35.0Q..46.00
Famous moke lla!ion ombre and fancy
knit .sv.:eo!ers of lOOo/o wool. long aleeve
styling. Great Christmas gift1 ~M-l-XL
TWO-PANT SUITS
99 .00 '""· 135.00
Body-shaped two and thre.button model
suits with longer iockets. A travel-weight
selection of fabrics.
SPORTcpAT
66.00 "9· 85.00
Newest model of this season ••• wide
!apsl:r. body-shaping, deep pocket flaps
ond a .center vent. linen, wool and sl!Jc.
Wool dress slacks, lob waist-band, quer-
ier top pocket, five colors. r~. 35.0017.50
Men's pajamas, coot style, many pattems,
A-!\-t-D, "9· 6.00.7.00 4.69, 2/9.00
Men's dress shirts, disco ntinued styles
from regular stock. AU wosh and wear
· ond permanenlly pressed. Many collar
styles, reg. 6.00 and 7.00 -••••.•. 3.99
Fine neckwear, silks, po!yes!ers,
"9· 5.00-6.00 •••••••••. 3.89, 2/7.50
Orlon acrylic stretch crew hose ••• 3/3.50
lealh"er wallets, po$S w ses ond slim bill-
folds, coif or morocco, valuos from .6.50-
7..50 •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 3.99
VARSITY SHOP
Rare leg :slacks in permanently pressed
Dacron polyester and Avril ·rayon. Wide
belt loops; Western pockets; 30-38, r&g.
11.00 •••••..•••••••.••.•..• 8.99
Sport shirrs wi!h lon9-pointed co!lar.s and
3.button barrel cuffs. Permo nenlly
preued Dacron® polyester and c::onon-
blends in good.looking .stripes, florals,
dots, reg. 13.00 ••••••••• , , •.• S.99
Cotton knit shirts with mock crew nack-
lines, short .sleeves, pockets. Solids and
stripes; ML-l'fJ., reg. 5.00 ••••••• 3,99
STORE 1".JR BOYS
LONG-SLEEVED
SPORT SHIRTS
3.99 reg. 5.50-6.50
Boys' sport shirts in o non-iron cotton
polyester blend; sizes 8-20.
LITILE SHAVER SHOP
Famous make flare pants In stripes. All
perma~iint preu polyester and colton
>¥ith lop pocktts, J,.7. val. 4.50.S.OO 3.69
Sulls ond sport cool• f~om our regular
stocks for holldoy drm ups.. Polyester-
wOol; +.7, reg. 14.00..18.00 ••••• ,. 9.99,
Fomou1 mak.•r flare pants In auorted
stripes on p1rmanent pri-M polyester-col·
ton, Top pocktl•, belt loops. Machine
waahable, dryoble. 8.00 volue •• , 4.69
SPOllTSMAN'S SHOP
long Beoth, Santa Ana, ftomona, la Habra
Sleeping bog with nylon outer shell and
inner lining plus 1hree pounds of polyes-
ter insulation fiUing, reg. 22.95 • 14.99
Mustang tennis rocket by Wilson is of
hardwood constrvctiol\o nylon strung, reg.
22.95 ...................... 11.99
Blin~tablampe floshlight fine European
design, tricolor type, reg. 4.00 •• 1.9Q
STATIONERY
•
Mogna Teoser, on exciting game, reg.
10.00 .••....••••.•••••••••••.. 4.99
Photo Album for insiamotlc; photos. reg.
10.00 •.•.••• ; ................... 2.99
INFANTS
Downlown L6ng Beach, Sol'lla Ana,
Pomoncf, la Habra, Son Diego "
"TOLUCA" CRIB
AND CHEST ENSEMBLE
Rkh ook. fl nllh and lrodilional Sponbh
styling enhonce this Chilckroft eniemble.
Standard size 6 year crib, reg. 110.00
......•.•..• ' ...•.•..•.•.••••• 19.99
.¢.drawer cheil, rS9• 130.00, •• 109.99
Double dre1s1r1 r-o. 16..5.00 • , • 119.tt
CMHo•obo, "9: 14J.~ ...... 1 lf,tf
-•
BAG
A
BUNCH
S·HOP AND SAVE
,--WED. THROUGH .SATURDAY
·pRE~THANKSGl-VING CLEARANCE
ALL-WOOL
CARDIGAN
12.99
.A 20.00 wluet Durable
link-slitche d sweoler. hos
do1Jblo-knit c1Jff and wot•
bond. Royal blue, powdw
blue, opp!&,. blotk. came-
red or gold, tizes s.M-1.·XL.
Men's Spomwcan
SEA CREST IY
ONEIDA Sil VERSMITHS
25% off
fourteen different toble oo-
cessor1ej In .~lverplote" en-
hanced wfth graceful ci.irves.
Beverage ·pitcher, roll troy,
"egetoble dish, trays, fro m
15.95 to 29.95.
Silver
BOYS' NYLON
JACKETS
12.99
'An 18.00 value! Fomovs
make lackat of wal.,...,..
pellent 100o/o nylon hos
worm quilted hood that
folds under collar. Manr
colors.
Sfwe for lloYt
TRADE..:IN
YOUR OLDlTROLLER AND HI.CHAIRS
SAVE ON PURCHASE OF ~IW .MODIL
Strollert, "9• 27.D0-31.00,
w!th .. cl.ln ................... ' 21.00-32.00
HI Ch1lrt, "f. lf.01).27.00,
with trad..&n ••• , •• , •••••• , ••• , • , 14.00-22.00
T11cit advontao• of this oppertun!Jy to aow·on tht pu11o
<ho~ol.cny lltW &troll" ot l!I d!!ilt.~ ,_ "'"'
tn that old stroller or ht chotr oMI t;Od. It fn on 9'9
rtgulor price of a new model. An troCIMM dO'Mted
to the Good Will.
lrifanl•' Shop. Oowntowrl ~,. leach. $1 nfo Ano.
llomono. lei Hobto. So" 01'1•
SILVERWARE
Sllvtrpla!ed coueroles with (:OWl'I. Round,
eblong, 1\).2·3 quart.,. 17.00-25.00
Ch1ntllly fl~re by Gorham 25% off
Htfrloom sterling, 15 poltern:r. 25% off
IMtrnotlonal sterling flatwa re, oll place
Mttlng pieces in all .potterns, tav• 3.00
ea'ch piece setting. '
lnt.rnational Sterling seMng pieces, good
select1on ...................... 25% off
LUGGAGE
Downtown long Beoch. Santo Ano,
Pomona, la Hobr~, Scsn Diego
SAVE ON SAMSONITE
SATURN TOTES
13.95-14.95 ''9· 17.97-19.95
Wolkowoy b.iys on lightwelghi carr"folls
11'1 choice of stylesi "Floro\" in blue, white,
1mn, "Tweed" In while or green;
"Town" solid color In while, red, blue,
black, green.
fltwtred canvas C0'81, ideal overnight
tt1lttosu '" two ottractive floral ponerti ..
foahion color'I. Zipper dOlfngs. 16" to 21",
''"' 6.00.8,00 ••• ·' ....... 2.99-4.~9
BEDDING
OownlOWfl long Baach, Santo Ano,
Pomona, Palos Verdes, lei Habra',
Son Diego
NO-IRON PRINTED SHEETS
FROM FELICITY
Slrghtly lrrt011lar printed sheets in no-iron
50% coHon/60% polyastor blend. Priced
much higher if perfect.
J,2"x36", if perf. 4.60 pr.•••••• 2.70 pr.
-42"Jt36 .. , If perf. 5,40 pr.••••. 2.90 pr.
Twll'la. lf ,..rf. 6.50 •• ••••• •••• 4.00 ea.
!'viii, If pwf. 7.60 .•••••••••••• 4.70 •••
QuHMro ff pwf • .10.00 •••• , ••• 5.40 ea.
Kings, if perf, 13.00 •••••••••• 7.40 ea.
luxurious extra-plump dawn pillows, .20"x
26" size, down-proot str iped ticking,
special purchase •• , ••••••••••••• 8.99
HOUSEWARES
all stores except Morino,
Lakewood, N\!WF)ort
Robeson "Flamo-Edge" ct1tlery set, reg.
12.95 •••••••••••••••••••••• 7.99
.Stainless serving pieces. reg. 5.Q0..12.95
..•. : ..•......••..•.•.••.•• 2.88-8.88
Souffle set has 8" French solid copper
bowl, 2-qt. dish, whisk., reQi. 29.9519.88
Corning electromatic percolator, reg.
29.,95 ••••••••••••••..••.•• 24.88
Corning Sd ucepan set in gift carton. t-qt ..
1 'h, 1 .;r-, qt. covered pans. Harvest, reg.
00.00 ••••.•..••.•••••••••• 14.88
Mognalile roaster with vapor .seal cover.
Holds a 15-lb. turkey easilV, reg. 25.00
•..•..••.••.••••...••.•••.•..• 19.99
W~den serving accessories: salad bowls,
wrvl1\9 Merllll" reg. 2.75-19.95, 25% off.
GIFTWARES
COOKWARE GIFTS
~ off
Reg, 5.00.30.00. A beautiful selection for
your Holiday entertaining or for haste»
gifts. Choose bl.lnnel warmers (buen!lull'I),
servers. fondue:r. casseroles, chafing dish-
es and a large group of Sfainlos.s steel
cookware.
I'• bucktts, reg. 14.00 ••••••.• 1.99
CHINA AND GLASS
CINTURA DINNERWARE
place setting I.II .... 10.ao
St! •• oleg°'" ~ollday tolilo with 1ioc ..
'tlful C.ntvro dlnnel'WQrt In white coupe
or narrow rim .>pc. place ~ng. """°... -he •·add a !un>poon Much to ef!W.df11111f' coffM. 17..pc:. demi
.. .... black ot whit"' .... 25.00-30.DD
••••••••••••••••••••••• 20.00..25.00 °""'91 punch Mt lntPorted froM Pom.gol,
tnclvd .. a qt. bewt, 12 cup• plus lodla.
........ OQ ...................... 17.99 --Load-"'""' •111.,10..-l/S1rlf2 ell
Famous "°""' dl!W19'WDP<tih, p!Oce •et·
tings. optnttock ••••• SOYI' 20% lo so%'
Castleton 1CUlpturol gloSIW'Clre,
reg. 2.00 • ' •••••••••••••••• 4/4. 99
Nerftoke chino ploce settings. dinner,
ICllod. bread and bi.mer, CJP and aoucer.
Chokt of 4 lwiy pcHetn•"9· 9.9S 6.99
Newport .#.I Fashion Island Newport Center • 644·2200 • Mon., Thurs., Fri. I 0:00 'Iii 9: 30 Other Days ' 10:00 'til 5:30
-------------------~--------
DESIGNER S·ALON
Eu ropean and domestic knits
46.00-99.00 odg, 70.00-150.00
~JI wool or all Dacron® polyesler knit, mTsses' tw& cmci
lhree-piece suits.
BOUTIQUE SPORTSWEAR
IMPORTED WOOL KNITS
40.00-57.00 odg. 60.00-85.00
Pontsuits, dresses in the ne;o1. longe r lengths tn imported
wool knit, Beoutif!.llly tailored fashions, now red uced for
the very first time. Sove 1 /3rd.
LIGHTWEIGHT FALL COATS
1/3 off ·
Select group of light -wool coots in the new long•r
length; orig. 100.00-140.00, 67.00·93.00.
FUR SALON
NATURAL MINK BOAS
22.00
An elegant look with ofter.five fa1hlons. Fine quality
mink. origianlly 29.00.
NATURAL BLUE FOX CAPES
177.00 "9· 199.00
Capes styled with three plump rows of luxurious fox •..
exciting 'over special evening dresses, -
SUNCHARM SPORTSWEAR
FAMOUS MAKE SEPARATES
9.99-14.99 rog. 17.00-28.00
Pants, machine washable polyesler doubl• lcnit. Streight
leg or modified flore. Pont tops, reg, 15.00.23.00 in
drip-dry cottons, acetates, blends; bock-zip or cardigan
style. Don't miss this value.
FAMOUS MAKE SPORTSWEAR
10.99-29.99 "'· 17.00-46.00
ChoiCe of pants, shirts, sweaters, skirb end lop$ In your
fovorile sportive fobrics and colors.
famous make cable knit sweaters. lon11 and s?rort,
with mctching skirts in regular o r the naw longer length,
reg(l!or 16.00.17.00 ., •• , •••• ,, ••••••• eoch 9.99.
DRESS SHOP
MISSES' BEITER DRESSES
17.99-23.99 rog. 30.00-66.00
Woit until ycu see oUr cOllec\ion of misses' bettel' dres>
es induding young designer fo;hlons In l·pc. dresses.
suits and costumes end pantsuits. Foll colors from your
fa vori!e makers: 6-l 6, 8-18.
WOMEN 'S SHOP
HALF SIZE FASHIONS
17. 99-39. 99 value• 36.00-60.00
.A selection of suits, dresses, end costumes In Fen ailen
ond in exciting prin!s. Y9u1l fin d thess fosh!Ot11 cire
perfect for the holidoysl Sizes 121h to 22V2.
FOUNDATIONS
OLGA SOFT-CUP BRA
3.99 -.
This bro odiusts to minus, aven:ige er full tigure, 6 and ·
C cup. Perfect comfor!l
Suddenly Slim Secret Touch Olgo {'Onfy girdle hos
reinforced panels. Controls. White; S-M-Lr-XL. Perfect
with new foshion~ special ••••••••• , • , , ••• , 9.99
Youthcraft Contour bandeau bra b_po!yester fi.
berlill lined nylon lricol cups. reg. 5.00 • , ••••• 2.99
LINGERIE
SCHRANK SLEEPWEAR
4.99 reg. 7.00 and e.oo
Shor! and long gowns in luxurious, soft.brushed Cud.
dlesuede nylon a nd oce!ote ore frosh!ld wilh embrcl-
d ery and ribbon. Poste!s. some prints; S.M·l.
Stiift gowns from a famous maker In sheer .nylon
over opaqu& nylon tricot. lac& and embroidery tdms1
sizes S-M-l., reg. 7.00-8.00 • , •••••••••••••• 3.99
OLGA PANTY SALE
BUY 3 AND SAVE
first time everl Olga Sc:oop panties of Anrto11® 11ylon
--,rkot or e Oii iliopia WiinTcilUl'iiJ_'5aa_ IHCfiOWCY
-seom-:-lNshed nylon crctc:h. Ela!.tlc leg and W.ist.
Brief, white or plnk;.: +7, NQ-2.00 • • • •• ' •. 3/5.10
Bikini, while, pink, +7, reg. 2.CIO ••••••• , •• 3/5.10
fiatf pcint, whit., nude, +7 reg. 2.75 •••• •• • 316.90.
loc.e trin1med liriet, whtte. hlue; lt-7, "'Do 2..50 3/6,35
BRONSON JUNIOR
SpORTSWEAR
Vest
Pont
Skirt
Blouse
10.99
9.99
7.99
7.99
Reg. 13.00 to 20.00 acrylic
seporotes In black/white tweed
or hrDwn/repti!e tweed, ~15..
BIOV5115 by Stuffed Shirt lrt
whho. gold, broWll °' black I<>
cootdinate.
Young Califomla Shop
HOLIDAY
PANTSUITS
IN POLYESTER KNIT
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DAILY PILOT JI
Teacher, t'
69, Sues
Fordham
NEW YORK (AP) -Pall}
Weiss, ene of lhe natlon•1 *'
I<-. philosophy teachers, Lt\·
tulng Fordham University for :.
tt-mJllfoo, charging he Was :~
denied a prestigious post ;I
because he was considered too :'
old. He is 89. .
He charged In U.S. Distric~·
Court that Fordham offe~
hi m the $100,000-a·year Albdt'
Schweitt« chair, which ~IS'
underwfitten by the state, last
September. Then, the ap-
peintment, which weuld have
begun next year, w a s
withdrawn after state educa·
tion officials allegedly advised
Fordham that money for the
chair would not be granted lf a
man of Weiss' age were tt OC·
cupy it.
Weiss, tbe retired Sterling
professor ef philosepby •~
Yale UrUversity, is n • 1':
teaching at Catholic Unive~·
ty of American in Washington,
D.C .
Weiss pointed out in the suit
that the chair is named for the
famous physician, "many of
whose achievements C81nfl.
after he was older than QM;.
plaintiff,'' Schweitzer died ~
1965 at the age of 90. _
Named as defendants were ·
state Commissioner of Educa-
tion Edwald B. Nyquist 8-lJ~ ·
three Fordham officials-t~.
Rev. Michael Walsh, pre~i·.
dent ; Paul J. Reiss, vis:ft .
president, and the Rev. Reber.I;
Roth, chairman of the;
philosophy department.
In September, the suit saidi'
Reiss notified Weiss that the
nom ination would .nofbe pre*·
ed because Forham feared it.
might lose the chair. •;
"I am not sure whether,·
legally this constitutes
discrimination on the basis of·
age," Reiss wrote in a lette.i:.
"At present, however, it is the
context within which we must
eperate."
The suit charged t h a t ·
Fordham's action wac·
discriminatory and violated
federal and state law as well·
as constitutional rights. . ~·
The son o( an immigral;'t
tinsmith, Weiss attended Cit~·
College and received his Ph.D.
at Harvard in 1929. He taught
at Bryn Mawr College for $5
years. In 1946 he went to Yaf'e
and retired in 1 9 6 9 af·
ter . reaching the mandatory
retirement age
After hearing of the rejection
by Fordham, he went tB
Catholic University, where he
is Heffer professor o f
philosophy. Weiss is the author
of more than a dozen books.
among them ''Modes • f
Being." · ·
He has l ectu red et
uni versities all over the worlcl"
and appeared on several
television programs. · .-
In the sui t, his health wn"
described as "excelle nt." If'
said.
"Plaintiff walks eight milt!S
a day, swims and does'
calisthenics. His mental con·
ditlon is also, beyond question,
excellent." '
A spokesman for Fordhal'J\
said Wedneday that Weis!
would be past Fordham:s
mandatory retirement age 70
before he would have joined
the faculty. The spokesman
said Fordham is considering
othe r names to submit to the
state Education Department
for the · post. ·
Scout Post
Slate Named
Officers of the new Explorer'
Scout Post 294 at Edison Hi8:ti
School in Huntington BeaCli
have been elected . ·, •
Dan Winchell , 15, ef 9752 tit
Cresta C i r c I e , Huntington:
Beach, will be president fat
the post's first year, and Dart
Simpson, 16, ef 10161 SunlaD.
Circle will be vice president:
Charles Grant, 15, ef 9032 Be~
bi Circle will be secretaij.::
treasurer.
Richard Hutchinson, ~t ·
adviser, said the general in;· .
terest group meets lhe fir!tt
and third Tuesdays eacll;
month at 7:30 p.m. New meat:-
bers are being !ought, he saldi
,..
I
)'
-L
T<!Hday, N°""'btt 10, 1970
COLTS' NORM BULAICH DRAGS RAY NITSCHKE .
:!
~· Sports in Brief
Cage Boycott Ends;
Bunce Gets $625 Fine
DETROIT (AP) -Several University
of Detroit students. with visions of
becoming college basketball players.
responded Monday to coach J i m
. Harding's general call for volunteers.
However, their services were not need-
fJd since boycotting varsity and freshmen
te9m members returned lo practict after
a week's absence. The decision to return
fr>llowed a 3 p.m. meeting with Harding
and his assistants.
• ' l.JVERSIDE -Seven-foot L a r r y
Bdhce. former center in the American
Basketball Association. has been fined
S625 and placed on five years probation
for-two cases of attempted extortion.
Bunce, 25, of Riverside, was sentenced
Monday. He was arrested last August and
admitted sending threatening letters to a
bank and a physician.
He quit the Carolina C.Ougars before the
1969-70 season when he said he did nol
feel like playing basketball.
Bunce starred at Riverside City College
and Utah State before turning pro-
feS!lional. He played with four ABA clubs,
including the Cougars and the former
Anaheim Amigos.
•
OSAKA. Japan Kathy Harter.
former Marina High School student and a
Seal Beach resident, teamed with Eva
Lundquis1. of Sweden to capture the
women's doubles title by defeating
Japan's Kimiyo Hatanaka and Chikako
Murakami 6-3, 6-3.
Miss Harter will play Ka z u k o
Sawamatsu in the women's singles finals
Wednesday.
•
NEW YORK -Ken Rosewall suc-
ceeded his Corona del Ma r rival . Rod
Laver, Monda}' as Tennis Player of the
Year.
The 36-year-old veteran was voled No. 1
Notre Dame
Voted No. 1
By Associated Press
Notre Dame coirtpJeted ils rise to the
top of The Associated Press college foot·
ball poll today, edging past Texas' defe n-
ding national champions who in turn
ousted Ohio State three weeks ago.
Thanks to a 46-14 rout of Pittsburgh
while Texas was having its troubles
beating lowly Baylor . 21-14. the Fighting
lri.sh pulled do1vn 23 of 46 first-place
votes cast by sporL'I writers and broad·
casters across the country and 822 poinL'!.
Texas received 13 first-place votes and
'713 points. Ohio State, Nebraska and
Mlchlgan held onto the 3--W spoUli with
711 6311 and &07 points. respectively. Each ~ived thrff first.place votes. with the
~1ining one going to I Ith-ranked
Arizona St.ate.
"Jf1 all Jot ThelsmaM's (1ul1 ," grin·
in a world-wide poll of tennis writers.
Rosewall· won by a margin of eight
points. 97 to a_g, over Laver.
•
BUFFALO, N.Y. -0. J. Simpson is
out of the hospital. but the chances the
star halfback will see action this week
are "very doubtful:' coach John Rauch
of the Buffalo Bills. says.
Simpson v•as discharged from Buffalo
Genera l Hospital Monday after overnight
examination of the left knee sprain he
suffered in last Sunday's National Foot-
ball League game against the Cincinnali
Bengals.
"Fortunately, the diagnosis was that it
isn't a serious injury." Rauch reported.
•
PARjS -Seeded players Ken Rosewall
of Australia , Arthur Ashe of Richmond,
Va. and Andres Gimeno of Spain and
unseeded Clark Graebner of New York
emerged Monday as first-round ,victors in
the Paris Open tennis tournament.
Rosewall. seeded No. 2. steamrolled 21·
year-old Patrick Proisy of France 6-1 6-2,
but U.S. Davis Cup star Ashe, seeded No.
3, had to fight through two sudden death
tie-breaks to overcome Owen Davidson of
Australia 7-6, 3-6, 7-ti.
Sixth-seeded Gimeno fought back from
a tie-break loss in the second set to win 6-
1, 6-7, S-0 over Nicola Spear of
Yugoslavia. and Graebner o u s I e d
France·s•No. 1 player Francois Jauflret
7-6, 3-6, 6-4.
Kids' Motives
Good, Methods
Bad-Brundage
f'EW YORK IAP) -Avery Brundage
chided the world's militant youth Monday
for adopting the ideals of the Olympic
Games and then using the wrong means
to achieve them .
"What the kids are demonstrating for
today are the very things the Olympic
movement has been fostering for SO
years," said the ~year-old president of
the International Olympic Committee.
''Their motives may be good but their
methods are bad.
"They say they want peaL-c. Peace has
been the cornerstone of the Olympics
since they were started. They say .they
want equality of races and op-
portunities. They want to rectify in·
justices and uproot the establishmenL
"The Olympics have the same goals -
big and small tOUntries. peo~ cf dif-
ferent ra~s. colors and creeds striving
together. No distinctions. The emphasis
en the individual and not the-nation.
~~ Ata Parseghlan when told th_at ~oa:c.....
1>1mrw1 No.~1::-'l'htlsm1nn, N0 1
qu.Jrt.trbacfl:, became tht school's all-time
total offenM. ludtr Saturday.
"But the rebelling kids want lo burn.
loot and destroy to-garn-uietr alm!i:-The
Olympics do ll through sports. I am rtot
dlsccuraged. I think youngsters will
realize thls and come around to the
Olympic Ideal."
Notrt Dale bna't betn No. 1 in the
lin&I poll -•••
'""' ..... ~. II. Arlr $t !II 1'4 :11)4
It, M ltllHlpjil ... lt1
1), Air l'ort• l·I 1• 1•. kfl DJe,.o ~I. ... 1f
lJ, Dirt"*"" ''fl d 1•. T•ltdi' M »
11 UClA J.J '' 11. UK • J.lol JO
If. Or...,. •·1 .. •• I(.,._ $!, •·J "
Bruncla1e~ JOC president ·for lbe Jast H
years who insists this will be his list
tum of office, wu a guest •l Olympic
•louse It which IS lllhographs 3nd
poSters were unvefloo In commemoration
of the 20th Olympic Games at Munich in
197'1.
High School Play Sinks Pa~k ·
MILWAUKEE (AP ) -Two new
wrinkles set the tone-as the Baltimore
Colts continued their charge loward a
playoff berth A1onday night by downin g
the Green Bay Packers, 13-10, in the Na·
tional Football League game.
One cf those .. new wrinkles" was
unveiled on Ute very first play of the
same when running back Sam llavr\Jak,
a former Bucknell quarterback, took the
ball on an apparent reverse and lhrew to
wide receiver Roy Jefferson.
"It was one of those high school plays."
Baltimore coach Don A1cCafferty said.
"\Ve have been using reverses all season,
but that's the first time we have thrown
off of it."
Then there was Jerry Hill 's 15--yard
scamper around right end for the Colts'
only touchdown of the game.
Quarterback John Unit.as faked to
Ha vrilak on a plunge through the center
of the line , then pitched out to Hin. who
turned the left end with nothing but a
host of Baltimore jerseys out in front of
him.
"Thal was a great call by John,"
McCafferty said. "That's the first time
we used it this year. You have to come
up with new wrinkles now and then to
keep everybody honest."
Although the score was close. the game
wasn't. Green Bay took an early 3-0 lead,
then watched Baltimore explode to a 13-3
advantage before lhe Packers scored
their final points with less than t'A'O
minutes remaining in the game.
Havrilak's pass on the first play, v;hich
was good for S4 yards, was the only real
long gainer of the day as iritermiltent
rain forced both teams to play more con--
servatively than they wanted to.
"We thought we could suck defensive
back Ken Ellis up and it would go for a
touchdown,'' McCafferty said of the
game-Opening surprise. "But Ellis stayed
with Jefferson."
It was only the second pass Havrilak
has thrown as a pro, he admitted.
"Last year, in a rookie game, I threw a
halfback option pass," he said.
'I've Be..en Clieered, Booed'
Blanda Stays ~~nchalant
OAKLAND (AP ) -George Blanda ad-
mitted his age, whi ch is 43, brieOy last
September.
"My age is against me. A team has to
look for youn~r players," he said after
the Oakland Raiders put him on the taxi
squad.
But Sunday afternoon , after throwin g a
touchdo.,..·n pass and then kicking a field
goal in the closing seconds to beat the
Cleveland Browns 23·20, he said , "I think
it's good to have a little experience
around."
His teammates are ge tting th e
message.
"The guy almost embarrasses yo u."
center Jim Otto, just 32. said after Blan·
da 's Sunday performance.
"He 's out there. 43 years old. running
the wind sprinls with us, yelling all the
time, coming in lo pull it out for us," Ot-
to said.
Blanda pulled out Sunday's victory with
1 14-yard touchdown pass to Warren
Wells. kicked the extra point, tying the
score with 1:32 to play, and then a 52-
}'ard. field goal with three seconds left.
A week earlier, his 48-yard field goal
with three seconds to go tied Kansas City
17·17. Two weeks earlier, his three
touchdown passes led the Raider s to a 31-
14 win over the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Blanda has proven beyond a doubt he
still can throw, but he said Sunda y, "My
ki cking has kept me going for 21 years."
He started kicking field goals pro-
fessiona lly in 1949, with the Chicago
Bears, v.·hen he was a third string
quarterback behind J ohnny Lujack and
Sid Luckm an.
His kicking ha s improved with age. But
Rebels May Get
Manning Back
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -Whal at
first-appeared to be the end of Archie
Manning's college football career may be
only a temporary setback. The super
qu.arterback ma y return to action within
10 days.
That was the word from doctors follow-
ing lll'O ·hours of surgery Monday on the
Mississippi standout's le ft arm, broken
below the elbow Saturday.
The surgery here consisted of im·
planting a stainless steel compression
plate in Manning's arm . It is a technique
developed in Switzerland.
The doctors had said earlier the star
would be irJ a cast for thfee months. That
would have meant the end of action for
r-.1anning this season.
Blanda has an explanation of his bad
years with the Bears.
"George Halas (the owner and coach)
wouldn 't even buy me a kicking toe and
they only let me practice field goals two
or three minutes a day," he ·said after
booting his 25lst three-pointer Sunda y.
Blanda , who never got along well with
Halas, "retired" from football in 1959 on-
ly to show up with the Houston Oilers
when the American Football League was
formed in 19f>O.
He had 11 points Sunday, increasing his
all-time point record to 1,534.
Blanda has taken over for starting
quarterback Daryle Lamonica twice in
the past three games after Lamonica suf·
fered minor injuries.
Ken Stabler, a young quarterback from
Alabama. is stuck in the No. 3 slot and
must know bow Blanda felt in 1949.
"Sometimes J feel sorry for Kenny
because he doesn 't get to play more,"
Blanda says.
"But maybe it's better for him that he
doesn 't have to go in there in some of
lhese situations."
After 21 seasons, Blanda said "There's
no use getting ner vous."
"I've been cheered. I've been booed.
T've made field goals and I've missed
them. I've had every experience you can
imagine. That's why I can remain
nonchalant.''
Ul"I TtltPMlt
AFTER TUMULT AND SHOUTING , NEW OR LEANS KICKER TOM DEMPSEY RELAXES.
Saints' Star Kicked Four Field Goals Against Detroit, On• Going 63 Yards in a 19-17 Win.
Dempsey Ba~k to Reality
Saints' Kicking Ace Relives Big Mornent
NE\V ORLEA NS (AP) -Rcrord·sel·
ling 6.'l-yard rield goals are (inc. bu t what
Tom Dempsey would rea lly like lo do Is
J!O through a season \\'ilhout missing one
from inside the 40.
His 6.'l-yarder on the fin al play of thl::
Jiame Sunday gave the New Orleans
Saints a 19-17 victory over Detroil Lions
and exceeded by se\.·en yards the record
56-yard field goal Berl Rechichar of
Ball imore boomed 17 years ago.
Sunday was lhe night for celebration -
and Dempsey said he did his share -but
by Monday hr was back to reality.
although "stilJ so1newha1 stunned" by the
\\'hole thing.
"Your •money ki ck.,' nre inside the 4{l
11nd ifs been a disappointing yelilr for 111e
so far." said Dempsey . .,.,.ho h~d made
only five of IS field goal allempts before
going four.for-five Sunday.
"I've got a lot of improving to do and I
still have lhat goal In my mind that one
year 1 v.·anl to go through a season
without missing one from inside the 40."
Dempsey u•tl!i bOrn with only hnlf fl
right fool and no right hand but he
docsn'I &ee that as a handicap, certainly
nol as rar as place kicking is concerned.
"Other kickers lock their ankles and if
tht'y don 't do it just right they miss." he
said. "I don't have much to lock. The ball
takes off a lot faster and higher because
of that "
Dempsey. in his second year in the
N'FL, may not be as 'A'ell known as some
or pro rootball 's more established
kickers. but his st rong leg makes hiril one
or the best at ki ckoffs.
Ile consistently dr ives them into the
end zone or else knocks them so high 1
return is virtually impossible.
Lan1ouica Expected
To Return Sund ay
OAKLAND -Daryle Lamonica 's
suspected shoulder separation has bee.n
tt1<lgnosed as a simple bruise. and the
Oakland Ra ider quarterback StloUld bt
ready to start again next Sunday against
the BronCO$ at Denver. __
He led the Saints in sroring last year
v.•ith 99 poinls and was fifth in the NFL.
Eight of the Z2 field goals he made last
:year were from more than 40 yards.
A leg injury in preseason practice ham-
pered Dempsey's development this year.
lie missed all of the ' preseaS()n games
and said he came back against Atlanta in
the regular season opener "before I was
completely well. lt ju.st kept bothering
me.
"It wasn't until lasl week that my leg
finally fell good. That was the first lime
nil year I really fell like I could kic k the
ball hard." he said.
"We. all said betor:e._t.he game_SUJld.~y,_
'It's a new-sea!IOfl,L ll..!Jaid Dempitey:-"A
new day started for us.·•
Me said the team has confidence in
Roberts and in itself.
"This was the first game U\j!J yea r 've
v.•ent into with 1 good mental attitude. We
actually thought we could go out there
and beat the Lions."
Dempsey had one request of his
blOClfers for the historic kick. "Fel~.
. give me just a moment longer, this one is
kind of Jone." lndeed it was.
(.ii\
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Horn Places
Words Better
Than Passes
,.
,
' ,.
MILWAUKEE (API -Don Horn'i
\vord3 were more carefully placed uia;I
his passes Monday night after his Grito
Bay Packers lost a 13-10 decision to die
Baltimore Colts.
Horn. substituting for Green Bay's in·
jured quarterback Bart Starr, was inter-
cepted four time s as ·he. completed 10 of
23 passes for 96 yards.
Did the Coils' zone defense bother hint?
"Not really." Did you call most o{ the
plays yourself? "I think so.''
Did the plays come from the bench on
Green Bay's touchdown drive? "Some of
them ."
Any idea what caused those intercep-
tions? "I don't comment on (!x?& like
that."
More cordial in defeat was Eacker
coach Phil Betigtson.
"It was a typical Unitas production,''
said Bengtson of the Colts' victory, which
\vas engineered by Baltimore's 15-year
veteran John Unitas. ''He runs that team
very well."
Bengtson attributed much of Horn's
misfortune to inexperience but noted
"'•"hen you give up the ball four times,
it's costly."
The Packer coach said Horn had called
most of the game himself, but Stafr and
Parker coaches engineered the Packers'
touchdown drive in the fourth quarter.
"Starr couldn't have thrown," Bengtson
said. adding that neither he nor Starr bad
known until just before the game. ~'He
has tendonitls below the elbow."
Fourth year safety Rick Volk intercep.-
ted two 0£ Horn's aeriaJs.
"I just happened to be in t~e right
places at the right time,"' he Said.
"We had a good game plan against
th em. \\le knew when they were down
l:l-3 they tiad lo throw. We were able to
play our zone and line put enough pres.-
sure on them to hurt his (Horn 's) throw·
ing."
Both Unitas and Colt coach Don Me·
Cafferty expressed disappointment at
Starr's inability to play.
"I would like to have seen him play,'•
said McCafferty. "f hope he gets better."
"We enjoy playing against each othe r,'•
Unitas said . "I feel bad not to see him
come out and play the way he wants to.
I'm sure he feels bad too ."
New Tactics
Needed to Stop
Husl\:y .Whiz
LOS ANGELES IAP) -Different tac-
tics must be used in playing defense
against Washington quarterback Sonnv
Sixkiller than against Stanford's Jim
Plunkett, says UCLA coach Tommy
Prothro.
ln next week's episode of the Southern
California Football Writers meeting, he 'll
explain the difference and how UCl.A
worked against the W a s h i n g t o n
quarterback on Saturday at Seattle.
Stanford won the Rose Bowl bid with a
2~22 victory over Washington last Satur·
day but not until Sixkiller, the Cherokee
Indian sophomore. had made the af·.
temoon a tough one for Plunkett and the
Stanford Indians.
Prothro watched the game on television
and a writer asked how he thought Stan-
ford would do in the Rose Bowl 1gai11sl
the Big Ten champion, presumably Ohio
State.
"I think they'll do very well," answered
Prothro whose Bruins lost earlier to Stan·
ford. 9-7. "They 're in a cla ss with anyone.
There are 15 to 20 teams in the country
who can beat anybody on a given day.
"Stanford is in the upper half of this:
group."
The Bruins of UCLA were idle last
"''eekend but Southern California showed
offensive firework~ in down j n g
Washington State (70-33J in.Jta: Pacific·
8 game. ;
Assistant USC coach Will ie Brown su]).
bing for John ~1cKay at the wr'itert
~eeting, ~aid the staff was particularly
pleased with the Trojan offensive block·
ing.
Sophomore tailback Rod AfcNeill won
the honors as university Player~f·tM
Week . He scored touchdowns on J'Unl of
46-S.t..and S yards In the rout.
This week , ll's USC's turn for att epcn
date.
DAILY PILOT Sl•H PMlo
GREEN BAY PACKER FAN-Ru" Berg, Sr., of Huntington Beach
claims the title as the No. 1 fan of the Green Bay Packers in that
city and perhaps the entire state of California. Russ visited hi s for-
mer home town last summer and brought back a tuft of turf from
the Green Bay field th at has grown to fill an eight-inch flower pot.
He is pictured with other Green Bay mementos.
Has Stadium Grass
Gre en Bay Transplant
Still Loyal to Packers
By HOWARD L. HA1''DY
Of lht Ot llY Plkll Still
Green Bay, Wisconsin is noted as one
of the most rabid football towns in the
entire country and it appears that loyally
to the team doesn't change even when
one of these fans moves more than 2,000
rililes away.
So it is with Huntington Beach resident
Russ Berg. Sr. Despite the fa ct he has Jiv-
ed in California since 1943. he is still a
5launch Green Bay Packer fan.
In fact , he could lay claim to being the
No. l Packer fan in Huntington Beach
and perhaps the entire State or
California.
He not only subscribes to the Green
Bay newspaper and has a myriad of
Packer novelties around the house , but he
has gone a step fu rther and transplanted
some turf direct from ~he Packer field to
his Huntington Beach backyard.
The Green Bay influence on Berg
began during his childhood as he grew up
ln that Wisconsin township~
"My mom and step-father owned a
tavern and former Green Bay coach
Curley Lambea u was a close personal
friend of my dad." Berg relates.
"My brother (Donl and I used to play
pool with him all the lime and most
Packers of those days made my mom 's
place a hangout. t got to know quite a
few of them." he says.
Berg rl?(ently made a trip to Green
Bay to watch the Packers and Los
Angeles Rams play.
Berg is a manufacturer's represen·
tative for a metal stamping and spraying
company and is a part owner of the firm.
His oldest daughter. Cora l Jeanne, is
working in Huntington Beach and son
Chris is attending C a I State ! Long
Beach). Russ, Jr., the youngest of the
three children, is a senior at Hunlington
Beach High.
To show his true devo tion to the
Packers. Berg says he never lost faith
during the string of 12 straight defeats
and feels the team is definitely in a
transition period at the present time
under coach Phil Bengtson.
Berg and Bengtson continue a
friendship through the mails on a regular
basis.
One of the most hallowed spots on the
Berg property in Huntington Beach is not
a pumping oil well. Far from it.
. That spot is reserved for an eight inch
Dower pot in which Berg h a s
transplanted a tuft of grass direct from
the Green Bay Packer playing field .
· "l dug up that grass myself last sum-
mer right on the spot where Bart Starr
made that fantastic touchdown two years
ago against the Dallas C.Owboys in the
NFL champi0111ship game," he says proud·
ly.
The grass has thrived in his care and
along with the Berg famil y, is fed
vitamins regularly.
When he was in Green Ba y recently he
and his brother took numerous pictures
of the Green Bay Packers . He goes
through them with an eagle eye and has a
little anecdote to relate about each
player.
"Bart Starr he's a great guy. Every-
lime you see him there's a bunch of
kids around him. He'll even gel up lrom
the dinner Uible if a youngster comes to
the door and asks him how to hold a foot-
ball to throw it.
"Llonel Aldridge, This guy is class.
''Donnie Anderson. He's funny and he's
reall y coming into his own as a player.
"Kevin Hardy. He's happy to be with
Green Bay and says he wants to be with
a winner is the reason he's so hap py.
"Willie Wood. A great guy. He's Mr.
Packer of today, t would have to say. He
is the spokesman for the team.
"Gale Gillingham. He took over al left
guard three years ago in Les Angeles and
1 told him at that time he would become
an all-pro. When I reminded him of it this
year. t)e remembered our conversation.
He made it last year, you know."
Berg could go right on down the _Green
Bay roster but time does not permit.
Are Green Bay and the Packers his on·
ly interests in sports these days ?
Far from It.
He and his wife J ean are regulars at all
Huntington Beach and Golden West
C.Ollege football games.
''Yes. and you promised me to attend
the basketba ll games this year, too,"
Jean reminds him .
The Bergs have become close personal
friends of Elmer and Carolyn Comb s,
coach of the Oiler basketba ll team.
His other penchant in life is writing let-
ters. most of them of the encouraging
variety to people such as President Nixon
when he lost out in the balloting to John
Kennedy.
"When I feel something real strong, 1
r~pond and write a letter ." he says.
Berg has two letters In his files from
Nixon as vice president or the United
States which he treasures -almost as
much as he does his associal.ions with the
Green Bay Packers.
And being such a football connoisseur.
how does he feel about the Les Angeles
Rams? Arter all. the Bergs have lived in
Southern California since 1943.
"I don't go to the Ram games unless
they are playing Green Bay.'' he says. "I
don't like the Rams."
Tutulay, Nowmbet 10, 1CJ70 DAILY PILOT J f'._1_
Circuit Football Coaches JC Aeesl
Tell Ventures With SBVC
By CRAIG SHEFF
CH tM CMllY Plltt ilaff
In the aftermath of a near riot during
Saturday night 's Saddleback-San Btm·
ardlno Valley College football game, Mis·
slon Conference football coaches gener·
ally ha ve called for a complete investi·
gallon of the circumstances surrounding
the incident.
Some of the coaches reported ha ving
some problems playing against Siln Ber-
nardino while others said there were l'lo
Incidents at all. Most agreed that the
frustration of losing by a big score prob-
ably had something to do with the out,.
breaks,
The Saddleback-SBVC game wa~ halt-
ed with a little over 14 minutes left in
the fourth quarter with Saddleback hold-
ing a 44--0 lead. Three San Bernardino
players were ejected prior to officials
calling lhe game.
Numerous incid ents of kicking a n d
helmet swinging by San Bernardino
players were also evident.
Saddleback coach-athletic d I r e c t o r
GcorBe HaFtman does not want to
meet San Bernardino in any sport in the
future. "It's in the administration's hands
right now. I think they'll do what is
ri,aht."
In a telephone poll by the DAILY Pt.
LOT. coaches of the conference we re
asked if there we.-e any circumstances
of dirt.v play in their games with San
Br.mardino.
Followin~ are the answers:
Cllnt Whitfield (Grossmont) -"J
wouldn't call them dirt y. They have "
real agJtressive team. We didn't ha ve
any trouble with them this year !Gross·
mont lvon, 34-20), but last yea r was
something else.
"They had two or three kids kicked
out last yea r. We were ahead SS.O when
they went after us. \Ve Jost a tackle \\•ho
got finge r nails in his eye.
"This would never happen on my club.
\Ve would take immediate action. It only
l1urls you r team .
"That kind of play will not beat a
learn, it will only help them. When a
team starts fighting, they admit defeat.
The y get "'hipoed by the shoulder pads,
so they start fighting."
Whitfield added that something should
Gaucho-SBVC
-
Brawl Caper
Still in Limbo
Accord ing to a San Bernardino Valley
College official, a decision on action t.o
take in regards to a near riot during the
San·Bernardino-Saddleback football game
Saturday night will probably be made in
the next three or four day5.
"\Ve will not make a decision until a
proper administrative review Is con-
ducted." says John Harder, public in-
formation officer or the San Bernardino
Valley Junior College District.
"It was an unfortunate incident. We
now ha ve a football season to finish and a
college program to conduct."
Saddleback College president Dr. Frftl
Bremer ha9 been in contact with San
Bernardino Valley officials.
"I've talked to Dr. Russ Hackler (vice
president of San Bernardino) and he told
me a plan has been discussed but that no
decision has been reached.''
Bremer says the president of San
Bernardino C.Ol!ege (Or. Arthur Jensen)
is attending the California JC Assn.
meeting in San Diego 8nd that was one
reason why a desicion has not been
reached .
"Dr. Hackler and T discussed the In-
cident and he apologized. At no time did
he Ind icate we were responsible. He in-
dicated San Bernardino was responsible."
Hackler is also president of the Mission
Conference and was in attendance at the
Sadd\ebac k..San Bernard ino game.
Mel Ross. commissioner of the con-
ference, told the DAILY PILOT that a
written report of the brawl from referee
Duff .]deans is expected in his office
within the next l'!o days.
Ross says no action will be taken from
his office. He adds that if action is to be
Uiken through the conference. Jt will have
to come from the administrative level.
He says the referee's report would
have a great deal of innuence on what
action the conference might take.
"Football is a very emotional sport.
Tl's too bad this unfortunate incident had
to happen," Ross concludes.
bt done to prevent slml11r clrcumstanctt
from OCCWTing In the future and that
somethin~ has to come from San Bern-
ardino.
Wei Fortman (Soutbwe11teml -"We
had four Injuries In tht San Bernardino
game !Southwestern lost, 30-14), but it
wasn't because of dirty play. They were
just normal lfi.juries and the law of aver·
ages caught up wit!i us . The officiating
was the best we've ever had in San Ber-
doo.
with San Bernardino was probably the
best behaved game we've had with them.
(Citrus won, 34-12). They had one player
ejected for unnecessary roughness. The
game was very well controlled and there
was no late hitting. ,
"Someone should definitely be held
accountable for wh at happened. Some-
thing should be done and action should
be taken. San Bernardino has had a his-
tory of trouble. There 's no question
something should be done. But I'm not
in a position to say what.''
•·we had a good game with San Bem·
ardino. It could have gone either way.
They have a mstory of problems the re.
Jt's up to their administration to take
ac•lan.''
Foreman opined that frustralion prob-
. ably had a lot to do wit h lhe Saddleback
incident. "They just don·t know how to
react when they 're behind like that.''
Mack Wiebe {Palom1r) -"I really
don't want to be quoted. That's bulletin
board material.-\Ye have to play th'em
in two weeks. \Ve had no problems with
!hem last year, although it was a very
apprehensive situation.
DON FISCHBECI(
Golden Wost
W 11 11 1 m Richardson (Chaffey) -
t•We've had S(':Tle trouble, bul I don't
think it !hould be settled in the news-
papers. It should be settled by the com-
mis.sinner, the league offices and t h e
San Bernardino admjnistration. rather
than open It up. ll doesn't help junior
college football to brin.1t this out.
"We had trouble with them, but I'd
rattK.r not comment on it." \Chaffey
won. 57-38 ).
John Strycula (Citrus) -"Our game
Edison v s Ba1•ons
"We will probably insist that so m e
conditions be met -like crowd control
and the officials being alerted before the
game.''
Bob Dohr (Riverside) -"I'm surpris-
ed. I've never heard of a football game
being called with that much time k!fl.
We've never had problems with San
Bernardino. Of course our situation is
different than Saddleback's. Our kids
know their kids. They've had two tough
years."
Riverside plays San Berdoo this wetk.
All's at Stake iI1 Biggie
For Irvine Grid Crown ROD CUMMINGS
Saddlebock
Saturday night's Irvine League con·
frontalion between unl>eiten Ediso n and
challenger Fountain Valley has a lo t rid-
ing on the outcome -including the cir-
cuit championship and a berth in the
Ctr AAA football playoffs.
Shbuld Fountain Valley upset the Edi·
son express, it would give the Barons a
piece of the cro wn -and if Estancia
should defeat Corona del ~1ar on the
same evening , it would throw the loop
into a three-way tie for the champion-
ship between Edison, Fountain Valley
and Estancia .
Victory for Edison , however, will givf!
the Chargers undisputed ownership of
the title.
ley team had rolled to five consecutive
Irvine League wins -then topped it orr
with a sensational 21 -21 tie with L<iara
at La Palma Stadium .
All that was required for Pickford and
his Barons was to whip virtually senior•
less Edison.
But it wasn't in tht! cards for Fountain
Valley, and the. final blow ca me with
eight minutes to ~o.
II was there that Rocky Whan sacked
quarterback John Svoboda on a two-
poinl conversion attempt lo keep the
Chargers in the lead, 21-20.
That pla y turned Fountain Valley ln-
~ide out and instead of Pickford being
named coach of the year his adversary,
Bill Vai l. copped thf! award along with
Orange Coast area and Orange County
laurels.
,,~
l ,. ....
And , to add fuel to the fire , it \\'as
first-year Edison whi ch knocked F'oun-
1ain Valley oul of a tie for the 1969 loop
crown and a certain berth in lhe play-
offs.
Coach Bruce PiclHord's Fountain Val-
It's a year later -and the Barons
ha ve their chance ror revenge at
Orange Coast College Saturday ni1ht.
HARRY CARMACK
Orenge Cutt
•
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"' ".
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·:·
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....
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Servile Loses l(ey Player
Front bucket seats andoo.i=
Space for four adults.
Androad-huggingmaneuverabiUcy
that'stoughro\IIldmtand.
Then bring it back to us.
lf you insist, you can buy cme for a price that~ even a more pleasant su.rpi.se than
the pcri:irmance.
·' .. .:-.. ..
".•:
Servlte High's long and di.sappointlng
1970 football season comes to a close
Thunday night when the Friars meet
arch rival Mater Del 11t Anaheim
Stadiwn...-and for-o>aeh~e-Dtn .m his~Anaheim-based crew -_vic~y
"Wld render some salvage to an
.iberwise dismal season .
Servile. racked with key injuries since
the outset of the campaign, marches Into
Wlt Angelus League encounter with an
unimpressive 3-& mark -and ls coming
off losses lo Bishop Amat (43-7 ) and SL
Paul ( 48-7).
However, the Fr\11rs' opponent, Mater
Del, didn't fare too well either agalnst
Amat (48-16) and st. Paul (27-0).
The game Is part af a doubleheader at
the Big A with kickoff set for 6 p.m.
Tickets , priced at $3 (reserved), $2
(general admission) and St (students 11nd
children undg_ll}~W be.avaU~le it the-
s a 1um box office Wednesday and
Thursday h:om 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Scrvlte's chances fbr victory over
coach Bob Woods' Monarchs are fu rther
hampered with the loss of Mike Van
Deale, who sustained t1. knee inJW'Y
against St. Paul.
Slated to replace Van Deale Is junior
Paul PlrrucceUo, a 165-pounder of
unknown quality. He's carried the ball In
only three games, netting eight )'ards.
However, Dena has another fullb ac k
behlnd Bill BIHott who might be used In
the ha lfback spot. He's Chris P1Un, a
sen ior who has ._averaged 4.& yard! per
carry and gained 103 yards a1aimt Pl1111
x.
Fullback Baggott carried for 115 yards
In eight carries in Servile'• opentt
against Las Vegas Clark. but an injury
5idelined him for tour games.
He was held ln check by Bshap Amat
and St. PauJ.
The passing game has been adequate
for Dena's ttam with quarterback Bruce
E1na1'1 C"lmpleting 52 of 88 attempts for
'420 yards and Lhree touchdowns. He's a
senior righthander, and U needed, junior
southpaw Tom Walbrun will be ready to
back him up.
(
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11 DAILY PILOT Tutsday, November 10, 1970
Area ·P .rep Football Players of Week
BOB FERRARO
Co rona, del Mar
GARY FISETTE
Laguna Beach
AUNDRE HOLMES
Mission Viejo
WILLIE JARMAN
University
Top Team
Unchanged
In Ratings
The official listing of ranked
Orange County prep football
teams underwent little change
over the y.·eekend with the top
three -Anaheim, Edison and
Newport Harbor holding firm
after convincing v:ins.
Rancho· Alamitos dropped
out of the rankings following
its 27.7 loss to Pacifica, y.•hich
shot up to sixth place -the
first time ever that a Pacifica
eleven has made the elite 10.
And Eslancia High's Eagles
jumped into a tie i,.dlh
Pacifica at that p o s i t i o n
following their 21-19 decision
over Fountain Valley, drop-
ping the latter off the role.
Ranked teams in danger this
week include Edison, Estan-
cia. Saddleback and Marina.
Edison meet.s F o u n t a i n
V&Jley (>3), Estancia bat tles
Corona del Mar (3-5) and Sad-
dlebacl< faces SOnora (5-.l). , .....
'lta T-~1. M1""6m -l"2I
2. l!!lllwn {Ml
J. NtMIOt1' Hlrtle!' {7·11
•. Mtl'Y Dtl lf<tl J. OrWIM 11.(;._l)
" 'ac.llk• ('J.I) Etllll(.11 U·11
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KERRY BOWRING
Costa Mesa
BRYAN KERNS
Marina
-.
St. Paul ,
Amat Duel
In Bigg~e
Only one change has oc-
curred in the Top 10 listing of
CIF AAAt. football teams over
the weekend with all 10 rated
teams victorious.
Arcadia, Pacific Le a g u e
pacesetter, dropped to ninth
with Newport Harbor ' and
Pioneer moving up a notch to
seventh and eighth following
easy wins.
The key test or the week -
and perhaps thf year -is in
the Angelus League where
Bishop Amat will entertain St.
Paul Friday night at Mt. Sa11
Antonio College.
Amat (8--0) defeated St. Paul
(7-1) twict: last year, the se-
cond time a 34-1 1 thrashing at
Anaheim Stadium in the CIF
semifinals.
It's conceivable that the two
parochial powers will meet in
the playoffs again, regardless
of Friday's outcome.
Amat is ranked fir st in the
poll while St. Paul's once-
beaten (7-6 to El Rancho in
the season opener) Swordsmen
are rated fourth behind El
Rancho and Pasadena.
Orange County's duo of
Anaheim (fifth) and Newport
Harbor are favorites to win
again Friday -thus tying the
Sunset circuit up with 6-1
recon:ls. Newport defeated
Anaheim , 7-0, but was upset
by Loara (4-3-1 ), 14-12.
Orange Coast area power
Edison, rated second in
Orange County, continued in
fourth place in the AAA
classification after romping
to its I Ith win in a row etiver-
ing two seasons.
Irvine League contender
Estancia garnered two points
in the AAA poll.
1. BLUE CHIP STAMPS
WITH LUBE , OIL & FILTER AT
IA YSHORE RICHFIELD ..,.
JM W• c...t HwJ,, N_,.,, IMl.ll 641-4111
TONY SEPULVEDA
Fountain Vall ey
ROCKY WHAN
Edison
PHIL METZGER
Newport Harbor
LEE JOYCE
Estancia
RICK ANDERSON
San Clemente
GARTH WISE
Huntington Beach
DOUG MILNE
Westm inster
Edison F avored Over F ountain Va lley
Edison's Charger.1 are six·
point favorites to remain
undefeated in regular season
football acti on Saturday night
when they face the Fountain
Valley Barons on the Orange
Coast College stadium turf ac·
3 PIECE
WIND 'N
RAIN SUIT
H•od-.tmcket-SIH!ts
e Whut & 1•1111rMf
e HMYY D1ty "•tit e H~ Yisiblllty
ONLY
sl.99
1 ... 11, •v1111111tt 11111
IENEllAL
TIRE
cording to the DAILY PILOT
odds this week.
Ram1 over NY Jet• bv f
Minnesota over Oerrolr by 6
UCLA over Wathlng1on bY !
sronforl ov..-Air Force bv 1
Ndir•s 1 ovtr K•n••• sr .. 11 bY 12
No1r1 Dflmt over Geor11l1 Teel\ by 21
Okl1""'"11 over K1nw1 tty j
Svr1cus1 ov1r Wut Vlr•lnl1 bv 4
At~ .. ns.ts ovtr SMU bY 11
Saddltb.llck over Citrus by 10
Go!Oen Wu! over CYPren bY '
Or1nte Co•sl o~tr Son Oleto Meta
'" Ei!•flCl1 over Corona del Mir by 6
Mete• Oel ov..-S1rvi11 by 11
NewJ>Orl HartlOr over Hunt!nt 1on
Be1c11 bv 10
Cosf1 Mesi over S1n1a Ana V1 lley ,, '
Foott\111 CYer MIHIOll Vlelo by s
El Dorado ovfr Lag11na !e•ch bY 7
M1rl"I C>Ver W11Tmln1!er bv 1
El MOden• over Sin ClnnHi1e bY 4
Edis.,... ov•r Foun1aln V1ll1y bY 6
Orevo11 over Army bY 14
Auburn ov1r GllO•tl• bY I
Mk:Mt1n .St1!1 over Mlnr>e'SOll by 2
C:olor1do over Okl11>om1 Stilt bv 3
l!l•l>oo Amil OVtr St, Paul bY 1
2WEEKS
ONLY!
NOV. 9 to NOV. 21
GLASS-BELTED J~~:0
• Polyester Cord • Wide 78-Series
The Same Glass Bert Ti1e That Comes On New 1971 Cars
SIZE BLACKWALL TWIN-STRIPE FED. EX.
Reg. Price Sale Price Reg. Price Sale Price TAX
A 78-13 $25. 75 $23.17 $29.55 $26.59 S 1.90
Dolll SwNhntd
COAST
GENERAL
TIRE
-C78·14--$29--;rc;--$26-:-46 $33.80--sl0-:-42 $2.15
E1a"l4-s3o-:ss--s27.49-s3T75--s31.21--s2.3s
$32~30--$29.07-$37.15--$33.43-$2.55.
S3~.45 -s31.9o -$40.45-Sf&."40 s2.s1
S32:fo--S29.07-537.15-S3!i3 $2.61
$35.45-S31 .90 S4o.45--s36.4o-s2.11
538.90-535.01--$44.70-S40.23-$2.98
543-:-10--s39.33 sso.60-$45.54 sJ.08
$57.45 SSl.70 $3.22
NO TRACE NEEOEO
""1J'I CHECIC .•• Snould oor supply pl loOme '"" S•>?S OI !"''" 111n •11"'1 duri"Q 11'>11
even\, we w•U ~on0< ~n~ o•cle•1 p11ceo now 1or !u1ure deh•ery 11 tr•1 -n1sed puce.
GENERAL 4-PLY
NYLON CORD
ffi~~
• Dual Tread Design
• 4-Ply Nylon Cord
• Duragene Rubber Trea d
GENERAL-JET
$ 45
SIZE
&.50 x13 RE G. LOW
PRICE
?~-1· s21 2s B ~~-U s2 400 B!i6-llS2 5" ,,,5.1s, t <~·'~
Tubeless whitewall prices. plus. Sf 78 lo
$2.53 Fed. E1. Tai per hie depending
on s.izes plus e11:hange cas1n.g.
AVERY
GENERAL TIRE
SERVICE
515 W. 1 f th.1 Cos to Mesa 16941 l1C1ctt louleved, Huntlntton leecll
847·5850 5-40·5710 646·503J
-----------GENERAL TIR(S , •• WORTH DRIVING ACROSS TOWN ro._.on ----------
•
An aheim Man Wins
Pickeroo Contest
Allahel m's DeMis Parker ls
the ind!vidual winner in the
eighth week of competition In
the DAILY PILOT Pigskin
Pickeroo.
Parker guessed 18 of 19 cor-
rectly (one game resulted in a
tie) and was just 17 oft the
proper point total of 8811 in the
th e Tie Breaker with 871.
The five entrant.s "1>o guess·
ed 17 right (and their Tie
. Breaker differentialJ) were:
Five wlnners who manacet
16 correct guesses (and ~i
differentials) are: Charle~i
Otis (Huntingto111 Beach, 52),1
Randy Carpenter ( C o s t t
Mesa, 73), Glenn Robertsoa'
(Costa Mesa, 98), Ross Pain•.
ton, (Costa Mesa, 111 ) ani
Diana Broderick:
(Westminster, 111).
Mn. Ray Wheeler (Costa
Mesa, 105), Bob O'Neil (Costa
Mesa, 122), Bo G r 1i ff i t h
(Newport Beach, 138), Doris
Flinn (Fountain Valley, 173)
and Bill Taylor (Huntington
·~each, 208).
A total of 2.8 entruts had 18'
r!ghl but 23 we~ elimluted,
by .usage of lhe lie breaker.
Only two weeks remain 111
Pickeroo competition for tht
current season.
Entry blanks can be found in
today's and Wednesday's DAI~
LY PILOT sports sectiou.
Pilot Pigskin
PICKEROO
Co -Sponsoritd by
.
~F Voit
And The
DAILY PILOT
BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT
In Cash For Each WHk's
First Place Winner
Voit Footballs Each WHk
B• 1 pi9skin proph•t. Pl1y the DAILY PILOT Pick•roo
gamw for weekly prizes. Winn•r each week rec•i'f'es
$I 0 cash a nd a Voit Collegiat• foctba ll I 1ugg•1t•d
retail price, $9.95 ). Nin e runner-u p Pick•roo pick•rl ·
al1c each 9et a Voit Coll•giate football.
Watch for this player's form each week in the DAILY
Pl.LO.T Sport~ Section. Circl• the +•ams you think wi
1
ll
win 1n the list of 20 teams and sen~. in the player 1
form or reasonable fac:::simile. Then wi tch the DAILY
PILOT sports page, for •ai:.lt "'!e•k's list of 10 winn•rs.
JlIJtES _
I. Submit 1!111 '"try bl1n-or a r11wn1ble l1t1fmlle to 111t~r lh• (tlnf"I,
2. Slnd IO: PILOT PIGSKIN PICKEROO CONTEST, Spoth tleptrt'"""' P. o. lk>ll" !560, cca11 Mea. c1. mu.
l. Only on1 1n!ry per Pl!rJOn uch wnl<.
4. En!rlu mu1t be d~flvered {by !MU or In per'fl)n') to OAILY PILOT ott!et by 5 p.m. T~urldoy.
5. AMF Voll and OAILY P ILOT emplcv•1 Ind lhelr lmmedl1t1 l•mlll• not 1l1tlbl1 to e111er.
6·. TIE BREAKER muil be lilied In or !'ntry It void,
7. 1n caH of 111 IOr flfll pl1c1. duplltalt merthlndi.e prizes will M
1w1rded 11111 winners wiU eq11a11v 11Mr1 In !ht 110 ulll prl11.
t. Wlnn1rt who 0!8te in ll'>e tnp 10 rnort than Of'CI durinv lhe conies! hlVN
tht 09T!on, •lier th• firs• w111, of tx(hanvlng the van lootblll tor 1nortiw
qu1nrv Volt prOducl of rqulv11en1 ~•lu•,. r---------.,
ENTRY BLANK
I ~lrtll t1c11111 you t hl11k will wl11 this WM k'1 tefllft
lhorne f'MM 11 MC•11d eH ll1tetll I
I 1
I
I , I NY Jets vs Rams I I I Detroit vs Minnesota I
I UCLA vs Washin9ton I Stanford vs Air Force I Geor9ia Tech vs Notre Dame I
I Oklahoma vs Kansas I
I Syracuse vs West Vir9inio I
I Saddleback Colle9e vs Citrus I
I Golden West Colle9e vs C ypre~ I Oran9e Coast vs San Die90 Mesa I ·1 Corona del Mar vs Estancia
I Mater Dei vs S.rvite I
I Edison vs Fountain Valley I
I Huntin9ton Beach vs Newport I
I SA Valley vs Costa Mesa I Mission Viejo ·vs Foothin . I I El Dorado vs La9una leach
I Marina vs Westminster I
I El Mode na vs San Clemente I
I Bishop Amat vs St, Paul I
I I
I Tl• lll•AIC•ll -My fllUI lfl 11\t I ltlll ~V"'lt'lr II "!"ti Kit .. lft t i!
1f t•-lhl .. Ille"' II ....................... ,_,, ............ -..
I NAMI I
I ADDfllSS I
I CITY ... I
&.;":: ... ... -------• •
' \ .,
i
I
I .,
i
•
•
. -.... -. ·--·--·-. ·--·-~·-~-------~.--.~~----~~--~-~~~-~~-~--r,.-------r----......... --....... -_.., ___ ,.. ____________ ,..,.._'r'
>
.. .. ' .\
Mollie Parnis succumbed
lo the midi hemline ,
but says she concentrates
on fabric rather than
length.
• "
f.' -· . ··"'
nmen
BEA ANOE RSON, Editor ·
Tlltldtt, Mntfllllir I .. 1m """ 11
Ul'tT ...........
Thal Rudi Gernreich, the designer who invented the topless bath·
ing suit still believes iii revealing fashions is evidenced by a
safari styled jumpsuit (le£t) which features a plunging neckline.
Another designer embracing the revealing look Is Pauline Trlgere,
who otters boily suit with matching midi skirt.
Press Blamed for Co~troversy
ULTIMATUM· TO S-PRING
By MARIAN CHRISTY
NEW YORK _:... Bitterness Is sweeping
along that Manhattan stretch known as
Seventh Avenue -the street where the
$10 billion fashion industrr, New York's
fourth largest, now sits 1n undisguised
disenchantment.
Just-opened spring-summer 1971 col·
lections, being reviewed by eagle-eyed
store buyers across lhe country, find
buyers and designers angry at public
reaction to the midi which hasn't been
!a.sh.ion's success of the year.
Typical comments:
"People will just have to stop wanting
what they want and wear what designers
are designing."
"If women don't get with it, they'll
soon find that there's nothing else in the
1tores."
"The problem on length has been
created by the pres11. They're to blame
for confusing women with all those an ·
ti midi stories."
All designers are skirting the hemline
Issue by drawing attention to important
points other than length.
Bill Blass, one of America's most
famous designers, reports that while
most women resisted the midi in August,
now they've come around. ' ' 0 u r
customers are definitely midi-minded,''
1ays Blass.
Blass' spring...summer collection is all
midi and he's been traveling around the
United States telling women to be calm
about the hemline controversy.
What's more, Blass is "sick'' of
pant.suits because "everyone" is wearing
them. His theory: "'The fashion world
has been oversaturated with pants and
they've lost their original status."
However, Blass does a few trousers in
opposite moods. He is sticking to the midi
and he'd like lo make sure his ladies dQ
likewise. He has a series of print silk
organza dresses that have midi hemlines
that are rufned. ObviQus ly, they 're
practically impossible to shorten.
No New York collections are without
the shirtsleeve midi and Blass is no ex-
ception. His are tradilional button-front
versions with a thick sash swathing the
waisUine.
Blass' concept: "Women were baptized
into the midi with long winter roat.s. By
spring-summer they'll be 'used' lo it and
the hullabaloo will be finished." 1 Mollie Parni.s, who dresses Mrs. Lyir-
. don Johnson and Mrs. Hubert Humphrey,
last aeason fought the onslaught of the
midi. Now she haJ :succumbed 100 ~r·
cent. · "The new · hemlb)t! Is the long
hemline," she says. "Last week I made a
atore appearance ·and talked with 103
women. Only two argue4 about length."
Mollie's way of bypassing controversial
midi chatter is lo tell customers about
her new fabrics which, admittetUy, are
fabulous.
Says Miss Parni.s: ''Hemline jsn't a
'
(
! \ -1
I I ' . \. \ !
' I Q) : . \ \ --~\'-
(j)!:-Donald Brooks creates a
1ee-throu9h lace
point of discussion any more. The woman
with an above·the-knee hemline looks as
if she should be going to the beach."
Donald Brooks is in a midi mood but
he's sweetenina: the look -especially for
wedding gown1 wo rn over
1 gin gham checked
slip (leftj. Bill Blass,
1111 midi advocate, designs
1111 flannel suit with
short, cropped jacke t
for spring.
after-dark -with bathing-suit g9wns
Which are just what the name im·
plies. They're brie! bra tops with midi
skirt& that leave the torso utterly nude.
Gowns now come in two pieces -a
tailored shirtsleeve top and a skirt that is:
side slit to the upper thigh.
Brooks. -ilke many other dealgners, Is
hoping that elegantes will consider t.hi!!
look, not the length when thinking apring
fashion.
And the midi goes marching on.
Truce De.clared in Fashion War
From the Wire Strvlces
After a season of controversy about the
hemline, both camps have settled back
and opted for a peaceful settlement.
Except for Rudi Gernreich, who has
come out fighting with his spring col-
lection.
He wa s ready to battle at least in ap-
pearance, for his offerings included toy
shoulder rifles, GI dog tags, goggles and
caps. They were paired with buff knit
pants outfits.
During the New York showing where
they were introduced, no one smiled as
the models paraded and neither did
Gernreich. Finally he said, "At this point,
you probably all think that I'm a member
o! the silent majority." This militant
fashion mood reflects the times in
general, he added.
Another revolutionary idea f r o m
Gernreich was sweater swimwear styles.
The designer who became famous for his
topless swimwear showed 1weaters to be
wom over maUICing bikinis and bras with
the bras optional.
Some ~were long-sleeved pullovers with
high necklines, so me were designed with
revealing fronts and some .were cardigan
styles.
Gernreich says he got the Idea at a
party where people were jumping into L
swimming pool with their clothes on over
their brief swimsuits. "They came out
looking very sexy," he explained.
Bare knees were evident in the cud-
dleeoat collecUon by Victor Joris: as well
as in the offerings by Stanley Herman,
designer for Mr. Mort. •
"Short shorts are the answer to the
minl,'.'..J.,.is.said...He..00~.lll'UI green
1horb with an lke jacket, white knee
socks and a white cardigan blouse.
Herm.ar1 feels that the at-the-knee
length ii the answer lo the length dilem-
ma. A best-seller for winter, it still will
be around for spring.
One of the designers offering below-the-
knee. lengths is Pauline Trlgere, whose
designs were soft and 1 I m p I e •
Lichtftight jerseys and silks were done
tn prlnta, including mauve and white.
Capes and 1hawl1 were prominent In
lhe spring ahowlnp. u well u many
"sen&iblt." clreuea.
.
CHOICE OF THREE -Tbe woman who does not
w,ant to wear the midi length for spring can choose
either a pair of short shorts by Victor Joris (left),
an ~range noraf knicker suit with vest and cape also
by Joris (centei) or a knee length 11sensible" dre ss
•
by Sta nley Herman. Shown in New York, the !ash-
ions were part of spring showings, a "peaceful"
settlement o( the midi-mini question. M0tt IDHm•
bl es were al the knee or below ••
'
.
I ' '
\
l
I
f
Brotherly Love Not Enough
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am 23, have
been married two years and was a virgin
until &ix months ago. Someone other than
my husband consummated the marriage.
When Cal and I were going together he
spoke with great reverence about my
virginity. He kept saying our wedding
night wouia be everythlng a wedding
night ought to be. But when that night
finally came we were both exhausted
from the ceremony and reception and the
100.mile drive. Nothing happened. The
following day Cal got himself a terrific
case of sunburn. He couldn't put on a
shirt for two weeks. When his sunburn
healed he suddenly decided to have a
knee operation on an old football injury.
ANN LANDERS ~
After 18 months of excuses (and get-
ting ki9sed goodnight on the forehead) l
was convinced that I must be the most un-
desirable woman in the world. It was
then that an attraclive man at work
rescued me from a nervous breakdown
by suggesting that we have an affair. l
accepted immediately.
Your column a few weeks ago, quoting
the Ohio psychology professor {he said
the importance of sex In marriage was
.greatly exaggerated ) really did il. Cal
showed me the column and crowed, ''See
-here 's what I mean!" Your answer
was a gem, Ann. You said you weren 't
going t.o comment until you heard from
lhe p_iofes~ wile. l then_ told Ca_I
maybe HE could live without sex but I
couldn't. When he uked how 1 had
managed so fa r. I admitted I had
taken a lover, hoping he would view it as
a challenge. His reaction was shocking.
He said, "It's O.K. with me. Let's leave
things as they are."
l am hurt and fed up and I refuse to
live like this. I am nQt interested in mar-
rying my lover but I definitely want out
o( this weird marriage. What Ls your ad·
vice? -RENEE
DEAR RENEE: Try to get Cal to go
with you for couuellng. If be refuses, see
a lawyer. You might bt eligible for an
annullment. I see DO reason for a %3-year~
old glrl to aetUe for 1 brother-sllter mar-
riage wit.II cheating prtvUe1e1.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am 19 years
old, stand 5'10" and J weight z.40 pounds.
t have plenty of energy and enjoy ex-
cellent heallh in spite of the fact that I
have been overweight all my life. The
reason I am writing is because I want to
join the Marines. According to the
regulations r must get down to 162
pounds. l am at present under a doctor's
Morning Leagues Note
cart and adhering to a very strict diel
My doctor says it will take me until
March to drop the 78 pounda. I forgot to
mention that I am a girl.
Is there • possibility that the Marines
will take me now, if l promise to take off
the necessary weight? I am •!ready down
lo 190. -LOVE THAT UNIFORM
DEAR LOVE: wtddl unUonn? Hit or
beni? What with Womea'1 Lib b'Jlnc to
mu.1cle ta everywbere l'm DOt takiDg
anything for sruted.
Netllter the Mt•'• Mame Corps nor
tbe Women's MariM Corp1 will accept.
you uaW yn med &lie wetpt tt-
quiremeata. St· keep CM.Dtial tltoae
calorlel if yoa wut to aee Ute Halli of
Moate1uma aid tt.e S.res of TrtpoU.
"The Bride's Guide," AM Landers'
booklet, answers some of the most fre-
quently asked questions about weddings.
To receive your copy of t b i s
cmprehensive guide, write to Ann
Landers, in care of the DAILY PILOT
enclosing a long, self-addressed, stamped
envelope and 3S cents in coin.
Birthday
Fete Due Ceremony f . P . Music Bene it
LI n ks a I r - --The· Schooh>l-Music cl lhe--A..,.e<eplion in the--patto rA
The accomplishments or ·the
past 14 years will be reviewed
when the Newport Harbor
Grandmolhen Club celebrates
its anniversary with an in·
stallation luncheon in the
Mesa Verde Country Club.
University of Southern Califor. Hoffman Hall will follow the
The Rev. Thomas P. Nevin nia will be honored by the Tro-program and lunch will be
officiated when Sandra Ann
Mcintyre became the bride of
Philip James Laipin of Palo
Alto.
jan leagues of Los Angeles served at 12 :30 p.m. in Town
and Orange Coonty during a and Gown.
BE TTY PFLUG
Sets D•t•
Dece mber
Weddi ng
Planned ·
Mrs. Edwin t£. Pflug ol
Anaheim has announced the
~gagement of her daughter
Betty Marie to Joseph H.
Caitbamer Jr. oC Garden
Grove .
The bride.elect a t t e n d e d
Anaheim High School and Con·
cordia Teachers College in
River Forest, Ill. She is a
teacher in the Anaheim School
District.
-The brldegroom:.tl.Erj, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H.
Cal.tham~ Sr. of Laguna
Niguel, was graduated from
Lakewood High School and
served in Korea with the Ann·
ed Services.
Auction Design ed to Dress Up Home
benefit program beginning at Assisting with lhe benefit
10:30 a.m. on Thursday, ·Nov. are the Mmes. Jack C.
12. Bomke, Orange County Trojan St. Joachim's Catholic A variety of t a 1 e n t e d League president, Norman
Churdl, Costa Mesa was the students w b o s e a C· Abel Jr., Raymond Terry,
.setting for the double ring complishments have · been ac· Earl Harris, Horace Proulx,
Mrs. R. H. Van Marter will
accept the gavel during the
noon meeting Thursday, Nov.
12, where Mrs. Ron Evans. a
past president will be in·
stalling officer.
The couple will wed on Dec.
26 in Zion Lutheran Church in
Anaheim . Fashions will almost seem to grow on trees at Rancho Capistrano, South Laguna
when Las Damas de la Villa stage a dress auction and luncheon Thursday,
Nov. 12, as a benefit for the Villa : a facility for women recovering from alco-
holism located in Santa Ana . Preparing to make their bids are {left to right)
. Mrs. Jan Jenniches, auctioneer, Mrs. Robert Barrett, a model, and Mrs. Dale
Harrison, narrator.
Horoscope
Taurus ~ Be Original
WEDNESDAY
NOVEMBER 11
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARI~ (March 21·April 19):
Accent on what you own and
how to add to possessions.
Answer lies In your ability to
stick with project. Be alert
and determined . Apparent
minor details should command
your attention.
TAURUS (A pril 20-May 20):
Cycle high; You ean sue·
cessfully take initiative. Wel-
come contacts, challenges. Ex.
press greater Independence .
Be original ; take the lead .
New starts in new directions
are favored. GDtlNI (May 21·June 20):
Some family secrets are to be
discussed. Free yourself of
emotional burden. Throw off
fear. Acctnt harmony. Enjoy
pleasures-there is no need for
feelings of guilt.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Some friends are generous
now-with promises. Maintain
sense of hwnor and balance
Otherwise. you i n v i t e
disillusionment. Be analytical.
Seek truth. Face facts as they
exist.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22):
Some of your plans require
approval o f professional
superior, o Ider individual.
Don't invite problems. Work
through proper c h a n n e 1 s ,
Org8nize thoughts, actions -
then you get what you really
desire.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22 ):
Good lunar aspect coincides
with succes;; in advertising.
publistling, dealing with those
"'
Open Sesame -
Play Reviewed
at a distance. Make calls. Ac·
cent communication. Climb
oul of emotional rut.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22):
New approach could result in
financial reward. Q:ioperation
is required (rom mate.
partner. Realize value of
public relations. Don't lake
situations, per sons for
granted.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21 ):
Spotlight on communicating
with thosl who may hold op-
posing views. Be receptive.
Let male or partner state case
without interruption.
SAGITIARIUS !Nov. 22·
Dec. 21 ): Respect your own
body, health requiremen ts. By
doing so. you exhibit maturity.
Neglecting your basic needs is
sign of infantilism. Enjoy
what you do-do what you en·
joy.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J an.
191: Good lunal'. aspect coin·.
cldes with crea\ive activity,
romance, relations w i t h
children. Study Sagittarius
message. You will g a i ri
rewards for doing what corn's
naturally.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Thoughts may center on
home base of operations.
Questions of security
arise -and should be
morning ceremony.
The bride is the daugh ter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E .
Mcintyre of Newport Beach.
Parents of the benedicl are
Mr. and Mrs. James P. Laipin
of Portsmouth, N.H.
ESCQrt.ed to the alt.ar by her
fat.her, the bride asked Mrs.
Alan Harris to be matron of
honor. Searving as best man
was Scott Rainsford while the
guests were sealed by Harris
and Kim Collins.
The bride is a graduate of
Immaculate Heart College and
taught at Paularino Elemen·
tary School, Costa Mesa. Her
husband holds a BS degree
from the California Institute
of Technolagy and is a
graduate student at Stanford
University.
Th'ey are at home in Palo
Alto.
Professor
To Speak
Dr. Donald D. Shipley,
former mayor of Huntington
Beach. will be guest speaker
for the Bahia Chapter of the
National Secretaries Associa·
lion Thursday, Nov. 12. in
F r a n co is restaurarit. Hun·
tington Beach .
Shipley, who form erly was
director of Idy\lwild School of
Conservatio11 and N at u r a I
Science and director of the
School of ,Conservatiori and
Natural Science at l he
University of California, Santa
Barbara now is a professor of
biology at California State
College at Long Beach.
The 7 p.m. meeting will be
preceded by a 6:30 social hour.
claimed will be presented by E. G. Corkett, G. W. GrurKly,
Dr. Grant Beglarian, dean of William C. Adams, Dwight
the School of Performing Arts, Anderson, William Barker,
in Edison auditorium o( the John ~-Billings, Donald
School of Business Langille, Page Parker, Fred
Administration on the campus. Bice and Norman Bing.
South Coast Junio rs
Health Emphasized
A representative of lhe
Cystic Fibrosis Association
will be the guest speaker for
the Thursday, Nov. ·t 2,
meeting cf the South Coast
Junior Woman's Club.
Members also will see a film
during the 7:30 p.m. meeting
in the,home of Mrs. Gerald
Bennett, Fountain Valley.
Club members packaged
more than I 1.000 pamphlets
entitled "Rubella Robs the
Cradle" for delivery to the
Fountain Valley elementary
schools and will lag more than
6,000 postcards thanking those
assisting the M u s c u I a r
Dystrophy Association.
The club has arranged a
presentation of the March of
Dimes program on genetic
counseling for Fountain Valley
High School students on Tues·
day, Nov. 24, and sponsored a
presentation for Edison High
Vineya rds
Surveyed
Wi.nes and cheeses will be
sampled by members and
guests of the Sunshine Com·
School studeats last week.
A pizza sale will take place
Saturday, Nov. 14, to benefit
the ways and means fund of
the club. Pizzas will be offered
in the cafeteria of Fountain
Valley High from noon to 2
p.m.
Viejo Sets
Bus' Tours
Christmas has arrived at
Mission Viejo and residerits
are invited to join two up-
coming shopping tours ar·
ranged by ltiission Viejo
Recreation Center.
The first event will be on
Thursday, Nov. 12, when a bus
loaded with 3Z passengers
heads for a wholesaJe outlet In
Los Angeles. On Thursday,
Dec. 2, sboppen wiU go soulh
to Tijuana to examine wrought
iron. candelabra, candlea and
leather.
'rbose interested in joining
either group may call the
recreation center.
Membe r Coffee
munity Preschool during its A Peek Into C re at·
sixth annual wine-tasting par· grandmother's Parlor is: the ti·
ty at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, ti~ of the program to be
Nov. 12. presented during a mem.
Songs and snatches of the upcoming ChiJ ..
dren's Theatre Guild production may be
viewed during a preview skit, "Open
Sesame" which will be presented at 10 :30
a.m. on Saturday, Nov. 14.
The skit, a preview of the guild's stage
production "Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves,·•
will be performed in the Children's Book-
shopp~, Corona del . Mar. It will be free to
all children and their parents.
answered. Property laxes,
safety ·requirements,
permits -these require your
attention.
Mesa 'Auxili a ry Halecrest Park, Cost.a Mesa bership coffee, plaMed by the
will be the setting for the Orange Coast B'nal B'rith
American Legion Hall in event which will benefit th~ Women at 8 p.m. Thursday,
Costa ltfesa is the setting for parent participation nursery Nov. 12. in the Fountain Valley
Members of the guild of Newport Harbor
also will view the skit when they gather on j
Thursday Nov. 12. in the Corona del Mar
home of 0Mrs. Kalman Spelletich Jr., vice
president.
The full-length productjon "'ill be staged
at Orange Coast College Saturday, Nov 28,
at IO a.m. and 1 p.m. and Sunday, Nov. 29,
at 1 and 3 p.m. Tickets. at $1 per person,
are available at the college and Richard 's
Market, Ryan's Hardware and Newport Chil·
dren's Bootery.
•OWi( TOWM
ol CO IT A MllA LET'S BE FRIENlll Y
I
tr you have new neighbors
or know of 11nyanc moving
to our •~•. pfcue tc-U us
iO that y,•e may extend •
friendly welcome and htlp
U~m to become acqualntt'd
In their new aurroundln11.
So. Coast Y'ISitor
4f4.ts7'
Harbar Y'JSitor
6*G174
PISCES (Feb. !~March 20):
You may find that a short
visit lo relative work s
wonders. Turn on charm. Be
affable. Remember birthdays,
school of which Mrs. Rufino home of Mn. S h e I d o n the meetings of the Auxiliary Mora is president. Marshall.
to Barrack51t249, Veterans of1-~=====~--~----------
j anniversaries. World War J. The first Tues·
day of each month members
gather for a business session
at 7:30 p.m. and the third
Tuesday for a social and
potluck at 6 p.m.
BIBLE THOUGHTS
GOD'S DISPOSITI ON: God m1d1 "'"'
111d 111jov1d •11oti1tln9 . with him. He
WALKEO •11d TALKED with Ad1111 •11d
E1>1, "-in tll1 cool of lh1 div." G111. l !I.
E11och WALKED witli God 11111 w11 11·
,,,,,..d 10 hi9hlv th1t h1 """'' lli1ll, 0111
God lr1111l1t1d hl111 Into H1•¥1n, Gin.
1:24. God 111•d1 111111 1pirlt111I, in ht1 own
im19• Al'ld li\"1111, CG1n. I :261 10 th•I
H1 co11ld ht¥t PLEA.SURE ;,. m111, hi1 cr11!11r1, 11,,.,, 4:1 I !Ki119
J11. l ibl1 J. God '1 DISPOS ITION w11 to b1 • COMPANION t1
111111. lut 1111n ch.1191d th i1 bv b1c om1119 r1b1lllou1 11'1d ,,,JI, G111.
6~5.1. ON\ Y th1 ri9ht1011111111 of Noth ,,,.,,,.+,d TOTAL d11*1111c·
tion of 11r.1n. 6od'1 DISPOSITION NOW i1 to SAVE m111 ETEllN·
ALLY for l'LEA ~UllE lboth God't ind 111111'1l i"-1:1.••"'"· Jn..
J il6: 2 Pet" Ji•. liil GH ••v•.--.'-1 11, .. , ,., PllASUJiE i11 th1
d11lh of lht WICKED-," Cit ll:l t. Aho, "-th1 Lord thy God
f1 1 con111111J11' fire--," lew11d w:ck1cf p1opl1, D111t, 4:24. E .. 111
J''"' "-h•ll b1 11•11l1d fro'" h''"'"· with hi1 '"ith+y 11191h,
i11 ll•111i119 flr1 +••il'l9 ¥tn91nc1 1n the'" lti tt •11ow not God,"
2 Th111. I :7·•-ln 1dllilion, "_;I lh1 rlght1ow1 1c1rc1ly h1 ''"''·
wh111 1h•ll th1 Yl'lgod l't •nd th1 1:11,.1r •PP•tr7", Pot. 4:tt,
W, 1tl NOW h,,., ou1 ch1l'IC1 lo ht 1 COMPAN ION with God
thro119ho11t 1t1'11nitv '' h1 d1ii111. THAT it <iod'1 DISPOSITION.
WI!•! i1 YOUllS1 A.11 vou d!ipo11d to to .. , God, oh1y hi111 i nd
b• lt .. td7 Wril1 o• p~o111 for Fii.EE 010\!11 011 God'1 w1v 1f
11l .. 1tion. Ch111ch of Chrltl, 217 W, Wi11on St., Co1t1 M111,
C1liforni1 '2627. l'ho111 141·571 r, 145·2441, 646-5761.
~ J COSTA MESAN ' ' ,"if' EWfim ~LOA
IN OUll JEWELllY OE,AllTMENT WE HAVE DIAMONDS,
WATCHES, RINGS , GOLD JEWELllY, lllACELETS, IANOS,
GOLD COINS AN SAYINGS GALORE, ITALIAN IMrOltTS
ALWAYS IN STOCI(.
IN OUR STEREO DEPARTMENT WE HAYE I TRACKS
CASSEnE RE EL TO REEL ANO SOME OTHERS INCLUDING
RECORD OECl(S, PLAY DECKS AUTO PLAYER OECl<S, CAS·
SETIE RECORD DECK ANO SPEAKERS, RECEJVEllS, TUNE~S,
CHANGERS, TURNTABLES. _
IN OUll INSTRUMENT SECTION WE HAVE 6UITAllS,
OllGA.NS, AMPS, P.A.'1, CLARINETS , TRUMPETS, DRUMS,
HARMONICAS, ACCOROIANS ANO SOME WE DON'T
KNOW.
IN THE R.EST OF OUll STORE SNOW SKllS, IOOTS, SUR.F
BOROS, GOLF CLUIS, GUNS, BOWS ANO All;ROWS, CllASH
HELMET, TYl'EWRITEllS, HAND TOOLS POWER TOOLS,
FISHING POLES. I MM ANO SUPER t MM CAMERAS, l'RQ.
JECTORS. JS MM CAMERAS. 1'01.ARQ!Q.L...lNL.AR.GW.
RANGE-FINDERS , Slll'r1l!D£ PROiJECTOll, 2 'iii CAMERA,
TELE-SCOPES. llNOCULARS -ALMOST fVERYTHING E:LSE
IMAGINABLE IN THE REST OF T~E STORE. COME IN AND
I ROWSE. ·
All THESE ITEMS AT LOW LOW l'RICES
EVERYTHING CARRIES UNCONDITIONAL )0.DAY GUAllAN·
TEE FROM llACITl'S COSTA MESA JEWELRY ANO LOA~ INC. .
COMl SEE US SOON!!!
1838 NEWPORT BLVD
fJ-i..,nr,.,~n Co~t.1 M"'>•I nP .Jf B1 0,1d> .... 1~
Phone 646-77 41
•
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Other members accepting
responsibilities will be the
Mmes. M. A. -Moore and
Margaret Gottschlich. vice
presidents; Paul Huffman and
Richard Green. secretaries,
and Louis Spiel berger,
treasurer.
The club has grown from its
original membership of 26 to
114 members and bas adopted
philanthropic p r o j e c t s in·
eluding the City of Hope.
Florence Crittenton Horne,
Fairview State Hospital and
Services for the Blind.
'Vegas' Night
An evening of Little Las
Vegas entertainment wUI oc·
cupy members of l..AMi Lirios
Guild of the Easter Seal Socie-
ty and their husbands on
Saturday evening, Nov. 14.
The fund.raising event in the
Laguna Beach borne o( Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas O'Brien will
benefit t h e rehabilitation
center.
12 DAYS ONLY! ••
Pre-Thanks • .ng
' ,,
•
select grou
" this fall's '
I
QualiCraft oes »t . I most
were i 9.996
10.99
The style shown i~ just a sample of the fresh
shoe fashion you'll find! Enjoy these specialf'
savings now on an attractive choice of shapes.
colors, textures. In sizes for 'most everyone. ~
LOCAL
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Ho eth1r 111w1p1p11 t1tl1 you 111or1, ,.,,,./ 41•'1'· •llo11t whit'•
1•1111 •11 111 tti1 Wr11t1t Or•n11 Co11t the" tflt DAILY PILOT,
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DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
GIVE
A
MANO
By Tom K. Ryan
• 1'ALfaJE:1HIS ISAWI?( Sl'fCIA~ l\'l:tK fOR WE ~WKS. ITS A 1iMEOF ..,.,EY CUN/JIN!< OF CRASS
aANDESTINEH'( .• :fOR If
15 SN£flKY Wl\l\11'! .••
.:Tl!r. WJ:EK l'H!EN 'fl/ERV flBFR OF
OOR ltOT Uf!Lt ~ CRIJ:S OOTFOR
SOMfON£:1ll VWfOOR PENT-UP
GU/Le WON!.,YOU'l.L 00 HONORED
111 KNON1JtA1,aJCtA!iAIN, I HAVE CilOWl~U UPON WllO'il/O 1-AY
MY ANNUAL. SNtAKY Wf;i:K SNfAK!
••• YOUR CO-Ol'l:llATION W/Ll. llE
.•• PUT, IF YOU CARE.10 DROP e.\CK l.fif!:R I rMY HAY!: AN OPENING-•••
SCR!B&ll::
5(.ft\~
""'""'
MUTI AND JEFF
G
APPR!'CIAll'P.
By Al Smith
I GAVErT
T'M:> COlrrS.
'f+IATS .
ALIE! ?
WAATSTHAT
SUPPOSED
TOBE?
A
WHITE
LIE! MUTI! .
,
..J By Harold Le Doux JUDGE PARKER
I E"tPL.AIN EP TliAT I WA.SN'l' INTE?-IF I WERE YOU, I'D SEli:IOUSlV PROM.15E
W14V WOtllD W A.ND 8 IN DUSTR1E5
OFFER YOU Tl-IREE TI MES THE A.MO!HlT
01= Tl-IE CURli!:ENT ~PP~A.l5A.L PRICE
O!= 5PENC.ER FA.RM S, ASBE\'?
E5TEO IN SELLING AT A>N PR'ICE 50 I STUT TMINKING A!OllT fROpas. TO KEEP ME
WA.SN'T INTEllESTEP IN KNOWING WHY . IN6 TO li\E! ONE Of THESE P'A.YS rNFOR'MEP
rnE'I WA.NTEP ro suv: NOW. LET'S I Mtc:MT JUST FALL IN LOVE Of:. ANY suot
STOP TA.LKIW6 ASOUT W A.NP a WJTM SOME OPPOlmlNIST WM0 POU8TFUL
JN1'UST!i:IES! I WANT 10 TALK Wt.MTS 10 MARRY ME PE:VELOP».EJlT! PIP THEY s~v Wl4V THEV
WANTED ™E PROPErn?" A&OllT GS! tAY MONEY!
PERKINS
.!i'~=-J.t".>7.,
!DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by .~A. POWER I ,,.,.
ACR OSS 43 Facia l Yesterday's Put zle 5ol vrd :
expression 0 L [ • S £
1 Kafir 44 Fam ily
or Zulu member
6 Acidi ty 1(1 Pole 45 Trained
47 Rel1ain •
14 Par ----: 51 Symbol in
By Air Mail rell9ious art
15 Build LIP 52 Anti·
a ba nk pol !utionis t 's
acco unt hope :
l b Exchan9e 2 words
~remium 54 Bring
17 har9es toge ther G ~ L 0 I' '" )8 Kind of 58 Clvil H ' MISS PEACH
school: offense 11/10170
Informal 59 Footwear 3b Key 19 Sounded Item 7 f i>h
20 Lotter ies : 61 Ta sk 8 Extras 37 Girl
Informal &2 Texan's 9 Kind of student
22 Oistinclion neighbor firear m 39 Vi ol ently
24 Harvest b3 ··-breve: 10 Mar~, Tony inc lined
2& Fabric Muslca I or aul ·--· 40 Less harsh
27 Person instruction 11 Onct more 42 Painful
from higher 64 Uncanny 12 Slightly sound
. ~fOllnd bS Rupture sc orch 43 Relieved
31 ontainer bb Caustic 1) Hard •• ···: 44 Declared
32 Tille compounds 2 words as a ract
33 Ran &7 Consumed 21 Morose 4b Old woman
J S lnvo!11n\a1y a le oho I 23 Wall member 47 Enterla iner
moveme nt 25 Oan1rr 48 Fellow:
38 Golf club DOWN 21 use s foe Sl ang
feattJ't 28 Indoor 91mt 49 Bird
39 ---· 1 •••. in tile 19 S-an nearer 50 Wiiiy's
leag ues be I fr)' to the wind pa rlner
2 o,clare 30 Ra ves SJ A.t to1's parl
,_ ..............
U'L AINIR
. SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
B..t~.<o.
T i.M>dZo ·~·
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
tx:OOo 'too ~NI
/llCll'll. I.OT" NtctJr ·~-ntest!. pt.QS.~ IS lrf
F'"'
By John Miles
By Men .
-A NE WBORN KIO
POIESN'T KNOW W>iAT HR!; SIGNING"
40 Neither
iood nor bad J H.istoric
41 an's river
nitkname 4 Forbe~ring
42 Med iterranean 5 Not used
34 Ara
Parse~hian a Eag e Oa)'
JS "·-· and
55 lsraell
dance
Sb Eire
57 Smell
By Saunden and Overgard _r:==::::::==:::::::=z;:;-f.1$5,Z~/::.,MMm;OTh"H\:.i1w.iii.:::.1.ii:'l/.'N.~/';"fP/,1v,i;;f'IMQLi;;i'S!fAA-;~f;~~.-;j;i;f'fi!ueKPErfi1~'1 HEAMlllll/.E, AS MIKE AW
BVT WHY 010 HE • WE SHALL CO#T/NUE 7V TIGE/l HEAD NORnl-
STEVE ROPER
ts land b Sna le trouble" bO Fuel
'SWEAT SO MUCH·.wl!Clt RXlOtV HIH-ANDOBSEWE TIGER/•• LOOK OUT BEHIND/
WE TAJ.KEO ABaJT. HIS ACTIONS.I
BATTEf///!S ;>
.... ,,.., ... -~
1111on o v,,:.~~~,,;..
WO)l.t> CJOO fiJilJ .l: M,l.'le CllAR115~ taO'-
THl~WOIUt ..
MR•MUM
DAILY l'!LOT II ' .
By Al c....
By Charles 8-ttl
'r#:tM~)
"
By Roger Bolen
! -llo00¥-1 t>COO?-·
~ -·DODO?
~ \
DENNIS THE MENACE
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ft DAILY PILOT S• Tutsd11, NMmbtr 10, 1970
Yo11r JtJone11'• Wortla
-Some Tax B1·eaks Still Eeft
OVER THE COUNTER
NASD Ll1tlng1 hw Mondoy, November 9, 1911
Fo1· l\lerchandise Donations ~!?:.ti~;~w ...
.,,. --WO'!" ;~ C•
~~!...'f,. 1\11 )\I lltYdl C' 1J 7S 1 ... , '-I l 1\\ ~.1A
2f\oo a Jttrm c, 111' l)\li l'*"'" f. flt j = o i~ ~ :~:: tm n~ ~=di ,r-I~ g11...t-i
r
I
By $YI.VIA PORTER
The massive 1969 Tax
.Refonn Jaw really clamped
down on many v.·a,ys of saving
bies via making cparitable
contribullons Jn appreciated
6tock, merchandise, etc. tn the
pas!. many of you in the
higher brackets could actually
make more money by giving
aw1y propeny to chArlty than
by 5e.lling it -but · that's all
tent now.
While the Jaw narrowed
the possibilities for tax sav·
inss through contributioos in
property, though. it did not
complet~Jy eliminate them.
lt's more imperative than
ever to make sure you
UNDERSTAND WHAT TAX
BREAXS ARE LEFT and how
you can take full advanU.ge of
them.
-·vou can still combine lax
saving V.'ilh philanthropy by
making your co ntributions in
:stock. real estate, other
capita! assets which ha ve
risen in value and which you
tia\'C held more than six
months. You can deduct as
your contribution the FULL
FAIR ~1ARKET VALUE or
the properly -yet you do
NOT hav'! to pay tax on the
increase in value. T h e
charitable, religious or other
organization will be just as
well off as if you gave it cash.
lt can sell the property and
convert the entire value, in·
eluding your untaxed profit,
into cash.
To il luslratc, say you bought
stock for $500 some years ago
which is now worth ,I,000. If
you sell the stock and give the
charity the proceeds, yiu will
tiave to pay a tax on the $500
·Jong-term gain. But if you give
the stock to a charily and let
the charity sell it, you wind up
wilh tbe same $1,000 deduction
from your Income but pay no
.... "' lhe pn>fil. Whal -
)'OU cbooat makes no dU·
fertnce to the dlarily,
-You also can sUll get 1
tax break by giving the stock
to tht: charity and lm·
medietely buying the ide:nticil
stock in the open market for
$1,000 -assuming you don'l
want to part with the stock. Jn
this way , you get the same tax
benefits of a contribution for
the full value and no tax on
the profit. And by buying back
the stocg you have raised its
cost to you from $500 to $1,000,
nl no tax cost to you.
But let me WARN you
against procedures which, in
t~ past, I recoritmended for
tax savings but which will no
longer give you tax breaks.
Yoo can no longer sell your
stock'° a charity-at your cost,
deduct the excess d the value
over the cost and not pay any
tax on the gain -the SO-
CAIJ..ED "BARGAIN SALE"
TO CHARITY. If. in the above
example, you sold the stick to
the charity for $500, you could
still deduct $500. the exce89 of
$t.000 value over the $500 sales
price -but if you did this, un-.
der the new ruJes, you would
also pay a capital gains tax on
half of the $500.
Be careful a ·b o u t con.
tributing stock, land or similar
ASSETS HELD FOR SIX
MONTHS OR LESS or con·
tributing inventory, stock in
trade or any olher property
the sale of which would reuult
in ordinary income. U you do
this in 1970. you contribution
deduction will be limited to
your cost. Again using the
above example, if you had not
lleld the stock for more than
six months (or if this was your
merchandise) you r con-
tribution deduction would be
lndustrr, Profits Dip
During 3r.d Quarter
By JACK LEFLER
NEW YORK IAP) -Pronts
flf 392 corporations Jell in the
lhird quarte r under lb e
double-barreled impact ()f a
sluggish econ()my and the
General Motors strike, a
survey showed recently.
lndicalions were lhat fourth
quarter earnings would be
even more disappointing if the
seven-week GM strike hangs
en.
The profilS tumble em-
braced a big majority of in·
dustry groups anc.i was blamed
in part for the stock market's
recent decline.
A check by the Wall Street
Journal of 570 companies
showed 392 bad de<:lines and
178 had gains for the three
months ended Sept. 30. This
represe nted an aggregate pro-
fit drop O[ 9.8 percenl fro~ I
Net Profit
Of Capital
Firm Given
LOS ANGELES -capital
Alliance Corp.. owner o{
Mariners Savings and Loan
Association of Newport Beach,
lhls week reported net earn-
ings for lhe nine months ended
Sept. 30 in the amount ()f $380,·
8~7. or 47 cents per share.
This compam to PlS.749,
or 37 cena per share for tbt:
similar period in 1969, w.hi ch
repn:sents an increase in per
:dlare earnings of 27 percent.
Per share earnings for tM
three months ended Sept. 30
were 11 cents compared to 14
cenls !or the similar period in
l.969.
Earnings !or both period.,
were computed on the 819,221
total abam outstanding.
• "We antJclpat.e an ucellent
fourth quarter, as profits from
GO.r rul est.ate dtveJopment
.Proeram and acctlerated ten·
dJq lldiritltc (....Wllng U.m
our s ub1ldlar y's un-
""""'•led llquldy of 15 por· 1--~.,.=n ~ savliiCS') lhd l!-1f.st the
~corponiuon·1 t~a-r'n1 n gs:··
Rapbeel Qaikin. Pttsident1 staled.
1 ..... Oii OfL PARfTfNM
W..... BAU WAllHOOH
OP9I TO '"' Na.tC
$5 and ..
Wf & l ..... !11,t.UTA AllA --HM.IU WAWTI•
year earlier. The Commerce
Department bad reported that
the second quarter declines
was 11. 7 percent for the ma·
jority ()f American businesses.
The GM strike, which began
Sept. 14, was seriously damag-
ing to the auto and automotive
equ.ipment industries a n d
adversely affected suppliers in
the steel, rubber, chemical
copper and corrugated box in-
dustries.
Profit declines among major
com panies included: U.S .
Steel. $33.6 million, or 62 cents
a share, from $46.1 million. or
87 cenls, in lbe 1969 lhird
quarter; Du Pont. $ 7 7 . 7
million. or $1.60 a share. from
$84.3 million. ()r $1.76: AUantlc
Richfield, $43.59 million, or 77
cents a share, from $54 .11
million, or 97 cents: Union
Carbide. $.17.03 million, or 61
cenlS a share. from $43.7fi
million, or 72 cents; and Gulf
Oil, '140.511 million. or 68 cents
a share, from $148.7 million,
or 72 cents.
The best performance was a
gain of 82.9 percent by aircraft
makers. Other gainers were
chain stores 13.3 percent. drug
manufacturers 10.7 percent,
nnance companies 16.9 per·
cent, food producers 11.2 per·
cent, oUlce equipment 4.5 per·
cent, petroleum products 1.3
percent. tobacco compani~
23.7 percent, and utilities 4
percent.
"Tbird quarter report s seem
to suggest a bottoming out ()r
the profit decline and except
fo.r the GeneraJ Motors strike
1 would have thought proflls
would be on a moderate up-
trend from now on." said
Frances Shott, chief economist
for Eqliitable Life Assurance
Society.
"The strike has delayed this
uptrend and probably fourth
quarter reports will not look
good for most sectors e{
business. 1971 is another 6lory.
I expect roughly a 10 percent
increase in profit.a next year
over 1970."
Newton D. Ziruler. analyst
for the brokerage ftnn of E.
F. Jlutton & Co., commented:
.. A good part • of die third
quarter rtports have betn
more dlslppotntlng than an·
tlclpattd. The fourth quieter
depend< on lhe GM strike and
probabl)I will ha_ve_Jo be writ·
ten off as 1 poor..quartet • .!.!.-
General Motors reported on
Wedneldly • Joss of $77.l
million in the third quarter.
compared with a profit or
$2211.I million a year earUer.
Sales slumped to $3.59 billion
from $.S.Q.1 blllion in the 1969
--thlrd quarter. It WU GM'1
first quarterly IDSS since 1944
ond the. worst quarter Jn the
<0mpa01'11>1w 11111«)'.
ti.., Wl9iltf" 11¥ •Hllll" i. 1111 N•llontl A1Hd-~1-
tllon of s.a.irni.. ·-nw onl Y '" ol -.l-..1 Offlel'I. 11'1(.u .,, ·~ ft# Y our c-. -· 1U1U l'Ot ~1111 1r1nt.t<. ~RI c,.,. •.0-•-••°' ~ IO ~·-,...._ tlof\1 I t rt ltP. j11rfMI l.lMO """'""' ~ .. ...,.,.... loll<' -'ti tft"" Gff f¥c fact that )'Ollr ..et was •11er or . 1 .. • G Al•ctt1 tOPtOalrn.111, 'G ll:""'llc
quoted at •1.~. ~~r11~ • ._.IU! := .~1-'~s:ir Another tr1c.ky new pr~ ,'I.Iv• 11tton po.ir-... 111 . 11 ·~-1 dl•Hll c..io:tdl ,,, 1n.tt vfs1on •PP es to u...-o you -'ll"llt rnrow,,. 11n111
w ho contribute paintings, :' 111e noid••· i!;1= i::-i.,:
aculpture. other ~ t 1 n g I b I e ""n rn.rllllfl !: t~
al ::"'CIOwfl ... tom-GoClwY c person property (machinery, ~i.e'rit 1 1,. ,.Ph c..
caUle. etc.) ~ charity. You~~"~"'f 1i~ 1m a-"M~
get a deduction for the full AID Inc '" I V. ..... ,, •"'•' . ., ~ITS lr>C -'\\ ~ rn value ol these gifts only 1 the .r.sG Ind 3._ ,1, ro.11 P'r ~-"ty •-1 . ...sG ,. All ,.,, ,w111 IR ... ,..., 1 uses t11i:: pa ntJngs or .._vM c• 1h 1 ""''o ~11
!fmllar property in a way ~~,ri!' i1 ~~ ~ ~~oit!.n
JIELATED To ITS EXEll&T< -.ft II• m 1* Hanovr S ITU' I .. Ir lndul 1~ )\~ HIYtfl In PURPOSE To illustrate jf .r.1rtir~ F 13~; 1.v. t1e•1th •n ' ' Albl.t H 1~~ 2'i .,tnred F You contrlbule a painting to a "'1"-rh ,(, w. Her11 Cp . "col•c 4\1 s H!Oot Int mURUm for its use. your con-.r.nco Lnit lt\111 n~ f4olm EP . , _ . I Allo ••11 p; 3 HOlabrn tr1bution ts its tu I value. All11d Eq ,,,_ iv.!::!-,",
I .. ~ lb . I' Alpn G10 l 3\;nOl'l I Bu u you .,ve e pain 1ng Amaoc , 1•; Howro til
~ ..• ~ h.ch •t..~ Am 8t1tn 1• i."' Hawm Jn to your '-"1Jt.U'l.::11, w l UK:ll A El L•D J"'i •l• Hudi Mt
II "I ' ibu'" Aln E111t 73\<.o 73\o Hud PP se s 1 , your cori.r .ton Arn Fu"' ti\ ~ Hua ti••
deduction is ()n}y your cost : a:?~. ~lh ~ t:r.~ ~,
Plus 50 percent of any increase"'" re1~ 1, uv. Hr•,." •'"•' . , . ...nllel/1 8 70 7'\.J Hr Jn the value of the pamUng A11111n 111 •i• 114 ::::i•o~ Sr
since you bought it. (And if :~~11 •n~ ~ :\? ,•!1 .. ,:1
l..a • • 1: Ho .. Arotn pf 79 31 '"rlf t.,., giver is a corpora.,.on, "'""' Art Moll u11o i•v. 1,"', c~• . . I Nrow N 7A 17"2 n rm In deducUon IS only the eost p us ""'kit ,,.. '"' Int 8Wlh 37" per~ ol ••• • .... AICC eot :121'11 3l\.'> In! Mu!Hf n 1..-.;;1n. u 1 r Auto Sci • av, Int Sri
predation.) The Tr ea! u r y r.~; At 1ri: 1:"" i~;:k:i' flf hasn't yel explained what is ••r "•111t S\I 1•.1o ,1 ... ~ •• , aktm 11:11 20\.'t ~ .t """ II meant by "related to the e11tn P 1v. m .~ F •• fgmr1 3• 3.fl:. ~•llUm C dla.rity's exempt. purpose, so ieu U\6 1~ Jim W•t • -teellm 23~ U\.'t 1m.1 F <:beck with a professional tax 1e 1111 1ra 111.1o J1rmtt11
adviser before making this g:i; k~ ,j.,,, 1l~d~ F~~
f tribut ' lltrk I-It ~ o10JM Ktlter SI type 0 con •K>ll. 8eh LID lW. MIV. Kais.St pf
A finaJ note: the Treasury 2/:~111S.: ,~ ~~~J:•'Grn
will now permit you to make I~~\"'' Hr ,J:: 21~ ~!~T
charitable deducti~s up to 50 ::r~ ~ ,~" 1~ ~~=
percent of your adjusted gross 1,~, c"H 1rn .,,v, ~~tt, ,~, . ·5130 ·"•ll J\lo~~· income, again percen~ r111en 1 'Vi •K•~• c,"' , I f Sri"-' t~ 3f 3~ tl/11 C prtv1ous y, but watch out or &•k• kt 2G 2o1 ~lno 1n1
this. If you give the charity 11i:~ ~ 1~\l 1~ K1'il1 c:'
lo · I · Sucker So\ 1\.'t KNf, V• ng-tenn capita gam prop. ••"" c11 3 311 Kre 1rr
I (••ch •AAi. • held •w•nup s ,.\It ,.~ LMc 011 er y .... as Suli;.A }OU )IC Lt•• '"" 6~ L•nc• IR for more than six months), you vii W Sv 7n4o 2»o ,''~ w'", Cmlldv N Jl)lli Ill)) •n• caMot go from the' 30 to 50 :1noro M 11 70 L•rson 'li I Cuu1M 1 II 11 Urwn M percent ce1 ng un ess you c111r1u ,14 :m LHdr c,
agree to cut your deduction bf ~:: ~ 1:: 1:tt t:~u~"J
ha" of your unrealized paper C•P •ntA 3 ~ L ... 1, AF ""' CtpTdl :M9 2¥. LkK Mt-f ........ fit.! on vnur contribution C•rr o • ., tv. 10 LPDllw t""' .JV • :1rt1 81 2 m Loll CCIY Use care and here too, pro-;•rtr G11 '1~ 2'1'1> Loo Etrn I • • , vllC NG Ill Jim LYnCft C fessional help is m1n1mum c1111 c., 1v. 1~ Mid GE• , =•nltx ~J 351't M•I ltlty self-protection for you. i•n vps 11 1n~ M.t•ll!rt
Next : Stocks. =~~"~•b ~it ~ ::::1~ ~ Clltr1 0 .Rf 6\~ MlrMJt C
Finance
Briefs
~m L•• I 11'1 M ... Mfl lies llld J ~V, Mtrrn Gr •• VIII lJ\li 1~ M erow~ I tlrll 11 13 M1ul LP CllrlH S 107 110 Mt~er O Christ pf ff ltM M<KuY
Clltdoel I 1 Ao\tdl< H CH11 Mtq l o>; HV. Meo Ml9
c;1111 U A nv. 14\lo Mt<ttr" Cltll U 8 13'11 2• Merkl IR
C:ltrln Ml l.f11\ 15\lo Mkliil C• Cltllr. Mt 1~ 2(111, MIClltX
Cltrlon 1~ 1" Mld'w GT Clint Mer 1204 1, M,t1 G•s <11ro1on 0 5 .J'J, Ml11 VIG (II# CD 1Jl't 11'.lo Mo RKll
Coeur o 6ll 1 Mod sci Cog1r Cp Jl J6 Moftwll; It
Coltm s,r 2~ 31,1, IM'on1 c.o1
NEW YORK (UPI) -There ~~~·sir ~J~, ~o:i: =:;: ';,k
Cornut W.. •~ Moort s are 1,200 active investment c,~ 0c1r <1111 u,,Y.o fo\t11 TrA orn •• 111,1, MltTr Wf companies among the 1,328 l= ~r:.. ",i: 23~ Motc11 ~
registered with tbe SEC as of ~::; .. "1' 1lv. 1J:: .=::.11~
Cmo Cm 6V. n, Mutll:I Es June 30, 1970, according to cm11 1n11 4~ 5\li :tr 1~ . . I Cm11 Ttc m sv. W1esenbtrger F 1 n a n c a I '"'"~' ""' 7ft =:iC:~ i
Services, an authority on the l::"~doct ':,, ~.~ :;;n~"~r Con!rtn 1.., mutual fund and financial Cooper L '""" 1.sr, :•,: •,t,0
Cor-11 .s 1'ii »'• · · du tri C01171 Yr t t i)) Nt11 Mid services 10 s es. crw1,0 1,,.,,, 1,v. N.i ""
• . • ..... Cre1t Mii 1\!o I~ Ntl Seclt Of the active et1mpan1es, """" cros1 co 31v. JM N•t :111ow Cru!dl Jt S ffi N•I SltYo" are mutual funds, 195 are Cvi!<•• c 1 •~ NEn GE --•• • d • 1U Otn1 Lb1 s>• 9~ NJ HtlG cl\RtCU""Cn companies. In are 01n1v M 1..,. ••.:. N1Ch1n F
• • •-+ •-·~•& d 0111 Dt~ Jn Slit Nltll A unit mves....,en~ u ,.;,,.;, an 0 11, Gen ,..,, V'll Nicll e
seven are fact a m 0 u n t O•'•'" P '"' l NA ltesc 01vl1 Fd )"Ii IV. HCt, NG certificate companies Wiesen-o., Mlr I•~~ 1sw. HElll' ou
' Otcot lfl S\9 "'• Hl'A Gtl berger reports, Ot111D .+.o 36 ~ NW H•IG Otlhl Int "" 111 ~ 1'11Sr Otlll~ CPI .\t 51 Nud ltK
' THE HAGUE (UPI) -8:: ~~~T ~:~ ~~ 8:/: ~~~
Dutch nower bulb exports in-8r.':' c~ ,~~ 1!:Z &1>1m!~•n
creased from 11933 tons dur· Ohc trn: '1• 311; Otttr T,. • Olvtr CM 31'1 3ii'I Ovtr NA ing the first six months of 1969 00~0,u1e1 ,1 !.~ •,,. ""• '" , · d' n1n._ .... ,.p c 1,. lo 21.330 1n the correspoo 1ng 0ow Jon 3S'll le\.\ P1D11 er ·oc1 lb' ODYle oa 131' 14'11 P•c Autr> pen IS year, Orew NL '"" l P•c Fal! Ounllln 0 11\lo l~ P1•cD Co Durlrori l S lJI~ Ptncol SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -El "•Int ' '~ P•11t.r o~ E111!C wt lV. 4 P1r•w H Bank credil cards were in· E••• s11 7 1v. P•u"'-Y Eton Ltb l•'' 25 Ptvet~ troduced nationally just four ~i""io.~~~ 1~ 1~~ Petri M'
years ago, but bave found E1~ syst 1 '"' :rrt~~1~
their way into one out of three ~l"t11e11' t.'.~ ~"? :~G~:'c
A • h !I Nuc 11\lo lt p I Wt mer1can omes. 1ctcpy 1 1~ p 'r,'0111 Al least 60 mi t Ii on l1'2'"sv• ~~ ~;z P~Ro• pf Americans no1v hold bank !' Otta •1 u v. ~ .. ~111,,!ull I Modul 3 3\~ ''" credit cards and this does not F.rnpS 0 11 1s'-'i H1o ~!.'!'!!'",< • Eroerar C lJ H """ include travel, entertainment E11t•o •• 1v. 2 ~r,!.. •,0~1, .1 d Entwlsl 6 t '4 v.. or 01 company cards. A stu Y Eon cor• 1''> Hi ~ :;:
conducted by Louis Harris and ~~i' 1~ 1l~ 1~l: f'uti ' Nc
Associates found that credit or =~b \e:.,,0 1"..: f'~ ~=
eharge ca~s were most 1ikey ~~I: 1~·~ ,1 .. ;.,.,:Ti
to be carried by .... .....,ns mak· ~Ina"'' ,.., 1v. "°"° c, ,.~ "v r11 AC!lt 50'1> J7 Qo11•1r ing $15 000 or more 1 year. •1tG •t' 4 s ciu11 cM • '11 WFlll 1''o 2 .. !'IT S'(St = ld!llll 11~~ 171'\ ltd Oyft
1\1ARLBORO, Mass. (UPI} ~::, ~ii 1~: 1la :~~ ~I
-Computers that are: com·
patible with those made by
,u 11=: :i;; r: )I ,. l "rK fl 1 .1~ Iii • ~ ~ :::111 1: riv.ls~~= ,,. ~ . ~ 1.a
1VZ ,f: ::-r .. , r' ;tt ~~ J 'J! 15 ~~:J~ ..... JM I' lt11t ,.._, 2fl"lo 2"" Trlat N _,. llV. '-"' ......._ !I' '"' ll:Ytfl ... ,a14 41 Trkialr ~ .a P'd -~.7S Wt Stc:llltf" 3 M TY,_. I'• •v. f\4 AH' ,Dt
2Vt 3 Sctntn IE '" J~ Unl!K ) 2\\ ~-l~trln "' 11~ ictioH IA ~ ~ u~ 111um 2714 2N Atr.':' !:i I \It Sci Cotr t» 2~ U11 McGll -l l't A .. G~I I.JO 2:~ ,:"' ~ 1'f-~~ ,1lt ~I ~= ll~ 2Ttt :~. ln!tr1 'l 1t11t s.c'I"'° ,. No m us ,.,,., lU • A1111"'J :/} '4 2~ Ser -H 11 lt UI TrkL 3' ... S1 Alc•Mlll f,ia 17,. ll\IO Surle f/f 1.,....1nlt Uf/ ,_.,. M ....... Alcdm'" »
J 7\lt s.1, '"'" •w , Vl•h SL• 5\1 •Iii Aftaio f'J ·"' ,. jllo S-tr1t )"-l'4 U!ll INI tM t6W. A,_. .lOt 1~ ~ SY(" Off/ S W. Vtl LO ~ 6'4 """"'-'ilCI !l«I 16\\ 11 ........ U' U S:J VMA $e 1•14 IS Al~ r.J ~ = ~M :: r ~~ltlt ~ 11n\ ~fll:.c11 1,20 1Pol IN $411(1 $1 S \~ 21~ Wtc:11• ,. 11 1' A\ld Mtln t0
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S\io n~ $!•n HP<f 2• U V. Wt!d!rn 1 7'oli it.malS119 IM ',',.1:!.~ St... .. Sii' lllh 12.\lo Wt1ln1 M 11\lt 11 ~AA£< .~,,. 7~ j\,; Strtw Cl " lll Wtll Fn 1•'4 11'1\ .+.~1 '.n:ao
:)0 " SuDK .,.,, 11"1 l!'o W"at ,. ::: 1~ Atn Hosr:>.·"' ~ 111'111 S11tc1•l F »> '"' W1fll NA ,.~ ...... ArneH .so· , Srtllo F• 319 ~ Witn M11 "• ...,. AAltFll 10 2J!Ai U:W. ~,m-• ''' ·-W••o l"\i l~'IO!h ' IU t\11 ' ... •• . .... J\li Am Air','" ... 1 1Yll TtUff• 1~ 16\li WJ"9 Wft to.._'°"' Arnl1• .OS.
1N 201~ f!~, w '1..,, ':.'-: ~~':1w"i-'"' m :!:l:: i:~ :\ ~ TV c.... I'll I~ Wrltlll W 71 ,.~ Arn Cati 2.10 13\~ U llt TtnMlll 17VJ 11\.li YrdllY fi 'Ill fti ~~.'!!. 1..., ...
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2l\i ,:~ MUTUAL ~i.t~~ni,.,:, ~' 'tl<o it.m OuelVnt
•'" ,r:~ ~~ir.i,,t·~ 4 ,y; Am Exp Incl
11:\il ltl'I AE•lnd lll'A'
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U\4 ISV. ' : = ~~ ,,~ ':t Am He>1P ,1,
l \it '"" .+.mlnvut .JI 5\-\ 1 AmMldld .11
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Jiit ~ -Tl'll lollowint -INTGN l ,7' 1.t2 .r.tnPlloto .I! is UV! 1111on1. IUPPlled Dy 11111 CoA 11.JI 12.U ArtelO., .n. Uli U -Htllolwl Au«~ ln'f Guld I.Oil I Gt Am Sl'tl!llQ I 111'1 1714 •llon ef StQw111e1 In" lnclJc ... 1 ... .r.m SllJp ..60b
:M\lt 27\lt o.111rs. inc.. .,. 11111• 8e>1 to.• 11 . ., A s .... 11 1.t0 ~ W. tl\it PtlcM t i ll'!lktl ln"'"ton 0-. AmSoAtr 10 7V. l \.'o liln.t lllQlrlllH IOJ ndl j .11 4,U .r.rn Sid 1'
''"' 7"11 could' f\llV• be1111 Miit .n t.Sl AmSfd Df.f.JS 2 1~~ IOld (l!IO) Oil" boul'hl Pl'Olll 3.11 1'3 "m Sttrll ... 21\.li HU !t r.kid) MOr>d•Y Stock 16.30 17.n AT .. T wt 11'1 II' aid 'at11 Stltct 1.75 1.0 Am Tl.T 1.60 11•11 nu ""rdfl 1 7t 1 tt V1r ,., • 25 1.n ArnWW1c1 .u 11~ l!V. Admlr11ty Fi.nc11-In" llltlfl '-j' •.JI AWWSof l.1S 7V. I W. Gfwt11 5 U i; ... l11tl 17. I II.JI AW ri: 1.U ~~ ~: tncom 3:51 3'.'2 ~""Hncodl: f;:I t.~ :~a\;"" .60
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2t 7Mli Ctn! SM ID.00 10.tl NIW' W'lCI 11.• 1r:ss l'f/1 w " 1J 2Jl't Chtflnlnt F11nd1: Ntwton 13,06 4.t7 1 rQllT .'5 •V. .At 811111 10.2t 11,25 Hldl 5"11 1,,, t.fl t I GIE I It IV. t W. Com 51 1 a l.11 Nor111Jt 1•.11:511.0J 8tltG pfC4" 2 2\lo Gl"Wth I.ff I .fl 0cl'tDPl'I .a.31 •. ll 8 1naP11t ,!So
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J!\ l 'll SIVlld t .olO 10.3] Opp AIM I.ti ID.17 1·1: M'1'°ot ' tlli 10 SPKt 7.1'1 1.50 OTC JK t .D 10.U • H !'~ !Vt Cl'llmc:I ll.lt If." Ptet Fnd 1.07 1,14 :mr~lld
15"' UM Colonltl: P111t Rw 7.02 1.11 lllliehLt":l:
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J'r'J 6 Coms &d '·"° 4.71 Pion Fnd I0.47 ll.u 8tloc P.t .so 16,., I™ Cwl!h .... 1.11 1.11 Pl1n lnY t ,U 10.10 8•kltn 1.IO 4\\ •'II CwUh C 1.11 1.J.I l'rltt F11n1ll: 8tld.,.H .IOb 1\'lo l'N Comtt Al l .S1 t .Jt Grwth 21.10 tl.10 8tll How .60
11 11 ComP1t 6 00 6.51 H Ert t .01 t.01 kll ln1trcon
"'" 41'~ C&ll\p 8d I.It I.tit N Hor '2.5022.50 ••mf• Co .• 4:U. 5\1 Comtt Fd 1,47 9.IJ P'ro FuM l .IO I.to BtnOt• l.IO
21 311 Cornllk ~.u '·" 0 Port! lllllVtll 8tfldll .. , ! 7:u, J>~ (IWIC(lrd 11.fl ll.11 ProYdnt •.OJ 3.0 81MflCI 1.61 7 )'.lo CC!Mfl.I lfl lO.OG 10.JO Prud SYI t .1710.112 8-'1 ptS.SCI , •• 7 Contt Ml •.• 1.4 PU<ll•n 'IM t.• II-" pU,30 11~ ,111 Cont G1'11 7,74 7,11 Plllfttm Fwncl1: e-i 5of2.l0 51.11 5'14 Cor• L" 11,.Y l •.11 Equll ,,n 1.M 811191111 12i.:. ll'h Cntr t•• 10 "11.n GHr1 12.'7 u.ss e....,Ul'I 111,
11v, 11 Crn WOl" J.U J,IJ Grth 1,11 t.13 8t•kt¥.,t~11:1 JO JI\\ Crn WOt l 6.'.IO 1,tt lncorn 7.11 7.M 8ttll n·, 1'\'I U•Vlll M Jl.10 51.70 ln,,HI 4.31 1.•t .,, Tl'lrlH ·'°
''
,. lt" Otl•W••• Group· VlJI• 7.24 J.t 811rt ~ ... ·• .., O I 10 •• i1 -"°"" 5.tt l.41 81111 Ltlltl I 1.. '"' ''' ·'" ·"" ll:1vert I '1 9 7J 81ock Hit :16 1 71~ Dt!Wr ll.IJl2.l1 Rlnlrtl 1J.1,13:111111 8tll 1.20 '' 4~'11 0.lll L.'.IO I.If Ao.nl~ 5 50 '01 ~el pf4.7S 51 n Ooat cox 12.tt 12.tt 5•1.,., Fd •.n 5:16 Bobbi• er1<1 11'0 11"' Ortxel lt."n 12,22 khuitr IJ.11 u.7t &"Mino Co .40 t •1 I~ Ortvf I'd 10 Sl 11,5'/ kllelde,... Flll'ICI . a.tlC11 25b tlV. 6'\'o Or11'f L" 11.S! 12.67 Int ln\t !liiv111 8orld ind ,17
IM UV. E•lonl.t+owt,CI: 5Pcl 11•11• 800kMlh 1.21 ,,. l \' e11•~ t .H 10.11 e11 1iS4 n:S.. 11ont1H1 1.2(1 • 1'16 Grwlh 10.tJ n .•7 Com $1 .: ....... tlorlW•r l.IS '" '~ I~ 1.n J,tl SKurltr Furods· Sornl•M .Ill 17>\ 1rn SNCI 7,1'1 1.11 EQlllV 2 u " s" 9Gf l!Clll 2.21 th 10'4 Sieck 11.11 ll.2l lnvtst 1:1, t:t1 8111ms Inc ~ I Eben! 11.•1 lt..47 Ullr• St5 1501•1nltAlr -" 7 1V. Efl'ff 11.lt U ,11 SllK Am 1:47 t'.11 rlH.SI 2.C. '° 10\i Emf, SC J ll $.JI s.i SMCS 11211•.St 1•lif MY 1.2111 1• 1, Enw" 11.15 11.IK Sl'ntl G1'11 .U I." •IHMr pf t li• ' EntPl"W J.t7 1.1'1 Shem Fu un11vi ll Arlt Ptt .OI '""' .l, EClllllV l.H .... Siii•• A, ~•.21 2f.U ar P11 '"·°' 1G 10'11 F.Clllt !:Ill 7.11 1.17 Sh Ott" l•A l•M &dWY H•le 1 s ~ 'l!'llJf l"re 1.u 1.n Sidi e.u t.47 M'wYHlll p1 !
"" 10\lo EWll" I!.~ 1S.73 SIQm. Funds: 8rt;wy Gt ,tD l•V.,., l!Ylrll lfl 11.20 U ,,, C•Jll 7.4J 1.12 lklrnUG l.n :nu. JN F•ll'ld 1,,5 l ,t ) 1nve11 l .'3 10.15 .~~'1 jg F•rm l tJ I Tl 1.11 Truit 1.07 l .n erunnrlr. 10 F..t Crth 11.1411.ll Sm1111 I I.~ 1.lJ i Er f :llt Fld Ci t 1ft.1t11.7l Swst 111" 1.l't l .'1 ~C. 'u..
another manufacturer, and
with n e w memory-.saving
systems, were recenUy in-
troduced here.
Land
Fld Fund lJ.ft 1.\.71 $WlflY tll 5 $4 '·" 11Ck1 Co 'p1 ... ' Fld TrflCI 10.17 22.'4 S-r In,, 12..JS lJ,J !"" ' ~.o Course '1=1 ";~: •.Ill ftm:;• Gt tu tt =~ 1'.':
tlldust 1.a 3.1s !"" '' IO.so ll.50 Iulo\!• w .11
Foor new models. each of
which can be plugged into
other exisUng s y s t e m s •
debuted, and RCA Chairman
Robert W. Sarnoff .said the
new computers otfer users ot
existing e q u i p m e n t con--
slderably greater memory
capacity a n d performance
than CWTttll sygtems.
CARACAS (UPI) -Dia-
mond output in Ve.ne:uel•
reached 202,381 karats in the
first six months of 1970. com·
pared with 166.801 karats ln
lhe corresponding period e1(
J969.
LUXEMBOURG (UPI) -
The giant American cor·
poraUon E. I. DllPonl de
Nemours hos sel up a new
subsidiary In the Grand Duchy
of Luxembourg. The ntW com-
pany. Du.Pont Photolux Sa .•
wtll_ build • 1211 mllllonfadory
to manufacture a polyester·
based product used in p~
ducUoo of p\)Otecraphic fllllL
Inc-5.lt J." INclmto" Furt01< u'*•'""'•·• Vent s.• '·" Am IM J:ll 1.0 uni ...,
Se F 'd FtlF Vt t 1910.IO Flliwc: .• t.14 url.',~ 11,,.'l'_ t n ay ~:t1iJ~ l~ I:~ 5'1~, •• 1[#~'·" !:~:N: 111.U 1'1! t11Jl'lc 1,tl 1,1.1 Ct• 0. 1.,1 7.•I '"1'lll'Y .l'Ct Ft1 Muttl 7.IO 7.'1 .Stodl; 11.IO 11,lt Sur,.,,. M f'1! Ntt I 10 1 fl Sucrr"'IM l"v: 8usPIUl!'<I ,w.t A one.day seminar on "'' 11w1 :M:n ,.:1, S::1t ~.:: 1,11
Fie! C•1 !.IS.... l'Kll ,:,_, ?·= itl:IOt C• 11 recreational land development Fl:' F!'tll s.oi ··· sv~ 01 ,., r_,, -Mt ii.ct I' C-lh 4.tt I.•~ 'rMlt A• 11 '1t H ID t i Flntnl is being, held by UC Irvine ex-~::..;~ lr: ::ff T..cll•t i.st 1:.. :~':GL M~ . • F 1 ,._,11 1,n ,,,. Ttcl!nc >JI 1.t1 ''" s. i:ici tens1on t a .rn. ta p.m. r-,.,~~""er-: f::.O J: 'il:'l~ 1111 ;, .. A
day at the Airport.er IM, 11700 = t:;t I~ Tt:: i~' :·Ji i~ ~~~ ';.:
M -·~· Bl d. Utll '·"' l ,1t i ~. ll:Jlll.1' C#ll( '~. a~•uur V ,_ 1,111 I·., Gt , ,_., <•• c ......,.
Spuktrl will disoW finan-~~:it :.~ ,;r. Vn~':.1 ifl :;J! f:=' l._. _ , _ _,_ • _._,_ l'\11"111 Inc Gr•. U ... ;J7 (tr• Cl.Oii t c1ng. 111v~ .. en~1 new ;,~.., C"lnl"C 1 u t ,J'I 1111 1 .. ,1 •1, c;. .... ,L, 1 ....
--·'a"·-and planning of ltl'l..C •·15 1.t7 unlttli r;..-.: · t1r1Tt11 1.111 • .. 5.., ~"" l:iti 'l'Tf 10,~ 11.flJ Attm UI 1..tJ Cll'Tltf<I M
projects from m 1 r k e l ,~ """ t.l; "iJ: tf: ''l:l 11.n ~·~i.rw .-~web to the finished pro.~"T.c ;;; .~ u~:~~JT :U E!r?~·\:
Jed. lncludin( nits, ad-~~··"~-•·*' u. "•...,. Fd; ~c1 c, ..n.ts: I • d __. _..., .. -: \/'ti L .1,:W $.ll ICI Coro N \'ert sang an managc111•:11•• ""'• , '·'' '"' IM.'em '11 •.n ·•l•ntlfCtt' 1
coordinator Sao r or d R. Jr,; 'S't 1~.~ 1ifs v::s •:,. ~,4 ;:t ~:::C0'1~4ii Goodkjo said. c~'1..:-1tt: ,,:: ~::r ....:._ ::r, t~'1 <:::~~ 1::
Goodkin htads 1 rtttarcb ~-'!~ ~~:Il~t: ~r:1"" 1111" it! .: =:1~1 t,4
corporation thaw~ pr e1 p a r e di i1fil"'"' :i.• .," ::~' J: ill? lt., c:-M~Vt,' i'!. marke.Urag ormat on an ct11 •.g ?.1ft w1n11o1m Gr1111t r~ sw r
f Htrbol" T.$7 ?.7i Elnlfr ll.tO t.JJ ....,TttU .... consult.auon or real est.ale~" 1en11.n '""' 1 .1• 4::J .,,.. 1.-
devtlaptMnts ln 40 mt.es IJMI ~!.\ ~ t.~ I:: ~ ~ 1. :;::=;-"'°
11> fortlgn cwntria. ==:. ;{l 1;:~ =' '!:t.':i'a ~"'t"tr ·•
Enrollment Is open.~ 1t~'~:f'; ;t!l:' 'tlf'~~ :"..!i
.RestrvaUons JllliY be madt tCM 'Int ..... ,,,, Wffl IM , •• 1.n ,hi,,., 1:20 '"I•"' ,..,, 1.11 Wtllllt!ll 1.111121 _,,...,.., t. through the elleMkJn Office at 11 ll'IC l ~ US =~· r· 'd\ 4.11 MwMn IM
m-5414. A $2$ ree lnclud• l..,_ "ffi' b. .:.-~1:.1rtt,• t•'I l~t ll«l~_ir tf:
1 .. --1. 1"'1 01'11 6,117 U.1 "'""" ..4 Al =~-. W!Wlo lllt N I Ul;,fl llllllW f ,lf 1 ,fl
_,
Market
Sgnabob
.. . . ,,--..-. ,
Monday's Closing Prices
. . •
, NMmbtr 1970 DAlLY IPllOT
Complete New York Stock Exchange List
American Stock Exchange List
AKRON (UPI) -8. P',
Goodrkb Co. bas recaijtd
about 25,000 convc.nlional bias..
ply Plsatnser c•r tires in the
Silvertown 1.25 by 15 sl>e and
8-ply rating lor lnapect\go lot
PoSSible tr.ad dehda.
I
I I
I '
' •
I I
: I
l
:w;. !( (.,.¢ '• \4 4,0CP,.5,1 . I " • I .,.e=. <t < t: .(-.,!<<< ;..o, I.*-.•,< <·V 'tl '+: c e, J +11•., .• +4 < '!.. c; •,•1 ••, •.~'d'( ""·'""~'/ *• \ "'G'"""', "I Gi•i ~~-.-,,--..-.-..-~ ··,·~....-•r•,-.,-.-,... ... ..,. ·· ,-,·r -,..-•. ·.-· -• --· · · · .. · · · ·
I
I-
"ONE OF THE YEAR'S
FUNNIEST COMEDIES." .
"A BRILLIANT
PICTURE!"
-WM#rM """"v
.. ·' -tw A-4<1 H«okl·(-~ ((
EXCLUSIVE
RUN
"DELIGHTFUL!" _,...,,"-·· , .. A"'*'" r"'"'
GIG YOUNG-ANNE JACKSON
•• • •• .. . . . ... . ... . o ""'5f ~l<l'. Al 11.U:.0.RTffU~ ll"11. O ••l'Ollf """"' ..... "i11tcl
Ptt1-Llni Mh1Hlli h1
"T .. I Me T•ot You Lo•e Me,
J11•le Moo•. "-GP'
. ,_,Monte Walsh.
is.what the West
·was all aboul
AND
FINAL
WEEK! ENDS
TUES., NOV. 17
'LEE
11.&B'VZK '.
.. XOJITE
WAZ.SB" ·--I
" . I
Phone 639-8770
ALSO: M11rto Tllo-lo
"JENNY" -GP'
JEANNE MOREAU ·JACK PALANCE
i , R0Wa11n9 ~ 2nd FEATURE K\ ·t:t( Dav;d Homm;ngs ;n
_.......,-··----"THE WALKING TH•ATR• STICK" ~ °''°"""" CDST .... 5.l, illtOONI! S4WICZ
...... .,.... ______ __
~MAS:H'IS THE BEST
AMERICAN WAR
COMEDY SINCE
SOUND CAME
IN ,,,_,,_,;M ......
e N-Yorier
14th BIG
WEEK!
~-~tnioPr~l'roducld
~·· OONAlD stJTHffilANDElllDITGOUlD· TOM SllERRIIT
c.~"''"'l~.lll!l!l-·O:fl-·.G•IRr&•lll•..,llJOS IDl -·· ... ~. -· @""~ lf'IGO Pllf:MMR dRI M. llWI RIC lNDO. ~. ,.:::..., '
..... -.. .--. -.. -~ :::..-:= COior b)' PE LUXEe PANA'llSIC>N9 °;
• q!)SS llU~ll~ ...,_ .. ~,.,..
AIRPORT
I BURT UNClSTER • DW MlRTII f ·
~ElN SEBERG •JlCOUEURE BISSET
_.. 1 llllllSM Pltl. • UCICUl'I • ,.._ii_.. (
li'il .... -·-~ l!:!I ----~
Dnld He111111i11tt
Somo11tfl• Ettet' i11
'flieWilkiitt ·sflU."
R..r.d G-P
stto-for tM 1 tt "'" at
R .. 111•1 P'rlcn
Walter Matthau
Louis Armstrong
· ·HHLO. DOLLY' IS
A SUPER MUSICAL' .
· S~ngers 'Set UC Irvine· Orchestra
' .... . . --.
·coUGAR
.COUNTRY
For Chili Date
Seddleback Col l ege'$
Chamber Slngen, under the
direction of Donald A. Walker,
will perfoMn for.the members
of the Laguna Hills Lawn
Bowling Club at their annual
dinner Friday night.
Concerto Grosso Highlights Opener
IN COLOR ............ ,. ,,." .... , . ,..., , ... ,,"
fHttd wltll' lu111.-,..,._. Md •• ,,....._.,.
• fll• •• , '" .. t1,. folml,.
Wet:l(DAYS: 4:JIM::IN;:lf
UT. n:•J:1J'4:JM::IN:•
SUN. t:IS-.~:20-....,:JI '
ll•El f'AllKINe @•,
Th~ pr.ogram will be beld at
Clubhouse No. 1 in Leisure
Worl~ at 3 p.m .
TV in Taiwan
-'8, TOM BARLEY
-Of TM IMIW 'P'li.t Sttff
WoUgang Amadeus Mozart's
glorious muslc comprised the
major portion ol the UC Irvine
orchestra's opening-concert of
the 1970-71 season Saturday
night but its delivery by this
young and enthusiastic
ensemble will have to take se-
TAIPEI, Taiwan (UPI) -cond place in tenns of this
Every second household in this review to a fresh and inspiring
capital of Na tionalist China work bf a contemporary
owns a television set, ac· Jewish composer.
cording to offi<:ial statistics. Ernest Bloch's Concerto
As of JuJy, 1970, there were Grosso for String Ordlestra
162,900 television sets in the ·took the Jast spot on a v~y
city of l .S million population. pleasing program but it
Tbe-coontry -as-a whole has -b~ht Dr . .r-eter .Odegard to_
600,000 video sets. ~ ·· the-pOdium for a performance
11----------------that is sure to rank vety high
EXCLUSIVE
ORANGE
COUNTY
INDOOR
THEATRE
ENGAGEMENT
COMING
SOON
Mo1ember 18th
!HEMAN
FROM
EASY RIDER • "FIVE
EASY
PIECES."
NO RESERVED SEATS
-rt;. .. 1,ocJ&"lS S.. J,IJ.J;Jll-MS· MIO· lQolS
~ l<(l(hllS·!.30·11'S· l\lOll
"A bold
uncompro.
mising look
at the
feelings-and -
facts of
marriage!'
-SATURDAY
REVIEW
when \he time comes to
analyze this promising new
season.
Odegard read th.is com·
manding and deeply moving
work in very much the way
that Bloch would have wanted
it with perhaps his best work
to be found in that magnificent
final movement -a towering
fugure, packed W.th passion
and the. smoldering spirit of
the Jewish peOple, and a
movement which made huge
demands on Odegard's young
performers.
Those demands were very
capably met throughout this
brilliant Bloch and we had the
obviously inspired Odegard to
thank for an interpretation
that stressed the impressionist
harmonies of the work while
ensuring that the passion and
pathos~ so inherent to BIOcb's
A children's play based on
historical •fact will be staged
this month when the Fountain
Valley Community Theater
presents "Caddie WoodJawn"
by Carol Ryrie Brink.
The production, to b e
directed by Mickey Barbolak,
dramatizes the story-of-a
young girl who lived with her
family on a frontier farm in
Wisconsin in the 1860's. Bob
Pergrim is mucial director for
the show.
11tls major Mozart work had
Its problems for the young
Grant. We found him capable
but a trifle mechanical in
some key passages an'd it was
our view that the closing ron·
do suffered coosiderilhlY from
his apparent inability to cope
with the score.
As in the Serenata, 11ozart's
theme in Olis earlier work was
essentially one of happiness
lhal It Ls nol enough to mertly
mark time with the baton.
It is the prayer of eYert
conscientious orchestra t o
have a good opening coocert
under its bell in the early da.ys
of the new season. Odegard
and his UCI players certainly
ensured this Saturday night
and did it in the very pleasant
-decorative and acoostlcal -
and brand new concert balL
aOO we were not al all sure,f~~~~~~~·;!~ that every effort was ~e tolt
extract from the orchestra
every nuance of gaiety in·
jeoted into tbe score by its
composer.
music were brought to the
fore. -
Guest conductor S l e v en
Warner had used Odegard's
baton lor the work im·
Nonetheless, it was a pleas-
ing performance-if nol quite in
keeping with the stature of the
superb Bloch and t h e
Serenata. Grant w i 11 learn
mediately preceding th e 1f~ii~~~~~~il~
turna in D Maio<. and he gave [I)TII DIOI .. Bloch, Mozart's Serenata Not-II !{ x
us a dedicated and very _____ .. _
capable interpretation of what filEWPORT BEACM • oR.3-ti3sb·
we have always regarded as
one of the great German's ENDS TONIGHT
happiest pieces. Barbra Striesand
His bubbling humor came Walter Matthau
through very well in this UCI IN
airing of the work and "HELLO DOLLY"
nowhere more so than in the
sprightly second movement -STARTS WED.
an infectious menuetto that
brought sterling performances George Kennedy
from Odegard's f e at u re d in
solosits. "Zig Zag"
Odegard called on associate
conductor Kerry Grant to take ALSO
the podium chores on the
Serenade in B Major which Stacy Keach
opened what turned out to be a Mariana Hill
rewarding program.
King. Patty McQueeney and
David Emmes.
Performances will be given
on Sunday, Nov. 15, at 2 and
7:30 p.m.; Monday, Nov.16, at
7:30 p.m.; Wednesday, Nov.
18, at 7:30 p.m .. and Sunday,
Nov. 22, at 2 and 7:30 p.m. at
the Fountain Valley Com·
unity_Center, 10200 Slater
Ave.
Admission is 50 cents for
both adults and children, and
reservations may be made by
calling 847-0500.
"The
Traveling
Executioner"
BALBOA
673-4048
OPEN
6:45
10t ·r. ••tboll bib.. hnlntul1
••••••••••
IAltlU. STREISAND
"On A Clear Day You
Can See Forever" • •• CHARLTON HESTON
"The Hawaiians"
STARTS WED. -RICHARD
BURTON
GENEVIEVE Bl!IOLD
1*.rt.:f~ ..
·J\.flli'flt$jt ,.;11.ilf, ~. Teclmiceltr
"A FILM n~ IMP'ECCAILI
IRILLANCE" -Joye.• H•h•r,
) Syndic.al•d Columni•t
"GREAT
MOVIE
MAKING"
Principal members of the ----------~11 Mart Crowley's
••m.:~
•~m.:
mPtltl[)~~
AG-.U...Fi.t.~
-HEW YORK TIMES
.. ~""'It
diary of a
mad housewife
a lrank perry film
richard benjamin · frank langella
. carrie snodgress ' '"''"~Ola~ by eleanor perry
t1om !M r>0>el by iu• ~•u!m1" • p1oduced 1nd nioec!e!.':!.!:•nl< De<•Y
A UNIVERSAt.. PICTLIRC • TECHNICOLOR' ~ -..,!!.,-:-::;,..::;:!"' ~
NO RESERVIO SEATS __ n ...... 1,:io&1,1~
Ju, .. , MIO, l4S. H>.30
Sol. l"S. 3.30, S. IS. /,DU, l'S 1o.30
S..... l•H . ..00,MS. 7,30, 9J!S
"LOVERS AND OTIIER
STRANGERS''
·ALSO-
"Where Eagles Dare"
Aho •'Jh1 landlord''
eH "The Bittle
of Britai""
cast are Susan Peck, Cassey
Miller, Vicki Barbolak, David
Kilpatrick, Ann Nieves, Jim
Kilpatrick. Mark Barbolak,
Dierdre Emmes, Cathy Hall
and Brian Smith.
Others in the Fountain
Valley production include Cary
and Colin Miller, Keith and
Kurt Kiss. Kimberly Gray,
Sam Wahnen, Victor and
Christy Bobrowski, Lynette
Yetter, Willa Bouwens, Viclti
Scavo, Greg Hanson, Craig
HENRY'S AEROPUERTO
GRAND OPENING SPECIAL
NOVEMBER .11·12 ONLY SofttMY DCllw Jr, MHll
P'tter L11"'1ord i11
Any Mexican Dinner .......................•• $2.50
$~.00
ell-~"""' -=c--11 *eiiiiii Any Steak in House fReg. $5.00 I ............. .
Complete with salad and potato
Birria ( Bar·B·9 I, Beans, Rice ................. .
CHAMPAGNE WITH ALL DINNERS
ENTERTAINMENT -SHONA BISHOP DUO
Corner P1ll11d1s and Blrcfi,
No Res.rvttfons
ur Orange County Airport
54$.5579
$1.75 i1ii nw1" IXl.11!;
I "' i,o..a r ·--Ab• fleylftt
JOHN VOIGHT
Ac.odemy Aword Wl1111e1 ht
'THE REVOLUTIONARY'
ROBa<T REOFORO
KATHARINE ROSS
ROBERT ,BLAKE
SUSAN Ct.ARK
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GAILY PILOT
HOUSES POR SALi
General
2629 HARBOR
BOULEVARD
546-8640
' Open Evenings
1111 1:30
$500 Down
&: closing costs to any.
one AND you can move
into this 3 Bedroom charmer located in Cos·
ta Mesa. It's a D 0 LL
HOUSE. Just painted
inside and out. You must
see it .••• full price
'21,500.
NO DOWN
4 Bedroom· 2 Bath ' Thi:. .1ome~ is in beauti-
ful condition and in ~
excellent area. Owner
has purchased another
and MUST SELL this
one. Four spacious bed-
rooms-2 Queen sized
baths -step saving kitchen -forced air
heat -all for , ONLY
$25.9?(>.
• .. ~ " ... ' -. 'Ii ... --.. --~ ~ -~· -.....
I Tut~, Noven11itr 10, }<,,..,
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi!
1000 G ... r.1 1000
* * * * TAYLOR CO. *
LUXURY LIVING & ENTERTAINING
True elegance throu~hout. Extra large cor·
ner site with ocean view . 4 Bedrooms, panel·
ed den, 5 baths & powder room. Will ex·
change for smaller home in Cameo Shofes.
.................................... $175,000
FAR FROM ORDINARY!
-4 Bdrm, 3 bath, family 'kitchen . Attrac(ive
exterior. Quiet WestcliCf street close to
schools, shopping & library •.......... $49,950
''Our 25th Veer''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hills
NEWPORT CENTER * * * * General 1000 General
Road
644-4910
* * 1000
oflnJa JJ,,/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
52 Linde lilt Dr.
Cust 6 BR., study, 5 bath home w /3 frplcs.,
circUlar stairway, decorator selected carp.
& drapes. Shown by appt. .......... $210,000
For Complete Information on ell homes &
lots, pl•••• cell:
BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR
833 Dovar Dr., Sult. 3, N.8 . 642-4620
General 1000 Generel ===;;;;
BEACH BEAUTY
with 6% loan
Open Dai~
328 Aliso
Newport Heights
corner of Beacon
1000
1 short block from
Cliff Dr.
HOUSES FOR SALi! HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSl!S FOR SAL I
Gtner•I 1000 Cott• Mele ===;;;;;. OWNER
1100 Corona del Mar 1250
CUSTOM 2 Bedrm
& Guest House IN MILWAUKEE
Must have fut sale • quiel
street -prime ttBldentW
area, now vacant, Large 3
bednn, 2 bath. new lhag
crpts, drps, dble garagt,
fult price $23,950. ~ low
down or submit tenn1. Call
540-1151 Heritage Realton:.
tt YOU'LL LIKE
to Jove & live in this well
kept -. 3 bednn • 2 bi e 0
bltns • form din • frplc +
patio lam rm: space-for ,
boat/pool? &side loc. $27,500
Tabor & Assoc:"iates
642·5586 646-6682
E-SIDE Tr i-Plex; 2
br's/gar's, fenced /yd's.
Inc $405 per mo.
IRVINE TERRACE
BARGAIN
Home badly abused
by tenants
Located in
Irvine Terrat:e #l
Priced way below
The market
S Bedrootn1, 2 baths
Reduced to $47,000
Or make otter
Realtors
''Our 25th Veer
In the Harbor Area''
673-4400
Prine/Only, $38,500 or may -~-----s ·
trade up, By Owner : 1h Block t o Oceen
642-5531 Newly redec. 3 Br.. 2 . ba.
51,4 % WAN. Take a look at Try $7,000 down. Hurry, this
this Expanded T-Plan ? one won'1 lasl!
Ovr-sz lot. Pymts $181/mo.
Owner: 546-2176.
HOUSES FOR SALE
Huntington Be•ch 18
LEASE OPTION
4 Bedroom, 1600 aq ft, 1 ,vear
f}(!W, upgraded built.in elco.
tl'ie appliances, e ·a r p et 1,
drapes, trplc, paUo, block
wall, S2SO per pi.o. ·Leaise +
$50 oPtion, $32,500 Full Price.
Owner leaving fur Oregon.
I' '62-4471 ( ::::. ) 114M10J
LISTINGS NEEDED!
Horbour Realty
Doris Drake 8*-4153
FIXER-UPPER
Best value in downtown
Huntington Beach, $13,500,
Easy tenn11 at 'i'l/.i%
R-2 lot, AGENT
536-1525 536-9225 SPARKLING
NEW
IRVINE TERRACE
The Best of Everything
350C. Sq, ft. of custom quality
home with exquisite panor-
amic bay & ocean, day &
night view; w/lge. h!d. &
filt. pool, lge. patio: .:Z king
size bdrms. plus convert.
den; storage gaJore. Lge,
fan1ily rm. w/wet bar, bit.
in BBQ. View dining rm. &
living rm. 3 Car garage.
Shown by app't. only.
Immaculate 3 rear old home
one mile from the surf. 3
Bedrooms, fireplace, bltns,
professionally landscaped
yard front & rear. YOU can
take over the FlJA loa.n on
this property. $205 Per
month PRYS all. Brand new
listing, $32,250.
By Owner $36.500 ""'"""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""""""""" COLLEGE PRK-$25,900
FHA 7~~% -Lo Own.e * By Owner: 645-0927 *
* FIVE-PLEX
at $88,000 * TRl-PLEX
at $57,500
ONE EACH ONLYI
CALL TO SEEi
356 E. 20th ST.
COSTA MESA
642-4905
ATTENTION-
ALL DOGSI
If your owners 8.re seriously
interested in living where
they can have a licensed
kennel -we have a home
for tbem. With just $3.000
down they can n1ove into
CLIFFHAV ~
3 Bdrms. 2 ba:lh-s. On Ige. lot.
Near schools. An ideal fam.
Uy home. $48,500.
Salisbury ·
Re alty
315 MARINE A VE. 673-6900
BALBOA ISLAND
Continental
Special
COATS
WAtLACE
REALTORS
Open Evenings
• %2-4454...•
ITS BEAUTIFUL,
BY THE
BEAUTIFUL SEA!
A rare combination of con-
vei:ience, luxury & income
at the beach, Near hiways
& shops. Custom 4 bedrm-5
bath, Jiving & family rooms
both have lovely fireplaces
and ocean views. Close oU
master suite for batch-apt,
complell? with private en-
trance and glassed roof pa.
Uo. We are proud to offer
this one .. $69,?QJ, Phone
~nn to view.
Spacious 3 bedroom 2 bath,
Jlving room with fireplace,
large dining area overlook-
ing lovely secluded lanai,
carpeting, drapes, built-in
electric kitchen. Garage oU
alley with electric eye open-
er. Nicely landscaped cor.
ner lot.
646-4032
'''**''I 2 BDRM
Roomy 2 beclnn on the golf
course, solid cusrom con-
struction in immaculate con.
dition. Max privacy and
Min maintenance leaves
time for golfing or goofing.
Many quaJity feat~s. As-.
sumable 1st at 71.4% with
min down, Priced at $66,950.
-CORONA
DEL MAR-
THIS OL' HOUSE
hns two very desirable R·l
lots {with 3 large bW'S &
alley access) just steps lo
main beach & bay_ ~lagnifi.
cent bay VIE\V obtainable
from second stories when
new homes are built. $65,000.
Colesworthy
& Co.
3 BR/2 BA. Newly decor &
Lg. fenced yrd. lmmed. ace
$23,900. By Owner: 54~2367
TREES.TREES
Cust large 2 BR home. like
new shag crpts, drps, ~Ho,
lg fncd yard. Submit tenns
or assume 61,4 % .FHA loan
at $138 total monthly.
Nawport lla•ch 1200 2828 E . COAST HWY. BRASHEAR REAL TY 847 .8507 * 642-0427
Newport Beach Cor°6:4.~:~oM•r ASSUME '" FKA mortga ..
No Down-cVA 1 .. -.... ...,...,..,,..,.,...1-•L 12<.000. Cash o.ut '°'
0 Sat 1 5 SCARCE ITEM! $15,000. H•at<d pool, two pen • A real Crown of the Sea! story, 3 bedrooms, 2Y.I baths,
Just reduced to V.A. apprals-Shorecliffs; beaut. honie, format dining room, family
al of $32.500. 3 large bed-1700 sq ft of living space. room w/fireplace. Carpets It
rooms, family room, 2 baths Access' to· beach For de-drapes. Vicinity Brookhurst
a~ a dream kitchen with tails, Call: • & Indianapolis. By owner
bu1lt-lns Including the refrfg. CORBIN after 6:00 PM 962-763.'S. REALTOR erator and used brick bar-• N'""°" Boach omce b-qu•. Aii on a 100 It wld• 4 BR plUS LRG DEN
1028 Bayside Drive lot with a ~luded priva~e MARTIN •
6754930 covered patio, Come see this
WATERFRONT roomy"''"'> at 2261 GOLD-REAL TORS 644-7662 EN CIRCLE or call 673-8550 .. 1 _____ ,.,..,,.---.,.--
pALACE * NEW LISTING *
Pier & slip to accommodate Sharp 3 BR. home on 60 ft.
Only $31 ,9501
Gl/FHA tenns! Irnmae. Big
yard. Block wall sprinkleni.
HAFFDAL REAL TY
842-4405
4 BOATS up to 50'. Enjoy lot, So. <'>f Hwy, All rooms =========
the ultimate in luxury living spacious. Fonna.l din, rm. Fountain Velley 1410
and ente1·taining in this cUS-Lge YIOtkshop off gar. Ex·
tom built quality home. 4 7114 o~ A BR-POOL tra· parking for guests, Pric. ASSUl\tE 5%. % loan, by
bed 3 b '"--" 1 1• 11 .., d 1 u• ownr. Immac 3 BR, 2 ba, nu
\
'
this lovely 3 bedroom & fam.
ily room with fireplace. The
kind of home a loving mas-
ter should have. Large dog
FREEDOM HOME with an
extra room plus a double
garage, remodeled kitchen
\1•ith hand finished "'ood
cabinets. 1'"'HA or VA, O~
Pretty Fabulous
Brand new listing • big, near
new Spanish style 5 bedrm
roo.~s, aui:i auu ~r-Owner's divorce saci1fice In e 0 se · t & d wtll k 2nd ma! d1nmg room. Very ]!_¥~ B&yCTestl'iear-athoblS-&' MO.RGAM.JiEAJ...IY-$~~500:--~ ~ e ri __ ...,._,
able family room wi~ cozy stores. Fee title, New car-67~2 675-6459 wknds.
DELU-xE----•1 ·"'"-"·', ••.•. y_oom'"'""'· Huge fen ced yard, Call no\v! --$l5~l50 fireplace. Best buy 1n the pets & drapes, family rm, GREAT VIEWI I==========
area at $l28,000. xlnt cond, game rm, 01 harbor & ocean. Attr. split Laguna Beach 1705
INCOME UNITS
$33,000
Loca,ed In Costa Mesa,
this duplex has been
completely redecorated. , .. It's in beautiful
condition and boasts a
very low vacalicy factor.
Both units are 2 Bed-rooms with built-ins,
forced air heat, double
garage, completely fenc·
eed. GUARD AGAINST
INFLATION ••••• IN-
VESTl
MESA VERDE
Fixer Upper
~26,900
This Is the lo\vest pr!~
in Costa Mesa's most
desirable area -Mesa
Verde. lt needs some
work, but nothing major
and with 3 big Bedrooms
and 2 Baths and double
garage it has everything
you w a n l including
built-ins. Owner anxious
• • HURRY.
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths
$22,500
Jn Costa J\olesa. This
1400 sq. !L home has it
all .. , .. bui lt-ins .•••
forced air heat •• , neer
new carpets ••• excel·
lent condition ... near
11.U !Schools and shoppi.n.g.
Believe it or not It's on-
ly 5 years old and the
full price REALLY is $22,500. Be sure to see
this one.
-rarr.,. ·
"1l2THARBOR
BOULEVARD
546-8640
1093 Baker, ·c.M. ·· 546-5440
FIXER UPPER
Most reasonable 3 bedroom in
Monticello. Bring your paint
& brushes • get a rea1 bar·
gain. Vacant & ready to go,
immediate occupancy. rtfake
an ofrer. Asking $20.500.
co: rs
WALLACE
REALTORS
-546-4141-
(0pen Evenings}
G.l.1s Extended
No Money Needed Here
GJ'('at Mesa Del Mar home
with 4 king-size bedrooms.
Modern luxurious b a l h s.
Beautiful BRICK FIRE.
PLACE, loads ol deep-pile
carpets lhruout with match.
ing drapes, Completely en.
closed yard. Il's a sleeper,
selling at appraisal of
$31,750 • SELLER'S PAY
ALL rosrs. cau •
Walker & lee
REALTOR.>;;;
129iO Harbor Blvd. at Ariams
~f>-(H~ Open 'Ill 9 PM
LEAVING THE
COUNTRY
Save Now! Fantastic Terms!
A!lsume low interest 5% %
loan or buy F.H.A._ or V.A.
It's an extremely \veil kept
4 bedroom. 2 bath home in
Costa "lesa, \\'alk to all
schools and shopping. See
to appreciate and act now.
-Prioo $27,950. _54&-2313
1-o·THEREAL
\"\.. ESTATERS
I ' o>'/
Newport
at
Fairview
646-8811
<anytime}
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
SO. OF 15th-$30,700
BALBOA with family & dining nns,
very plush. Owner transfer.
ESTATE SALE red. Lease or lease option
Luxurious 5 BR. BAyfront OK also.
home. Beautifully decorated. Lease-Mesa Verde
Pier & slip. Proximity to ·Sharp 4·+· !am rm on quiet
Newport Harbor Yacht Club. street, near schooi;. Vacant
$168,500, now. $260 Including gar.
--d~ener. 545-SllO Coldwall Banker ,,...cilernttheltll)
lllii ...... "'.,..:N•'...:.....riiJI OLLEGE REALTY ~ •lsOOAdMl1tH1rbor,CM.
833-0700 644-2430
C I th .sa.8281 level home on R·3 5100 sq. -"-"--'-'.;.I Q eSWQr Y " 1°'-" .. ' '°' ' "''· "'""'· POOL MUST SELL BY OWNR $200.000. 2501 Ocean Blvd., Enjoy outdoor living tn a
& Co.
REALTOR
Newport Beach Office
1028 Bayside Drive
675-4930
NOT BRAND NEW
BEACH-$17,500
k CdM. By app't. only. South Seas atmosphere with Brand new. fee simple, 1 bl Bo'll Grundy, Realtor beach, 3 br, 2 ba, 2 frplc, Call:· 642-4620 sloP.lng rock gardens,_ ~·
beam ceil"g, w/w crpt, huge "'""'"'"'""""'"'""'I ered patio & sundeck. Spac-dbi gar, 642-7523. OCEAN & BAY VIEW ious family home; 4 bed.
NEWPORT . SHORES ~ New 4 br, fam rm, 21h ba. rooms, 2¥.J baths, built-in
$26 500 Beautifully J$1ndscaped. By kitchen & fan1 ily room.
Lovely 3 Bd~ .. xlnt cond. owner. 644-4394 Wood paneling thrUout. Fire-
Close to pools, tennis. place. Separate children's
Cayv.ood Realty 548-1290 Lkfo Isle 1351 play area. Walking distance
to school, $37,850 PLUSH DOUBLE DELUXE REDUCED -
Not new, but only 8 yrs. MtheobilW•AH~R'rn' """oNTishled14• 705-0N lmmac. 5 BR., !amlly rm. 45 '"' · • · t lot street to street By
Unbelievable in Newport
Beach. View. Lg. BR's. For-
mal dining rm. Huge panel. I-"""""""'""""'"""""""
$39,500
4 BR+ FR young. 3 large bedrooms, 2 or Bst. Ofr. 673-8152, 675-3277 ap.p't. oruy. · full baths. Family room.
Gourmet kitchen with latest SALE OR LSE/OPTION 2 $93,75o
..AO tan
REAL ESTATE led lam. rm. with cathedral
bcan1 ceilings. 2 fireplaces
+ BBQ. Chc11·y kitchen. 2
baths. Custom built. Terrac.
eel yd_ Patio. HUIT}' Call
(714) 962-5585.
1--UREST E. OLSON INC.
RLTRS.
19131 BROOKHURST AVE.,
HUN TINGTON BEAC~I
ADDED FAMILY
ROOM
MESA VERDE
A 3 bcdJ'OOm, 2 balh, T-p lan
with an added ll'Cl9 family
room. Large i1TCgular back
yard with built-in Bar:B.Q.
Quiet eul-Oe-sac street. Fab-
ulous honte for I.he family.
Call now. Only i29,950 •
546-2313
675-3000
The number lo call whether
Buying, Sell ing or Leasing
CAMEO HIGHLANDS
4 Bclnns. & den/dining rm.
Upgraded carp_ & drapes.
Frplc. Comp, bit-ins, Excep.
tional buy at $45,950.
--mn.n ,\ 111..lfll
llli.11:1'\' l\f.
rsr 1.1~ 01~1000 -----_,
+POOL
Newport Beach lovers look
at this • -4 big bdnns • fam-
il;.-room • sparkling pool •
plus Harbor High School •
Westcliff Shopping • All th is
and only minutes to the
beach • Priced under mar-
ke l for quick sale. Better
hurry.
DlAL 645-0303
FOREST E. OLSON
e!ec. built·ins. Encll"sed pa-Homes on 1 lot. 2 BR. Va-LIDO REAL TY INC.
tlo. Just take over with pay-cant. By Owner. 645-1691 3377 Vfa Lido 673--7300
men!s cheaper lhan rent. BY OWNER -Westcliff area,
Cali today (714) 962-5585. 4 br. Only $38,500. 642-1611 Huntington Beach 1400
FOREST E. OL.SON INC. or 642-9996 $3000 TOTAL
19131 BR~~RsT AVE., Newport Heights 1210 DOWN
HUNTINGTON BEACH to take over spacious 3 bed-JHANKSGIVING room ranohor ••bloct to low EASTSIDE gov't. loan •"d total pay. FAMIL y HOME Move In for your ThanksglV· ments only $192, Jess than
ing dinner here. 3 Bdrms. & rent. Boat gale and HUGE
3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, dandy family rm .• in rustic Pilgrim back yard, deep avocado
REALTOR den, kitchen with built·lns charm Nat wood used shag carpet and room to
2407 E. Coast Hwy., CdM 2299 HARBOR, C.M. incl. dishwasher -Plus a brick · frplc:, mod. bit in, run! A steal at $24,500.
BEACH COTTAGE big 2 car garage and sep-bl w lk & l BACHELOR PAD UPPER BAY BREEZE •rale wo'"'"°'· $25,500 -kitoh., carp., dra"''· o . a er ee For all year comfort, Family Phone 6'l6-TI71. gar. on alley, Fine Hghts. Beautifully decorated 1 bed. fun and activity awaits you area. "Be thankful," it's Realton
ll90 Glenneyre St.
494-9473 549-0316
EMERALD BAY
Just listed! Attr. traditional
3 BR. 3 Ba .• sep. liv. rm.,
din. rm. & fam. nn.
TI6 Emerald Bay $75,000
. Shown by app't.
Bill Grundy, Realtor
833 Dover Dr., NB 642-4620
CAREFREE Hillsi de house
w/spectacular ocean view,
$55,000.
Bethke Realty 494-2858
San Juen
Capistrano 1n5
><>0m, 1 bath with lots of o·'y $32 000 7682 Ed' at nearby NEWPORT '" ' Inger BY owner modern adaptation
room, Near the beach. Huge YMCA. Introduce your wife CALL e 64,·2414 842-4455 or 540-5140 of oltl Californla Mission ~~~;i:~;~h~::~~=· ~~F~.F:i'r:::: $27,5_0_0 91~-EXTENDED ~:~~~:~~l:~=~n Walker & Lee FORMAL DINING and 4 B +Family rm Ne•r Newport Po•t Office ELIGIBILITY around open air atrium. 8'
Realtors FAMILY ROOM PLUS three r. . • VEI'ERANS. World War u high walls encompass 1/5
2790 Ilarbor Blvd. at Adams balhs for the special value Huge 4 Bedroom home, ele· Newport Shores 1220 and all veterans! Now elig-ac lot. Wide brick walk
545-0165 Open 'ti! 9 PM of $43,000. Safe cul-ed-sac gant family room with !Is NEWPORT Shores 2 Br. &. ible to purchase homes or leads alongside brick col-
HOME + VACANT RE'S YOUR street with boat storage ac· own fireplace, 3 separate conv. den, 2 ba, frplc, all units. call for further info-umns to front entry. Gas. Neat home on corner lo! HE baths. dining room. ••try h 'l 1 1 , logged arched lrpk glows cess. Owner invlles lease. il bltns. Club faciL 642-9463 omes ava1 n a I areas. • · with room for two addition. ANCElll hall. No down terms ava • 1=========_o=i847-8507 642-0427 431-3769 in 15'x30' liv nn. Dark oak al units. T~!?fisting home CH ••• pijl'Chase at $325. pt>• month. able. 54()..1720 cabinets fumisll all elect.
is in exCClle11t condition and Assume a $24,500 low Interest M. M. LA BORDE, Rltr. TAR&ELL Unlverslt\• Perk l2l7 kitchen. From dbl garage
has !ante Living R1n, roomy Joan on this delightful 3 646-0555 G4'1·7003 2955 HARBOR BLVD. Culligan ~far!CllflrupplleS
Kit. }\'ith dining counter, bedroom, 2 bath home. Beau. See Forever View constant 9'.>ft water. Talre
Two bdrms, and concrete tlful corner Jot with access LIDO WATERFRONT Costa Mesa 1100 From the patio of this lovely I ~~~~:";:;:;;~~~ over owners 6%% loan,
enclosed patio. Detached for boat or trailer. Fresh, APTS.·310 LIDO NORD 4 BR., 2"' ba, to~se.1· 2 BEDROOM ~.500. CaU 493-4847
Dbl. garage . plenty of r~m .. clean, neat. $30,800. 546-2313 $150,00J Price with 7% h:t · FIXER UPPER Very close: to tennis cts. & $1G,49S. Electric bullt Jn I "==========I
lo:-boat or 1raller Storage. T.D. 6 Beaut. turn. units: 4 Tu'., xln't residential area. pool Jn immac, cond. A . Condominium 1950
AN EXCELLENT BUY AT 6 car IPD..., .... 5 & util. room. Cozy frpl c, bltns, fam. rm. & good buy at $35 950 range & oven, garbage dis----------.. ---• · posal. forced air heat, 60x Lalwin'1 "TANGLEWOOD"
F1tA TERMS. WiJ1 consider trade for boal Qu iet lree lined cul-de-sac • • lOO' fenced lot, double gar. a sharp 1 story, 2 bedrm & ONLY $21.500 with very low 80 Ft. on swimming beach. access for boat or trailer. • d h II
M. M . LA BORDE, Rltr. or maxlmllm $85,000 lge, 4 walk to park & _schools. 9n re I .·.~~~,.w.~ c,-,,,.".,·wndrapii:~· 3 bedrnt, available now 11-========~ 164G--05.% 644.7003 WESTCUFF BR house a 1st rome basis • $26,950, '"'"" t"""· • ...,. "take over" loans. Possible
REPOSSESSIONS Biii GrUncfy, Rltr. FllA or VA terms available, REALTY ments less than rent. Quiet lease-option on 2 bednn or
Sparkling clean homes, some J ust vacaled, 3 bednn, 2 833 Dover Dr. N.B. 64,. ..,,'){\ Call 545-8424 Soul" Coast 1 1 neighborhood. Walk to shop. try $1SXI down & owner wW •• b h r ·1 hO ~..... " Univ. Park center, rv nc 1 nev.•ly painted & carpet ....... , 2, at , ami y rm me, near • Realtors. Call Anytime 83~0 p ng, clllTy 2nd TD.
• • &FllA5 bdrms. Some with l\.1arincrs School. Nice lo-DOVER SHORES * TRIPLEX * 1, Lerwin Reelty, Inc.
pools. ·VA conv. tenns, R•ol\y Company cale, well planned famil.y $5 950 Do 0 will "·l 962-'988 enytime home. This Ivan \Vl'.'Ut home with . .....,,. wner ire P fro~f~~·~ ~a~·~~. HARBOR VIEW HILLS PETE BARRm Vl'?W'has 3180 sq. ft, of Uv. finance. 3 2-BR., l1A ba. ea. Beck Be y 1240 962-4471 ( ::::) S4W103 A~artments for
8843 ,Adams Ave. 002-5523 LUSK Ing area. 4 BR, 3~ BA, Bltn!, w/w cpt. & drapes. 3 HOLIDAY SPECIAL BUILDERS $ I 1980
Entcrtalnmen1special! 3bcd-REALTY 6fl.5200 panelled ram rm w/frplc &: Car~. w/allel.f ent. \f~k -Fot sale by owner. 4 sn. 2 CLOSEOUT • •-------1
SACRIFICE • $18,800 room home on huge lot, Ex.. wet bar. High beamed ceil· to t,.1op1, churches, schools BA h F al d' ,. WATERFRONT-Thtte 1 br 2 BR. i .. __ fche('d Jot-Exlra pa.nsiv• patio with 11\ump. 16 • 2 BR UNITS. StudBIAo l"g llv''"" rm., "coun+...•'' & 0 CC Pric $34 950' ome!. orm tnirig Credit rejections place 7 horn. -•• Ooly 1 ld 1" "' "·oll ·.· p' a'trt'ck •wood' .,.~. _,,, rm, trplc, cpta, drps_ , power ., oocho;ce 1..;. 0" the mar· units w/dock. $63,000. Prin--sharp-:-musrseU-NOW-;-all· StOnc wann rrrroundfng· gi. type. -yrs 0 • n -~kir-w/brkfst,,_area Swim-. .... .,,...,.,,.,._,,, f need ""' c\pols 0n1 ... Owner ~2662 each. E--slde C.M. Ex· l 1108 900. •· J 0 Biii H R't --vac:.,-cover.td pati~ e ...ket.aaaJJltL&_l Bed rrM 3 &. v terrrnil anl 40' free.form pool with ccptlonaJ TRIPLEX C1iff· ming poo . , . ~Y . even, .1 r. yard roo m tor pool Reduc. 4 ·· _._._ an 6 pm.
Call Palrick Wood 545-2MO jaruu.L By appt at $55,000. haven ar'.c'!, N.B, l3) 2 BR W64~W Rltr, 103.lOpeMnarou",u~ 2lll E. Coast, Cdl\1 -61HZU ed t~~M9.SOO. Tertns: lmn\ed roo~°:· :O~·~ shake _R_E_N_T°"A_L_S __ -----1
• Bill Haven, Reeltor 642-8235 675-3210 unrrs:-fce land. Call Ken ,,.,......., ., 3 LARGE BEDROOMS occpy. Phone MZ-9541, RANCHO LA ~Ui::STA Hount Fumlsh9CI
2ill..E,.Coast, CdM 67J.3211 Harris. SOOtn Coast !teal 2 BAntS B kh . Ailan H.B -==:.;_;_.;.;=="--I
NEWP.ORT SHORES HOME + INCOME Estate Ml>-3424 3 BR + den, 2 BA hrdwd BY OWNER El Toro 1244 -r:!° ..... urstoli ta, . Generel 10GI ' an. crpts. drps, dbl i(3l'-Spacious fam borne -Lge lot, -1;),)0 pen 10 am-6 pm ---·---1 2 "" .• d•n. 2 •·.Dbl. ga•. + T())'I IOC8tkln &Side.. near NEWPORT BEACH 0~ ~ h • 3 BR 2 Ba 2 BR age, access lo rear yard fpr 86' lront11.ge. Beauti fully 3 BR.. 2 ba home w/cpl, MODERN 4 BR.· 1~ BA, RENT e A O HO"E
rm. f()r extra CU or boat ~~PP g. /bl, 4 + ' Owner ~ii. leRSC, lease/~ boa!.11, trln:, etc. &side CM. lndscp'd, nr Schl's. Vic d.ms_._ b.!104, cov'd ~t);) Col}do, $21,500. 5"~ FllA, m
Near beach. rec!n~fyt ~:s, 2"lf:· t1on or llCIL apacknla: 3 BR $25;'150. WesN:tur-Plaza, cPts, drpS, lovt!ly ysrd, $28,0CO. Call~ transferalilelOan: b .. 51>10 ,. -l.L $9S .. IS:Z~! .&ALULPAREAS
Open Evenlnt• $26,:.00 ' •""" · condo Ind pool & m.any rec· Wellt-McCerdle, Rltr1. bit-ins, garbage dlsp()tal, appt. 837-28$3. a11 $. '' ~ ·
'Ill •·. _ Georte WUliemton .aLa~llahblc. m Rlty I rea.tion&l prlv. Make oUf'rR! 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. dshwsr. Lge fam. rm. 2 car NO matter what ft ta, you DIAL d"U.-d~612-5fm==-. =Charge ~( ~~~·
-REALTOR C en yer JEAN SMITH, RLT • sa.n29 gar. Reasonably p rtctd can sell tt with a DAJJ .. Y your ad, then stt back and !..!!!!!!!l!ll!l!!!!!!l!!!l!!B,1:6~7~3-4~350~---'~64::;5-~1564:::1 CaU &f&.31)23 ""'" S<UT69 400 E. l!th St., C.M. -646-03.19. PILOT WANT ADI Ml-1611 llaten to tht phone rinll ___ m_.11_ ... "------1
• J
t RENTAl:S --RINY.ALS -· RENTAU .
I .::T':'."~d~"'~· ;;·~-~tiir;:;-;,l:;•~· ,:.1'17::::.•----::-;:;;;cr."",A:-IL_V_P_IL_D_T_J'(,
RENTALS , _ RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS '-. l<IA:·NTALU~ fumlthtd
• 1110111 Pumllhed HoutM Unfvml1hed Hou111 fumbhed Ap!,t. P umlthod Aptt. Fumlohod Apia. Unfurnl...... Apia. Unlumlthod ~-Unluml-pit. "
i RGntalt to ShaN 2005 0....,.1 JOOO Nowport BHch 3200 Huntington Bo..t. 4400 Huntington --!':!!_wparl -5200 -por1 BMch 521111 Huntlnthln Booch 5400 Huntington Booch .5400
II' w.!!'.!,E~_:£:•L";t'i.: RENT e A e HOME ~7.:_v:,;.:~ >rl» ct Q '.)/.
"•" "5· A UP l BR "1ow hom<. !Mre Terr. • i · !I ~;:: ~ ~ ;;: ALL ~1ZES • ALL AREAS ~ loc. --· a utnia erm~MJ FURN. OR UNFURN. We have othm .. can u
v~ta fiunlin<Jlon PRESTIGE LOCATION
I• MU7lD be .. 2 p.m. ASK roa JODI Casual estate living. Enter La Quinta Her-1j WANTED: elderly. ~fintd m.noo mosa's lush green atmosphere &: stroll tree-i; lady to shr my lovely .,,,,, 1-*-:-"'R"U"'G=--=R"'A"'TS=--I lined walk ways lo your apl
1• apt, CM. Non-smoker. ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED
1J 54&-6432 SPACIOUS 4 Bil, 2 BA.,.._ 1 BR. Uni, $150 -Fur n. $180
MARINER SQUARE APARTMENTS
immediate[y ed jacent Westdiff shop-
ping center -has a Townhouse avail·
eble featuring privele residential et-
mosphere. 2 Bedroom. Water, gas &
coble TV. included in ren t. Kitchen
built-i ns include dishwosher & disposa l;
wall lo well carpets, full length linen
drepes. Cell Bob Buckley et 645-0252
or come by MARINER SQUARE
Apartments. 12# Irvine Ave., N.B.
Custom Garden Apartments
I, 2 & 3 BEDROOM
FAMILY UNIT NOW OPEN
,1 GIRL to share luxurious apt famll)" room, + worbhop, 315 MAR1NE AVE. 673-6900 2 BR. Unf, $175 -Furn. $210
,: w/2 othtt girls. Split S220 huge yard tor kldl. $2'l5. 1 ~~BA,-LBO_""'A"l"'Sl.AN'fcc..,0=-I 3 Spac. fir. pi,.ns, decor. furnlshings: live
:!1.,:+=•;01;·;M>-;;'I001:===== CALL rooAY! FOR ~ase -3,Bdrm, 2 Ba-within romantic setting w/fun or privacy. ,:i• *BLUE BEACON* huge family rm. ~et bar -Terraced 'pool, pr!. sunken gas BBQ'a w/
'1; Nowport Booch 2200 * 64s.G111 * pool (malnte~ u>eludedl seculded seating compl. w/Ramada & Foun·
lAllDLORDS'' .. patio -service porch -.
'. ON THlhBEACH ,, carpet Jhro-<>Ut -gardening tam.
;:Nlcc2BRwinterrentaJ.$225/ included _ Nr. shOpping *Color co-ord. •it w/ In direct lightin9.
CUSTOM FEATURES:
C entrel Recreetion Artia-Swimming Pools
Weding Pool1 & Seuna1-Pvt G•rden Patios
Color Coordinated Or.tpe1 & Carpeting--
Soundproof Vt'ells & Floorinq-Blt.ln Ren9e
& O ven.-Di1hwtsher-Ceremic Tile Baths
Open Beam & Vaulted Ceiling..,_·y-2 Mile
To The Bee ch.
1' rno. Near Jetty, Cood beach. ttnter & park. -Newport * Delux• r•ng• & ovens * Plush &hag crpt9, 21551 Brookhunt StrHt
•,:1-=Di='ck=Be="''==Re=al=ty=91)2.==""= Vacancy Problems Ended Hi~. $325/mo. Call * Bonus storage space + Cov. c•rport "1.~ FREE supply ot qualified &12-1983. --....... * Sculptured marble pullfnen & t ile beths ~i .Baylhorel 2225 tenants at no cost to you. BEAUTIF1JLbomt-;11weeping * Ele_91nt recreetion room.
(5. of H1mllton) Huntington B11ch
PHONE: 962-4458
'; BAYSHORE Cottage, adults-, Ask !or LEE or OLA view of bay. 3 Bdr. :tbath, FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY
Costa Mesa 5100 11 2 BR, turn Immaculate, $350 832·6600 huge family nn., 2 Patios il'l· Blk f.rom Huntington Center, San Diego
:': mo. 2Gll llarthore Dr,_ Open I-:--,==-:==== 50 with view, full dlning nn., Frwy~. Goldenwest Colle2e. Newport Beach 4200 General .5000 NEW 2 BDRM. Beam ceil-!: weekel>dl. (213) 821-1545 fDr * OUT OF SIGHT boilt·iM. BRK 1425 mo. San Diego Frwy. to Bear.h Blvd., So. on bigs, wood paneling. All rec
j; appt $125. NEAT 2 BR. Choice E. 540-1720 Beach 3 blks. to Holt; W. on Holt to . . • YRLY 2 br over-garage on features. $16.5. Adults, no
side Joeatlon. Private patio. -. BAYCREsr LaQuinta Hermosa 714: 847~5'441 Peninsula. $160 mo. Married pets. Call now 64&-0'.173 t Corene del Mar 2250 Tot or small pet ok. Vacant! Beaut. 2 story pool home couple. 675-4958. RENTAL FINDERS 387 W. Bay Street ~ 2 BR. 2 ba +a guest rm.·& * BLUE BEACON* avail. Pl'c. 1st, 4 BR .• 3liRi'iE~N:i'T;'A:i'LFs~===="i"'========~l i1l'BRRit.:J0eiieii1ux;Xe°e!Poo;;;o!1 .. ::;;;idieeJAlPpi:t.I Free To Lindlords l:SP=:A°"Cl~O~u~s'"°2"B~Ro-.~c~p~t,-. drp.,....,-, * 645-0111 * BA., $650/per mo. 645-0283 H Unfu I heel Costa Mesa 4100 Newly decorated. Westclilt. carport. Child ok. $135 +
lj ba. l Blk. to beach. $290 $l75 BR.AND NEW dlx 2 br THE BLUFFs-4 Br, 2 Ba ouset rn 1 -$185. 642-6274 645..Ql ll dep 2214 College Aw. No.
i,·1_M=on=th=·=Re=al=tor=·=614-=T270== "--• lnl (nr tennis H . I B h 3400 •VALUE -2 BR. $145/mo. . 4llW Jttti.C_.. ..... .. 1,_.~ N>2'1 ,,1 ~ triplex apts. Priv patios, .....,,...,_om um. unt1ng on eac JIEATED POOL. Crpts, SINGLE a~t, must be quiet, I ~~~~~·:;.:,.::,.,~--. I "' """"""" ..
• L--2-S""" ....... ts, ga.r. 356 E. crt.) PooJ $325/mo, 644-4869 . Have refs 33rd St SlOO I· ,-B~R.-~Sh---B-1--~R-/O~ : Bal... ~ 20th·-s-,· c M ""'905 3 BR • Ba. t ·-•-1 4 BDRM. 111 Ba. fenced yrd, dcps, dshwhr. Adults only. • • . APARTMENT arp. uo. . ,1 ·• · · ~ .· • ., cps ...... tr.>., ... I'" S250/mo. year's lease req'd, No pets. 2295 Pacille Ave., ~9155 -Rebig. Crpts, d r P s.,
l' 2BR-Modem. Winier season. $185. REOEC 3 Br, nu w/w patio, pool. 3 Car garage. Call 84&-5875 or 846-IDl7. CM. 548-6878 *OCEANFRONT 1 BR. RENTAL carport. No pet!. Lower.
. gie~~;~4i~?ti & drps, avail nns. Ch1drn _!Rl~tr:._.~S<~J!.6966~~· ==--J,;;:;;;;;~~~~~~':J-A'Aoaoi;pU'u1iOco;;A~pi;1s\,aaiittra;;;;:oiiuv;;e:;-,J Yearly $175/ino. $70.00 & UP "'="~•· ~-='~'55~~--:--,,
& pet ok. Bkr. 5.34-6980 TIIE BLUFFS Fountain Vall•Y 3410 Pool, Util paid, Garden '°"'=673-=2259=='='0=6=P=m== I ALL SIZES _ ALL AREAS LRG 2 BR. Crpt, drps, 1 or 2 ;. Also 4 BR. 2 BA House. 1\1 BLOCKS OCEAN, 2 BR 3 BR. l'h: ba, pools, nr schJs Hvin"' Adults no pel• ,. FURN OR 0 .. ...,..,t"ft... kids ok. $135 &. $140 + dep. r Lklo Isle Wl over garage. Family ok. & shop'g, $285. 644-2432. 3 Br. Fam rm., din. rm.. 1'6·n. n36 &: up. • N•wport Hgts. 4210 ASK FoR BQ~"'· 1998 Maple Ave. No. 1.
J Broker 534..6980 BEAUT view, 5 BR hse, 21,i frplc, l~truPeci I~ 7trored 1800 Wallace Ave, C.M. CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adults, hO 832·7800 ~642-6344=~-·~-~---
: 5 BR., 4% ba. waterfront ba, New cpts/dfps, Lease patio, sc s w nt • ASSUME 'l % LOAN • pelll. Lg kit. Sl.3S-$150. 2421 2 BR, 1% BA, sharp, crpts,
home w/dock, -on Lido Costa Mesa 3100 $395 mo, EastbluU. 644-5862 & back ~pmklr s~. 2 car Costa Mesa: 2 BR House E. 16th St., NB. 64&-1801 Costa Me1a 5100 drps, approx 1200 sq ft. Nord, Sl500Month. 1----------1,=c'=c=~~-~~-=l gii.r.Avail.immed,S260mo. Avail now $160 mo
3 BR. 3 Ba. off-water home NEW Duplex. 3 BR. 2 BA., Ni!~~T &.~~ b~rlv~ 835-322lbetwn9am-5:30 pm. !or~)~:.ab~ss~~~ Corona del Mar 4150 545-4879 • .•
fumi.shed .•. $5> month bltins, dishwasher. shag $240/mo tse. 2131681-1278. Aft 6:30 pm 968-5223, Mr. 548-4059 --* * * * BEAUTIFUL New 2 Br,
Bill Grundy, Rltr. &i24620 cpts, drps, frple, dble gar. 21 ==========l"Re'.;'.ic:;h:_·~~-===-l ..::::.,;:::;:=~==c-=c=l2 -BR, fully crptd, pool, So. El Pu•rto Mes• Apts. crpts, drps, adults-no pets.
Balboo ltland 2355
plilios, corner lot. Very Univers ity Park 3237 FOR Lse. Jmmac 3 BR, 2 ha, ""' 2 BR. FURN. $155 of Hwy. Oose to shops. * * * * 374 _ c Woodland Pl. or
private. 1 blk to bank & in Talbert Village. Nu shag Pool, bltns, cpts, drps, no Adults $185. Jse. 673-8213. 1 Bedroom Apt1. 646-7674.
r;hopping, ttar gate to put cpts & drps, frplc & bltns. children, no pets, 325-J E, FURN, year round, 1 blk $130 up incl, utilities
1010 SO. Bayfront: 4 Br. 3l,ii trailer or boat in yd. $250 DON'T DELAY I 968-8004 aft 6 & wknds. 17th Pl., CM. 548-2738 from Big Corona, util paid, Also furn. Poot & Recreation ba. waterfront home&. 2 Br. mo. 1541 Wintergreen Pl, 1 CALL US TODAY! 1 Ba .......... ..,. apl Ooek. blk •·est of Harbor & Baker. 3610 1 BR. Lrg closets. Pool. $105, 1 adlt. 642-8520 area. Quiet Environment
·---4 Bdnn. 2 bath Lake ,.5;;;a"n"-ta"-'An=a"------fl b d N Oil •treet --"•-N pels. Bill Grundy Rltr. 642-4620 Call &U-5039 before 9 AM or 1• Shuf e o~r · e · FURN 2 br &. .ba upstairs, 1 _._ .... ,~. 0
----3 BR, 2 BA, walk in closets,
W/W crpts, drps. Adults,
$165/mo. Ref's_._ S40--01.S4,
MI 6-6922 or 548-9457.
EHt Bluff 5242
NEWPORT BEACH I
VIiia Granada Apts.
Furnished, F ive bedrooms &:
den, with balconies above !,
patio below. Gracious Jiving
& quiet surroundings for
1amily with children. Near
Corona de! Mar High School.
Fireplace, wet bar & btlilt-
iri kitchen appliances. WW
ce>nsider unfurnished or furn-
iture purchase.
835 AMIGOS WAY 644-2991
Coldwell, Banker &: Co.
Managing agent &33-0700
e NEW DELUXE e
3 BR. 2 BA Apt for1 lease,
Incl spac. master suJte, din
nn & dbl garage. auto doot
opener avall. Pool & Ret.
area. e FROM $265 e
865 Amigos \Vay, NB
Managed by
Wil.LIAl\1 \VALTERS CO.
SPAC 1 BR. Lrg patio, entry
hall, crpts, drps, dhwsher,
alterS PM. ForestHome·•·•••••••$365 RENTALS cpt/drps, Util pd. 1884 br & be. downstai rs. 1959-1961Maple Ave.
: Huntington Be•ch 2.-oo NEW Daplex. 2 BR. 2 BA, 4 BR. 2'Ai baths •••••••• $350 Apts. Furnished 11·onrovia Ave, CM Available now. 673-ll48. Costa Mesa
, 3 BR., mo. to mo.•••••· $350'--'-------* WINTER RATES * "'!"~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!= I • bltins, dishwa&her, shag 1· ~. l 0 DEL LAKE MANOR • d ti 1 3 BR, 211 batb. ........ $300 General 4000 t BR. furo $125. Baohelor's Balboo 4300 MARTINIQUE •
* DELUXE 1 & 2 BR. pool, nr. Fashion lsJ &
Garden Apts. Bit-ins, priv.1=m='=""=· 1=1=15=·=....,,.=====I patio, heated pool. frplc.
Adults $145 mo. 546-5163 Corona d•I Mer 5250 ~ Ne-"·· decorated 2 br house cpts, rps, garage, pa 0• 3 BR. 2 Ba. tnhouse • •· • $3401 -;;;;;;;o;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.; ~,. Adulb no pel• See p k Llk 5 ndl ~ .. .., . blk to shopping. Fenced yd. • d h 11 1' M•~gr·. •135 El.den, No. 6·CM-PENINSULA POINT ar • e urrou n91 1 Br. unf. $150/mo. Poo!. l----------1 ~ ~..,!7 pa.Uo. Adults. $160. $185 mo. 1541 Wintergreen • eFREE APARTMENT ,~~~·--:c-----:=-::::-~l 2 BR.. -DELUXE 1-2&3BRAPTS. Elec & wtr pd, Adi~, no BAYVIEW t r=~=="====== Pl. 1 blk west of Harbor & re I •RENTAL SERVICE 1$Jo Wk. 1 per, w/kit $35. yearly~~ ~~:n;-;5 Also FURN. BACHELOR pets. MESA MANOR. 241 Fabulous tri·level with !
•1 Laguna S.•ch 2705 Baker. Call 642-5039 belore 9' Maid ser, linens, TV, & tele. 675-laSs ' Prv patios * Hid Pools Wlhon Ave., CM. 548-7405. vlews of Newport Harbol'.
Ai'\f or after 9 PM. REALTY Sin~les e Bach•lors Seal.ark Motel 2301 Npt Nr shop'g e Adults only 2 and den, 2 baths, built-ins, t CLEAN Small 2 BR house, MOV I NG TO HONG e mall Famo·10•11 e Blvd CM 64~7445 2 BR apt, $13.5 per mo. 2 BR 17'17 Santa Ana Ave, CM Newport Beach 5200 service poreh.2 patios, ma~ t Univ. Park Center. Irvine apt w/sundeck $155. mo. M , frple, close to town. OLD:tra KONG?? Call Anytime 833-0820 FURN. 2 Br. apt. Close to all Util pd 673-9749 gr. Apt 113 • 646-5542 sive beamed ceilings, slate J PEOPLE ONLY. 4~9323. Let the Property Manage-I DAY ./ WEEK ./ ~fONTH stDpping. Adults only. No · * THE SEVILLE PARK NEWPORT care floored entry&: family room.
ment Dlvislon of South pets. tnq. 1791h Rochester, OCEANFRONT 3 BR. $235. New 2 Br 1~ Ba / free livg overlkg the water. TremendOUs storage, carpets
Laguna Beach 2705 Coast Real ton solve your 3 BR. 2 ba •••••••••••• $280 LAGUNA BEACH •• 494_9436 CM. Also 1 BR. S12'S. Util in· Adi ts cpis drps ~ ~ 7 pools, 7 tennis cts $750,000 &: drapes, $400 per month.
Leen/S,t11le Furnl1hlltd problems. For appointment 3 BR, & din, nn., 2 ba •• $325 NEWPORT·BALBOA 675-874() BACHELOR Apt Fur n. eluded, Winter lse. 673-4724. w I Pat. Wtr I Grdnr pd Spa. From $175 to $450. 6 month or year lease,
' call ~5-8424. , 4 BR .• fam. rm, &: din. rm. ANAHE!M-ORANGE 7'16-6018 drps, w/w crpts, pool, priv. 2 BR. 315 E. Ba§. Winter · 636-4120 Bach. l or 2 Br. Also 2 sty WALKER & LEE l Lovely Beach Condo CLEAN h lou 3 air-nd 'I'urtl Rocle S360•.,,,~!!!!!'~~~~~!!! 7-&>82 $200 thl y 1 il 2619-I Sant Ana A $155 Townhouses. Elec. kt, pri. REALTORS f Avail Now for le.<1se thru , s arp; spec s, co ., e i= balcony. $135/mo. 55 . mon y. ear y ava . • a ve, pat or ba1 Subtrn prkg, opt
• June or longer. 2 BR, 2 BA, bedrm, 2 bath, famUy rm, 3 B~'t~"OTIIBRs $295 RENT FURNITURE 2 BR, w/w cpts, drps, bltn Ing. No. C. 673-1521, 548-TI71 667-K Victoria St. $155 maid ser cpts, drpa. Just N.1 "°'===64,.'~"~ru~~=~I -t--upper---wi~-living, dining F~ heat. frplc. crpts, drps, RIO, spir strcse, frplc. L"d I I WILSON GARDENS APTS of Fashion Isl at Jamboree CORONA DEL MAR
'\ kitchen areas main Coor ov-dbie garage. Only $225 * DIRECT TO TENANT $195. 145 E. 18th. 557--6682. 1 O S • 4351 2 BR Unturn. Newly dee. & San Joaquin Hills Rd.~ NEW 3 Br. 3 Ba. lower du. ~ooklng beautiful p o o I • C a 11 Heritage Realtors New crpts & drp,. Spac 1900 for leasiog Wo. plex. Frptc .• washer/dry-. "'n 54(}.1151 24-Hr. Delivery e BEAUT. Bach & 1 Br. DELUXE Beach Apts, Furn. '" ~ Large 2 car port plus stor. · 100% Purchase Option apt. $29.50 wkly &. up. Stove, r e f rig, gar. grounds. Adults, no pets. 'l BR, Studio condo, 2¥.i Ba, complete bit-ins. Enclosed I age & completely laundry fa-3 BR, 2 BA, crpts, drJfs, Complete 1 BR Apt as Furn .. incl util. 546--0451. $200-$250/mo. 320 Nord. SEHO (mHo. bo2283 FountainW Way frple, wash/dryer, pool, patio & garage. BeauWully
cillties. All beautifully & frplc. family nn. $250. Low as $Z2/mo. FURN Bachelor & 1 Br. 642-4097 or 535-6696. -.1 ar r, turn • on sauna, Dover s b ores landscaped, Year lease at
completely funrlshed , linens, W1l11-McCardl1, Rltrs. I Wison), Ne .. __. Adlls ~. eves: $300 per mo. Contact 1st Western Bank Bldg. 30-Day Min mum Exceptionelly nice! "l"'•... ., .........
t 100 steps to private beach. -~~-51-~_1729-,---i Day "833-0101 Nights CUSTOM Fl,JRNITURE 2 BR, Priv patio. Hid pool "°2~B'°r-. -:-U'°m""um.-""erp""'ts"',-,drp-s, .;;;:;
china, etc. U desired, Only 1810 Newport Blvd., CM University Park * WIDE VARIETY 2110 Newport Blvd, CM Balboa Island 4355 VILLA MESA APTS. 968-3597. ;; &15-605o 0
, Tennis court&: 2nd pool al-AT'l'RAC 4 br +bonus nn. RENTAL 1 Br. $125-pool, spac. Adults, 2 BR, compl furn. Bl.tn kit, 2 car encl'd gar, Children patio, pool, bltM. Sl60. W•M'' TL .. ~ ao on property with gorg· Just remodeled. Close to 3 BR 2% ba, townhse. cpl & 517 W. 19th St., CM. 548-3481 ideal for Bachelor, 1993 new cpts & drps, No chldrn, welcome, no pets please! SeacllH Ma.nor Apb, 1525 • land ap;-lb ~ul · ---.o~ Church. 548-9633. no pets. $225 yrly, 673-6945 $165 719 W Wilao 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil I eoos sc ..,,g ru-... schools&. all shop'g 1~. drps, Ava~ De~. I, option to APARTMENT mo. · n. Placentia. M~2682 ask11
Easy access to super mkt, $235 mo, 336 C ab r l 11 o. purchase Jf :lesired. By onr, $125--2 BR Trailer. 1 or 2 64~1251 about oUl' discount plan.
"'°pplng, eac. 1325 month, 548-8774 833-2955 aft 6 pm. RENTAL ad"!" ooly. "'""· Ulil Jn. Hunllntl<on Beach -Quiet Adult Llvint * BAY-ONT * winter basis. Will consider clu'ed ""3315 n< --2 BR. Gar. Patio. Crpts, ALi.\iOSf new 3 BR, 2 ba, $70.00 & UP " · .,..,,.. . * SOLTEROS APTS 1 & 2 BR, Shag cpts, bltns,
It lease • purchase ~ mrtrlgl1t drps stove I refrig, Quiet Atrium, •-Jc, pallo•, bl1"' ALL SIZES • ALL AREAS Studi~Gas &: waler paid. Call Spanish style Bach. & l BR, beaut lndscpd, $150 & $170 Furnished & unfurnish· sale. Adults prefe•--i-=. Refs. ··al du! "' "" ·~-1975 -• starting $295 , 499-2152 AM or S37--0791 any-tropic setting for a ts incl refrig, dbl gar, $310. FURN. OR UNFURN. after 6:30 pm, ll'W"'JW:>. Pool. Rec rm. Quie t, Adults, incl all util. Adults only no .u, 642_2202 •
~;~
ON TEN ACRES f ti only. 1 blk to shops. 833--0569 ASK FOR BONNIE Parsons, CM no pets, 17301 Kttlson Ln. pets. f me. $169/mo. 646-4430. 832.7800 Sll5/mo. Dix mob honle 11 bJk W. of Beach on Sia-241 Avocado St. &iS-0979 3 BR, 2 BA, delx 4 plex apt,
1 6 2 BR. Furn le Unfurl
Fireplaces I priv. patios I
Pools. Tennis -O:intnt1 Bldsf.
900 Sea Lane, CdM 6ff.2b1l
(MacArthur nr. <Nst Hwyl
RENTALS . $195. UNUSUAL, attrac 2 br Back Bay 3240 ~-~~~~~~-~/cabana, comp! tum, htd !er), 842-7848 * * NEW 2 & 3 BR. Shag frplc, bltns, cpts, drps, nr
Hou••• Unfurnished ... & den + util rm. Yard. l·A_V_A_fL_N_ov-'--15-.-3-B_R_. -fncd-1 JS~L~H s~'l"~e t~u:•' ·poo1. Adlts, no pets. Four l~B~D~Rl~M~.-,,.-a-r~be-ao-h-.-.. -w·l crpl!, dwhhr, gar, Only 3 Hoag Hosp. $220 mo. Inq.
Gen•ral 3000 falio. Adults, no pets. East d b Season's 2359 N e w port • dee .. util, pd., $125, adults. neighbors in your Bldg. 4150 Patrice Rd. 642-4387,
'1---------· side-; Avail U/1. 644-4212 ~=\~rt-M~iap~hl dis:l~t: ANPARTMt :NThS 548-6.132. Anytime after 6 pm. Sat. ChUd ok. Nr. S. Coe.st 64Z-l m. 4 Br, 21h ba Studio apt.
t 1 BR tot/pet OK •• , ••••• S80 3 BR, l 'h ha. c:rpts, drps, $200 mo, 54s.-2124, ewpor eac NE\V delux 2 Br duplex. encl 536--0414 Plaza. 2 BR. 2 BA, bllrul, crpts, Cle am. 714 G 01 de n r 0 d .
I 2 BR fnCC:: kids/pets •••• $1(1(1 bltns, frplc. $215 mo . 880 Irvine Ave. gar, patio, bltns. WestcliU BACHELOR Apt. UtU pd. 540-1973 or 545:-2321 drps, $170 mo. Nr Hoag $375/ mo. yr lse. 540-7573,
2 BR TRLR C.M .•••••• $120 1-73!)-9432 or 842-TI53 Corona del Mar 3150 (Irvine and 16th) area. $195. 67~1849 NEAR OCEAN! GOLD MEDALLION Hosp. lnq. 415{1 Patrice Rd. aft 5 968-8658.
t 3 BR kids/pets OK•••• $14() 2 BR. House. Crpts, drps, (714} 645--0550 LGE newly decorated 1 & 2 LINDBORG CO. 536-2579 Modern 2 BR, cpts, drps, GE 642-4387• 642-17'11·3 ;-;B;;;R.;:--:;2-B"A"'.-,erp=i"'·-;drp-,.·I
:. 3 BR kids/pets OK •••• $150 $145/mo. No pets, 1 small MAR l!OLIDAY PLAZA BR apts, $14CI & $160, Inq. * 1 & 2 BR. Opts. drps, kltch. Encl gar, Color anten-~HOICE Lido Isle 1 ~r., lrg Stove & refrig, dshwhr,
f 4 BR group/students OK $200 baby. Ca.ll 64&-2719. 3 C!>:ONA2 ~E; DR DELUXE Spacious 1 BR 853 Center St, No. l, CM. bllns. 733 Lake. 536-3700, nas. Nr, bus. $148. Adults, iv nn, garage, ea sc garb. dispL $ 25 0 I mo.
4 BR Horse m cb, corTals $250 2 BR _ Unfum. Fenced/Yrd. . room, s, • pa. furn apt $135. Jleated pool. SLEEPING room $45/mo. 536--0275. 120 E. 20th. $175/mo. 673-5148 , $7>-269S.
I STAR.LET 77'7330 boo 2029 Wall tio, garage. Central loca· Ample parking Nochildreo. lc""'=.CC'==-~---1 -.~=~====-=-2 BR 1 BA -1 f -=~~-~--~·• • Rear se, ace, 'Kn • Stone Villa Trailer Park, e AT OCEAN -Adult Jivina. e NOW RENTING e , , .. ., c, un urn, -· I -00~ "'"21GI lion, Refs, no pets, s~..., pet no pets. 1965 Pomona CM. ...,. I d blk to 2 BR, 2 ba 2 )TS old * DOLl. HOUSE 61___," or.,..,,... month. Agt. 675-4930 or ' 33.1 \V. Bay, CM. -1 BR $150. 2 BR. $175. Pool. Mesa Verde Area. NEW Du-C1'J> s, rps, ocean. Swedish trP1c, b 1 t n s;
i. WVELY 3 BR, 2 BA, split SHARP 1 room small house, l-'6,,_1>484"";..7_E:.v_•c."=--~-i Costa M:sa 4100 •BACHELOR apt $75 mo Rec rm . .220 12th St, H.B. plexes, 2 & 3 BR, bltns, encl Yearly Sl95tmo. 673--8088 sundeck. 613 Narcissus,
r, level. W/w crpts, RIO, pa. stv/refrig. Partly furn. $105 2 BR, 2 story, l~~ ba, Adults, incl util. Adults, no pets, 11 BR, apt. partly furn. Wtr &: _;ar, patios. wshr I dryer LIDO JSL&Lrg Bay View 2 675-5720 t· tie", children ok, $l8.5, HUR-~u'=tll='-pdo'.=548-<i680~~~.,.,,-,-, nr Fashion Isle, $lS5 mo. I---------·I br $125 incl util. No garage. gas pd. Adults only. $85. 918 hookup. Also lrg 2 &. 3 BR Br, study. -2 Ba, crpts, drps, ~.c--:C"O"'R=o=L~I D=o-A=P=T~S-*-1
,. RY•. 3 BR, 2 BA, Condo. bltns. incl 7~9112 REMARKABLY 540--0623 Palm St, JlB. 536-4678 in 4-plexes. 546-1034 frplc. $29.5. 642-0807 2 213: .,.,,...., UNBELIEVABLY BR Studio. Unfurn. All i; * BLUE BEACON * dshwhr. $220 I mo. Crpts, l=====c-=====I SMALL Sleeping unit, older LARGE Bachelor unit ~ NEW TOWNHOUSE 5238 -elec. dshwhr, dbl carport & ~ * 645-0111 * drps. 540-U51 or 5S7-7648, Balboa Is land 3355 EXTRAORDINARILY adults $60 mo. all uW's, $100/mo. Ideal for student 2 BR, 1% Ba. & 2 BR, Crptg, Irvin• Jrg pooJ. Sl~ &-up. 673-3378
. VERY CLEAN 3 bedrn'I Mesa Del Mar 3105 Val D'i::~u~~~~n Apll I ;;;c=-;;-CA::LL==-64•~='-:64;::.::--:::;l~~~*~c .. a1,.1~64~~""'2687"==*--1 drps, slelf clepanding ~ ~~ 2 BR. 2 Ba. Ocean side of home w/Jarge fenced yard ---------6 ROO!\fS, 2 ba, g~, patio, Adults, no pets NO\V Renting-2 Br furn, gd $135. MOD. 1 & 2 BR cpts, en, enc gar, a OS,~ NOW LEASING! Hwy, Nicely deccrated. j• &-great patio, bar·b-cf. Bllns MESA Del Mar lge 4 BR blk to so. bay. Refs. mar-Putting green waterfall & Joe, rec rm, hid pool. No drps, nr beach. 409 Calif. 37'1 \V. Wilson, New, family and adults units MORGAN REALTY 673-6642
1, &: frplc help make this the tam. rm, for lse. $250. mo. ried cpl. $250 mo on yrs lse, stream, fiowe~ everywhere, J<;;cc;hil-;d;;;re,"~·;;'-"<O;;/m;;o:-.-;;64;;&-58;-;;;;;';;-" J:0'3G-l:OO:"='=•=r=84=7=-51=69"=== J HARBOR GREENS with total recreation club UNIQUE lree level apt 2 Br
,. best rental for the moiiey at 546--0106 673--0252 45· pool, rec. room, billiards, S~I apt $75 .Furn, util paid. GARDJ!:N &: SI'UDIO APl'S and pre-school. 1, 2, &: 3 nr bch v.•/ pool. $225/prl.
$250 per mo. Call Agent B h 3400 BBQ's, Sauna, furn.-unturn, close to H.B. Plt>r, 1 adult Santa Ana 4620 Bach.1, 2, 3 BR'a. from SUO. bdrma from $1511. Nr. shop. furn. 431 Dahlia, 549--0010 ~. 546-1141 M11a Verde 3110 Huntington lac Singles, 1BR,1 BR + den, J;ont~Y~·,.'64';'2-8520~~~~-~oJ;-;:;;--:-;:-::::;-::;:-:-j 2700 Peterson Wtl)', C.M. ping, golf, schools. Jusl 3 Br, 2 ba upper duplex. Nr
$150-UTIL pd. 3 BR triplex. ---------2 RR, From $135, See It! EAST side 20fh St., furn, ut!I 1 BR, air-cond, ad.Ifs, hO 546-0370 llOuth of San Dleeo Fwy. on beach & mkt. No pets, $2?:>
I
I
.
I .
i
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Chlldren & pet ok, COUNTRY Club Vllla Condo HUNTINGTON H arbour 200l Parsons Rd., 642-8670. paid, pvt patio, 1 adlt, $U5. pets. Utll's pd. $135-$140 mo. ---~=~-~-Culver Dr., lrvint, 833-3733. mo .. 401 Jasmine Ave. CdM.
Broker 534-6980 3 br, 21,ii ba, frple, 2 car waterfront 3 Br, 2 Ba, frpl Between Harbor & Newport 642-8520 541-9135 * $170 * PARK WEST
IT'S A breeze .• sell your gar, pool, adjac, Mesa &: deck & dock. Ue or lse . 2 Blk N. 191.h. 3 BR, 1% BA, patio, bit-ins, APARTMENTS BESI' Location. Lrg new 2
ltema with ease, use Daily Verde c. Club. $290 mo. option, $550. 644 -4221, • • • • • • • • • 1 B h 4200 Lagun• Be•ch 4705 crpts, drps, Ask about our Owned and Managed by ~Rs.it~. $225/yr, a.round.
Pilot Ousified. 642-5678 545-5868 846-5041 $6 nite up $27.50 wk up Newport t•c ) discount plan, 880 Center St. The Irvine Company
1_::=:.;:::::;::;::::..;:::;:::::;:__.==========..:========;J STUDIO & 1 BR Apts *LAGUNA BEACH * ~64~,..,..===-~-~-~ ~ ......................... Is you ad in the classiflt>d
General 2000Gen•ral 3000G1nerel 3000 e Color TV, phone se1v, pool OCEANFRONT. APTS. RENTALS * QUIET Adult couple only. You don't heed a gun to SECTION? Someone 11 1----------------------------o Linens, maid serv avail. 2 B~. 1 ba., yearly .••• $2451. Lge, unfurnished 3 bdnn. 2 BR. No pets. Drps, crpts. Draw Fut when you pls~ watching for it. Dia l
The Punle with the Built-In Chuckle
O Reorronqe letters of the
four ttramb!ed word1 be-
low 10 form four simple words.
l U G D I I ! An o nlmol 110;n1r fried Un· l--Pl-ln.7~,~--,~--1. • --1ucces&fully-to-teach-his dog
_ _ ._J . how to play poker. Every ;::::::::::=:::::::::::'..~ tjme.fhe dog got o good hond
KA 11 REL 'he -his ~ 11-" h-1~, .~,n1n1n,~,,-~,-I O c:omplere the thutk!~ qooted
by fiflino In lh• mln!no words
• YOll d•vtlop ft0rn &Tit!) No. 3 b•low.
e Children&: p-~ section 2 BR. 1 ha, trplc ••••• , $250 home, dining rm,. fireplace, dshwhr, heated pool , an ad In the DAILY PILOT 64:-5678 toda,y! * SUNNY ACRES * 2 BR. 1 hll.; winter •••• $225 bUt-in kitchen. $130/mo. 2295 Pacific Ave, -·
2376 Ni!wporrBlvd. 548-9755· call: 673'-3663 642-2253 Eves~ .X~l~ lease at $325 mo. CM, 548-6S78. 1 _F_ou,__n_t•_l.,.n_V_•_l_l•~y--54-:IO_F_ou-::n:::t:-•l,..n_V_•;;.l.;;l•;.:Yc....._54:.;.;1.:.0.1 CLIP n-tlS AD 2, 2 Bdnn-:-& <Jetf'l\ifnished 2 BR. Unfurn. Upstairs, ~ --
good for. $2 on niabi·a unit, at Victoria Beach: Crpts; drp11. $130/mo. In. · associated rent or S5 on week's rent. deck w/~n w, only a fant ok. 568 W. Wilson St
• • • • • • • • • I fnw steps lo beach. 646-6783 or 545-0760 Yearly lease at $275 mo.
BR:OKERS-AE.ftl TORS
?025 W Balboa 1)71-166)
QUI ET. Easlside
Lrg. furl'· 1 BR. $160.
Privale patio. Frplc. Lock~
garage. AduJts only, no pets.
M_gr. 146 Melody l.n., C.J\.f.
3. 1 Bdrm. furn. Lge. trte
A New W•y To Live shaded patio. 150 yds, to
in Newport BNch \\100ds Cove Beach.
OAKWOOD GARDEN 1.e.,, m s mo.
2 LRG Br. liv'g/Din'g rm.
closets, Cvrd parking area,
v.•/w cpts, 6f6-6961 or
64~1246
APARTMENTS MISSION REALTY 3 LG Br, 2 Ba. new cpis,
On 16th Street blwn Laguna Beach Phone 4*0731 drps, no pets, chldrn ok. Avl
Irvine nnd Dover Or. STUDIO apt North Laguna, Nov. 1 $165. ~7245 aft 5.
(714) 6424 170 SlOO mo., first & latt + 3 BR, 2% BA, 1harp, crpt.s,
WATERFRONT W/pie.r & $25 cleaning chg, UIU. pd, drps, tool. Avail mw. $W
225 ~~ , ..... ....__.,,. mo. 545-4879 e $30 WEEK & UP floot Jg boat 2 BRfl Ba.1~=-~n:::.·_c;:~~~:::,.,,....,,-,1;;;-:r;;;no..-;';;"iT.:;;;;;;-;;;;I 1 Br. or ShidiO!l turn v.·/ Furn/unturn. 'i'early/\Vin· t BR N. end. % blk shop/ (1) 2 BDRM a.pt Unlu.rn. No com~ kitchen. r~ tlnen.~._ trr. 3601% J.•inley, Appl 'bch. ldry fadl, Adults, $160 childre~Jf ~
htd pool, air-mnd, 'JV Ii Adli.a-. No P.ts. 833-UU or: -up-.--'49M48a. 830-'237,
maid .'ll!rv avail. 673-8249. 2 BR. crpts, drps, blt·tns. 158
• M2-26ll O 3 BR/2 BA upper. Blk to D•n• Point 47~ Tulip I..&. Adlta, 837..'Z967/
Bl Amcrlc11rd • M/Ouirge beach. ~/mo to July 1. RI >5375; $14!S. * $135 * Att: 6 PM. 6'l3-4.26S. 213; STNGLE, TV bet.led pool 2 2 Br. ApU, bltns, crpts. drps,
I BR ~. ~t J 3l9-11M9 blk. from heh .• .,1: wk.. si35. clean. Jnquif.e 15&2 A . r11rn, .... t's, !IOW, -C" ~ ~ ·-tt!rlg, crpts, drps, carpol't * $25 WEEK &-UP • mo. Dana Marina IM, 3(ll1 o •• a ..... er. ~-
:l-ounlai~
Jlediurranean Sr,.le tu....,,
1 11 %--1-
Adall IJTin1
ll'andaltedllllalunlbllod
l. . & :;r... 11 r-1' I' I' I' I' I' I' 11
' I
~ tt;--r I I I I I I IHisj I I I I
laundry rm. Ask tboul our MESA MOTEL COas~ Jfwy,1 Dana Pl. LR.G 2 BR, Pool. $150/mO,
SCRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFIGATIOH 7000
dlKOUnt ph1n. 141-W. 18th Rllchen, TV's, matd aervlct ··r.tAKE Room For Dad-COri't'. sh®'r. 313 E.. 17th
St. 64Z-U58. Heated pool. 6469581 dy' •, .cl~•n out the PL CM 548-6532
NEWLY d~eor .. tum, utll t-OCEANFRONT -WlnTl!r garage_, .your trash Is CASH e NEWLY dec-2 Br upatn.
pit.Id, older p('n;(ln prtf, $105 f'ltnl&h, 2, 3 A. 4 BR's. with• Daily PUot Canilled CJD, bll:M, dbl pr. Adla.
mo. 1 adlt. 64U520 Ad"ultt only. * °'11 673-8088 ad, $155o 1&14 V5o!a Pl. 673-7909
BUSINESS ond
FINANCIAL
Olflco Rontol 60711 Bu1lno11
SUPER-DELUXE QUAIJTY OpportunltlH
1-i.3 room, uo to 3,000 eq, WE DARE YOU!
2 BR., 11,i ba... fpl., elec.
bll-lna. Incl. tt'frig. 2 Cat
i•rlli:e, UXl .?i1onlh
Lawson Realty 675-4.562
Bolboo l1lond
YEAltLY: Bay View, roomy
2 br/2 ba, lo'4-er, 6 Yrs old,
bltins &: refrl&"-New ab.q:
erpt. 675-5207.
ft office suites. Immed, oc-To check UJ out We ani a
cupancy. Orange C n t y, highly referenced co. Man
Airport Irvtne Commere. or woman to ..m~ m.
Co.rnP.l~ adj. Airporter fftabHlhed lnlt.nt food
l·t'otel I: Restaurant banks route located in eommerei&l
San Diego &:; N'pt. fwy., ' and factory accounts. Ca.sh
UNCROWDED PARKING necessary lof' immediate
LOWESI' RATF.S start $1~. ·For mO&'e in-
Huntington Beach 5400
ON BEACH!
""" Whoddyo Wont? Whoddyo Got?
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Special Rota
Owner/mgr, 2112DuPontDr., formation write 1·1vln1
Rh 8 Newport Beach name, addrHa .t: phone No. 833-3223 Courte~ to B~ken Instant Food &@ply, 21m ''"""'~;cc:;;:::::c..:;,.=::::::;:1 Crenshaw Bl, Torr an c e, DELUXE offc. suite, grnd. Calif. 90505
• 2 BR unl. From $225
O 2 BR Furn. From $285
C.. rpets-drapes-di.shwuher
heated pool-saupa-tennls
ree room.ocean view5
p:-!ic ample parking.
5 Llnos -5 tlmos -S bucks
RULal -AD MUIT IHClUDa 1-Wh•I YM lllV. .. .,..._ .._.... ,_ -' II .,..._
1-YDUll .... •MIW ....... ._. ..._ fl ..._.......
'""""D{Jllfll• ,Dlt SAl.8 -T'aAOit OttLYI
noor, has own entrance and l·*-R~~,~E~-~Olf=r-~ Westcllff Dr. st. addrtss, ea . itate ce *
450 gq ft, with pvt panel Fully equipped A oP.Uatlns.
offc Desk spac &: • t Low down, E-Z Tenn1. IJ.
til85. mo oft lease :Jr: censed partner considered.
• Newport Beach area. ~Pb'
To Place Your Trader's ParHIM Ad
PHONE 642-5671
:a..~ utll, crpts., drapes. Box M·2l58, DaUy Pilot. S30
· W. Bay, Costa Mesa.
Security guards.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
ID OCEAN AVE .. HB.
{Il4) 536-1487
Ofe, open 10 am-' pm Daily
Managod >y
WIUJAM WALTERS CO.
CASA del SOL
Channing, casual, new apts
at the beach.
l BR, From $135
2 BR, From $220
21661 Brookhurst St, HB
(714) 962-6653
Huntington Granada 2nd TD Loan
7% '7o INTEREST
1st TD Loan
2 Br, 2 ba apt nr Htg Center. Trade like-new 17' Coldspot 8 Commercial Units on C-2 3 Room industrial olfice, w. FOUND -Chinese rickshaw
Bltns-dshwshr, dln'g area, to~freezer refrigerator for Jot, 98x300, $90,001. Clase lo 16th St, Newport Beach. vie 35th St., N!B. 675-31162 or
crpts, drps, pvt patio. similar mcxlel with left Newport Blvd, Trade for $85/mo. * ~1724. 438-8365
Adults only, $165. 530--0193. hand door. home tn Oregon. Leon Vi-INDUSTRIAL BLONG: 2550 GIRL'S Bike, vie Edison
2 BR. duplex, close to heh & 838-4904 bert, Rltr. 548-0588 eves/ SQ. ft 643' W. 17th St, CM. High School, H.B. Call
. 673-6534. Owner ph: 673-19Z7 968--68Sf downtown, crpts. drps & Large equity in custom
stove, no pets, $140 mo, oceanfrnt home, Oceanside What do you have to trade? NEW Bldg, 1368 to 2300 ft. RABBIT vie Mlnorca &:
53&-3.'iO'l FOR rentals. land, comm'l List it here -in Orange Nr. Baker & Fairvlew, 1 yr Andros St. CM. C&U to iden-r-.~1~130~_-,,2-,8"'R,.,-<"rp-,ts-,-d'°rp--,'°. I or home. 531-0651 wkdys, County·s largest read trad. lease. Su11ivan, 540-4429. lily. 540-8209
bltrui, dshwshr, .garage. Aft S40-0i28 nites or wknds. ing post-and make a deal. FOUND, black &: white kit·
4 pm, 847-3727 *. * * *Lots 6100 ten; vie. Irvine Ave .,
1 BR, near beach, crpls.1 ~·""!!!!!~!J!*!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!Jl!!•!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J MONARCH BAY • Large Newport Heights. ~106 drps, pool, adults, no pets. choice view lots. Lease hold roUND • Grey & white cat,
Trarlewinds Rlty 847-8511. RENTALS RENTAL'ii . Private Beach . By owner vie Ford & MacArthur Blvd.
• LGE 2 be opl-Crpts, drp•, Apts, Unfumllhod Apts. Unfvmllhod 492-lll2_ 644-MB8
bltns. Avail Nov 1. 121 LAGUNA BEAat view FOUND • Black eock•·poo 962-85i8 Santa Ana 5620 Rooms for Rent 5995 lots_ owner will finanoe. about 5 mo old. Vic Newport
Ownrl Agnt 545-8424 Hgts. call 646-2032
DELIGHTFUL-Newly de c • CUTE bandoned k It suMy up."trs nn w/ba.lc. ln a I en•
ha adlt home. Many Acreag• 6200 about 8 weeks, free to sood
2 BR. Crpts, drps, range. ALL NEW
Closed gar. Children &
•mall pel ok. l l•W. 842-8365. PARK PLAZA
I BR, unfurn, $120. Adlls, no Separate Family Section PPY home 546-2308 xtras! Empl, lady $100. 10 Ac. &>. CaJlf. $10 dn, $101~~---~-----
546-6740. mo. $995 F/P. L. ShewfeU. FOUND • Puppy. peach col-pets, nu shag cpts. Nr H.B. 1 BR. S137 • 2 BR Sl.61
Hospital. 842-8383 3824 South F1oY..-er St, SA l-.'-"'N'°'=E"A~R~-CJCE=°'A~N~-"ee,.--ao""'t I 2 blks E. Bristol & Mae·
Spanish bldg. 1 BR. $1 35. 2 Arthur, nr S. Coast Plaza
326 w 3rd. st LA ored w/black nose, * 1 or 2 Rooms for rent . , &46-S3l5
BR. $150. 219 15th Sl, H.B. (714) 545-3214
w/pvl ba & ent, also kitch l_;'.213'.:'.::'62l-5;::::_1:::0_::1·~~~--t--------
& gar prlv. 123 Via Nice, 40 AC. Zoned J\.lobile Homes.
1 & 2 BR New apts. 1'~rp1c·s.
Near Occ-an! Patio. Adul1 s.
LINDBORG CO. 536-2579
2 Boru.1s .. 2 bath.~. Cpts. &
drapes. $140 per month
847~2 or 847-4583
NE\I/! Never Lived·ln: 2 & 3
BDR.t'1S. Nr. Bc11ch * Agt. &15-1070 *
Fountain Valley 5410
ALL NEW
VALLEY PARK
For FAMILIES with pre-
~hoOI children only,
2 " 3 BR and 2 BR Studio
$160 to $215
17256 South Euclid, FV
(Just South of Warner)
(7141 5*4785
Santa Ana 5620
Laguna Beach 5705
DELUXE 2 BR. 2 BA, view,
elec eye garage, ldry,
497-1056 or 494--5810
Rent1l1 W1nted 5990
NB. 673-7185 Paved frontage, Next to $50
1 Lg Br ful Ba Jg closets pvt :r.1illion development, SAC!
ent pat. 3 blks to bch bay for $1900/pe r ~ acre.
673-102.1 aft 6 ti! ll tERMS: 714: 682-1357
*$15 per week-up w/kit· • ~hem. $27.50 per week-up Mountain & Desart 6210
Apts. :r.10TEL. 548-9755.
ROOi\1 for rent. Kitchen ~D home _+ _3 rental
privil. :r.1an only. $60/mo. units. Gd locah?n 1n Desert
2161 Miner st. CM. 646-5289 Hot Sprgs. For info write E.
SEMIRETIRED Eng Ii s h .C::-"O===-,=~_,--t G. Thomas, 66·563 Aroma
couple with 2 very small * FURN/BR W/BA. in Ave, Desert Hot Sprgs.
\\-'ell behaved dogs wish to Lovely home on BJ. Gd. BUSINESS and
rent or lease unfurnished 2 Reis. Aft 8 pm: 673-3222 FINANCIAL
br house ar cottage in South NICE Room, priv. home, 1-:..:::::::::.:::;;::=. ____ ,
Orange O>ast area (South kltch. privil .+ Near shop'g Business
Laguna southward). Max. &: transp. C.M. 5-19-1061 Opportunities '300
$140. a month. Very clean 1----------1
and gulel; _!te!e.rence1 ;.;M;..i;..•<;;.._R_o'-n-to_l_• ___ S999_1 *-CAN.OY SUDPLY available, 4"9 6-~123 or r:.
642-31175. CLEAN 1gl garage $20 West DISTR. * side, C.M. Ez access, ·c:e-(PART OR FULL. TIME)' * FREE * menl floor, elec. 642-S.583 VERY HIGH INCOME REAL ESTATE Now available in Orange
RENTAL SERVICE" Gonorol Councy •nd sum•nldlng
to areas, All locations· are com.
OWNERS and Income PrGDerty 6000 mercial or factory furnished
VILLA MARSEILLES MANAGERS by us. Qualil.ied person will
BRAND NEW call * 548-9365 e AS.SUME 7% LOAN e become distributor for our
SPACIOUS C.M.-2 BR house + (4) 1 BR candy (Nestles, Planters, l & 2 Bdrm, Aptt. PERMANENT Bachelor apt. apts, Room 2 more. $56,000, Tootsie Rolls, Milk Duds,
Ad I LI I ln NB or Bal. Retired elder-gross $6500. 548-4059 etc.). You must have 2 to 8
u t vng ly gentleman, mn ========== k Furn. & Unfurn. d Ink / k d 8 u1lnoo1 Rontol -hl'l!i per v.-ee spare ti.me r er smo er. same a • (d•.,.. or eves). Dl~washer • color coordinat-dress 20 yrs. Moving due to J ----------sif-;(i CASH REQUIRED
ed appliances. plush ah!l( 32nd Sl. widening by city. HARBOR BLVD. fr ont. For more Information write:
carpet • choice of 2 color Art t.anon 646-2272; 19 x 37' w I restroom. 2110 "DtSTRIBlITOR DIVlSION achemes • 2 baths • stall 67J....08Th -•-•--~ --~ 1,.:"""""'~--..,-,--....., I Harbor Blvd, CM. $Zl0 mo. •23, P.O. Box 1739, Covina, ..,.,,wers ~ l"'lu•u''"" WIUV" WOMAN alone wants lo rent year's· lease. 548--0783. Calif. 91722, Include phone
robe doors • lndlrect light· ml ~--· In • ·-··-1 • ,........, ~ ... -. DOWNTOWN-Qllt .. -M.,., -number. - -,~in JHtcben • breakfast ~"'nw-..._, BR .. -~ ·~" .. l""''.,. °""' '"' bulldinJ' 50X90, Prime k>ca· LIFE "-nt bu --iw bar • hUie privale fenced oceanfront a.pt, yrly. Penn. tlo 541 •ant E ~· •••"
pal lo • plush t.andacap,lng • Rcaa. 4!»-415& aftt $ or P.O. n. ,,..,,.., • v e • : cuualty clients wil1hlt l!O
brick Bar-8-Q'a. large heat. Box 33.1 Laguna Bch S4s..3270. AA9DC\ate w/casualty &l"nt.
ed pools k lanai. 1--:-,-.,-,,N,;Do,L,-O=R=s'""=-CORONA DEL ?.far. 660 Sq. $hanl deluxe turn.+ ollicn.
3 101 So. Brl1tol St. e LA D e Ft E-Z parkin•, prime lo<:. 6311-7150, 1133-<lSZ -
FREE RENTAL s£RVICE Realol'll)mk:s ,.,,.:-, 675--6700 • p•-•-11all1n f ood, ffi Mi N. of So, Cou Plaza) Brom. 5J4...6982 -_..,.. uz.n
The
DAILi
PILOT
,_
ORANGE
COAST'S --
leading
Santa Ana Sandwk-htls. DELI. On 18.le;
_ . PHGNI: 557.a200 l\.tATURE Reliable couple Office Rental 6070 Beer & \Vinet. Eatablilbed 14 M k I
need UhfUm. llo1lSe W/dble )'l'I. S.C, 492-1221 * ar etp ace
DAILY PILOT DIME -A pr. M'ax $lOO-mo. 6"12.-0238. CORONA DEL ?I-JAR ~D HELP? Look for H
• L1NES <Oil""" Just .. ,. NEED COM BACH S RMS llOO., It cmd nc, 2 tn Pilot Ct&SSUled.
nlea a day. * 675.345.1 BA, CI D, Pkr, &nl;757 Phone ~
'
I
Are You Letting Cash
Slip Through Your Fingers
See If You Have Any
Of These Things A I l
DAILY PILOT
WANT--AD I
Will Sell Fast!
I. Sto.. 29. llcy.:lo 57, Electric Train
2. Guitar 30. Typewriter SI, Kiiton
3. loby Crib 31, lor Stools 59. Cloulc Auto
4. Eloctrlc Sow 32. Ency.:lopodlo 60. Colfff Tobie
5. C1mera 33. Vacuum CIHner 6 I. Motorcycle
6. WHher 34. Tropical Fl1h 62. Ac-Ion ,
7. Ovtboord Motor 3S. Hot Rod Equlpin't 63. Sid•
I . Storoo Sot 36. Filo Coblnot 64. TV Sot
9, Couch 37, Golf Clubs 6S. Workbench
10. Clorlnot 31. Steeling .Sllvor 66. Diamond Watch
11. Rofrlgorotor 39. Victorl1n Mirror 67. Go-Kort
12. Pickup Truck 40. Bodroom Sot 68. Ironer
13. Sowing Mochlno 41. Slldo Proloctor 69. Comping Trailor
14. 'Surfboard 42. Lawn Mo•r 70, Antique FumltuN
15. Mochlno Tools 43. Pool T1bl1 71. Tope Rocordor
16. DlshwHhor 44. Tira 72. Sollboot
17. Puppy 45. Pl1no 73, Sports Car
11. Cabin CruiMr 46. Fur Coot 74. Mottro11 lox Spp
19. Golf Cort 47, Dr1pe1 7S. Inboard Spoodboot
20. Barometer 48. l inens 76. Shotgun
21. Stomp Colloctlon 49. Horii 77. Saddle
22. Dlnotto Sot 50, Alrplono 78. Dort Gomo
23, Ploy Pon 51, Org1n 79. Punching log
24. lowllng loll 52. Exercycle 10. loby Corrlogo
25. Wotor Skis 53. Roro looks 11. Drums
26. F l'ffllr S4, Sid looto 12. Rlflo
27. Sultco11 SS. High Choir 13. o..rc
21. Clock 56. ~olns 14. SCUBA Goar
Tliese or any other extra things around the 11o-
can be turned Into cad! with a
Don't Just Sit There!
DIAL-DIRICT·--
642-5678 •
r
1 ·
ANNO\INClM!NTS
aotd NOTICES
LOST: Tlnkerbelle Pellam -
the llve.1 at 114 Via. Lorta
on Lido • she's a girl cat,
.tr\ped like a raccoon. very
10fl & friendly. blue coll.u
w/plnk stones. PLEASE let
\IS know if )'OU know
ANYTIIING about be r .
133-6910 or 673---0563
LOSI": $1.ln. approx. 5 pm,
Vtctor!a & ~sident Pl,
CM . 2\2 niet old. ~ collie/ * Shl'phi>:rd male pup. Ans
"Snoopy", Flea collar. Lt
brwn w/ wht neck & breast
a rea, blk tipped t a 11 .
Reward oUered. 21.28 Pres!·
dent Pl, CM. 548-9809
I.DST: Dog, small tan
female, Part dachshund cl
beagle, white on chest. Vic.
Alpha Beta. C.!\f. Tuesday
eve. Missed vr:ory much.
Phone !>t&-315.1, 2U E. 19th,
C.M. Ask for Betty
BEAUTIFUL male Irish Set.
ter, vie Laguna Beach. own.
ers very attached. Very nice
reward. Na.me Bogart. 17
mo. '69 l..agUna tag. 548-5784.
PLEASE HELP!
$10 REWARD
Small brown curly poodle,
femall!, Very friendly, An·
IWCl"S to "Ro-Berta." H.B.
area. 53&2035.
I.DST ll/8 Fem, Long·
haired. Wht. W/blk & grey
tiger markings on back k
face. Vic: Bay & Newport
Blvd. 54S-5986 aft. 6
MALE Silver Toy Poodle
w/small blk circle on back.
Vic. J.fariners &: Antiqua
Way Sat nlte, Reward! --BLONDE -Cocker female, 1
mo's old. Lost vie. of
Harbor View Homes, NB.
PLEASE, Rl!tum. Reward!
644-SZIG
LOST: Siamese "Samba";
Rhinestone flea eoUar &
Stitches ln stomach.
675-5m & 673-1003
LOST Irish Seller female,
approx, U mo's etld, skinny,
needs her Jove & ma:l.iC:a.-
tion. Reward! 646-06EiO
e REWARD e
Lost black &: chrome 10-spd
bike. '0Llgle". 64G-5639 ·or
673-4568.
YOUNG black cat w/Oea
collar. $10 reward. Vic 21st
St & Orange Ave, CM. ....,,...
DARK Siamese Tom cal
declaYled. Lost in N.B.
Reward. 673-2771, 347-2757
Personals
Newport Air Associates
Fllle School & Flying Club
LEARN TO FLY
$500. , .. _. ........... ,
Co111plot• Couno hicluJoe;
40 Hours flight time in Cessn• I 5011 with
20 hrs. dual instruction. Club membership.
2 Month's free dues. lndividu•I instniction,
t•ilored to YOUR ability,
10 OTHER AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE
ot LOWEST RATES IN ORANGE COUNTY
Learn to fly now --•nd Mve fun I * Fly Mexico & C1n1d• * Special Rites for Commercial
Instrument Students.
For Complete Details Call NOW
673. 0313
SEW-KNITS
SPECIALIZING IN STRETCH & KNIT FABRICS.
end LINGERIE
Wll HAVI THI FINEST Sl!LICTION
OF KNIT FABRICS ON THE ORANGE COAST.
2199 FAIRVIEW ROAD
COSTA MESA . 540-3268
S-T-R-E-T-C-H
& SEW [T.M.)
CLASSES
Morning -Afternoon
ind· Evening
LINGERIE CLASSES
NEWPORT -MESA
PRE-SCHOOL
140 E. 22111 ST., COSTA MESA
645-2323
6:15 A.M.-5:30 P.M.
Klnder1arten. Readiness
Arts. lo Crafts
Mwic lo Rhylbm
Physical Fitness
Phonics
Colors & Numbers
Educational Field Trips
Hot Lunches
Basic Bible Stories
TOTAL CHILD
DEVELOPMENT
• Mtdic1I Asslst1nl
• D111t1I A1slst1nt
• lnhllltlon Ther1py T echnlclln
• IMwttncJ Medical Tedmldaa
•LYN a..r..,
• Rt1mlllt1tlon Teehnlci1n
• EkG T echnlcltn
,e ~ lltctptJonl••--
• Nurse Al6'/0nl1rly
• Wini Cl1iii:1 & Others
DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
CALIFORNIA
PROFESSIONAL
SCHOOL MEDICAL & DlMTAl
PIUONMU
,.,,.
Get the etory , , , k11ow tho 011•
cltl119 Opportun!ti11 ovoil1blo f•
YOU in ttlo U.S. '"''•I i11du1try. Got
in thi1 gr••+ now c1 r1or flold """•••
ogo is 110 b1 rrior ind l•v·ofh 11•
vnho•rd of.
N•m• .••••• -~l·L· -~~u.~o~. -~~~~~."J • , .
Address ••• , • , .•••••••••••••••••••••• : .
City ...•••. , •••• , ••. Phone ••.••..••• ;
'
ANTHONY SCHOOLS a lnnkHpers Institute International
PHONE 776-5800
1717 SOUTH IROOKHUltST
ANAHEIM, CALIF. f2S04
IAPPIOYID FOi YETl!RANSJ
Introducing
Frog Lovers
To Chopin
Parents, don't wait until
your child is out of !be Frog
Lovers Age before you give
them the gift of music -
)·ou wait and it may be too
late! Children in the Frog
Loving stage (4-8) are !be.
perfect age fo r learning
music.
Yamaha, after years of research, designed
the Yamaha Music Gourse to assure that all
children can learn music.
You do not have to buy an instrument, there
is no home study -just lots of fun for your
children while they learn music.
Classes are now enrolling -won't you
please give us a call and let us show you the
whole story of the Yamaha Music Course !
Your biggest reward will be when your
frog lover looks up at you and tells you ...
"I gave my frog a new name, Beethoven."
AIRLINE & TRAVEL CAREERS
For Men and Women
e Travel Agent
e Ticket Sele.1
e Communications
e Re11rvatlon1
• Air freight c.,...
e Operation• Agent
Day and night clasHt
AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC
Santa Ana
610 Eoll 17th StrHI
Accredited:
National Association Trade & Technical
Schools
Approved for Veterans
Eligible institution under the Federally In ..
·sured Student Loan Program
--~--------• ·.... I
I I
I OPEN I
I ~ NOW I I ... I
I .. I
II EARiY ACHIEVEMENTS CENTERS; INC. I
FOR CHILDREN AGES 2·11
I No\v is the time that you can have a posl· ·1-
tive impact upon your childs learning pat-I
terns. I The Sunflower Early Achievement Center I
I Instructional Program is designed to sup-
port your childs individual growth patterns I
& meet his basic curricular needs while I building his character, independence, re-
spect for others & respect for self. I
I For information and application to tha
Sunflower EAC-2515 West Sunflower Ave., I 11'1 N...,.,, ""'ini~.o:: .. = ;:!'· 7141'45•2'22 Yamaha Music School I Santa Ana -call Mrs. Ruth Brewer, Sun~
3 Z hr. $600 1uM1ar1 rutlMlllT A11r1ta1Kr flower Director, (714) 540-4750. I
OWlfll I Offl.tRI l'f MIMllll Of Tiii H:O'UllDW 642 1844 FULLY LICENSED * Lessons CAll 01 WRITE FOi Fill llOCHUll IN COSTA MESA • I A MEMBER OF THE u.s. FINANCIAL GROUI'
Renowned H.indu Spiritualist l~~~'!!'!!"l""'!!'!!'!!!!'l!'~'"'""'!!!!""'!!!!!!!!""'""'""'~l 'i:""'iii:""'"i<iii'i""""~:=~~""";;=;"'"~"":<ii;;;' I ~!'!'""'!'!''!!"!'!'!!'!'!!'!'~!!!!!'!'~~!!"'~!'!'!'!'~~ ~ - - - - - - - --Advk• oo all matt"'. SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRICTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY J bs M W
7 Love, Marriage, Business J C 1 L I & G d o --49n, om. 100
Readings given 7 ~ ~ hbv1tttlng 6550 C•rpenterlng 6590 •rpe •Y "I •r enlng 6680 Housecleaning 6735 Painting, Tile, Ceramic 6974 k 10 ro pm Reptlr 6626 Accountant ~u·N. ~~mino ~al, NEWLY LICENSED FINISHED Carpen Ir y. e -EXP Japanese Gardener, FOR XI.NT JlOUSE Paperhanging 6&50 •Verne, The Tile Man* CONSTRUCTION
San Clemente O)SfA MESA PRE-SCHOOL Door&, paneling, cabinets, EXPERT Maintenance &: Clean-Up. CLEANING * F.XTERIOlt-lNTERIOR * Cusl. work. Install & repairs. -ACCTG. CLERK-
492-91.36, 492--0076 lBth &: lofonrovia: 1ii day + n!modellng, garage walls. &C~~R.INSTALl..~~l I =1U-=7p=m=-82&-=="~"o--~~' -=,.*-C°"al"l'"8.16-064,,--.8-,,*=-\Von't 'be underbid! Custom No job too sml. Plaster hfajor Newport Beach finn l;;;;;;;;;:!ii:;!l':!!!!;;;;;;:;!;;;;;;;;;;;;! I FuU day ses5ions. Plan. 1.:96>-::::,7137::;======~ l~CARF'E'Ti:A'Yiifro' 1• GARDENING service & 1 -1.tesa Cleaning Service wtirk, fully guar. Finest patching, Leaking shower Is seeking an accountant
Special Voge Classes ned program, hot lunches. I CARPET LAYING Cleanup. Free estimate. Carpets, windows, floors. etc. paints. Free est./color con· repair, 847-1957/846-0206, v.ith min. 3 yrg. exi>er. in
Fol" \Vomen Only Ages 2-6, hr& 6:30 am.6 pm, Cement, Concrete 6600 C.A. Pa,e 642-2Cf/'Q Exp Japanel@, 548-8255 alt 6 Res cl Commc'l. 548--4.lll suiting. Local re!s, Lie, CERM.tlC Til~ v.\)rk. Free construction acctg; Prefer.
starts tomorrow mom (Wed) $18 wk. Compare! 642-4050 My Way-, -~;n~ ·-;;:; EXPERT GEN Cleanup, tree &: sprnklt Bond, Ins. 492-5338, 549-0811 est. No job 100 small. ably housing or apt. canst.
at 9 A.~f . or 83!J..5237. repair. Walls, celltng, !looni CAJltPET INSTALLATION serv. Rototill, Handyman, Landscaping 6810 HOLIDAY Special Inter & 53&2426. 1.-fust have heavy accts. pay.
YOGA CENTER LICENSED Child' care my etc. No job too small. &: REPAm. 646-4191. odd jobs. Reas. 64fr5848 LAWN Main!. & Cleanup. Exler Painting. Free est. able .'.:< cost acctg. experi-~4~45~E~. ~17~0~> ~SI~. ~~646-828~~;1 1 home, ages l to 5, 1.fon thru 543-1494. CARDENING Dependable, reliable &. reas Local ref's. Llc'd & ins. Upholstery 6990 ence. __ Fri. Lunches & snack! in-CON~-E All ....... ..._. Electricel 6640 By Exporienced Jan<> ... se oA1 .,,,.,.... Free window 'vashing inside Xlnt v.'Orking conditions
MASSAGE SPECIAL eluded. Vicinity of Baker&: 1,..1"\...C,! ' ....,. .... s ..... ""' 1---------* 548-0228 ......... -1='"-'e~'-· ~~=~-"'"~-~-& out. Call Chuck. 645--0809 ClYNOSKrs <Csy-kos-key) anc1 company benefits.
6 Dollar's Bristol. 549-4038. sL Sawing, breaking, haul· ELECTRICIAN. Small jobs, 1 ~-~-~-~--EUROPEAN Landscaper Custom Upholste'"", 1831 Pie<>~· send "'"m• "'lh Ing cl Sldploadlng. Service &: · to & · C I t y d C I , · & kma h' PAINTING & paperhanging, •J ""'"' ""' lle &: She. Health Club Wll.L babysit in my Corona maln nance re pal rs• omp e t ar are own .,esign \\'Or ns Ip, 25 yrs cxper. Only quality Newport IDvd. 01. expected salary to: Box ?if.
Separate .,.,.alk in Sauna's for del Mar home. 2 yrs & up quality. 5:18-8668 Bob. . Lic'd 1 Bonded. ~_!-~!__ JIM 540-4S37 J='al=l<=96-.1383==='=ve='=· === voork. ?o.1ix any c 0 Io r. 642-1454. 2080. Daily Pilot, 330 \Y. Bay,
Ladies&Gentlemen84< 7-7879 Ba1&nced meals, fenced ~~~o~~~sti~~ttt~~ _F_100_,. __ . __ 6665 General Services 6682 MAID SERVICE 6815 _,,.. __ 1!»_3~------J70=s~s-&~E-M7P=Lo=y-M-E=N=T 7C7·="=·~=~--~-I
17.\3.1 Beach Blv'-corner back yard. 67J-.0870 Ll call "! t w 0687 PAINITING -Ext.-Int. 18 ALTERATION Lady. l'lrrl i..:•f:..:.Sl.::•'.:.'~''-H='°.B=~---I* WILL Babysit • my home c., "u a .....,. CARPET VINYL Til.E CARPENTRY, Cabs., Paint-Job Wanted, Men 7000 time. Must be exp'd. In bet-* MASSAGE * behlnd Pomona school o;:;r-:!R!bi~ ~~too UC ~~'1262 rn;E ES!'. ting, Formica, Plbg repair, Fee?~~!~T~~enl ~· ~~~st~nsi:e~ilin~~ SCRAM LETS !er wcmen's apparel, for
SAL'NA * \\'H.lRLPOOL 646-5894 Estlm. H. Stufllck, S48-S6lS concrete, appliances & Have a MAID in your home 968-9126 , • Specialty store in C.M.
• -~Jy Girls. Plush facilities. ,...,.1LD CARE my •·me,· a·y Gardenl-6680 water healer replacemen!s. -=========' J 5'16-481,.., .... ~. ...... · uv " CUSfOM CONCRETE ..• ,, to ll\•e In for as low as $14().. -I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I ~n 7 da).,, noon-midnight. ...... N•ar F.a~ew & 6411"3511 Mon thru Sat. 7 to 7. Plastering, Patch, ANSWERS v...--.~ PATIO-DRIVES-ETC. $3.50 per mo. Services ren-.
2930 \\'.Coast H"-'Y, Newport Adams, C.M. 549-0752 Free estimate. 67s.5Sl6 AL'S GARDENING THINGS your husband does dered ai our office or in Repair 6880 ART GALLERY
Bea.ch. SIS.3608 Babysitting _ AU ages for Gardening k small land. not have time to do! your home. Please Call. ---------P/time, Laguna. Must be well
SINGLES & L'Ouples dance 126 Monie Vista., C.1.1. DECORATIVE CONCRETE 8Caplna: setvlces call 540-5198 1'1 al n t-ttpe.lr! Anything. (213) 266-6250 Collt:cl. * PATCH PLASTERING Carter -Nudge -Guild -groomed & have a good rap. DRIVES· WALKS· PATIO c-a-.i~-N ,,,_.,. ,.. .. ~f c 545-0820. All types. Fret: estimates Walker-\VAGGED his TAIL port with nnblic. lessoM: Ballroom, Latin * 646-425.5 * CAIL DON, 642-8514 ._. .. .,15 e .. ...,. •• .......,, • ~ ---..-AB=ABA=~.o---LOCAL Girl wants to clean Call S4G--6825 An animal trainer tried un-.. ~
American & Discotheque. IVILL baM-lt, my home, S '-,;======== ta Mesa. Dover Shores, • rl bo Gd 1. lull MISS EXEC AGENCY Cl 12 SO 5 4 9 2 0 2 2 . "J" 1 ~ \Vestclift. SECRET ARIAL SERVICE apts "" p v. mes. re s =========· J success y to leach his dog 41() \V Coa t H NB
asses ' • -' days week. Nr. So. Coast Contr•ctor1 6620 -==-:==-;-;=,-Effi . ti ti & 1"1!85. rafes~ 6-12·1224. Plumbing 6890 how to play poker. Every · ,,.~ !n..,. wy, 546-56SL Plaza. 557-8887 ________ ..;..;. Proleu. Garden l\Iaint. c1ent, con den al, rtas. time the dog got a gOOd hand ~,,.,.,... i;SWI<WiNNCGEERSrui'!,-NNe;;;w;-ii0raogru;;eol".Wc;IL;:L~b!a~by:s~;t:!!,,;,-mc-yc-:ho:-cm~e GENERAL Bldg. Contractor Prunlng, fJ'ff work. sprnklr 67l-2002 Anytime. Painting, PLUi\IBING REPAtR he \VAGGED his TAIL. Al90 1''ee Poslllons
Co. Gulde. Free Info OCSG, 1.fon lhru Fri. Ages 2~ & will do remodeling, alter&· serv, aeration, fertllite, X·SECRETARY wants typ-Paperhanging 6850 No job too i;mall
p
83
.
1
o--O.
19
ao
3
. x 2111, Anaheim up. N. B, area. G7J.-.84_ 70 tion s, small repair jobs, pest, disease, weed control. Ing, Spec's a specialty, ex· • 642_3128 • EXP. Man over 25, part~tinie APPLICATIONS now being
painting, plumbing, et e, Cleanup jobs. 64G-5893 • per & rtl's. 549--0192 No \Vasllng tree top I.rim, remoial: taken for exp'd restaurant
B I k M •~ •~• WALLPAPER * DRAINS Plugged? Draining climbing irons furnished. ....,._., 1 w -1 k U YOGA CLASSES. Tues aftns r c , atonry, •...-.u.... AL'S Landscap\n.... Tree RAIN gutters Inst a 11 e d , * 64 .. 030 ••••· .. -~nne -8.l ers, coc ta
6560 ·-o slow? Expertly cleaned $9. ,,...... ,v 1-h bo N 3 p.m. Free class this Tut's. etc l\fY \Vay, qua!lty home removal, Yard remodeling. Rainy season here soon. \!/hen you call "Mac" 24 hr SE'rv. 530-3S54 ' 1 ~~-------a u-= .. ses, us Yll. t:1v
Nov. 17th. Yoga Center, 4.J5 ---------repair. \Val!s1 ce!l!pg, floors Ttuh hauling lot cleanup. Free est. Reas! 968-2208 548-1#4 646-lnl BAR manager needs position restaurant, Dana Po Int ·
E . 17th, c.r-.t. &16-8281 BRICK "* BLOCK * STONE etc. No JQO too small. Reµatr sprnklers. 6!1~ll66. H '-'·· b Roof 6950 as restallJ'ant manager or _<,,97=·-1808-=-~-=--I B the hour aft 5 30 H II 67311 ou.ses, """~• 0 a 1 s · ing bartender. -496-4362 .. -°"" Cf HEALTH Spa. membership Y • er : 54.3-1494 r.10NTiiLY lawn main!. Ne\V au "I flagpoles, anything ...... ,. eanlng: Woman
to• ··'e !-2. Take O\'t>r 642·l!l4S * 645-(IT:i8 GEN'L ,.mod•!'·· & m•;•L I & mkf !•tali·' '"'-""!"" -so•ably ---------SILK SCREEN Tech. 35 _.,. needed, exper. Own+--. • ...., '" u'6 .....,, av.·ns sp n "8 '""• T.N.T. Lawn Service . . 'T..,~' ·,"',.___'""a .,_.;;9_2 LEE ROOFlNG CO: Roofing J•~ Penonal ref's, 642-122-4": ... t' pymts. 15 mo, left 642-3973 Brick, block, 1tone. Patios, No job too s ma 11 • ro t o-1111\ng, n-ets/shrubs Garaae clean-up!, hauling It paint"". · ,....., e&t. .......,.. ,;i • of all types, re cove r , exp. seeks Job or te11.ching.
aft. 6 or week-ends anytime. entrance ways. No job too lJc'd/lnsured. 675-8183 removed. MS-~ 1. h vi 54 8 • 863 , INT EXT ER 1 0 R 1938 Westmlruit~r. C.i\I. Banking 1g t mo ng. ~a , ..-. or • repairs, roof coatings. Lie & I=========;; ALCOflOLlCS Anonymous. small, 646-782S, Ref furn. GEN'L remodeling & maint. LAWN Care, cleanups. trash 531-3729 PAINTING. Loe. Ref. 1:-,1. bonded since 19-17. 642-7222 Job Wanted, * * OPERATIONS
Phone 542-7717 or write to C t I '590 No job too s m al I . hauling. F.V.; H.B.. & 1'-lOVING, Gara&<! clean-up & l\IED. Serv i cc. Free BEFORE 'll')u buy, call T. Women 7020 MGR.
P .O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. arpen er "I Llc'd/lnttt~cl. 673-8183 \\'estmstr. area. Free est. l!tc hauling. Reamnable. cst.lm11.les. 646-0210. Guy Roofing Co. Recover 1 ____ ------Medium sized flnanciaJ !mt\..
CARPENTRY Remodeling * Additions 847-5802 Free estimates. 645-1602 PA INT ING : Ho n cs t ,; pe ci a JI st. 64 S-2780, LADY Y!'ould like let cook k tute i!I seeking a mature per.
6tl0 MINOR REPAIRS. Net Job KARL E. KENDALL NE\V Lawns, re-aeed. Con:ipl y A RD / Gar, Cleanup. Guaranteed work. Lic0d, 543-9j9(). keep house for 1 gentleman son \\"ilh Savings & Loan ex-.
1----------Too Small, Cnbll\Pt tn gar· Llcenstd-Bonded 5'18-1537 lav.'1\ care. Clean up by }Ob Remove lrec!s, Ivy, trash. local ref's. Cal.I 675-5i40 aft RE-ROOFING, shingles & in exchange for comlorta.ble per, &/or banking bkgrnd.
TALENT conle'SI al Fell· aces & other cabinets. Add!Uons * Remodell,..,. or mo. Free est For Info Crade backoo. 962--8745 5. k R ··'-& tt quartel"!I Laguna. 494-6334 10 manq:e a branch oUice. •t · · i.... ... 897-"'17 or·~ -02. ' ' · roe · t:I"'-'"'" Sno.<"08 ng, Hard work!""' and hav ..... cianoJI n uslCIAf'IS, s .. ~ers, 54S.8175 U no ans~;er leave Gerwic.k .1. Son Uc. ..., ~ PAINTING & Papo""'""''"i"" N · b 1 all 897 A....., after 4:30. .,. e u11:
d ,_ au · ·1~ "' ·• CLEAN UP spre ... •sr TRASH I. Garage <'lean-up. "-06 .... 0 JO 00 sm • ~ I=,,.-.,-,.,----...,,=-ablliiy to dlrttt. htuat ho aneers, com..... ut\i '-"· msg at 646-2372. H. 0 . 673--6Q.tl • 54S.2170 ~ 7 days. $10 a loe.d. Free est Int, k Ext. Reuonable. EXP Ace/pay ace/rec, free 10 traveJ to lnterna!lon.
Cash prizes lo winners. Andet"...on .. N
1
ew fe~ & repair. Mov.·. Anytime, 548-roll. ~ estimate. 646-?Mt Sewing 6960 payroll Gen. oUlce sect al airport arta. Pie.,.,..,
1\lt• It Thurs nltes. Apply REMODE G n. •-Ca-! Cleanln" 6625 .... .r M-'""" Reas d ti •·ti/ t ,. •-""! ·~ Jn permn Mon It Wed, from LIN & n.:PI"' •,..... • '"' .. .,...... · e MOVING-CLEAN-UP & LABOR &: Mat'I. Inrcr & E'x· u es iu P ime •.rvN • resume 10 Personnel Direc.
l0:30 pm on. Fellcianos, specialist. Comm'l1 resu:k~ ~-HAULING. VERY REAS! ter. SlO per room. 1'"'tte est. QUALITY You've _always AIDES - for convalescence, tot•, P.O. Bo~ 45646, L.A.
1617 WHlcliU Dr., N.B. lia1. Paneling, car> In e ts, F & ~I Cle11ning Servlc::? ~.50 J!R.. J-a...11 q_s_s: api l}__g, *-*-ROY: ~ * 5.i7-8$.'l8, 540-1046. "'anted, Dre11mak1ng • elderly care or family care. 90045.
GIANT-prqc I \dewalk ~f7511t98e.. fonnlca...--Ca·l-1 HoUd!(y"5peeial. CeMl-Foo.ril. cfiii'nTng, painting, e1c. E:it· HAULING I' Cleanup,~ McAdainSPalntlhg-sav. -• ~~~~m .~t.5::t';;_&~ lI~kcrs, !>47·ti681. B"°A"B"'Y"'S'°1°"r"rt;°"'R"°.-,=,,.-,n1'""0.,---o._-I __
.,_ er:•t1rlt!1 In 2 hh. 536-3508, per. rcllablt!. John 646-9548.· & •hru"-f"('l'l'Kl\'td. "'""'e lnte.r. It Extcr. Special rates .,. JAPANESE la".. l\l do I nd We Sat. Nov. l•th. SAM tol:R'""E=P,..A"l="°~AL=TE=RA7T=t"O"N"•'1 •••2241 EXPER H 11 c·~ w "" PROFESSIONAL D k UJ y, gra ma lype: fetr 2 n--f 16lh SL & ·~ ~ wo-· • •ws 1U1 .... uenet eslimale. 54•59~ <in apts. fi46.3645 res&ma. · housework, Needs transp. children 10 & 6. •~ -5 PM. ""''-o -<:ABJNETS. A i job C I G d l "" . & II.mt.ti &nbl ~;i~ ~-, Avt Procttds to fl)' sze . CRPTS/Wlndows. 3 rma &: omp tle ar en ng PAINTING· l•te• & ~,, ... 1ng a on. Call 540-1332 J;,-'CM,_ . .,.,....,.;;..,,-=,.-·l "'' ..... • 2S )Tl e r 53-6713. Scrvtce •. 646-4876 alt_ 6 pm. 1 • " •• ""' • • prices for the holidays. -========= )'OUlh prorra:m11 sponllCftd xpe · _ ht.II foam shampooed + -HouHCIHnfne 6735 Very ttuonable.. &15--0318 ~7 -;:ABYStTTER, l\1ature
by 'J'be Costa Mesa Rol&r)' 5.\fALt JOB compl v.•lndow "''Uhl"' both EXPER. Japanese Gardener, &ft 6 Pl\f . Jobs Min. Wom. 7100 "-"Oman. l ~ 2 da.)"I • oo-
Smilce Cub. SPEClAUST for $37.50. 82'7-3lS2 11.ll 4:30. rn~~I~ =~64~Ua 2 CLEANING \\'Omen, 4 hrs * PAPERHANGING EJROC:,: f~~a:: ADVERTISL"'IG -Tm med op. caslon&l nltes. Jla nt ·
SERVICE DfllCTORY Call Gtlfdon. N&.fi5.l5 Diamond Carpet Oea.ning once a \\"Mk or bl-monthly. &: PAINTING w 988-2425 reuonable-. 67l-l8"9 portunlly ror 111.dJcs & girts.1 ;;-H,,a-.==· °'<2ll.-1_59Z-300T='=·;_.I
ROOFING Pre-Hollc.t11.y Spec1al HERRING0S Dependable, thorough. Ca.U ' $243.50 per hour + BABYSITTER -My home, Accountlnt '500 a AD Home ltn~mtrita. P't'ee minor repafra $30 owr Com{llete Gardcnin& Sel'\b after 6 pm, 962..al06 S A H PAINTING Altera I Ions -642-5&45 gtntn)Us bonusci &. <'Om· H.B. Hl«:hool d li tr let ~ ,.,..Ell. S..US 300ft$1S. heeest. 64S..lll7 1162-4914 WINDOWS I: walls 9'-..Shed. &CornplcteRcmodelingServ, Nellt,accu~te,31yeanexr>. ml11lons . Pleasant Spanish lady ok. $31:1 Yt'k. 536.2117 or 642.t'IOO, """"' •33
ISm bullnea.illlllcr dlpetida~ CUSTOM WOODWORK STEAM Jct carpet cleaning. LA W N m1ln1enance, ex· Flrs. g~ipped, 1c3.led .l e Dreuml\k!ng • Alterations ttlephonc \\'Ork. C.11 & a~ """""""' l
aocuraM 1: ,_ bookef'plfll F\ll"nhure &. Ctbtntta By OarKart, n&IJon.\\ide pcricnctd, te3tonible. CAii "-'txcd, nia clcaninc. 1'We *PAPERHANGING De1lgned to 1ult you. ply flO\\·! 548--a501. 186!1 1---------·I "°"'' ... pick ap ....,. 548-mS OI' 6f5.ttM& anvlce. FrH UI. 6CM05.S tor tlft uUmatet, S..7722 Cit. day/nlte 673--3090. &: PAINTING. * 968-2.t.25 ~II .let ... $16-6446 Nt'v.'p(ltl, Suite F. C.?of. Dla1 60-587l I-cbarre tt.
Announcements
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-·· Tut.sd&y. Nowmber 10, l'l70 DAILY PlLOT 1 '('.
OIS & !MPLOYMENT JOBS & !MPLOYMEN'r
, Wom. 7100· Jobi i\\er-., Wom. 7100
JOllS & EMPLOYMENT MER~ljANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR FREE TO YOU PETS ind LIV!ST'OCK TRANSPORTATION TRAHSPORTATIOH
.lo~ ._ M11t~-w-7100 SALi ANO TRAOI SALi ANO TRADE _, ~ ----_ -·· -;;:;;;;;;:;:"Ti:;;;;;;;;;;-,::;;:::/!H~o!!':!'"!!'!..... ___ .,..!!11!!30 Mobile Homn 92DD M rn l Ilk•• 9175
ABYSJTl'ER 6:45 pm-12:45
am, $ d.ay1 a v.·1<. Older
\\Oman pret'd. ~7667
SALE
Office FumltuN IOIO Ml1cellaneou1 l600 LOVABL.E, lively bUc cocker mlx ·~ female. & mo. * f YR OLD Albtno/Muit-
PROl'BSSIONALS llotin'd ""90 ....a dm.. *SPECIAL-SAVE* Sho1'. Lovea children. anc·M....,. G<ldln•. WeU
It )"OU have told: Soft w1ter, $69.50 • Reftfi'd wood um 50% ON LABOR Houaebroken. Need• aooct trained. Exp rider, S250 or ~ Encyciopedil Britannica, rota.ey cha.lrl. $29.50 • we UMITED TIME ONLY ho m e • t e n c e d y • rd . make off'. Mo bi' le L1'y1'11G'
DELUXE mini bike 3 bp, red
w/chrome. * IW2·9950 *
FOR. Sale ·TACO Mini Trail
Bike. **TE LLER ..., •-, VtouumCleaner>,Avon£tc, have tho lucest Nlectlon Reuphobltt,..,. tumiluro 6$.Sl39 11/12 MS-4297 "•
xperleoced , Must be able IO • I N EED YOU .. -..... -lD tJijg ANY COUOI -$50.00 CAN you help! We ad<>pted 7 YR old AQHA ; 9>ml at Its ' Best • $36-41165 *· type SO wpm . TO SELL ' area.. ANY CHAIR · $25.00 1, and have 3 clean, ta!, 1eldiJ'I&, Xlnt dlspos!Hon, Gd J MINIBIKE S
Please call -IOTILEO WATER M~ Mahan Desk Labor only tborou&'bly potty trained klt· tor exp/rkler. lncld: All * S46-U93 *
962·5551 ~ l e 1800 Newport Blvd. Ctme.J.nc one oC our vut te-tens from a "no care ta.ck ssoo. Call Art: 7 IN IRVINE AGRICULTURAL ==========I BEAUTY !~ Rtceptloni'1 • IRVJNE PERSONNEL A GAL. M2-84SO leetlono of !abrlcs. "'\rhbon" cat. WIU deliver. 84&"'657 PRESERVE-BEAUTTFULI
Girl Fr ida y. l.lt • SERYICES•AGENCY Lead• Furnished. REVAS UPHOLSTERY Pl•"• call MS-"°" ll/12 TRANSPORTATION
secretarial . Mw;t be Call Nita: 847.&105 Store E4ulpment 8012 305 PAJ..M, BALBOA YEAR ,-old fr iendly ,
Motorcycles 9300
t
!: ;
' . • ·:·
" .
.
i
I
beautiful, arnbltlowi. &. ' Saliifaction since 1954 ahorthllir, medium·slz.ed Boet1 & Y1cht1 9000
sharp. Exp'd ar will train. lnturance Girl $700 F" P d. CUSTOM WRAP COUNTER 67~2794 mall!: dog. Had all a:hOta. NEW
$300,000
RECREATION
CENTER
n.nnn.n
YHINI l '
Full ............. .,_,, p 0 .. __ 1 Yr . .,per. -•'I ins. Ma· Dearte Accounting or Fin· &: DISPLAY rIXTURES. 0 h I I d d '61 URICHSEN 25' Cab· "'l'"'"'.u ...... · ,QO,t.A .~ .. A~ • •646-0045• * PURE-CLEAR og ou1e nc u e . 1" • 10026. Santa Ana ture & penonable. Hn. 9-5. ~. ca11 Ann, !7'W"mo. BOTTLE D 548.-2430 U/12 Crulaer. Slpa-6, 50 Hrs on WestcliH Pel'$0nnel Aaency, ci..-·sler Sea V En l BRAILLE 'futnscribtr • G S I -• WATER Dll'AUTlruL white le •ui • i'· m· G-orol Offi'co 2043 We11tclitt Dr., N.B. 1r11• • • -" ~ mac $4950 548-3693 Clerk, experienced. Person-... l l CHLORINE-FREE !Slue/grty Pl"IMDt mother . ' S(atisli<•I typl••. ••"'I ore ("A~",,.,.-0 '.o",_,.0'-b-•c,.·~--~ • M~o··CYCLES, 1·10" .... HOUSEBOAT "I ne!OtticeCaplstranoUnifled ·• '' ~ * v• ~ le cat. Verytimid.SMneedsa • ., at,
School District, Capistrano bckgmd, Previous exper. in SALES· 5 men & 5 women to table saw, 2 desks: 2 ~Y A GAL-DELIVERED special fogter or perma.nt'nt live aboard, Slip Avail.
Be h PA or CPA otc. helpful, demo SLIM·GYM & JET chairs, office '""'1>ip., m•"Y "'° ·~· 11/'" * <:AO 2f•A * ac . aATH Mary Lou Good, misc & gallons-&~ gallons of Limited offer. ~. .....,. ~ .,.. e BRAKE & alignment TRISH HOPKINS 968-2416, 5'13-8329 gool.'I paint. 1700 Superlor , ___ CaIJ~="~'~-64~05~~-FREE To good home: AKC 15' BMt, 25 hp Johnson & mechanic. Earn exc e s s Ave. CM. 64~1691 ,. silvu-bcige 2 yr old n1ale continental trlr. Xtras. $395
$l@ month. Must haw 4S8 E. 17th (at Irvine) C.M. SANTA CLAUS & l need * AUCTION * Poodle. MinlalW'l'. All shots cash. 548-0141 aft 5.
tools. X1nt opportunitY. l718 642-1470 help In filllnr Christmas GARA.GE SALE Fine Fumitur. ~1679 U/10
Nowport, CM MAID WANTED: L>·~,·n, orders for the fabulous • Applia.nct>s LOOKING For a ~ homo S1Jlboeh 9010 • ...-SLIM GYM. Hl"!I flex . Incm. Many household Items. oc: °" ..........
CARRIER English speaking. N.B. high 8.ll-ll77 MUST S ELLI I Auctions Friday. 7:...., p.m. tor• 2 yr old areY le white NE\VPORT 2(), aacrlfice. Im-
644-5408 after 6pm Phone 147·0116 Wind y1s Auction B1rn nice ma.le cat. Maybe mac. $5750. orig rost. Sell BOYS MALE/Female: Must be 5ii~~C~a~A:::pe~ =========:l2015in Newport, Of 646-8686 adults. 540-l!HJ ll/lO tor $3095. 213/24~194.l
over 18 CASHIER, USHER. Also Driveway Salesman Applle~ces 1100 Behind Tony'a Bldg, ltfat'l. FREE T~ qualified bom.e:. * NEW SOLING -Never Us-W ANTED E'ITE.5, DOORMAN. Apply w/lube exper. Apply in ---------IBEAUT. coppertone, com· ~le-kmixm~edog.~hite ed. Priced to sell !
THE THEATER tF 0 X J, person, BOYD'S ARCO. 490 HOTPOINT Gas dryer. wash pact beer bar w/tanks & w ac eyes nose . enc-Dys/548.8781 Eves/548-5103
for tho South Coast Plaza, C.M. E, 11th C.M. !Cross road ·n \\-'ear cycle, Xlnt cond, retri& .• cost $395, sell $200. ed yard. 5"48-08ll llflO 16' CATAM~N ~ Ve; DAILY PILOT 546-2712. Irvine.) $65. Kenmore elec dr)"f'r. \\'et bar. sink le cabinets LOV~BLE. male G. Shep. tast. Moved north. my loss.
Dana Point, San Juan Manager trainees 151 wanted SERVICE STA. ATINDNT. Xlnt cond $50. Deliv & w/hardware, never used. Collie muc. l yr. Shots. your gain. $495. 54&-9452 ,. ..... .i.traoo and guaranteed. 546-8672 , Rust-liT.en Couch & match.. HSBK, watch do&. loves•,:;::=;:======~ ...._ by Symbra'etle, Inc . Part time. exp·d. ne11.t in kid 536-4277 11 121" Capllltrano Beach. Interviews will be from 11 appearance. Apply 2590 847-8115· chr. Dinette table & 4 cbn. s, / Power Cruisers
Cont.ad Mr. Seay ttf_ am to 6 pm Sat, Nov. 14 at Newport Blvd., c .M. KENMORE Auto washer, 6 Very reas, 5.57-3331. GRAY tem11.le spayed curly
DAILY PILOT the Saddleback Inn, Suite cycles, xlnt cond $45. CE SEARS 18 Chord o.....-an, 3 haired terrier r>OO. 9 months '67 ALGLAS 33' Twin Screw. SERVICE Station Attendant : ·• id h ho h b F II ~ nd I Id' X 233, Santa Ana. Call for an washer. 5 cycle, Xlnt eond months old. Gray 'M:lOI-o ss 1 ts a rk . u Y r ou · nc g Ira San Clemente ott'lce a""t 71415214)846, w/mech ability. Must be s4o. Oeliv & guaranteed. upholstered-heavy me 1a 1 962-3401 11112 Gas Tanks. Asking $23,000. 305 N. El Camino Real y.-Exp. Danny's Arro-21302 646--0849 492-4420 MAN for shipping & rec. Pacilic Coast Hwy. H.B. 546-8612. 847-8ll5. re ce p I lo n is t eh a Ir , TERRIER/Cockapoo m Ix.I==========
d t s lJ 1 full SUPER 1970 dlx. 30" Friga-Christmas tn>e. artificial, puppies. 6 wks. Tan colored.
CASHIER. Exp'd, for fine ti~e'. r.~uast ~a~~ ~river's SERVICE Sia. attndnt. Ex· dnil-e elec. range: yello.,,,•: used 0 n C'. e . Decorations. Small dogs. Call after s. Speed-Ski Bo1t1 9030
womens clothing store, part Hcense. $1.80 hr to start. Hpcr'bod. Apcp!.v, ~~,,. ~,::s~ 2006 used 2 mo. Sacrifice $125. 549--0654 557-0153 ll/U • '69 GLASSTRON jet drive time/Xmas. Sale.11 position ar r. "'. ~ .1 r d Please apply ~11 am only, ------~--496-2686 or 493-4196. STROLlrO-CHAIR. sacr1 ice, UNUSUALLY marked tiger runabout. marine radio tele-
also open 1°1r exp1' · No 946 w. 17th C.M. SERVICE Sta. Pump ls!. al· ---c~=~=="'==~-1 chrome, vinyl coni;truct., female kitten -3 black & pho,,., •le. 54~··= alts. phone c a s p e ase . ---00=~==--tendanL Exp'd prefd. Over •REFRIGERATORS • . h . ~, Backstreet, No. 25 Fashion MOTEL MAID 20. 2801 E. Coast H11.y at All sizes-AU colors-All incl lip-proor hi c air. ':',~ii;~,,,,. male k i 1 t e1"1 '1.2· 18' CENTURY 175 HP gr.
Island, NB p/time Sail Inn Motel Goldenrod. Corona dt'I Mar. Reasonable. stroller, buggy. car se11.t, =~-=-O:,:.--~---'"'c:c1 marine low hrs. Hull good
CLERK·TYPIST for N.B. 6T;;,-l841 * 675-0533 * ** 64&-7820 ** youth chair & tbl, cost s27o • FOSTER home for pregnant cond. bsl offer. 54&-2805 -------~-==='-='-,:.~=~~-.,-...,-,~:7:;..::::...::_:.._ __ J make ofr. Oak frame COUC'.h mother cat whose kit tens·'========"== publishing: firm. Sharp Call New Accounts Girl SHIPPING & Re c e iv I n g . • MAYTAG service man & lovescat, must ro , '1
Mrs. Sabetta. 642-9410 $475 Inventory control bkgrnd. has washers, dryers !n 675-6419 will be ready for Christmas. M1rine Equip.
Beautiful new offices. V•~ h I f I G t tu •ty match sets, best guar. 531· . 836-4493 or 548-0813 11/12 * COLLECTOR * ·~ e Pu · N"a oppor ni 8637 1-150,000 B.T.U. Day & Night Kt'M'ENS _Black & while 9 MISC Electronic r epair pleasant wor king conditions. for aggressive man . f r terio mount\ · · 1 & ru All Top benefits. Call Miss Con. 642-2fi66 for appt. MUST Sell Electric Dryer. 3 1"100""c'on· 1',',1 Mr' , ---y ",•, wks. old. To good homes . equipmen pa · or · 7••-Ab. · y Old E 11 ·.....,rt:' 83.>-ii212 Days, 673-2796 part. 642-9201 days; aft 8,
9020
9035
SPACE RENTALS
FROM $11 .50
IN AOUL T PARK
-PETS ALLOWED-
MODELS ON
DISPLAY
-EXAMPLE-
BRAND NEW
DOUBLE WIDES
Total Eiectri1,.
(Gas Available)
2 br., l bath, con1pl. \\'ith
carpet, drapes & appliances.
Lg. awnings. both sides &
lull skirting-Tax &
license-Completely set-up
$9999
SEE THE FABULOUS
30X5S CORNELL
AND MANY OTHER
MODELS INCLUDING
HONDA
Ill
"FRIEDLANDER" 1•• •Melt (MW't" • ., •
537.e824 • a:9.3-1566
NEW-USEO-SERV.
> " l
! • ' ' ' '
'
l'U'V'U'U"ll i
• • •
I
\ ' ' I .
"
. ~
' . ' . I .
• TRADE WANTED. I '.
'69 Harley Davidson 74 Chop. I
per. Must see to appreciate.: •
Wilt trade lor late model! -
s-portscar. Call 635-8ll6 after 1
6 p.m. :
'70 Honda 450
Finance company experience,
skip.trace & demand collec-
tions.
HUNTINGTON
INTERCOMMUNITY
n1e. SS ..,........ iga1I Abbot STUDENT Assist teach. lite .~· _ · _ xce ent Con-Mrs: Greenman at the eves 11/12 962-4981.
Personnel Agency. 230 W. hsework ~10 hrs wk . diliort. $5(1. 557-3ut DAILY PILOT 330 W B
Warner, Suite :nt, Santa Respons., \.villing, thorough. LGE 'double-door refrigerator. Costa J\.1.esa. ' · ay, FREE kittens • White & Boat Slip Mooring 9036
SINGLE-WIDES
.FINANCING AVAILABLE-
14851 JEFFREY RO,.
Lo""', low mlle. Like new.
dlr. •908442. Will take tradeJ
or finance private~· Call
5464052 or 494-681] I
HONDA mini tra.il 50, bored
out twire, straia:ht pipe.!
•9>5377 I -
e '68 HONDA 350 .
-HOSPITAL--
Call 847-1801 or apply
Personnel Dept., 17772
Beach Blvd .. Hunt . Bch.
COOK • HOUSEKEEPER.
light nursing dufjes. Live-in.
Fri thru Sun. $17/day.
673-3528
COSMETIC SALES: Fan-
tastic New Product Guaran.
teed Cllentle. 546-3904.
COASTA[ AGENC:Y
A member of
Snelling & Snelling Inc.
The World's Largest
Profe11ional
Employment Ser vice
2790 Harbor Bl. CM 54IJ.fr05S
Harbor Blvd. at Adams
DECORATOR. exper. male
or female. 5 day wk. in-
cludjng wknds. 6#-1520
·Ana. Balboa Penin. Pt. 615--0233. \\'hile. Jn excellent cond. FRIENDS Annual Book Sale black & white. H B ·I ----'----'"'-~
-$70 962.9863 ~77 11/12 15 TO 30 ft. slips avail. for newport . THE DAILY PILOT . Nov. 13. 14. ll a.m.--4:30 2 FEMALE cats 3 months power OOats. Also dry
el hasanopenlngfol"anexperi-Sewing Mlchines 8120 p.m. San Clemente Elks old, cute and playful storage for boats & trailers personn enced, journalist in Its w0-Club 1505 N. El Camino 646--0367 aft 4 11112 Bays!de Village. 300 E.
men·s department. Applicant SPECIAL Real. San Clemente. PT. G. Shpeherd male Black Coast Hwy. N'pt Beach. agency m"'I be able to -port, Jiii ELEC mower & e I e c · WISH d ' '° 1970 s· T • -o · brown 2 yrs. Loves children. to tra e a as· mooring
of I S · wn·1, eloarly, underst••d inger oucu~ma c, vacuum sweeper, 2 sets f 50· Pr essiona 1rv1ce ..,,, B wain 1 I $3750 673-2484, 54~3989 11/12 or a mooring. ad-4.Ssentials ot photography & eaut U conso e, . twin beds, couch-makes into · 1 1 Ph °'! '"°" for the employe r ""'"8238 7 Li p FREE To b;n1 10 v, r .. JUS men · .,.. ~ col· l~ut. Top company bene-........ bed. Sp. l . Star te ark, I t and the applicant 2060 N t Bl d CM Ck<an-type bird. Cal I•-'-'-·--------fits. good ,salary. attractive ewpor v . . ,-833 Dover Dr., N.B. new quarters. Apply in writ. Music•I 12. PAN Yam row boat, 5 hp 530-1679 11/10 * S~IP av~! for rtu~ to 36'
642-3870 ing only, citing experience, Instrument s 8125 outbrd Mercury. $200: '56 AKC Female black labrador. ~~se~ at ewpo owers.
NlTE Janitor. Apply in background & education to Che_v, V-8 auto. Gd_ cond. S l'.rs.~Gogd_ with ch.ildren 1..c~;;:;.=~-----
person. Mesa Lanes, 1703 Margaret Greenman. Per-12 STRING GIBSON s:m. Ph: 548-8257 aft 4 pm. 892-4149 11/11 •PVT dock for up to 28'
Superior Ave, C.M. sonnet Manager, Box 1560, Guit1r: Great Soundl z End tables $3.5() each. Very FREE Unique red &: black motor boat on channel.
NURSES, Registered, need· Co~t:-. Mesa, Calif. 92626. $125 or Best Offer. PLUS sturdy aqua blue couch. Mini Doxie to special home, 673-2662 aft 6 pm
ed. California license req'd. VANDA Beauty counsel'Or . Free set of strings. Good condition needs clean-male. 847-8497. 11112 Boat Rentals 9038
IRVINE
% MI. SO. OF
SANTA ANA FR\VY.
CALL COLLECT
714-132.a.lBS
CONTEMPO.
LAGUNA HILLS
23301 RIDGE ROUTE DR
LAGUNA HIUS
Scrambl~r. Very good cond. !
Lo miles $415. 644-0057 :
'70 TRIUMPH 500 cc, 3 mos I
old. Excellentconditio nJ
S900. 536-7294 aft 5 I
·10 TRIUMPH Scrambler-500. !
'trophy Used 2 mo·s. $975.;
673-3510, 675-3049. ..
HONDA 1970 CB 450, like : Prestige adult community, new. $695
adjacent to Leisure World. 831-2117 or 499-2366
Beautiful surroundings, a11 1.,,,68,--,y"°A"M"A""H"A.,.-"2S0'"""'E"nd.,.uro,,--. !
luxury -appointments, put-Dirt . Git kit. 21" front whl. I
lin1o: green, hobby shop, Xlnt $425. Aft 5, 557-3915 1
much 1nort". !
CALL 830·3900 Auto Service 1
Wa.nt To LiYe ln
COSTA MESA Call : 496-5702 Capitalize now on Christmas * 532.2977 * Ing $25. Costa Mesa 64rr2633. XI.NT watchdog, police dog, _;..:.::;;;:;;.:: __ .....:.::.::::
Nu .. sing. se-lling season. No. lerr·s. $4 DRUMS, Roger set. Xlnt WANT TO BUY! vw bus xl~t for family w In o Rent A Sailboat Loc:al spaces available now!
SUPERVISOR, RN. hr poss. 546-5170 cond. Zildjian cy m ba I s. with gOOd body &: Interior. C'.htldren, 835-3608. 11/12 Cal 2S, sleeps f, fully equip.. It you are serious about buy-
& Parts 9400 \
VW Engine, Good Cond.
• 642-0443 •
3 10 11:30 shift. XLNT. accom. to college stu-Must see. Best offer . Engine unimportant. Any FREE to gd home. (ll ped, S30 per day, wkdys; S40 lny a mo))lle home ••• Now·s
Park Lido Convalescent dent. exchange hshld dutie& 962-1185. year. 6424689 Lovable fem. dog. Great Pf'I day wknda: S200 per Wk. the time to see
Center, 642-8044. 675--0310. 54&-7197 DECCA duaJ . pickup t!lectric 113 CARAT • 35 pts, total w/chldrn, 546-6319 11/10 I.t!ssons incl. 968-4840. BAY HARBOR
OLDER male Pizza Maker. guitar. Excellent Condition wedding set. Never been 1.1&-VERY special, lovable tiger MOBILE HOMES
VW PARTS
Chassis, Traru!missiona fl
Body parl.S". 642-0443
Tr1i11rs, Utility DENTAL Assistant,
chairslde, age 1~30. exp.
pref. Laguna Reach.. Call
494--3596 for application.
nights. LaPiu:a Mia, 16947 Schools-Instruction 7600 $50. 642-7614 ed. Cost $375, Sell $175. kitten needs ioOO home. BCNt Ch1rter 9039 1425 Baker St. (al Harbor)
Bushard, V.V. Call alter 11 • FENDER amplilier in l,,:'.544--06~;:'.1~7.,...,,...,.==cc-:=--, 1 ;"~'·~3222~=~-~--'-'.'.:l/~1~011-:::'."'":-:-------Costa Mesa sw.9470 4 x 8 Box Trailer.
Ai\1 962-6404 I----------I xlnt cond . 8 MM movie projector $20. 8 FREE to id homes 6 wk old 32' Twin-screw Chris Craft Tripi• Wide Cornell Good condition. $75.
ENGINEERING
AIDE II
* PART TIME·* TRAIN TO BE A $150 548-8496 mm Bell & Howell movie darling puppies. 962..6401 Sips 6 * 0e1ux boat Hillcrest e Flamingo .. can 642.9873
LITE BKKPG. Heavy Equip. ment camera $10. Geiger counter ll/10 * 548-2434, 636-4034 * Paramount • Universal I===;======!
g.3 Mon·Sat. G.irl Friday. No Pi1no1 & O rg1n1 8130 $35. small boat $35 firm. ~ao=sro=N~T~-· ~AK=c~_,:.;I J=========== Ban1ngton e Broadmoor Trucks 9500 S?2l-S92l . 2 yrs. (!xper. plus OPERATOR 531·'ll94 errier · ma e. Fl I L 9150 Continental • Star 2 yrs. college or equiv. com. l)'Iling. Good job, benelitB &: F~e to gd, ho me . Y ng ••tons .70 TOYOTA HI LUX PICK-,
bination required. File ap. health ins. Mark C. Bloome. Approved For Vets • ORGANS • HIS & Hers Lucien Picard 21 c968-4=::'.5~28'.:_ ____ _:l::ll~IO~J -----------J General •Hillcrest
plication before Nov. 24 3005 Harbor Blvd ., C.M. Learn to operate bulldozers, Now 3 famous brands jewel, Comp!. Polaroid 3 YR. Old Sm German LEARN TO FLY CHAPMAN ~~~:i~f~~oi;;:~ty~
• CITY OF COSTA MESA • 1 =p7A=RT~T=i_m_e_M~ed~i'"ea71-A",-,'"is--I drag-lines. cranes. scrape.Ni. .i YAMAH!n Al IOC".&tion !!m. ~!nw~~I ~~sasM:~~ Shepherd to &"ood home. Low rates, private lhru com-MOBILE HOMES ne\V one. Priced to sell. $1899
77 Fair Dr. (714) 834-5350 tan!, must be exp, back of· loaders, trenchers, e t c. ~CONN D;.a1. Sac. S30-6T78 54&-1281 11/10 mertiat. Call after 5:00 pm. 1m; ~:~~·+G.G. Lie. 275VIV. Chicle Iverson
Exper Phone Salesman lice procedures. S a I a r y Home .sdtudy oi:e~ares1 you , THOMAS. TABLES , 1 hi C FREE 7 mo min. full blood T.ues, Thur. and Fri. and on ~~-c..:.d-""b---h.,.1.~. ~ Inc., 445 E. Coast Hwy., N.B.
open. 1530 Baker. Suite A. for res1 ent tra1n1ng a our .. "" ma c ng ap-poodle, 10 ~ horn• w/l>.l· weekends. 830-4370 YEAR ·roun eac 1v1ng. 2 Salary or Commission CM. 54~1214 mOdem facilities in J\1iaml. Huge savings on Door modt>ls ta.In'& chairs. % keg bttr ''• g;-J. e•7~15 ........ 93 ll/lO br, 17x35. $90 mo. MUST .c677~~"0900=,.'"~'~· _53_0'=",.·-~,
Choice of hrs. 642--4438 Lay-away now for Christmas dis-n.ser, Ma.tchin• refrig, " " ~ E L $"""" f I '61 FORD P.U. wt292 cu in PT·TIME off.ice girl. in-Florida. Hiirhly paid career ,,.. FAN Mangulnes 1965-1970 Moblle Home s 9200 ~'5-L.,n!17 .;,.NV or o er. EXPERIENCED Alteration & ls open ambitiOU!! men . Uni· & save. Msny trade-ins for Stainless steel Tables. Btst ..,.. "" eng, auto trans, clean. Will
Counter woman for Dry sura.nce, fypin~ & misc. 2 versa! Heavy Construction a: low as $150. ofr. 833-3526 894-1912 ,69 GENERAL lake best offer. Dan -
Cleaning Sfore. Apply 120 h!'S per day, 6r>-8050 Schools Dept. 1203. 501 N. Open Sundays 12-5 l's"o"F"A'"--m,-,-al"o"hi"og,__ch'"a-,.ir,.-,•9o:-1,-e 11/10 Triple Wide Cornell 673-4646, Phillips 66 at
S. El Camino Real, San Cle. * :dRESSER,
1
.part time, Gol den Cir., suite 206, S.A.. Dally ti1 6 -Fri til 9 Tweed; Xlnt cond, SSS. Ste~ ~G-E_R_M_AN~-S-he-p-he-nl~m-a-l-e.-8-I Continental e Paramount 24x43'. 'Dishwasher, awning, Clr!~~gl I&• BoanlhoaCoo. st Hwy,
mente. 492-5424 exp . tor qua 1ty work in Calif., 92705 or (areal 714/ COAST MUSIC tbl $IO. Lamp $5. ~aa:navox monthll old. 54~5336 aJt Barrington • UniVl!!raal skirting, Set up In Huntlng-.,..-...,,~===..,.,.=~ "r"'E"'M""ALE=~eoo=k-. -A'"p"p7Jy~l'"n l ~~~~n Valley. Ph : i..:"::':..·7;::521:;:::_· _______ .. NEWPGRT &-HARBOR Console stereo $45. 557-3540 6 11/12 F1amlngo e General ton By The Sea. Rent $75. * '66 CHEVY VAN*·
person. Mesa Lanes, 1703 PIANO Lessons your home ...:Cos=1':_:.M::e="=-,,*~;.64;;~..:285:;:;:1_1cARPET layers. lvive shag FEMALE Siamese cat 11,; h1'0admoor • Star $9250. Call Tony, 531-8571. w/camping uni t, r&h, NEW
Superior Ave. C.M. PRINT SHOP HELPER Certified tE>achen;. Music ALLEN ORGANS crpts deal direct, exp in-yn old. To a &ood home . Hillcrest e Cambridge PERFECT TIRES, PAINT & SHOCKS. Days, tun lime. Will train. 1 543-9957 11/12 CHAPMAN $1475. 494-7136 FILE clerk.typist fast, accu-Personnel Dept. Hoag systems. Mr. Hatchcock, The muslrJa.n's cboce for stall. ca.n fin . 539-8327, MOBILE HOMES 12 x 57 In five star adult
rate & dependable. willing 646-1368. home, school, chureh. Ex· 827-8740 3 MONTH old female puppy. park. No pets. Ideal loca.
to learn, advancemen!. 3 1 ..!":"."''::'~·:._• :'N:.'·9~·-----·1 -=-==-------elusively in So. Calif. at 1---=n=R~E=w=o~O~D~--Part Lab & pt Husky. Has 1206 N. Harbor, S.A. tion ln Costa Mesa. Pb.
1966 FOR~l Ton 9' P/U
bed, 4 spd. 1700 Superior
Ave, C.M. 645-1691 days per wk to start, 9 to 5. PUBLICATIONS EDITOR MERCHANDISE FOR GOULD MUSIC CO. REASONABLE shots. 847-7307 aft 5 ll/12 * n4/53l-8105 * 646-8612.
Mr•. Morl•M•n 492-4104. Creafjve writing for NEWS Since 1911 * ·~-••13 * TAKE OVER PAYMENTS '"A FORD window van, R&H, l =c;..---~--=~ 1 LETTER p f ho SALE ANO TRADE ...,.. .:iv FREE: Darling wh.ite, long. .,., . re · sp. exp. ""'5 No MSJ·n S ' he'-• bl -• '"II '68 BROADMOOR ·~-bit · t Trad FULL or· pt time. Take ..,.. · • . ..-... FOR Sale -Xlnt -ndltlon ..,.,,..,,,_ ue.ey.,.. "' en. .....AJO re eng, new parn • e Personnel Dept. Hoag Hosp. I---------* 547-0681 * "'"' Dutch Clean! Motor Homes 9215 557-4540 orders & make Fuller deliv. N.B. __ -=c~;:.;::;::.....:.--J doll carriage, rock e r, 673-7069 after 6 ll/12 $900 down & payments of
$2.SO hr prof ti st. 546-5745 Baldwln blackboard. 542·3la! PETS ind LIVESTOCK 110617 '5.l Dndge, l t,i T dump, RECEPT I CASHIER, 11 e . Furniture 8000 · -· per mo '68 CONDOR GEN'L OFC. CLERK typ & fil. 9:30-5:30 M-f i-----------PIANOS & ORGANS e SKI ta.milies reM-rve now! Huntington Sch. area tandem whls. 2-spd axle,
Need l full time. 1 p/time 644-1116 N.B. for appt. New & Used Cabin at Mammoth Mnt. *Dir, 54S.8241 * MOTOR HOME quick sale, $625. 642-8520.
eves/I pt/time wknd s. Lile ------~---i URGENT! f\.fust sell thiB WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO SlpB l . firepl. etc. 531_3374 Pets, General !IOOl=-.c,c=:;..::..::c:.:..;.,..._ 26 ft., completely self con. l -'--,N=o=w=•s,.-•T=H=E~-1
bkkpng. Apply Carpeteria, RESTAURANT; Now taking weekend: white. gold trim· 1819 Newport, C.M. 642-8484 days; 540-0017 eves. ---------8X30 SHASTA w 110X1 5 taincd. Chassis and power by
1 C a PP I I ca Ii on s ror * med bedroom Bet serta mat. OPEN SUNDAY CHINCHILLAS: Emel'l'ency cabana llv'g "!I· nice yard. Ford. Auto. trans .. air cond., TIME FOR
lTI 4 Newport B vd., .M. • HOSTESSES. * 3 DISH-tress k box springs: Salem AFTERNOONS NEWPORT Be.a.ch TeMis illness Jorces sacrifice of + Adil Pk. $40> rent, S2200. pwr steer., stereo system,
Gen:er1I Office WASHE-Rs. No-one under 18 maple hutch and drop leaf Cub Memberihip, $200. 29f prime a.nlmalll k equip!., "'646-.:::,:3::,70;:2.,:•:c'=":,,,,~---sleeps 8. Im.mac. throughout. Ci)UICK CASH
Call Loraine. 645-2170. West. need apply. Apply at COL-dining tables & chairs: * BEAUT. ~ u rl 1
1! :te r 545-4529 or (2131 325-297t Call 536-2241 1i2x62 EXP ANDO, 1 br, cor· Sold originally by us, Priced THROUGH A
clitt' Peraonntl Agency, 2043 ONY KITCHEN, 3211 Har-white & i;:old cocklall end· Consol,e piano, bony inish, STORAGE SHELVES: for ner lot, tam pk w/pool, by for quick sale.
_w_e_•_to,litf._,Dr.,. .. .,N,...,.• •. .---l --ho~r=B='"-d;;.·· .,:c_,·'-'·~=~-I !ables: c b a i rs. unusual 18 mos old. S450· 557-8825 sale. $3 &. $4. 549-j212. 287 Dots 1825 new marina. $5300. 496-2381 'rnEODORE DAILY PILOT e GIRLS e * REITTAURANT HELP * lamps & lots of glass ware Television 1205 Nassau Rd, CM. QUALITY BUDGER: 17x50. ROBINS FORD WANT AD
Atll'act., Xlnt ~· Good h~. Female, part time. over 21. dishes & much more. Cap.. F irewood For Sale * w EI MAR. AN ER Nr: Bch. Full Price $6950. 206o HARBOR BLVD.
No exp nee, wtll train. Ch:er Call after 1:30, 545-1686 lstrano Mobile Park. 32802 540-9881 Fem/Beauty: 8 Wk'&, AKC Sp/~nt $65. 536-6668 COSTA MESA 642·0010 642-5678 -----'-----·I V'1I Rd · 21'' Color TV $100; 19" Black ==========I j•~;.=:~=:=:==:;:===_;;;;,;:;:=:,==oz=:;=.l==~;;,,;:~~=="/ 21. 642-0tSO 10 am-5 pm. ey . Sp. 25 S.J .C. I 0 • Exe/Pedigree. Reas, to l.,C::,,C,~="~=..,,;,.-,'= 49°'1!16 & White portable 3 . Ml W ~• 1610 d ho ~ -HOMEWORKERS WANTED · ri • • 548-6529. IC. lnr-g me. .......,wner con-(E lo Address rs) Sales 1 ·.~UN-J_Q_U_E_C_"_'t_o_m_m_•_d_e sldered. 545--0878. ~ 'W ;"'\. Rushn~:ped. se~t -~d-Spanish din 'g/rm set , Hl4F i &Ste rM ftlO SILVERWANTED:Willpay 3-TINYToyTeacupPoodles, ~!STAR .GAZER:-Jt:~J
dressed envelope . NOW!! lge/tbl . 6 Uphol /Ch r s. highest prices for silver :' wht, l champagne, 2 It. u B1CLAYl.POWN
LANGDON WORLD Chr1'stmas-Cash Orig. $650, Sac! S 30 0, COMPLETE nd t -coins. elrculated or un· femait•. 1 mate. S75 ~ HA~.JI M YOlir.Do.llyAd/-,,'tyQilJ. w sr"':'i.~u.m TRADERS, P .O. Box 831-5818. . sou !ly!e~. <"lrculated 646-6851 w/papers. SSO. w/o pspers. ~.,,,,, Y Accor41nf lolhe llo"' "'V"' ocr' n
dondo n -Sa.nsu1 3()00.A amp w/Son1c1==~-"-' ~-'-''---~ • T '-·-f W-'-'-· 1127-A2l, ~ O<:'&ch, Earn ex'tra ct1i1h on a 8' sofa. rl(!ver used. quilled speakers, Teac 4010.s tape. SMALL paint r;pray outfit 551-3331. , 11·16-fM 0 On11"lop messoge ?r iri;i._.....,, 4-15:~_.
l ;
I
(
I
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-
.
I
Ir
I
Cd.if. 90278 par! or full time basis flora.I. Scotchgua.riled, $125. Cost new $1200, sacrifice &II wa.nted. Reasonable! LABRAOORRetriever&Gtr. 4J8-63 nodwordscorrtsponcllngtomimbers 2'3-17.:,!!!
*HOUSEKEEPER. live in in your own home. Matchina lovese•t $1 5. $600. 673-281)( + 642-5776 ** man Shep.herd pups, 2 mo'!I ~TAUIUS ofyourZodJocbirth ~ign. .SCOl.,IO
Huntiniton Harbor. Own for details call 530-8337. QUALITY Fr e 0 c h Dtn•·nr old. SlS. Call Sat or 1ft 7 pm .Al~. 10
•' "-,,.. "" '31
1 2'..._ .. ,_ 4611 X,w oer. ~ I I
rm, TV. Must be exper'd & (714 / 847-6405 eveB. WE BUY used furniture, an-Sportln,. Goods asoo room •·rnl•·-. Pl•Ue caJJ wkdy1: 548-3928, _ WA'IH 3~ .,,;:::,,,. 63T':°~.1'9 Hor.21
•-ak E"glish. Salary t 'VW'I L • •u -·~• [).?·!~~ '""' 34-"""' 11.-~ -,.... _,,, tlques, bric-a-brac, orienlal ·---------•••9u7 AIREDALE Pu I AKC ~ S " .,-~ to $300 mo'ly. Ph: 846-0106 ~"' ; PP eB: 48:; 1:¢ 46c;,... 71-74.a or 841)..4666 rugs, Oil paintings. Call • SURFBOARDS • WANTED -USED Slim Born 9/tlno. Sl.25 ea. •IMINI '* 11..:' 67Vo1" SASITTAllUS l ~==RS,.,.-•E="i=-=::-:1c-:-Sales 642.3445. Both 6 ft. 10". Good cond. Gym. Must be ln good c:on-reg litter/champ pedigrtt, <2?."l"r,,21 1 04y .JIMMt 611Stol_..is HOr: J?~
HSKP mp yr pays toe. R" Sofa, beige. 2 chairs. 2 Rea90nable 642--0352 dltlon. *Call'" -·1 536-G220 ?'~(JllHf 98. 391""'* 6'NoM 1
George Allen Byland Agen-D I ..__ Q'I~ IOTN AOT1, 700oor DfC.lt Carffr Oppor tunity rexe end tsa'es. 5 cock· GREEK' $.lrf't>oard 7 • 2 • •. fIVE 6 wttlt old Be"""e mix l~J , 11 A Al '*"-71 To 1·2"'1...0041 cy 10£.B E, 16th, S.A. F RI ht p ' .l ,.., -· 1 Ilk .... 60.7):7$ l:ZY.. A1Glt n=. c,_, .,7 n"""' or 9 erson 11.1 el'!. u~cu Yr, e Go;id condition $M or best FREE TO YOU puppleB. $5 eaCh. Call '~HCI• t3S-.. AlSoom n u:c~.-•.n
"' ~ new, 5'16-4798 offer. 968-72()( 11.nytime 642-4213 ~-11.H! 21 14 To .uu,.,1e4 ''Mel.a CA,Al.;ot:H INSURANCE GIRL -Exper. Farmers lnsuraru GroUl> =""'"=-''-,,-.,-'--.,-,.-·I " 150... A!ts 7SUp OfC..U _.J{{~
includinr-bkkpng & SH . .,..6ff~lftilfifii1Tiftn'O. SLA~ VlN~l.--cO:;\"e.r--ed IHANSON::StfRF80ARD 2 VR. old m1tle-rilver pood.lt.-TOY -Fox-Tenier--Pup_?les. ,-"'= -i1U~,f-,1 -~~-~ !f~ '~= J11H. t'""-~·1---
Salar,y open. 64&-8S3G gram. Learn wilhouldilturb. ':'h:L ehi ir, l year old. 10·3•·. ~. 536-9405 Llkes kids. To aood home. -u:icc~ -nile" brown A -12-;1t2£.S llCouJd-4Cll~ ~ S: t.:b.51 --•---
LlMITED No. of perm Ing yoor present .iOb. £Arn $ . • 1338 -531""8143. U/12 white. MS-215.1 1.1ti: lfllK.lo. AtSetN 7fl~lfW 'MIMI-IS
modelina posltloN. svail. Gd comm. whill'! leamin1t Out· SOF'A & mll!ching chair $3>. M l1c1ll1neou1 l600 PLA y FU L pups * AKC Toy Poodle•. aprlcol, uo IVtro:;: fi~ fi~11
AQUAIM
1-•-a must. No exper. sla.nd lf'li opportunity fot' l\taple. double bed $11). After c:A.,7~1 ll/ll. 1male,1 female. ~ JUt'1JJj22Mo't' _ ~IA. ll:t.nefll IJ.11.10 -~ 5 p m -•7 <l"llr "" •$" ,,,.18 A',J, JJ 2J Tocjg(1 Sl n.t 8l Of ,·,: If -·d. 1.A.G 83,;...JOOl people Wl!h 1tn en to !ht m . .,,ir''" • MUST moVfl: Bunlt bedt, • -__.__..... ...... "2•No 54., «-• L.~;E HOUSEK"E:EPJNG. fulure 639-2920 or 547-?ll.1. NAUGAHYDE studio couch, Rel k stovt double bed 4 KlTTENS &: Whtie mother. LAB. Retriever Pup.'1 l§}J-.. , .. 2 I 25Wllh 5.5N'M 15~. '3-6'19.22
supervltor ol 2 1\J'lc &ch.I. ' Good condition. se1.' chests .• tw1n bl>dJ. 1 wetksold.543-l623 ll/U AKCRqls.-cbampllne vi"!l6 1~~ 1':=-:f~11 i.
11-'~!a
.,e. 5 days, 14: 30 PM. Call 549-0$41 St.3-006 Sa.nl• Ana KJ'M"ENS tortoise abeU and Chril'tmu Joy. ~ 1-71 ;, AUf..1J ~~-i: ~!)o = =-11"1 ''';It }?'}o -
6'2.-6830 Mn. MacG~r 11!£ Fule1t draw in thtt RATTAN. juicer. din. seL BLACK lamb jacket. site 12. gray. ~3 ll/l2 PUREBRED Mlnil, Prod.Its. IA'Ai s1,;._ 11 I ac~ OOWri '°~ MAl. >er~
'l"R "DER'S PARADISE 5 West : . .-Dafly Pl lot Electrolux, dr.:ft boa.rd, aiJ:e Exttllent condition. FREE N E W SP AP ER S. Black A aprloota.. Rtu. J~ ~~· '"'. ' ~n'°"Gooct ta\ Amr. {)N~I
• llii'es.s Umet-5 bucks .ClusltiM. Ad, ~I lA c.lothe!I, tnl'ltt M6-6065 673-0443 673-7!18, Jl6 4lat, N.B. 11/12 $4&-3512. -· " \2J \81 --'-~--~~-··---
I
,
!
~ .. ~-~-~--"... .. ... r--··~ ~~---------..,..------------------...,...----------·----
OAILV PILOT Tuesday, No"ttmbtr 10, l~JU:
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION T ...... ~TATION TRANSPORTATION -Trucka flOoTrucka '500 "-lm_,po"'-rta"-od-'-A-'-~--~ lm.,.;tod --Au1M W~ mlU ~,;,;11;.;;•c.;·c.:;;;· ;.;.,_.;:_ __ '....;l.;;;•:;;;l'U'-'_,=..:c.n=--.......;';.;.•"'° 1u:;;:;'°"'::::..;·c.n='---.:."'°=I Uaod C•ra "'° 1=============1 MG v.ouswAGEN ·WE 1AY CASH c~ ~BILE •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•I
G. M. C. ~ '6'2 vw· FOi YOll CU ·t,;r,..,;ir~ .1t10 ..._, 1:.~:,i:,p~~. BAUER
BUICK
TRUCK CENTER
CALL 54~750 "W!'' ·CONtlBI ·. -•· 507.-· 0ompot1...,..,.. wtth--
•
m•1 · -• ..... .11,000.,,.·11 u..-.... , ·cyclo• . -=-==-======I
l'IV ,.,...,_....., lk»! ·• c.wllUc <XlUPE tftalino bl&dr tntmor onlY PLYMOUTH 24 hr. Phon• · • Radio. !SKU' 891) C:HIVIOUT Air. 'Wtule. ,......:,. Wori!. driftll '1000• mlloo, 1WI In --;..;:;.:.:...:..:....;:..;.._ __ I
SAL!S • ''FRI""',_.. $427 ···-...: -. m-~· ''"'"" _,,,_ F\111 1a .. .,., ~TEUJTE: ~°'· au10, CJ1UUW1.11 a.ta .,_ ...... tory equipped includlnc • vin)ll top, Xlnt Con d . IN
UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE '800.~C~t;;~ H b' , v' w WCAl.P.A.VSH'6P CttMOLD •P"d b .... c. UIASJ, .:-1:~=~xt.~~
NEW-USED-SERV. ar, our·: ; • . . • ' . 70'Mallbu~s ·CHICK-IYIRSON PIS Aub>/lram, R/H, 5 yr CO.STA
MESA
2150 Harbor Blvd., Co1t1 Mes------------.:. , ;~ , yW WUT&nty, 8800 mi. $2500.
95\0
·57 JEEP re 150 P.U. 4 \\'hi
drive, xlnt ghllpe mech.
needs body \>.'Ork. $700.
~2305.
Recre1t'n Veh icl" 9515
VISIT OUR BIG RECREATION CENTER ·
\VE ARE TI-IE
SHOWCA!1E DEALER
FOR
El Doradd Campen ,
:P,f!ni Homes, Chassis t.1ounts
and Balboa l\totor Homes.
CHOOSE FROM
SHELLS TO COMPLETELY
SELF-CONTAINED ~fODELS
$2)0.00 to $9695.00
Try Before You Buy With Our
Reasonahle Rental Service THEODORE ROBINS FORD
2060 Harbor Blvd.
Costa r.tesa 642-0010
Ca mpe rs
'65 vw
Camper
9520
Fully Equlpp,2d. I NQX699)
$1754
Harbour V.W.
18711 BEACH. BL. 842-4435
HUNTINGTON BEACH
• •1o'df•lN~gA'!, • 8
Avalon Deluxe, 9 ft ., mono.
malic. butane stove & oven,
b'Jm(lt'r ext .. bou nce-av.•ays,
eler: & hand \Valer pump,
outside connections. ** Mako Qff., ** 213: MS:~ •••••••••• New '71 Datsun
160f' OHC, P ickup with camp.
er. Sale pria. $a>9'l dlr.
( • 43827.i) \Vil! take C\l' in
lradt!. \Vlll finance private
party. Call 54&-1053 or
494-6811 .
__________. l87U BEACH .BL, 84ZM35 t • vt;1Jomtd..+· ait-·C'Ond., pow: . Pvt Pty: Aft 5 -54.5-4369
, HUNTINGTON jBEAOf 1cr Ulld caa6 ~ ,_ U~windows .• (trJ,AGOl !W9-30.U Ext. 86 or 67
lmpo~ Autos , . 9600 MGB VW LEASING call"'.,. -. ..u>il&... ., $Zff5 · l>'lo HARBOR BLVD.
--------1 • Tax .. Lie. Down GROTH CllRRDl£T . . . ccsrA MESA
PONTIAC
DATSUN '&5 •1o e . $950. N•w black • $50.87 "' inonu> "·. . • -a1tL .JONES'... 1989 MERCIJR)f M...:..i,
paint, good cond. ~a Lark • 36 month ~ eod leue .ut·tar SU. ,,..,... BJ~ ·~ Ce,atw stlition Wl(Ol'l. KU all ex-. '70 GTO
'68 DATSUN PICKUP Motol Room No: 25. 19'11 yYI Bug U2U -.ti ·BIYd. . Jru lnclodinr .~. Im· "'5' cu. iri. Ram Air, AT , . Hau"9ion a.cb 28.13 Harbor, C.p.t \~ rnttUlate cond Lo mJ'a. close ratio 4-lpeed, "Spe'cializing
-· · Pvt 13'""' .. ~ .. ........, hood tach, Ride &. Handl'c CHICK IVERSON MTG! KI.lo3m '69 CAMARO pty. ~. ~--·· pkg, P/S, P/D/B, Radio VW LAT·E MObEL ' '61 Monterey. Good cond. 1 It heater, New Firestone Radio. "''"· •~. , ,,_,. PORSCHE (WPP 762) Will take ca' io 1--,6-6'-l'O--R-S_C_H::_E_
• ID
trade or finance priva te
party. 546-4052 or 494-GSll.
'70 2000
Llk!' new. :P.tust sell <"'PJ.
10.1) dlr. "'ill take car in
trade or fiQance private par-
ty . 54&4052 or 494-6811.
'68 1600 ROADSTER
Reac\y lo go~ dlr. (WEZ 710)
'Viii take trade or finance
private party. 5464{!52 or
494-6811.
'67 Datsun
Wagon
Automatic. (UDE 591 ) Sacri-
fice! \\fill take trade or fin-
ance private party. Call
5464052' Or 494-6811
ENGLISH FORD
57 ENGLISH FORD
Engine overhauled recently,
Good body, 2 door, new
paint, $150. Call after 6: 00
p.m. 63&-929'3
FERRARI
FERRARI
Newport Imports Ltd. Or-
ange County's only author·
i1.ed dealer,
SAi.ES-SERVICE·PARTS
3100 W. Coast Hwy.
Newpon Beach
64Z.9405 540-1764
Authorized Ferrari Dealer
FIAT
l97tl ·HARBOR BLVD CADILLACS VI, automatic, meWfic blue, owner. Muat sell. l2fiO or Wide ovals. "ALL BLACK"
Coupe 912. 5 speed,. brown ())STA MESA • WANTED air ooncf'., power atffrilll:, "best offer. '494.-0lDl 1'f1.ke otter or trade fo-r
\\1th' black interior. Brand Ir ANY OTHER dlr. <QBS 241) Will take late model Ford truck,
Quality"
new Perrelli tires. X"YJ474 WANTED to bu.Y '66 or '67 LATE MOOEI. trade«•rtinaneeprivate'par. MUSTANG &f6.4665
$3399 bug, body, eng, tires, brakes GENERAL MOTORS CAR ty, 54&-4052 or 494-6811., G ANT good cond only. ~1441 I CHICK IVERSON ·'~"'-o·=w~"""cc'~""'"''~· ~~ SEE.Clil/C< TRAPP OR 00 'EC Camlno,.aub>, R1H: '68 MUSTANG '70 LeMans Sport I:: BllL MAC CR.ACKEN Low milea. 1100 superior VW '9 VW '"lback·•~ rood, Na.,-,._~,lac· Avo,<:.M. 64>1691 . . AM/FM radio. Must .sell, ..,.,a ~ Like A ti Olive finish, 1.utomatic, dlr. STOCK 549-3031 E."t. 66 or 67 moving. Be1t offer. )800 H.UUK>R 'BLVD 1!165 Iritpala t-dr· ~t ctter. -~W! utoma c, power Power st~ring. 14,CXXI miles,
19TO HARBOR BJ.VD. 675-8&57• • , Costa 'Ji[~ ., 49+-9'S43. 1356 Cerri to·g, • ~~~~) ~~ t:;• d dlr. (U4 AGA) Will. take, in
COSTA MESA 540-. 9l!J()· n....-.. c... • ..111-.. haguna Beach~ a e.or tnde or finance privat •. ·REDUCTION ~~~~=~=~·1'64 VW Sqback sta, wag. . ...,...,.,..........,, 'G5alEVROLET'lMPALA finance private party,· ty 5f6.4052 494-6811 '65 PORSCHE $650 ...... ,,.. lllllCI Ray. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR "'° 5164052 ... <94-6811 . 0
' .
SC ., -ndAyo CM .~.oR .TOPUSEDCARS a.EAN,NEWTIRES, . • • .,.~PONTIAC Le .M 3.16 Coupe, wit sunroof.• "-"""'-~""'",.-'c·:C-· -~~ "'· • 49'1.()713 e '67 M f ~ =h&'=·d:~~ ~~= l*c.o;: B~~;,n~i:L ;;~: u_:; i:~. i. extra clean. t959 CHEVY $7s. . . . us ang ~1~!tw~~~~-~~1:; SALEr!!
099 544-1866 Eves * llAUER BUICK 195.S Mercury, needs brakes Hardtop. OWned by little old all:g, xlnt meehanlcal con-$l 234· t. 17th St. $50. Afttir 5 pm, 54&-7947. school teacher, 29.000 actual dition. Very clean inside & CHICK IVER50N WAllfTED Co.la M"a !ilS-7765 '68 CliEW El Cam' 6 m11 ... <UOF6l2l Must .. u. out! $700. 16985 Edgewa("
I'll do1la ~--l. . mo · Call Sid dlr 540-3100 or Lane, Hun.i"-ton }{arbour, ' '62 CHEVROLET YW pa.,y top -WI" your IMPORTS WANTED Like new, lJ,925 mi. Auto, 494-T506 aft 10 am.. M&-428S ... '6
VOLKSWAGEN today, C.all Orange Counliea ps, r&h. 673-563), 613--0728 ======== No"• il•lion w•9on. A11to• 549-3031 Ext, 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
'69 912-4, chrome whls,
radials, Bahama y e·l Io w
w/blk lnter.. 20,000 mi's.
Immac. Mu11t sell -$4875.
54&-1794 or 673-281)4..
'65 PORSCHE 9l2 Red
S.1pd. Make ofr. 64&{)178
1956 PORSCHE Speedster;
Runs perfect! Needs paint.
$137j, 613-7995 111 A. 45th
St, NB.
SAAB
Authorized Dealer
Sale11 e Service • Parts
Sonet C.Oupes in Stoc~
Orange County•• Newest Dir.
COAST IMPORTS
oJ Orange County Inc.
1200 W. Pacific Coa:it Hwy.
642-()(06 • 546-4529
SUNBEAM
~ ~ ::;, =: BILL TOJJ:yUYr:arA ~ .. ~~a~~~~ ~~t '67 M~st~ng ___ RAc.;c.;;.;Mc.;c.;B_LE_R ___ I ;3·;;:· r•dio, h1tt1r. fll'W
'68 YW 18881 Beach Blvd. cond. 64.>-23.59. VS, a~tomat1c, rad10, dlr. REDUCED TO H. Bea.ch. Ph. 847-8555 ;,;,:,::,==;===I new ores. <QTY 1241 Must 1958 RAMBLER 111 at Ion Squareback sell by Sunday, Will take wagon. Good rond, needs
Auto Lnsing 9110 trade or finance private par.b ·::.'":::c;'"::.·..:1:;:100.:;·_;"""'.:;:.1:..7.:;0l'--I While with red interior, new ~ 4M-6811 -: tires, soo miles on new fac. --------'59 CORVETTE cu11tomized, ty. or · '63 Rambler n1s s525
tory ena:ine. VUR819 LEASE balanced blue printed 327. '65 MUSTANG Q\oovt, & oyl, Ca11 beiore 10 am or afler
$1699 A NEW 1971 Must see to apprttiate. auto, 1 owner, iood cond, 7 p.m. 494.7280 --------PINTO $1700 or best ofr. 91)8.-0.347 $600 or best cHer. 146-3653
CHICK IVERSON $50.00 mo. ''7 CCRVETIE 1caf:::•c::5..!:P·::::m::... ----vw (•• ) GOOD CCND * •~ *'69 MUSTANG Mach I. 351, 1----,,-.-----1 T-BIRD '63 PONTIAC ·
54S.3031 Ext. 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
1960 VW BUG
Red, with mag wheel11, wide
oval tires, new engine guar.
anteed IQ!' 90 days, IF7174
$799
CHICK IVERSON vw
-·mo. _... --A ll l1M•n•. \II, 1ulom•lic, rt• open end *Aft 6: 546-2531 * air, 4.·.,I:"-'• fu pvrr, 1teno. '56 T-Bird needs some body dio, ti••'•'· !OKN 64 11, RENT ===;:=:::=::":'::°==='i,,!1Re~u~. ~64>-~2886~·-~~~ work & tuneup. Sl!XXI or off-
A NEW 1971 COUGAR '65 Conv. RIH, pl•lb, V-i, I ,:";:'.:,•94:,·:,!1612=:, :,'954=1l=5=. ==I
PINTO ~ ---------1 Auto, 29,000 . ml. $1~. I ·
$4 'DAY •· '1989 COUGAR. Xlnt ~77 day, 54&-5289 eve.
mechanical cond. New rub-IXr.''.'T JUST WISH for 1---------1
her. $2100. tuml.ahlngs for your home, AND
TORINO
REDUCED TO
s525
4¢ MILE ·
PUT t.. LlTI'LE
IGCK IN YOUR
Call days 64~5 find great buys in today'•
1968 COUGAR XR7 Classified Ads. '
TORINO '69 GT, mint con-
dition, air, pis. priv. party.
Make otter. 536-7078 --------
Cu5tom ·Vinyl top, Good cond. '63 BUICK $1650. '642--0806 eves Used Cera. ttOo UMd Can 9900
LIFE! =;;~;;;~~~==1i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 l •S1br1 4 dr. H.T. \II, 1uto· THEODORE DODGE m1tie;-pow•r sto1Tin9, f••-
54S.3031 Ext,'66 or 67 ROBINS FORD tory air. fFU 0191.
1910 HARBOR BLVD. """""'n··---R-LVD ccSTA MESA -c~ ..ES. · ''68 DODGE RT REDUCED TO 1969 PONTIAC CUSTOM S e '66 VW Bug Slm 6'2-0010 FULL POWER + factnry air,
- - -___.._ Good condition. Call alter 5, Low .milts. MUAt liqui~te
.....---- -• '66 Sunbeam Tiger, 260 cub. 644-7796. Used C•rl ,,. tmmediate?y. lst Pl99 buys,
! doo• k•nillop. F1clory air, pow1r tl•1r.
r~,. 111,b1 hyclr111'11tic, .a •• , with bl1cr
i"t•rior. IZDX672 ) "THINK" loch. "'d''''· XI"' .. .,., ... , 1 --,-6~.3--V-V-1-~-----------1 XEU3!it. ~,..;~ .. ~'~~' BUICK CHICK IVERSON
'65 FORD DBfll========= '69 BUICK Electra 225, VW
TOYOTA · d °'"" Gold, < woy .,.,,., ·--Ext OI • CAMPER Shells & sleepers Se ""_,,,,,, · ot 6'?
for all trucks. shells from NEW 124 CPE. DEMO an :~~~· ~ ~~ l =~l97--="0-HARB=-OR..,.-BL;...;.:VD..:.:,.· -ii
$175 & up. 1169 W. 18th.. $2795 1968 TOYOTA 54&""'6 DODGE '63. < doo•, !WI,
1969 PLYMOUTH GTX 2 dr. H.T.
0..ly 11,000 111i11t e11 thi1 b1111tif11I teld
cir. 440 VI , vinvl top, buc••t 111h, r•·
dio, h11ter, eute., pow1r li••Ting. IXVH·
I Ill
F•lrl1n1 500 2 dr. Spt. Cpe.
VI, 1utorn1lic, r1dio, h11t.r,
pow•r 1letri119. { ( PIZ 14il~
c.:~ fac van camper, 4-''FRIEDUNDER'' ~daa~~ i::s:;,,i:,~~· 1~~~ Ra$dic. (ASL 634 ) ~.70~SPO=~R~T~W-A~G~ON~-.tJke~ '~~· beaut. eond. k-~:
spd, sips 5, pop top, r&h, 13750 BEACH ILVD. actual mile!!, Lie. WA1t05l 725 new54~;· ;ir~ r.• -
11475. T"de !i57-4540 i•-. 191 $1m FAl:CON ~. '70 SPORT WAGON • Like l -----.;.·----11
imApoL•F•edA AR•o'"M' E09600 NJ~:mE·D~1~~. CHICKvt:ERSON Harbour V .W. -"'-w~"~t.'~~=·'=· ... =·~~i44=133-.06J~n-1 _ •eo: !!t~."·.J .• ~~';".;:
, • - - - -I u~'"'l Ex OI a JS69 BUICK.22!! Cullom. 6U,<Ma t---------- - ----.. '" JVJ t. or 67 18Tll BEACH BL 842-4435 All extru. Call dl )'S =========II
1964 ALFA Romeo Jiulia 1970 HARBOR &I.VD. HUNTINGTON. BEACH BM-5591: ev~ MS-1415 FORD
v e I 0 c e headers, JO mm mDBfl -;:;;;;;:;CC~ST;:A;;;;;M;:ESA;;;;;;;;::::;; ~ •67 VW BUG '67 ruviera. Excellent con-cams. dual 45mm "'-ebers, 5 ITIOIYIOITl&I dition, Vinyl top Ir .extru --------S:t. ~:w &Pi:~~'. ~~~ · "" Black beauty. Radial tires. $2450. 540--0al8. '64 fQRD WAGON
AUSTI N HEALEY
AUSTIN AMERICA
Sales, Service, Parts
Immediate Dellvery
All ?itodels
J1rtuport
31inpo.rts
31JO \\'. C.oaat Hwy., N.B.
b42·940:'> 54()..17&4
MlJST sell '62 Sprite Xlnt
cond, mcch perfecl.. New
tires. top & paint. 30 mpg.
S425. Mark. 548-2733
BMW ·
Authorized Dir.
Sales • Service • Parts
All ~Iodels lo Choose From
Service P.1ond11y 'till 7:00 P~I
Sat 'till Noon
COAST IMPORTS
Of Orange County Inc.
1200 \V. Pacific Coast HIV)'
6U-O.J06 • 5-16--4529
DATSUN
'71 PICKUP
Used. Lo\v mUe11, dlr. S!('p
hum[lE'r. C.Oronado min'ol"fi.
Radio, heater. !n4 CAXl.
\VtU take older cnr ln trade
or fJnance. 54640S2 or
494-GSlJ.
DOT DATSUN
OPEN DAILY
AND SUNDAYS
,..__ l~ Ueaeb Blvd.
-<-.UYntil'l&ton J1earh
M2·mt or~U
'70 DATSUN
4 Door Sc!dan. u8ed (603A VA)
dlt. \Ylll take tradl or tln-
llnce priw te party, c a 11
~6-t(l.';2 or 494.fi811.
1969 f.DR nation wagon.
Auto.. r•n. Red wlbllick
int . l•,noo ml. 1 owntt.
ll.1!1... &4&-7849. llll CIW
Or, N.8.
auto sport ltd '71'• HERE NOWI Sacrifice! (VOE 310) Tm l========
SEE & DRIVE THEM •mall down. Will financo CADl1·1 "C Authorized Saie:. • Service ..,.. Ideal sttand CAr.' Autnmatic,
radio Muat be seen. CORT.
MS)
DEMO SALE A FEW REMAINING TO's AT Pvt. pty. C&ll Sid dlr. 540-3100 --------
CLOSEOUT PRICES! 0' 4"'7506 aft lo am. CAD' ILLACS 70's 1970 Fiat 124 Sports Cpe.
Radio, ,,.,,.,, ,peciaJ ox· fl'•M Lnu.:, lal'l)e Selection
haust, pin striping, radial WA fAlllO Of VW Ca.......c:,
tires, :ow m iles. IMPORTS .. .,.-••
$2795 Vons, Kombls,
Lugosi 'Stock of Qu•llty
Co<llll•c• In 0""1" CMty
$795 '
DON BURNS
Porsche Audi, 1. TD.
13631 Harbor mvd. 63&-233.1
Just S: of Garden Grove Fwy, 9625 Garden Gro\'e Blvd. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 B .. ·-. New ., u·-.. 5.17-1777 Call Collect -a Gl' 89'8 Cpe DeVilles, Sed. DeVWet
and ·El· Doradoa '67 SPYDER
Super Sharp. 4 speed, dlr.
{TQC 5581 \Vil: lake car in
trade or finance private par-
ty. 546-4052 or 494-6811.
JAGUAR
JAGUAR
BILL MAXEY c"Hl~~··wiliSoN
!TIOIYl§ITIAI · vw
• " • 549-3031 Ext, 66 or 61
111181 BEACH BLVD. 1970 HARBOR BLVD
Hunt. leach 147-ISSJ COSTA. MESA •
I ml N. or Oiut Hwy. on Bdli e '64 VW CAMPER: Gd
C.Ond. $1095. "It Won't
1963 throu&h 1970
Plus Many Other Fine Can. ALL SALE PRICED
NABERS CADILLAC
2600 HARBOR BLVD.,
COSTA MESA TRIUMPH Lase" 54().91~ OPEN :;UNDA Y
* * 642-3369 * * 1959 CADILLAC P.-RTS
TOP .DOLLAR
.for CLEAN USED CARS
~Andy Brown THEODORE
ROBINS ·FORD
:lllO -Blvd. Cloo<a Mta
Ml-0010
HEADQUARTERS ~J~;~ ~""~
The only authorized JAGUAR se ll J400. 846-6.171
classic
mus t
'69 vw BUG {SEDAN DE V1LLE)
Extras, xlnt cond. 673-8370 Transmissk>n '67 ,LTD
dea!Pr ln the entfre Harbor =="====== .....
C.Omplet.. SALES SERVICE PARTS
BAUER
BUICK
IN
COSTA MESA
234 E. 1 Tlh Stl'fft
548-7765
MERCEDES BENZ
MG
MG
Sales, Service, Parts
lmmedla!e Delivery,
All Models
J~rlnp n11
Jl111pLll I"
8100 W, Coot HW)'., N.B.
642-9".I05 S«l-1764
VOLKSWAGEN
'66 vw
Sedan
100'/'o Warranty. Radio,
(RUF 081 )
$997
Harbour V.W.
uru BEACH BL. 842-4435
lfUNTINGTON BEACH
'69 VW, lmmac:ulale. under
warn.nl;y, Jl395. 534-8294
ext 207.
'&5 V\Y ConYI, gOOd cond,
35.000 aria mi't , A steal at
l6S5. 61M409.-
19&1 VW Bua w/bed, mags.
reblt mtr. Xlnt cond. S1295.
~. 6 lo 9 pm A wknds.
196:1 VW BUG $500
Clll after 5 pm, 5J6.3i9'7
1969 BUG $1495
Xln't cond. 133-0'J19
1'HE "Y ~lm.i P&lff" of
classified ... Dally P 11 o t
Servk:e Directory. Chtck it
for tbe servlct )W need.
•
Air lnnilltioner 166 YW Sunroof Radi~ Aircond.,rxiwerat~ring.dlr.
Immaculate condition. Yellow Radio vinyl lop, low.m il6. (ZVZ.. 315) Will take car in lraBe
with pin atripping, new tire!! Hub eapg or finance priva~ party.
& !'niine guaranteed for 00 Brakt!I
d.y. Lie YPTOOS ! ! Priced far quk:k sale I! 546-4052 or f9f.68ll.
' ·$1099 · 542-3UO 1962 Ford station wagon. R&
CHICK IVERSON ''·~.,-CAO=-.~,-..... --. M~.,.-,-.,-11,·1 ~;_~alut.•Phom•'.'.'.:·~.M~I-~•"'•
Sacrilice; Make otter: A ..--• ..., ~ .. , VW proipeetive antique In &ood ~•7P~·7M". ~-~~-~II
M!l-3031 Ext. 66 or 6T running conct!Oon: ca 11 '6.1 Ford Van. Delux Oub
1970 HARBOR BLVD. 642-+ff9. Wan. lo ml't, map, 3 aeata,
COSTA MESA '64 FLEE'IWOOD. Immac. 1 xtra tanks, top cond. Must
VOLVO
U'V'Ll'VV
THINI
'VOLVO' -"FRIEDLANDER"
family sd, M~h: xlnt, Nu i ~"-ll_,~o_m-_84_7-0444 __ . ___ 11 tires. Poluat tee! $99 5. '65 FORD SOOXL 2-dr HT.
~6,,.7;.(162'='"1~~-~~-l Air oond. Full power. Xlnt
'68 C&d El Dorado, Sliver ,;"""':,:c::.· ,::1965= . ..:64:::""'c.:=11=6:.... --
Mist. compl equip. Stereo '64 9/Pass Station Wagon.
tape deck, 4 nu tires, $4.375.. Looks .l Rt1111 Gd.. $150.
CWP!lr.97) Call Bay"'°"' 96>-8C168.
MOtor.. 642-4011 . I -~.~.6~,~Ranc~~be-ro-~P~.U7,-JI
''10 CAD Coupe de Ville • .F\11)¥ equip, like new
7500 mi. Llkt new. * n(!615.2030 *
$0000. &1<0328 1 =======<II ~-~~~--~ '68 CADllJ..AC Fleetwood INTERNATIONAL
1J11t •uo nnn. •I e.rou,twn. Sacrilloe $3500. $7568 • 531-6824 * Ca1J m.415.1 1---------NEW,USEO.Sl!Rll .... ""' Cadillac. Doctm'o '66, __ _ ---=-----. ""'· .,,..,,... lnt.rilatlOiiil-~ -1641 "'675--0!51
VOLVO NOW'S THE 5covt
'71'1 HERE HOWi TIME FOR 1 wdlo""'1 .'!..rt:'.:'.:,hubs, AM/FM SEE & DRIVE niEM ta • ..,,.._ Kelley Blue
A FEW REMAIN.RIG"" AT Q\llCK CASH = .!:'ii.: aale lhil
CLOSEOUT PIUCES THROUGH A CHICK IVERSON
Wt Lt.W WANT AD vw
IMPORTS DAILY PILOT 51""'31 Ext. "'°' n
oi 5671 U'10 HARBOf!. BLVD. 19"' Harbor, C.M. '*'"""' 64"• OOSTA MESA
.,
$2895
1961 LI MANS 2 Dlt. H.T.
Vi11yl tor>. , ••• , 1teerln9, low mile19e.
IYPYO'&OI
$2195
1969 GTO 4 SPEED
Only 12,000 mil11 011 thi1 b1•11lif11I V1r•
doro 9r1111 1ulomobile. 1714.AFX}
$2795
1969 CHEV. MALllll! 396
F1ct, 1ir, black "inyl top, 1p1rklin9 y1l0
low t1tl1rior, !ZKF597)
$2995
1961 BONNEVILLE 2 DR. H.T.
Ftclorv 1ir, Ioctl ctr with low mil••t••
Gold wit" gold interior. IWXG611 )
$2495
1970 G.T.O.
2 dr. H.T. l1t11tlf11I 90111 w!fh 1111d1lwood
vinyl lop l interior. F1ctory 1lr condi·
tio11ing. tZl277651
$3695
1967 MUSTANG 2 + 2
190 1119., r1di1, hitter, pow•r 1!•1r. Eir·
••ptio111lly 11ic1 le.mil••t• e•r. (009411
$1795
1970 L! MANS Sl'ORT 4 d• H.T.
l ¥1ry c.onc1i,,.1lil1 ••fr• 011 thi1 ••~c11li"•
'''·Only 4,000 fl'lil11. f1.1120t l
$3995
1969 CUSTOM "S" 2 DR. H.T.
)'h1yl lop, power 1tteri111 I br1~•1, lurb1
hydrtll'ltlic tr111tmi11ien, ligkt y1tlow. E•·
ce,11on1I cir. IZLHOl61
$2495
1---CCLIAOl-D ·SUlfN.YS---1--
REDUCED TO
'65 OPEL
Sport Coup1. ladle, fi•tl•r,
4 1p1eG. I RGU 062).
REDUCED TO
s995
'66 CHEVROLET
M•libu 2 door h1rdiop. VI,
1ufom•tic, r1dio. h11ter,
pow1r 1i•1rin9. IY PW IJ7J,
REDUCED TO
SPECIAL ·
OF THE
WEEK!
'66 INTERNATIONAL
CARRYALL 3 SEAT
A11lom11ie, pow1r tte•ring &
br1k11, r•dio, h••ftr, •Ir
eo11diiioninig. bc•l1•11I condi•
lion.
$1695
BAUER
BUICK
IN
COSTA
MESA ~ROY CARVER
~ROLLS -ROYCE 234E.17thSt. COSTA MISA
l92l HARl>OR BOULEVARD. COSTA MESA 548 _7765 546--4444 ,.
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