HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-11-16 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• • .. ;.:;
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'[" ·''.aft .'. LIVe" na>,:? ... :·¥W • -·· -· _,__.;.•'--,.._..--•·•·~ -•. "•• l ........ . ' ' . ' 1! ' • ·-t ~., 11 ... -~1-.\.>o• '/ · ·: · ~--. · Conflitrimeni ·seen .S~n:, See 9a1 ·--. Stn·a·JJ noats · · · · · · · ' · · · ,, ,, Tucideni ·_.
·---Race Titles
••
· . Grief E'Qllnws Team's · Jet Crash . . ~ . . .
·. ~1 CR.Uc A"MMtRMAN · co~ebac.k:.•'a ~screamed as she tay
; .. , ... ,_,rc~.,..P~W_!1t;r,' , . , · on1one.ol'thelOOrriat'tressessefupintbe ·Hilm,NaTo~: w:Va.'~·1""Jlhia itown · ce11.~~;,, :.: ,,,,.,_·'! · · ~
died-today." • "God,•·what ~ happened?" another
WI!li:liiai-cry;.a nwii<· •I "lluritilil!tOI>. coed~ --r,c • • . • Hcf?PitiJlfefie~ed~ the gr.jef a{ l,tarsllail In · hillwa,YS' ouOiide, ~e.crttafies ~nd
u.Uversity an~·tts ~oyt1e city ,!{!er; ~a~ur-foo~{lll ~c~ _ sai ~ng and· cry mg. .i:~jghtls ct.ash of:a SollthetJJ Nfways; • M~ Of ~Ii ~ were aboard •tho· ~d DC9 carrying the school's foot-twin-engine jet. Head coach JUcl: 89lley,
biJitteani'8rrd 'othert. ~. ' · '.:' ' ' ., .and Athletic director,Chaiies Kautz, ~-
!Arrioog· ... fh:O~ ·q0 the,: ·1~., )p ~dJtion amo~·t~ •deild. ' . . . to.:• the play~, . ?>.a~ing . staff '.Mfl Ab a n~by hoapital, c1tu:ens and
b:foiters, 1 "ere· three prominent •ptiySI· studen~ were: ushered. to a. conferf!lke ~lans and their. wives, 3, newly elecred · room, 'f!MlY fh~;CQme late In fthe ,n;{gbt Eti.~'leiislator Who alao was one of Hun. Jooltjrig; ·hoptng, for survivors. \, ti~n'i.-wealthiest. me:n, :fl>ast president At Jeut 10 M ·them-crumpJed.-t&-o,the of~~arstiali'S aiumnJ · 8ssociati0n, a city flo:or · whi!n the . cordoned-o£f . ~RfP..l.. c~an .,iw~p8M·Dris~ of .the pru;itd fp~ caring for '1ur\t1vors,~ fo-
MJnhilt" atlueuC, t#St'&s '1cluti': -an 'in'· ma1n~d-.<1u1eb.r.-' ... " tf.,.. • .. z ·: ·~
dUirtililtst 8nd the 'sports. .dirfctor . of' a . The coac~e;s.1 ~1,yers_ and ~ who
1-:televislon station.'.'·,· , ,'"'.' . died were am';)llg tho~~"'!· lirthe last
tll(all,.there were 73 dead,!aM..,."Sthool two .years. had rallied in sup\Xlrt of oftlSOOi nd · 't t u ilotlWent 'into-,I.far~!. It was a tough two-year period DiUrn&\ ~ a Ct ~ '. ~ , ,. .. .. • , -:--~l\en 1he sctbool~ent 27 g~es witlll)\lt '*'~i-ht about ,400 ·stu~ and •'8' _vi~ry; ("'~ expel~ troni! Jts .con-~; r ~ haRd.S in "I .·cam~ ~er~. fO[. recru~t,ln~ yfol~Uct'l~,· ind aaw
• 'i•l JO.leiV!ce,.' 'oiienl!.f · ~ib "the 1ta ,llt•d _coaCh . remol'<d _ 1or ,~ed lr• ~ ,. .... ' ·I ""'-bat•" "'iiil!trlhes. • ' , ·• ' . , ••s. ui·lfl !'t'·ICN!··1~' 1 ~~,.... • •• . .' It Was those .. -1e who had' sPeaJileld.. i~l : \¥ept . OP,tJ,\ll{., ~me fell to. , 11 • ed.-ii rives C•r~t!M : '$150 l¥lO for ~y PD(.' · •: '. "· ' " "schoJ!u'ship ltmds(9114'-~0Ulo WU!. ?°"·' -l"gllll LoH~,J<u'l'baY, ·, •, '. VirP!Ja Leglallll"f~-ri!IN-$1
1s ,hait~r Lor ' k\unbtl)'•,.: · •. mill~ !or an 1.r;Ut1ciaf inl' fllface.
ne ·P'•Yll)iji;or~,Jl'~Roi ·.' Al)ith\~"'f · '~·the
· bad 1e. "!"XY0Wl8 , g"'._. 'wtfeki.Vil""' ' · ~iliines
' -' •• 'San~ 3'iiiol'; •• and !thef• .oi;,f ~ ~~Iii the
By ~ON LOCKABEY
D91tr Pllet INllM lfltw
MAZATLAN -FfuKY-windS ln the
GU]f''t>f ,California comj>Jetety turned the
. LoS Angeles to ·M~Uan yacht race
around ip ~ finBl 20!)-mile leg Saturday •.
Overall and Class D· corrected time
wirmer was one of the smallest entries in
the race, L'Alegro, a Ca1-36 ·owned and
skippered by Roderick Park of Richmond
Yacht Club.
nie handwriting on the wall was seen
by daylight Saturday When 8. bfisk wind
whistled out of the northwest to douse the
hopes o1· the early leadeni, Kialoa JI,
Rascal, Baruna, Warrior and Novia ·del
Mar, the first five boats to finish.
·"Some of UlOSe 'ctBss D bo.9.ts actually
crossed the gulf In' less time ·than we
did," said John B. Kilroy, owner of
Kialoa II.· '
Kloloa had drifted across the .. finisb line
lo· be the first yacht lo !Inlsh -·2,45
a.m. Saturday. Only two hourS t;>etilnd her
came · Bill Wil'°!l't ~ ll'Oll!"Santa
Barbara, followed;nWly an htc>ur ·~ter by
John• Mcintire WBanma. "
·Al. Cassel'• ~oo) oloOp· Warrior from
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club finisJ'Jed only
20 mlnules~belllnd Baruna, .llpd John 51lrl~pi• !19-iooi.liotch ·No.U. del Mar, San
'llie&o;.Y•cht aw, the scra:lch boat I• the
fleet, was,only a few minutes behlnd her,
· · .Ed SWibetfi Class c 'Yacht s 'u n •
• donJ10li)W88•tl•«ljrsl·to wipe out the Class A flfft"WbeD she was the seventh bol!lt tO
fiNIJl;'1'ut,lhe ii.kl not remain at the lop
'of UiO;Jliini!Icap -lllandlngs r.r:1ong. earry
Brr~' ·.l~pid, ,a, (!fasi D entry,, was
Uie, nes:t boat to. finiSh and looked for all
tbe w«Jd like a winner.
Then came L'Allegr.o with a c:orrected
lllne that .wu 11Q1 16 11< beaten.
Sucli ~ lbe for111nes or ~s!ortunes of
yacht 'radai-F,_cr the first three days
ftptn,Uio Nqv. 7 slatl It apP<ared to be a
Cla"' A "!CO wil,l_I KmJoa II.hava1'C ai shot at'tbe elapoed 1!jne fecord, , •
1beo came &lie aOltl•Il .oih r-: San
LDCu with the 1-. ~·~~I aud ~ '{liee'.MUA'l'IAll,'h;e.11 ' "
Of Huge Forest F_ires
By ~THUil ~ VINSEL deaths are known -blaming a campfire
Containm::itb,o.inigb:f';1f':'8! predicted foi-the Big Deir area blue,· pJu! arsOn in
today as ail armY of 3,300 firefighters · a series Df five Others in two counUfS.
closed in on ,the worst b 1 a z e 1n .San ' Joint '.invdtlgatlon Jed . to the arrest
• By JOANNE RE\'.NOLDS .
Of ""' D..,, ,_ Steff •
A, 6f:year-old ·man. ·ls locfal ar-
rtl1'11Went,_1oday__on,cbar , ..
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Bernardino County history, wii,h Saturday of Phillip P&&e,.44, of San
50,000.plus acres s e a r e d and wit.old Berhardino, who ls beJd lllthout ball pen· ,
millions in losses. ding arraignment on arson charges.
mw:~e'r atter ~rtecqy w~gi •two •
Newport Beach offiee.rs"Saturday In·wllal
has been described,os the worst Jboo1in1
in;the.hislory ol the.departmeot..
The ?aging inferno whipped into Authorities allege . he set fires . near
massive proporUon.s Friday br Santa Ana Redle Canyon and Lorna Linda, whk:h
winds reaching 100 miles per hour has burned more than 4,000 acres apd three
destroyed 54 homes and virtually wiped homes, while other blazes. were-quickJy
out lhe tiny ·ranch resort community of spotted and extinpished.
SmileY. -Orange County escaped the ravages of
Gov. ~dj{e._agan declared t~ ar~a hellish fire whipped by the so-called·Devil !~eluding once-lush Sa~ Bernarthno Na·.~-· winds, ·after canceling all time off and
lion.al. ~orest lan~s a disaster are~. alerting all personnel Friday.
Fll'ef1ghters said only ,a few minor in· ·
jur·es have been .re......,.""' _'. and no They were geared for a ~Ible re~at 1 .,.... -performance of the devastation resulting
_Boulder Drqpped
On Truck Kills
1 ...
Driver; Boy Hefel
A truck driver was killed Saturday
'night ·when a boY dropped a 40-pound
boulder fr~m an overpass u the ~.IC .rlg
roa'fed through Ontario, crushing . ·his .
head. . -• -. . r,
The !ootholl·shaped ·rock shattered the !
windshield, hiltinB Clilford A. Owenby,
5(1, of Downey, and ·caus!nk·the tru~k>:arid .
trJller to,rlp .through the center divider ·
twice and run oU the freeway. 1
from .coUDty tires fanned by · the annual
Sat1~· An' omtaught in OCtober.
San Bei'n8r'dino. · ahd ' R' 1 v e r s 1 d ·e
firefighters were rapid]y enclosing the
worat .of 1 the weektqd blazes ·which eruP.te~ at the ·east end Of Blg ~er Lake,
with 66 perceJit contaliled by ml~y. ·
"We were really·-helped by the ~nd 9f
the Santa Anaa aDjl the fact that the
forward fdge of the fife burned into the
flat area, where w~ cpuld move Jn truc~s
and manpower," said U.S. Forest,Service
(See B~, Page I) .
Student Veterans . , .
Send Christmas ..
Trees w Vi.einam
His driving' partner~ .James B. Gasio
Jr .. also 50 and a Downey resident too,
su~fered minor injuries in the tragedy,
the second such fatal lqcident tq a mol)th.
A teenaged ~ who said he saw the Five V~etnam vetermf turn e ·d
rock dropped led police to the h<ttJM! Fullerton JWUor College students ha~e
where the juvenile was arres~ aqd la.ter peraona.Uy 'seen to it that some of tile
released to hfs parents' custody. -troops In southeast Asia have ,an old·
No one Wa.s an:esf.~ in Ute other in-fashioned · Christmas tree for th e
ddent which occurred on f.he1 Pasadena hollda)'s. ~ ' .. ·
Freeway,• while .SatUrday ni~t's .fatal '. The five, Doug. Allsn, Jim Wadleigh.
rcK:k-drOpplnc·Wp •on"" San'J1emlrdino. Glen Ullom, Bob-Splru and'FJC Studeol
Freeway. · · -. • · Body Pmldent Dsn Frtetond;:spent •jl)e
CrlmlnJil ·\cllti-g.I · ·wlll 11<· brought . weekend In Libi>y, Wyo,, ')ll'lllllng
against the 11Dlil(nUll~(l2-yeat-<il11 In·San : purdlase·"ind ·1111Pn)ent _of 300 -~'
In custody in N•'!porl BeaclJ<Uy J.U ls .
Arthur Lambert, a -resident of1the Dunes
Tiailer Park wbO,Uats hil·OCjcuplttOn as •
cohsUJUitg fonglneer. He ni slated. tO ap.
!>';Ir in I/le ·llsrl/or<ohjdiciill Distrlcl court
this afternoon. • .pUicer~~ameS .. Gar~er. 22,-ls listed in -
fall' .condition following> a b d o m 1 n a I
s~gery . during ·Which .a kidney wu
removed. 9fficer ~ohn •Ellinghamt 2(, la
also in fair condition after he .was woun..
ed,in..the ·right thi8;h .. BoUt are in Hoag
Memorial' HO¥ital: ~ ,
The inCiOeni · wu appar~tly 1parked
when the tw~ patrp~en j!lopped Lambert ~t .Jils trailer. He reporteclly ·waa spotted,;
dHl~1vinh g er_J{llica)Iy,~ d~n P.aclfic. Coast -g way.
.As the two talkedllo lhe auapect prior
to administering a field IObriety 'exam.
he allegedly· 'puDed out a· :25-callber
automalic and · shot GantnU· in7 'the
stomach. 'Ellighan1. assertedly wn ~
while wrestling Lambert to the ground, -,
The\ shootin·g was 1 wttnessed b ., ·
Lambert's wife and. two student.a from
1 Newport Harbor ,lfigh School 1w!lo were
(See SHOOTING; Pqe J) . . . '
0r .. , •.
' w • • 1\'eadaer
Wll be cooler· by a good It de-
grees on the C<I~ Tuesday with
local temperatures pegged at 81
degrees and 'the inland mercury
soaring to the '2 mark.
I ,INSmE TODAY, . ' '
' Upt001'.d110/130o,ooo Pakistan..
ft "I"' be qead · in o · d¥0l
d~ter of~ CJIFlone and tKlat
,·
sne -.had gone. bo•int '!Or ~-. " .-of the niirkle." ; " . · ;.o; .~ '1 · ' ·,crow awa1Ung 'the .rtturn ~
tbUden had been a Mar 1ha11 •. plane. ,
.. cov!Vri ·sumrs· 1
HARTKE WINS
Bei-r\ardino '!;OOnty Juvenile· '.Oriiil, , ac--trees ID oiltposta ind headquarters oil ,_ cordlni!'to Pol~ u :,t.11the1'. Frimlis. • over Viclnam.
He did not .sat jusl whal the cbarges They .. Id they wanted' lo sho1< Pres!-'
' wave which f'anka wM t"'
wor1t holocau.it& ·of otl time.·
P J • • ' age "· .
Jin!b&cker bu't sufiertd ' a head ln)ury. TJtey wa1ted and watched in the cold
lit) sucee;s(ully underw~t dJn&erJ)UB , nigh~ air, :II' ~'big' 4et r~lf i~ed
1"Jn sllr'gery dUring the ~mmer lnd· .. beneatl1·Jiw, darlt rain cloudi, makmg its
~e ncoverit:ras serving as student ·final IPfl'OICh~ p-l~ manoger, · lo jolii lbe Pla1.lng Their ,.,. IUnied lo ~ when the
Ieano again so . · •-• ·' -.J<! dbaJllU• «I behind a irtli, followed by
'A\ a makbhlll. ~.<enterllh the ~llilllllilt-and •mUsbrOom of block ~·s physlc"1 !dueatlm bulldijlC, doo-......ke, • "1*:~-~lo\lstlldoll!I~· ;a.Ir-, .,.,.....,, awalle·~
· AIG, p!Uie.--"' fP'Ut 'I (lee lllUmll, Pip 1) ..
, ..
' '--1 • . • INDIANAPO~tS, Ind.' CAP) -Tlie of·
• ficial t-ertlfication of complete returns -
from th!'.! NoV. f'general election showed
todaj u,&t'Deni'ocraUc Sen. VanCe.. Hartke ~
finished ahea11 'of Republlwl Rlchald '
RoodebUsh by.t,338 votaa.
But a recount ... mid 11mos1 a ..,.. tatiily. . •
wfl1 be, bUI Ibey <!Jilk!. range from. mall· . dent Nixon that college ' s tu cl e n ·t s·
eiOul mischief lo rrianllaug!>ter,, thr?11Rbou\ II\< n~Uon support his Allao
Ll Franks sa!d the v~ltn, who suf· pohclea. · •
fered severe dlfnage to the head, thrbat Allan added, 11We~ know W h It
arid cheit, was dead on irrlval at Antonio Christmas in Vle:tn-..m away from )'OU:r
C<immoolty H1>spltal In nearby Up!Mi!. · loved ...,. ls like !Or tboae 11-year .. ld
The egg-shaped ,t>oul<ler wO. drop~ ki~s." · •
from a ped,estrlan overpau on Ci"'P'I' Tbe lrees, wm Jll'by !ryck lo ~aule,
Menne, near ·tllO bonle• o/ the armted ' WUll., and then to-Vleiilam vi• J,t!nY
·Juvenile. 'l'rampon. ·
. .,.
' C•Uflf* t .Ml"'-U...11 C~ Up 11 Mtvtft \ If
, ... tlfhf -.n .. llllt!Mlt ..... ' • ·s:• ' • '' °'"" CW!ltJ II ( ....... -1' I Srfvll ""1W , "
IM• • MfHcft II '""' " ""9 DJ~ . II s-. ......... 1' '""""""-,·~· "" .....,...,...., .,, ,.,,....... -11
....... 1 .. 1. .......... ...
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.... ........ 11 ............. , ...
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., •• OAILY PlL.01
F,....P .. ~J SHOOTINb-: .. ... •rkf•*1q-. ...,. In i Unl1 dttvon by
i. Smith. 'l1lOy btct orrlved = .0... pr1Qr to tbe·ill>Ootll\l•IO tbe ~ct obomt Whal Smith
waild bf a rou~ dr1IM <lflvlN WI. I !ieliber of tbe•lwo ctudinto;wtn 11>· iPrtl and .!I '(Ii i!i\111! Wl>O WU linaUy ~ ..... bdao lAlliborf
j ·QUeollooed ~ U.Ut their ......
...... the -.. the <ia .. Id· ll>ey
!'4idn'I ~ 11, •• IRJt ft're pbllosophlcal.
gulls it couldn't bt htlped," ... com-Mled. .
'Gardner's wound a 10 Mrlaa.Ulat
' didn'I wilt !Or an ambulall<>e. Ht
1h8 --Olflctr In O!llcot' wrence Gebriel'•c unll and btct him
drive lo the llospllaJ; .
. Meanwblle otber·patrol uni~ btct block·
• qff COoil llldWay 1o .ii ...,. tralllc, ~up road,blook< 11 the In~
!I( llll'lldn D!fve, Dom-. llrlve; 'l'llllltl .\~enuo and Riverside• Drive. A ~ ~ JOlloo unit stoppld tr*fll« et the 10.
~oa <i Newport Beul~ and ti'~ 1!9"d for the s~g ·patrol
< At tht hospital. a team of four doctors
worked oo the . wounded paltOlman.
several hours. Ills condition. ""1cb wu
originally listed .. -llsd 1mp.-
today lo lair. l!e Is in 1111 inleall\'e. Wt
unit.
· .. Elliogllsm was taken lo tht bolpllal a
-few minutes later by ambUlanct.• ·
" Gardoer, who llv01 In Newport, baa ·
l\een· a member of the police -llnce .ianuary of thlS yw: A sractute·of ·C&I . ~te . L0og Beacb, bO llolds a . BA In
.,,imlnology. Elliogbam u. a two ye>r
·,.ieran of the force and lives in C..i..
Mesa. Bothtmen are •incle.
,., The Jut ilme a Newport patrOlman.
-!':U sllOl In the lint of ~ wii Jn· I•
•hen O!!Jcer Wllllam Tllbet wu iliol1n .!he band by a n~'--. M..,;.., .. Lido "' Jsle. · · -.,. _,.... ......
-Salur4ay~-·. -.,, -Doi. let. Ken 'lbompeon caQed the wont in
)lie histor1 ,Of.'lf>e ~ nmalnod
uilexj>lalned today. ,,Lambert aJJeredly told ,,._ lllt
~ .ipproedled bini In • -actna manner.
·•lnvestigetors said neither EDlngb•iD
llor Ganlller elm their fW111 during the
lncideol. SIQllh sal4 be look bis oul wheo ·
he heard the ahol! ·llrod, but put It -Z!'°"...:=t attr .f.lllogham lflPPIJq with
"l'be .... y.Nired -· ,.= ~ llllpecll be hlld btan 11 Be a ~ i:".J:i~ .belan be!nc l1opped . ' . MIL Lambert, Wl>O Ilsa come Cllt of the ...... _ the >-. qu4fl!aaa4 lier
)!albl'nd.ad Wl>O: wei -I dllrtnc.the ~ ..... htld lor queatloning by in· ,..lp!bn, b1zt WU la!Or releued. . ,;.
_ ., __ r ... i
BLAZES •••
lnl,."'J::~..rbr,~Rt.. e,.u.,;
• Work! lll;fiway aJii bolptd contain. tht
llamtl, bo·added.
Hunctr,ck of peraons were evacuated
lronw:ablna and -1 lloplea bi tht
mOla'ltainoua areas i n c l u d I n 1 com·
-Of Arroriear, Runninll Sprlnp .lmiiway Park and Smlley.
i ,
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• -~<:.
, OAILY ,!LOT,.,_.." Rle ... N KMlllU FE~LOW QFFICIRS QUESTION WOUNDED NEWPORT PATROLMAN
Sgt. Rlcllanl Miller Oolt), Del. C~arlH Wilk..._, Ellingham
Narco Raid Error Leaves-
• ' . . .. . Homeo\vner, Officer Hurt
PHOENIX, Artz. (AP) -NarcoUcs
detecllvee, raiding what they thougbl was
a hippie bangoul, .. cbaog~ ahola ·early
Sunday nlghl with realdenll of the hooae
who bad Just moved In. Tbt man of the
bou.e and one policeman were injured.
Police gave this account:
For oeveral -u. • boole In ·the Ea1t
Phoenix section btct been u n d e r
ourvelllaoct u a poulble baJiaout wbtre
druc• ...... being used .•
The surveillance a-p-parently ceased
several days ago as officers prepared to
make their move. Meantime, the hippies
moved·out and Mr. and Mrs. Leslie West
moved in.
At 1:30 a.m. Sunday, polioe went to the
house, carrying a "rio-knocl:" search
warrant which would have permitted ·
tllcrn .IQ·~ VllthOut,.vrorniJg. , llul ·uie plalnclolM. deU<ll""' l<nocbd
anyway aod told Mn. Wet!. who
answered the door, lhey were policemen.
Sgt. Ken Strl~d said the woman ap-
From Pagel
MAZATLAN. ••
parenUy dill not believe t&e detectives,
although they allowed a badge, and shut
the door on them, tblnking they were
returning hippie's.
When the police broke in, Mrs. We.t
screamed and her hllflband grabbed a ri·
fie and fired several lihots. Detective
Harry Burke. 31. fired l)ack, hitting We•\
in the side. Mrs. Wut then toot the rifle
and fired at Burke,. wh6 was hit and lost
two fingers. · ·
Other officers finally convinced the
Wests the intruders were poliCe.
Strickland said, "It was 8 ~un
derstandin&. The couple probably felt
they wtre defending their home agalnst
some hipplea and th• 6fftde'l'1 'tMUghr~
they were fiibUog !Ome qiminal<."
No Sittiltariti~'
Seen in Grid
Plane Disasters
The latler -with· a ptlpulailon of 110 persons -aullered U homea Jolt, while
!Wnea approached· the Se Btmmlino
city limits once. the small light boats bringing up tbe wind
-·:Whipped by O'inds pealdnc ·at 100 milts from utern.
,,... hour in certain ....... the namts wtre Even lhe winds In lhe gulf connived to
t---Drlt •PQUecl. bYM&ry-Jo Cl111"1e111 27..---maU-it-•-small boaLrace.JJLoLJhe
from her. fire JOokoµt towv. veterans who went by past experience tn ·~ aalil the howlfng winds bl..,_ a rounding the cape and 1olng north lo pick
-In her IJ.lquare-foot tower •lop a up the northerly winds were lruatrattd.
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. !AP)
Despite the grim _colDcidence of two foot.
ball teams ripped apart in the fiery
wreckage af airline!'!, federal in~
vestfg1tors aald today they see Uttle or
no similarity between the Wichita St.af.9
and Marshall University dlaamters.
ptnnaclt-of rocks on ID l,IS'l.foot pell. Tholt which struck out acros1 the fUlf
"I 1ot up lo .i ... II and, jlllt by ffCOl\d from lhe cape encounlued first a brisk nature, took a look uouncl," i&Jd Mra. southerly which later turned into a
Clauaae.n. northerly and held all the way across.
"And there It was. It w1111't crackl-o ... erall and corrected time winners:
Ing. ll·was s rumble, like tht nunble <i I. L'Allegro
an earthquake." · 2. Intrepid
Trucb and men wen en route to the 3. Ana Nuevo, Rolfe Croker, Sin Fran.
isolatad: area within ftvt mln\ltea after Cisco
ber radio dlspat.cb of Iha alarm. 4. Malobi, Skip Jordon, Calllomis Yacbl
Aulhorllies ...,. opilml!Uc today that Club •
.a roaming herd of lxtrtmely rare 5. Whimsey JI, Hugh Rogers, LA YC
BJ&horn beep eJCaped harm In another 6. Taba100, George Gr1ffith1 LA YC • J,-. fire, hailed belort it rMcbed 7. M•lilml, Wlllam Jonas, San Fran-
tbtlr breedln( srow>da In the Clicamon(Ja cisco
Wlldern,.. Arta. 8. Perlcus, W. V. Wrighl. HHYC
DAILY PILOT
N"""' .... H,.,,.,. -IMl"!I .... ... ..... ..,
CMtll .,.... S. Cla:a••
ORANGI CO#Jt.•U•t.llHING COMPAMY
Rob.rt N. w,,. ,, .... , .... '"'*'""""
J.ck It. cm.., VICll ..,.. ..... .,.,., .,_., ........
1\o111•t K••vtl .....
.
'
i.
9. Arlana, Gecrge Thorson, LA YC
10. Red Head, Larry Maio, Sin Die10
Clus A !. Capricious II, Ben Williams, LA YC
i . Mal.ague:na, Bill Ravencraft, Santa
Barbara Yacht Club
3. Vector II, Herb Johnson, San Diego
Yacht Club
4. Warrior
5. Ra!Cll.
Class B
I. Sundancer
2. Blue Norther, Bill Sullivan, LAYC
3. Encore, Fred Ms~Donald. LA YC
4. Type, !Jeweliyn llixby, Long Beacb
Yacht Club
. 5. Michelle, Vao Capels, S.atUe Yacbl Club •
Class c
!. Tabasco, George Grilfllh, LA YC
2.·Ariana
3. Red Head .
4. Reaolu!e, Wmen Wemrboll, San
Francisco Yacht Cwub
5. Vlvanl. Mori Haskell, LBYC
ClwO
I. L'Allegro
2. Intrepid II
3. Ana Nuevo
4. Malobl
5. Melliml
Two Perish hi Quake
TAIPEI, Formou (AP) -Two
_persons we~ killed and two were injured
by f~liog alonea and erumblinl walls In
a\ e1rthqU1ke In Fonnou11 Ult-cout
cllY of Tallung, police reported Sunday.
The ..Formosan Weather Buruu &aid the
epl~ter was at eea, aboUt 2 mllu
north,..I of Tallung, Salunlay aflemoon.
---------------~ -~ ---
"We see none," said John H. Reed,
chairman of the National Transportauon
Safety Board. who drew a distinct 111\e
between the sleek jet chartered by
Marshall that bore 75 per1ons to death
here Saturday and the aging, overweight
prop plane rented by )Vichlta Staie"whlch
,;mashed into the RoCkies six weeks ago,
killing 32 persons.
Yet one common thread was woven In-
to both crashes: each involved a plane
flown into a hillside by a pilot who was
not routinely familiar with the terrain.
The twin-engine DC-9 jet from Southern
Airways was trying to land in rain and
fog Saturday night when it cut a splin-
tered swath through the tops of trees on a
high ridge rising near the airport runway
and nosedived to the ground.
Although the charter pilot was one of
Southern'• senior captains, no-one could
say whether he had ever tried to touch
down before at Huntington,· a small, one-
runway airport that Is nbt on Southun's
regular routes. The airport lacked the
more sophisticated landing aids or larger
fields .
Killed In the crash were 38 members of
the Marshall foofball lquad, its coaching
staff and atbleUc director. the plane crew
and a group of prominent Huntington
citizens flying back with the team from a
17·14 loss to Eut Carolina.
-er '* *
From P•e l
DISASTER ...
another telephone call from Jeff Nathan
•ports editor of Marshall's studeni ·
newspaper. He had called the Sunday
Gazette-Mall spoi'ta desk earlier after the
game from Greenvllle, N.C., 111d gave
sketchy accounts of the action. •
But he said ho llsd lo hurry. "I don 't
have too much time. Ollr plane ii leaving
rlghl away and 111 bavt lo hurry." He
added as he ht.m& up, "The plane la ltav.
ing, l'U call whe.n we land."
From a Huntington lelepllono . booth
SalurdtY nlJhl, Rieb TagJ..,, a junior
foot.ball player, lold-his ptrenla In
Bethlolltm, Pa., tbal be wu·all""
Ta&ling waa fate Friday wbtn --the
plane departed for Greenville, and be
~the trio.
"J'm \live-;.. he sobbed int.a the
leltphone. "Nobody e!Jt Is ••• tbey·rt all
dtad."
I
I Eye·d Campµs Crisis I
)
J
J
. ' '
r . •
VCI Panel Discusses Confl~cts, Probllinis . ~· ...
' ·BY PATllC~ llOYLE UCR atud<nt Findley said lhal an effort
0t .... De~ ,,~ 11.11 -wu being made .at uctt to t.Ue tht
"Th! campij! ~lbould nol prolacl aludents oul lnlodhe communily and lo
slulfents. They ll!Odld"llave lo·anewer for alao bring lbe coinmw1M -the cam·
brt4kin& the law. l'IA lib an· ordinary pua. One program M meoUoned WIS c~~::: ••• 11v, lb~ q•~'~came from i brinalog automobile dealera oelo campus
-t'' ~·0 ,, -~ to talk about air pollution. Conner memr,er .o/ Students for· a Ettlestetn, -.the other UCR .-tudent on
DemocraUc-SoC!ely not a poi.Ice cl\lef. ... 1 · ·d ... b'•• .. t -~r Tbe !Maker wu Jot' l'!llwe,t". a UC -paoe • "' -·~ --~-ems .-between campus and COIMlWlity arose ::i~de Slu~I ·al!ldYl!ll fOf\. llh ctoo:' from pollflcal coilflicll. . . .
"There U a misunderstan4fnl about the Eltle.ui!I w~ a !il<mber of a paoel al Bill of Jtigb)ll." he lold tl>e audience
IJC· Jivine Satuiday ~b)g the coo-gathered at the Science Lecture Hall.
f1fcta: and the proltltl'QI that arile' ",Demonstratina: peacefully .doei not
between .a colte;e camppa lDd the ·1ur.-mean quittly~" ..
rounding cO~ty. . ~ • ~ EttUuteln also criticiud politidans for
AUo on the panel, part of a Callfof'!lla ••putting doWl'l professors to turther their
College Peraonoel' A s so c I at ~ o n cc'.IDo awn pol!Ucal:purposes. · ' f~~ce, were Newport Beach City CoWl• . "People have ~ believe what tlley read
c1lman Richard Ctoul, Tom. Flnd1ey, · about this (the politicians) becawie' wHat
another . UCR student and Jim Dean, they read is their major source of in-
news editor of the Santa Ana Regl.ster. formation " Ettlesteln added.
Dtan said that oae a( his biggest pro-He said' lbat one of the btst ways, tb
blems wllh oou.,. cam-wu .. fjn-solve meny of Iba pol!Ucal confllcla la for
d!Jll. oul about . construi:live ll!inl• thal i the colioae ailnilniatrotora to permll "*!\.
1l4ppen._on campua.'• • 4
• • fomlll of 1>olitical activity thtt .... not ''Vk>l~ is taking over the tmap (If violate' the law, includirlg Repuhllcan,
the !plivenity," Dean Mid, ·addlns that Democratic, Radical, c.ommunia:t and all lhf prof-ts and.the ~llors llhould olher lyP68. A campll! should be a place
make an effort ·to ioform the press of the where student& can eipreas tbetlilelvu
good things lhal occur. ' publicly." -
City (l.ouncilman c?l\lii said illt <Dtft.
mun!Ues surroundiog 1Jcr parlliularly
Newport Beach, bav• '¥'t. 'bad mu c h
.,..ci&Uon with the campu! becaUoe ol
tl>e isolallon of UCL .
He Slid that with the small number of
sti.&dtnts at UCI, about 6.000. the cities
are not affected that much, but tie said
that be was conctrned with the apathy of
residents to matters outside of their own
live.s, both on and off the campus.
Student Findley said that just such
apathy was one reason for manY af the
bomblnp that ~IVt.fOCCUrrtd receDUy.
"Tbt atudtat.a who have resorted to
bom.bin'l.'~.he said, "are ones who really
tho!i!A:hl the Sy!tem would w or k
somei!Qw."
He said students trying to work "within
the 1yst,em" had been frustrated by their.
efforts. He cited one example of a man
who had be.en atnt to Sacramento from
UCJJ, to lobby for air pollution control.
Findiiy Aid ·Iha. mil\-found 29 paid oil
''""pinY lobbybla lhal he bad lo com· ~with: ·, . .,_r
"Such • protilelll W1lii i really be solved
soon," Et"lltela reipcnded. "And the
quea119D · Ui not really !low lo slop Iha . bomba'.l lllt ralMr how lo slop the crea-
tion of.."'J'I"' bontbera ...
. .
Soldier Slain
In Gun Battle
Lame DUc.k Congress Meet
' Convenes; Faces Conflict With Lawmen ·
· · WASHINGTON (AP) -Congrtsa
NORFOLK: V.a. (AP) ...:-A 20-year~ld rtconvened' today in the lame duck in· ArmY enl~ted man, under treatment f9j .. " batUe fatigue, after service in Vietnam. stallment of an election-year scu.1on one
was fatally shot early today in a P.Dflght Sen1te leader called lll'Jending, and found
with Norfolk police. poll~cal controvern wailing.
Authorities said Joseph James O'Brien Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana. the
appsrenUy took his own life when officers majority Jeadtr,. -.accused~ RepubUcan
fired tear gas into an apartment where campaigners of ~al .vilific&tlm, 'and
the lll:lldler had beld a young, l'OUple cap-"political sllc~ateriam. ,, . Uve. 1 Abo\11 30 armed <ificers convor1ed Senate Republican Leader Hua!> Scott
ootaide the apartment of Mr. and Mrs. of Pemsylvartla said the lame . duck
Andraw Hernande;, ·to which poll~e said· meeting "will' be . .iii u nm i t't 11 t e d
O'Brien bad gone at the cllma,t of • disaster," marked by polltlckina and the llltoQl!n( spree lhsl ,began Sunday niaht
tinue to do my job In January," he a.aid.
Ht aald that included word from Nii:otl
that he is utilfled with Scott'a
performance. ·
Marine Held ·
In 2 Attacks
In Clemente
when he argued with his girl friend. promotion of pet prdjects.
Mrs. Hefnande.z had spread the alarm The calendar is Crowded, and time is A yowig Camp Pendleton Marine wu
after esciplng -th! apartment by' making· short -allhouah Mw(ield aaid be beinl held on felony assault charaes to-.
a ladder of tled-together bedsheets and could not guess wb.en the s~lon will day in two aeparate knife attackl en
lowering herself to the ground from a fin~lf adjourn. • women in San Clemente Sunday -one ef
second-floor bedroom while Hernandez. a Democr&Uc ' senators caucUled· .and which resulted in minor knife wounds to a.
Marine, engaged O'Brien in conversation. agreed that there should be .an a~m'pt th ·
Police said O'Brien., an .autpatlent at before ·Thanksgiving to ov.err}de Preli-llllor defend.in& one of e VJ.ctims.
Portsmouth Navll Hdlpltal, went to the ."dent-~izoo'a veto of·a tiill' 19 @arpJJ Polke ,aJ'1._llted GlrY Frank Shaw, 20,
home of his itrJ frltnd. -JU.d)' Hiriton, 18 restrlct·~campaign spending m radio 1114:! near the parking lot at the municipal pii:r
-late Sunday night after telling 'her he television. • ~ ·· .a flw minutes after tbe sec.and attack.
would ''get" her. They said be wu arm· Man'field Slid firm Jealalttlon, staµed 'J\e ~th 'ff4! booked oD suspicion of
ed with an Army Ml& rlOe. before lhe' electlorui, will w,it un~ later auault ,~tb Ii deadly .weapon. :
.The Hinton girl bad Oed. Police !!laid in the week. He added1 that tlte ~Sift&te nie "Jitl!lt incident occurred at tbe
O'Brien shot the .family dog in the definitely Will vote on :Presldent~Nltbo'I• TrlfaJpr beach at 5:45' p.m. as: Robert
backyard, shot a lock off a door and then welf&re reform proposall!I. . Charles Jtt.ner, 1 sailor aboard the US!\
shot up the inside of tbe house . The girl's Scott di!counted. ManSfitld'1 attack on Larson, w.a8 preparing to leave the beacb
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Hinton, Republic.an· campallP'I tactk:1. · with his companlon, Ann Carol Hely, 25,
were unharmed. "Thole are· political purely, they ate of San Dieco .
Police said O'Brien uten went to the ritual and required,': be 'uld. "In due Officers aald the assailant ran up
Hernandez apartment "and asked for lime, J'll make the · ume kind of behind the couple and brandished 8 transporlaUon." threatening the couple statements." • 11witcbbl\de knl.fe, .attempting to assault-
witb the rifle. Hernandez' automobile was · Milii1fiild and· Scott ~ that' the the woman.
in a repair shop. November-December 11 me duck meet. Jttner, 25, told police he began figbtinl
Hernandez told officers O'Brien "calm· ing should bf treated as a c 1 ea nu P with the man .and suffered a cut arm in
ed down." when told that Hef!landez was sesaion, handling only appropriaUon1 and_ the stru1c!e. ~_assailant then fled down:
a ~arine. but-became-excited aneW'wben---oui~tm.e--necesslliil15irore&d· the Sanla Fe railroad tracks. -
police converged outsfde the apartment jouming. Aboul an bour later Camille Johnson et
after Mrs. Her~an~· esea~.. In fact, 'Scott said, the administration 612 Calle Victoria, was taking an evening
, Pollet said 0 Bnen befan fmng from a will be in a strongeis: poaltlO!J. ~icularly walk along Calle Santa Barbara when a
window and put t~o bullets into the fl;rst on defense and foreign affa1r11, µ1 the new man matching the description of the
police car to amve, narrowly mlsSJ.ng 92nd Congress, due .to convene on Jan. 4, assailant in Lhe first knifing jogged up
two officers inside. During the ex· He said contcoversial i88Ues not now behind her. · '
citement, Hernandez nec1 the apartment. ready !or action should waJt until then. The woman told police t,be man thrust
When police demanded 1;hat 0'8!ien Scott sai.d his judgment of the lame a knUe at her stoma ch. She stepped
come out, they. were met with a hail of . ~uck meeting hasn 't changed since elec· backward and attempted to talk to the ~eavy automatic ~ire, .. ~ftet..aboltl_ AD tlon day.: . . . ~an. A few minutes later a•passing autt
hour. they fired tear gas into the apart-"I tbmk it will be. an unm1t1fated distracted the assailant and the woman
ment, heard one more shot -then disaster, aside from the necwlty o 1et-fled for help.
silence. . ting appropriations bills through." Shaw, wearing clothing matching the
When they entered the apartment. Scott also said be expects to hold onto assailant's, was arreaf.td moments later
O'Brien lay dead on the floor, the muule his job as RepubliClll lea4er when the a few blocks from tbe scene.
·of his rifle at hJs hud. Police Si\id he was new C'.ongress meeu. "I hive more than Police said they four1d a switchblade
not killed by a pJlice bullet. ample assurances that 1'0 b;e able to con-knlle on the young Marine.
IUY WHERE 1rs MADE-SAVE I
Rufhll'1 m1nufacturn the finest furniture you wlll
find anywhere. You ... It and seltct it right In our
ahowroom. Pay up to 50% lt11 than retail. ChooM
from an unllmltec:I Hl•ctlon of fa b rt c 1. Cu1tom
changes 1r1 alao poNible.
UNLIMITED smES OF •
UPHOLSnRED FURNITURE Pre-Christmas
Furniture
Idea
HUNDREDS OF BEAUTlfUL FABRICS
TO CHOOSE FROM
' show room -
you'll enjoy
selecting
from our
l•r91 t.w•tche1
of colorful
fabrics;
. • ALSO CUSTOM REUPHOLSTERING _
• The r•tso" we're au9·
gasling Chrlstm1S' ao soon
;, that it's• groat IDEA to
htv~ your Own furniture
solectocl and manuf•olured
~I • oosl much Ion than
you would p•y in • ral1il
fu,.iluro store .. nd in lime
for Clirialm••·
e ALL Woill •UAMNTllO
POa 'tHI
LIPITIMI OP PAlllC
1922 HARIOR ILVD. •
Or Call For Appointment
·COSTA MUA
• 548-0259
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p ' • ' • ..\ ~ Bnritin gtea 1ll"a@~
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•
Today's F••a1 l
•
N.Y. Stoek• ·.
TEN C~NTS
• ...._
' \
City f~~~§ Suits.
I
. $100 Million ·As ked in Acce ss :Cla.ims
' " . .
• DAfLY PILOT Staff • ._.. ' . ' . ' ' .. ' . -.. GISLER SCHOOL..$'.TUDENt S WRAf!P l!D UP IN ST.UDY OF EGYPTIAN MUMMIES
. ,· · .H•~~t~. Yvette :P,~1.""~'' -C1eofJ-frA-;.:THch•r c.ollins · •nd Nefertiti
--
l ~ •
'\ . . .. , .
Puptl,s_·Learn Pharaoh's Secrets
• Bf ALAN DllOON
Of ail lilltr ,, ........
Four cliims rot losses. and damages
totaJlinc more than $10:0 mWion were fil·
ed ag ... lbe Ctty o/ Huntington 'lleach
today. .
It was tht latest salvo Jn the batUe
overf'PUbUo acceu to the t.Jo ~ .thre6.
·q..rte,;mnf-iiunttpgtOn Paetnc.btac£"•
Tbe'"cWms-..... being llled·lhll al·
tm:iowt ... 117 1 rtpmentaUves Of the· HW>o
t~ Picjlk COrp. The d1Y ;ec<nUy lnl~ated ~I proceeding., to establl.sh
public re<ieaUOZ\al easements ov.er the
beach which . extends north · of lbe
mWliclpal pier to the city llmiLs.
In a P~ reiease, the il:untin(ton
Pacific Corp. -owned jointly by the
Huntington Beach company oJ1!1 Soulbem
~act_1fic -states U)at a 40-year old1 con-
tract between Ille parties II. 1WI In force.
In the first clalm, damageJ of up to '$61
mlll\op are sought. 'M1ls clairi'l U fOr the
cJty'1 alleged breach of a 1932 contract wh\ch arose from a Superior Court J~·
m.~t In San Diego County ond ~ WJJ.
Firemen .Baffle
R~.gi~g BJiu.e
In Southland aatcj to~ have settled a. lawsWt in' "hkh.
By ttaav c::QVIUE from about 3,400 B.C. up to the formation the city claimed similar e11sementa~to
CM ,.. rt.lb' '"" ,,.., · of the early clvillzflitlons in the Tigris-those sought In the present' Utlgatkm. · By ARTRVR R. VINSEL
Of l'IN o.ltr l'Mll Sl•H ·'The ariCierit.EiYPtianS were the world's Euphrates river· yalle)'s. Jn ezchange for the Huntington Paj:lflc
top rhortldaM.·: .. "We tie it in : wUh English, religion, Corp. ~ranting the city a ~rm~_t Containment by nightfall was predieted
today as an army of 3,300 firelighters
closed in on tbe worst b I a z e in San
Bernardino County history, w i ~ h
SO;OOO.~u,w~re~ s.ear:ea ·ana untold
For ln$taoce, When a pharaoh died they writing, and ·s~ ol government,'' recrut~ euement, O\ftt. t t}lT.e e
pbt his bialns· In a jar ne1t 'to his tomb. Collins said Thui'ida'y. "Tomorrow the quarlen of a· mile of beach. lands Stiith.ot
Ju.t a5k: Cathy Tra9'nbt, abe knows: kids will take ·a spelling test in Hebrew.'' the. pier. court records .show the City
And so -do most ol her 11and12-year~lit They also know the alptiabet in Sanscrit agreed that it would -be "forever baned
claismates at Gialtr' Iiltermedi.ate School and hleroglyphi~. . and enjoined frairl asserting aily fdrther
millions iii1osses. . · • in ·1-JUntlrigtori ·B:t•cb. Some of the projects coq1pleted by right uµe_ or claim" Jo the beach north. of ''.l '~-tel~ th~.klds things about st~ents ihoWed ama.ilng-.detail;-. · the'Pier,"~-to tJte elal!n... , Tl;le raging· i[lferno Whipped it.Ito
massive Proportions ftlday bJSanta Ana·
winds reaching 100 miles ~ hour bas
ckstioytd 'M. hOnies omf \;rfui)jy ·wiiJOd
out~ tJte, tiny ra6ch resort· ~ty of
Egypt I· nefti' 'learned un"tll I· was a . l'fo boys made. one. pyram1d from Wllllam ·E. Fdster. vice presklent of
fresbrn9i tstooaete.~··1an Collins, 'Cathf's ~.500 sugar cu~," C:OUinJ. commented. !i~'tlnP,1) Pacific, 11;id, ."by claiming an
7th : gta41> "~ ·•teacber. explained. 'The center of il_ is _hollow. but· Ibey built 1nte...i m .this prope!\Y . for the, .ecood
''lb<y fUJYe;!a• mucli .... ter .sOpbistica· support . ~ mside to streni!be'!, ·~ t!llie •. ~ _c!ty bU-.f•~. to hOnor tbe
-~i~~-Uon t<idoY,."" : • • . . ' ,~ • · , • ~·a l~.f~ stoaf'!" it, 11 \ir\t"9' ~ ~ nil!lt·lli .!~." . , ~~~,>(~:.:,~~ .... hel~ c y ltt',~-·~
lloMI P-liiido~1
• !J'~i .,...,~ .... ~
luilei havi .beeo· ~.,..... 11\d'~f!o · daalbs. are. "kiiown -blamln& a_...._,,.,_ !if lhe.Bi&Bear or..:b)Ue,,phio ~
. ·~ ~··tt4·.!. .. J seul~li! lllltslitj~fl!!,_a fa JM•_• ~tl!'Jorae cond ..... Uoa!of lhi ~ '°.r 1~~ . .,,,iii'\,l~• 2~:-io:. ~ b~k .•iid ~led bOrr . s~atloii ~~-i{;(ill.2 .111.• ~ itudy A liall-\fozea 1'>1111i glrl.uneol<e4,•way • . · ; ~ 'ila ,.
"'I:. .:'Ille, ..olli'. of bis wjth ttielr 1110ther<" ilY:rofoam wlf forma "'~!er Us looll ' '
... ·. ; · • 1iilddon' "¥>J.,i ·Wif• of and decorated "the' blink fa.ces like AddltloitilUy:· ~~ii j,: 'ct~ Jn • ~-o!Ilve'otliers !JI 1wo-c{>\mt1t>.
"h)n( ln«st1i11!1Pa ·~ :tO' the Ortiat
$alurday" of .Phillip ·page; A. a( S4n
.lle,..rdlno. who~ held wi!HOill balf ~ ..
ding arraignment on anon chargu. · ·
· ffiilibed i Cifatif:b·andeat items as Cfeopatra. · · 1 • 1 • • • ~a ~lJ•tocit · qnllllm)'. assOittd' smaller · Obe-'kid t~t a green c~ sam.ple wiJkinc.~~·.Pframinds;-models of from liU did, made a grass lawn of it ~-~~ headi .ot.NerertiU . ahd ~'tructed lhe .bome of an E~ilan
alld th!>·JJanlfnr·1an1e1>1 ·of.Bib)>M"-noble-. He used hair dressing for lbe
·wtlh rU\l!!oWm. · b!ue water. in t!>e IJOC!I. . . Authorities allege he aet fires near
~ .. ~~.;,...a Llnda •• -burntd •mere lllap •4;oot acres ancPthtee
homes, ·llfhile-othe:r bla.Zes were quickly
•potted· apd ext~.".•.· • . • .
. "By~wiQt'~ bands illCI shar· ·Bufiding a .bit of old Egypt 'f8'n"t
Ioj:the" ~ wtth cJ&ssm"iitei, the klds eO:. etiough 'for CoHinS' kids, they· also bad to
~ U more. It'~·• Jtude~t.~entfld)e~on. ex~liin every!hi'll they .did~ ~e Wbol~
rather; lban>tbiiold·f,...bioned .cber·Jec· class. •
Oral'lge COunty esca~ .the nv•s:es of
""lllah fltt ·whlpjled by·tht! iio-<allW1Devfi
Wlnds,.ofter c..C.llng .all~\:Ofl Ul!I ·
alertin8 .aH perulDel! Friilaj;I' · · 1
ttife;" contfts 'rt11ted." i • .. • '"We ·Jeamtd a lot II beamed ' Ronda C~ ,!Ifs .laJ<~ Iii•. ki4S,~t 60 of Spinal<, 12. "WbOn you'leam and !uive fun ~~.On· av :~~~e\~ of~~ it amts in deeper." ..
: • ... ' ·1 ,,.
. Th9)i were geire<ff<ir!a~bte repeat . r..:-r::rr·i:r~~1t~~~-=~ lJq.d ... y· ··of 'Bu.ena Park Girl ·
Santa Ana onslaUght (n dC.t®er. ·
San Bernardilfo and , ·R.l v e r's i d e • · ~~h~r·;."~::~:r.tr..i:i·~h~ 'F .. o·. un·. d. ·,. 'Mu:i!det• Pr·-. ob·ed· erupted -a~Uie east end o~Big Bear Lake, :.I.-
with 65 percent containecf'bY mid-day. • ~ • . ;,w~ ,were really pel~'l)J ihe e~, of
the San •. ta Anas · and _1lie-jact t!ia. t-the Aided by Jdentlfteatl011 of ·a partially ,, b ~......; ..:...: -....:~ in. thick bnJsh: forwanl edge of Lt1e'•fire urned 'intb the 1-....-rr-».~ -"'?"'... .
flat ·arta, "here we coU!d ,move~1n trucks . tteatrlllhii 'Piri, 'Orlnle County Sher·
and manpower," said u .. s .. rorp:t.strvice ifrs inveltjglfora today stepped up their
fnfoiiriation officer wr.!l"wt • . . ~fies liitO wUf"t!JeY belltve.J> a c ...
A'flttbreak cauSed'.by'lbe Jlhn:ol'llle ill ni~°"'\ · • · • ·-
World Highway t1so llel.Ped'conta1n tlie . ~~fwncl,4'. thcVtctlm's ,.,_.
fi;un<S, he added. · P!ifli>.'1"11'!'1,ofllcera.to Identify the dead
!lunilreds of jie~' .......... ~tee! . ilfl oi fti!;LYM Mine<. 16, ·of BUOl1'•
(Boe BLAZE!!,~·~ JI. ~fJi ':(J:~~:~_pa11nts listed her u ·
· · ' · -~!On !.doy corillnued ·their ex-V alley Fluo" ride · ~!Wil'of 111t:1inm ... vere4 gully Iii . . . '!hlc!h the bodr .m · 1ouoo s.turo.y by
chilClren playln& 1 in the' area. The Group Steps Up ~~.!* ... _ J!ll"'v~ ·"'"./<filler'• .,...
COtj>ner's lrl\lestlgaton. haV'e ·ctetennin-pe*;tW• 1• R~;.,7, ed that the Buona Park lllg_h S<'llool girl
W< • ""' • died lnim • b!Ow to the back ol the head . . ~ r .,
which fractured her skull. They believe
that :she cHed at· about the time of her
disappearance.
Investigators art working on lhe theory
that MISI MinJ""'was killed at another
)oc1tion and her body brought to the
Emery Street gully by car. The body was
dUJ!lpod face down in thick bro.VI.
Two Pfri~h in Quake
T-¥PEI, Fonnosa (AP) -Two
persons were killed and two were injured
by falling stone's and crumbllng walls in
an earthquake in ·Formosa's east coast
city of Taltung, police reported Sunday.
, The Fonnosao .Weather Bureau said the
epicenter was ,. at sea, about 2 miles
northeast of T&itunc, Saturday afternoon.
~igTi ·Rise · Home
for Elderly Set
~fir:·I'J~pt;h Ap~~l
Anolhef fil!i· hoiiae b·expecttd al the
HWJtlngton ,!leach City Council" ,...Ion
tonight when the fate of a high-rlae home
for ,the ehlerJy ,\Viii be on the ljne ..
A 17·story, 287-unit tower platmed by
the First Chrisllan Church on ·Adams
Av enue near 17th Street was denied by
the planning commission 4!-2.
That declaion has been appealed by the
arcbltecl. WOiiam Blurock of Corona de!
Mar, who coruilders that the •1well plan·
ned project will flll lhe specla.1 needs of
senior eltb:ens of the community.''
The appeal is to grant an exception for
the hl.ijh~rise development, similar to the
Bethel Towers in C.OSta Mesa, and reduce
the req~ off-stfeet parking.
In nojec:ting the project. four pl3!1111ng
commissioners ariued that the high-rise
structnre would be, incon.llstent with the
restdtnttal neighborhood and staled .that
the appltc"anls bad laUed to demons•te
a hardship.
Ro1Jo., West. chairman of tht First
Chrl!t~n r owers by the Sea Co,rP,Oratlon,
has indicated that he may stress 1o the
counc;il tonight that the city has not yet
designated a high rlae zone.
That was one. of several hardships le·
cepted by 'the , planhlng' cominlssion ind .
council JI) crantl~I an '1c;ept!on re.cently
ror the Slinoet Bay Project. Whkh IP.
eludes an 11-story tower arid ~1-stOry
hdtel, near Huntington Harbour.
Anti-fluoride ftsidtfit!, ;or Fotll'ltain
Valley are trying to beat the Christmas L. 'All . :1'u.ew~~o::t.;,:~:':ri~.=gayole : · . :egro Mazatlan· W1·nner "We have 800 signatures 6ow," George . . .'
Llndegren, leader oL the petitk>n drlV'e, ·· , , · • • • . • -,
said this mornJ.ni. '"'We !>oJ>' to ha•e the.... _; .. t ~ , •. . _
necessary ~ by Dee •. I, . before C' ;..~ n Ji'~ f s .. ":;:;~ .. 1~~=~-~~.iO :1 ... ~~·:,, :· .~q t ~ cor~$ as: Fick~ Wind~:Mar Race.
force ci\y Offlciajs Into callln, ~n.el~ · I · . -· , .' ; , .
on "lbe 'nuori(le issue'. The city ciluncR ' ; By ~!;MON> bOCK:A•IY • • · "5ome ortho!e Cl.,. ti boats actually· d•-.. ~ .lbe lint to wipe out tbe Clau
.
coniPe!l!IJUol!; ai ,the property· owners'
CCJll for pnWtdlng lifeguard oncl malP.
tenance 91 \be be9cb !fl)ce' 1961. ·~ od·
dUfonal $88.000 ~ *"!Ii!! !qr CCllltrlbutloos .to~ federll erosion ·~~·pnijecl.
"'11le. eioct amount o/ tlie damages In
th!,~ of contract..clatih:wnr depend
-·
: ' . ·1~ "· f .. ·J• -' C-r·ou:Md ,. ·'
"
, , , r. t .._ , .. _
upon the outcome of the' easement sdtt. ..
said ,Foster, ... but· it· apPean that the
greaJer the SUc:ceM of the city ID
establilhing ' lti claims ,undir the ease-
ment suit, the larger the damqeslhat tt
will 'have to pay ·1or·l&a breach ,of1 coo-' . ·-. . tract.~' · J ..... ,, • '• •
-.. '
,
• • • ol.(y rJJ;'OT Iliff ;.,,,. ~ . . ' .
Edison. Wgh s I.coed Candy Appel, .17. ls the.Huntington Beach
school's.1970 horn coming ·queen. She was crowned during .ceremon-
ies Saturd8y at Edison-Fountain Valley'football gaine. Her•charm1
proved Jucky for .Chargers, who defeate(l ·Fountain Valley ·Barons ~or
Irvine League crbwn.. ·
~ .J . .-
Two Ne-wport Policemen
Wounded in T1·ailer Park
By JOANNE REvNotllS
• Of 1111 0.11'1 Pt•t Jteff •
A 61-year-<>ld man is facing ar·
raignrnent today on ~harges of attempted
milrder ·after u~rtedly ,wound~g two
Newport Beach ofllcers Saturday in what ·
has been described' as the worst shooting 1
In· th• history of the department. ·
In custody in Newport Beach city jail la
Arthur Lanlbett, a ri!sldent of 'the Dunes
Trailer Park who lists llis occupation Q
consutt!iig ·eitglrieer. ·He "is sl8ted to ap-
pear tn the Harbor Judicial Di.strict court
thi.s afternoon.
Offlctr James G!lrdiner, 22, Is listed in
fair con'dltion following ab do m In a I
surgery dur~g . which . a kidney was·
remoJed.~ 9fficer Jo~ E!lin~h{lm, 24,Mis ,
a ISO 1n. f'1r . col)dltlpn after he was woun-•4 'll)ltfle rlglit thl&b! .~Ui' ~· in Hoag
MemOrlal H°'plta!. ' · 1'hf' •incident was apparenUy sparked
when the two patrolmen stopped Lambert
atr hlt trailer. He reportedly was spotted
. drtvislg erratically , down Pacific Coa¥
Highway. . .
Smith didn't wait for an ambulance .. He,
put· the •tmc0naqoqs offlce.r bi OfJ~r
~wreni;e \G(IJ:>ri~l's unit · and bad ·hjm.
drive to the· hospital.· . ·
·MeariWhile ether patrol ttnifA.badN~
ed.off Coast HJgliwaY to au·cross traffic,
setting up road blocks: at the intersections;
of Bayakle Drive, Dover· Drive, Tustin
Avenue and Riverside Drive. A Coat.a
Mesa poUce:unlt '~ traffic at the in-
tersection of Newport Boulevard and
Hospital Road for the speeclli)g RJ1trol
car.
At the hospital, a team of fdur doctors
.. worked on the woonded · patrolman.
several hours. His condJtion, which was
originally listed :as serious had improved
(See POLl.Cl\~tE;N SHOT, Pare II
' w '"'· " . .. ,..-.. er As tHe two' talk.eel to the swipect,' prlOr '·
to admlrtiste;ing a nefd sobriety . exaqi, .
he allegedly pulled out • Jkollber
autocpatlc' and -shot Gardlntt in \he · 1tom~h. EJllg~, use~\y wu shot
wlill! Witltllng Lam6ert to' the ~-. ~T~ stkiOting w8s1 wi~ · ti" Y
Liihtittt'• 'Wife· and· two Students from
Newport 'Harbor' High School who were '
pOrtlcipatlng In a ride aloag proiram. .
frn !JO coo'1er bi ·a good 14 c1e-
1rees on Ute ~ Tue!d•y With
loc,I temperatures· pegged. at • •
degrees • and the inlind rnucury
soaring to the 82 mark. ' -·
INSmE TftDAY
Upward. of JOO,OO(i PCkbton. agreed to flllorlda.Wclty lf(~.Jlllt ·~· : •. [ .. !""",!!"',~,~ ... ~ the giiif In 'less time thah we . A fleet1when she WU the seventh DOal to
af!'r listenlflg .to orgurqeni' !Qr • n • , ~'J'LNI· -~ •. r!"lh t b.,; did," said JO!m B Kilroy,. owner o1 flilllll. But'lllle d\cf'oot rell1'11n at the top
apinst It. 1 -.. •· · • ' ' <'~pl ~ ""'-• ~ lurhed -~ • ,Kl•loa II . · , of the handicop standing> for long. Ban-y FIDorl<lebuMIY•t.~n .plattd.yi.lhl! :IAl. llntreWi>. ~~ 1'cht ·race • Kloloahaddrlltecl ·-lbe-flnishline llerkua' Intreyld , •Cius D entry, was •
clty,water, but It .. wilt' bt In the ~ ·~In the~ .. . ~ Sil!urday. to be the first y1clll to finish about 2:4' the neat boa~ to .ftnlah oncl looked for-all·
future. · .. : . . . _.: l c:" ;,. . • C>vt.P "'IDCI -• ,; ~led tnnc a.m. Saturday: Only two hours beh~ her thf!i werldJt~·a wtnner.
The two ,llcb w~ In a unit drJven by
patrolman>Tom Smith. They had arrived
at· trie tcene prlcir to the sboqtlng so the
•tudellb COllld ob..rve what Smith
thi>iiiht·wouid be • touljlfe clnD\k driving
$r may be deo4 In· • dU.I
dis41tar of c11clone • m\d tklal
wave which rcink.s Wi~~ the ,
worst holocaust& OJ· au Umc.
POQt 4. •
"There '" a~t 12,11111 registered • wilt~·!'~ ~ oj jbO q9ll'll\ oilries In, .. came BIU wn000•1 Ras<0I 1rom1 Santo 1'Jm came Ii Allegro with'" corrected
voters¥' tjle_clty," l:lndegnon ~IMoid. '· the"-,L'~ .-;cal~·~ Ul!I . •Batbciro, fOllowed ""'ii' anf<>ur later by -time thot wu not lo 1be beaten.
"We need thl!~lgnatures of ,tt ~ ot oll!M*l "'1 !iJ .Rodeilcl Park of Richmond John Mclntlrt In Baruna. Sjlch are the fort-cpnlsforlunes of
lberh. pJwi we want more Jn ~~aotf»-Y4df ~-"!"' . .... ..... • • · ·• Al Caseel11 SO;foo! sloop Warrior froht ' yacht nctnc. For the flrat three dAy1
ano dlsquolHied."' • '. , • ~lll, , ....-Cllf the woll, '!., oeea Bahia Coflnthlav Yacht Club'flnlshed o~ly rrom the'NOll. 7 atart It oppe~ to be •
LinC!emn alio said he. WllWd f"l" °'!'. bY. ~ wben • "11111& wind l!I mlnu)es behind Bi'"!'•· and Jolm Closs A r..t with Klaloa II !Jav~ o lhot
city council Tueocfay nJ&hl ID fo!JOw . lQI.• • Olll of lbe --....t:to douse the flcilpps• If.foot ketch Novll del Mor. Sah • at the elapeed time .-d:: :
lalt week's challenge when he · .isl<ed ho;el o/ _the earJy leader'!' Klaloa 11., Diego Y1ch1Club, lbe scratch boat In'"" Then came lbe aoflalr near Cape San
l!'J\m to ~ pu)>lill*d· Pl'oal, "'°" ~;-.. wmlor oac(,Novla de! <.nee1, wu.ooJy-a few mlnutoo bthincf her. Luc11 with the leoders being stalled oud
flili>rlde Ii 11ft. -· •. Siar; 'tli< lln\flve boott to linlsb. Ed sunberg 's Clasa c Yacht s u 11 • (See MAZATLAN, P•se' I}
\ ... • • '• . ~ •• ' ~ .
test. ' ' ' ' I
Neither of the two !ludenls were In~
juied and It was Smith wbo was finally
able to subdue Lambert. ,
Qudtioned aftei"ward atiOut tbelr ruc-
lion to the s.hoolln111, the girls said they
"didn't llki It,• but We're. phil111ophl<tl.
0i1· cueas ·11 couldn't be helped," one com·
mt'llted.
Gardiner"• "(OW1d was so 11ttlou1 Iha!
• •
I C.Uftnll9 • t ~ ...... ,.
Cll9dlll!t u, U """""" 1r <II...... 1'o# ,........ -..i S c-1o. 1• or.. -~ ,,, Cf'll"""' 11 STl'N' f"""' 11 _.,._ ....... 11 ...,_ • n.a
CJ'*-,, ·-........ l•tt ...... _,. ... ' == ,", •Rtwtt...... lr
'"'••• 1'-lt ....., • 4 ..._... 11 ......... " AM l....... 11 ..._.. """'1>\I
Mli... • ' \
•
•
r
• -
Marine, 29,
Arrested
--'
,~In Knifings
• A "'°"' Camp --Marine -..... ..w .. felooy -ult -... '°"
.'illy In two IOPll'll<I knife 1tlaclcl on
Wonlen "' San ci ..... i. Sunday -..,. al
"'11icb ..... Ii.I In mmor l<nllo -to I
-doliadlq One of the victlmt.
:: Polic!t aailtld Gary Prut ~·· •~ }!olr Ibo pvl<lnl lot It the anmidpal pltr ·a f<w l!\lllutel 1ftu the oecood 1ttack.
'l!Je )'Olltll WU boolcad on IUlpiclon of
.... ult willl I Wdly .... poo.
Tbe !Int tncldeat occurred at the
Tralllpr btlcb Ii $:4S p.m. u Roborl
Qartes· rttner, a ...Uor aboard tbe USS
I.anon, WU pnparlng to Jeave the btlcb -'* <Omplllioo, Ann c...J llely, •• ti San Diec•. ,,Offlcen Mid Ibo ••D•DI l'lll ap
llehlnd ·the couple 11111 br1ndloJ!od I
nttclll>llde blle, •liimi>tlor to -lbeWOOWI.
;. Ittner, .. told poUce be bepn fllhtiftg
.Willi the ,... aod IUl!ered 1 cut orm In
Ibo itnJBile. 'l1le uullaiit then fled down
the Santi Fe nllroad tracka.
':About .. """ liter -J ........ al Cit o.IJe :"J1ot«lo. 'WU lltlnr ID ......,.,
wlll< llq'Cllle llaoU Bor6oro -·· mu matdllnc the ~ al Illa •••ll•al In the l1nl lmlflnl, jGUad ap boblndblr.
Market Clerk
Held Up Again
A Cotta MIP marbtdort, rol>boll eoa
.... -by I bl!llllt wtio dtappad Ills CUD 11111, tllDed bis ptaway Cir, -=~~·butb;,Joba S. Vcn..t, •·6itf II Illa Tie foo Mtriet II ltl3 Pomono A.._, blndad n lilout llO to I bNnSad bandil lrJllOd
wtlll • twtn-blmllad ovtl'<lDder dor· rlneer.
Vorocat Pl4 tht !ID, hllry-(IOOCI man
... UV<mlly calJn 11111 didn't -to
lie hflh ... ..... anooll!lY paru., the
job dotplte Illa )inMnce ol I Diile tbaP-
per la tbo ... ol Illa IJl<n.
He -Vidimlled roeeDlly 11 a Tie Toe ¥arbt It W .Del Mir A .... but -anUb tbe P'rldty ...__Illa-·· bumbllnc lad to omit ol • llltpOCI ..... 111e-.
Bandit Suspect ' (
.sb(>t by· Police, ·-= .iii!-. ollol • burlllry -ly lbiliii<r<·· Tiie Mpeet 11111 ll1qad .-=..-.z ... eoptund. -...-
•'Tbo "1lllnded ..... <lr1Dt E. M.,.,., 11,
of Santi . Ana, .... bit by three allolcun
peiletl u be fi•d the Piggy Bank Coin
SbOp, !Ml Brtltol SL He 11 reportad In
eatlllldory condition at Oronp Comley
lledlCll Center.
Offloer Cllltltt Koloduy celled to
lloyer to tlop -~ after tbe
ompec:t -lhrouch • window to get out of the shop. l!Wde, Ofllcera aid tboy
loomlf Winton L. Worley, 23, blJ!lng In I
restroom.
Seal Beach Freeway
Hearing Scheduled
Sul Beach l'Olldentl wtD hive a cblnce
to llOUDd off aboUt tbe propoaed Bet!
Beach Boolevtrd !noway intercllallle
nell Th\D'tdly.
A m..unc bu bttn oobaduled for ,,.,
p.m. at Hopklnaon School, Lot Allmllol,
to conlldor deatan propoioll.
The lntetcbange would connect the
Boulevtrd with tbe San lllqo 1'roeftY
(lntersllte Route 40il).
DAILY PILOT
OAAJitG& C04IT PUILllHlltO Ct;tM.PNft
Robtrt N. Wee4
PntldlM W hlllWW
J1sk R. CMrlrr
Vlc9 Pnlldlrlt If• 0...1 ~
1'11011111 Lrtll
lllllr
Tho1111t A. M•rpftlM
M-elN llfl;w
Alan. Dlrkl11
Wat o,.,.. CMfy Mllr
Alb.rt W. let .. ............. " ........ __
17171 ........ , ... ,.,
M11fitt Mir••• P.O. '-no, t2MI
' --~ ltldl1 m ..._, .. ..._.
c.111 MtMr a w.1 a.,..._
.. .....,, a.di! ni1 W.1 ..... ....... ..,. CIMlntl at Hortll 11 c... ... -
DAILY PIL01' ......_ 11r •lcMrf ICNl!ler
P'ILLOW OP'P'ICIRS QUESTION WOUNDED NEWPORT PATROLMAN lfl. Rldlanl Miiiar (left), Dot. Chorlos Wiik-, Elllnvft•m
-
From P•e J
.POUCEMEN SHOT ..••
todll' to fl!r, Jfe II hi the lntolllift core
unit.
p;tltqMm WU taken to the hospital a
-mlnutea lotar by ombulance. GordiMr, who Uvea hi Newport, bu
-a member of. the police forco oln"' January of tJlll year. A sraduate of Cal
Siiia. 1""' lleacb, be holda a BA ln a1mfnololY, Ell)IJlbam la a two year -u rl-the for<o and Uves in Coate II-Both men are alnll•.
Tiie 1aot tlme a Newpoi't patrolman
-Ibo! In the line of duty .... In 11118
-Of!lcer WI1llam Tllbot w .. Ibo! In the bud by & fiffinl auapec! OD Lido hie. '
Satardl1 nlebt'• lhootin(, wbk:h Dtt. Bel x... 'lll9mpton ctlled' the wont ln
Illa blalGry ol tbe deportment, mn11ned
~tlld .~t!e d6cln blm lll • mt:Dldnl -· . ~ tll4 -1Jber .Elllnshlm nor Gai61ir 4rew tlltlr 'IUDt durlnc tbe
tncldoal &nl1ll Mid be fookotlll out wbtn
be beard Ibo ollolt nr.o!, but put H away
-ba AW EIU..,,.m sr1p(llln& wtlll
Limbert.
The srar-llalred -tloo ,.-told IUJpeCll be had been at Btrbhire··,
and the Dry Dock befor~ beJn& stepped
by tbe o!Ocen.
From Page J
BLAZES. I.
from cabins and pemw>enL bornes In tbe
mO\Ul~us are.u J n c I u d I n g com·
numWea of Am>w8-, RllJlnlnp Sprlnp
Amllway Part 11111 Smiley.
'Ibe latter -with a population of 120
pertOns -IU:ffered 49 homes Jost, while
f1amu 1pproacl>ed thl San Bemlrdlno
cUy llmll1 ooce.
Whipped by wlnda pcotlng at 100 miles
per hour In certain gutta, the flamea were
ftnt spotted by Miry Jo Cllusaen, 27,
from ber fire lookout tower.
She aid the bowling wlndJ blew open a
window In her IZ«(uare-fool tower atop a
plnnlcle of rocb on an 8,537-foot peak.
"I 1ot up to cloae II and, just by MCOnd
nature. took a loot ll'OUnd," sild Mrs.
ClallAOD.
"And tllereJt waa. li wasn't crackl·
lnJ, It ,... a rumble, lite the rumble of
an earthquake."
'fiucks and men wtre en route to the
isolated area within five minutes after
ber radio dilpllcll ol the tl1nn.
Autbor!Uet were opumJaUc today lhlt
a roamlD& herd of extremely rare
Bll!m> beep eacaped borm ln another
!,000..cre flro, llalted before II reached tbeltlbraedlnC lrounda In the CUclllltlll&a
Wl1derDtlt Mt&.
Pet Hospital Hit
By Mesa Thief
A dnJi --r<nlly herd up f01"a hypo kit IDd tbe cbemlcolo be lnJectl
blqlariaed a Cotta M ... pet hoopltll
over the weoliend, police aid today.
Elllploye llobert L. Mtlone aid 100
bypodermlc needlea and' botUet of
morphine and demerol worill 118 were
tll<tn from the Bater Brlltol Pet
Hoapltll, :Jt7I Brtlinl St-, oo SaLurday.
Whoever looted two opera.uni rooma
broke a loclt on a tide door to gaJo entry,
lnveflllllorl tal4.
Boosters Will Meet
Band booltm ol Hunu.,ton S.ach 11Jcb Sd>onl bave ICbeduled 1 meoUnr for
7:!0 p.m. Wednesday In the bind room,
Roll Wahl. praldent, IMOlll!C<d today.
I
. ----
Mn. Lambert, who bau come cut of the
trailer while the officers questioned her husband and who was present during the
shootings, was held for questioning by in·
vestigaton, but WI! later released.
Student Veterans
Send Christmas
Trees to Vietnam
Five Vietnam veterans tu r n e d
Fullerton Junior College studenta have
per10na1ly aeen to it" that some of the
troopr in Soutbeaat A.!Jia have AD old·
fallhloned Cbrittmas tri<! for 't b e
boUdays.
:ri>e,J!ve, Doug Allan, Jim W~eiah.
<lie u-. Bob Spirta and F JC &tudlll!i
Body Pmtdent Dan Fntland. jpent ilie
,...kend In Libby, W)"O., 1rr1nllni
purtJiue and shipment of 300 Christma! tree! to outposts and headquarten all
over Vietnam.
They said they wanted to show Presf..
dent Nixon that college st u d e n t 1
throughout the nation support his Asian
pollcit•.
Allan added, 0 We know w h a t
Christmas in Vietnam away from your
loved onet is like for those 18-year-old
kids." 1 The treeS will go by truck to SeatUe,
Wuh., and then to Vietnam via Army
Traoaporl
From p .. ., J
MAZATLAN I I I
the !ITllll~t boala bringing up the wind
from astern.
Even the winds In the gult connived to
make it a small boat race. AU of the
veterans wbo went by past experience Jn
rounding the cape and going north to pick
up Ule northerly winds were frustrated.
Thoae which struck out across the fUJ f
from the cape encountered first a brisk"
southerly which later turned Into a·
northerly and held all the way across.
Overall and corrected 'time winners :
l. L'ADegro ,
2. Intrepid
3. Ana Nuevo, Rolfe Ctoker, San F'rm-
cisco
4. Malobl, Skip Jordon, C•!Uornla Yacht
Club
5. Wblmaey ll, Hugh Rogm, LA YC
6. Tabuco, George GrUflth, LA YC •
7. Meltimi0 WIUtm Joou, San Fran-
ci><o
8. Ptrlcua, W. V. Wrll!ht, HHYC
9. Arlina, George Thorson, LA VC
10. Red Head, Larry Maio, San Otego
Clai& A
t. Capricious ll, Ben Williams, LAYC
2. Malaguena, Bill Ravencrott, Santa
Barbara Yacht Club s. Vector U, Herb Johnson, San biego
Yacht Club
4. Warrior
5. Rascal.
Class B
1. Sundancer
2. Blue Norther. Bill Sullivan , LAVC a. Encore. Fred Mad>onald, LAYC
4. Type, Llewellyn Bixby, Long Beach
Yach( Club
$. Michelle. Van Clpell. !jtatUe Yocht
Club
Cla11 C
!. T1baloo. tltorje Grlffith, LA YC
2. Arlana ""
3. Rod Head
4. Raolut., Worren Weaterhoff. Son
Francllco Yacht Cwub
5. Vivan~ Mort Hotl<ell. LllVC
CIUID
!. L'Allqro :
2. 1ntrep1d n.
3. Ana Nuevo~
I. M1lobl
5. Melllml
• ....
2 Shot • Ill Raid Error·
Polke,.lnnocent HomeoUJn~r Sh~ot it Out
-• -• -j
PHOENIX. Art&. !AP> -Nar<otlcl mO.ed out ind Mr. ind Mn. IMUa Weat When the police w•te '"· Mri. West
dltedtvt1, raldlna whit thty thought wa,. fn!'Ved in. ·1crumed ~nd her hU!band grabbed a ri·
a .lllpple baqout. a::chlna:ed sh<M early At 1:30 a.m. Sunday, police went to the flt and fired several shots .. Detedlve landif ntchfwlth reslden.ta 'of the Jlouse . houae, carrying •' "no.knock" learch Harry Burke. 31, fired back, h1tUna: W_est
who had just moVtd tn. Tbe man Of the ,1wan-ant which would bavt pcrm.!tted In the side .. Mr,. Wes~ I.hen took the rifle
h<M.aae Ind one policeman were injured. them to enter without wmln1. and fired at Burke, who was hit and lost
Police gave this account: But the platnclothta detectivei knocked two fingers . .
P'or 1everfl weeb, a house in the East anyway and told Mr!. West, who Othtr officers finally oonv1nced the
Phoenil: section b&d bten u n de r antWered ~ door ~)' were PollgemeD. Weata I.be intruders were police.
ourveWance u a pouiblt blngout where s,t. Ken Slrlddl'nc; aJi1 Uw,...,.. ·ap-Strickland .111d, "'IL was • mJaun.
cfr1111 were being uaed. _, ~Uy did' llQt;be)lev~ the 'detoctlvu, deratendlni. Th•. couple grohlbly felt
'Dia aurveWance appmnUf coaad. ' a!illo<l&b they s~ 1 b~e,. llllltbut llley were .dafend)ng tlJeir ome agalnal
aevera1 days ago u oHioers p~ to the door .oo them,, thtnkin&: Uity were aome h!pp1el _and the officers ~t
mate their move. lleantlme, the.~· rttllrnlnc blpplet. • Ibey were DJllUng oome criminals.
'
Soldier Dies
In Gun Battle
With Laivmen
NORFOLK. Va . (AP) -A ~year~ld
Anny enllated man, under lrtatment for
battle fatigue after service in Vietnam,
waa fatally shot early todaY in a gunfight
with Norfolk police. · ·
Authorities said Josepa.-James .O'Brien
apparently took his ownJife when offictrs
fired tear 1u into an apartment where
the soldier had held a young couple cap.
live.
About 30 armed officers converged
out.side the apartment of Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Hernandez, to which police sa id
O'Brien had gone at the climax of a
•hooting apree lhlt began Swxlay nighL
when be argued with his girl friend.
Mrs. J:lemandez had spread the aJarm
after escaping the apartment by making
a ladder of tiecJ.together bedsheets and
lowering herself ·to the ground from a
second-floor bedroom while Hernandez, a
Marine, engaged O'Brien In conversation.
Police said O'Brien. an outpatient at
Portsmouth Naval Hosp ital, went to the
home of bis girl friend -Judy Hinton, 18
-late Sunday nlgbt after telling her he
would "get" her. 'They said he was arm-
ed with an Anny Ml6 rifle.
The Hinton girl had fleet Police said
O'Brien 1hot the family dog in the
backyard, shot a lock off a door and then
lho.t up the in.side of the house. The girl's
parentJ, Mr. and Mn. Richard L. Hinton,
were unharmed.
Police said O'Brien then went to . the
Hernandez apartment ''and asked for
tranaportatlon," threatening the couple
'with the rifle. Hernandez' automobile was
in a repair shop.
,· Htmandei told officers O'Brien ''calm·
ed down" when told th.at Hernandez wu
a Marine, but became excited anew when
J>Ollct cmverged outside the awtm!nt
after Mrs. Hernandez' escape. ' ·
Police said O'Brien beian firing from .a
wlndOw and put tw;O tlulleta into the first ,
police car to arrive, narrowly missing
two officers inside. Dur:ing the ex·
cltement, Hernandez fled the apartment.
When police demanded that O'Brien
come out. they were met with · a hail of
heavy automatic gwitire. After about an
hour, they fired tear gas into the apart.
\ment..-heard one more &bot -•hen
silence.
When they entered the apartment.
O'Brien lay dead on the floor. the muzzle
of bis rifle at hi.s he.ad. Police said be was
not killed by a police bullet.
COUNT SH,OWS
HARTKE WINS
INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. (AP) -The of-
ficial certification of complete returns
from the Nov. 3 general election showed
toda y that Democra tic Sen. Vance Hartke
fin is hed ahead of Republican Richard
ROudebush by 4,338 votes.
But a recount seemed almost a ce.r·
tainty. lo I , j
" .,,
Lame Duck Congress Meet
'
Convenes; Faces Conflict
WASHINGTON (AP) -con cress duck meeting lwn't cban1ed since elec-
reconvened' today in the lame duck .~·.~ ... ~Id~ it· will be an unmitigated
atallment of an electJon.ye:U-session one disaster, aside from the necessity of get-
Senate leader called wiendmg, and found · ting appropriations bills through."
pol1Uca1 controversy waiting. Scott also said ht expecta to hold onto
Sen. Mike Manafield of Montana; the bis j'o.b. as Republican leader \.hen the
majority ltader, accused Republican new Congres1 meets. "1 have mor~ than
campaigners of personal villflcatlon, and ample assurances that 1'11 be able to con·
"political s\lcksterlsm." · tinue to do my job in January," he said.
Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott He said that included word from Nixon
of Pennsylvania said the lame duck that he is satisfied wlth Scott's
meeting "will be in u nm It i gated performance. .
disp.ster," marked by politl~ing and the . Sen. Robert _c. Byrd (D-W.Va.),
promotion of pet projects. . sidestepped questions abou t the prospect
The calendar is crowded, and time is he might challenge Sen. Edward M. Ken·
short -although MamOeld said he nedy (D-Mass.), for the pos.t of majority
could . not guess when the 1ession will whip in January. He said that was
finally adjourn. ~ premature.
Democratil! senators caucused and "I will run, and I intend to win," said
agreed that there should be an attempt KfMedy .
before Tha.lbgiving to override Presi· Sen. Edmwid S: Muskie (D-M&ine), a
dent Nixon's veto of a bill io abarply leading prospect for his party's preaiden-
restrict campaign spending On radio and t.ial nomtnalion in 19n, said _he would .like
teleYislon. a fieat on the Sen~te Fore1p ~elatioos
Mansfield said farm legislation, stalled Committee !"-the new Congre~.
before the elections will wait until later Mansfield s attack on Republican cam·
in the week. He added that the Senate paign techniques seemed directed at
definitely will vote on President Nixo"n•a President Nixon and Vice President Spiro
welfare reform proposals. T. Agnew, since they led the battle for
Scott discounted Mansflejd'a attack on the GOP.
Republican campaign tactics.
.. Those are political purely, they are
ritual and required," he said. "In due
time, I 'll make the same kind of
statements.''
Mansfield and Scott agreed that the
November-December I am e duck meet-.
ing should be treated .as a c-1 ea nu p ,
Sess.ion, handllni anly appropriaUOl\I and
other absolute necess ities before ad·
jouming. ~
In fact, Scott &aid, t.be adlflfuistration
will be in a stronaer position, particularly
on defense and forei(ll ~falrs1 in the new
9Znd ConJtess, Bue f& cdnvWe 'oil' Ji:n. 4,
He sa id controversial Wiles not now
ready for action should wilt until then.
Scott said his judament of the lime
Beach Browriies
Vow Cleanliness
At Central Park
Fifteen Brownies, Troop 708 of Hun-
tington Beach, have "adopted" part of
the 147-acre Central Park with the goal of
keeping it free of litter. -
The area the Brownies will clean ts a
eucalyptus grove at the north end of Lake
Talbert. The troop's first cleanup day will
be Wednesda y with the youngsters plan-
ning to work from 10 a.m. io 3 p.m.,
pausing for a cook-out lunch.
Mrs. Thomas Peale. an. assistant troop
leader.~ said that Ma yor Donald Shipley
and other civic oUlctals have been invited
to the lunch.
"The Brownies intend to work one day
every m.onth to keip this stretch clean,"
she explained.
.
Serigraphs Set
At Golden West
An el.hi.bit of optical art sertgrapti,,
from the personal ooUection of Uls
Angeles painter Rene Parola go on ex-
hibit next week at Goldtn West College.
The show begins Monday in the colle1e
library I~ tootln,... 'thron!IJ Dec:. 11
during regular library hours.
Paroli., an art and design teacher In
Los Angeles City Schools, specializes in
hard edge shaped canvases ·and optical
.art serigraphs. His works have been exhi
ited in .umerous local and national
abows.
Comedy Play Slated
In Fountain Valley
Fountain VaJley High School students
will p~nt tbe comedy "You Can't Take
It With You\' from Thursday through
Saturday in the school's theater-in-the-
round.
Admission prices are $1.50 for adults
and $1 for students with identification.
Curtain time for each showtng is 8 p.m.
Election Scheduled
New officers and dlrectors for 1971 will
be elected at the 8 a.m. m!eting Wed·
nesda)' of the Huntlnftan Beach-Fountain
Valley Board of Realtors at Mile Square
Goll Club.
.BUY WHW lr1 MADE-SAYE!
. I Ruff•ll's m1nuf1ctur• the fin11t fumtture you win
find anywhere. You ... it 1n'd .. iect it right in our1
showroom, Pay up to 50°/. INI than retail. Choose
from an unllmlted Mlection of fa b r I c 1. Custom
changH are also possible.
UNLIMITED STYW OF Pre.Christmas
Furniture
Idea
UPHOLSnRED FURNITURE
HUND.REDS OF BEAUTIFUL FABRICS
TO CHO SE FROM
Vislt our
show room -
you'll •"i•Y
11l1cti"g
fron11 our
large 1Wafch1s r-
of colorful
f1bric1.
'
• ALSO CUSTOM REUPHOLSTIRIN5
• T1ie reason we're tU9·
gestint Christm11 IO soon
is th1t it's a gl'MI IDEA to
have your own furnihn
elected ind manuf1clurad
et 1 cost much less tli1n
you would PIY in 1 retail
furniture store and in .. time
for Christmes.
• A.1.L WOii •UAU.NTllD
fOI THI
1u1m lrtll OP PAlllC
.1922 HARBOit BLVD. o
Or · aU Por AppOlntment
COSTA MES1'
• 541e0259
(
I
.. . .....__. --·-.. ---·····-----------~---· ... -·-----· •4•• -••• ----• ----, • ' -
Grid Crash
Casualties
Identified
* * *
•
N S. ·1 •• o 1rn1 anties ·
Seen in Grid
Plane Disasters
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. (AP)
Despite the grim coincidence of two foot·
ball teams ripped apart in the fiery
wreckage of airliners, federal in·
vestigators said today they see little or
no similarity belween the Wichita Sta,.
and Marshall University diJasters.
"We see none," said Jolut H. Reed,
chairman of the National TransportaUon
Safety Board,--who drew ·a di!ti.nct line
between the sleek jet chartered bf
Marshall that bore 75 persons to dealh
here Saturday and the aging, overweight
prop plane rented by Wichita State which
smashed into the Rockies six weeks ago,
killing 32 persons.
•
UPITI ....
FACES OF MARSHALL _COEDS SPEAK FOR WHOL E TOWN
In Huntington, W. V1., Disbelief, Shock and Grief -
City That 'Die~'
Grief Follows T~am's Jet Cr ..... sh
By CRAIG AMMERMAN
AIMci.ttll ,~ Wrttw
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. -"This town
died today."
With that cry, a nurse at Hunlington
Hospilal reOected the grief at Marshall
University and its home cily after Satur·
day night's crash ol a Southern Airways
chartered OC9 carrying the school's foot-
ball team and others.
Among those on-the plane, in addition
lo the players, coaching staU and
boosters, were three prominent physi-
cians and their wives, a newly elected
state legislator who also was one of Hun-
tingtml!s wealthjest men, a past president
of Manha.ll's .alumni association, a city
coonc:ilman, two past presidents of the
Marshall athletic boosters club, an in-
dustrialist. and the sports director of a
local television station.
ID all, there were 73 dead, and a school
of 8,500 and a city of 73,000 went into
mourning.
At midnight, about 400' studenl! and
citizens joined bands in a campus
memorial service, opened with the
singing of an African hymn, "Kumbaya."
Most wept openly. Some fell to their
knees as they sang.
"Someone's singing Lord, kumbaya • , •
Someone's hurting Lord, himbaya •• ,
Someone's prayiog Lord, himbaya."
~iends had to carry young Mrs. Roger
Childers from a Huntington hospital,
where she had gooe "hoping for a
miracle."
Childers had been a M a r s h a 11
linebac)er, but suffered -a bead· injury.
He successfully underwent dangerous
bralq 'surgel')' duriffg the sommer and
while recovering was serving as student
team manager, hoping to join the playing
team again someday.
At a makeshift treatment center in the
school's phylijcal education building. doc-
tors i.nd nurses treated students in shock.
"Alex, please come back • • • please
come back," a coed screamed as she lay
on one of the 100 mattresses set up in the
center. r-.
"Goel, what--has ftappened?"-ahother
coed cried.
·In hallways out1ide, secretaries and
football coaches sat staring and crytng.
Most of their bosses were aboard the
twi~ngine jet. }iead coach rue~ Rolley,
~l'ld athletic director Charles Kautz. were
among the dead.
At a nearby hospital, citizens and
sludeDt.s were ushered to a conference
room. They had come late in the night
looking, hoping, for survivors.
At least 10 of 'them crumpled to the
floor when the cor~ned-off hospital,
primed for caring for survivors, re-
mained quiet. '
The coaches, players and boosters who
died were among those who, in ~e last
two ·years, had rallied in support of
Marshall. It was a tough two-year period
-when the sc hool went 7:1 games without
a victory, .was expelled from its !!00·
feren~ for recruiting violations, and saw
its head coach removed for alleged ir-
regularities.
It was those people who had spearhead-
ed drives that raised $150,000 for
scholarship funds and pressured-the West
Virginia Legislature into releasing $1
million for an artificial playing surface.
At the airport at nearby Kenova, tht
wife of television sportscaster Ken Jooes
and their three children were in the
crowd awaiting the return of the
chartered plane.
They waited and watched in the cold
night air as the big jet lazily circled
beneath low, dark rain clouds, making its
final approach.
Their gaze turned to horror when the
jet disappeared behind a hill, followed by
a bri lliant Dash and a mushroom of black
smoke.
In Charleston, newsmen a w a i t e d
another telephooe call from Jeff ·Nothan,
sports editor of Marshall's student
~~~sp:a~r. He had called ~ s1111q~
t!azetle-Man' sports desi.! earlier after Ui:
game from Greenville, N.C., and gave
sketchy accounts of the action.
But be said h; had to hurry. "I don't
have too much time. Our plane is leaving
right away and I'll have to hurry." He
added as he hung up, "The plane is Ieav·
ing, I 'll call when we.land."
Ftom a Huntington telephone booth
Saturday night, Rich Taglang, a junior
football player, told his parents in
Bethlehem, Pa., that he was alive.
Taglang was late Friday when the
plane departed for Greenville, and he
missed the trip.
"J'm alive," he sobbed Into the
telephone. "Nobody e~ is ••. they're all
dead."
--"1
Monday, November 16. 1970 H DAILY PILOT :.L
Campus · Crisis Eyed
VCI Panel Discu sses Conflicts , Problems
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of ffle Dlllf1 '"" ii.if
"ne cam1>'4' should not protect
students. They should have to answer for
breaking the law just like an ordinary
citizen," I
Surprisingly, that quote came from a
former member of Students for a .
Democratic SocJety •. not a police chief.
~ speaker was Joe Ettltstein. a UC
Riverside student studying for bis doc-
torate. ·
EtUestein was a member of a panel at
UC Irvine Saturday discW!lng the coo-
flicl! and the problems Uiat arise
between a college campus and ~ sur-
roUnding community.
Also on lhe panel, part of a Califorftl'a
College Personnel Association con·
ference, were Newport Beach City Coun·
cilman Richard Croul, Tom Findley,'
another UCR student and Jim ' Dean,
'news editor of the Santa Ana Register.
Dean said that one of his biggest pro-
blems with colle_Je campuses was "fin--.
ding out about constroctive things that
happen on ~pus_.;''
"Violence Is taking· over the image of ·
the unlvenity," Dean said, adding that •
tbe pro!"'°" and the chancellors should
make an reffort to infonn tbe'press of the
good things that oeeur.
UCR 1student Findley sa1d that an effort
was being made at UCR to take the
studenl! out into lhe community and to
also bring the community ooto the cam·
pus. One program he mentioned was
bringtng automobile de~rs onto campus
to talk about aJr pollution.
aboot tbls (the politicians) becauoe what
they read Is their major source of in·
formatton,'' Ettlesteln added.
HI} said that one of the best wayt to
solve many or the politicaJ conructs is ror
tl:le college-adminlstrat.ors• to pern11t "all
forms of poUtical activity that' does not
violate the law, lnclu!ibJg Repqlillean,
Democratic, Radical, Communist and all
other types. A campus ahould be a Place
where students cao eiptess the~ves
publicly." . •
City Coundlman CrouJ said the com.
muniUes surrounding UCI particularly
Newport · Beach, have not 1.ad m u c h
a$50Ciation . with tbe c.ampUl!i because of
the isolaUon of UCI.
~le .said that with the small number oI
students at UCI, about 6,000, the cities
are not aff~ed that modi, bµt he saJd
that he was concerned with the apathy of
residents to matters oulsjde of tbelr own
lives, both on and off the camPus.
Studeot ·Findley ·said U,.t .Just such
apathy was one reason for many fJf the
bombings 'that have oceurred recenUy.
."The students who have resorted to
bombing," he said, "are 0oe3 who really
thought the system would w o r k
somehow."
He said students trying to work "within
the system" bad been fruslrated by their
efforts. He cited one example of a man
who had betn sent lo ~ramento ~
_,,)
UCR to lobby for air poUutlon <lOOlrol.
Findley said the llWl found 29 pUI oil
company lobbyiatl tbal lie had to com-
pete with.
. "SllCh a problem won't ruily be llOlved
soon," EIUel!ltein responded. "And the
question is not really how to stop the
l:iombers but rather bow to stop the cre4·
tion of more bomben." -)
· "Thme of us who are radicals have one
lntemt In common wlljl tbe camplS "!1-
ministraUon, "· EtUesteln said. '"The
radical needs-'fo communicate with ~
people of the community and disrupt!~
tends to minimize the communtcaUon." ·
"On the basis Qf th~ mergini of In·
terest." EtUestein added, 0 there Is a
chance that pie campus wlll survive.••
A memQer of the audience asked panel
meplber Dean why only derogatory newt.
gets into the press. , _
Dean said that Just '""' criticism bu caused many newapapers to re-evaluate
their role In the Community and the man·
ner in which they have beeo covering col-
lege campuaes in the past.
"We will have to try to be men ~
structive as '!FU. as lnf~tive," Dean
said. "To get. more poa1Uve things In
print, we newsmen wUI have to do a bet·
t<r job. .
-"But the proi>iicrs •ill alto bav.e to be
more &ggressi ve in telling news to the
prm '' be .added.
Boulder Death
Youth Drops Big Rock on Freeway -Ettlestein, the other belt student on
the :· said the -bligest problems
between mpus and commuoity arose A truck driver was killed Saturday
from poU cooflkl!:. night wheo a boy dropped a 40-pound
releuecl to h1a parents' custoctY.
"There is a misunderstanding about the boulder from an overpass u the big rig
Bill o£ Rights," he told the audience roared through ·Ontario, crushing his
No one wu arrested tn the other In-
cident wblch OCCWTe.d eft the Paudena
Freeway, whUe Saturday night's ·fatal
rrick-dropplng waa on the 5an ~
Freeway.
gath~ at the Science Lecture Hall. head.
"OemonstraUng peacefuJly does not The rootball-shaped rock shattered the
mean quieUy." v.indshield, bitting Clifford A. Owenby,
EtUestein also criticized politicians for SU of Downey and causing the truck and Criminal cbarps will be bl'Oll8hl
against the unidentified 12-yeai"-old in San
Bernardino Coonty Juvenlle Court, ...
amling to Poltce LL Luther F'nlnb.
"putUn~ ~wn professors to further their tr~iler to rip 'through the center divider
own pobbcal P~· twice and ~n pff the freeway.
"People have to bebeve what they read ..)Iis driving partner, James B.-Gaslo
~r :: also 50 and a Downey resident too,
suffered minor injuries in tbe tragedy,
the second such fatal incident In a month.
Jle did not '"Y just what the cbarpa
will be, but they could range from mall--
cious mischief to manslaughter. ' Gas Main Crash
Kills Countia1i
An explosive crash Sunday tn Orange
when a car bit a gas main killed one man
and seriously injured another.
Danny Carrillo, 29, of Anaheim , died in
the fiery crash and the driver of the car,
Richard Florez, Zl, , of Orange wu
seriously buI11ed. • ·
Pou~· said the car ran off th,e road and
ruptu • four-inch above &r'i"!l4 nll!ili'il inaln it Batavia s!llet aOcl
Lincoln nue. The resbltlng fire burned
(or two hOOrs melfing the car into a char·
red mass. No structures were damaged.
Luna 17 in Orbit
BOC HUM, Germany (AP) -Luna .17,
the latest Soviet moon probe, went into
lunar orbit early Sunday, the Bocbum
Obsedvatory reported. 0,..-ector He J n z
Kaminsky said the Wlmanned craft,
launched Tuesday, was circling the moon
on a path slmilar to that of Luna 16,
which landed in the moon in September,
automatically scooped up some soil and
returned with it to tfie Soviet l:Jnion.
A teenaged boy who said he saw the
rock dropped led police to the home
where the juvenile was arrested and later
Lt. Frankl said the victim, wbo llllo
fered severe damage to the bead, tbroat ·
and chest, wu: dead on arrival at Antonio
Commwilly Hoopttal In nearby Upland..-
Battin Re>Vises Stance \
On ·supervisors' Sa"lary
'By JAdc BROllA~ l persu&aed bl.I lb/ va..1 maiJti1 ~ thl!. °' -. ~ '""" 1tat1 people of the CP,Unty do not c&i3agree with
Orange COUnty Supervt.or Robert W. the Oguz. set by the boanl last Tuead'1
Battin revised bis propolled move on the ($19,200)." "
boan:I members' pay situation Friday. Baker bad said before that he thought,
.Battin said he would now propose that the people were· up..et because ot ·
the board .rescind Its action moving the wideaPfeld publJcity «lVer a secrer·
annual salary up H,200 to $19,200 and ask meett.g at which the salary was Apo!
the Grand Jury to recommend a salary JIO!"dlY set at $29,261 a year. ,...
level. Meanwhile, the Orange Coun~'·
SuperviS()r David L. Baker, who Of Cities meeUng Thursday n!ght .·
originally proposed that the salary ques-to Join In the controversy Of the
tion be sent to the jury for recom-supervisors pay.
mendation, said Friday that be would go ?Jle members turned down two .,
along with Battin's idea lnamnuch u be posing proposals. One suggested that the.
always thought it was the best-CXMll"se of action or the supervisors in TOting
aCtion. , themselves a reasonable pay tocreue bl{
Baker added, however, u\at "'I am still approved. ·
El Rancho has the hottest price in town!
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Mince Meat .......................... 59¢ Pie Cru$t Mix
Borden's None Such, •• 28 ouncP. size! Betty Crocker ..• perfec t r esults! ... 11 oz. pkg.
Dow Hancli-Wrap .................. 49¢ Lipton Tea Bags .................... 59¢.
• B ig 200 ft. roll ••• use so many '''ays ! Serve it hot and hearty ! 48 ct. pkg.
• Early • in • the week ·Menu -Makers!
Pork Chops ...... L.~:::~~-~ ...... 89~
Fresh! ••• ~rom mid-western grain fed pork f SlltfOif witll Mri. -·s D<ISSini ...... ,,, ............ 99c ~.
(ondoti ·Broil ................. $1.39 LI Beef Braising Ribs ' ............. 4t·
So much meaty goodness ...... delicious braised! Enjoy the he:artf flavor of beef t Boneless, value!
Introducing ••.
NlW TIS![ TWT
FROM BROCl'SI Cheese Ecla ·1r's •••••••••••••••••• • 89'
Chocolate covered bite-sized deswt , , , cheddar, gwi,., cream eh .... fill•d 1 D•!ightful ••r-
prisel •• , 8 oz. pkf, You11 be J>)used to •ervo these for the bo!idaya l
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Pricu in effect Mon,., Tuu., Wed.,
Nov.16, 17, 18. No 1a.k1 to d.taltr1.
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ARCADIA:
Sunset ltld Hunlinllltt Dr. ([1 Rlt!c~o t.flt1tl
PASADENA:
3211 ~ost Colando lll'ld..
.SOUTH PASADENA: .
-fremont 111d·H1ntil1rton Dr.
HUNTINGTOll BEACHl
Wsnw .aid Alionqui• (Bolrdws!I Center)
NEWPORT BEACH:
2727 Newport llMI. 1n4 2m ·[dfuff Dr. (toltlluff ri11qe c.nr)
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.. DAILY PILOT ·-MoAdl)', Nowmbtf 16, lq>7Q .
Cyclone, Tidal WaN
.Pakistan DeEJth
Toll 300,000?
'He 'll make a great
political leader. He'•
:young, ·good looking,
and .taku order1!'
'The Bard'
On Voting ··
BJ DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI) -By thlJ time
nearly everybody has ii.ad a shot at the
.elecUoa returns except W 111 1 a m
~e. And so, for th~ final ..aly;i., ... call In the Immorlal liard:
Q. Mr. Shakespeate, l'.(ave you read any
or the analyses of the recent American
election? ·
A. "I have bought golden opini.ons from
all sorts of people."
Q. And did ·Y"1 notice a rather wide . , . . \'ar18.nce . . •
· A. "I DO PERCEIVE here a divided
duty."
Q. Well, how do you account for the
fact that Republicans view the election as
a victory for PreiRleut NiJ:on while
Democrats see it as a·Nlmn defeat?
A. ''There ii nothing either good or
bad, but thinking makes It .....
Q. Have you focmed any opinlom of
your own?
A. "l . have, perhaps, tome eballow
spirit of judgmml ..
Q. What Lo your Judgment of lhlJ year'•
campaign?"
DACCA, East Paklalu (AP) -Cf.
ficials aay 300,000·penons may have died
in the cyclone ~d Udal waves in East
Paklslap Wt Friday, making it oPe of
history's greatest disasters.
Four islands 60 miles south of J'.>ac(:a in
the Ganges River delta were lubed
hardest by the !~mile-an-hour winds
and •toot waves from the Bay of
Bengal.
Officials sald so many were dead or
missing that rescue turns were countiDg
s1E.VJvors, not the deaCr Some aoorces
,m" there appeared• to be a,lmoot DO
6Ul'Vivors on at least one of tbe lalaods.
The 1961 eensus • listed 1.4 mllllon
persons OD the four Lolandt -HaUa,
RamagaU, Owjabbar and Bhola -but
other sources estimated the population
was less than haU that when the storm
hit. However, there had been a,rectnt in-
flux of workers for rice harvest.
Pope Attacks
'Money _Spent
On Arms Race
ROME (AP) -Poi>e Paul VT appealed
today for an end to the-arms race eo that
vast sums cao be uoed to feed, clothe and
educat. the world'a poor.
Quoting his'. 1967 encyclical Populonnn
Prog.-..sio, the Roman Cathollc pontiff
told a conference of the U.N. Food and
Agriculturto OrganlzaUon "that wheo oo
many people are hungry, deaUtute and
•·steeped in Ignorance • . • all ez·
penditures prompted by motlves of na-
tional or personal ostentation, every
debilitating annamenta race~ becomea an
intolerable scandal."
"Exaggerated nationalism, r a c l 1 m
engendering hate, the lwt for unlimited
power, the unbridled thirst for domina·
tion: who will convince men to emerge rrom such aberrations?" he continued.
"Who will be the first to break the cir-
A. /•Maclrlnatiool, b o 11 o w n e ! i , cle: of. the armaments race, ever more
treachery and 11\ rutnoa& dl9ordm. Too ruinous and va·in? ••. Will man, who has
like U>e lightning, which doth cease to be learned how to harness the atom and con-
ere one can aay it ll&btem. I am nothing quer space, finally succeed in .conquerfn&
lf not crtUc:aL.. .. '* lelfill;lnels?" .
Q. BOW DO YOU FEEL about the win-11. He cited Dr: Normal Borlaug, the
rling.canclldates? -American scientist who won this year's
A. "I have _-. bettor fl<'1<i Jn, my Nobel 'Peace Price for hla ap'ICGIWral time." , work, and oalcl: ''U all men of good w!U"
Q. Wbat about the loaers? • . W\)Uld· work together f"' peace, "lhe
A. "The.lowest and most dejected thing tragi~ temptation to resort to violence
of fortune. Poor naked wretches that bide could'tben be overcome."
the pelting of this pililw ·storm. .So
weary with disasters, tugg'd wi.th fortune.
When the hurlyburly's .done, when the
battle's lost and won, they have klss'd
away kingdoms and provinces."
Q. There seems to be some di!pute
over-what aort of impact Viet President
Agnew had on the election. Would you
give us your appraisal? .
A. "He hath a mint of phrases in his
brain. Delivers• in,pcb apt and gracious
words that aged ears play trUant at his
ta1es, and )'bunger hearings are quite
ravished, so sweet and voluble in hi1
discourse. But, for my cwn part, it was
'Greek to me."
Q. Inflation was one of the big issues in
the campaign. Would you comment .on
that? • ..
A. "'I CAN GET NO REMEDY agalpsl
this consumption of the pune." -
Q. Hot about the charge that over-
permissiveness ~ntrlbutes t o a
breakdown of law and order! ,
A. "What makes robbers bold. but"loo .
much lenity?" ~ ..
Q. What .w'ould be your !Ummation of .
the election?
Sihanouk's Kin
lJn.der .Arrest ·
In Phnom Penh
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) -
Maj. Chan Landy. head of the mllilary
police intelligence bureau, ~d today that
two .children of deposed Prince Norodom
Sihanouk hive ·been arrested and will be
tried soon in military courts.
Princess Bothum Bopha and Prince·
Nar.adip6 will be the first members of the
royal f~mily to go on trial in person.
Sihanouk, his wife Monique, and other
f(lembers of his inner government circle
h~v~ been Sentenced to death or to long
prjson terms In absentia and are in Pek·
tog. where Sihanouk has set up a.1overn-
ment in exile.
A source in the Military Justice depart.
me.n~ said Naradipo and Princess Bothum
Bopba will be charged wltli cooperaUOn
with the enemy, tantamount to treaaon, ~ and that~e trial will be public-.,
A. "Striving to be~ter, oft. we mar
what's well.''.
1 Q. Thank you, Mr. Shakes~e.
-, Tl<le• _ ... *""'..... •1••-...... .......
fin! IM 4!11•.lft. S.I
'"-Plltll 1:00 •.fl\. s.• s.cor.. hlfll It:• t .m, rfJ:
Mand io-':a•·"'· t.e
..,,. ... ·~-·-.... 4:• ''"" MilMI ... 1:'5 '""· kh 10:112 ...
C..tal
HoW!'I' -.....,. Lltllt "'''laltlt ...... "'91'11 tfld l'IWlllM llWf'I ~·
"" ~ I to 11 \l'llh ht-ill.,._
-todoff •1111 f!mdty, Hllfl lloetr "' C.t'ltl ..,,._...,,.. , ...... ff'On\ 17 .... ,......., .,__..""-,.,... ...._ .. "n. Wit_. t.nHf'•h.I•• A.
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The olllclal death count rooe to 1~111
SUnday nigbt, but fatality estilJlates grew
hourly from scores of reports. A former
assemblyman said local officials in-
dicated ~.000 bad perished I n
Patuakhapt district to the west of the
four islands. A utility orflclal l!lakl
tbomands of farmers were swept into the
sea when a tidal wave roared over the 15-
-dam which bad reclaimed the land
on which they were living.
The area Is a cyclone alley, with storms
hilting almoot every spring and fall and
wtth huge tolls beeau!e of the lack of I
warning system or of speedy transport
for the masses of farmers and fishermen.
In June 111S, 30,000 periabed in a
cyclone tbe:re, and historians uy 300,000
died in a storm and tidal wavea in 1737.
The greatest disaster recorded in history
occurred in Cltlna's Honan Province iD
1887, when a Oood took 900,000 Jives.
• The bead cf the Pakistan Red Cross ap-
pealed for help to meet "the complete
devaslaUon in the offshore islandl."
Preslde!!L_Aghl Mohamme4__ Yahya
Khan ordered army units Into the area to
restore communications and conduct
evacuation and relief work. The United
Natlons, the International Red Cross, the
United States and India offered relief aid.
Many lslandl and c:oastal dlstrlcts w""
sWI cut off by bigb water. .
A rescue official who Oew to the delta
area reported seeing at least 3,000 bodies
in graves; 100 to 150 in each grave."
One ship that may have gone down in
the storm wu tbe 5,500-ton Maha·
jagmitra, an Indian freighter tha\ was en
route from · Calcutta to Kuwait wjtb 49
men aboard. A shipping oUlcial' aald her
last radio tramm.ission said she was in
the Bay of Bengal "In the proWtlty of a
cyclone."
Syrian Junta •
Ruler Tightens
Grip on Nation
BEIRUT, Lebanon {AP) -Syria's new
ruler, Gen. Hafez: Assad, tightened the
anny's grip on his naUoo's politics today
. and tried to· fonn a new government as
some of his supporters clashed with sup-
porttts of the OUlted regln>e. . ......-~ " Weekend demonstrations ftl't reported
ln Daml.scus, the Syrian capital, after
Aasad, the defense .mlnister, overthrew
President NOW'eddln Atassl and a
govmiment dominated by Gen. Salah
Hadld on Friday. AU are members Of the ·
Baath SOclallst party, .but Assad is ·con-
&idered more of a mocierale.
University students clashed In the
1treets of Damascus. An unconfirmed
report said one man was killed and 35
were Injured when A11sad's seeurlty
guards charged into the crowds, hitting
with b!ltons. . · ·
The newspaper Al Moharrer said the
governor of Suweida, in southern Syria,
resigned in p(_Otest of the coup, and
demonstrators fh the town supported the
custed government.
In Egypt. Premier Mahmoud Fawzl
resigned, and President Anwar Sadat
aaked him to fonn a new cabinet.
Mlnlster cf Information Mohamed Fayek
said Fawzi, 70, and the other ministers
will.rem ain in office until the new cabinet
is formed.
The cabinet had been appointed after
the death of President Gam8! Abdel
Nasser Sept. 28. Sadat, Nasser·s suc·
ccssor, appointed Fawzi premier Oct: 20.
The semiofficial Cairo newspaper Al
Abram Sal~ Fawzi wanted to shake up
the makeshift cabinet immediately, but
he has agreed to wait for a transitional
period.
Official sources said the new govern·
rnent will be fonned by nezt Thursday,
• when the NaUonal Assembly reconv...,,.
TROOPS OF CAMBODIAN S. VIETNAMESE TASK FORCE BUILD BRIDGE DURING DRIVE
Pontoons Repl•c•' SfNn DestroyM by Enemy forces; Supplies From Seigon
GI Toll Hits 44,000
.
9 Americans Killed by Red Mines on Weekend
SAIGON (AP) -Enemy mines and
booby ttapa pushed the total cf American
battlefield deaths in Vietnam put 44,000
during the weekend, while in C&mbodia,
North' Vietnamese forces battered two
Cambodian units on the northern front
The Viet Cong's crude explosive
. devices took nine American lives over the
weekend. Despite the absence of any
pitched battles Involving Am er i c a n
forces, 44 U.S. troops were reported l!-:111·
ed last week,'the highest t611 in five
..... Weeks. This raised the total number cf
Americans reported killed in action in
Jndochlna to 44,033 since Jan. t, 1961, but
the total will undoubtedly be increased by
casualty reports which have not yet
reached the U.S. Command.
Meanwhile, U.S. troop strength jn Viet-
nam dropped to 363,800 last week, a
decrease of 4,200 during the Past. week
and the lowest in almost four )ears.
Another 19,800 troops are to ~ cut by
Dec. 31. brinline the authorized. total
down to 344,000.
The U.S. Command announced the cut..
back of 1)35 mono troops with the
withdrawal from combat o[ Ult 3rd
Squadron, 4th Cavalry, 25th Infantry
Division, and the 704.th Maintenance Bat-
talion of the 4th Infantry Division. Both
the 25th and 4th Divisiom are being mov.
ed out of Vietnam by Christmas.
North Vietnamese forces in Cambodia
attacked two sweeping detachment! cf
the big Cambodian task force bogged
down SO miles north of Phnom Penh Sun-
day, killing 13 Cambodian soldiers and
wounding 49. It was the worst casu!lties
the Cambodian command has admiUed in
two months, and only seven North Viel·
namese bodies were found on the bat.
tlefield.
It was the first serious ground fighting
In the area north Of SkOWI since the
20.000.man government task force recap-
tured Taing Kauk two rnontM ago and
dug in .
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Cambodian troops continued to bold a
handful of key strong points along the
northern front but made no major effort
to rwstablish government control along
the 32-mile stretch of Highway 7 between
Kompong Cham, 47 miles northeast of
Phnom Penh, and Skoun.
Southeast of Phnom Penh, South Viet-
namese 1.1arines and Rangers aboard
river •assault boats moved along the east
bank -0( the Mekong river to within 20
miles of the capital, sh-Oring up that sec.
tor or the city's outer defenses. Th•
Marines clashed with North Vietnamese
and Viet C-Ong forces over ·the weekend,
claiming 44 killed and :14 captured. Seven
South Vietnamese Y<ere killed and 11
v•ounded. a spokesman said.
~ North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces
attacked Cambodian troops Jl miles
northeast of Phnom Penh along the
ltiekong. Air. strikes and heavy artillery
broke up the attack, and there was no
rePort of casualties.
Credit Card fraud
can be stoppe
if you use your
•
Credit card fraud cost Americans over:ZOO-miilion
doDan last year.
·a.ming thQ!Jght,. im't it?
· Well, here's a c:hecdid thought: It doesn't have
to hal>'Pcl!. to you.· head Or •set f Not 'ity.Qll-we your • , more preo y, your ace.
You RC, unlike siFtures, your face can't be' forged.
Which is why Uruted States National Bank came up
with the Facecatd. ....__
As its name implies, this MastcrCharge card has your
picture on it. (Scaled in plas.tic.)
So nobodr can use it. Exa:pt you.
In short, it's safe.
And handy. For instant idcoti6cation.
OK, how do you get one?
First off, fill out a short application blank at any one
of our 59 oll!ces. •
· Second ofl', wear a smlle far our camera.
That's it. . . . ·
Ready to get a FaceCard?~
That's usjng your h~ •
Colta Mesa Offlct 1843 Newport Blvd.
.$oqth Cdl1t Pl•ia 3333 Brl1tpl Strnt
UNITED
S'IATBS
.NATIONAL HANK-.........
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IEA AN DERSON, Edltof -...,, ,,...__. w. 1m " " ... 1a
Lig.hts Glo.w ·
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Harmon y ~
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The overture has begun and the curtain ls about to rise· on the
Symphony of Lights conducted by the Huntington Harbour committees
of th~ Orange County Philharmonic Society. .
Already attuned to preparations for the dual even~the Christ·
mas Boat Parade and the Cruise of l.Jghts-are committee members di·
reeled by chalrmen Mrs. James Thompson, parade, and Mrs .. l:.pujs yt.
Zimmerman, cruise. · .i . . -'
The first event will be a day para4e starting at 1 p.m. Saturday
Dec. 12. Two night parades will Ille place beginning at 6 p.J!I. Saturdaj .
and Sunday, Dec. lS. ')
Prizes· will be awarded for humor, theme and beauty wiih Jw{g.
Ing to be done from the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kriox. The re-
sults will be announced at the Huntington Harbour Beach ciub foUow-
·ing the Saturday night parade.
Layne Neugart, Harbour View School teacher, will award the
children's trophies, and among those invited to -serve as judges are
movie star June Allyson: Clarence Hall, superintendent of schools,
Ocean View School District; Rams player Myron Pottibs; ahd Dr. N6r·
man R. Stanger, Orange Cou nty director or vocational education.
"' Beginning Monday, Dec. 14, and continuing through Sunday,
.. Dec. 20, will be the Cruise of Lights.
Starting at /.v.m. and leaving every half })our thereafter .from
the Information" Center. 4211 Warner Ave., shore boat,, will accommo-
date more than iOo people on the 4S.minute tour through nine miles ot
holiday fantasyland created by brilliantly decorated houses and boats.
For the first time shore. boats Crom Doul? Bombard's Catalina
Cove and Camp Agency have been contributed for the cruise and will
provide good visibility, comfort and safety for the venture into fairy·
land .
. Tickets are $2 tOf adults and SO cents for children.
Reservations are not necessary, but those Who wish to assure
space for large groups may do so by sending reservations, accompanied
by a check. to the Huntington Harbour Philharmonic Committee, P.O.
Box 2032, Huntington Beach.
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DECK THE· HALLS AND YAWLS WITH HOLL YI
-Huntington Harbour residents ar~ll wrapped
• up in strings of Chrislmas lights and lher holiday
decorations as they begin preparatio for lhe Sym ..
phony of Lights.
•··
Sales Pitc.h Rings a · Discordant Note · fpr f Saddened Mother
•
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am glad you
printed the J"etlcr f~om the ~man who
had had a miscarriage at f1\'e month.~.
She urged you to educate tho ignorant
fools who ask embarrassing questions
(such as, "Was it a boy or a girl?"). Now
I hope you will print my lcfier.
J had a premature baby (seven
rl>n ths ) and she lived only 24 hours . Five
days after I returned from the hospilal. a
chj!:erful v<llce on the telephone con·
gY.tulatcd ·me on I.he new baby. The
f~owing day a photographer came to
Uj front door with a camera -he
wvited to t.ake pictures.
(!alls from Insurance companies, diaper
scifvices, baby furniture store.t and toy
cdinpanies drove me crazy. 1 was born~ ,
ANN LANDERS ~
barded by cHers for gifl5 ln the mail . t
became so depreued 1 could barely do
my housework.
I know these companies are trying to
get business, but why can't they at least'
check lo learn if the baby lived before
they begin to hound peop,le? Or belt~
yet, why aren't the hospital records kept
private? This le.1king of lltfotmalion
should be stopped. Get busy, Ann, there's
work to be done. -BEEN THERE, TOO
DEAR TOO: 1 •grte, but don't bl1~e
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tbe bMpltals. Tbey do not le1k lbe la-
for1n1t&on to commercial OJmpaales.
Births are a niatter of public record.
Anyo ne can get them.
• A check should be made to learn If
there is a baby in the llouse before the
prom~ten descesd. I&-c1n be done.
tactfully and lutcfully -and I 11l"oacly
recommend ll
DEAR READERS: Here Is a Confiden·
tlal to the hundreds who wrote ~ expreL
•
-. su(prlae. Or disappointment that l"Mn not (Mr•. A.) whom I've known for many
a t_hrlstlan: In a recent response t said, years, has been stulin& tbJngs oul of
''As a nonChrisUan who r e--0 e i v e 1 the homar: of her friends -mine Included.
thousands of Christmas cards every ye·ar At fll'lt I thought I must be i,m•gining
I do not resent the religious messages --things but now I'm cei:taln my lilspiclons
ete." 1 was disturbed by the number of are correct. Another woman in our club , ... ~-ha&'s,poken bl me 1bout thls friend also. reader! who don. t I ~w th~ are oJbet The items 'flfrs. A has 11£~ w~e not
.religions beside Christianity ind equate very valuable -tqe most .eosUy was 1
"nonCt\r'JsUan" with Communist. Alheist J,•lf of '20 earrinls. But I'm terribly
and AnUGod. My religious faith ~ U'psel because I believe.she Is sick and
Judaism, lhe basic concept o( wtiich Ls might get lnto serious troubli.
One. God. .,. My husband uys, "Keep quiet. Just ·
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My problem Is
loo hot to handle because of the aiu Of
this town and the prominence of the
person Involved. A very fine woman
lock up· things when the comes over." ·
This i pproa'ch might not be the act or
kindness he intends It to be. By ketplnl
aUent, t could be unwltUngly encouraging
her to continue 1tealin1. WW ~ou advlae
me? -CONCERNED FlllEND
DEAR CONCERNED1 Tdl 1M ,,._.;
at otce tklt )'ft 1re aware .r Mr eo•
pal1lon. Be 1utle ud IOll«aa&ory, Let
her bo" yoa believe she ii Ul ... ll
neec1-or Pi'Ofedlffiit:hlp. tatM meu;
Ume. keep Items tli1t mla:bt tempt. W
locked •P when 1be ll 1 pest ii ,...
llome.
Is aleobolism a di8eue t How can the
l'lcoboltc be treated? 11 there a curt?
Read · the *klet "Alcohollan -Hof>'I
and Relp,11 by Ann Landen. Encjnfi 35 ·
cents in O?in with )'OW' requeat and a
long. tta"'ll"<I. ·sell-addrmed envelope la
care ortbe DAILY PILOT.
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• Star ~ r ·rek Rev ~als · E.·.~t thly lnflu.enc ~
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By JOD!!AN HASTINGS ot , ... OtUY.l'MM ·111H
U she prepares 1 gourmet
' dinner with style and flair,
chances are she11 a Caneer.
Ubru are the peaCCmakens,
trying to bring harmony to the
universe.
"
exert Influence over people.
"When people art ignoiant
ol ~elhing lhey COf!demn it
because they don't under-
Nnd.'' he reasoned.
Before offering b r i e f
per90naUty sketches for each
sign he uplained that people
born on the ·cusp (when one
sign i1 coming in. and the other
leaving) will pick up qualities
of both.
•
people in this algn hlodtt It 11
Well as lihey hand)e all alt..
tions. Pra ctical ·and .
aellberate, they allo •re
lovers of beauty and will fW
their homes with art obje(U
as the late Wllllam R. Heant
did at San Simieon.
"A TaureBn will mull o•er a
subject bu.t Once ht bu mlldt
up his mind -lbat's it," .
claims Righter. ~ ·•
are •nallive,. Wjl.l'm and .,....uc .. anc1 ~ about tbe
home. Rlgbtei' esplalned that
lnvlrilhly u be ~ed a aoOc! ,
meal IDd di><;ttct, GUI the r
coot, the pel'IOO wu bora
under this sign: · ' cancer men wlie ~!"lleol
merclwidlaert UM ~
Field, H6c:t<!ellirl"U.. Wan-
·: namai.er. · -, ·, ~:
" ' the way Right« described -
·.Vireo . Pillow -fluflers,
lttll&hLenen and-t a b I e •
-<!lm«1, tMY wllll everythin(
petfect IDd can't 1tand to '" anything t.wf'Ong. ~
, IJ!ru lite to oee bQtb sides
to IUl)'lhlng, IDd u a· Libra'•
husband .lf" hit by a car •be
Jll1>babl1 _ ""'1ld ,raUonalqe
that the drivec1s wtfe had fix-
ed him a !>ad Pol of coffee that . .
...
These and other Insights into
persoqality a n d character
traits were disclosed by C1rp
roll RJghter when he spoke to
members of the Lido Isle
Woman's Club and their
guests.
The syndicated columnist
and asttoloeJan for many
celtbrilie. began his carter as
a lawyer from a family of
lawyers. • For 14 years he
. ttsearchid astrology trying to
"It Cilud be dynamite -likt
mixing nitroglyctrin ."
More people are born under
the slcn of Aries than a;iy
other but there aa,Jewer in
the Ha ll or Fanl'r"because,
although Arians like to jum p
in and do things, they don't
like to flDA9b What they start.
People born under tht aicn
or Gemini can do anythin1
which combines mental and
manual de:iterlty. They l'lllke
the best salesmen and are
quick at repartee. They like
short cuts, so I.hey never do
the same thin( twice in the
same way.
Leal tt$pO~mofe to pralae
than any other qn; and the
astrologer· ld.viHlt wt jn e n
with l.eO h'!'.binda ·~ ,lj_e·favljh
wl1" 'Colnp!lmtnti. lfy,er ~
. ty, Leos Are' Ver/ fciowiitc
"and have _tq hfft lflectlon.
• JnOn))ng. • ' Ttley like to Dalanc:e and
weigh and tben ·-dq. lfbat..,thtay
~ . .want to do, but· 1'ith chlrm, "magnetism 1i,.i hirmooy. u you aet 1n1o io argument wl.tJt a Scorpio, give ln1 arbitrate or get a lawyer,
Rf'1tttr.' advises. Forc~I and
~tive, they make ucellent
' . They lovl home 1"4 family
' . ,.
' . clisprvve ·that the planets did TillrUI attract; money, and Mooo children (Clncorianl)
more thail tllll, ti. the olber
ailnt acepl;~. ' " Antlaeptl< .... ~es!< WU
i Tapestries Enhance 'Noche'
' 1 Artist Mrs-Jo (Esther) Oendel, a member of Torana Art League dtsplays
! one of, the .league 's tapestries which will decorate the wall's of Villa del Sol in l , Fulle~n for.Santa Ana Ebell'1 Noche de las Estrellas party on Wednesday, • Nov. ~ . ...Spons~red by the Adrians Section and the league the event will bene-
; Iii lbe. H"lll.Ol'hilia ·Foundation of Orange County . • ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-: • i •
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No Stays 18_arred
AT
WiT'S
~END
" When I arrl>ed,-thero were
eiiJl.t·can tn bet drlvewa1, an
ovenrel&bt aalapenoriJn her
livin1 .room who whipped out
an order book and sold me an
Orthopedic corset.
"nlat was Annie's flrrt in 1
aeries of "home .parties."
Enc!)W'aaed by her, iuccess
(she rectlvff a Dannel Jam!
m.te pillow for her bed) ahe ...
Ukiah' Rites .
' .
' -.
'
generall .becau.. they too#
what they want In do and do
it. ..
SaJ11tlatl1n1 . are depeOO<nt .. beinJ-lad.,......t Direct,
blunt and-ollllpoten. tb•Y
· d-Oft•t • a .polal. And people
alwaya -where they stand with thole. born under this .. ' ,,ip:
. · Sagtttarianl usually have a
· dUfi<ult tline U theY continue
to llve near where they were ~ _ind be auQtst3 th•Y
would &et alq best it they
m<lVe far from tl\eir place of
bjrth ..
Scr1ppY CIJlri~ar • almost always co ative .
. 'Ibey like the alatus and
. Oon't lli.e change. '11W:y have •
flair for palltlca aod a great
underllal\dilll of wwld af.
fairS. President NiJ:on is a
Ca pricorn. Abo .more
Academy Award wlnners were
born under thia tban any other
aJin, 111"1ter claims. •
Aotloo is the key phr,.. ol
Aquariam who are outgoinc
and friendly.
"This age is the tune to do
what you want to do; get bu!y
and do it," he admonillhed .
Pisceans are the scrapbook
of the 1.0diac because they
contain element..· of all tht
other signs. They_ are Jn tune
with what's ioing on and have
a facility for reducing facts to
an e1aet formula. Many_
artists and business leadert
are born Wlder t.h1I tign m;
duding Einstein" and Nt)ln9y,
• J .-
Gift ld~s
Suggested
! !
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Iron c;urfa in Rises
Speaker Tours Russia
President
Honored Series-Beg ins Ho~iday . Cooking Tips
feoturing updoted Heriloge
recipie~ and th e ea sy elect ric
way -lo prepQre them . A tou.r of cathedrals, palaces
; -and galleritJI in Rutsia 11 well
: U I visit to 'the JCi"emlln is OD
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EY ES SOV IETS
o. w. Price
,
' r-,
A farewell luncheon will be
the agr;nda for members of staged by the Newport Harbor
the Laguna Beach Woman's E1changettes at 11 a.m.
Ck.lb 1t 7:38 p.m. on Thursday, Wednesday, Nov. JI, in honor
Nov. 19. of outgoing president Mrs.
0. W. Price, a former of· Jack Dalbey.
fic ial of the U.S. Veteran's MI'S'. Helen Keever will open
Administration, will present a her Balboa home for the ar-
alide lecture of hb tour last fair. Mn. Dalbey Is mo vine
summer which co .v er 1 with her family to Oahu,
Germany, Hungary 8 0 d Hawaii. She planned lo charter an Exchangettes Club there as
Russia, enUtled Llfe Behind an aul.iliary to a newly formed
the Iron CUrtain. E1chuge Club .
Included in the ta1k will be a1j0ii0iii0ii;i;;;;i0iii0iii0iii0iii0ii;;;;
description of the people,
economy and life under Com-
muniM rule as well as
numerous incidenLs he and his
wife Eliaabeth ·experienced
dwin& their visit.
Also on di.splay will be I by
10 pbotocraphJ in black and
white which Price bal tinted
ln oil.
Proceeds from the lecture,
which ls open to lhf: public at
a cost af II, will be used '1otl
new kKchen equipmtnl. ..
MAI. AlltlCHD
HEARING AIDS
c"""' ,...,., •"'ltlflcetlM ' ltO t Al P Ml!N
3409 E. COAST HWY.
CORONA DE L MAR
,., .. ,,.11tft!Ht
'75-3133
• An eight to t'en week series
for · expectut ~rents will
becin at 7:30 p.rl). ~ednesday:,
Nov. 11, In the , HunUnaton
Beach home of .Mn. Thomas Harris.. '
Preparina E z P e c t· a n I
Parents, a member group of
the lnternaijonol Childbirth
F.duca'tion '.'Asaocfallon. i s
1ponic;rin1 the .. n.. In tile
,Lamue method. ..
. · ~t1e nted by
;
';' Southern California Edi1on Co.
FASHION ISLAND HOUSE
·on the moll
1'_onight (Mond•y) Nov . 16 -7:30 P.M.
Tuesdoy Nov. 17-10:30 A. M.
-.. music
REE" CONDITIONING
TREATMENT
A,.i.111t-... ·-~ '"' ""' .... ~ ... _,,.
FALL PERM' SPECIAL ............ -....... , $845 . ..,....,., .... .,...... .
.......... 1
Crowning Glory
(fonnrrly caprice Colf!Url's), .
SOUTH COAST 'LAZA
lower l•w•l-Nt•+ +• Sttf9
,,. ,...... 546·7116
Opt11 Ev111i1191
I
267 r. 11tti sr.:cosr.t. MESA . ,....... 1••·••1• Opt" E"•"'"'' l Su~4•.,
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Foi~-·~~~ :Vall~y
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• • Today's Naf. l .... ~,. .
•
·.TEN ce{TS
. ~ -• ~ • ' 0 • f I !
Suits City Fae,~s; . . f· • ' ,.. .. ..... • •
' '
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Four claims for· loaea: and damages
totalllnpnore than 1100 mtlllqo were fU·
ed against the City cl HUDtin&1lin Beach
today,
' It wli the latest Alvo In the ~ltle
over pubHc ·access to the two and.Jhree.
quarter-Mlle HW'IUncton-Paclfic beach. ·.
1 • DAILY PILOT ltetr,.....
Tbe. c111ma wen 1ie1ng ruid tlijs .r.
temoon by. representatives of#tbe-HDD'
limif'"' Pacific Corp. Tbe city recently
lniUated legal proceeding, to .atabllah
public reCreallonal euemeats ' over the
beach • whlcb. e1tend> north. cl the
. 'GISLE R SCHOOL STUDENTS.WRAPPED UP~IN STUDY OF EGY PTIAN MUMMIES
_Hatsh'epsut, Yvette P11inka1, Cl901Ntr~ Tucher Collini and Nefertiti
~~~~~~~~~~~~ ' municipal pier to the city llmlts. .
Firemen Battle
'
Raging Blaze
Egypt ·studied-
In a preaa release; the HunUnaton
Paclfic Corp. -owned jointly-by the
Huntington Beach tlompany and Soothem
Paclflc --states that a-40-ytar old con-
tract between the parties ia aWl in force.
In the first claJm, damages of up to S5I
million are sought. This clairii is for the
clty'l alleged breacli of a 1932 contract
whJcb aroSe from a Superior c:owt judg·
ment Jri. Slul Diego County and which was
said to "have· settled a lawlutt rn wbleh.
the city claim~ 'similar elsements to
those aOught In the present llttgaUon.
In Southland
Pu pi~ Lear1t Pliaraoh' s Secrets
By TERliY COVILLE
' Of tM j 11tr Pli.t Iliff
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Th · I E · h Of 111,,.°"1,. P!Mt ,,.,1 e ancien gypuans were t e YlOrld"s
Containment by nighUall was predicte.d top morticians. :
today as an army or 3,300 firefighters Fqr instance, J;ben a pharaoh died they
closed in on the worst blaze in San put his biaiiis in a jar next to his tomb, Just ask cathy Traynor, 'she knows.
Bernardino County history, · with And so do moct or her 11 and 12-year-old
50,(l(IO.plus acreil seared and untold classmates ati:lisler Intermediate School
milliom in losses. 1 in • HunUngtoq. Beach.
The raging inferno 'whipped iilto ''1'1)1 teacijng these kids things about massive...pro~s· Friday by Santa Ana· Egjpt 1: •nefer 1et~ed until l was a
winds re~g !00 mlle.s ~r hour has freshman iltcollege," Ian Collins. Cathy's
destroyed :54 Domes and wtually "wiped 7:th · Vade ~'history teacher. explained.
out.. Uie> t1ny· ranch resort community of ''They ha-.:~ a much greater sophistica·
-11 tiori todayJ .• ""'°' f!Y.· ' r Gov. Ronald Reagan, declared the .area Carmen;. White, U, is fascinated with·
IocllJdjng once-lush Sin' Bernardino' Na· ~gyp~lan mies. "J never luiew they
Ilona! F....i lllldl a dli!astei area. ::_~'so , wra~. I '"""""f they i••I ~~·aaldlooly ,a leW'nlinor In·· ""-'lf°l!· , ai<Nnil·Old~s." ' Ju.ties have . ·been· ftported -and no ) <l:i · is winding up ·a ·obt-rhonlh study
dfaibf are~ ~in1 a campfu:e on ,.ncient zl>'P(-nie walls of his f~tbt~Beara~.~.·P!wt ~in .d':Uroom are~ behind piles of
a ~ of Jive others ln two·COWrt.1es. filiiabed proXcta ol such ancient items as
Joint lnv,estigauhll"'ltd· to~tlle arre..t ' a sµ.(got tall mummy, assorted smaller
Saturday ot Phillip Page, 44, Of S@l w8~. ba~es, py11aminda, models of
BemaroinO, wim ls helit witbollt bail pen· the;' , si\llPtUred heads cir Nefertiti
dins arraignment on arson charges.' , I!.~ -hangfug gardens of Babylon -
Authorities allege be set fires near with ~eal 'flower1 .
Reche Canyon . and ·toma. JJIDda, . wbicli "81-Wotkint W!th their bands ipd shar:·
burned more than 4 ooo acres ahd .three Ing Ule work witJi classmates, the kids en-
homes, while . othtr blazes were quickly jo)' tt more. It'a a ltude~t~rien4!d Je~on. spotted· and exiinf!llQl!ed' , • rither tban the old fashioned teacher lee· · · · .. ture:"""ColllDa·relited. .
Orahge ~t~ escaped .~. ra~ages ~r Collins bas :tak"en his kids, about 60 of
hl:!lllsb fire whipped by the~an8d Devil 1befri ' 1on an uhacrinative tour of Einmt Winc14:, after-cantellng all tline off -and . ' ' I f . • , ·-OJ' r
alertiDg·aH pm;oftnel•Fridaf. · ,. · .J' . · .
from aboul 3,4~8.C. up to the formation
of the early Civilizations in the Tigris·
Euphrates river valleys. ·
"We tie it in with English; religion,
writing, and ,studies of govel"Jlll)ent,"
Collins said Thursday. "Tomorrow the
kids will take a spelling test in Hebrew."
They also know the-alphabet in Sanscrit
and hieroglyphics.
Some of the projecta completed by
students sh"owed amazing detail ..
"Tu'o boys made. one pyramid 'from
4,500 sugar cubes," f:ollin.s commented.
"The center of it is ftoUow, ~t· they? bl.lilt
support beams inside to s~ It.
Then a 145-pound youhgster stood on it. It
survived." ·
Another youngster attached · a clay
sculpture Qf Hal.SbePsut ~·a f.a mo us
qu,... ,.-,t9 a .bricl<, l\"'!.lllinled..botl> fer a nlCe'bu!t'. ,,,, . ' ,""'if ' .. J. ":''.
A _hall-dozen young girls~~IOCIY
with their mothera• 1tyroipam wig Jorrns
and decorated the tilft' facts llke
Cleopatra. · • ,
Oi)e . kid . took 1 green .,cafpet samJile
from .bis dad, made a grass lawn of It
and ,co~tructed1he home: of an Egyptian
nobleman. He used bali'. dressing for the
b!Ue water Jn ~' J>Ol?I. .' ·
Building a bit of old Egypt wasn't
ehough 'for CollinS' kids/ ihl!y: also ·bad lo
explain everything they did to tQe whole
class. ' ' '
"We learned a lot,•• beamed Ronda
SpinaW. 12. "When you learn and have fun
it sinks in deeper."
In exchange for the Huntington Pacific
Corp. granting the city a permanent
recreational easement . over t h r e e
quarters or a mile of beach larKls south of
the pier, court recorcls .abow the Cit.y
agreed that it would be .. 'forever barred
and· enjoined from auertlng.any. furthe
right title or claim'~ to the beach north of
the pier, aCCOrding Jo the clalm.
William E. Foster, vkt president of
Huntlnjton Pacific, said, "by claiming an
interest In fhb proph;ty _for the second
Umc, th< city has {ailed to hooor tho
written contract it ·midt 1in' ltn.."
:1n,a ~.cl~ ·H~Pici!le ·
seek! another --mn"°* ~penaaUon ::~eel lnY'™ ~of 11!11 " .. A'he'~Uoft • ,. . 1111
cltf w <il~:i iali.n 11>" ~b ptOpeit, and ' that. tbe1:wwi1tt1
aliliild l!o ~ for lta lost!. '
A.~. "10,111 ii claimed. In
)
Higl~ Rise H.om e
For ~l.derly Set
For 8 each Appe al
. Th•y were geared"for a pos!iblio.rel""t . B. . a· . ·of Bu· ena Park. Gir· I pei:fqnna~ ¢' .the devastation re$ult1.irg'' . N y
fiom Coilnty' (ires 'flin.Ded b)r the aMqal , ' U
s.rita Ana onslaught in Octobei-. • • :. ·
Another full hou•e Is expected at the,
Huntington Beach City Council· session
toilight when the •ate of a high-rise borne
for the elderly wlll be on the line. •
A 17-story, 287-urilt tower planned by
the First Chriatian O!.urch on Adams
Avenli'e .neft 17th street was denied by
the plaMtna' commission ~2. san ·Bem.ardlno and ; ·R.:i'Ver'sf'cfe
firefighters were rapidly enclosing the E. · · d M d p _, , "I)· 'd
worst• of the weekend btaus "1rich· oun . ur e1· ro ' e eniptedt.at the east end of Big Bear'Lakt, ·1 _ .i ' · ~ ~. ,
Thal decblon has been appealed by the
architect, Wllltanr Blw.ck of ~ clel
Mar,. who cmsidera that the. '1weU plan·
ned project, wlll 'llll .the: si>ecl~l ne<ds cl
se-.flor citizens of, the community.'' with 65 percent rontained by mid-Oay. • ·
· ;,We were' really he1~· by 1' .end of , I
the· Sanfa .An3s· and the fact iH8t the Aided by Identification or a partially
fOrwird ~ge of the ,fire b,urned ftito the deco'mposed body ·foUnd in. thick brush
flat area; wh.ere we could move in trucks n~ar Buf:na Patk, Orange · County Sher·
and matipowet," Said U.S. Forest Service lff'! iny~tlgafurs today stepped up their
infOrrDatlori Officer Bill Makel . inquiries into what they beheve is a case
-A fli"ebtealE' caused by the Rim of the of-'niflrdlr.. • ,.,
World Highwi}o also helped conlaln the Docuriients found on the victim 's re-
names, he added. ' mains ~lped,oflicers to identify the dead
Hundreds of persons, were ,evacuated girl as VW Lynn Miner, 16, of Buena
(See 1lLAZ'3, fage 21 Park,. ~fiss Miner's pareflts listed her u
. . ' ' Y.alley FliWride
Gro up Steps ·v p -
Petition R:risli '" . . . .
misSftig last Oct. 31.
rnftstigaton today continued their ex-
• amination of -the brush.covered gully in
which tbe body was fowld. Saturday by
·chlldren jilaying in the atta. The
youngsters uncovered ~'iu Miner's re-
maiN. .
Coroner's Investigators have determln.
ed that the Buena Park High School girl
dieil from a blow to the back of lbe bead
which fractured her skull. They believe Thi appeal ls to"gi-int an efupl.lon for
tqat she d1ed · af about the time ~f her t!,le ~lgfi.~ c!_evel~meflt •. ~~mtlar ~·the
·disappearance. Bel.fie! Towers in Co.stalft:es~. add·reduce
Investigators are ~orki ihe theory the required off.street parking.
that Miss Miner was e at another Jn rejecting the project, four P!annlng
location and her brought to ·the • commissioners argued that the hf~h--rlse
E >"': structure would be inconsistent with the mery Street gully .by c~. The body was residential nefghOOrhood and. stiled.that
cJwnped face down-tn thick brush. ' the applicants had failed to demonstra~
' a hardship.
T P • h' • Q · )' Rollo West, .chalmwt cl the First WO erIS ill Uakc Christian Towen by·the S.a Corporatloll,
tw tndlci~ that he may 1trul to the
TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) -Two council tonlgtit thal lhe city· hU "?'yet
persons were killed a~ tw:o were injured· designated a high rise aone. ' ·
by falllrlg stones 9.na cnnTibllng walls in That ... one of .everal hiiash!ps ac-
an earthquake in Formosa's east coast cepted by u.e, planning a>rnm~~ ·and
city or Taitung, police reported Sunday: council ~ granting an exce~ recently
The Formosan Weather Bureau said the for the SunHt Bay Project. Which in-
epicenter was at sea, about 2 miles eludes '° 11-ltory tOwer aM 11-story
northeut· of Taitung, Saturday afternoon. hotel, near Hunttncton Harboaf.
Anti-fluoride· residents· oJ Fountain
Valley are trying to beat the Chri!lmas
ruall. with their petitions.se41Ung a vote
oiih nuoridatJon of city water'. L'AI,legro Mazatlan Winner
'·
"tie have 800 signatures now,". Ge<1rge
Lindegren, leader o{ the petition dri.ve,
slid this morning. "We 'hoPi to liave the
necessary 2,200 by Dec.· 1, before
evftYone ge\J. ~. ~1µ. Olrlitnl!'~· '' l.4ndegreR' 1nd ·im supporters hope to for# clty of"9als 1pto calling •n el(!Cf.lon
Class: D .Cra ft Scores as Fic'kle Wi'nds Mar .Race
Oll.:ihe fluoHde lliue. 'rbe .city council By ALMON• LOCKABEY
Qlled to ftoorl~ citY~'!'iter June 2 DllllY '"" klflllt ••tw all. .listening to arglU'()enls f\)I' and MAZATLAN -F.luky wtnd5 ln t be
aplnst IL , • · Gull of Ca~ornla ·comptetely turned the
J'lDorlde has .not yet ~rl p,laced in ."1e . Los 'Angt1es to MaiaUan yacbt race
cilr water,· btlt I\ will _lie jn "the neat_ arouOdJn the final 200-mll•Jq Saturday. r"Uiiit. ~ . . . Overall and C1ass 0 corrteled time
'!Tht.re art about 12,000 registered •imt:r was one of the smallest entrle, in .
v<Mrs in the dty." Llndegre.n explained: the race. L'Megrg, a Cal-31" owned and.
"Wt need the s.lgnatur• of 15 percent of skippered by Rodetk.k Park of Richmond
thtm plus y..e want more in Case some Yacht Cklb. ate ~IUled." •• The barMlwrltlJJ& on the wall was seen
Liildelren aloo said h~ youtd race !be by ilayJtght Saturday when a brisk wind
cl\Y ""1Jldl Tuesday nlgltl to follow up wblolled 0¥£ ofthO nortllwest to dOUSe the
talf ,..week's challenge when he asked hol)el of the early leaden, KJaloa 11,
u..,. to produe< <.Pl>bltsbed proof that ~· ~ Warrior· and Novla clet
fluoride Ii .. re. • Mar, lhe liist five boata to lln~h. '
•
•
"Some of those Oass D boats actuaUy
lTOSled the gulf in less· time · than we
did," said John 'B. Kilroy, owner of
Klaloa n.
Kloloa had drllttd ..,.... Uie finish line
to be-the.Jlm-ylcht to~flnllb~about 2,.15
a.m:Saturday. oru, tft bOuri behind her·
.came BJU Wlbon'a.JWcal from Santa Barbara~ foilowed nearly an hour later by
John Mcintire in Baruna.
-· Al"'Cas.sel's 50-loot sloop, Warrior from
Bahta Corinthian Yacht Club finished (ln\y
20 mlnutea betliru:t .Baruna, "'and JOhn
Scripp.f'f9.root ketch NO\lla del Mar, Sin
Diego Yacht Club, the scratch ~t m tbe
Oeot • .., qnly a few mlnates be\Wld btr:
Ed SUnbtrt'1 Class C Yacltt Su n-
. l
datlcer was the Urat to wipe out the Cla!I
A fleet when she·waa the .eventh bOat \o
finish. But oMdJd· not rematt) at tbe top
of the handicap standings for long. Barty
Berkua' intrepid, ' Cius D entry, was
the nest P<>at to rtnl•h and looked. lw an
the world like a winner. .
:rhen camt L'Allegro with a corrected
Umt that wu·not;,o be beatfJl.
Such are the. fo.rtune. or misforhanet of-
yacht radng. F\JI" 'the lint 0,,... days
1from the Nov. 7 start it appeared to be a
,Cla119 A nee with Klaloi n havt.Jnc a·lbot
at tile elape<d um. record. · .
Then came tht aoft air "'81' cape $an
Lllca wltll the 1 .. dm..belng 1tallea' and
(See MAZATLAN, Pase I) •. ·:
.
. . • ~.: ~ 111',:'f-r ; .• ...,,~ Crowned · . . ;·~:. · l -: ).' t ....... .
Edison. High 'School ~oed Candy .Appe}.J71 i.'Uie,lfuiitl.,~n Beach.'
school's-'119;70 homepomiJ1g queen. She was cro'fn,ed during .ceremOrJ..
les Satlitday·at EHlson·Fountaln Valley :tootballtgatn~ . .Her clumna prove~ lucky for €hargersj who defeated Fountain· iyidley-~Baron1 1?"
lrvineLeague.crown.: '. · .. : ·. ·' , • ._r· ..>< • .
' . t. ,.. . . . .. '' . '
TwO. Newport P.olic~~¢n
. .
Wounde'd in T1·ailer. Park.
· ·lly·JOANNE RE\'NOLDI.
.. • Of ""''Dllllt' P.:lwt .. .,... . · i\ · 6t·ytar~ld man 1is ' facirJg , ar-
raigpQ,ent ·~y on chargu of attempted
milrt:ter 1 an.er . assertedly wounding two
Newport Beach ofllct.ts·Satbrda)i:fu What '
has Deen dtsCrlbed' u . the ·worst. ahOoting ,
in' the history of the ~ent. 1 • ••
In custody 1nJ;ew119nS.~ltclt.Y Jfll ta .
Atlhur Lanlbett, a n!sklent ot"the Dunea
Trailer Part who 11.sta 'occuptit!On _u '
.sonsu1un,'erigtpffr.·flt ,1S sll~ ~ ap'.-,
peJt In the ·Harbor Judicial Diltilct court
this afternoon. • , • ·
Officer Jartes <iardlner, 22, l&'llsted in .
fair condition following ,ab do !Ti In.a I
sury.en_ dur:tng which a kidney ,,.as · removiid, Off~ Jom Etllnglwri, :1, Is
a&o in fair ~ after he wU' 1ftlUJl.
ed 1n· the rigHt !hip. Both' tin in ~ Memorll.f Hofpltal. ' ' . '
The lilcldent was · apparentfy • -.bd
when the two patrolmen sioppH·Lan\tiei1 '
at his trailer. He reportridly wu ·~
drivln1 .irralically, down Paclllc eoa,i..
Hlthway. · , • •. ~ • ·
As tile two· taJl(ed to the s~,'Jrior'
to administerh)a: a. fii!ld sobriety exam,.
he alle'gedlf pallf!d out. a \.15-CaUbitr
automadc and shot Gardiner " in \}le' stoma~-. ElllP.,m 1 aue,~y '!'~ fhqt whU• wrtotllng. tambeJ'l,IAJ Ille ;riiupd .•.
The° ·~ting WU, 1 WilJ\esied J>y '.
Lambert"• ·wlfe and two,.~tl from 1
Newpo,rt itarliOr n;,ii ~ wli<t~wen • pirlic~Ung In a ride -.i'i*oidrP. .
The two glrla """' In a 111lt drlytft "bji·
patrolman Tom S!nllh. The)ilhacf 6rflvid '
a> the _. jlriOr to ihe"~lbllf.·~'!he . •
students "'!lid obierve ,wlift: 01Si!lllfl
tlioitghl·Would be a rooUne drunk !lflvlltl test." ~. ·.,~·
Neither or the two studeftts Were in-
jured and It w11 Smit!' who ;wu finally
able to subdue Lambert. ..
Questlorr<d ,atterwanj aboul" ll>Olr ,.....
~en to the aliootlngs, lbe girls ~Id Ibey
"didn't like ·I~" btlt we're .pl)l)CIPll)llcat
1·1 iue• Ji CO¥Jdn't be ~lpedt'' one~ r
m~p~r*a . wound ,;,;,Ito Ie.riou. ,thlt ~
" ...
' . c:.uc . . '
·I
I ' ;.::;._:,tt.: .• • , ., I
! :·'.' .. -~~1 ;..1.,.()·'-.f \ t It'll be °"""' .bJ a Pl 14 de-
grees .,. .. the -~.with
loc;al len)per• ....... ' """"'la( ,. '
littgn8•imd· ·the lnJOM mttClll')'
soartng ·to lbe '~mark. t •
t JNSUIE''{GDAY
,r .
l Upward.I of JOO,OOll. Pold1tm1o
b · "10!/•"be d<ad· ip· ·a ;dubl '
J disa1ttr of cyelou\ Ond ~ tidol
• ~vt' 19hich rapkl ,with '. qa,
.., .oqrtt ... ll"Olocot4fC.S of aU t""'4
1Pllge · 4. • I
1 c.....,,., • 111'"1111e ~ ,.
CIMdllli Ult 11 ~ '" It I C ....... twt ................ I c..m.... ~ 11 •• or.-"-tY tt ~ ,, ..,,.. ,.,.., ,.
Dala ...... " ._,., • • .... ,
DI--! 11 • Sfdl ~ t•1t I ............. .,...,.. ' "' t·-· 71 I I~ .,, />"""""' ,_ U I ....... -, .. , ........ , l ,. ·~ .... •. ,.~ ...... ... .., ~~ , . .....,. __ "·
~ .. ' . . ., ,,. . . ,.._ '
.t ·1
-.
' '
•
•
\
'
' .
...
~ DAil Y lllLOT "
Marine, 29_, .
Arrested
In Knifings
A ,..., Clmp hndlolotl Mlrloo -boiJ11 beld Oii felony uuult clwil• to-
C!ay In two separoto knlle 1ttacko on
women in San Cltn'lerite Sundty -one of
wblch result.<! In mln6r knife woundl lo 1
oailor deltodJnl ..,. of tbe Vlclhnl.
~ Pollco·ometed Guy Fronk SU•. 21,
a .. r Ibo patlt!Of lot et tbe munlctpal pier
a few nUnut.es after the aecood attack.
1be youth was booJctd on SWJpklon of
assault with a deadly weapon .
'Ille -lint lncldeot occvrr<d at tbe
'l'rlfllJll' bolch.1t 5:4t p.m. u Robtri
Ollrln JtlDtr, I allor lbolJ'd Ibo IJSS
I.anon, WU pripltloi to l ... e tbe bud>
Wltb bll companion, Ano Corel Hely, Ii,
of 11111 Dteco. •
Offlcm Ill<! lbe 1111Jlut no up
beblod the· ·""'Pl• Ind btudlabod 1
IWilcllblode -· llto"'l'llnl lo -it tbe-.
· !!mu, :18, told poliee he be110 !!Piing
wttb, Ibo· 1111n Ind oulfored 1 out 11111 In
tbe itnlQ!e. 'Ille .•••Jl•nl lben fled· -Ibo Slnto Fe rolirood ·1rac1u1. ·
About Ill bour lltor C&mil1I J-of w Ciiio Vlclorla; .... tUlDa •• ...,.ig
WilJk lf<lll Clllt flllllo Blrberl -I 111111 IDltcblni tbe dolcrlpUon ., tbe •••'11nt In the tint lmlllq, Jouocl up -··
Market Oerlc
Held Up Agidn
A Colla Mee1 -tin, rol>bod-
..t -..,. • -wbo dt-4 ltll "'" Ind lllllled bll ...,.., Cir,·--up ... Frldly -~ bat Ulla -at 1 diffenat lttn.
Jolm I!:. v...-, .. oltly 11 lbe 'Ile
Toe llortet It 1111 Po!llCIOI Ave., ltlodod om"-llQ lo I beuded bondlf vmoef with • --bomlled ........... dor· rinc•.
Vot100I< llld Ibo Ill!, lllfry4IC<ld mu
Wll -ely Cl!m Ind didn't ""'"" lo bo blP on dnlp, lftl'!Otbl1 pllllltJJ lbe Job duolto Ibo preMnCe of a IDlle lbop-
per In tlio -ol Ibo !llcn. Ho wu vlctlmlaed toct11Uy at a 'Ile
Toe llortet II Ill Del 1111' A ... , bat -
-Ibo Frldly --the boodlt'• bumblln( led lo anal of a ....,.a _,.
Ibo-.
Bandit Suspect
ehot by Police -= omca o1iot • butllarY wv 11111 montlnl. The ~ aDd allepd &CCOlllJlll<e. Wire c.tp!Ured. .
1'11 wounded mao, Groot I!:. M6yer, 13,
ol Santa Anl, "" !lit by -lihotaun pellet! ,as he Ded tbe Piggy Bani: 6oin
Shop, 1111 Brillo! SL He Is reported In
oatllfaclory coodltloo al Or&DI• County
Medical Ceotor. ·
omc:er .Cbarlel Kolodzoy c.tUed to
Moyer lo llop oeverll Uma lflei' tbt
IUSptd •mashed lhrooab • window lo ''* out ol tbe shop. lntklt, ollleero llld tboY
found Winton L. Worley, 23, hldin& in a ,...trcom,
Seal Beach Freeway
Hearing Scheduled
Stal Beach resldenll will hive a <bloc•
lo SOllDd off about the propoaed Seal
Buch Boulevard freewty intuchanae
next Thundoy.
A meellnl bit -lcheduled for 7,30 p.m. 1t Hop-n llchoo~ Loi Alam!,..,
lo <Onllder dOl!gn propolll>.
The lotereba!ll• irould oonooet Ibo
Boulovltd wttb the SID Dloao FretWay
(lnlotlloto Roule IOI).
DAILY PILOT
OltANIJ COAIT llV•LISH/JtO COll\PAMY
R•~rt N. Wtt4
DAIL'I" l'ILOT""" W • ._,.. """"' PILLOW OFl'ICIRJ QUISTION WOUNDED NEWPORT PATROLMAN Sfl. Rlcliord Miiier ·(loft), Dot. Ch1rle1 Wllkent0n, Elllnth1m . '
Fro111 Page~-
POLICEMEN SHOT .••
lodoy lo lair. He Is In the ltlteDJlw c.tte
111111: '
l!:!llqblm WU taJten lo Ibo bolpltol I
ftw mlnutel later bJ ambulance.
Gardiner, who Uves in Newport, bu
been a Ql.tmber of the police force slnc:e
JenUll'Y of Ible year. A 1taduoto ol Cal
Stoto Loq Boa•b, he holds a BA In
crbninolQIY. Erunpam 11 a ~wo year
veteran of the force and Uva In Costa
Ilea Both men ore alnflo.
The lul time . a Newport patrolmin
WU sbot lo tbe line of duty WU In l!ISS
when Officer William Talbot wu 1bot In
the blDd by • nee1n1 MpeCt on Lido
lit<.
Saturday aig!Jfs sbootln1. wblcb !>et. Set. Ken T!JompsOD c.tlled Ibo wont In
Ibo blllory ol tbe depatlmea~ nmalned
lioexplalnod lodoy.
Lmberl "aJJeaodl)' told ThomPIOD flt•
elflcen apptOICbld bim In I meDICloi manner. _
lovatlpt«s llld oellbet EJllDibam
Mr Gltdlner drew their .... durtoa tbe
-Smllll llld be loOlc bll oul when be beard Ibo lbota,flred. but put It ... .,
-be oaw l!:Wli8ham lfapplln(. with Llmbotl.
Tbt gr•y·hltred tu1P8Ct aleo npOrtedly
told suipectl he had been at Ber'kabire'1
end tbe Dry Dock before belna slopped
by tbt officer~.
From Page I
BLAZES ••.
from cabins and penne.nent homes in the
mounlainoua areas I n c I u d i n g aim-.
1!1UD111e1 ol Arr.,.h.r, RlllUllnp Spri!1p
Amllway Park and Smiley.
The latter -with a population or 120
persons -suffered 49 homes lost, while
flame• approached thi! San Bernardino ,
,.city limits once.
Whipped by winds peaking at 100 miles
per hour in certain gusts, the names were
first 'spotted by Mary Jo ClaUS3en, 27,
from ber fire lookout tower.
She said the howling wind!: blew open a
window In her 12-aquare-foot tower atop a
P.fnnacle of rockl on' an 8,537·foot peak.
0 1 IC1l up to cloH It and, jw:t by second
111.ture, took a look ·around,'' said Mrs. a. .....
"And tltere It wa1. 11 wasn't crackl· fnl. It "" a rumble, Uke the rumble 0(
an urthquake."
Mrs. Lambert, who ha<.! come out of the
tralle.r while the offlcers questioned her
huiband and who wu present during the
~s. was held for ques\ioning by ln·
ves~s, but was later releued.
Stuaent Veterans
Send Christmas
Trees to Vietnam
Five Vietnam veterans tu r n e d
Fullerton Junior College students have
p°monally seen to it that acme of the
troops tn Soutbeaat Mia have an old-
fuhioned Christmu tree for the
holidays.
The five, Jlooa Allaa, Jim Wadlelab,
Glen Ullom, Bob Splrka and F JC Student
Body President Dan Frttland, 1pent the
weekend in Libby, Wyo_.1_ •rr'111ing
purchase and shipment of 300 Chrlltmas
trees to outposts and headquarters all
over Vietnam.
They said they wanted to show Prest.
dent Nixon that etillege s tu d e n t s
throughout the nation support hls Aelan
policies.
Allan added, "We know w h a t
Christm1s In Vietnam away from your
1ovtd ones i! like for those 13-yearo()Jd
kids.''
The trees will go by truck to Seattle,
Wash., and then to Vietnam via Anny
Trwport.
From P .. e I
MAZATLAN. ••
the small light boat! bt!Dglna up tbe wind
from uttrn.
Even the wind& in the gulf etiMived to
make it a small boa\ r,aee. All of the
veterans who went by past experience in
rounding the cape and aoing north to pick
up the northerly winda: were fruatrated.
Those which struck out acros1 the fUlf
from the cape encountered first a brisk
5oulberly whlch later turned into a
northerly and held all the way across.
Q\terall and corrected Ume winner&:
I. L' Allegro
2. Intrepid ~
S. Ana Nuevo, RDUe Qooker, San F'r1n-
clsoo
.,..llMM "" .......
• J•clr: R. Curley Yb,,. ........ ~""-
TliH111 ICMTll
1 Trucks and men were en fOllle tb the
/ isolated arta within five minutes after
btr radio dllpa!cl> of lbe alarm.
4. Malobl, Skip Jordon, Callfomla Yacht Club
5. Whimsey n. HUlb Roaers. LA YC
6. Tobuco, George Grillltb. LA YC . .. , ..
l\e1t111 A. M.,,111 ..
"'""''" lfliW Al111 DJr~h1
W.1Df'lllff~Mltw
Albert W, 11111 _.,._
"""""'"' --17171 ..... 1tw1 ... n1
M1lli111 Mir"'' P.O. lu Jto, f1Mt --,,_._.,,,,_._
C0.19 M .. 1 »o W.t a.y •tt•t ~htd'llQllW.!lllMI~
"" (lillMftltl .. Hetlll 11 Clmlllt ....
•
•
Autborttlu we.re optlmiaUc today that
1 roaming htrd of extremely rare
Btchom hOlp .,..ped horm In another
a,ooo..aae flre, halttd be.fore it reached
their breedloi rrow11ls In Ibo cu • .,...,.
WUdemoao Area.
Pet Hospiwl Hit
By Mesa Thief
A druc uaer apparently hard up for 1
hypo tit ud tbe chemlclll ht lnjtcl!
buralll'lled a Coal! Meoa pet holpltol
over the weekenct, poliei! 11ld tod1y.
. l!:m_ployt llobert L. Malone 11ld 100
l'lypodlrmlc needles and bottlu of
motphlM and dtmcrol worth Ill -· taken from the Baker Brl1tol Ptt
llololtol, 2t7I Btlllol St., on Saturday.
whoevtr looted t"o oper1Uni rooms brob a lock on a 1ide door to 1a1n enlr)',
iavntJiaiora aald.
Bootten Will Meet
B1n4 booltm ol Hunttnrton S-h mp School· bave 1rheduled a meeUria for
7:!0 p.m. Wodnosday In Ibo band room,
Roll Wald, ptelldeot, IJ1DO\meed todllj' • •
I
7. MelUmi, Wiliam Jonas, San Frltl-
clsco
8. Perl-W. V. Wrlabt, lil!YC
9. Ariana , George Thorson, LAYC
10. Red Head, Larry M1io, San Diego
Class A
l. Capricloua II, Ben Williams.,LA YC
2. Malaguena, Bill Ravencraft, Santa
Barbara Yacht Club
3. Vector It, Her~ JohtllOn, San Diego
Yacht Club
4. Warrior
5. Rascal.
aass B
I. SUndancer
2. Blut Norther, Bill Sullivan. LAYC
3. Encore. Fred MacDonald, LA YC
4. Type. l.Jowellyn Bl•by, Looi Beach
Yocht Club
5. Mlcbtllt, YID Capelo, Suttle Yacht
Club
Cl111 C
I. T1buoo, G<orge GrUfil!i. LA YC
2. Ari1na .
I. Rod Head
4. Rnolute, Warren We1ttrboff. Sin
Francltco Vichi C...b
5. Vlvolll, Motl Huken, LBYC
CIHID
I. L'All'IJ'O
1. Intrepid n
!. Anl•Nuevo
t M1lobl
5. Meltlml
)'
2 Shot in-·Raid -Error ·
Police, lnnocf)nt Homeowner Sh,oot i~ ·out
PllOINJX, Ario. (AP) -Non:otk:a -ool Ind Ml'. ud Mn. Loallli W111 Wb.en . l!ie pollc( broke In. Mr• We1t · diiitactkw. rUdinc Wb:at they fh<>ll&bt wu . moved bf. acrwned and htr hual:Jlnd grabbed a .ri -
a ,htoo&t ~acbanged lbOts _~lj ·· At1:30 a.m. Sun-. police ftflt Iii the n. and fired several shots .. J?ete<:Uve
SundiY nt•ht with rttklenta of the houM ·"' b>ule, r.111""'1.... a "no-knock" starch H1rry Burke. 31. fired beck. h1tLing w:est ' ,... ~ ·" u.. . In ... Ide Mn west then took the r1ne who hid Just moved in. The man of the warrant which would have . penrutted wi~ s · B ·k ho waa hit and lost bouH and one poUceman were injured. them to enter without warnlng. and fll'ed at ur e, w
Police gave this ~t: · · But the plalnclothea dttecUves knocked two flngers11·. r ally convinced the
For several weeka, a holllt 1n the iut anyw1y .and told Mr1 WtJti wM Othtt o 1ctrs tn
Phoefti.I aect1on had beeri u ad e.r ,.,.ertd Jbe door, they w"ere )Olieem'en. Wt&ts the intruder• ~ere police. milun-
eutVtliluee 11 a poulble bl!ll«tl -. Set. Ken Sttlcklaod llld tlie-womu ,a~ Slrkkland ~· lt 1 w~ob~bly (tit
c1rup w1r1 belnl llled. · . ~ooll,Y d1d a6t !JOlltve Ibo detecUve1. derll!odloidef di °"'!le~ borne qllnlt Tlio IUMUlance 1DOll'Ol1lly 'lfHl'I . ilJ!liottllt they obowed .: bld(e.-fl"I Ill Ibey were en ll(tb off I thoulbt
several day• aao u olf!Oen. ~.~· 4' °*' oo ~ ... thfnkinc thfx. ~ iome hippies ~d e c:rh': It.,
maire lhelr·move. Meaottnio , Ill!> b1PPJet ~ hlwlei . Ibey were lllhlinC '°me ' · . .. ,.
Soldier Dies
In Gun Battle
WithLawnwn
NORFOLK, _Ya. (AP) -A 2'1-year-old
Army enllst.d m111, under treatment for
battle fatigue after aervlce in Vietnam,
wu fatally obot eorly lod1y In a gunfight
with Norfolk pollce.
Autbotlties aaJd Joseph James O'Brien
appartr1Uy took bl.I own lift w)len officers
fired tear gu into an 1partment where
the soldier had held 1 youna: couple cap-
tive.
About 30 armed Officers convera:ed
outside the apartment of Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Hernandez, to which police said
O'Brien had gone al the climax of a
ehooting spree Iba! bepa Swlday oigbt
when he ar111ed wllb bll litl friend.
Mrs. Hernandez had spread the alarm
after escaping the apartment by making
a ladder of tied-together bedsheets and
lowering herself to the ground lrom a
5econd·fioor bedroom while Hernandez, a
Marine, engaged O'Brien in conver5ation.
Police said O'Brien, an ou~titnt at
Portsmouth Naval Hotpitll; Went to the
home of his girl friend -Judy Hinton, 18
-late Sunday night alter tel.ling her he
would "get" her. They 11id he was arm-
ed with an Army MIS rifle.
The Hinton girl had fled . Police said
O'Brien shot the family dog in the
backyard, shot a lock of{ a door and then
shot up the inside of the house. The girl's
parents, Mr. and Mn. Richard L. Hinton,
were unharmed.
Police said O'Brien then went to the
Hernandez 1partment "and uked for
tran1portaUon." threatening the couple
with the rlfle. Hernandei' automobile w1s
in a repair ahop.
Hernandez told officers O'Bri~ "calm·
ed\down" when told that Hernandez was
a Marine, but became excited anew when
police converged out!ide the apartment
after Mrs. He.maiidez' escape.
Police said O'Brien began firing from a
window and put two bullets into the first
police ca r to arrive, narrowly missing
two officers inside. During the ei·
citement, Hernandez fled the aparbnent.
When police demanded that O'Brien
come out, they were met with a bail of
heavy automatic gunfire. After about an.
hour, they fired tear gu into ~ apart-
ment, heard • one more shot -then
silence.
When they entered the apartment,
O'Brien lay d'ad on the floor, the muule
of his rifle at his head. Politi! uid be wu
not killed by a police bullet. ·
COUNT SHOWS
HARTKE WINS
INDIANAPOLIS . Ind. (AP) -The ol-
fieial certification of complete returns
from the Nov. 3 general election showed
today that Demoaatic Sen. Vapce Hartke
fin ished , ahead of Republican J\icha.rd
Roudebulh by 4,338 votes.
But a recount seemed almOl!t a ett·
tiinty. " •· i
• ~eDuck Congress Meet
Co~venes; Faces Conflict ,
W ASlllNGTON <-¥°> -Co n g re 11
reconvened ,today In the lame duck in·
ata.llment of1an et9ctton-year 1essloo oiie
Senate leader called unendtnr, and found
political controVer1y waiting •.
Sen. Mike Maiiafleld of Monlina, the
majority leader, accused Republican
campa.i~s of personal viUficaUon, and
"political sllcksterlsm .''
Senate Republican . Leader Hugh Scott
of PeMSylvania said the lame duck
meeting "will be an unmitigated
dlsuter," marked by politicking and the
promotion of pet projects.
The calendar is crowded, and time is
short -althoogb Mansfield said he
could not gueas when the 1ession will
finally adjourn. · ,
Democratic sen1tor1 caucused and
agreed that there should be an attempt
before Tha.i.ksgiving to override Presi-
dent Nixon's veto of a bill ta sharply
restrict campaign spending on rad.lo and
television. '
Mansfield said farm legl!Jation, stalled
before the elections, will wait until later
in the week. He added that the Senate
definitely will vote on President Nixon's
welfare reform proposals.
Scott lffsCOunted Mansfield '& 1ttack on
Republican campaign tactics.
"Thoae are political purely, they are
ritual and required,'' he said. "In due
time, I'll make the same kind of
5tatements."
Aiansfield and Scott agretd that the
November·Oecember 1 am e duck meet-
ing should be treated as a c I e a. 11 u p
liessioo, handling.only appropriaUont and
other absolute necessities before ad·
jouming.
In fact, Scott. said, the: adminiJtr1tion
will be in a stronger position, parUcularly
on defense and foreign affairs, in the new
92nd Congress, due to conve!lfl on Jan. (,
He 54.id controversl1l issues not now
ready fer action should wait unUI thtn.
Scott II.id hi& judgment of the lime
Beach Brownies
Vow Cleanliness
At Central Park
Fifteen ·Brownie:1, Troop 708 of Hun-
tington Beach, have "adopted'' part of
tbe 147-acre Central Park with the aoal of
keeping it free of litter.
'I1le area the Brownies will clean la: ~
eucalyptua: grove 1t the north end of Lak.e
Talbert. The troop·s first cle111up day will
be Wednesday with the youngsters plan-
ning to work from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
pataing for a cook-out lunch.
Mrs . Thomas Peale. an a11lstant troop
leader, said th1t M1yor Donald Shipley
and other civic officials have been invited
to the lunch.
"The Brownlts lntend to work one day
every month to keep this atretcb clean,''
she e:rplalned.
duck meeting hasn 't changed smce elec·
tion day:
"I think ,it will be 1n ur:mit11ated
disaster,· aside from the necessity of get-
ting appropriations bills through.''
Scott also said he expect& lo hold onto
his job 1s Republican leader when the
new Congre&B meets. "l have more than
ample assurances that i'll be able t.o con•
tinue ta do my job in January," he l;lld.
He said that includ~ word from Nixon
that he is satisfied with Scott's
performance.
Sen. Robert C. Byrd ID-W.Va.),
sidestepped questions about tht prospect
he might ChaJlenge Sen. Edward M. Ken·
ne<fy CD-Mass.), for the post of majority
whip in January. He 51.id that was
premature.
"I will run , and I intend lo win,'' r;aid
Kennedy.
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie <D-P.faJ.nel, 1
leading prospect for his party's presiden·
tial nomination in 1972, r;aid he would like
a seat on the Senate Fnreign Rtlations
Committee in the new Congress.
Mansfield's atlack on Republican cam-
paign techniques seemed directed al
President Ni,;on and Vice President Spiro
T. Agnew, since they Jed the battle for
tbe GOP.
Serigraphs Set
At Golden West
An txhibit of optic.al art serigraphs
from the personal collection of Los
Angeles pa inter Rene Parola go on ez.
hibit ne:1t week 1t Golden \\'est College:.
The show begins Monday 1n the: college
•library and continues through Dec. 18
during regular library houri;.
Parola. an art and design te.ach11r In
Loi ·Angeles City Schools, spttializts in
hard edge shaped canvases and optical
art serigraphs. His works ha ve: been ~hi
ited in umerous loc1l and nstion~I
5hows.
Comedy Play Slated
In Fountain Valley
Founlaln Vllley Hilh School students
will present the comedy "You Can't Take
It With You" from lbur.sday tbrooah
Saturday in the acbool's theater·in-the-round. ·
Admission prices are Sl.~ for adult.s
and $1 for student! with klentilicatioa..
CUrtaln time for each showing is 8 p.rn.
Election Scheduled
New officers and direct.ors for 1971 will
be elect.eel at the 8 a.m. meeting Wed·
nesday of the Hunf.in.tton Beach-f ount.aln
Valley Board of Reali.ors at Mlle Square
Goll Club.
BUY WHW ITS MADE-SAVE I
ltuffeU's m1nufectur .. the fi,.e1t fumlture vou win
find 1nywMre. You ... it 1,.a .. iect It right In our
1howr~ ltay _up to 50% '"' thin r1t1il. c~ ..
from 1n unlimited •l•ction of f • b r I ca. Cu1tom
ch1nps are also poulbl•·
-UNUMmD STYW OF Pre-€hrist.mos
Furniture
Idea
UPHOLSfiRED FURNITURE
HUNDREDS Of BEAUTIFUL FABRICS
TO CHOOH FROM
Vt ilt our
skow roorn -
you'll •f'li•y
••lee.tin g
from our
l•rge 1wttck•1
of colorful
ftbric1.
• 1"1 re•son we're • "'9·
911ting Chri1tm11 so soon
is thol it's • greol IOEA lo
h•¥:• your own furniture
selected encl manuf1etur1d
•t 1 cost much lass than
you would pay in 1 r1ton
furn ltu,.. st~e ond in time
for C!iriltmoL
e ALL WOil •UA~UD
JOI THI
UNTIMI OP PA•tc
922 HARIOI ILVD. o
Or C:oD -llor -Appolllflllent
COSTA MES~
• 541·0259
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Newport Beaell-~ Today~s F l••I
N.Y. Stoek8 E DIT LO·N • •
* ., .
VOL 63, .NO . 274, 3.SECTIONS, 32 M~ES '
. . ew·
L'Allegro W i ns 1
Class 'D' Yac-ht
Mazatlan. Victor
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Diur l'li.t .... i.. l•llw
MAZ.\TLAN -Fluky winds in I he
Gulf or California completely turned the
Los Angeles to Mazatlan yacht race
arOllDd in the final 200-mile leg Saturday.
Overall and Class O corrected time
w~ Wu one of the smallest eJ!b'ies in
Firemen Battle
Ragi ng B·laze
In Southland
By ARTllUR R:-.VINSEL
01 tfl9 0.llY l'u.t Strit
Containment by nightfall y,·as predicted
today as an army of 3,300 firefighters
c)osed in on the worst b l a z e in San
Be.mardioo County history, with
liO,OOl)..pluJ acres s e a r e d and untold
millions in losses.
. The raging inferno whipped into
musjve.proportiooa FridaJ' I>)'. S1f1L! f\na
wlodo reaching 1118 )DiloS RI'" hoof bu
d<alroyed $# homes and ~ ......
out tlil tiny ranch resort comlmml"i; o1
Smiley. •
Gov. Ronald R<!agan declared .the area
tnctudlng once·lush San Bernardino Na·
Uonal Forest lands a disaster area.
Fireflgh!ers said oJily a few · minor In·
juries have beeo reported -and no
deaths are known -blaming a campfire
for the Big Bear area blaie, plll;I arson in
a series of fiy_e ot.Pfi!rs i!l lwo counties.
Joint investigation led to the arrest
Saturday of Phillip Page. 44, of san
Bernanilno, who is held without bail pen·
ding arraignment on arson charges. ·
Authoritlu allege he set fires near
Reche Canyon and -Loma Linda, which
burnM more than 4,000 acres and three
homes, while other blazes ·were quickly
spotted aod extinguished.
• Orange County escaped the ravage1 of
hellish fire whipped by the so-called Devil
WlndS, after canceling all time oil and
alerting aU personnt!l Friday.
'Ibey were geared for a possible repeat
perfortnrulce of the devastation resulting
from county fires fanned by the aMual
Santa Ana onslaught in October.
. S8n Bemardino and Riverside
firefighters were rapidly enclosing the
worst or the weekend blazes which
erupted at the east end of Big Bear Lake,
with 65 percent contained by mid-day.
. "We were really helped by u1e end of
the Santa Anas and the fact that the
forward edge of the rlre burned into the
flat area, where we could move Pt trucks
and manpower," said U.S. Forest Service
infonnaUon officer BUI Makel.
A firebreak caused by the Rim of the
World Higtiway also helped contain Uie
flam es, he added:
Hundreds of persons were evacuated
from cabins and pCrmanent homes in the
mountainous areas i n c I u d i n· g com·
nWnilies of Arroy,·Bear, Runnings Springs
Andlway Park and Smiley.
The latter -with a pOpulation of 120
persons -suffered 49 homes lost, while
flames approached the San Bernardino
city limits once.
the ract, L'Alegro , a Cal~ owned and
skippered by R;oderick Park of RichmoDd
Yacht Club.
The handwriting on the wall y,·as seen·
by daylight Saturday when a brl.sk wind
whistled oqt of tj>e ~west to douse the
hopes of the early leaders, Kialoa JI,
Rascal, Barona, Warrior and Novia del
Mar, \be firit five boatl: tO finish. ·.
"Some of tlKlSe: Clas& D bQats actu8Uy
eroued the 1ull in Jen time ·than we
did;'' said· John B.'. Kilroy, owner of
KWoa II.
Kloloa had drlfled across the finish line.
to be the first yacht to finish about !:~
a.m. Saturday. Only two hours behind her
came Bin Wilson's Rascal from Santa
Barbara, ToUowed nearly an hour later by
John Mcintire in Barona.
Al Cassel'! 50-foot ·sloop Warrior from
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club finished only
:ll minutes behind Baruna, and John
Scripps' ~foot ketch Novia dtl Mar, San
Diego Yach't ctub,·the acralch boat in the
fleet, wu only...a few rniiiut.es behind her.
Ed Sunberg's Clasa · C Yacht Sun ·
d._ was ~lint tq will" out the Class
A fieef "1ien she Was the seventh boat to fin!il".'1161 &he did Dql r<!11a!Ji at the top
ol ~Cip otaBdlngs'for·ioog~ 11•'T1
~Ip! .i ... ~ .p.-~ ...... ::~·~ =~,l?'>~~or all
-'llltft.,;,.,. L1~ wltli 'comcttd
time that Wll al!t to i,. bealen. .
Such are the fortunes or m~unes oC
yacht ndiig: Foi the. first three d.3.ys
from the Nov. 7 start it appeared to be a
Class A race with·Klaloa II haveing a ahOI.
at the .elapsed time r.ecord..
Then came the soft air near Cape San
Lucu with. the leaders being atalled and
the sina1i li&ht boalJ bringing up the wind
from astern.
Even the winds in the 'gull coonived to
make it a am'all boat race. All of the
Vf:\erarul who mnl1bY past exper1ence in
rounding tbe cape and coing north to pick
up the northerly wincU, were frwltrated.
Those ·which' struck out · acrt>ls the full
from the cape encounleri!d first a brl•k
southerly 'which lafer turntd into a
northerly and held all the way aCl'OS!.
Autopsy Slated
In Mystery Deatl1
Of Newport Man
Studies were In progress today to
determine what kllled a· young Newport
Beach man found dead Saturday aboard
the boat oa which he' lived.
No vi.sible cause could be found and an
autopsy was perfonned on NicOOlas A.
Miller. 28, who wu found by hJs rather,
Russell E. Miller, of 2221 Fortuna Ave.,
Newport ·Beacli..
Toxicti10gical studies must be com·
pleted to determine the presence Of any
fatal chemiCh!S In his s:ystem, accordinl
to the Orange County Coroner's Office.
Services for ~Jr. Miller will be private
and are scheduled Tuesday at 11 \.rn., at
Baltz Mor\uary In Corona del ~far.
Beside• his father, he· 1eave11 his
mother, sisters Joni Dorey, of Sacramen·
lo and Jani! Bechan~ of> Saudi --Arabia,
and bis grandfather, of ~entucky.
ORA_NGE COUl'jTY~ CALIFORNfli -· •• t-i10 NDI\ y; NOVEMl~R 16, ·1970 TEN CENTS
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o icemen
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Rans Am.-..ek I
Pendleton M~rine Held . .
In Two -l(nife Attacks ' .
A young Camp Peodleton Marine was
being held on fekiny assault charges to-
day in two' Separate 'knife attacks on
women in San Clemente Sunday -one of
which resulted in 'minor knife wounds lo a
sailor defending one of the victims.
Police a'.rrested ·cary Frank Shaw, 20,
near the parking lot at the municipal pier
a few minutes after· the second· attack.
The youth was booked on suspicion of
assault with a deadly weapon.: ' 'Ibe first incident occurred at the
Trafalgar beach at 5:ts p.m. as Robert
Charles Ittner, a sailor aboard the USS
Larson, was preparing to leave the beach
with his companion, Ann Carol Hely, 2~,
of San Diego.
Officer• said the assailant ran up
behind the couple and brandished a
switchblade knife, attempting to assault
the woman.
Ittner, 26, told police he began fighting
with the man ana suffered a cut arm in
ttie struggle. The assailant then fled ,dov.11
the Santa Fe railroad tracks.
T wo'Perish ~ Qu11kc
TAIPEI, Formosa ·(APJ -Two
~sons were killed and two were injured.
bJ falling stonei ·and. crumbling Walls in
an earthquake· in Formosa's east coast
. city or Taitung, police reported Sunday,
The Formosttn Weather Bureau s&id the
epicenter was at tea, about 2', mlfes
nartheasl of 'l'aitung, Saturday anernoon.
About an hour later Camille Jobn60fl of
612 Calle Victoria, was taking an evming
walk along Calle Santa Barbara wtiei:i a
man matching the description of the
si.ssallant in the first knifing, jogged up
behind her. ·
Police said they found a switchblade
knife on the YDWll,¥arine.
The woman totd~ the mu thru$t
a knife ai bier !'toma'cb. Sbe stepped
backward and ·a~pt!(d to' talk to .the
man·. A few minutet1 Titer a.J>as1ing aute
diStractea the assailant and the woman
Oed for help.
Shaw, wear~ clothing .matching" the
assailant's, wu an:ested moments later .
a few bloc;ki from d)e scene.
Architect Files
Suit for Debt .
San Diego architect George R. Graves
claims a Newport Beach deve'°pment
company fla! rehlsed to pay the $1,315
fee he charged for design work on the
planned Newport·ff«(tage Ho<pltal.
Graves names Newport IntemaUonel
Companlel · Inc.,-Robert W. King and
Daniel L. Cotton as defendants In hi!
Orange County SuperiOr Court complaint.
'The archltect•states in his lawsuit that
the debt.dates from Jasj Nov. 20 when he
first 11.Jbll]Jtted his bUt to the Newport
company.
Consultant
.
Charged ·
·1n Shooting.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
CM * o.Hf l"lllf ...... A 81-yeat-old man ii facing ar-.
raigrunent today on cb.f!rges of attempted
murder after assertedly wounding· two
Newport Beach oftictrs Saturday in wliat
ha been delcribed as the worst ~In&:
lo the hi.my ol the departmeit .
In CUllody In Newport Beach city jail la
Arthur Limbert, a resictent of the Dunes
Trailer Part who llst.s his occupation as
consuWna engineer. He is slated to. ap-r
pear In die Harbor Judicial Diltric! court this ,rtemoon. .
Officer James Gardiner, 22, Is listed in
fair condJUon following a b d o m i n a I
aurgery during which a kidney waa
removed . Qfflcer John Ellingham, 24, Is
also Jn fair. CQnditlon after he was woun·
ed in the right thigh.' Both are in Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
The incident was apparently 1parked
when the two patrolmen stopped Lambert.
at hi.I trailer. He reportedly wa11 ,spotted
driving erraUcally down Pacific Colst
Highway.
Al the two talked to the suspeCt, prior
to administering a field sobriety e1.am.
he a1te1edly pulled out a .is.:callber
automat.lc altd lhOt. Gardiner in' the
_, .
UNDERGOES SURGERY Shootlnt Victim Gordlner ---·
Luxury Unit
Plans Told
.In Newport
stomach. Etlipam assertedly wu lhot · Plans for what may b:ecome Newport
while wreatllnc Lambert to the ground. Beach's most· luiuH.ous a pa r't men t
'lbe ·~tlng wu wl~ .b,Y development were discloeed today by ~~ ~~ li<P lawym for the developer. the Dooa14 -~...._.,_ In rldo ...... were • Scb!>li Collli.nY· of Toledo, Oblo. .;. • ,...~ a ~~-f .,,. .,.Ji<!, planned Oft the JNCl'I 'J1io t"o &Iris ,..lll,J'-di, tqiiey properlJ on the blofl• idjacenf to ~ Ta!n-sGIU!i. 'lllef1IM Hoag Memorlal'l>Jlpital, woold be built in
at the.,.,. prlor-lo.ttie ""!'!In& ao lhe at least lwo atages the tatter ma~ !no
lludel)ta ...,Id. ~ 'lihll Smith dude hlgl>pricod condomlnlams.
thought would be a ii>utfne drunk_ dli_vlnl 'lbomu Pec!renpaugh, attorne7· !ot;
&eat. Scholz, said 'the first section will include
Neither of the ·iwo studenta were. In-255 apartments on seven acres to be built
fured and it was Smith who wu fipally at· -a ·co.st ot 17, million.
able to subdue Lambert. .He noted . that all plans a~ still ten·
· Questioned aftenfaril abdut their reae. titlve, pending current pre-zonlilg Ind
Uon to the shootinp, the girla· said they annes:aUOn proceedings. 'Ibe tract ts
"didn't like it," but we're pbilOIOphical. located on a county island west" of the
"I auess ll couldn't be he!~.'~ one comr hospif41, south of J:lospital Road-ei:temioo
menled. . and cut of Superio'r Avenue.
Gardiner's wound w111 lo aeriou! that Peckenpaugh stressed the lavlshss of smith didn't wait for an ambulance: Re the project pointing out that some two-
put the uncomclowl olfict:r in Officer bedroom aPartmentJ will be Jarger than
Latqtnce Gabriel'• wllt Ind bad him 1400 square fee.l i •
drive. to the boopitak The apartment.< will Include everything
Meanwblle other patrol ~ts: had block· from efficiency to three-bedroom unrts.
ed off Coast Highway to all croe1 traffic, He saJd the rental charges are not yet
settiO(I up road blocks at the interltetliln1 known, "but will be at the upper end Of
of Bayside Drive, Dover Drive, Tustin the spectrum."
Avenue and Riverside Drive. A Costa Peckenpaugh said Scholz la the world's
Men palk:e· unit stQl!Ped traffic at,tbe in· largest owner-builder of apartments and
tersectlon of ·Newport Boulevard and has been Jnvolved mosUy in construction
Hospital Road . for the speeding palrol in the midwest.
car. ' "Thls .is his first West Coast develop-
At the hospital , I team or four doctors ment," Peckenpaugh said.
worked on the wounded patrolman It ha!· tentaUvely been n a m e d
several )Jours. Hl.s condition, which was •1vmallles on the mutts tn N&port.'•
Oflglnally ll>led as !Ori°"' had improved P~paugh said 00111trudlon Is
today to fair. He ll ln1Uae lnteoalve cart scheduled to.begin as soon as the pre-ion·
unit. , · Ing a~ annes:ation h,a .v e been ac.
Ellingham was talten•to the bolpital a Comptished, hopefuJly early nest year.
few minutes liter by ambulance. · The L«al Agency Formation Com.
Gardiner who live. in Ni~ has ml!slon (LAFC) Thursday delayed ap-
been a meinber of lhe pqlke forCe i1nct: proval of the anneiaUon for two weeks
January of this year. A ~te Ot Cal pending a change in water district boun-
Stat.e Long Beach, he: hohll a BA in daries. .
crimloology. Ellingham is a two. Y?I' In . i~ pre-zonmg application, the
veteran of the force and lives· in Costa developer ls asking for a planned com·
Mesa. Both men are alngle. munity zone. It is presently in a county
The Jut Ume a Newport patrolman R~ claaaificatior. which . Peckenpaugh
was •hot Jn the line of duty wu m· ttsa said. would actu811y allow ~elopment at
when. Ofilcer William Talbot wu shot in far greater density, 4.1 umts per• acre,
the hand by a fleeing tuspect oo_Lido than Scholz ~ planning under the new cl·
Isle. ty zone.
saturday night's sheoting, wbich Det. .-----.,,.~-------,
Sgt. Ken Thompson called the wont ·in
the history of the departme'nl, n:malned
unexplained today.
Lambert alle&edly told Thompson t.be
officen approached him ·in I menacing
mariner. \lfudter
Whipped by winds peaking at 100 miles
per hou r In certain gusts, the flames were
first spotted by J\lary Jo Claussen, r7,
[rom her fire lookout tower.
She said the howling winds blew open a .
wlndow in ·her 12-squart.root tower atop a
piMacle of rocks oo an 8,537-foot peak.
Lame Duck Session Starts
lllvtfligators said nalther Elllngham
nor 'Gardiner drew their l'Jl'll durlnc the
incident. Smllh said he took hit oot When
be heard the shots ftred, but put tt away
when he saw Ellingham irappUDt ,•itb
It'll be cooler by· a' aood II de-
grees on the coast · Ulelday with
local te:mperaturei peaed at II
degrees and the Inland mercury
soaring to the a mark. "I got up lo close it and. just by ~cond
nature, took a look around," said Mrs.
Claussen.
Residents Without
Lights in Mon,lng
Residents of Bayside Drive and Balb6a
Island were without power for 1wo boors
"'arly Sunday morning alter a Southern
Callfomla Edl§On Company pole w a 1
blown over in high winds. •
A. ~er spokesman !&Id the downed
pole was near· the intersection of Marine
Av~nue and Bayside Drive. Power was
restored two houl'1 after tlle outage was
discoVered at e:JJ a.m.
umbert. -' . . Cungr~s R~~nve~ to Face Political Contrliver~y 11>e grav-haJred l\lipecf. also reportedly
(ke POLICEMEN BBOT, P ... I)
Contact A r~ School WASlfil'fil'QN._m>) - C o D I r e 11 reconvened-t today-'lri ille .lame ·duck "fn.
stallmcnt of an tlecUon·ftsr 1eSSlon one
Senate leader called unending, and found
political controversy waiting.
Sen. Mike Mansfield ol Montan._ the
majority leoder, llC<UI«! Republican
campaigners of penonal vlllllcatlon1 and·
"political allckstertsm.11
S...tt Repliblle.n Leider Huch Scolt
of f~lvanla aid the lime duck
meeUng ••.,u1 be an•unmltlgat ed
disaster," marked by poll(lckln& and thC
promoUon of pet project.<.
,
The calendal> Is _g:~. j!Kf )ime !a
1horl -altbcugb Jlllnsf;<!d said he
could not. guess when the sesslOn wW
finally adjO<ltJI. ·
Democratic ae:n.ator11 caucused and
agreed that there should be an attempt
before 11\.aJksgtvffik to override Prell·
dent Nixon's veto of a bill to sharply
re«trict campaign spending Oil' radio and
televlaion.
Mansfield said rann leglsl•tion, stalled
before I.he elections, will wait ur.tn lat.er
In the Wet.I\. He added that the Senate
d•flnlt<!ly wlll vote on President NIJoo'•
welfare refqnn pi'Opouts:.
Scott dtocount<d M11181iald'1 allaclt on
Republkall campaign tacUca.
• For Free Lunch Info
"'"'-are political P"!fly, they are Officials ol the Newpor1-M.w Unified
ritual and. iequlred.'' ht Ilk!. '.'In due School DIWld said tqday that netdy
lime. I'll make the wne kind ·of famlUes 1eek.ln1 free fubCbM for thtelr
statemento." chU-lhoukl contact the princlpll ol
Mwfltld ond ,Scott agreed thit lhe their Khoo! rather O..n qlUnc the November~mber 11.m•~k •meet-dlatrlcil auperlnendent. •
Ing ahould be treated os a '°"",a nu p-• Scboot principals hava • oomplete. 11>-
JltS&ion. llandllng only•tppropfllljipns and formation and the correct f6rmJ to1 l111
other a.baoluto n<ctuiUes befPr< ad· out for lhe )lrOtram, icl\ool olflcla!a
j011mlnJ. · noted.
"'
JNSmE TODAY
Upwards ··r 300,ooo f'a/<Uto"-
,, mo11 be. dtad. in a dtlal
disaster • o/ eycloM• and tidal
wove 10hich tonk.t .1Df&h ih.c
wortt holocau.stl of all time,
~apt 4.
Ctn""'°' t C!Mdtlfle lilt 11 Cleul!... ,._.
C-ln 1• -" DMllt ...... 1• -" .. """'' ,... . •llNwW"""' 11 ,Ill_ ,.,,
........... ••IJ
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_,,.,... ..... ,. -" ............... I ...... c-tJ •11 •-Me ....... ,.
"""" 1'·1S lledl.MlrMh 1t-1• ,.,....... IJ """'"" ,, -. ...... ... 11 ................
•
1 OAILY l'ILOT N
0 •
Army Man
Kills Self
In Sh~tout
-NOl\POLK. Va. (APl ..:. A 2Q.year-6ld
Army enliated man, Qllder trealment for
1.ame fatigue after service In VJe!Mm,
was fatally shot early loday In a lllllflebi
orilb Norfolk pollco.
•pJll""Uy look bi• own life when olllcorl
f1rtd tear •au ln10 an apartmtnt -.
.lbe aoldlor bad htld i )'Olllll c<>uplt cap>
live.
Aulbor1u .. said JOMpll James O'Jrlen
About 30 armed offleers converged
.outalde the apartment of Mr. and Mn:.
Andrew Hernande:, tb which police _Aid
O'Brien had gone al lbe climu of a
shooting apr<e lbat bopn Sunday llllht
·"""' be ariued -hla lit! fried.• . . Mn. -had opr...i tbe" &!Inn &Iler acaplllg tbe apartli>elll by mutoc
a laddtr ol flod.loptber ·-IDd Jowednl bonell to lbe .,..m from a
~bedroom whlle ilmlllldeJ, I Morini, ._ed O'Brien In convwaatlon.
Polli:e saJd O'Brien, an Oulplll<Dt at
Pommoulh Naval Hooplt.ll, went to lbe
borne, of bl> lirl friend -Judy lllnton, IS
-late Sunday 11\lht alt« telling her be
wool~ "get" her. They aaid be wu ~
ed wilh an Army MIS rlfle.
The lllnton sir! had fled. Police llid
O'Brien abot the famlly do& In tbe
bockyard, abot 1 lock oU a door IDd tben
abot up lbe lnalde ol lbe -· The girl's plrllJll, Mr. IDd Mn. lllchard L. lllntan,
were UDharmed. •
Pollce llld O'Brteo tblD -to lbe lltmai>des apartmont "llld ulDed for
transponatlan," tlueatenlllg Ibo couple
wtlh lbert!IL -· _ ... In I ropalr abop.
l!emai>del told olllcm O'Brton "eaJm.
-ed down" wlien told .lbat ---a Mar'lne. but beCime excited anew when
·police COllVeTlod outllde lbe a~t After Mrs. Hernandez' escape. .
Poµce llid O'Brien bqan firing from o
window and put two bulleta into the. f1rit
police car to arrive, narrowly miuinc
two offlcen Inside .. DurJng the a•
cltemenl Hernandez n.d lbe a~l
When police demanded lhat O'Brl<!n
come out. they were met with a bail of
heavy autOmatlc IUJ>flre. Alter about an
hour. Ibey fired tear gu toto lbe apart.
ment, beard one more shot -the
1Uence. \.
When they entered tbe apartment.
O'b.rien lay dead on the Boor, t&e mUR.J.e
of his rtne at b1I head. Police sald he wu
not killed by a police bullel
DAILY ,.I Loi Steff ,,...
Fire Guu Home
Lt. -l!lc!wd Ellerman of N<!wport Beach Fire Department surveys
damage in bedroom of home on Balboa Island. Sunday night blaze
caused an estimated $20,000 damage to residence at 1304 S. Bay
Front. No Injuries were reported. Firemen Indicated the blaze may
have been caused by an electric iron.
Narco Raid Error Leaves
Homeowner, Officer Hurt
PHOENIX. Aril. !AP) -Narcotics
detectlvu, raiding what they thougbt was
a hippie hangou~ exchanged shots early
Sunday nf&ht with residents of the house
who had just moved in. The man of the
boUH and one policeman were injured.
Police gave this acc:ount:
For 11Veral weebo 1 house In the Eut
Pboenb: section bad been u n.d er
aurve!Dal)"A IS 1 poaible hangout wbera
drug$ were belni used. ,
The survelllanc:e ipparently msed
several days ago as, offlcetl prepared to
make their movt. Meantime, the hippies
moved out and Mr. IDd Mn. Leslie Weat
moved ln.
At 1:30 o.m. Sunday, police went to lbe
houae, carrylllg a ''no-knocll" IWCb
warnnt which would havt permitted
lbem to enta' without warning.
Body of Buena-Park Girl '
But lbe plllnclothes detecti•" ~
anyway IDd told Mn. wesi. who
answend:tbe door, thty wet;.e polic;em.en.
Sgt. Ked Slrlckland said the woman •P.
parenUy did not believe tbe detectives, aJt11ov1b Ibey •bowed a badge. and obut
the door ·on. them. thinking tbty were·
uturnin1 hippies . • Found; Murder Probed When the police broke in. Mrs. West
screamed and her husband grabbed~ ri-
fle and fired ·several shota. Detective
Harry Burke, 31 , fired back, bitting Weat
in the aide. Mn. Weat then took.the rifle
and fired at-Burke, who was.hit arid 1ost
two fingers.
Aided by ld<nUflcaUon of a partially
decompoeed· body found In lhlck bnllh
near Buena Park. OraD1e County Sber-
lff'1 lnvestlg•tora today stepped up their
lnqulrles Info -t Ibey believe ii a case
of murper.
Documents found O!I lbe victim's ...
mains btlped officen to Identify tbe dead
girl u Vkki Lynn Miner, lS, of Buena
Park. Miss Miner's parenl> 1iJted bor u
From Page I
SHOT •••
told IUlpeCls he had been at Berklblre'1
and the Dry Doclt before beiDI stopped
by lhe officen.
Mn. Lambert, who hao come out ol lbe
trailer while lbe officers qu..Uonod bor
husband and who was preaent during the
sbootlng1, wu btld for ~utaUonlDI by ln-
vestlgaton, but wu later released.
DAILY PILOT
CllANO• GOAIT PUILW41NO COMl"AHV
Rob.rf N. We.d
J1ck l. C11rley
vie. Pr•IHn• and ~11 MIMfW
TI.om•• l(,,,.a
Editor
TI.0111t1 A. Murph;,.,
M1n•~lng ldlror
l. ,,,., 1Cri11
NfWP;ln &MCI! en,-Editor
Newpott IMdi Office
2211 Weit 1111"1 leul•v•~
Melll"f .Ydre1n r.o.1o .. 1175, 921.IJ -0--•r.:1 UO W.t ..... ltrwt lAfl.O'll Nd!: m ,.,._, •-1111
Nt,lnlfflt!Cl!'I &eidl: 17'7$ keel! hullVlrf , c:11T11W1t•1 JOI Notti! It C..mlno ....
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missing: lalt Oct. 31.
Invuti&•tors today continued their ex-
amination of the brush<OYered gully in
which the body wu found Saturday by
children playlng in the area. The
youncsten: uncovered Miss Miner's re-
maim.
Coroner's inveltigaton have detennln-
od lbat tbe Buena Park High School girl
died from a blow to the back of the head
wh1ch fractured her skull. They believe
thal she died at about lhe ume ~f her
dlslppearance.
Inveltilat.ora are working on the theory
that Miu Miner was killed at~another
location and her body brought to the
Emery Street iullY by car. The body Wll
dumped face down In. thick bnah. ·
other officers finally convinced the
Wests the intruders were police .
Strickland aaid, "It was a ml!un-
derstanding. The couple probably felt
they were defending their home against
&>me hippies and the officers thought
they were fighting some criminals."
Eleven Bombs Thrown
SAl'I JUAN, Puerlo Rico (AP) -
El.even bombs were thrown from ·cars in
San Juan over the weekend, injuring two
persons and caJJ.Sing eaUmated ll3,000 in
damage. But a high police officli.1 said he
thought they "were ilolat.ed incidents and
not the start of 1 terrorist campaign."
• UPI T1i.r.t.
FAA OFFICIALS LOO PARTS AS CltASH PROll llG,INS
Crash Kiiis Football Team, Co.1c.he1 and Civic Leaders {Story Page l)
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Poli~e in ~·A~tion
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Law's Eye View Stressed in New Program ..
llJ J04NN!l lllY1WIUlt · : ' , allowed ~ ;. anyWhere code u.r. (tod lilckllurn. wbo 11 1 yoar and • ball
• • ...,, ....., l4'ff llahll on and aireJt salq;)," ctbMttJU' tJ· vettran with the force, explained how the
HYou knew, J rtaU,y didn't get cut of. plained. radio w~rks .~ti showed them the code
the car with the tn•athjln of arresttng a The effectlvenesa of tM: program bmt book which hsts call ~~bers and penal
drunk drlvtr. I wu j111t eolnc t.o he~ her ' euily measured, but U Randy's ~d c&de numbers. •·f or instance. a ~!:..I.~ chan8e her Urt," the officer told tWo at-.Robb'a "actions were typtcal;;_t:idfl murder and a %11 ls an armed rob.._,.,
tenUve high school atudeQta. alongs JllfY go a long way toward btlplng he sald. . T~ teenagers hid just watched three teenagers.and policemen underatlnd t~h When a call came over the ra.d~o that
officers arrest 1 woman on suspicioti of other a little better. soundi d interestin~ an unidentified car
drunk.driving and the patrolman wU ex· During .their ride, the. two teenagers driving over lawns rn Dover Shores -
plalnlna: the procedures they ·bad wllr saw Blackburn ticket 1 woman . for Blackburn would Jespond. th Jed · tailj:aUng, and watche<I the arrest.a of two ' When he gol to the scene where e ne~at· SJTest along with stvtrtl other P.J!OPle f~ dr;unk driylng as 1'ell al the regular patrol officer had stopped th~~
eventa was part of 8 routine · patrol f&r • a,rrtsts of 1wp groups of ju~~ for in quuUon. the teenag ers ':''ould w~:~ in
the officer, but provided 1 cbaDce for the 1adl: ~f parmtal ~trol. _, _., ~e car while he checked wit h ~e o 1cer
students to obletve a day in t.be life of a While tbey dldn t say muCb a-.OUt the _ in charge. . .
co 0 the , ewport Beach police juveniles who wtr1 taken in, both agreed If there was somethi ng going on, such de~~nt's ride-along program. wholeheart~ly with the ~est of the ~ a .field sobriet y test. and there was no
Each FT idly and Saturday of the school drunken . drivers, and discussed the 1mnunent danger, he would have the two
year, fi~n'I · 7 to 11 p.m., two or three suspeeta' poor reactions oo sobriety tests. students '?u t .of the car to watch. h .
atudenta ride with an officer to get .a In one case. Blackburn took the two to Some-•people were pu uled by t eir
first.band look at what• ]>Wolman faces !Jle statlon ~they could r~Uow the book· presence, but didn't object to them. Some
in hla: dally rouUne , 1ng process in a drunk driver arrest and weren't aware they were thre. ·•
Robb Whalleen ~ Randy Kuehner &ee the Pfperwor~ involved. While the emphasis of the program ls
were riding witb Offlotr o en 11 i 1 "I think jt's easier to understand them to acquaint the students with the polJce,
Blackbum who aided in.the drunk arrest • ·(the polict) if ybu get a chance tQ * all the program works two ways.
and both ' agreed the eiperience wa:i the thinga they do," Robb said. At the end of each ride the teenagers
worthwhile. · Asid~ from following arreat! and gt.v~g are as~ed to fill cut an anonymous ques·
Jtobb . who ls a 15-yw-old sophomore a traffic ticket, Blackbum, tried to fill m tionnslI'e for use by the departme~t.
from N'ewport Harbor said he &a!ned in-the details of what a routine patrol is .The que stions are geared to helping the
sliht into the proble~ faced by 1 cop as like. men in the program understand the kids
well u ID Idea .of bow the dtpar1ment He drove down some alleys. ".Thls is who participate. They want to ~no~ what
functlona · how you spend most of your time on they like or don't like about thell' ride and
Randy,· 1 1g...year-old junior at COrona morning .watch (midnight t? 8 a.m.). You how the students. w_ould improve t~e pre>-
del Mar, .aald he thoua:bt the proaram try to. hit all the alleys ut your ~ea, gram and relations between their age
ought to be avallable to more people. watching for any kind of movement, be group and the department. . . so far, the program ia an undisputed told thenr. Both Jl?bb and Ran~y sa id ~hey liked
auccess. Ed Cibbirtlll, community rtla-the .expe~1ence and praised the 1d~ or ex·
tlona officer for the department, said posmg high school studen~ to ~hce o~ a
they have taken out is to 30 atudenta Student y eterans non-law eruorcemenl basis. The ride every weekend slnce the-program beg:an along and having a cop come on campus,
1ut year to be. available lo talk to us and answer
"When· we opened the program 1as1 Send Chr: ·tmas questions."'. good idea," Robb oajd.
year, and aplD this year. the sign up list a.a '.'I think they ought to do more of ll,"
WIS completely fllled up within a few 5&1d Randy.
days. we had""°""' 1nt~ studente Trees to Vietnam __ .:_ _____ _
laat year to have run throuch the sum·
mer," he said.
. Currently ride alone Ollly operates from
September to June becluae of dilficulUes
involvi=_d in getting vacatio~g officera
and students together.
The patrolmen who drive in the pro-
aram are selected on the bula of ex~
perience, knowledge of the department as
a whole and their ability to communicate
wi~ teenagera. ·
"They work the ride alona:s in addition
to thelr regular luties. They are not part
to their regular duties. Thty are not part
anywhere in tbe city.
"Of course, they are not allowed to
take the kids on any calls that involve
violence auch aa armed robberies or on
farnlly dispute call&. And Ibey are nol
Bandit "uspect
Shot by Police
Santa Alla police officers shot 1
bura:lary suspect early thJa morning . The
suspect and his alleged accomplice were
captured.
The wounded man, Grant E. Moyer, 33,
of Santa Ana. was hit by three shotgun
pellets as he fled the Piggy Bank Coin
Shop, 1341 Bristor St. He is reported in
satisfactory conditlon at Orange County
Medical C.enter.
Officer Charles Kolodzey called to
fl.foyer to st.op several times after the
suspect smashed through a window t.o get
out of the shop. Inside, officers said they
foand Winton L. Worley, 23, Mding In a
restroom.
COUNT SHOWS
HARTKE WINS
INOIANAP,OLIS, Ind. (AP) -The of.
ficlal certification of complete returns
from the Nov. 3 1eneral election showed
today that Democratic Sen. Vanct HII'tke·
finished ahead of Republican Richard
Roudebush by 4,331 votes.
But a recount seemed almost a cer-
tainty.
Five Vietnam veterana t u r n e d
Fullerton Ji.A,klr College atudenU have
personally Ren to it that some of the
troops 1n Southeast Asia have an old·
fashioned Christmas trte , for th e
holidays. C!Wf~
The five, Doug A1lan. Jim Wadleigh,
Glen Ullom, Bob Splrka and F JC Student
Body President Dan Freeland, apent the
weekend 1 in Libby, Wyo., an:anging
purchase and shipment of 300 Chri!tmas
f?ees to outPosta and headquarters all
ever Vietnam.
They said they wanted to show Pres!·
dent Nil.on that college a tu d e n t 1
throughout the nation support h1!l Asian
policies.
A11an added, "We know what
Chri.!tmas In Vietnam away from your
loved onea ls like for those 18-year-old
kids."
The u... will 10 by truik to seattle.
Wash., and then to Vietnam via Army
Tranaport. · ·
Veteran Jumper
Gives His Life
To Save Partner
ALE5.5ANOlllA, Italy (AP) -A
veteran Italian parachutist gave his life
Sunday to save his inexperienced Swiss
colleague from certain death, officials
said.
The Incident occurred w b e n Mario
Goeparini, 35, of Milan and a veteran of
150 jumpa, ma~ a twin jump from 2,IXXI
feet with Guy Bomet, 24, of Switzerland.
Officials said Bomet, making his 20th
jump, got entangled in his ropes and
Gosparini did not open his own main
chute to avoid creating an air J>OC:ket that
would have complicated problems for the
Swiss. \
Instead, Go.<iparlnl tried to open his
emergency chute after clearing away
from Bomet but he was too low. He died
upon Impact of a fracturtd skull, the of·
fic ials said.
Bomet, meanwhile, stabilized hJs
parachute and landed safely.
DIES AFTER LONG ILLNESS
CdM Student Von Baik
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Funeral Slated
For CdM Student
Ralph Van Beek
-Funeral services were held today for
Corona del Mor High School student
Ralph Van Betk who died Saturday.
The IS.year-old student died at Hoag
Memorial.Hospita.1 following 1 lengtby il·
lness.
He aiid hi! family have lived In the
Harbor area for ei1ht years. He was a
junior at the high school.
He leaves his parents, Mr. and · Mrs.
Felix Van Beek of 2220 Donnie Road.
Newport Beach. Services were held at
Pacific View Chapel wllh Rabbi Canon
Goodman officiating.
BUY WHERE IT'S MADE-SAVE I
Run.II'• m.nuf1cturn the finest fumlture you wfl1
find 1nywher•. You '" it and Mlact It rltht In our
&howroom. Pay up to 50'/• les,. than retail, Choo•
frem an unllmitff Ml.c:tion of f 1 b r I c a. Cwtom
changes an also po11lblt. -
UNUMmD STYLES OF Pre~Chrisfmas
Furniture
Idea
UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE
HUNDREDS OF BEAUTIFUL FABRICS
TO CHOOSE FROM
Vi1Jf OUf
1how ,..om -
you'll enjoy
sel•ctiru;
frol'rl our
lerge swatches
af colorful
fabrics,
o ALSO CUSTOM REUPHOLSTERING
• n;. reason ._.,,.. sug-
gesting Christmas W> soon
is th1t it's o grNI IDEA to
have your own fumitur8
selected •nd monufaclured
at a cost much less than
you would pay in a retail
furniture store and in time
for Chrislm1s.
e ALL WOll •UAUNTllD
IN)l THI
L1,n11111 O! 'AtllC
.1922 HARIOI ILVD. -•
Or Coll For Appointment
COSTA MESA:
• 541-0259
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• . •• . • . ' . : =~ 'Dentists ·SWe ·et Bal
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The question, "What shall I wear" wilJ be a harder one to
. answer this year for members of the Junior Auxiliary of the Ne
port Beach Assistance League · who are planning to attend the
annual ·Candy ·cane Ball.
Sorlie will .appear at the Balboa Bay Club wearing glamorous
pantsuits, some will come in traditional ball gowns and some
perhaps in midis. ' . .
The annual formal event will take place Friday, Dec. 4,
and all proceeds will be used for the league's philanthropies.
Flickering candlelight will provide an intimate setting !or
a sumptious dinner a nd dancing to the music of the Society for
the Preservation of Big Bands and the Spring Canyon Group.
Serving as co-chairmen are Mrs. WiUiam Von Essen and
Mrs .. Byron Tarnutzer, and assisting them are the Mmes. Jarnes
M. S~ and Howard Martyn, reservations; Kendall W. Knight, ~ec~ra~1ons; ~ichael E. H~1in , Albert Pizzo and Kent Snyder,.
1nv1tat1ons; William C. Ring, music; ·Schuyler C. Joyner. seat·
i~g ; i:_ritz 'Westerhout .Jr., hostesses, and Chal'.les S. Cook, publi·
city.
Beginning their Assistance League service by participating
on. ball committees are the Mmes. George F.· Bethel, Roderic S.
Daley. Robert Gairilner, Paul Hadley Jr .• George E. Koehler,
Paul J . Nicoletti , John O'Donnell , Thomas S. RaffeUo, Richard
Ramella, Donald F. Stoughton and Kenneth Young.
The new members. who were honored during a brunch in
the.league's service center. will be guided through 3.n orientation
period by Mrs. Hanns Baumann, provisional chairman. which
will fariiiliarize . them with the numerous Assistance League
projects. Within a year they .will have worked in every phase of
the leagu~ .program and h'ave a full knowledge of the commun·
ity service rendered by the organization.
The league supµOrts a dental health center and social seN•
ice office which gives temporary aid to needy fam ilies and of·
!ers a scholarship loan fund for deserving university students,
among other community charities.
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' BEA ANDERSDN, Editor
-MRIHY, ,....,.....,., u.~,m • ,._ 11
BIG DECISION -The decision of what to wea r now is complicat-
ed by the question of \vhich length to choose. Making plans for
the Candy Cane B.all of the· Junior Auxiliary of the Newport Beach
Assist4nce League and tryi ng various fa shion moods are (left to
right) the Mmes. Paul J.' .N.icoletti, George F. Bethel apd John'.::
O'Donnell, provisionals .. The extravaganza, which will usher irt :
the Christma.S season, wlllj8ke place Friday, Dec. 4, in the Bal~·
boa Bay Club; ?-,
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21 -gun Salute Awaits Sorop fi mists
Newport Harbor Soroptimists will. Salute American·
ism when they celebrate the 50th anniversary of the
founding of the national organization. The gala will
be staged Friday. Nov. 20, in the Airporter Inn at
6:30 p.m. Speaker will Ile Mrs . Brigette Page, gover·
·'
nor of the Pacific Region. and joining in the obser·
vance will be Orange Coast members. Ready to give
the event a "21·gun" salute are (left to right) Mrs.
Francis R. Hall. Miss Velma O'Brien, Mr.s . Giles
Broadlick and Mr s. Kenneth G . .Haas.
Boutique Entices Discri minating Shoppers . . .
Discriminatin l? holiday shoppers wiJJ find an array
of enticing gift items and decorations at bargain
prices when they attend the Christmas Boutique,
sponso red by th e Women of St. James Episcopal
Church. The Byron Farwells will open their bay
front home for the event, planned from 11 a.m. to ·.
5 p.m. Wednesday. Dec. 2. Completing the decorating _
of a tree for the event are Cleft to right) the Mmes.
Joseph Whitacre. John Glithero and IsabeUe Kehlor,
chairman of arrangements.
Sale~ Pitch Rings a Discordant Note for Saddened Mother
DEAR ANN L~NDERS' I am glad yoo
printed the letter from the woman who
had had a miscarriage at five month!!.
She urged you to educate the ignorant
fools who ask embarrassing questions
<such as, "Was it a boy or a girl?"). Now
1 hope you will print my lettei;:
I had a premature baby (seven
nltlths) and she lived only 24 hours. Five
d~s after I returned from the hospital, a
cheerful voice on the telephone coo.
gr ulated me 00 ibe .oew baby. The
f wing day II' photogra""'f caJTI< to
th front door with a camera -he
w ted lo take pictures,,.
Us from insurance ComPC\flltl. diaper
se 'ces, baby furn,iture !it.Cl'e! and lo)'
coils>anlcs drove me crazy. 1 was born·
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ANN LANDERS ~
barded by offers for gifls in the mail. 1
became se depressed I could· barely do
my housework.
I know these companies are trying to
get business, but why can't they at least
check to learn if the baby lived before
they begi n to hound people? Or t>etter
yeL. Why aren 't the hospital recor~ kept
private? 1lll1 leaking O( information
should be stopped. Get busy, Ann,. there's
work to be done. -BEEN THERE, TOO
DEAR TOO: I agree, but don't bl~me
the bo1plta11. They do not luk the In·
formation ie commercial UJmpanles.
Births are a' matter of public re cOrd.
Anyone can get tbem.
A check should be made to learn If
there 11· a Nby tn tM: bouse ·belore the
promoters desceDd. It can . be done
tacU11lly and tastefully -uwl 1 1troa1ly
recommend U. .
DEAR R,EADERS: liere is a Confiden·
llal to the hll.lldceds who wrote to express
surprise or disappolntment that l am not
a Christian: In a recent response l said.
"As . a nonChristlan who receives
thousands of Christmas cards every year
I do not resent the religious messages -
etc." t was disturbed by the number of
readers who don't know there are other
religklns beside Christianity and equate
"nonChristian " with Communist. Atheist
ana AnuGOO. MyF religk>us faith is
Judaism, the basic concept of which ls One God. .
~
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' My gr<>blem is
too hot to handle because or lh,e size o(
this ioWn and the prominence of the
person involved. A very fine woman
(Mrs. A.) whom 1·ve known for many
years, has been stealing things out of
the homes ·or her friends -mine included.
At first I thought I mi.isl be Imagining
things but now I'm certain my suspicions
are correct. Another woman In our club
has spoken to me &bout this friend also.
The item! Mrs. A has lifted were not
very valuable -the most costly was a
pair of $20 earrings. But J'm terribly
upset because t believe she L! sick aod
might get lnto serious trouble.
My husband says. "Ki!ep •quiet. Just
·lock up .things when she comes over."
Thia approach might not be the act of
kindness he Intends jl to be. By keeping'
1llent, I could be unwit~gly encouraghlg
her lo conUnue stealina:. Will you advl1•
me? -CONCERNED FRIEND
DEAR CONCERNED: Tell 1he wemaa
at oact that you are aware of lier c:em-.
pulsloa. Be gentle and noaaceuu.1ory. I.Al·
ber know you btUeve the ls Ill and ·11::
need of profe11ional help. Ia tbt me..:.:
time, keep It.ems that mJgbt tempt Mf:
locked up wben sbe 11 a guest la )'out:
home.
' . Is alcoho1Jun a dlses.se? How can tbt.:
alc6hollc b6 treated? Ts there ·a cure?~
Read the bool<Jtt "Alcoholism -HoP'i.
and Help," by Anni Landers. Enclose 36
cents in COin With you!' requeat and '"e •
foi!g. -~. 'Alf·addrmed envelope In
care of lhe DAILY PILOT, · ..
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MondtY, NO'fttnbtl' 16, 1970
'
Star Trek
'J '. ·: IJi ~ IW'l'INGS ..................
1f ahe ~~, iounnet
dillller with .iyie and llalr,
uert Inn~ over. people.
.
•
R.eve.als E 9rthly ' . • . ' .; '
trt ttn1klve warm . and .._uc. aod good •bout the
home. Righter ezplalned U..t
" "
. Inf I uence
g-w bec•uae they know
what they want to do and do
it.
t c:hancea are tbe't a Cancer.
. "When -I• are 1-'ant·
of ,..,,.thJril they ·-It
Mg.,.. they don't . JIM!r·
stand,'' be rtaeoned. .
Belen offeriq , b r I e I
penon.ality 1ketches for each
sign he. explained th1t people ..
bom on the cusp, (w))en one
~Ian Is coming lo '11<1. the otbet"
leaving) wUI pie-up qualititl
. -1e In 1h1I alp blOdte II u "
well" u tlley handle all allUI·
Uom:. ·R r a c tl cat azif·
dellbor•lt, ' Ibey '1ao .,,,
loven of buitty and will fDl
their homes with ~ objec:U
: lnvariebly U lie enjoyed a good
meil and checked out 1ht
• cook, the· t>Uson wu born
~r U'dJ slan, .
the wa y Righler described
VI r g o . Pi J low -Ouffers,
ltralgbteners and t a b I e •
dust.en, they want everything
perfect ind can't stand to see
anythlnf wrong.
Sag!Uarlms are dependent
on being Independent. ·nu.ct,
blunt and out.i>oken, they
'don't miai a polnt. And ·]>eOple
alwaya know whef:e they atand.
with those born under thlt
sign.
undoritandlnl ol -Id a!·
falra. President Nixon is 1
C1prlcoro . Also more
Acldemy AwU'd winners were
born under this than any other
algn.·JUghter claims. { •i" ' lJbru are th& peacem'11:er's,
tl')'in( to brine hannony to the
unlverte.
: 11, -the 'late William 1\-lJ!'"'
did at 5an SUnleon.
"A Taurean wUI' mull over a
111bjeet but """ be bu mild•.
' up bis mind ·-that'• U,"
cl~ Righter.
c.ncer mert'fuake excelleot merclwxllMn llke Marsball flekl~ a0c:J..fe11er and wan.
1\lmaker,
Libras like to sey both aides
to anything, and if a Libra's
husband was hit by a car she
probably would rationalir.e
that the driver's wife had fix·
ed h.1':11 a bad pot of coffee that
A00oo la the key pbr,.. of
Aquarlans -who are· out&oln&:
and friendly.
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,_ and othq lnalgilla Into
pertonality an d character
1ra11a ..... dlaclooed by ea~
roll ~ when bt spoke to,· Jrltlrnbera · of the Udo Isle
Worrian's Club and thelt guom.
The ayndlcalOd colwnnlal
and UlrokJC1an for many
ctlebrities bqan his e1reer •
a lawyer from a family ot.
lawyen:. Por 14 ·years he
-lldled IUtlOh'l)I trytoi lo
~ that !be planela did
ot .. ~~ be dynamlte ..: Ilk•
mixing nlln:ltlycerln."
More people are bom under
Ute . .1ip of Aries than uy
other but lher.e are fewer in
the Hall of Fame becauie,
alliloullh Arians like lo jump
In oncl do tlinp, Ibey don't
like to llnilh what Ibey atart.
• T111r111 •1tlr1.U _.,, and
"'Ibis age ls the time to do
what you want to do ; 1:et busy
and do II," be admonished.
People born under the lign
·• of ,Gemini can do anything
Lem resJ)OOd more to praiae
than aiiyi other •lin, and the
utroloeer ldviled w o me n
with U.O busliendi lo bO lavish·
with compliQ)eob. Never pet•
morning. .
They like to balance and
weigh and then do what they
want to do but with charm,
magnetism and harmony.
Saglttarlans usually have a
difficult time 1f they continue
to live near where they were
born and he 1uggests they
would t:et along best if they
move far from their place of
~birth.
PJ9Ceans are the sciapbook
of the r.odil!C ,because they
contain element.a of all the ,.
other ·signs. 'Ibey art iii tune
with what's going on and have
. y;blch COJ?lbinel mental and
.• manuaJ .dnter~ty. They make
the belt · Jalesmen and are :.
• qu.ick at rtpartee. Tbty like
· lhort cufi, ao they never do f'
. • the ...,. 'lhllll ........ In lbe •
am~ way .
.-MOGll childrea (c.ic.ri-)·
o:-i y, Leos are •very romantic
and hlw fn haVe a&ction.
They )ove boftie and lamlly
more tbaa any of the other
.i,,,. actpl ca.--
~ ~ aoalgesic WU • •
U you get into an argument
with a Scorpio, give in,
arbitrate er get a lawyer,
Richter advises. For«ful and
positive, they make excellent
Scrappy Capricorns a r e
almost always conservative.
They like the status quo and
don't like change. 'Ibey have a
flair for politics and a great
a facility for reducing facts to
an exact fOfll'lula. Many
artists and busineis lead~
are born wider .tbla eign in·
clud!ni.-<ond Nftinslly. • . • t ·1 .
---~ .. I . .,.... . . . "' . "~ ' , .
No Stq yt' BQ r!red ••
•
Delegates
. ,-::: . C ~et .. Loosens We I let
Gift Ideas
Suggested Gathering
Delegateil troin 86 Soutlsern
By ~ ~IC went on to bost 1 line of
I bav&. mbtru&d Annl! partlea that 1 e f t the
Huck ever afuce the day ahe neipborhood up . to their
invited me over for etiffee Ind check b a o ks m jewelry,
adviaed, "Wear · clean. ~· -dresael!I, toys, sl~ver, closet ac·
derwear" ceasorles, greeting cards, par· · ty dlocOlates and coemeUcs. ·
One art.emoon she Cllled and
said, ••1 want you ·aod your
hmbind' to come to dinner
Satuiday aigb(" . AT '_
WIT'S
END
"I cln't afford it;" I uid.
• • · 1.'What kind of a crick · 11
·'-Oiat?!'
Wben I arrivedr. theft were. ·
eia;bt can iD ber driveway, an
overweight aal~rson in her
living room who whipped out
an order book and sold me an
arthopedic corset.
That wu Annie 's first in a
series of' "home parties.''
Encour1ged !y her success
(she rtttlved a flannel Jam·
mie pillow for her bed) she
Ukiah Rites
"~y. Annie," I 'uid,
1111lnce I've been coming to
your bouae, I've bad to clip
coupiOm, get a part-time job,
breed my doe and cancel my
aperstlon. I cannot b u y
another single item."
"Did I ask you to buy
anY\hing?" she said, snifflng.
''I am sorry," I said.
"Forgive me for being so
liUlpiclous."
Annie bad spared no ex·
Harborite to Marry
Learning to Chrisbna.s shop Callfomtan chapters w 111
pense. There were e i ght In their own garages will be gather tomorrow in t b I
cauples of us seated around members of the Wednesday Mjsslan Inn, River~ide for a
rour card tables with pink MomlnJ Club of Costa Mesa conference of the southern
tablecloths and silver can· during a 9runch and meeting councils of the Daughters of
delabra. Two men in navy an WedneSday, Nov. 18• in the the American Revoluttorh
Balboa Bay. Club. !lost ·chapter members will blazers with dragon emblems A d. M Lo · ccor mg to rs. u1s greet the guests at 10 a.m. and
served roast beef, baked Kozel. chainnan. the program· following will be workshops, a
potatoes, fresh vegetables and will illustrate ."bow an im· gfneral meeting, lunch end 1 hot rolls. aginative touch can turn talk b WWI P Mott J virttially ·anything' into some-Y am ena r. Just as I .slatted to ~lax, thing." . al the' State Department of
one al them appeared at my Plans for 8 Christmas Hon-,i~P;a~rks;;;w;;;;:Re;;cr~ea;U;'o;•·;;:;;~ elbow and said. "How were d
Your veaetables'" ay dinner dance, taking pllC'e 1 e ' Dec. S in the clubhouse, are "Wanderful," I said. being finalized. A luncheon llAVTlfUL CLOTHD •• • °"'" a"°""" Used "Then you did nOtice how and gift exchange are planned a., .... ""'° u.•1 bur to M -
th r 1h GI be tt c ..... 1 twk:.1 In Int umt ii,,_, e ju.ices wer~ preserved?" or e o tro ers ~uon TfMltr L-_ Your G•lll
"Oh, yes." on Dec. 11 in the Saddleback
I M H bert L d\ THI SICOND TIMI AIOUNI "Thal i's •--ause of lbe nn . rs. er ynes an I ... R ''" st .... ,
u.;:i.; Mrs. Clive Schultz are the o,.i 11 t• j' :" ..;.;.. ... •
special vessels used in thelrli~c~h~al~rm~e~n~.OiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiii~~~~~~~~~~ preparation," he smiled.
"Oh?" I sald putting my
fork down slowly. HAVING HEMLINE PROBLEMS?
He whipped a small booklet Th, •lltw•r i1 1jrnpl1 -Ltl UJ 1liow you liow to
cut cf his pocket that read, Ir.nit your ew11 p•nh 1uil en , "8,etk,," ~nittinCJ
"eots Are People" and con-m•cklnt . Com• In, you'll bt dtlivht1d to l1t rn
linued,' "Later on when we how quiclr.ly you c•n do ~
show slides of the cookware, T H E . K .N I T W I T
you can follow along point by South CMit Pl•••-point. Or you are free to ex· Lowe11; MALL -
amine the display in the C~M~~ w~".'°;!~12
kitchen while we are serving!~~~~~~ "'iii~iii:iii:iii:iiiiiiiiiii:~ dessert. Naturally, we don'tli 1111!1
want to tum a fun evening into
Tapestri1ts Enhance 'Noche; Air Force Lt. Milton Arthur :.~~eley. She is an air llne a market place, ch we t.So, if
Reimers Jr. of-NeWport Beach stewardeu. you ·WUI juat tfflli .me your
will clalm Beverly Ann Bishop Her fiance, son of Mr. and phone number,1 Will call you
u bis bride during ceremonies Mrs. Milton Reimer s 0 f and make an appointment to
to be conducted in January in Newport Beach. is an alumnus show the cookware at your Artlat Mr1. Jo (Esther) Dendel, a member of Torana Art League displays
one of the lugue'a tapestries which will decorate the walls of Villa del Sol 1n
Fullerton for Santa Ana EbelP1 N;oche de las Estrellas party on Wednesday,
Nov. 11. Sponsored by the Adrlans Sec lion and the le{!gue the event will bene-
fit thii Hemophilia Foundation of Orange County.
Ukiah. · of San Marino High School, convenience."
News of the forthcoming Pasadena City College and the All eyes were upon Annie
event was announced during a University of Puget Sound. He who whispered, "Look, gang,
family party in the Redwood played varsity tennis In high the door prize la a fluted
Valley home of Mr. and Mrs. lichool and college, is affiliated gelatin mold 1hlped like a
Hal Bishop, parents of the with Sigma Chi, and now is valentine." bride-~. 1taUoned at CasUe Air Force h looked ridiculo\ll en AD·
Iron . Curtain Rises President
Honored
Ml!.!1 Bishop.ls a graduate of:, rB;:;ue;:;;;;'::M:;er;Oced;:,. ======;:;nl;;;e'::::•,;:be;;a~d.~====:::; Santa RMa Junior College and II
the Unlverslty of Callfontla,
Holiday Cooking Tips Speaker Tours Russia Series Beg ins
A f1rewell tu1cheon will be An eight to ten week aeries ...
A tour ol eallledrals, pa!IC:ft
'ind 1allirlee ta-u ... u
1Y I -to Ille Kremlin II on
IYll SOVIETS
O. W. Price
tht aaencla for memben ol at.aged by the Newport Harbor for expect;Ut parents will r _..... Bea begin at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. the .__. .. na ch Woman 's Exchangette1 at 11 1.m. Nov. 18, in the .HunUngton
Club at 7:30 p.m. on 'Mlurlday, Wednesday, Nov. 18, in honor Beach home of -Mrs. Thomas
Nov. 19. of outgolnc president Mr1. Harris.
O. W. Price, a fcrmer or-Jack Dalbey. Preparing E·x p e ct a nl
ftcial of the U.S. Vel•an'a Mn. Helen Keever will open Parents, a member group of
Admlnlstration, wilt pruent 1 \. the lnternational Childbirth ner Balboa }lame fot the If· Education Assodatton. i s:
1Ude lecture of bis tour lut fair. Mn. Dalbey ls moving sponsoring the series in the
aummu which c o v e r • with her family to Oahu, Lamaze method.
Ge Hawaii. She pWmed lo char1tr·1;:========.:ll rmuy • Hungary I n ~ u EJchangettes Club there 111
Ru1111, entiUed IJfe Behind an 1usill1ry' to a newly fonnedi I ~ll'lliD~O~W!ilj·M~'•T·O~Wii!iMil!m
Ille Iron CwU1n. Ezchup Club. 11
• Included In the talk will be •l;m;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ill
deoorlptlon of 1ht P!"Pie,
«OnOlnY and lite under ·Com·
munllt rule 11 well 11
.......... lncldentl be and biJ
w~ Elizabeth experienced durinc their visit.
AllO on display wUI be I by
10 photoeraph1 in black and
white which Price hu tinted
in oil.
Proceeds from the lecture,
tvhld! ii open to the public ~t
a colt « II, will be used for
MW kitclMn equipment.
MAL AllllCHll
HEARING AIDS
( ...... ~ ..... Atne111ktt ....
"O IAl.llMIN 3-409 E. COAST HWY.
CORONA DEL MAR ,... .,,., .........
675-:1133
feeturing updoted Heritdge
rec1p1es _en·d the· eesy electric
wey to pre.per& them.
.presented by
South.rn C11ifornie Edi.on Co.
FASHION ISi.AND HOUSE
on the moll
Tonight (Mondey) Nov. 16-7:30• P.M.
Tuesdoy Nov. 17-10:30 A. M.
---FASHIU.'SLAND
xl:Wl'tiaT CENTER
•
FREE CONDITIONING
. TREATMENT
,.;..
' lJji
WITH TOUI Nm IHAMroo' SIT '
l'alMll l.'811 '*""lltllr ""9111 lletltllltr, lf'NU11t "'"'· '"" •o ,_.,. ... llllr It 1111111Nltl11r N .. frM 'wllll WP fQv. "·~ .... ,.11 uin-•
. MON.·fUU.-'#10.
SHAMPOO, SET & OONDmONER s211
"""Ill'-"' -·~ ... .... ,. ·-...
Hl\BCOT •1ao
· FALL PEIM SPICIAL
•11 ... 1-1lo --· s94·s ......,,., •••• ••"-II ......... , ..
CroWning ·Glory
Cfonnerty C'apr1ct Colftur!t)
SOUTH COAST PLAZA 267 I. 17til ST .• COSTA MISA
Lowt r L•'f1l-N•1f to 5,.,. ....... 141·9flt •
PileM 14,·111, Op111 E~111l "f' & $11~d1y
Dr,•n '"''"i"9•
KJ C stereo103FM
the sounds of the harbor -. ~. ·
'
• music ~dS~~il yoi. like· go·od
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Ol!:AN$E COUNTY, CAll~Rf'.llA . MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, '1970 ·.T~.CENTS -~-.,. ~ ' . • _......_ _.,,._T_ ... " -· • ... Mes~ tdttit~il :u~~r's Pauiarino Traffic · Plea
' '
. '
.... . . ' --. .. ..
d!ii1nc tanlght'i dellberaUons.
. ~ waut Paulaino Avenue closed at
'Cbeyemle Street to throul!b traffic, which woUit. !l8 ca(ried by Jlear .str .. t,, after
the lat ter is cOnstnicted from Paularino A f~n\le thrOu'4 te Baker Street.
, ,Pu~l}c hearings are scheduled tonight
foe. atlditlon ol a small area known as the
Marina Vjew . ~xatiol).,, cbrrently in
county tcr'ritOry. plus' formation of tWo
undefground .utility dlstt-JC\8. •·
\)Ile would be 0!1 .Bay Street .betwe.n
·-" '-2 Newport
Newport Boulevard and Thurin Avenue,
with a major "share privately 'financed 'by
the Orange Coast ·Publisbing..company. 1
Tbe DAll-Y PILOT 'PUbllJhing iitm is
. offering to help l?ilY the cost of placing
utility lines ·undirgroW1d irr conjuriction
with its remodeling project, at no cost to
other property owners. ,
A second &strict Ls proposed by the
i;ity staff · along Newport Boulevard:
between Bristol Street and Mesa Drive.
Tavern twuuft will also be on tonlghl's
. . '
. . ..
· qenda as the ~t. ~ co01p1,1n111 . by
residents Uving '!'ar ~ '!J'fer,n! ban 11' town. e:!tw:1::~i:~~-~rw:
the Bethel Towers retlreloeot, apartinent
skyscra~r. . ,,.
·An ~t~e grouJi. fl;f .~eSid~~ ·on. Cl!w'cJi
Street art also ,askJng the . ~ty ;to m.
Vestlgate pr9blerbs they e.nc·o,unt·er
',..,.Jting fro!l1 'patroni of Plet"ll, •!io.the
1900 block of NewpiOrt BouleVard. \ •
F_;~gineer Arrested in Trailer Pa:rk $,J,ooi,i~g .
'~ r » ' ' '. '' r;. • .
·pear In the~ Judicial District court
this afternoon. , •
.. Qfns_es: James Gardiner, ZZ, is li.steclin
fair, condition following !& b do m ln al
suriery dtirtni-Wtiich 'a ·kidney ·was
:removed. Officer John Ellingham, 24, is
also iri fair condition after he was woun-
ed ;m the ·right thigh. Both are in Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
The incident was apparenUy sparked
when ,the two patrolmen stopped Lambert
at hiLtrallu •. He-reportedly ·w~ spotted
driving . ei"ratically down Pacific go&st
Highway. . . M tl)e, two talked to the aus~, Jll:lor
to ·administering a field sobriety exam,
he allegedly pulled out a ~ ~ber
automatic and shot Gardiner Jn the
stomach .. Elllghlm asserted!y 'itas 1hot
while wrestling Lambert' to the ground.
The 'shooting was witnessed b y
Lambert's wife and two students from
Newport Harbor High School who were
participating in a ride along program.
Contr~v~y
:Jn Lame Duck
.. Worst 1n uis.-..ry
--. . Containment Seen ,Soon
'.Session Seen . f u F. F •
• :wAsiiii«ml~'l&I:.,; c on'~~-t'•" ~W>f I.jg~ . 9.rMt~, .. Jt:~S. ... , ~---' ' , I ·~ 1 ' ~'j. ".l ' • ·\~ll'll;llR:U ~ in tJle_.J~ cfU~;m ... I ' . o-""f• •
ltallment ,ol<u ~~YMl'·~·il&!e · B_1.,A11JHUR_. !:_.~~.·, .
" ~ ....... ~ . allll lliliit -·--•. political contiov~ Tliitlngg, ' ·eo~ta:lruiient oj. nJ~uaII ;"' p,'..&c\ed
Sen... Mllie Manalleld . of"Monlana, the today as an army ol 3,300 lirefigbten tnajori~y leader,, accused RepubUCan, Clbsed in on Ult .worst bl.aze in San
campalfners of peflonal vilification, 8nd, Bem.vdmo County hiStory, wit h
1'poUticaf sllc~steriam." ·. ' :i~~u.fu r=~· s e I r e d and un'told
• . • ... , n..i' ,......, · ·'1r,...,.·.r...,.. i.Senate Republican Leader Hug~ S<!ott
F.EJ.L'C>WOFF!CERS QUES710N WOU · O~&w!'e&t PAY!lQl.MAN of Pennsylvania "aaid · the lame duck 'I'll• raging inferno wi!ipped Into · :51t. Rit;hii-J;Miller ,(lettJ_,'0.t. c~e1 ,~; J;lll~rft · meeting "will be an u·n mitigated missive propartions"Friday 'by Santa Ana
· · ·• ,. · disaster," marked ·!:»' pc;>lilicklng.and the wincb ,reaching ·lOO niiles per hour has ', . .. _ · · ~ .. ! ' :,r.-· ,-,,,• ,. • , "4. • t p'romOflon o( pl!t pj-OJecia'.. • -.... d~ed '54 homes and virtUally wiped
· ·.._ I'\ -•, • -.. -£ :r'··1.;1 · ·• .' The calenda r is crowded, and time is out the tiny ririch 'resOrt communiti o(
B. .:..: ,..] f B' '!> n:...:~1~ ., • · 1· •hort -although, Mansfield sald he Smiley. . 'oo .. J'' o ..... ~.: ... ,,,,· u e~~-'.i~.:~, :,, -~ .'. ~~ ~~ . ~:, r:j-:u~·~~beQ the~ session will in~~~~~t:~~nd~":rJ1:o a;:::
, , DemocraUc, ;-sepatora . ,caucused, 11?<f tional ~~t lapds a c:U!aater area.
• .,,. 11 • ' · ... • ~ 1 " r j ; · • r ' >! • ' agree,d that ti)ere ~ -~· an attf:?tp\ 1 li'itefl&flters ~id only a few m.lnor in-
Fo" ~-.11n· d '0 ,: l\J'r-,_ .. -;...__ '. d,;'liY,Dili._,~_Lc·e~' 'd· ,' ; . ' i>el<'f• 1)11;~vm •• t4 ,o•«rride,J>re•I· jUi1,.· have been repor!A!d -and no ti. U -lf•i.1.:1·-v~ ·£ 1·uu d~-'N~oo's veto of a ~~~l to WrP,ly deaths arc known -blaming a campfire
·'·· · • ~jl ., ..... • ,.1. ,, ·rt. re$lri~caID~,~Pe;adlnion.ratliqan"d fortheBi8:.»Carareablaze ,plutarsonin j ·1 ••• • -• -, .i.. ., ; • ~ .~. , , •1,: ': ~, ':,):;.-(i.~ ·i:/f.) .. televlslOn~.: · _ · · ~ a series of1ive .others in two counties.
· • i" -· ~. ....i "' ... ,. "· ' ' · ~ · M~_sfi8Ji!.iai<J 'f¥'2' l~gJslaUoi\, 'S'taUed Joint investigation )ed. to the arresl ~Aided :~ ld!iiUfic!tiO~ ?t a~partially ~t "M~ :~.r·:.w:~ Jtiqedrat' .ariother · before the el¢ioa;l~~qJ-waltWllil 1.ier Saturday of Phillip Page, ff, of San deco~.'~ f~~in·1~·1>rush location •nd ·her bo4Y '·brougbt ~the in the week. He added that the:·Senate Bemardino,wboishefdwithoutbailpen·
ne~ ~e_na, Plrk; Ora11ge~:~y· S~r· Emery S~·gully ·_by o~r. The ~y was definitely Will vote 'on Pres(dent Nixoa's ding arraignment on arson charges.
ifra nve~tigp.tpts tod~, stl{P~ up, their d~ped. fitce do\\'." m ~c~ .bnJi~. (~ f:A~, Pa&e J) Authorities allege he set fires near
inquiries irito wh;i.t they'beUeve'. is a case ~-~--~~~~-;-----,--,---;~-c---------------------
of rTiurder. · : ·~ · "
Documents'· feund oil the Vict.ifll's .re•
main; h~d-o!ficers'hi identii{th< d~acl
girl as ·Vii:ki ·Lyiln runer. 16, or ~uena • -! • • • • • • Park. Misi Miner~ parents listed he.r as
missing tart "Oct.: tt ~ ·
Inves~fgatots· ~ ~ conunuoo tfiiir ".e'X·
amUiation of the brush-covered gully in
which the bOd_y .. was found Satitrday -by
children pl8Ying ln' ' the .area.· 'i'Jie::. i p
yOungsten·· ~ered· ·~iss· Mincf-ls ·rt,. t
mains · ·.· : ·1· : • • ',
co~ni!r•s ·)nv'~sijgators' 'fiave ·deter,1111'1. ·
ed that 1the' Buena Patk High &hool girl
~ fcom a blow to the back of too head
which fractured her skull. They believe OJ.at she Wed 1]!11 a.bout the time of her
diuppearance. . . .
• :ttlvesUga~ors".'in!. working on the tbeOry
. . . .
Market CTe~k
~. -~ t i"' t•
Held Up Again ..
~ , ·, . . . .. . 'A Costa -~Jesa marke"t c\ii:k, -~bbed One
week earliilr.. !Jf a tiatldit1who drbPPed-his ain and:f,lled .hl.'!· g~ll.l\'8Y .. -car. ~as
ituck up;•Sliirl Fti~Y night, lldt this bme
at;.a dltrerenj.11"tore:-11->l •. · ,
• John E.1 Vora.eek, on duty all.the' Tic 11!" Marttet ·at'llllS Pblri'tl!• Ave:. hiliidea
8Ver aboll\,$50~ a bearded !>"\'dil aimllj;.
WWI a tWin-tiairelled oVer-ullder der·
rtnger. \,. : ,.· • ' • "·
Votacek said the tall, hairy-faced .min
was extreftlte1y·c8hn Md didn1t awear to
be'high on c!ruis. •moo\Jll.Y Jll11lillg , ti!"' Jo~ despHe the presence or a n\11~ shOP-
W In the rear Qf the store.
He waa vlctlmtz~ tei'eDUy at a Tic 'l'oc Mllfket at 111 Di! Mor Ave., but -
unlike the Friday incideol -~bandl\ll-
b_tqttbllhg led to arrest Of a suspect near
t~1~. -
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•• J•
' llttbe <:an)'llll and'Uml Llodi!. which
biilneH more \ban 'I oOll"iiet.l'lnd 'three . ' home~. 1!bile other blazes were quit~
spotted and e~llnguilbed.
Orange C-ounty escaped the ravages of
hellish fire whipped by the so-called Devil
Winds,. after canceling all time off and
alerting all personnel Friday.
: They were geared for a pos.rible repeat
performance of the de\!utaUon resulting
from county Jlre1 fanned by the annual
Santa Ana onslaught in October.
·San .Bernardino and Ri ver1Jd e
firefighters. were · rapidly enclosing the
wor:st of the weekend blazis which
erupted at the east end of Big Bear Late,
with 65 ~rcent contained by ntid-day.
"We .were really helped by the end of
the Santa Anas and the fact that · the
forward e<tge .of the fire btlme(t into the
flat' area, where ~·e could move in truck!
itnd manpawer," said U.S. Forest Service
information "officer Bill Makel. ·
A firebreak caused by the Rim of the
World Highway also heJped contain · tbe
flames, he added. ·.
Hundreds of persons were evacuated
from cabins and permanent homes ih 'the
mountainous areas in c 1-u d I n g conl·
munities of ArrowBear, Runnings Springs
Amilway Park and Smiley. .
Sonora Students
Get Bi~ds F;ye
View. ~f Chopper
• Kids at Costa Mesa's Sonora Elemen·
lary School will do some bJrd-w8.tchlng
Thursday afternoon.
They'll see· an Eagle, to be specific.
One of.Coita Mesa's Emergency Air·
Ground Law Enforcement (EAGLE)
police helicopters Ls dUe 'to swoo"p out or
the aky at 1:·30 p.m., ianding·on the cam-
pus.
The pilot and observer·off icer will tell
younpters what it's like to be a helicop,
as ·patt of the· departm~t'o continuing
community relations progtam.
Cyclist Struck
By Car'irt "M~a
Taking hls ·e v ~e n l n g const!lutional
as(rlde a bicyc~ _a Costa Mesa man
escaped with1his life SUnday night When
h1t by a more sophisticated vehicle that
malfunctioned.
M.Wia\ Muk 'F. Aubel, 23, ol ,
Anaheim,' W!d polict 'fte WI)! turning Off
Baker Street at Mendo!.a'Qrive, whm his
ctr'.a pbwer ateerfM failtd. , '
He tried to brake, bul hit tilt gas In-'
!rteacl, striking LeOn ·E. Stodda~l 37, o!
3040 Grant AVe,, who was' treatea: '!Of 1 ·
punc(ured anltJe it Costa Mesa Memofial
· HoopiW and reiwed._
'!I
.. The two girls ,w~re II) a Wl!t. drJvm by
. Pl!trolman T\lill 81"ltf-·Tbey ~'arjlved at the scene prior 'to tjlO 11boothiiP•· thi
students coufil obferve what, :~Ith
thought would be a routine drunk driving
test. .
Neither Of the twO atuaent, were fn.
jured and it was Smith' who, wu -finally
able to subdue Lambert.
Questioned afterward about their reac·
lion tO the shootings, the girb·ai.ld'tbey
(See PO!JC.EMEN SHOf, P.,. I) . . .
CLIMBERS CLEAR . .
MAJOR OBSTACLE
' . . YOSEMITE NATIONAL .PAllK, Cali!.
(UPJ j' -TwO stubborn · m!Nntaineera·
Monday surrn9unted a 15-foiot. overhang
called "The Great Roof" --;.the Wt ma-
jor o!>stacle on their con9µe$t' ,of "El
C.pi~s un11lmbed OQll!beaat fqJWar·
.ten Harding, 46, ind fie.art catdwe;·21,
were reported within 4M feet of tie~.l\llD.· mil and "ma)dng beaUlif•• pi:ocfUs." ~ ;WJier stbry pese· a. l" • iJJP JU'!(escaped the overhang, R.,.-Derrynerry, a member ol the
clfmbers•· groui,d party, reported after
flying past the 3,400-foot hlgh. Stone
m~lith above Yosemik! .Valley· JD a
light plane. ·
' Mesa Golf . Club
Hearing. Slated;
In Santa Ana -T": ~·
A hearing Is scheduled 'rlext· Weet In
Santa Ana as authoriti'9 "'ai~alpt iO un-
tangle another knot in · the complicated
finances of the Costa Mesa Golf .. and
Country Club and ·~e of its prior opera-.'
tors.
City offlciaJS and Creditors will nleet
with bankruptcy referee A. K. PbelPS: and
PRO Enterpri!es' ·ano"1ey1 · to··,ctiScuss
WhO owes wh~m bow m~~ .. ll>di ~ ~L
The co~erence• Will ~-l"{ov. "5 .ai lG
a. m.: in Phelps' office and.invblves &be se-
c:ond among thrtt. oPeratois'. to-nm tthe
1967-constru'ctiOn mUniciplil coUTW: ' · ··
The city claims gcili-pio .Rcitije Jltif
and his partnera oire It• ~qn.Q, pl ui
pre-bankruptcy .deblll of, IS,D .38; aa ii
now stands.' • • .• ,
RePresentiitives <!f Pim·, Enterprises
contend the · city · owes,.,.them a •bit
sum, so the purpose of the 'meetini is tct
discuss applying1this to the debt"OWed b7
the former private ~ators. · ' ' . ' . '
Oruge
(
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•
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•
I
• lf. DAILY hLUl MoM&f, H.M~ 1' 19,g
) I -·
Class '-D'·~Y ~cht •• . \
.Victor Mazatlan
'r
.; Student V eteralU
~Send Chrisemm
,.Trees to Vietnam
."-P"lve Vietnam veterw t u.r n • d
· Fullerton J_,. O>llege ltudenla have
perlOllllly ,..n to It that some of the
lroopl In l!outheut Alla blve ID old-
. fubloo>d · 'Cbrlllmtl tfff for I he
• holidi,;. ·
· Tfle' tive .. Doua Alllil. Jim Wadleigh.
Glen IJUom, Bob Spirk& and F JC. Shldent
llOdy Pmident Dan Freeland,.ipent'the
wMlrolld to Libby. Wyo., arr"'81n&
" 1'Ure11Ue and shipment o! "° Cbrlatmu tree. to OUlpOltl and bead~ra all overvtetnam.
'lllty llld !hey wanted to •bow Pml-
d<nl Nllon that oolle&e a t u de n II
lllJOu&hOut the n~tiop IUppOrl hb .yllD
p6UOles.
Allan addad, "We -"'b a I
Chrlltmu In Vlelmm -""" yorzr lov>d ones II like for 1hole 1*',......id
kida."
The tiw will BO by ~·to ... · Wuh.,' llld then to ~ Via .Anll1 :'l'r._i. .
: Police Re$enre ' .
P~UnderWay
In.Costa Mesa
A <;llJl!>llln to recrutt ,_.e Itwman
to bldt.Qp Costa 14-·· ..,.1ar oftictrl Ix 11111 imder wiy. .
"
Overall and Clo,. D comctld tJmt
w~ w11 .. one ol the: smallest entries In
the race. L'A,leiro, a Cal-36 Owntd and
slctpj)fl'ed by Roderick Park of Richmond
y ICll\ Club.
Thi b&OdwrfUna: on the wall · w11 teen
by dayllpt Solurday wben a brisk wind
wblsUed out of the northwest to douse the
l!Ope1 of the tarly leaders, ltlaloa I!,
llllcal, Blnma. Warrior and NoVia de!
Mar. !he lint five boatl to finish.
0 Some of thole Clan D boats actually
C!OIOed ' !he gulf In leas lll!>O tl>IO we
didi'' · said John B. Kilroy, owner of
Klaloa 11.
lttoloa bad drlitld aa.ea the llnla!! Une
to be !he !liat yacht to flnllh about 2:45
a.m. S.lurday. Only two ho\lrB bfhlnd ber
cmie Bill Willon '• Rucal from Santa
Barbara. followed nearly an hour later by
John MclnUre In llanma.
Al CuMJ.'1 SG-foot sloop Warrior from
]!ahla Corinthian Yacht Club finished only
20 minutta: behind Baruna, and John
ScrlP1'' a&.foot ketch NoVia del Mar, San Pie&~ Yacht Club, the acratcb boat tn the
fleet, WI.I only .1. few minutes behind ber.
Ed 6unberg'1 Cla11 c Yacht 8 u n -dancer wu the fir1t to wipe out the Cius
A fleet when she was the seventh boat t.o
finish: But she did n<>t remain-at the top
of the handlcap.standlnp for tong. Barry
BerkUS' Intrepid, I Clal:a D entry, WU
the nal boot to tinllh and loobd I« an lhe·"!'rid Uke a winner.
Then came L' Allegro wllh a corrected
time !bet waa not to be beaten.
s.c:b·m the !Ortanea or mill-of
yacht racing. For fbe first three. dafl
_from the NO)>. 7 alart tt appeared to be a
Cius A race with Klaloa II baV.in( a shot
·-elopaed time record. n.iii um.; the IOI! air near Cape San
Lacal wllh the leaders being stalled and
!he small lisht boals brlngtos up the wind
from aitern. -
Even the wlndo In !he "'11 connived to
make it a small boat race. All of the
vetetana who went by past ~ience in ,
rounding t.he cape and going north to pick
up the oortbe:rly winds were frustrated.
Those which struck out acroaa the full
from Qie cape encountered first a brisk soutl'lerty which later turned into a
northerly and held all the way acrnaa. Oirrently w!tb IS olficera. Lt. O-ge
!¢on'• reserve ranb need to be heeled
Up to .. according to police ad-
. mi~:,':;;. detalltoa requirementl 1or Autopsy Slated
,_.., may bt obtaln>d by vltlllnl nr .
calling !he Collla Meaa Polloe Fldl!ty at . In "ll'vstery Death 11 Falr'Ditn. -'-._ ', ,. ,. ·~ t f.1.iJ '
No written eumlnaUOO'll required , but'
-nctU1ted for ........ duty mUlt pall . Of N rt M • ~ qiJ!ly .1e11and ..... 111n~. · ewpo . an
plua a medical checkup ill the -Of tl>Oll Mllcted. . • ,.-
. Golf Gear Taken
At Mesa Course
A tlllel armed wilh a bolt.<ult4r anlp.
ped Ille lock off a Costa Mua youth's
countey dub locbr over the weekeo4.
·stealinC $l40 -111 of eolflng gear, the
:Ticli.Jh told police.
. » Merk N. roto. 18, who lives on the
Fairview State H03plta1 grounds where
his l•tl!er.11 1µp,rlntandent and medical
dlrector, Nld he aJao noUced other led••
m1u1ng at the Costa 14.,. Golf and
pmmtry•Club.
Police llld they ml1ht get 0ther
reportl of thefll today.
Eleven Bombs Thrown
SAN JUAN, Puorto Rico CAP) -
Eleven bomb• .-e lllrown from con In San Juan ovv !he ....nnd. Injuring two
-and ceUllnS estimated 113,0llO In domap. 11111 a hlCh polJee olfldal Nld he
lllousht they .. _,, foolaled tocldentl and
not th~ atart of a terrorist eampllgn."
DAILY PILOT
Ou.NIJI COAll rUIL.l&M!NI COMPAJCY
lt•Hrt N. Wtt4
"-111"" .... '11111 ......
J11lr: R. C11tlty
MDI ,._lMlt..., 0.-11 MtllltW
Th•11111 K11Yfl .......
lite"''' A.. M11Tplltu
Mtnlltwllfl1...-
,C... .... Offlet
110 w ... a., Street
lltll!otl -P.O. a.. 1161. 9111' --............ llw.t .. _...,..,.
............ 1 ......... ......,.
==~,~===':°ca.'=::
•
Studies were in prOll'eN ·.today to
determine what killed a YllUDll 'Newport
B .. ch man found dead S.lurdey aboard
!he boot OD which be lived.
No vllible ca-oould be found IDd an
autopsy was performed on Ntcb<ilu A.
Miller, 28, wbo WU found by his lather,
llunell E. Millar, of ml P'orhlna A .. .,
Newport Beach.
Tox!colog!cal otudl.. must M c<im-
pJeted to 'detmnlne the presence of any
fatal chemical• In his iiyatem, aC<!oM!ng
to tbe Orqe Coonty Coroner's Office.
Services for Mr. MIIler will he private
and are ICbeduled Tuesday at 11 a.m., at
Baltz Mortuary in Corona del Mar.
Besides bis father, he leaves his
mother, tiltera Joni Dorey, of Sleramen-
to and Janis Bechan, of Saudi Arable.
and bis a:randf1t.her, of Kentucky.
•
Veteran. Jumper
Gives His Life
To Save Partner
ALESSANDRIA, 1'aly CAP) -A
veteran Italian parachutlat gave his life
Sunday to· save his inexperienced SwiU
colleague from certain death, offictila: said. -
The inci4ent occurred when Mario
Gosparini, 35, of ?tt:llan and a veteran of
150 jumps, made a twin Jump from 2,000
fett wtth Guy Bornet, 24, of Switzerland.
Officials said Bomet, making hi1· 20th
Jump, ~ot e.ntangled in his ropes and
Gospanni did not open his own main
chute to avoid creatina an air pocket that
-Id have complicated problems.for !he -· llllleAd, Goeparinl 'flied to open . his
~ieocy c1'ute aft.tr clearing 1way
from Bornet b11t he was too low. He died
upoo Impact of a frachlred skull. the of-
lictall llld.
-~ me1Dwhile. llahw..d hb paridlute and landed Kiely •
Report Critic Cites
Boom in rornography
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charle1
Keating Jr., d_1ssenting member of the
U.S. Commlalion on OblC«lity ond
f>omocraphy, bu charged that the
group11 recent .report ls AlrNdy Jn-
crtUins bullne11 r.r pomograph•n.
Appearing on-the Advoca~. a public
lnldeutlni MMtl<e ........... to he talecalt Tueldl:J, ltntlnt llid: .. Since
the iealdnt o1 the conclUlions of . the
roporl, wbicll lndlosted a snater
permilltvtneta, we've seen a-apread of
Uve ,.. lllowa whlch we llld J\ol Wit.
-bef.,., along with a prolµeratlon
of Danllll type 1mut •boPI all acrea the
counby."
.
UNDERGOES SUROIRY"
Shootint Victim Qor<flne"
From Jrsge l
SHOT ....
told suspects be had been at :Berkshire's
and tbe Dry Dock before being stopped
,by the officers.
Mrs. Lambert. who bao cO!ne out of the
trailer while the offlcera ques,Uoned. her
'huaband and wbo wu presebt dl.U"inl: the
ahootina:s. was held for questioning bf in-
vestigators, but was later released .
"didn't like it," but we're philolophical.
''I 1UtJ8 lt COQldn't be helped,,. 'one com·
mented.
Gardiner'& wound was so seriOus that
Smith didn't wait for an ambulance. He
put the unconscious officer. tn · Officer
Lawrence 'Gabriel's Wl1t and·'tiad him
drive. to the hospltll. ·
Meanwhile other patrol wljll)lad block:
ed off C.0..t HlsJnvay to all croii trlflic,
1ettiJJg up road blocks at the intersecUona
of Bayside Drive, Dover Drive, Tustin
Avenue &11d Riverside Drive. A Costa
Mtll police wilt stopped·,trafflc at.the in·
tertectiori of Newport Boulevard ' and
HO!pital Road for the speeding patrol
car. .
At the hospital, a team-of four doct.ort
worked on the wounded patrolman
several boars.-His condition, which· was
orifinally listed as serious had tmpr~
tod1Y to lair. He is in the intensive care
unit ~
Ellingham was iaken to the bMpital 1
few mi1'111tes later by ambulanct:.
Gardiner, who lives in Newport bas
been a .member of the police force 'since
Jamwy·of tbil year. A graduate :Of Cal
State Long Beach, he boldl a• ·BA tn
criminology. Ellingham is a twct year
veteran of the force and lives in Costa
24tsa. Both meG ife-,~. :0 1( ,,, I
The 116t time a Newport patrolman
wa1 shot in ·the line of dutY Was ln 1958
when Officer Williim Talbot was iihot in
the· hand by a fleeing suspect on Lido
Isle .
'
turday ni&ht's shooting, which Det.
Ken 111ompaon called · the worst 'in
history of the department, nmained
uoexpl11ned today. .
Lambert all•aedly told 'lbompson .tho
officers approached blm ~ a me~ manner.
ln~estirators said neither Ellinaham
nor Gardiner drew their guns during the
.incident. Smith said he took his oi.tt when
be htard the shots fired, but put' it away
wben he saw Ellingham grappling With
Lambert.
The gray-haired suspect also reportedly,
From Psge 1
LAME .•.
welfare reform propbslls.
Scott discounted Mansfield's attack on
Republican campaign tlcUca.
"Thole are political purely, they are
ritual and required,:' be Slid. "In dUe
time, I'll make the same kind of
ltatemeiltl." .
Manafield and Scott · qree.t Jl!at the
Nomnber·Dec:emb.et' f • m e du~~
Ing lhould be treated u .a' c !:a an u p ....ion. handling only appfOprlaUona and
other 1bsolute ntct&Sttft1 before ad~
journlng.
In fact. Scott said, the ·admlnist.ratton
will be in a stronger poaltion, particul1rly
on defense and foreign affairs. in the new
9'2Dd eon,resa. due to convene an Jan. 4,
He said eontroverslal issuea not now
re~liy ftr action should waJt until then.
SCOU llid · his judgment of the lame
duck meeUn1 h1m't chanced 1ince elec-
tion day :
"I think It wW 'be an unmitigated
dlwlar, ulde.frnm the necwity ot ge~ Uni apPl'Oprtatlone bllli thrO\'lh." '
ScOlt allO ·~ he expectl to hold onto
hlo Job u Repobllcan leader when the
new ~ meets. "I have more than
ample auUrancu that 111 be able to con-
t.blue ro: do ·my job in Jan11ary," he aaid ...
He llld that Included word from Nixon
that he ts 11tlsfied with Scott's
performance.
Sen. Robert C. Byrd (0.W.Va.),
sideatepped quesUona about the prospect
ht might challenge Sen. Edward ~. Ken-·
nedy (O.M1ss,), for lhe post of maJorlty
whJp tn January. He aald that w1s
prtmaturi. ... _
"I will nm, and J,l.ntehd lo Whi," said
Kenn>dy. •
Sen. tdmund S. Mulkll_(!).Malnel, a
leading pl'Olpeet for hll party'• Pr.Hiden-
tlal nomination in 1972, -said he would llke
a &eat <la the: Senate Foref&n Re11tion1
commit.tee In !he new ~·
Mansfield•a attack 00 Republican Clm·
palp techni<Jnes seemed directed at
President Nixon and Vic~ President Spiro
T. Agnew, since they led the battle for
the GOP.
I
------------------- --.
..
'
_Soldie,t p~ A:fter Gu.nf~ght Wif~ Po!ice
NO!ltOLK 'Va. (Q'.) -A ~Id AqthortUes n!d J.,.ph Jem.. O'Britn lowortng herself to the . groW!d from •
' -·"'"' -'"'· -ed otflct er ed aecond.floor bedroom while Hernandez, a • ~ ~ ll\lft,, UM:~ treatm~nt for A~ut 30 arm rs conv I Marl.ne, engaged O'lrlen in convttiation.
battle;-f1tlaue after ttl'V~C! 1n Vietnam. ~n::~ t~U:~r:': :~:~~:rd Police said O'Brlen ,' an outpatient at
wu ,Utilly shot earty tod&Y to a l\l!lfighl . O'Brien had gone at the cl of a -h Nani. H°'pltal, wen.t to !he
with Norfoil< pollu... --•Tr. . abootlng·apree that begau 'Sµndaylllght home Of h~ g~l!riend -_,Judy ,!!inion, 18
aps)arenUy took hia own life when 081ctrt -when 1te·1r,Ued with his Clrl friend. -late Sunday night afte~ tel1Jn1 her he : · · · · would "get" her. They said he was arm-fired tear gas into an 1partmML-\vhtr1 Mrs. ~andez had spread th~ aJarm ed with an Anny Ml6 rifle.
the ooldier bad held a y_oung coujile cap. att•r eaeaPlo& .the apaume.nt. i»',mWng The Hlnlon girl had fled. Police Aid ttv'f· ,,., ... a laddier_of tled-tcptblt ~and O'Brien shot the family d<>i in the
/ · " backyard, shot a lock off a door and then
. ::-' shot up the inside of the house. The girl's RIJJlll Anauck ~ pareni., Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Hinton.
} · • . were unharmed. :: · j · · ' Police said O'Brien then went to the
P ndl to M • H ld Hernandez apartment "and alked for e e n arine e transportation," threatentos !he couple -' with the rifle. Hernandez' automobile was
In a npah: shop.
In Two Knife Attaeks Hernandez told officers O'Brien "calm-
ed down" when told that Hernandez was
a Marine, but became excited anew when
police converged outside the spartment
after Mrs. Hernandez' escape.
A Youn& Camp Pendletori Marine wu
being held on felony asuult charg~ to-
day in two separate knife 11ttacts on
women in San Clemente Sunday -one af
which resulted in minor knife WOWlda to a
sailor d~end,ing one af the victims.
Po~arrated Gary Frank Shaw, 20,
near the ~ng lot at the municipal pier
a few minutes after the second attack .
The youth was booked on suspicion of
assaul t with a deadly weapon.
The first incident <>ecurred at the
Tr•falgar buc:)>.at l:U p.tn. as Robert
Cb811es ]Jtner, a sailor aboard the USS
L3rson, was preparing to leave the beach
with his companioo, Ann-Carol Hely, 25,
of San Diego.
Officers said the asuilant ran up
behind the ooupla and brandillled a
switc,bblade knife, attemptlng to wault
I.be woman .
Ittner. 26, told police he began flghllnl
with the man and suffered a cut arm in
the struggle. The aasailant then Oed down
the Santa Fe railroad tracks.
Sorry, Sirs;
Signer Skipped
Special to the DAILY PQ.OT
GENOA -Everyone in this
bucolic birthplace of N e v a d a
statehOOd wa5 eagerly -awaiUng ar·
rival of the first new street signs to
go up in the Carson Valley for more
~ tha.ft.1® years.
·Dellbentlng long· and bard, the
~noa Town Board led by Mrs.
Hope Falcke voted to buy the re-
quired' material• and •hip thein to
the Nevada State Prison work1h09.
The order came back unrdled,
with a regretful note from the
warden, e:rplaining the pri.on's
resident &treet 1lgn maker baa e1Caped. ·
Costa Mesa Drug
Seminar Slated
Experts tn the field of drug abuse will
appear Nov. 19 fOr a seminar on
narcotics at 7:30 p.m. at ·Killybrooke
School In Costa M .....
The· panel, whJch ff sponsored by the
school's PT A, will include Mrs. William
Hart, a teacher at the school; Srt. John
Regan, Costa Mesa 'police detective;
James Boyle, deputy probation officer fOr
the county; Gordon Dale, Newport Beach
attorney, and William J . Vaughn, a:sti!·
t.a.nt principaJ at Costa Mesa High School.
Mrs. Ronald K. Arnold, program
chairman for the.group said the aim of
the program is to acquaint parents with
!he eliallng problem IDd make them
aware of the facts.
The program ii open to the public.
Abolit an hour later Clmille Johnson of
812 Calle Victoria, was takin& an evenlllg
wllk along Calle Santa Ba.rbara when a
man matcbing the description of the
assailant ID the first knifing, joUed up
behind her. J
Police said ·they folllld · a switchblade
knife on the YOIJltl M;arine.
The womiu. told police tbe man thru!t
a knife at her IJ,omach. She stepped
btckward and •UemP.ted to talk to the
man. A few minutes later a pusin1 auto
distracted the ISllilant and the woman
fled.for belp.
Sllaw, wearing clolhlng matching the
assailant's, wU llfested momenta later
a few blocks from· iie scene.
Cost.a Mesa High
Drama Students
Set Production
Final rebtar111s ·an In prosras this
week for the ·Costa Mesa Hl&h '8tj'>ool
Dr.ama Club's autumn production whlcli
will he staged Thureda)', Friday and
Solurday niabt.
-"You Can't Take~tt Wlth You.'' ts the
play,_ a zany acCount of life with the
Sycamore Family, directed by Mias Don-
no Krl!lttanaan,.
The cut·~ 17 will be seen on 1tage at
the Costa Meaa High School campus and
includes 'V)etorta "liedoll."llmce Simo-
nian, llecliy P'Ol'Ndt.' Joe Swenson and
Tim Flanagan.
· »Olher.<-,,._. -'will be · 8tM
Tllomu. Sllaron "Hill,: Cbr1' "Lfaaier,
Denise Maillet. sue Wlebtl, Glenn'Nelaoi>,
Chele GU!ham. Janet P'Orllld~ John Pen-
niman. Scot Glallmyer, Andy Hau and
Terry Vitro.
Firm to .Build
New Patrol Boat
A Costa Mesa firm haa been uaigned
the ~ontract to build a $223,000 fire-fight.
Ing harbor patrol boat for tht San biego
Unified P«t District, it wu announced
Friday.
The 42-foot, aluminum-hulled emer-
gency vessel will be coMtructed by the
Atlantic Research Division ol the Susque-
haMa C.Orporation. -
The company is headquartered at 3333
Harbor Blvd .• but much of the construc-
tion will be done in a leased branch
facility nearby in Santa Ana.
, achedttled foe dellvvy by m!d-lp71, 'the
fireboat la powered by t~ ~ril ,
Moton englne~ '°d "ill dl&Jllace 40,ooo
. pound.! alloo~ company :llllOkNman lllld..
Police said O'Brien began firing from a
window and put two bullets into the first
police car to arrive, narrowly missing
two of!lcers inside. During the ti•
cltement, Hernandez fled the apartment.
When police demarided that QtSrten
come out, they were met with a hail of
heavy automatic,gwifire. After about an
hour, they fired I.tar 1as into I.he .apart-
ment, hurd one more: shot -iben
silence.
When they entered the apartm1nt,
O'Brien lay de1d on.the floor, the munle
of his rifle at bil bead. Police uid be was
not ldlled .bY a policf bullel .-
Bandit Suspect
Shot by Police
Santa Ane poUoe off!oer• shot a
buralary auapect early th1a 1"0f1llnl. Tli•
suspect· and hit alleged accomplleie were
caplured.
The: wounded man, Grant·E. Moyer, 33.
of Sant.a Ana. was hit by ~ shotrun
pellet&· u he fled !he Piggy Bank C<iin
Shop, 1341 Bristol St. He ii reported in
satiafactocy confiltion at Orange County.
Medical Center. ·
Officer Charles Kolodzey called to
Moyer to stbp several times all.tr the
lll!pect am.ashed throuah a wllldow'to 1et
out of the shop. Inside, offlcas said they
found Winton L. Worley, 23, hidin& in •
rut:room. """
.. i.J,1 T•"""'9 Baltfllnir· In There
\Varren Hardina-. 46. and his
partner. Dean Caldwell. 27, are
still dangling on lace o! 3,604-
foot El Capitan in Yosemite
~ational Park. See story, Page
. ~ ~. .
IUY'WHIRE 1rs MADE-SAVE-!
,ltuffell'a ·manufactures the·flttett furn iture you wtn
flntl •nywher,.;:You ... It 1nd·Nttct It right in our
showroom. Pay up to 50% 1 ... than retail. Choose
from an unllntftMI Nlectlon of fabr i c a. Custom
'hinges 1r• aleo pot&lbla.
.. QNUM111D STYW OF ·· . Pre-Christmas
Furniture
Idea
••
UPHOlSlERED . FURNITURE
HUNDREDS Of llAUTIPUL PAlltCS
TO CH~I r•OM .
Vfstf ..,,
show reom -
you1U enjoy
11l1cti"g
from our
la'r91 .1watcli11
of colorful
ftbric.s..
,, ,
• ALSO CUSTOM RIUPHOLSTDING ' ' .
•
' •
• TM rfftort we're svg-
gnling Cllrisl,..s so soon
is that it's a greet.IDEA to
have your own furniture
selected and rn•nuloctured
at • ccttl much loss than
you would pay in 1 reten
furniture store. ind in ti~;
~ lilf Chd1tn;a1. -
I ALL WO•l OUAUNTlll
fOl THI
l.IFITIMI Of MlllC
.1922 HAllOl .11.VD. •
Or Call F,r ~nt
\
•
I I I
I
l
l
l I
..
••
saddlehaek
EDITION
Strict _ San . C-leinente:
'
·-
A proposed ordinance covering IV"1' -" added condition ot •pprovaJ to the con·
development pha,. of mobi)ebo~,parka trov=lal permit 11..i..1 recenUy lo L!J>.
for San Clemente ts ~ tow am city cola ~'Savino apd Loin fti a part near
coundlapproval after mooU,, ol ~ SboitclHra Goll Coone. ·'
and ievWon.. · · • ' Jncluiled ID the onllnan<o la a clame
A'nd'll the strict new coii. goes !ni.i eJ. miidnr lllOh a permit nwr'ai>d void 'll a.
feet, it will be applied to'whafappean lo "bulldliig permit "11..noi ~ out wl\hiD
be the last new mobile boole J114 titpiO 1'9'~• of ~of the project.
city for !ever.al years. ' UJPnslru<itkm."is not begun within 90
Tbe propnsed ordinm:e wu placed u dol's after the permit ta~isaued, the ........_
•
• •
permit-again-lapses.
Councilmen once~·more u:llftined the
propoaed meuurdn -i ..... laet
· week, then after debate. over, rW,ulmnent
of vl!ltor f>lrkhig, ~pacei\ aiid ·joof19p
coolera ;onolft:lally ..,..J the -wen> ready !or a wt;, • •
PlannlJ>B commlsalooen baye ,.nted
on the . ordlnan~ through' _ everal
meetlap atnce Its draftiog IA!t sprJn&. •
•• ar1ne e Ill
..
Hero~ -17~ Cit~d
Marine 's Son . Saves 2 Kids in Fire . . . . . ' . .
A 17-Year~ld son of a .Marine olflcef
has been P.re!ented,. a · Jetter of ap--
pree\ation by the comrnan(llng general of
El Toro Marine'·Corps· '·Air SllUon for
iavlng the lives of.two children lit a fire.
Jack Forst. Jr., was returning home
1;1,·lth his father. Warrant Officer Jack
Frost of Sept. 15 when they passed burn-
ing home in the housing area just oU the
base. · · · · ~
Young Frost immediately jwnped from
the . car; grabbed a fire utinguiSher
nearby and broke throogh the front wj.n-
dow of the home to fight the blaze. His
fcither w'eot to the rear of the b()IJfe and,
' ' .
with a garden hose, kicked in the back
door to help put out the fire. .
BQth father and son ~ credited with
saving Ole. lives of two chUdrm. lrapped
in the bedroom of the -cbaiTed home,
Cameron, age -2,·anct Damaln, I months,
children of Sgt. V. F. Jones.
In the special letter presented to Frost .
Brig. Gen. Henry Hile, the youth was
cit.lid for courage.in the r~ personal
danger. WO Frost. personnel officer at
the ba§r, hu been reconuntnded for the
Marlnt''Corps Medal for his action in
fl&hting the lire.
. L B4Da.eowners !IJ~et\ · .
.. Missiqn Viejo , ~gyp "
. ' . " . ' . -
Service Distribt,:&a:rd . . .
MissiOn Viejo tupayen may soon have
a voloe , in bow {heir ,county service
district funds are spent
Jim Creber, a niember of the bOard of .
directors of the Mission V i e j o ' . .
San Bernardino
Firemen Battle
Biggest Blaze
· cl.otainIDtnt bf' nlghir~ll was predicted
today as an army of 3,300 firefigbtera
closed in on the worst b 1 a .z e in San
Bernardino County history, w i t h
s0,000-plus actes s e a re d and untold
Jriillions in losses.
The raging inferno whlpped ·Into
massive proportions Friday by Sanla Ana
winds reaching 100 miles per hour has tlestra~ed 54 homes and vlrtuaJJy ~iped
ou\ the tiny ranch resort commuruty of
Smiley. ' .
Gov. <Ronald Reagan declared the area
Including once-lush San Bernardino Na·
tional Forest land! a disaster area.
Firefightefs sald on1y a few minor in-
juries have been repor.ied -:-and no
deaths are known -blaming a camp!ir~
for the Blg Bear area blaze, plus arson in
a series of five others in two counties.
C.ast
1''eatber
It'll be coolec by a good 14 ~
grees OI) ~t.bt coast Tuesday with
local temperatures pegged at 61
degrees ·anct. the inlind mercury
maring lo: ~ as. ~rk.
INSmE·TO.,AY . . ' .
Upwords of 300.1/QO. Pak_i$1o•· ~
Ii mati b.e deod • in a. dual
disaster. of· c11cknte and tidal.
wave· wb.icb .ra1qu with_ ~t ,.
worst h<ilocOwtr of on titnf.
Poge .4.l
c.....,.. • ....,... ~,.
CMdl'"-U.. II IMt'ltl If . (lt1tlflM ,..12 ....... -.. •
''
Homeownen· Aaoclation unveiled a pilot
program to establish a .9erVict district
advisory.· board between the ~unity
and the 'board ol eupervlson.
Addressing a group of 150 homeowners
In the .· Mission Viejo High Scho!>I
mnlUpurpose 'room Thursday. Creber
outlined ihe duties or a ser\rice district
which Include parks and recreation
facilitie1 maintenance 8 tree t main·
tenance, fire protection and capital pro-
jects like a teen center.
"There ii currently '2251000 in the Oso
Valley Service Area No. ·9 wbi:h ell-"
coinpasses Wssion Viejo," said Crebe r.
"An owner of a $30,000 house pays about
$40 a year."
He said the advisory board. Idea was ifl.
itiated by the Board of Supervi.sors when
the Homeowners Association sought to
use service ,rea hmds for a teen center.
"'Fhey didn't much like the idea of
petititons," aaid Creber. "So they 'lug·
gested an advisory board."
Creber said that the purpose of the
• board would ·be lo advise Bob Y ablo\uky,
the county service area ove~r,~ as to
the,nf!edt and desitts of the commanlty,
"With a board -It would be posalble to
hold budget hearings IO that U>e; wlshet
of the community could be ex'iinwd.
The mulls-of these hearings could be
laken to the County." ,
A dispute developed over who would be
on the advisory board and wheller or not
they should be appointed by 1he county
supervisors governing the Mi811ion Viejo
area. •
One critic of the enttre i<le~ suggested
that there Is already too much fragmen-
tation of county government and that the
decision on how the service area money
should be spent shoftld be left to the
homeowners association.
Creber slid the homeo~n assoct ..
tion woul4 have another meeting in a
month to fLJrttier dlacuas the. idea.
Mjssi,oµ Viej~ Group
Elects New ()fficcrs
1be new board of directors lor the Mis-
sion VtejO Homeowners Association has
been elected.
·Serving for • ,.., will be Mlk•
Shearer, George Ann Mouer, Luis
C-'tl ~. '' Or.-C-'t II ~ ,, ....... """" -,,
DMlll NfKm It '""' ~ II·• Dl'IWCft 11 lttctl _.... lf.lf ........ ..... ,.......... . ..
-Lesniez, Jllm Creber, Howard Anawalt,
Iloj1~. Gary~. J~ Dlllf and Bill
Prater. •"""11-.1 ,,.. • ,,...,. ,,
""'-t•tr .......... • ,..,.._. 11 ...... .,,.... " ~ LIMlf't II .,_.. Mfwt t•lt
Mii... '
'• I
f
,
I
· Member.shlp In associaUon ~ii WI
open. Anyone wtsbln& lo join may contact
one of thf botcd membera for in-
fonn1Uon.
' .
Ban ~ought
On Airport
'At EI ·Toro
Petitions , are being Prwared for
circulation Jn the Mlsaion Vlejo ·ar!a to .
bloCk the poesibillty of Jotnl uae . ol. El
Toro MCA! for commercill and military
flights.
Spear~ng the action •t. the Minion
Viejo Homeowners Auociatioo. which op.
_. 'Ole recommendation .by Iha
Paraons Report that the county. begin
d~E~ble j<>~t·nae: . ·. MWf r,.-. .pnc't ut faif.tht1~e:
hom group, aa1d Thll?!day that
oppolitlno lo antither·pr~-6. •. ,..
port ~ated. !n' Bell c:'anyori haan't
pner&li!d as me IOlllCOm ID 111.u)o!>
VleJo 'llecaiae ' many feel 1bat• tt c<iold
nevei:i>e llninced. • ·
"It,.would ·take ·a .bond. election· and the
voteti pi:obi bly wouldn't ..-Jt/' be ·aid.' . '
~ ~ bomOOWDlr1 meeting at
MJ4sion Viejo Higb School ~ uiged
e'(tryone to· write· to their coilnty
swervilon to Jet them koow how they
1ee1. ·
:••0ur best ladle will i. to stall, delay
and posi~ ~ on the airport.. lites
until we ~ ~.d our force." said
Shearer.
He said the p>ssibility that the final
decision will be made in Washington is
not to ~ scoffed at. He sup:eated writing
the California Senators and Coogreuman
John Schmitz.
"Sen. Schmllz lives in TutUn and ls an
ex marine. We must let him ~ boW •
we feel."
Shearer said that although they may
1oee a battle or two, what'• important is
winning the war. He said if Phue II is
accepted, the next step would be Phase
III, a comprehenslVe detailed pl.an whlcli
would .uncover many short.comings ln us.
ing El Toro MCAS for commerclal
aircraft.
.~uple to Tell
Lapidary Group
Of Yellowstone
AA opat-gatherliig trip laktn to an arP.a
near YellowltOne National Park bY, a San
Clemente couple wjll form the program
for the monthly rfteeting· Wednes~y of
the Tri Cities Lapld>ry Society. j ·
Mr. and Ml'I. W.'M. McKay wtu show
slides and 1pecimeris taken on tnefr re-
cent ll'ip lo the Spencer Opal Mine Iii
Idaho at the 7:30. p.m. program at San ·
Clemente· High School's ltttle U)ealer.
McKay, chairman of the Liguna,Beaeh
Art AJ>oclaUon, a1ao will detail coUectltig
aide trips In Nevada ttlld oregon,
The club'• nex\ field trip -',lo Turtle
Mountalb near Needles -alao, will be
dl8cmaed at the meetJna. The 1 public ii
welcome to the Wednesday event.
S«bool Rep0rl l.ht,e
On Science Prograni . . .
,A. nport oin \he..'ICMftce program at San
Clemente High School will be preaen\ed at
tonlght'i meeUng of the Board of Truoleel
of tli& Cai>fetrano Unified s'cbooi Dl!trlct.
Abo on 'the ogenda for the I p.m.
meeting In Serra School will be a
dlacusslon of enrolling.San Cltmenle High
khool ln 111 overteu .'ediacatJonal pro-
gram with lh<Forelgn Sludy Leaiua.
'
·. rf
·II lt'la'pwed, It woiJJa'JO!n a new'ceilC
ln1 oo:the Dl.imber otmob11e' hQrrie Spicft
in San Clemtnte, whkh .seems ass:tJied 'Of pu;age~::atcJrt. . ' . -.
. Tllo IJD!tt would &ooze 111• parU.ltfthel
city until a'.t '9!it ~,000 new ~~t ·
d\Vellfn&.un)ta are built In the ,clty. . •
Among tho-propo!lld development rub,
are standards for ,P.ce able aYeragtng·
3iOOO square feet1 With no plot "Daller .
lhan.3JIOO tqulN' ~L . 'Y' -1
. --. -. . . ..
-..... •
. '
Mt.b.IJlll .w.ru. -~'"'~·ts ~t 1or
eacb-•pace, with .• a~,,.._ r~
.. tback not lo be Jlliiil ftr velllclo parlt-
ing •• :.."·
Side yarda, muat ba.ar least :nve feet
wide wiih '..._ to"carports ·tbtoalb:a
10./ool-Or-wider dnvowai. .
O,ellln( llDlta leOo·UWi.• fee( wide-or
h&Ving 1ell than· lllO. aqufre feet · would
nbl be permitted. -· ; '
.. .
• .... ""·-~ ., -: . r' .... __ .... .J --•
-.. ~ '•• r ·• . ·---... --··' 1..i_.... -! •--·-r·--
t1 N.ILY PILOJ'P,llMI' W ....... Lo.-. ··~;;J,, " ·•.-z-.:.;.... . , 'I ., ',' .•' ......... : 0 1 .Ai"J!oB~fta /I • . , ! ·•.
.-" • ... • ..·1 ' ~· 1 'ii' •
1 Jnlrigµiiig stnt!es· In Engµ,;Ji he)p Hilaria. Larios 61 Pf•JlU8 lo"ltlll'Jl · ·
" \o ,read ·lb• langua~e. Hilario is •one of: 'tile , <P.illuall!itl~ -younit•ter~-.
, 1n an·JnnovaUve '!Junior first grade program" at l\alph, M., Gfltes
Elemenl81y School, El Toro. (5ee:page 3 fur >tory and pktur .. u:tbis
. unusuat·f(ducational ~pproach). . . -....... ~i • •••• • .' .. 1
' . ' . . ' .. .. ' . .
Police Fmd ·1Jtood tr.ail,-·
. . -
Hold Woman m Clemente ...
•
' .
•
IWlricllO!ll on ·traah areu,, ,rpi,,
matnious and ...-, ~ldl!lii alio
are lncl!lded. Streets, at leail 111 Ml wide
and -with the ..... llUtlinra .. 'paitln;lots would.,... ... apodllad.
Uiidergroond utlllllea and 8-
aystem1 atao woald be recuJalid.
One provtalon added to the cnde
reeently fl the placemen\ of fire bydranls
.. at too-foot intervals throughout a park.
Youth, 20,
Arrested
mOemente
A young Camp Pendleton Marine WU
being held on felony aaaauJt charges to-
day in two separate knife· at\acts on
women. in San Clemente Saaday -one ol
which resulted in minor knife wwnds to a
aaUor defending-one of-thervictims.
Police a~ Gary FrQk ShaW', 20,
near the parking lot at tbe mmlidpal pier
a ifew minutes· after the second •ttact.
The ypuUl· was bo9ked PO: auspicloa. of
assault with a deadly Weapon. . \ ,
The ' first incident occurred " the T,ra!a11ar beach at 5:4$ JY.m. as Robert
t Cbarlea l~tner •. a sallo,t aboard the VSS ·~· ... ~·to.ie.ft the bMcb
" wtth ·~,compacloa, Nm Cml lkly, 11, . ,tt.s.zi.lii..,o._,_ ... -' ---:--'e'--• Ofllotn ialct the ....itan\ ran up
w ~ • the ·COllpte and brandllheol a
mtd>blade lmlk, al1l!mpttq lo -u11
~·woman.
,Ittner, 26, told Pollo. be bepn fl&bllaf
,.ith_ the pian and l!lf~red:a cut a1'm 1n
the struggle. The auailaat then fled dawn
Ille Santa P:• nllroad lracb.
About an ~ leter CamWe Jolmoon ol
812 Cjille ViC\O!fa, ••· ~ an evening
walk along Calle 'Sl!U Barbara,wben a
' man matd>in( the delcrlpUon o1 !be ""'8!\Mt la the fJrst knifing, jogged up behlnil her.
The woman told" police the man thrust
a. knife 1t her 8tomach. She stepped
b~kward and attempted to talk to the
man. A f"w minutes later 1 Pasainc auto
dlatracted the 1sullant and tbe woman.
Qed for help. • ,
Shaw, wearing clothing matchbtg the
assailant's, was arreated momenta later
a few blocks from tbe scene.
Hearing · Tonight
On Ousted Capo
City Official,
A closed door hearing wtD' talle place
·.k series ' of ·~eekend disturbancu Jn' a ~ Orange C-Ourity Jail. · · tonight for -ousted .San J~. Capistrano
sm Clemente nelghbpr:hood finaUy.epded OffJcers said they had •togged aevtral adminislrator<lert &nest 'lbomf>IOrl.
Siturday night · with jbe ~t..· of a ' disturban'ce 1calli over Ute weekeflt ih· Thompson.requested the i.rmg by let.
wom'an .with .a badly gaah~:ann on in-1 volvlng the 1wqptan -one• .of them ter and ~city council assumed that it
itlal charges of bUrg1ary. . . . aJle&ecflY involving weapons stored·.in 1tbe was to be •public ~arlng u outUned 111
;PoJtce said the arrest and emergency · wcnnan 1 cat. ' his: contract. , 1 •
treatment of Mrs. Dun Byler,.49, Came . , But 'nlompaon apeclfied a private bear-
after a bU:rglary;cau came trt>m: the Juan , · ln~ before the council during which tie
Lona residence at 11 w. '.Avenlda ~ • Tsaldar,is,.: Ex-Greek , pt.ns to pre1ent reaaons·w111 be •hould
GlilHiel at '5:47·p·:m:. 1 1 • • •' • · • • , •• 'f r!main ln his polt Of.filne Years and de-
·Orllcen •found a broken wil\dow and· a : Leader,' Qie$ ·at ',31i,:: ltnd himsell •ialnst · cl>aries of ID-
trall · of blood ·leading from the' Luna , . . . • . competency.
home to 'the houae neit:door at 'l3 W. .ATHENS~AP) -•Constantin TWdariJ, .i The meet19g will la~ pl~ce a 7 p.m. at
AVentda ' ComellOi .. · · former prime mlnlater of Gl'eflCt 11bose me city hall •
·Wlde'tl\ey fOQlld the woman bteedlni cateettn.pbiftbapiinned·baH i centnry,
prOtURly from 11aah·ci1,her arm. died SUndly It •a. 1 •
After flnt-ald treatment at ·pol~ He wa prime 1mlni:ttei" In 1"6 and head(i~. the Woman w8a taken to aplna.yurlltei•htelloftbi;Poputtst
sfuth'·Coast· Community Hoapllal !or party and --elUl'lli bringing
treatment of a cut tendon. bid< King GeOrre ·11 livrn eitjle all!r
From Ujiere Mn. Byler was taken to World War ll.
Knife Wield~g .
Pair Rob Man
' In San Clemente
' ' '
A San Clemente~ fell•Ylctlm to '
~ pair ol bll .. wieldlna.tnilU<ri In Ille
SOulh Coast eomm..,Ky Hoapl\al )>anlnC
lot over tbe weekend. -
'
2 .Sa~ I ooquin: SchQols
Gei $3.9 -M:illion .Grant Jnbo ,S.~Raaor of 111 E...A ....... lda""1!Sotlltl>----l,-Juan reported· the lnddant lo S...
• " • ' ' . I ' -. ' . . ' . ...
, Tile state,scpoot Btilldlnlf lurid bis eir· ·, 110 rieewer:-' ·' ·
· muted''3'.11mlllton lor two ac~)_prOJ.' "'°'secolid ~le la a1io 'lo be 1n·1n1er-.C.. tn' ~ San J .... uln ~~ Dlstt1ct · me4late ICbool it' Mulrltnde boulevard, .
loUllln& '14,1 mlmon. · • • •' ' be!Wffn Loa Allp_ illcl Styrklge lri El ,, .,, r .~1. • T6ro.. 1.
Two Intermediate ocboola are plil\lledi The 1111& mar. Ji piort. oi 1 1111 'mll·
wtill one neUht( bid ..... ·~ JJJl!•mttt Uon """1nitlnent lo acfiool C0111tnlcd0n
Park lntermedllle . to. be loclted at ,the m!de avlllablo "1 tllo mid-October tale
lnlerM:ctlon of 11 yet unopened ;MJ•I· ot bonda, •t an lnte.re1t ra&e· morelttrac-
aon and Yale atreell, near the San DI· ' Uve to bond lnvtotor1. •
•
Clemente 'polioe •after ·drtvlof from the
..... ofiht1'Jbbery In whlcb be lal\ 411
from hla walle~ · .
Rasor told poUce be -lea•tnc tbe
hospital at ·about a p.m. Sllurday -· two men lri their· 11\1,d ·1111 ' _.ilod
hlm.. j
Each brandished a llWltcbbladO knlle,
and ilemanded Raw'• ...Uel.
Aller riffing the blllft>ld the. two me•
tossed It Into the vlcilm'1 car and lied on root..--
\
·collegians
'Mu~Pay
For':N~1•~ .. ' . '
By PATRICK BOYLE or lllli P.,lr. '11•1 Stiff
"The campus: should not protect
1tudtnts. They 1hould hive to answer for
breaking the Jaw just like an ordinary
cJUUn."'
8urpril1Jllly, !hot quofo ...,. from a
former member of Students for a
DemocraUc Society, not a police clllef.
The apeabr wu Joe EtUestein. 1 UC
IUvenldo 11Udtnt 11udy1Jll for b1I dooo
Jorale.
. · EtUe1tein wu a member of a f*lll at
UC Irvin• Salu!Uay dl1C11111n1 lht con-
Olc1t and Ille probkml lh•t arlaa
between a college campw: and the aw--
n>undlni commun!ly. ·
UN TMflllltlt
FACES 0~ MARSHALL COEDS SPEAK FOR WHOLE TOWN
Allo on Ille panel, part of a Ctl~omla
College Personnel A a 1 o c I a t Io n con-
ference, were Newport _ Beach City Coun·
cllman Richard Croul, Tom Findley,
llK>tht: UCR student and Jim Dean,
news edJt.or of the Santa Ana Regilter.
In Huntington, w. Va., Dlabolltf, Shock oncl Grit!
City That 'Died~
llNn Nld !hat ona of bis blQett pro-
blems with college camp~ wq "fin·
dfnr out about CONtructive thlnc1 that
happen on campus."
"Viol.,.,. II taking r; Ille Image of
the uNverslty," Dean Said, adding that
the professon and the chanceUors should
make an effort lo inform the press of the
iood lhinp thal occur. Grief Follows Team's Jet Crash
Bf CIWG AMMERMAN
·~ ,,_ Wrtttr
· HUNTINGTON, W.Va. -"This town
died today.0 •
With that ctJ, 1 n\D'M •t HunUntton
Hospllal reflected Iha pf at Marshall
J)'niveralty and its home city after Satur·
dey nicht'a crash of a Southern Airways
chamred DC9 carrying the 1cbool's loo~
)iaU t..m tad olben.
Amonl thota "' Iha plane, In add!Uon
to tbe players, coaching staff and
boosters, were three prominent physi·
dana and !heir wtvu, a newly atectocl
tt&te lqlllltor who &loo wu one of Hun·
tJngton'1 ...allhleal men, a put prelfdenl
of Mmhall'1 alumni uaocllUon, a city
i:ouncU-, two put pruldtnll of the
Marshall alhleUc boootan club, an 111-
dulltlallll and Iha aporll cllrector of a
local lill<vllton otatlon.
lo all, thore ..... 73 dtad; and • IChool
d 8,lllO thd a city of 73,000 went inlo
mourning.
At mldntc!>I, about 41111 atudtnll and
dtluna Joined hands In a campua
memorlal .oervl~. openad ·wllh Iha
alngtnc of an African hymn, ''Kumbaya."
Moll ftPI openly. 5orM fell {o lhtlr
kneel u Uley .....
"Someon1'a •lniirll Lord, kumbaya .••
SomlOM'I burtirii: t.d, twnbaya • , •
8omloae'a pr1ytni Lord, kumbaya."
Friends had to carry ymmg Mn. lloetr
Oillder• from a Hununrton hospital,
where the bad 1one "boptng for a
rplrac:le."
Qll1ders bad been a M a r a h a 11
linebacker, but aufftnd a head Injury.
lit aucceulU!ly undenmlt dan,...u•
breln aurpry durlnl the oummer and
whlle recovaina wu •rvtn& u student
!tam man11er. hoplnc to Join Ille playm,
team again someda_y.
At a malluhlft treatment cent..-In lht
"9>00!'1 phyalcal adUcatJon building, doo-
!ol'I and ....... trealad tludenta in ohock.
11Aln, please comt back ••• plean
eOmt back," a coed terUmed u ahe lay
on one of the 100 mattre.!!es: Mt up ln tht
cent.er.
"God, what bu happtned!'' another
coed cried.
In hallways outside, secretaries and
football coaches At staring and crying.
MOit of their bosles "ftl'I aboard the
twin-engine Jet. Head coach J\lck Roll!y,
and athJetlc dlrec:\or Charles Kautz. were
amona: the dead. .
At I nearby hospital, cltliens and
students were whered to a conference
room. They bid c:mne late in tht night
lociting, boptni, for survivors.
•
DAILY PILOT
... .,. h.. ll•la;• .. .... 1...-'"" ........ ..,
C.... "'"• S. Cla '"'* OlAltOI COAi? l'UaLllMINO COMl'AJIY ••l.•t+ N. w,,. ,.,. ..... •llC ......
J••k •· e11r19Y Vitt ,,._, •Ml Oefltrtl MenloJtf
Tllo"''' Ket,11 lt!l9r n .... ,, A. Mu,,ftl111•
MMttlfll f;,rtor
fl.l,htr4 ,, H•lf
So111~ Or•• Cl.IWll~ Edlltl" -c.tt M•: ut W•l I..,. ..... N~Mcfl1 t711 W•J::. ... hl;""'l'f • IH~~: 121 I ~·111111
IOtl 1Mdll '11*'f .... at11lltYfl'f ,~!fl IOI Ntrlll 11 C-llllt All1
'
At Jeut 10 of them crumpled to the . UCR ~udent FindJey said that an effort
floor -Ille conlontd.ofl . llolpllal, WU bell!i made at UCR to ta.lie Ille
prlmad for carlol lot· tun!...,, ,... llud11111 Olll Into Iha community and to
malnad qultL -a1lo brlnl Ille community -Ille cam-
Tbt ooadlaa. plun and ....... ""°. E:!!: .. ~~= ~ "'":.,~.m"u dlad ..,. llMnC ii-who, In tbt 1aal ;·~~t oJr pollution pu
two _,....., had rallJad In IUJll)Ori DI EUJ&lloln, Ille olbtr ui:R aludanl on
Manhall. It WU a touch lwooyMr period Ille -'• Mid Ille blQNt pnibltftll
-whlll Iha ochool wtn! 11 pm• wltboul bt-campu and coznmunflY 1 • vtctory,. WU nptllad ll'om Ill .... from pol!Ucal conlllcta " ......
f-ce !or ncrultlilJ Ylnl&Uona,_ and "" "There II a mllund.ftiandm, bout Iha
111 head OOlcli •-for auelacf tr. 8111 of J\111111," he told l!io ~udlence reruflrlUet. 1alherad at Ille Bclenca Lecture Hall
It wu thoot people q Jlld .opwbtad· ''Dlmonatr•Un1 · pe&ctfully · ctou not
ed drlvu that ralaad fllO,llllO for """' quJetly." · scholarablp fllnda and ~ tbt W•I Etllutaln alto erltfcllod poUUclana for
· Virllnla Le~lurt Into nltul"' '1 "puttJni down profeeaon to furlbtr their mllDon for '!" artulclal p11yJn1 aurf11e1. own pol)Ucol purpoea.
At llle-alrpor\-at noarby K-•a. Iha "Ptopla.have to btlllvt wha( they read
wllt of talavlllon 1portacutar Kon Jon.. about lhll (Ille polJUcfana) becauae what
and thaJr thrM chlldr., were In Iha 1u.ay nad II tbelr major aourtt of In·
crowd aw<Jn& the return of the onnatJon," Ettleltein added.
charlerad plane. Ha '!lid thet .a. of Ille bttt waya to
They waited and watohlci In Ille cold ~·~~ of Iha poliUcol coafUcta ll lor .
•'""' -•-... b'• J t 1-~• .. -·-·~ -""'"'" odmlnlltratora to --•t "all .....,. -aa -.. • ...., ~-forma of pollUcOJ ct1v11y uJi ""
benoalb low, dark rain clouda, maldns 111 Ylnlata Ille law, ~udlnr llopil~ca~t
flnlll approach. Dtmoc:raUc, !tadlcal, Communlal and ati
Tbtb'. -turned to horror when Iha other typoa. A campua ~ bl a placo Joi dlat_..s btbllld a hill, followad by where -la cu -lbtmMJvol a brllllant flub and a mlllbroom of black publlc]jl." , ,
amolle. . City Coundlman cmd tald Ille com-
Jn Charlalon, lllWlllllll aw a I le d muntU• IUl1'0llDd1nl UC! .,,.Ucularly
-talapboae call from Jiff Nalhan, NtwpO<t S..ch, 11a .. not had m u c h
•poril adltor of Manhall'• otudenl aaooolat!oo wllh Ille campua becauae of
nenpaper. lit had called Iha 8unday Ille laolatfoll of UCI.
GuetJe.Mall oporla dolk tarlltr altAlr Iha • Ht eafd lhatwtflt the 1111&ll number of
game from Gr1111vlllt, N.C., and 1av1 · olwlanll al UC!, about e,ooo, Ille clUu
mlohy accounta of Ille action. are nol al!ICl&d 1hat much, but he Mid
But ha Nld h: ud Jo hurry. "I don't 1hat he "" COnctmad wilh Ille apalhy of
uve loo much time. OUr plant l1 loavln1 ra&ldenll to mattara outaldt of !heir own
rilht away and I'll hav1 to hurry 11 Ht llvn, both on and off the Clmpua. dded , · 8tudant Findley &aid . !hat j111t auch ~ u ht hun1 up, 'The11plane 11 leav· ·apathy was one reuon for many of the
llll• l'U call when we land. bom"'••o "·t •-cumd u _".'..,. ..... ..-ve oc recenuy. From a Huntlniton telephone booth "The students who have resorted to
Saturday night, Rich Tagtan1, a junior bombifle/' ht aid, "are ona wbo really
football player, told hls parents in thought tht 1ylte!D. would w or II:
Beth1ehem, Pa., that he was alive. 60mehow."
T11lan& was late Friday when the He aatd atudents tryfn& to work 0 wJthln
plane departed for Gr11nvWe, and be the l}'ltlm" hid been frultrated by their
mlsnd the trip. efforia. He cited one example of a man
"I'm alive ," he sobbed into the who had been aent to Sacramento from
telephone. "Nobody else la ••• they're all UCR to lobby for air POllution control.
dead." Findley aaid the man found 29 paid oil
2 Newport Beach
Officers Shot;
Man, 61, Seized
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of Ille 0111' PllM lltff
A 81·year,old man II facln1 &r•
r1lgnment today o.. chlr1ea or attempted
murder &lier uaerladly woundln1 two
Newport Beach offiCfl1'8 Slturday 1n what
has been described as the worst shooting
in the history of tht deputment.
In cuatody In Newport Beach city Jill 11
Arthur Lambert, • re~dent of Ille !Mnea
Trailer Park who lilts hla: oecupaUon u
consulting engineer. He l1 111.ted to ap-
pear In.Ille Harbor Judicial Dlltrlct court
lbla afternoon.
Olllctr Jll1\ll Gardiner, IS, 11 Uottd In
fair condition followtn1 1 b d om 1 n a l
1111rery ®'1111 which a kidney wu
removad. Ofllw John Ell1Jllham, SI, II
alto in fa1r condition after ht wu woun-
ad In lht rlchl lbl1h. Bolh are In Hoq
Memorla1 Hospital.
The incident was apparently sparked
when Qt two patrolmen stopped Lambert
ll hi.s trill•. He reportedly WU 11potted
driving aTaUeailly down PacllJc Colst
Highway.
A.a the two talked to the suspect, prior
to adminlitertng a field sobriety exam,
he allegtdly pulled out a .:!kaUber
automatic and •l!ot~~rdiner in the atom~. EIUlliim I Y WU ahol
whll• 'WrtlUlng Lam o Ille &rO(lnd.
The atlotlUng wa1 wlbliiied b y
Lambert'• wife and two ab.Jdeata from
Newport u.nor llllh flchool who '"" pulfclpaUng tn a·rld• alOlll PfOll'&m·
Tht two Jltl1 ,,... In a unit drlVlll by
palrolman '!'om 8mllh. They had arrlvad
at lht ICtllt prior to Ille ahootln1 ao Iha
studenll coul~ oboetve whit Smith
lboulht woold bl • ~tint drunk drlvlns ....
•
company lobbyisU; that he had to com· pete with.
\"Such a problem won't really be solved
aoon," EtUestein responded . "And the
«1Ue1Uon ls not really how to stop the
bombers but rather how to stop the crea-
tion of more bombers."
"Those of us who are radlcala: have one
Interest ln common with the campUI ad·
mlnllJtraUon, '' Ettlestein said. "The
r,adlcal needs to communicate with the
'people of lhe community and disruption
ten di to mlnimJie the communJcation."
"On the baaia of thla: merglnc of ln·
terest," l:ttleste.tn added, "there la a
,chance that the campua wtll aurvtve .11
A member or the audlmce asked panel
1membtr Dean why Only deroaatory DtWll
1et1 lnto the prw.
Dean 11id that just such crlUciam haa
c:aiised many newapapera to re-evaluat&
their role in the community and the man-
ner ln which they have bten cove:rifll col·
!ere cam~ iii the pail
.. We wdl have to try to be more con-
structive as wtll as informaUve," Dnn
aald. "To 1et more posiUve thlna:1 in
print, we newsmen wW have to do a bet-
ttri Job.
"&t the profenor1 will alto have to bo
more 11sreulve in telllna; new1 to the
press," he added.
Young Suspect
Held in Burglary
A 11-yw .. ld 511ap1<t In Ille Aur. 23
bur1lary_ of Ta!;!> !!oil In Lallll\1 _Jleach
bU been .,,..led In Santa Barbara and
tttumtd to Lasuna Beach.
'Iboma1 Arvld Nelaon. a resldtnt of Na-
llollal City, W&I tmllad by 8anll
!a~11a County Shlrifl'a dtpulle1 on a
warrant from Lasun• Baac~. He w11
wanted In connection wllh !be Taco Bell
hur1lary In which fUOO In cuh was
laliln. •
Nlllaon Wat to he 11Talcnacf today on
c11&r1u of burglary tad l'•nd !heft,
pollct Mid. ' •
I
.•
Woman Diver Drowns ·
It took approxiqately an hour Sunday for divero to
locate the body of Mrs. Patricia Parke Jones: 41 of
Orange. She had been skindiving for abalone with
a male companion at Scotchman's Cove near La-
guna BM.ch ln 30-feet of water and failed to surface.
Future for Cr,clist Park Jury Selection
Starts in Trial
For Bad Checks
.
fu San Oemente 'Bleak'
By JORN VALT!llZA
01 t11t DlllY l"Utl Sl•ff
The future of San C1emente's Seabreeze
motorcycle park -whose operators
fought tllrouch two bitter public ~earing1
recently -fJ ln grave doubt this week
because of directives from Mormon
Church headquarters in Salt Lake City.
Bl!!hop Roy Trotter, head of the local
Mormon Church which led In the 'develop-
ment of the 700-acre cycle park on the
former Reeves Ranch, said today it
wou1d be known in a week whether the
attraction will be closed for good.
Complalnta from aeveral local residents
to Ille church headquarten in Utah -
coupled with increased activity in at,..
'
Boulder Dropped
On Truck Kills
Driver; Boy H el.d
A truck driver Wl.!I ldUed Saturday
night when a boy dropped a 40-pound
bouJder from an overpass 11 the bit rt&
roared tjlrourJ> Ontario, ClUlblng bis
ha ad.
The football-thaped l"Ck ahatlend Ille
wlndohltld, hlttiq euilord A. Owenby,
511, of .Downey, and causinj: the truck and
tratler to rip throtJ.ch the cent.er divider
twice and run oft the freeway.
His drivln1 partner, James B. Ga1io
Jr .. also 50 and a Downey reaid!?lt too,
suffered minor lnj'uritl in the tragedy,
the second such fatal lncklent in a month.
A taenaged boy who Uld h< oaw Ille
rock dropped Jed pollce to the home
where the juvenile was arreated. and ]at.er
released to hll p1renta' custody.
No one waa arruted in the other in·
cident which occurred on the P3sadena
Freeway, While Saturday nlght'1 fatal
rock-dropptn1 waa on the San Bernardino
Freeway.
Crlmln1l charges will be brouaht
aaalnst the unidentified 12--year-old in San
Bernardino County Juvenile Court, &c-
cordln1 to Police.Lt. Luther Franks.
tempts to 1ell the huae parcel -could toll
th! death knell for the five-month-old
facility.
The park opened last July amid 10me
furor from resident.I who complained
about nce11ive noise . dual and "rowdy
element!" beina: attracted by the hillside
park. '
Few of t.hoae predicUona came true,
boweye_r. .
Sinoe the aame ruldenta ruumed th!ir
uproar at .a city council hearin1 adion
resulted in a twG-year eitenlion of the
park's permit with a tailed condiUon that
''noise problems " be reviewed in thrM
mnnths.
This week, howfver, Mormon Church
officia1s ha ve written a letter to the local
church ordering the closing Of the park.
"The main thrwt of the direcllv!," Dr.
Trotter said today; "lJ that the Church
doea not want to be caught in the middle
(If a 1ocal controveray. Unfortunately they
are viewing the situation from a con·
aiderable distance."
Dr. Trotter. a San Cleme1te ciroprac-
tor, already ha1 appealed the ruling and
the park wlU remain ln operation until hia
appeaJ is acted upon in Sa1t Lake City.
Rumors have accompanied the news of
the park'• doom-one involving the poa1!-
ble ule of the entire r=rcel to a
branch of the Kaiser or · ·on.
Checks with representatives of that
massi ve complex in P'ontina, Oakland
and Los Angelea thl1 morning yielded no
confirmation of the reporta of Ale.
Dr. Trotter could not confirm tht
rumor, either, other than to aay it ap.
pears the church is "acUvely" pursulna:
lhe sale of the huge ranch.
Aside from the normal amount of
mish1ps in such an activity the motorey·
de park has operated smoothly all sum·
mer. No official noln c:omplalnte have
been verified by San Clemente police,
who have praised the Idea of such a park
becawe It takea noisy eyclea off •mall
pieces of private property in th! city.
Llat 1prin1 -before Seabreeze opened
-poUce 1011ed conatlnt e<1mplalnts of
noi!y c:ycle1 on empty lot.t;
Since tht park opened, ho\'t'tVf.I', th•
c:ompla.ints bave dwindled c:onslderably.
Jury selection be1an lod.ay ln the
Orange County Superior Court trial of an
investment counselor accused of wrltin&
$31,000 worlh of bad checks on the San
Clemente branch of lhe Bank of America.
Jt is expected that the first prosecution
witnesses will take the stand later today
in the courtroom of Judge Charles Bauer
and o!fer testimony against defendant
Darrell Graf Hafen, 42.
Halen, who was recently ruled to be
sane and •ble to stand trial, i1
represented by attorney Alan Stok~e.
Dtputy District Attorney Joe Dicke rson
has the prosecution chore.
Hafen's trial was delayed today when
Judge Samue! Dreizcn to whom the
Hafen case was assigned excused himsell
fr om the proceedings. ·
lt was explained that Hafen had earlier ,
filed an affida vit or prejudice against
Judge Dreizen at a tim ewhen he was
defending himself against the bad check:
char1e1.
Hafen was arresled last July 13 In I..<Js
Angel!s by FBI agents and San Clemente
police as he returned from one of hi1 in·
vestment tr!p1 from San Jose, Coata
Rica. •
Invut!J:ators aaid Hafen has conducted
a thriving business 111 this nation Sout.ll
American and Europe but many' of the
transactions in which he h;n been in·
volved are now being invesUgated in all
three continent.a.
.
COUNT SHOWS
.HARTKE WINS
INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. (AP l -The of-
ficial certification of compl!le returns
from the Nov. 3 1eneral el!ction ah owed
today th1t Democratic Sen. Vance Hartke
finished ahead of Republican Richard
Roudebush by 4.338 votes.
But a recount seemed a1most a cu -lainty. ...
BUY WHdr'iTs MADE-SAVE!
kuffell'a rn1nuf1etur• the finest furniture yeu wlll
find 1nywher .. You ... it and .. iect It rl9ht In our
1howroom. Pay up to so-;. 1 ... than retail , ChooH
from an ""llmltM •IKtlon of f a b r I c 1. Custom
ch•ftlM 1r1 alM po11lbl ..
UNUMmD STYW OF Pre-Christmas
Furniture
Idea
UPHOLSnRED FURNITURE
HU~DREC>s· OP BEAUTIFUL FAaRJC$
TO CHOOSE PROM
Vhtt ..,.,
show r•o'" -"
v•u'll enfoy
'•!•ding
fro'" our
l•rt• 1w1tche1
of colorful
fabriu.
• ALSO CUSTOM RIUPHOL.SllRIN•
~· reaSOl'I we're sug-
91riinCJ Chri1tm1s to soon
is the! it" a greet IDEA to
hive your ow" furnitµre
solectod a•d IM•ulaclured
al a cost much 1111 th••
you would pay in a rtl•il
furniture store ind in time
for Chri1trn1s,
• AU wo•• •UAlAHTUD
JOI THI
LrPmMI OP MlllC
,1922 HAUOl ILVD. 4i
Or Call For Appointment
COSTA MU.&:
• 541·0Z59
I ' -I
l
•
, '
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i "'!--........ ·--·~ ·-.~ -i-·-r"· e .. -.~ -.. . --. ·-·--. ~· ' ·-. . .
··.1~.':.·: .. ; ~ ,.: ~: "; ·;~: •...• .
. --:.:~ .. :±: . .:-
• ··J.. .. ·.• •••
~ -· ~ ...... , --. · ... .,., _,.
, " ·--
" ,
.Laguna Beach High School senior Carollne·Fee ls tbe school's 1970
. homecoming. queen. She . Was· ci'oWned Frj.day night during ceremon-
ies at Laguna High·El Dorado fOOtbalI g~e at Gufer~~~eld. Caroline.
wasn.'t tbe -Only y,'inner F·riday night; Her. Chir.ms prov~ b,1cky fOf
··Artist grid team, which defel:\t.ed·the viSitoi'S.'~18-t~~erid_ s~asofl.on'"
· winning· note.· · . · _ f • ' • •
'· . ' . Big ·Forest
Fire Nearly
Contained
By ARTHtJR I\. VINSEL
Of Ille l»llJY f'lllt Slllf9
Containment by nightfall was predicted
today as an army of 1;300 firdigbten
closed in on the worst· b 1 a z e in San
Bernardino County )\I.story, w Ith
60,000-plus acres sea~ e.d and witold
millions in losses. ~
The raging w~ whipped into
massive Proportions F ay by Santa Ana
winds reaching 100 -· 1 per hour has
do!Stro~d iii .holpl!s a\ilf v~i;' wli>ed
out ~ tiny ranch r ... rt-~ flf>
°' ·Smiley: · · . T '. .. • • ,
Gov. Ronald-Reagan deelafed'the a~
"': Including <llCe'!UllrS&n'lltlhardfoo N ••
· t.lonal Forest lands a disaster area. ·
• F~ters said only a few minor in•
jllriea ,i;.,... been reportOd -aiid'. no.
• dealhs are known -blaming a campfire
fG( ~Big Bear area·blar.e; pJus'arsbn ln
a·senes of five othen in two counties.
Joint investigation . led IO the ·arrest
5-.turday of Ph,illip Page, 44, of San
:Bernardino, who is held without bail pen-
ding arraignment on arson charges.
, Authorities allege he set fire1 near ·
Recbe Canyon and; Loma Llnda, which•
burned more than '4.000 acres and three
hom~. whUe ·other blazes were quickly
1potted 11\\d ertingU/shed.
, •
. ' ., .. ' :, '
• ' • > , • • • Lame·n·~<:k Congress .Meet
Conyenes; Faces Conflict
Orange County elcaped the ravages of WASHINGTON (AP) -C o n Ir e a 1 Democratic Benators caucused · and
hellish fire whipped by the so-caJled Devil reconvened ,today in the laine duck in· agreed that there should be an attempt
Winds, after c86celing all time off and stallment of ·an election-year sess ion one be£ore 11ta.,ksgiving to override Presi-
alerting all personnel Friday. Senate .Jeader called unending, and fOlDld . dent Nixotl's veto or a b.ill to sharply
They were geared .for a possible repeat political controversy waiting. restrict campaign spendif!g on radio and
performance c:if the devastation resulting Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana, the television. ,
from county fires fanned by ·the annual ma)orjty leader, · aocused Republican Mansfield said farm leglsiation, stalled
Santa Ana onslain:ht in October. campaigners of perlORal 'villtlcatibn, and ' before the elections. will wait until later
San Bernardino and R i v e r s I d e "political ~'ll(!~ksterism." . . · ' in the week. He added that the Senate
firefJghterS were rapidly encloslng the Senate Republlcari Leader lfugb Scott delblitely .wlll Vote on President Nb:on's
worst of the weekend blazes which of Pennsylvp.nta said the lame duck welfare reform · prOposals.
·t· · ' 1 erupted at the eaat end of Big Bear Lake, meetlrig "Wllt 'be an u rim It i gla t e d Scott discounted Mansfield's aJlac~ on
L-. p· I . s· ' '·::] with 65 percent contained by mid-day. dlsasttr;" marked )Jy politicking and the Republican campaign tacUcs .
.. ·."".~' . , na , anner's· to· · . h' .•. W.y "We ,were really helped by the end of p~o~~~e~~,i:'\,pr~t:'~. and time ls "Those are political purely, they 'are fR 1'-;~ the Santa Ana• and the fact I.hat the · titual and requ ired," be said. "In due
forward edge o( the fire burned into the short -although Na~field said he time, l'll make the same kind of
· "' • ~ fiat area, wbere we ·ooutd move in trucks could .not guesa when the ~slon wlll statements." , ·
Pl', kin St ', t ·s 't and mac," said·u.s. Forest Service fll;lally ad;qunt. Mansfield and Scott agreed that the -.· ... · g .. ··; r, uc ..... ur .. e ... ,ys ;@fil lnlorma onofficer,BiUMakeL , NovembeHle,cemberlameduck·meet. . . , ~ A firebreak ca~ by the Rim o( the Kni. }di · ing sho~ld be t(eated as a c I e. • n u p
t'.t . World. Highway a,l8o helped contain the • f, e .· Wie ' . ng session; handling only appropriations and 1 · · • • .. ~ • .: • will .• ··descn'be. how, .. _ Uni .................... 1 Oames.;he"added. · . . ,. , other absolute necessities before ad~ ~i :peach plamiiiJg comniluloqers , wic '-v11 =--.,.,,... Hun,dreds Qf .persons were evacuated • · · · ·jouniirig. , ~t will revlew a .ne"N methqd ,'of . me'µ19d ." of ·building 'the '. structuiesf coUld from cabins and ~nt homes in the Man· ne Cap· tor" . ed. In fact, Scott said, the adrillnlstratlon
bfndlng .pa'rking 'structUr~, as used at • De ~ Spplied ·, tq ihe Glenne~ "'S!ifft mountaiooul. areas Inc I u d 1-n g tom-. · • r will be tn,a strOnger position, partfr:olarly
IM:i,Angftes Intem'iltiOOal 'Aij-poit. · · , • municipal · parkia&\lot. · ' · '• mwUUta otArrowBe8r, Runnings Sprlnp ' · · · oo .defense-and foieign affJirs', 'Jn the 'ney/
l1;ii1 Stall of Conrad Associates or Los This' Will' be the thlrd p\'esentali6n Amilway Park and Smiley, I" :San· Cle. m"e·. nte· : . 92nd'ti>hgr~. diie .to' """~'ori Ju.}, ~es,speclalistsini>arklng1tructures, vlew¢4..by_fbe _comml!sion as if itttdies The latter -with a pppulation of 120 ll He safd .con'trove.rsii.l 'i:dues. ncit~now
parkplg· s~ture proJJO!!lls\ f~r. ~~una persons r 1auffered 49 homes .fost, while · , · • '· · readj" flir'aCt!On. shi>uJd 'walt1unt1L"tben. !,!'·,r., .. ·~e ,' , . . : . ,.;,,.;;•t· -. Bea~.. "· ' ' ' ' · flames •appi'oached the San Bernardino A young ·camp Pendleton Marine was · ·ScOtt ·said tlis judgment or 1 the lime · ,. 8 "'9911 Ac;tion on l.of'e!l.Haoell~a. ~\l~t for city Jtmtta ·once: ... ' • being beld on 'felony assault charges .to-duck 'meeting hasn't chilnged since~ elec-
a variance to;permit .JS'riddltklDal units. Wkl.-A•b 'nds .. Jri. .... t 100 ·1 day in two separate knlfe ·attacks on t' da ~' , t "" V t•~ Vill •t """"plex' IA -• "'~17'.. y WI s f'C~"' a m1 es I S Cll te Sunda one f '°" .. Y.: . ., . ..J.;;: ~ • •• • • • a 1113 aca "'11· aeo · .. Vin 13• .. ,.. • per boUi lit certain ~. ~names were wt>m~n, n an tmtp . Y ~ . 0 "l think it ·Will be , an unmiUgated . ..... ! pect<d to be def~. ;l1>o ~staff first lopott<d by 'M&ry Jo Claussen, 17, whlch reSUlted in'mlnor kn~• wounds to a , dlsll.!l<r, ..,ld~·!l'om'tlte nec<sslty•o!'get· ~ !.• • is c?)lcking out Jll"Vious penajtJ,lMJE!'i fr.om her fi re iOokDut tDwer. · sal(Or _defen,ding on.e o.f. the vicUm~. . · · ~ Uhg apn.optiati0mi'bills • ............ h!'', ' ~f · · > · "'eilth'8t ' . f~r the J>J:Operty relaUvlt toi~ 1"e9Wl"erntnt Sfie said the howling winds blew open a 'P'bllCe arrested G_,., Frank ShJiW, -20, ·Scott ~lso 'said be ex~"'i: hold onto
,,
TEN .CENTS
' ' .
Resid~'1t8
Spared; 2,
DogsD~ad
By BARBARA KRimiICR
01 ""' D811!' ,llM IW • Two large dogs were burned .to-deaUt
but their. owners escape<l with mlnor in-
juries in a spectacular fire that deslroyed
a-large home.in Laguna Beach early SuD-r.:__ ...
day.
Three fire units and 25 men responding
to" the 2:56 a.m. call· found the four-
bedroom residence , at 1545' Caribbean
Way totally involved, with flames
shooting 25 feet into Ole :air,, •hen they
arrived. Damage , was ·estimated at
145,000, _;.,
"Mrt.. AM SQ~,only~ of the
Muae at the time,· had ,...ped, by
smashing a bedroom window with a chair
iAd climblnk Out, according to "Battalion
Cllief Charles Kulm, but was seeking lo
re-enier the hotise, th1rit1r!I her 13-yea,..
oJa daughter Shannon R06ardes was in-
&Jde. I
Eniering the ~uSe, Kuhn saw what ap.
peafed to be a bumf:d ,bqdy. ~ide the
bed in tbe girl's room. He summoned
Fire Chief James Latimer and, on closer
on the two discovered the body was that
of a large dog.
The girl and her stepfather, John
Souza, appeared at the scene while
firemen were battling the blaze, ex ..
plaiping they had -•• to !lie beach
with friends wbo had spent the evening at
the home.
Mrs. Souza said she had decided not to
go to the beach and ·had lain down in her
bedroom and fallen asleep about mid-
night. Her room was the oliiy -pari of the
home not destroyed, firemen said.
"in 'he r ·escape and attempt to re-enter
the houSe, she suffered several cuts and
b.9.dly singed h'alr and eyebrO~s. fli'emen
said.
A se'cond fatally bufned dog later was
found in,,.tf1' ,teenager's i'oom. Firemen
said the two · animals, a German
Shepherd and a Labra~,.apparenUy had
been sleeping on the floor on either aide
of the bed. ·
'Firemen said It has not yet been pOss1 ..
ble to determint the caWM! or point of
origin of the fire and lnvidugatlon i9 con-
tihuing today. '·
The relaliveJy neW hon\e waS purcha&-
ed recently by ·a Whittler ®uple· who
planneclto'move there but leased it to the
Sbuza, family Jn the interim.
Chief Latimer sald' that by:µie time the
firemen reeleved the aJantt, 'the fire had
an estimated one-boui' start and "evert.
shingle on the roof .Wits burniiig." ·
Heat was so · iritens'e. Latimer said, tt
set fire to green .trees:. outside the
bUildlng., bubbled p0rcelain in ihe kitchen
sink, melted the loCk' off a reJrigerator
door and blistered paint on two tdjoining
homes. .
1 ; , ees on the ·co~t' Tuesday with R~ (mulUple . resklenUal) -. !* be I'' pinnacle, of roclulon an 8,537.foOt peak.. a. rew -minutes after the·aecood ·attack. . new Oongttss meets:" "I have more' ihan Ambulance_. Plea ·~.at'n. be cooler bf .. a good 14 de---~,:;o percent of parldnt ~Ylded inua window'in htr u;.square-fpot'tower atop a near the parking lot 8t the inanicip\1 pier :,,. hU . job 18 'RepUblican leader wheit the
'i ii tempetatltres\ ~ied·~ ar 1'8 . covered. ' · • • "t-gc:it•up to ctoae .1t and, just by second The youth was booked on_suaptclon of ap!ple assw:'°ces that 1'11 be able to'ait• · irets .and , the inWil. mercury City planner. ~ 1AlJV')'J ~ ~r slaff nature, took a look '8f'Ollnd," said Mrs. assault with a deadly weapon. . tlnue to 'do' my· job ln janU~ ...... he...Wd. ·rm.ring (o .. the 82" maTi.. ., r. . ' . probabl~ will, recopunc:na, •ti;_rjl of *:-ctauuen. The first incident -Occ1U'l'e4 atr ·the He· 3'iil that-fu.Ctuatd WOrd· from -l'~"i:190 . H' • SI ted
... -lion untillf<!S! week,'~ndlng~Uon "And there II W~S. It wasn't crack!-Tralalgar'bea<,11.at :.I~ pmi, ... Robert th8t ~·;is • ••tislled ~ with '*°tt'•: ea~ng a '~;;--·JNSmE , TODAY , of its report. ~ • ,1 ... ·K' -~1._ Jng. It was a rumble, like the rumble Of Ch~rles lttner, a 11 or •abofrd. t)\e USS . perfoit\1ance. 1 · 1 · ' ...
... • • · • .In ot;her acUoo oo \olllaht •.~}"'Ule · an em;thquake " Lanon,twas pteptrl ,to1Jeave the beach •\_ .. ~ ,The ·tagUDa· Btach..Clty. Counc:il bas '. tl,lwardi 9/ soo,fxxi PakistO:I'\· cotnmis!ion· ,.µ1:,' ' ·. 1
1 1 • • • with, his corripanion; Carol Hely·, %5; • · • · ' "' • ·. i · •1 ! •• • scbe<Juled a publJc bearlrig at 7:30 p.m. II >ii"1f be ·deod i• • duo! -set Wiring· dates: on standard! for ' ol~• Qlego. , , I , Junior Women's Cfu'b .wedn•sdlY on ,the app;al of Gold ;l ilii.St<r of· cy,lont •1"1• Iida!. the neo:. Cll,:JcommerclAl-relldenUal Laguna Chamh.er Set Officers said the assala~t tan op , · Ambulance Service from the Planning..
'loove,."vl1ich ronks Wllh_!}J,L _ --.h-_ , · behlnil the couple and' brarldisliea a H · ·, ' ·" Cpminisoion~ .<l<l!lal...otJ._LLl'.l'lllell to c\...,.,~_Jiolocow o. .of all . ~-. ' -Consider a vatl.,.,. ipplicat\On from • switchblade '·!Ou!e, atlemJl!ing' to ..,ault l\:ssi8f8 ospitat · · oj>erale out of 255B 'l'balia St' ' " ~,..9.,4. • • t1evin Oassedy1 1so ·Cleo. St. ror '°"' For Talk on Russia the womon.. • .. . . • : '_, . '· . The r~uest to oPt1'3te·• ~ ..,.
• -.i . strucUon rOf a slx~i apartment ex· , · Ittner, IS, tol~Uce he began n"'.h/lng. The Junior Women's Club 'QI La"'•na bu lance service at the addt9', \ &lollC • ~""'111• I Nl•rtl ... lk-.l• •16, I i,.~._.._'. &" • .., ~-· v~ 11 .. ,_,1¥ , 11 ceeding eerm,IUed -•and density ·tn Former Chamber president Hanr with the inan.,. auffei.f4 'a cut inn in ·BtCommach uhaon' l.ly~H~ltalllto,OOObeto"~f"orCciaslthe.. WiU\ corporate oftites and Hviag 101trte19 . :="' ,..~ ::::. .. c: 1: tbe-lW.iooe. --• '1 Lawtence will _address the Wednesday -(hestrugg\E!. 'Dleieail1U1tthenfleddoWn .... ,. u.xu for an ambulance crew was denied Oct.
,:, ~flltlkn ;: = '"""~ nJ1 . ~·a v:arianct aepllcaUon. from breakfast Of the Laguna Beacil> Cham~ ~ Santa "9 ~llroad tr4ck!'. j • • • bosP.ltal's' upcoming' expanSlon pro(ram.. 1., ill a ~ l'o~ by the cqrmplssiOnr ·: ~. .. ~, ~.....,. ,.,, , Chari• L Dli.Oll lot !l)i' P.tlpll ,Hotel, of C.Ommerce concerning his recent # . ~! A6out an hoqi' Jater Camille Johnson of . ~Jet M. ·Brown,"ai(niliiistra}Or of the At : the orlgiD.al bearlilg ~3 .Jetten ,ef
,' 1 ........ ' ' ,._..... '' 250'Cl'ff Drive; to ·~'the llructut'fl . to the Soviet lJnJon, • ( • · tll~eaDe vtctbrla, w-..taklni: ·aa i\ientng facOily, -.c:Ctpted the "check fi'o'm Mrp,. protesti from -..nelghboiing'· pr.ope rt 1 ·-t--Eir · · '' ~:, ,, wttb..a llgn ~tted lriJbl;R4·zone. The meeting will be Jteld at the Hottl Swalk &long C&lle Santa Barbara ·when'• CarllManus1 presldebt ·Of \lit club: '!'He ownera and tenant.! wei:e ~d, most ti• :~ =-'~'if' .... ,.?~-:-<-Oncldt:t I repst from JMS C.Om. Laguna at 7:45 a.m. Lawrence wUI nar-fnlri m~ the detcrlpUOn ~ilf Ute cheek WI.I paftnen\,ln fblt ·~n'the_clUb'a p~ssing concern _regarding~ lbCl
" , '• '
• · 1 pany to'egceed1bulldi!li. helgbt 'on ~ of rate a sll<le pre;.ntaUoo and talklabout assillimt; In flie Dnl ·knl£1nr: Ji>atd QP ' pledge' made to the ·1iosP11al llltte years tralffc huards ii !lie ambulance oervJce
four lots at,,, Park Ave: his observations of life 1n Russia. . \ behind. her. ago. were permitted.· •
r .. ,
--') ...
-. r
. Collegians
~Must Pay
For Acts'
Ul'IT1 .......
FACES OF MARSHALL COEDS SPEAK FOR WHOLE TOWN
In Hunll"91on, w. Va., Dl1ballaf, Shock and Griaf
~iiy That "Died~
Grief Follows Team's Jet Crash
BJ CIWG AMMDMAN
~ """' Wrttw
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. -"Tbls town
.died loday ...
· With Iha! °'1• a ._ at Hunllll&lon
Hospital refieclld Iha ' grief 11 MonlWl
,University and Its home city aftu Satur·
-day night'• crash of • Southern Airways
<bartered DC9 CllT}'inl Iha l!Cbool'a ,..,,_
ball team and othen.
· Among those on the plane, in addition
to the playera, coachlng allll and
bOO!lul, were three promlllonl phyal·
clans and the.Ir wlva, a newly elected slat. lqialator wlio afoo waa one 'If Hun-
llncton'a weal-men. 1 pul prwldeni
o! Mmbaft'• alumni -llcln. 1 city councllmll!. two put pnoldenta ol Iha
Morlbafl 1thlellc -· clul>. an IJ>.
dustrlallat and the 1p:J111 director of a
lccll leleYlllon lllllca.
·. In all, there ...... 'II -· and • llCbool ol 1,100 and a city of '11,111111 -1 llllo ~ abcul IOD llludenta and
dtlm>I joined hands Ill a cempua
memorlAI . service, opened with Iha
alnglnc Qf an A.frku bymn, "Kumbaya."
MOii wept openly. Some fell lo thllt
-.. the, ..... .. _., llqtni Lore!. kumheya .• ,
-·· burlbil Lord, kllmblJla ••• -..·, 11rayla( L9rd, kumhey1." Frlandl hid to clrry ,_, Mn. Roter
O!llders from 1 Hunl!nglon hcep!W,
where she had cone ''boplna !Of a
IBJracle."
O!lldm had been 1 M1r1h11l
Jlllehecl<er, but 1111111"'1 a heod lnjbry.
}le """*8lully wale ... ~ ..._
brain llD!'IOfY during lbe llU!Mler and
while ~erln& wu aervinl u 1tudent tum manoaer. hopln& lo jolll Iha pll)'lnc
leom1pl1uomtdoy.
.AlamUaahlflir.tm111lceolerlnthe
llChool'I Jil>)'llcel education bolldlnl. doo-
lon and Dllrlll !naiad -In shock. "Ala:, pleue o:1me back • . • pleue
come back," a coed ecrumed u lh1 lay
on one of tbt 100 mat.tnuu 1et up bl the
center.
"God, what hu blppened?'' another
coed cried.
In h&llwaya outaldt, MCNt.arl.. and
football colldlel nl staring and crying.
MOii of their boAaa were lboard Iha t..Jn.eoglne jel Head coacb Rick Rolley,
and athleUc dtrtctar Olarle1 Klutz:, wtre
-the dead.
Al a nearby hospital, d"""11 and
studeatl were ushered to a conference
.....,,_ ~ had -• late In lbe nlehl lo<:dnc. boptna. rec ourvlvon.
DAILY PILOT
• • •
At 1aa11 10 o1 !ham crumpled lo Iha n.... when Iha cordoaod-off hospital,
prlzptd for cariaa for IUrvlvon, r.
malnod qulal
Tha coaehel, pteyera and booalarl .mo
died ...,.. amnna !hole who, In Iha lut r..o )'IUI, hid rallied In eupport of
Mll'lllafl. It WU a toup tw .. yaar period
--Iha llChool .... t 17 --a victory, WU expelled fram ttl COftoo
ference for. recrultlnl vlnlAtlona, u>j uw
ill held eoach removed for aflopd tr.
recuJariUOI.
It woa lhoN people who hid spearhud·
eel driVll that rafaed f!I0,111111 for
scholarlhlp funda and preaeured Iha Wat .
Virginia Loplatur1 Into rel1111ni fl mlllJno fa< an arU!lclaf pllylnc lllrface.
At Iha afrJ>ort at -.by K111cva, Iha
wife of televla:lon 1portacNter Ken Jona
and thelr thrH children were In the
crowd awaft1n1 Iha return ol Iha ~edp)ane.
They waflad and watched In the cold
nilht air u the bis Jot lulJy clrclad
beneath low, dark rain clowll, maklnfl lta
final apprnach.
Their cua turned lo horror when Iha
Jet dlAappeartd liohlnd ·a hlU, followed by
a brilll.aDt fluh and a muabroom of black
amoke.
In Charleston, newsmen a w 1 I t e d
lll10ther telepllcne eall from Jeff Nathan,
sports editor of Manhall'• ttudent
newJpaper. He had called the Sunday
Gazette-Mail sport,, desk earlier after the
game from Greenville, N.C., and gave
1ketclty accountl of the action.
Bubb• said h' had lo hurry. "I don't
ba.ve too much Ume . .Qur plane 11 leaving
right away and I'll have to hurry." He
added as he hun1 up, "The plane is leaV·
ing, I'll call when we land."
From 1 Huntlngtoo telephone booth
Saturday night, Rieb Taglang, a junior
football player, told his parenta in
Bethlehem, Pa., that be was allve.
Taglang wa1 late Friday when the
PIM' <ieporled for Greenville, and bo
mined tho trip.
"I'm alive,'' he 10bbed Into tha
telephone. "Nobody else is ... they're all
dead."
2 Newport Beach
Offic,ers Sftot;
Man, 61, Seized
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
01 ni. DIOr Plllt It.ti
A ll·y_ear~ld man ii facln1 ar•
ratanment today on char1a of attempted
murder after assertedly woundlnl two
Newport lleach oUlcen Satur<iay In what
hu been dacribed u the worst abootinl
in the hiJtory of the departmenl
In cuatody In Newport Beach city jail II
Arthur Lambert, a rt&ldent of the Dunea
Trailer Parll: who llatl his occupation 11
-1tlng ... lnaer. He II 1laled lo IP'
pear In Iha Harbor Jucliclal Dlalrid court
this aft.moon.
Officer J1me1 Gardiner, 22, ts ll1ted YI
flit condiUon following a b d om I n 11
lllll8'f durlna which a kidney wu
removed. Officer John Ellillf!ham, SI, II
alld In falr condition after ht w11 woun-
ed In the rlaht thi&h. Both are In Hoaa
Memorial Hospital.
. The lncldanl wu apparenUy 1parked
when the two patrolmen slopped Lomberl
at Im trailer. He reporttdly was spotted
drlvin& erraUcally down Pa~ic Coaat
Highway.
As the two talked to the suspect, prior
to 1dminirterln1 a field IObriety exam.
he .UesedlY pulled out. a .lk:allber
automaUc and 1bot Ge.rdlner Jn the
•tom•ch. e:lllchao> IAlrteclly woa llhol
wblle wrtstlln& Lambert to the ground.
The obooting Wll . Wllnllled b 1
Limbert'• wile and two 1tudmta from
Newport Harbor Hlah School who w1rt
parlldpaUllf! In a ride aloni proaram.
The two 1~11 ...,. ta a unlt drinn 111
l"'lnilman Tom Smith. Thay hid arrived
al the ..,.,. prior lo the lhooUnC oo Iha
llUdenta coul<i Obaervl what linJth thouaht WQUld hi a routlna drunk drlvtn1
loll.
•
'
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of Ml• O•ltr Pli.t llttt
"Tbe campus should not protect
1tudenl$. They should have to answer fot
breaking the la~ j111t like an ordinary
cit.tun."
&lrprialngly, that quoit caine from a
form er member of Students for a
Democratic Society, not a police chief.
The 1peaker waa Joe EtUestein, a UO
Rlveni<io studant 1tudYlni 10< bil doc·
torate. ·
Ettlutein was a member of • panel at
UC Irvine Satur<iay diacuNinl the """
fllcts and I.he problem1 that ariM
between a colle1e campus and the IW'•
roundlnl community.
Alao on the panel, part of a Callfomla
Collep PenQnoel A 1 1 o c l a t i o n C'On"
ference, were Newport Beach City Coun.
cilman Richard Croul1 Tom Findley,
another UCR student and Jim Dun,
news editor of the Santa Ana Register.
Dian said tbat one ol 1111 biggest 1'rO'
, blemJ wl~ coUece Cll!\PUIU was •'!Jn.. din& out •bout construcUva thlni• that
bappen on camt~i~· "vtoleDCe LI g over ihe Image of
the univtraity," Dean said, adding that
the professon and the chancellors should
make an effort to inform the press of the
iood lhlllp that occur.
UCR student Findley nld that an effort
woa beinl ma<ie at UCR .to take Iha
1tudenta out Into lb• community and lo
afJo brlal Iha community onto Iha cam·
One proaram ha menUcned wu
automobile dealers onto c:empu11
lbout air pollution. · 4
EtUuteln, the othu UCR 1tudeat on
tha panel, aafd Iha blgut problems
--cempu1 and community ....,. from pollUcal eonflida.
0 Tberl ii • m!lundentandinl about th•
Bill ol lllahll," he told the oudlence c•lhared · 11 the Science Lecture Hall. "llemonltr•Uni peacefully cloea nol
..... qulatli." .
Eltlealeln afoo crlUctaed poUUclana for
"puWoi clown proteuon to furthor their
own poUUcal purpo111.
"P.aool• have lo bell"a wbat they rood
about thll (the pollUctanJ) beca-what
they rnd IA their mljor -ee of In·
form1Uon ," Ettluteln 1clcltd.
Ha Aid that one ol Iha beet way1 lo
aolve many of the poUUcal coollldl la for
the coUep admbllltraton to perm.It uan
fonna ol pollUeal acttvlty that c1oe1 .not
vlolala Iha law, ll\<i!ldlDI !loj!uhltcan.
DemocraUc, Radleal·, • Commuitlfl and all
other lypel. A campua lhould, hi a place
where ltudeztta can expt• tbemaelvu
publlcl,y."
City Councilman crouJ nld the -· munlties IWTounding UCI particularly
Newpqrt Beach, have mt ~ m u c h
aNOclition with the ca,mpUI because 0£
the iaolaUon of UCI.
He said that with the small number of
students at UCI, about 6,000, the cities
are not affected that much, but he said
that he waa concerned with the apathy of
ruidenta to matten outaJde of thelr own
Uves, both on and off the campus.
Student Findley said that just such
apathy was one reason for many of the
bombings that have occurred recently.
"The atudenta 1¥ho have TUorted to
bombing," he said. "are ones who really
thought the . system would w o r i.
somehow."
He aald atudenta trying lo work "within
the 1yatem" had been frustrated by their
effort.. H1 dted one n::ample of a man
who bad been 1ent to Sacramento from
UCR to lobby for air pollution control.
Findley ul<i th• mao found 29 paid oil
company lobbyllll that he ha<i lo com-
pete with .
"Such a problem won't really be solved
soon," Ettlestein re1panded. ''And the question i1 not really how to 1top the
bomber• but rather how to atop the crea·
tion of more bombera."
"Thole of us who are radicals have one
lntere1t in oommon with the campus ad·
miniltraUon," EtUestein said. "The
radical needs to communicate with the
people of the community and disruption
tend• lo minimize the communication.''
"On the ba1ia of thit"iner1ing of in·
terest," EtUestein 1dded . 11tbtre ia a
chance that the campus will survive."
A member of the audience asked panel
member Dean why only deroaatory news
getl Into the prtu.
Dean said that just such criticism has.
caused many newipapers to re-evaluate
their role In the ,community and the man.
ne:r in which they have been covering col·
lege campuJes In the past.
"We will have to try to be more con-
structive a1 well as informative," Dean
said. "To 1et more positive thin&• in
print. ,,. newsmen will have to do a bet·
ter job.
"But the profeasor1 rtll al.lo have to be
more aur111ive in Cellini: newa to the
pre111
11 ht added.
,
Young Suspect
Held in Burglary
A 21-year-<>ld •uapecl In the Aug. 23
burglary ol Taco Bell In Loguna Beo<h
hH been imi!i<llii Sarila Bif6iri iii!
ntumed to Llguna Stach. · ·
Thomu Arvid NelAon, a nlidant ol Na-
tll>W City. "" arn11ed by Sanll Batbara County Sheriff'• c!epuUe1 on a ·
werrant from Lacuna Buch. He was
waolad In C<!,_u.n with the Taco Bell
• burpry in which fl,alll In ealb w11
taken.
Nellon wu lo hi arralped loday on
char111 of buralarr and 1ran11 the!~
police nl<i.
I
.
Woman Diver Dr~ns
It took approximately an hour Sunday for divers to
locate the body of Mrs. Patricia Parke Jones, 41 of
Orange. She had been skindiving for abalon.e with
a male co~.nion at Scotehman'a Cove near La·
gtma Beach m 30-feet of water and failed to surface.
Futur~ for Cyclist ~ark
In San Oemente 'Bleak'
A
Jury Selecti~n
Starts in Trial
For Bad Checks
By JORN VALTERZ~
Of ti.. DlllY Pllrt Slaff
The future of San Clemente's Seabreeu
motorcycle park -whose operator1
fought through two bitter public hearing•
recently -is in grave doqbt this week
because of directives from Mormon
Church headquarter• in Salt Lake City.
Bishop Roy Trotter, head of the local
Mormon Church which led ln the develop-
ment of the 700-acre cycle park on the
rormer Reeves Ranch, 1aid today it
would be known in a week whether the
attraction will be closed for good.
Complaint& from several local resident.I
to the church headquarters in Utah -
coupled with lncreued activity in ll·
Boulder Dropped
On Truck Kills
Driver; Boy Held
A truck driver waa kJlled Saturday
ni&ht when a boy dropped a 40-pound
boulder from an overpad 11 the big rl&
roared through Ontario, crushing hia
head.
The football-shaped rock ahatt.ertd the
windabiel<i, hittln11 Cliffor<i A. Owenby,
50, of Downey, and causln& the truck and
trailer to rip through the center divider
twice .and run off the freeway.
His driving partner. James B. Ga1la
Jr., allO 50 and a Downey reskient too,
suffered minor injuries in the traaedy, 1
the aecond 1Uch fa tal Incident in a month .
A teenaged boy who nld be 1aw the
rock dropped led police to the home
where the juvenile was arrested and later
released to bl.I parent&' c11Btocly.
No one wu arrested in the other ln--
cident whlcb occurred on the Pasadena
Freeway, while Saturday night's fatal
rock-dropping was on t.lie San Bernardino
Freeway.
Criminal charges will be brought
against the unidentified 12-year-old in San
Bernardino Ccunty JuVllille Court, 1c-
cordin1 to Poiice LL 1.Altbet ~ranks,
templf lo Mil U!e hup parcel -CCilld loll
the death knell . for 1he five-month.old
facl)lty.
The park opened last July amJd aome
furor from resident.I who complained
about exce11lve noite, dust and ;'towdy
ele:nenta" belna attracted by the hills1de
park.
Fe,.-of thOle predicUona came true,
however.
Slnco Iha..,.. reaidenta mumed their
uproar at 1 city council hearing action
resuJted In a two-year extension of the
park's pennit with a t11ged condition that
"noise problems" be reviewed ln three
mont.lu.
This week, however, 'MOl'ft'¥'D Church
officlala have written a letter to the local
church orderin1 the cloelng ol the r,rlr.
"The main thrwtt of the directive, Dr.
Trotter aafd today, "la that the Churctt
doe1 not want to be caught in the mlddlt
C1f 1 local controversy. l1nfortun•tely they
are vie'lfinc the 1ltU1Uon fr.om a con·
slderable dJJtance."
Dr. Trotter, a San Clemeate clroprac-
tor, already hu appealed the rullna and
the park wiU remain~ operation unW h1I
appeal la. aclad upon in Salt Loke Ctty.
Rumort have accompYlled the neWJ of
the park's doom~• tnvolvlng the poaal·
ble ul.1 of the entire ranch parcel to •
bronch of ·the Kaller orpnllallon.
Cieckl wJtb repreaentatlves of thlt
massive complex in Fontana, OUland
and Lot Aapl<1 thll morning ylelded no
conrirmatloq of the reports of 1ale.
Dr. Trotter could not confirm tbt
rumor, either, other than to 11y It ap.
pears the church Is "adlvely" pursuing
~1ebf the huge ranch.
Aside from the norm.at amount of
mishaps in such an activity the motorey·
cle park baa operateli 1moothly all aum·
mer. No official nolae complain ta have
been verified by San Clemente police,
who have prailed the idea of mch a park
because it takes noisy cycleA off small
piece1 of private property in the city.
La&t liprina -before Seabreeze opened
-police logged conatant complaints of
noisy cycles on em,pty lot.II. ,
Since tbe park opened, howtvtr, th•
complaints have dwindled considerably.
' ' Jury 1electlon began today ht t Ii •
onns• County Superior C'.curt trial el an
investment counselor acCUll!d oi wrtttni
S37,00D worth of bad checkl on the San
Clemente branch of the Banlt of AmeriCL
It Is expected that the fir1t praaec;ut1011.
wltnesae1 will take the stand lat.er today,
In the COW"troom of Jucta:e Charlea Baller
and offer te1Umony agilnst ddendant
Darrell Graf Hafen, 42.
Hafen, who wa1 recently ruled to be
1ane and aDle lo· stand trial, 11
represented by attorney Alan Stokke~
Deputy District Attorney Joe Dl.ckerlOlt
hu the proaecution chore.
Hafen 's trlal wa1 delayed today when
Judge Samuel Drelten to whom the
Hafen cue waa as1igned eicu1ed hlmaell
from th\ proceedings.
tt wu explained thal_H~en .had earlier
flied an 1ffid1vi\, (;f,~Jce q1Jnrt'
Judie Oreiun at a-.tlm ew_ben lit "''
defenclin1 himaell a11inslthe bid check.
char1e1.
Hafen wu arre1ted last July 13 1n I.a
Ancelea by FBI agent& and San Clemente·
potl.oe u be returned from one of hl1 la.
vestment trlpa from San Jose, Colt.a
Rica. ·
Inveatiiatora uld Hafen hu conducted
a t.hrlving hwllneu in this nation, Soulh
American and Europe but many of the
trang,ctJona In which ht has been lft.
volved ar~ now beln& invutlgated In all
three continent..
COUNT SHOWS
HARTKE WINS
lNDIANAPOLJS, Ind. (AP) -The of.
flcial certification of complete return1
from the Nov. 3 general election showed
today that Democratic Sen. Vance Hartke
finished ahead of Republican Richard
Roudebuah by 4,338 votes.
But a recowit 1eemed alm01l 1 cer-
t.lnty •
'-
BUY WHIRi rrs MADE -SA VE !
Ruffell'• f'IMlnufacturn the finHt furniture you win
find •nywhere. Yeu '" It end teltct It right Ir• our
.ahowroorn. Pay up te 50% I•• th•n reta11. ChooM
frorn 1n ""llmlted •IHt\on of f a b r I c a. Custom
changn a·n 1lao po11lble.
UNUMmD STYLES OF Pre.Christmas
Furniture
Idea
4
•
UPHOLSnRED FURNITURE
HUNDRIDS OF IEAUTIPUL FAIRICS
TO CHOOSI PROM
Visrt our
1hew room -
you'll •11ioy
11lecti11g
from out
1•tt• 1w1tch•l
ef colorful
fabrici..
, ·ALSO CUSTOM REUPHOLSTDING
• TM re110n we' re 11Jg•
9esting Christmas so 1oon
is that it 's a gr .. t IDEA to
h~ve your own furniture
set.ct.cl •nd ""'nuf•cturod
•t a co1t much 1111 the"
y~ would pay in 1· retail
furnlture store and in time
for Chri&tmas..
\*LL WOii eUAU.NYW
N)I THI
LIFmMI OP PA•llC
,1922 'HAIBOlt BLVD. •
Or Cell '91' Appolllf!Mllt
COSTA MESA
• 541°0259
,
•
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----------
San=-=Cleme -e ••
~a2isir:~~~
.., ~ "
.EDl.TIQN N.Y. Stoek8
-
VOL 631 NO. 274, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES._ . ' . ' . TEN_ CENTS ·-• -. -. ..; . ... . • .r .. .. .. ..,.. !.. : ' •'• Strict · .. San ·c ·leme.nt·e Tra.iler· ... : p :ark: .. Law N.ear
' • • • . ' A p{'Op<>Sed ·ordinance ·covering every
develowient J.>!lase of mobile hoqie parks
for San,CleQlip•e~J.s..headed to)"anr city
council.approval •alter·moiilha Of drafting
and ttvislon. : · ' •• .
And H u.;jb;c1 new code goes Into ef.
feet, It will be applied to wbat 'appeat> to
be the tut new mobile home part In the
city foe sev.eril yean. n<Ptopoiil Ordinara WU placed u
an added 'tOlldltlon or approval tO the con. pennlt-lgain-tapees.
l(oveni~ JM!r{nlt granted ~ to Lin-C.Ouncllmen once, ·more ex~ the
. colD SavinP ~ Loan for ..a park near prqpoaecJ meBaure In study tel&loq la.at
Sbor..:liffs G!>U eo.pe. ~ . · week. then an.;, -le· over. requirement
.Jbcluded Iii the oMinaqce:,l{~ clause ' of vtaltor pUtlog spacot ·and iooftop
mumi such. a ponn!t -void H a coolen · unolfl!tally ·,.....cl tbe 1iandanls
building permit is not tUeri , out within were ready f0r a vOte.
"'llO day1 of approval of the'"}roject. Planning commlssiooers hive worked
U . construct.ion is not bqgzt within 90. on m.· ol"i!ini'ri& throuch Rveral
clays ~ tbe permit is,;~ . tbe meetin(i:alJlce !ta ~ftlni laat 1prlr.s •
. . -~ .
11 tt ls ·~. It would join '1ln'. cell-Mlnlmwn. width would be -45, !eel for
tng on the number of mobile home spaces e~,. 1Pice. 'with a five-foot ~Pt yard
in ~~·~e'!'~te, )thic~ seems ~ured of 1• setback not to be used tor vehicle park-pusqe Wedrietday night. , . -~ _ ,
·The Hmlt would 1.-new palU In the llli·
ci\Y. un.til at: least 4,000 new Permanent· _Side yards must .be at le~ five feet , dwe~ unltl are built In ·the cl\)'. wldei with accu.s to carports Uirough a
Among the proposed development ru1ea l~foot-01'-wider driveway.
are atandards for sJ)ace size av"erag\ng 'Dwelling units less than IO feet wide or 3,000?~. feet with no plot:mnllitr having lea than aoo squart feet would
than1;'!00 11q11_.,. !eel -not, be permitted.
•
. ..:. . --• ...
;:I
:~ar1ne Ill
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Mari1ie 's Son Saves 2 Kids ·in Ftre
Ban Sought .
On Airport
At El Toro
A 17-year-0ld son of a Marine officer
· has been presented a letter of ap-
preciation by the et1irunanding general of
El Toro Marine Corps ·Air Station for
18.vtng the Hves of two children In a fire.
JaCt Forst. Jf., WM returning home
With lils father, Warrant Officer Jack:
Prost Of-Sept. 15 when they passed bum·
ing home ip µie housing area just oU the
base.
Young. Frost immediately jumped lrom
the cfr, grabbed a ftre extinguisher
nearby and broke through the front win-
dow" of the hdrne to fight the blaze. His
father went to the rear af Lhe house, and,
. with a garden hose, kl.eked in the batk
door to help put out the fire.
Both f8\her and· son were credited :ivith
saving tl)e ll'ves of two children trapped
in the bedroom of the charred home,
Cameron, age 2, and Damaln, I month!,
children ef Sgt. V. F. Jooea. ·
In tM special letter presented to Frost
Brig. Gen. Henry Hbt, the youth was
cited for courage ln the face of personal
danger. WO Frost, personnel officer at
the base, has been recommended for the
Marine Corps Medal for bis action in
fighting the fire. __
Petitions are being ' prepared
circulation in the Mission Viejo area to
block the poosiblllty of joint uae ol El
Toro MCAS for commercial and military
fllght.s.
Spearheading the action ls the Mi11ion
Viejo Homeownen Auociatlon which op.
poaea the recommendation by the
PJrsons Report that the county begin
.dilcuuloN of poaalbie joint -' .
. MIR Shearer, ~t of ·thel ' . . ' . . . . . . . 1\11!~ • v·. .. s· . .. . ··u --· -Tburoday -· 1-f°'SIOD ICJO e~ · p--. :;11="i:'Mtf~~
.Service District Bo~d ··--·-:-~§~;e~.~--
·Mission Viejo taxpayers may soon have
a· volce . in h6w ·their et1unly service
dJ,strict funds are spent. ,
Jlm Creber, a member ef the board of
~rs of the lttissl.on V I e j o
San Bernardino
Firemen Battle
Biggest Blaze
Containment by night!SJI was predicted
today e an anny of 3,300. firefighters
ciosed: ·in on U:>e worst b I a z e in San Bem"'a.rdino County history, w Ith
50~plus. acr~s· 1 eared and untold
millions in losses.
.The raging inferno whipped Into
massive proportions Friday by Santa Ana
winds reacbin.100 miles per hour has
destroyed 54 Mmes and virtually wiped
out the tiny ranch resort community of
Smiley. ·
·Gov. Ronald Reagan dl!cla~ the area tncludin~. once-fuSh San ElemardiJ;to Na·
, llonal Forest land! a disaster area.
Ai 'Firelighters said only a few minor if1..
juries have been · reported -and no
deaths are known -blaming a campfire
for the Big Bear area blaze, plus arson in
a fseiies of five ethers in two counties. ..
.,..._ge
'· Coot
•
Weather
ll'll be cooler by a good 14 de-
grees on the ~ ·Tuesday wlth
local temperatures 1>t11ed at 68
' degrees and the Inland. mercury
IOBl'lng w· the 82 mark.
JNSWE. TODAY
Upwards of 300,000 Pakistan-
is may · ~ dead in a dMa!
1 di.sasttr of cyclo11e and• tidal
)1..wave-101Uclt-----4'an/tf-~i&h-tM
~ • WMSt holocausts of dll time.
i Page 4.'
l C.....,_.I I °'"''" u, 11 -.... ._ .. c-.-. ''
--M DI__. II
J :::.:· ,_ ' -" J ,..,._, , .. ,.
~ If I,,. .. ........,.. 11 Ml..... •
Ml,,.....~,. ,,_.,IM 1r
............ j
Or-C"'9ltY ti S•hle ,,__ 11 ,_.., "·ti lfld ...... , ....
,............ I, -" -. Wlllf9 W• II ............... , .. ,. . .
. tot.en pro6abb' wwldn~t. paa Jt," ht ·
Homeowners As!oclation uhvelled 1 pilot
program to e1tabliah a service distrlct
advisory board betwteri the community
and the board Of supervbors.
Addressing a.group of 150 homeowners
Jr. the MWton Vlijo lli(h School
multipurpose '1*>m Thursday. Creber
outlined the duties of a aeivice diStrict
which Jot-Jude . parks a~. recreation
facilities maintenance ,, tree t main-
tenance, fire protection and capital pro-
jects like a teen ~nter.
"There ls currenlly S225,000 in lht Oso
Valley Service Atta No. , t whX:b en-
compasses Mission Vlt}o.''~'u.ld Crebtr.
"An owner of a $30,000 bOOlt pays about
$40 a year."
He-said the advlsori boudJdea was In-
iUated by the Board of Supervilon when
the Homeowners Asloclation sought to
use service area :funds for a teen center.
"Thet 'didn't much like the Idea et
peUtitom," said Creber. "So they sug·
gested an advisory board."
Creber said that the purpose of the
board would be to advise Bob Yablonsky,
tpe c:oonty serv!ce area ovenef:r, aa to .
the needs and dell.res or the community.
"With a board It would be pos!ible to
hold budget hearings so that the wishe!I
or the community could be ei:amlned.
The results of these i:.earings could be
taken to lhe county."
A dispute developed over who wouJd be
on the advisory board and whether or not
they' should be appointed by Uie county
supervisors governing the Miuton Viejo
area.
Ol:le critic of the entire klea sugested
that there Is already too "lnueh fragmen-
tation of county govenunenf arid that' the
decision on how the service arU money
should be spent should bt Wt to the
homeowners associaUOri. ·
Creber said the homeownen auoc.la·
lion would have another meeting ln I
month to further d1scua the klea.
Mission Viejo Group
Elects New Officers
'lbe new bowd of directors' for the Mls-
si0n Viejo Homeowners AuoclaUon bu
been elected.
Serving for a year wUI be Mike
Shemr, George Ann Mouer, Luis
Lesmez, Jim Cre.be.r, Ho:-ard ·Ariawalt,
Don Seblde, Gary Bua, Joe Dalf and Bill
Pr~ter. .
Membership in the .-tiUon Is till'
Opell. Aoyone wishing to Joi• may COl1la<t
ooe of the board memben -for ln-
fonnauon. •
•
Nici. . '. Jlurlnf tbe • ~ meetio& at·
Mialoo Viejo High Scbool Shearer Ui,.d
· evetyOne · ·to write tO' their tounty
---. to let them. know how they .
. feel. •
"'Our MS tactic will be to 1stall, delay
and postpone action. on .the abJ>Ot1 situ .
unW. we can build our force." Aid
Sllearer.
.fie said ·the l'<>UllillllJ' Iha! tbe final ·
declllon wm be m•cle In Wlllhlncton ls .
Mt to be scofftd at. He supetied writing
the California Senator!: ind OJrll!Ulman :
J i>lm Schmitz.
"Sen. Sclunitz llVff 18 TurUn and 11 llfl .
ei marine. We miiit' let him bOW how
we feel."
Shearer said that .ithough they ·m11
Jose a battle or two, what's Import.Int 11
winrilng the war. He said If Phl.st n 11
accepted, the neifi\ep-WOWdDi'PhUi
III a comprehensive detalled plan which
wo{.id ·uncover many shortcomlngi In Ul-
ing El Toro MCAS for commercial
aircrafL
Couple to Tell
Lapidary Group
Of Y ell~wstone
h opal-lathering trip taken to i,i art.a
near Yellowstone National Park by a San
Clemente couple will form.. the program
fOr Uie mmthly mettlilg 'Wednesi!ay of
the Tri Cities Lapidary Soclety.
Mr. and Mrs. W. M. McKay win show
ahdes and specimens taken on their re-
cent trip to the Spencer Opal Mine ln
Idaho at the 7:30 p.m. program 1t San
Cle·mente High SChool'1 llttle theater.
M<Xay, chairman of tbe Laguna Belch'
Art AlsociaUon, alao will detail coDtctlli(
lid< triP, in Nevada and Orqon. ·
The dub'• 11elll fldd trip -to Turli•
Mountain near NeecDel -else wt1l be
cllacussed at the ~. The pellc ls
Welcome to the W-Y <vent.
. . .. ' '
1 llltrllltilng atorles ln English· h~lp HilaH<> Larl0$; 6, !l><e~are to Jeam
· to"tfe&d the language ... Hilario is 'one of:.the ,e'nUlusia8'1c . youngsters ·iu ·an'. ,innovative 11junior. first grade program" at Ralph . M. Gates
I Elelnenlary School, El Toro. (See ·page 3 lor story:and pictures of thls
. unuSllal educatlonaf app\iiach). -. ' ..
Police . Fin4 Blood_ T~ail,
Hold Woman in Oemente
I
A"9'ries of weekend' disturbances ln a.
s..i Clemente neighborhood finally ended
~-ntgtit· with the arrest of a '
wonian with ·a badly' gashed arm' on ln-·
ltlai cbargea of burglary.
:po]ke said the arrest and emergency ·
treairoent of Mrs. Dean Byler, 49, came
after a burglary call came from.lhe Juan
Luna residence at 11 W. Avenida San
Gabriel at 5:47 p.m'. J
Officers found a broken window and a 1 trail ef blood leading from the LUna
homt to the ·house next door at 13 W.
AvenldaComello. .
1nl1de they found the woman bleeding .
profUsel)' from ·a gash on her ann. ,
.After first-aid Lreatment at pplice
headtjuatten, the woman was taken t.o
SOuth <;:oast Community Hospital for
treatment of a cut tendoh.
From there Mrs. Byler was taken to
•
Orange County Joil. .
Officers said they had logged several'
dlitllrbance calls over· the · weekend irl-
volvlng the woman -one of ~
allegedly involvilig weapons stored 'in ihe
wonlan~s car.
Tsaldaris, Ex-Greek
Leader; Dies at 85
ATHENS (AP) -C.Onslantin Tsaldaris,
foqner J!iilµe minister of Greece whose
career In pollUcs spanned half a century,
dfed Sunday al age IS.
He was prime minister In 1946 and
again a ·year later as head or the Populist
party and was instrumental in bringing
back King George JI from exile atfer
World War lL
2 .San ]oaquin ·Schools . .
School Report Du ~.~Ge.L$3.9-Million_Grant
On Scle_n_c~ ~o~rlll)l J-._ ........ _
1
~-• . . • '
A ieport on !he.science program'.at San The Siii<! ....;..,,, -Id l)jt lllnd ,,..·ear· . 'C lrMWajr.
cr.meotellllhSchoolwlllbe·pr-•ledllt mirbd4u mlIDim lor two .a.iol prll!-Theeecond site ls alao to be'lll intar-
•-••"''a meeting of the Boord or -.C.S In tbe-San Jo0guln sd,;,oi Dlstrlcl . mecllafe scliool at "Mulilands boulevard, ~·Caplattano Untiled.School D!i1r1ct. toUl!nt IU million. -._ bilween 1 Los AliJos and Skyrldge in El
Abo oa the qenda for the I p.m. Two lntumedlate schools are plinnm, ~ atate llhare Is part of 1 lit5 mn:
meeting in Serra School wW be 1 with one aWinc .bid otage -Uhlverlity • Uon oommltment to achoo! conslnlctloo
dl11CU11lon of enrollinl Sen Clamlnt-: ff1alt Park lntennedlste to be located •I tbe made available by the mid-October •le
School tn 111 Qm'lhS' educational pro.. .lnteraect1on bf is yet unopened MJc:het. , ot ·bond.1, •t an interest rate more 1ttrac--
gram with the Foreign Stady Lup. IOft~ and Yaie""1treets, near the 8an Di-'Uve to bond investors. '
~ • '
. . , .
.l. RestrlcUona on trash areu, al&m, ,, . maUbo:res and aCCQllOr)' bulJdinp allo
are lilcluded. S!raJla, at -30 feet wide
and constructed lrith the ..... -
.. parking Iota would also ]le apedli6d.
Underground olllJU.. and .. teillla
B)lstellll also would lie rqulated. o.e· proflslon ~ to the cocle
recently ls tbe P~. ol fire eydnnia
at 400-foo! illtervals tluouput a put.
ac s
Youth, 20,
Arrested •
In Clemente
A young Camp Pendleton Marine wa
being held on felony assaUtt cbarces to-
day in two sepe.rate knife 1ttacb on
women tn San Clemente &mday -cne "
whlcb resulted in minor knHe wOIDk &o a
sailor defending one of tbt ~
Police arrested Gary Framt Sblw, 20,
near the park.log lot at the ~ pier
a few minutes alter the aecood. attack.
The .youth was booked on susplcion ol
assault with a deadly weapon.
'lbe flrst Incident occurrtd at the
Trafalgar beach at $:45 p.m. as Robert
Charles Ittner, a sailor aoo.nt tM UIS
LarlOD, was pr~ to luve \be beach
with bis companloa, Ami Clrol lklJ, 25,
ef San Ojego. . .
. ficers said the 1111Dant nn vp
the couple aJl!I -a ilf&bblllde.kllife, effe ..... fti j .Pll
U...woman.
ltlner, 21, told Police be been llPUor
w1tb 1be man and IUlfered a eat IJ'ID iii
tbe struggle. The ass ailant then fled down
Uie' Salita Fe rollroad triicb,
.About an hour liter Camille Johnson of
Ill Calle Victoria, was taklng an evening
wallt aJoog Calle Santa Barbara when a
man matdting the cleacrlptlon ol tbe
a.wtant in the !Im knifmg, jog<d up
behind her. •
1be woman told police the man thrust
a . knife at her stomach. Sbe stepped
backward and attempted to talk to the
man. A few.minutes later a puling auto
distracted the assailant and tbe woman
fled for help.
Shaw, wearing clothing m1tcbJnf the
assailant's, was arrested momentl later
a few blocks from the sce:oe.
Hearing Tonight
On Ousted Capo
City Official
·A clo!<d door hearing will talte placo
tonight for ousted S.,, Juan Capistrano
administn.tor<lert &n.t 'lbomPfOO.
Thom-requested tile bearit>i by let-
ter and the city c:otncll ·~ tbat it
Wal to be a publlc bearlnc 'U outHrwj la
his controct . •
. But·Tbompeon irpecifled a private heal"'
tn't before lhe.~councll •durlng whJch be
plans to present ieuOns Why he ahoWd
remain in his poif of nine years and de-·
fend himlell agalnat cbargea of in-
competency.
The meelil)g wW take place a t·p;m. al
the city ball. • ·
Knife Wielding'
Pair Rob Man
In San CleJDente'
A San Clemelite engineer !ell '1ctlm to
a ~ of knlfe-w1elclln( muam In h
Soulll Coaat Community llotpllal partln&
lot over lhe weekend. •
John S. Rasor Of Ill E. Avonlcla S..
Juan' reported the· incident to San
Clemente polloe"'-after-'dl'Mnl ti'clln the
·-of the robbery•ln wbldl lie loat llt
from his wallel •
Rasor told police he ,... lenlnc Illa
hoapital al about I p.m. Salurdoy -
..... -In tbelr mid ----him.
Each brandished I switchblade kntle,
and clemanded _.a wallet. .
Aller rifting tbe billfold tho two.me•
loosed it lllto tbe vlcllm'a car llld'Oed.., foot. •
' •
'
"""'' UAILY t-u."1 1 .. hlo111i11, NOvtntbtr l"r:i, l'r1v
UPITI._....
FACES OF MARSHALL COEDS SPEAK FOR WHOLE TOWN
In HYptin9ton, W. Va., Disbelief; Shock and Grief
(;~ty That •nied'
"
Grief Folloivs Team's Jet Crash
BJ CRAIG AMM£1\MAN
....... , ... ~'#tlht
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. -"This town
died today."
With that cry, a nurse at HW1Uniton
Hospital renected lhe trlef at Marshlll
Unl verslty and its horne city after Satur·
(lay night's crash of a Southern Airways
Chartered DC9 carrying the acbool's foot-
ball team and otbera.
Amona those on the plane, in addltlo1'
tD the players, coaching staff and
b:iosters, were three prominent physl·
clana and their wlve1, a newl7 elected
gtate Jq:iJlator wbo allo WA! one of Jlun-
tington'1 wellthleat men, a put president
of Mtirahall'a llurnn.I UIOCtation, a city ~ouncllrnari, two pa1t pr11identl of the
Marshall 1lh11Uc bool\ers club, an in·
d1.11triall1t and the 1porta director of a
Jocal televiaion station.
In all, there were 73 dead, and a 1chool
· ~ 8,IOO and a city of 73,000 went Into
JµOumlng.
.At 'm1dnl«ht. about ~ atudents and
cttiWll joined bandl In l Cllllpul
memorlal aervice, opened with the
siJlRlnl of an Aftlcan hymn, "Kumbay1."
MOit wept openly. Some fell to lh<Jr
knee,t_u they sang.
"Someone'• 1lnglng Lord, tumbaya .••
Someone'• hurttna Lord, kumbaya •••.
Someone'• pray1n1 Lord, kumbay1."
Friends had to carry young Mrl. Ro1er
Chllden from· a· Hunttnaton boopJtal,
where 1he had 1one "hopln& for a
miracle."
Childers had been 1 Marahall
llnebacker, but 1uUered a head Injury.
He 1uccealfWJ.y underwent dan1eroua
brain aur1ery durlni the aummer ahd
while recoverlog wu Htvln& u 1tudtnt
te_1m manager, bopln1 to join the pla)'ina
team again someday.
At 1 makesh.lft treatment center In tile
school'• phyaical educaUon buildinj, doc--
ton and DW'lel treated 1tudenta in lhock.
"Alei, plust come b1ck • • • pleaae
come back.'' a coed acreamed u 1he lay
on one of the 100 mattressea set up In the
center.
"God, what bu happened?" another
coed cried.
In hallways outside, :secretaries and
fo::tball coaches aat staring •nd crying.
1'f01t of their bones were aboard the
twtn-englne jet. Head coach Rick Rolley,
and athletic director Charles Kaut&, were
&tmong Ult de1d.
At a nearby hospital, clttzens 1nd
students were ushered to a conference
room. They ·had come late In Ule night
loc:dng, hoptng, for survivora.
DAILY PllOl
"""'-'"• ..... ....... ,...,
CMYI M"• S.. C1•11111e
OlANOa COAIT l'Ull.11HINO COMP.UY
Ro\trt N. w,,4
Pr•ldent •"" l'...i..,_.
J1ck It. Curltv
Vke l'm:•11nt •""' Otntrel MlnllH
lhorn11 K•1vll l!dlklr
Jho1r111 A. Murphll1•
M111.111nr ltdl1or
Ric:h1rd P. N1tl sovr11 or1noc counlr Edlkll' -)t.lt M .. : Jll W•I l1y tlrMI
,. ............. tl'I: 2211 Wn• •1111o1 lovltvaNI • l.ffvnl •ut:11 : m l'ornt A.,.,v.
,
HIMflfllk>ll ... '11: 111'1 a .. dl •ou!n&nl Milo CllmMlll as Nlflll Iii tlmlM At1.1
At least 10 of them crumpled to the
noor wbon the cordoned«! bolpl&al.
prlmtd for carlnc for aurvlvon:1 r•
matned quill
The coachu, playen and booltert who
died wore amonc -who, In tbt lul
two Jlltl, bad rallJtd In lllJIPOfl Of
Mlltball. II wu a IOlllh lwo-yaar per!Od
-wbtn tbt IChool want 17 1am11 without
a Y!c10ty, WU upollld from ltl COii•
ferenC* lor rtenllUJlc vtol1Uon1, and 11w
it! head coach romoved for a1lepd Jr.
rosuJaritlel,
It waa -people who had opurhlad·
ed clrlv61 !hat raiHCI fll0,000 for
scholarlhlp !undo and -" the W11t
Vlralnla L1111lature Into nlaailn1 II
mJJ!Jon for an artlltctal playln1 l\lrlace.
Al the airport at nearby Kanova, the
wUe of teltvlllon 1portac11ttr Ken Jone1
and thetr three chll-Wirt In 1111 ·
crowd aw1tUn1 the return of the
chartered plane.
Thty wallod and watched In Ill< ccld
nijbt etr aa the bifl jel lazily circled
beneath low, dark ralii clouds, maklnl lta
final approach.
'l'bllr 1ne tumid In horror whln tbt
jet 4Jaappoarld behind a hill, followed by
a brilllant flub and a mlllhtoom of black
smoke.
Jn Charltlton, newam.en aw 1 i t • d
another taltphooe call from Jeff Nathan,
spolll_edltoc or. Marohall'• lludont
newlfllper. He bad called tho lwld1y
Guatte-Mlll 1porta detk earlier after the
£~• from Oraenvlllt, N.C., and 11v1
sketchy account.a of the action. IUt ht aaid h> had to hur?)'. "I don't have too much Ume. Our Plane t1 leavln&
ri.Pt away and I'll have to hurry ." Ht
added 61 be hllnl up, "The plane l• lt&v·
in1, I'll call when w1 11nd."
From ·a Hunttnaton telephone booth
Saturday night, Rich Taglang, a junior
football player, told hi; paren~ in
Bethlehem, Pa., that he was alive.
T&1lln1 waa J1te Friday wMn tht
plane departed for OreenvUle, and be
mimd tbt trtp.
"I'm allvt ," he 10bbed lnto the
telephooe. "Nobody else is ••• they 're all
dead."
2 Newport Beacli
Officers Shot;
Man, 6l, Seized
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
01 rlll OlllY !'lift Stlfl
A fil·year-old man ii facin.1 ar·
rtJ&mnent today on cbar1u of attempted
murder aft.er 1111rt6dly woundln.i two
Newport Beach offtcers Saturday in whit
has been described u the worlil shooting
in the hi!tory of the department.
In clllt.Ody in Newport Buch city jail lt:
Arthur Lambert, a. resident of the. Dunes
Trailer Park who lJ.Jls" hla occupation u
consulting engtnter. He Is 1lated to ap-
pear in the H1rbor Judlc.i1l Olltrlct court
lhla ahernoon.
Officer Jamel Gardiner, 12, la U1ted in
fair rondiUon followln1 1 b d o m I n al
Surjei"y during which I kidnoy WU
removed. Officer John Elllngham, 2t, I.I
also In fair condition after ·he. w11 woun-
ed In the right thigh. Both are In Hoar
Memorial Hospital.
The incident was apparently sparked
when the two patrolmen stopped Lambert
at his trailer. He reportedly wu spotted
'tlrivlng erratic.aUy down Pacllle C:.O.lt
Highway.
M. the two talked to the suspect, prior
to adm inistering a field sobriety e.xam.
he allegedly pulled out a .ZXal.iber
automatic and. ihot Gardiner in the
stomach. Elu,twn auertecllY •11 •hot
wh11e wrestJtilfUffiWI to the ground.
Tbe shooting was witnessed b y
Lambert's wife and two 1tudentl h'oPl
Newjiorl Harbor Hiflh School who wort
parllclpattnc In a ride a1oa1 prqram.
Thi two llrb ...,. In a unll drl"" bJ
patrolman Tom Smith. '!'bey had trTlved
at tilt '""'" prior to tilt ohootlni oo the &tudlnta could oblerve whit Smtih
thoU(ht would be a roulln• clrllnk clrMna -
CQllegians
'Must .Pay
For Acts'
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of .... DellJ '11•1 llllf
"'nte caMpus should not protect
11tuclents. They should have to answer for
breaking the law just )Jn an ordinary
clUzen."
SW'prisingly, that quote Came from 1
former member of Student! for a
JJemocratlc Society, not a police chief.
The speaker was Joe EtUestein, a UC
Rfversldt student studYlnl for his doC-
torate.
ttUestein was a member of a panel 1t
UC Irvine Saturday dJICUlling the con-
ruct.a and the problema that arlu
between 1 college camp111 and ·the 11ur--
roundin1 communlty.
A1ao on the panel, part of a Calitornla
College Personnel A 11 o c i at ion con.._
ference, were Newport Beach City Coun·
cilmJn Richard Croul, Tom Findlt.¥1
another UCR student !nd Jim Dean,
news edltcr of the ·santa Ana Register.
De.an .. ld that one of his bige1t pro-
bltnis with c61lege campuses wa1 "fin· dlh& out aboUt conatructive t.hht&! that
hlppen on campus."
\"Violence la taklDg over the image cf
the university," Dean said, adding that
the professors and the chancellors should
make an effort to inform tbe press of the
good things that occur.
UCR student Findley said that an effort
was being made at UCR to take the
1tudent1 out into the community ind to
ailo brln( lbt communJty -the com•
Ont pt0trtm ht tnanuoned WU
automobile dealers onto ·campus
abaul air pollullon.
Blll!IMalJI, Iha othtt UC!\ lludanl on
the panol, llld lbt bJaell problema
bolw11n campill and conunwuty """' from polllfcal conlllcta.
'"l'btn 11 a mtaundlrtlandlna about the
Bill ol J\Jahtl," be told the audience
l•tbond at tbt Scltnco Lecture Hall.
"Dllllonatrattnc peacefully dots not
me"' qulll!y." ·
EllllataJn alto crJUclad pollUctans for 11puttln& down profuaor1 to turther their
own pol!Ucal purpoae1.
.. Pt0p11 hive to believe whit they read
about this (lbt polJUclam) becauae whit
lh<y ttad fa their major oourct of 111-·
formation ," Ettleateln added.
He uld that Ont of the bt1t way1 to
OOIYa m&llY of the polJUcal conflict& ii for
tbt coUue admlnJatialoh to parmfl "all
forms of poUllcal aCU•lty that dOll not
Yloilta tbt law, Jn\lh14!!1L lltpubllcan,
DlmocraUc, ~ C:O!iJ!Dllllllt, and all
other IYPll. A campu1 lhould be a piece
wtiere ·aludenta can ezprea thtrmelvu
pubUcly."
aty Cooncllmen Cl'ouJ aaJd the corri-
-munJUu 1111TOU11dini UCi parUcularly
Newport Beach, have not had much
.-tauon with Ille Cll!IPl!f becaUJe of tb1 ilol1Will of UC!. . --
Ht aaJd tbat with the 1m1ll number of
ltudtnt.I at UCI, about &,000, the cltle1
art not lltected that 'much, but he s1ld
that ht w11 concerned with the 1p1t.hy of
mldlnta to matte-• outalde of their own
llv11,.both on and off the campus.
Student Findley llfd that Just ouch
apathy w11 one re110n for many ot the
bombl1111 thlt hllve oet'.urred rtctntly.
.. The 1tudenta who have re!orttd to
bombing," he said, "are ones who raalJy
thought 1he system would w or k
somehow.''
He said 1tudtntll trylna to work "within
the ayatem" hid bffn·frustrated by their
efforta. He cited one eiample of a man
who had bten s~t to Sacramento from
UCR to lobby for air poUuUon control.
Flndley Uld the man found 29 paid oil
company lobbyists that he had to com-
pete with.
1'Such a problem won 't really be solved
soon," EtUesteln responded. "And the
question 11 not rea lly how to stop the
bombers but rather how to stop the crea-
tion of more bombers."
"Those of us who are radic:ala have one
Interest in common with the campus ad·
mlnl1traUon," Etuestein !aid. "The
ra dical needs to communicate with the
people of the community and disruption
tend• to mtnlmlae the commUhlcallon.·•
"On the basla of thls mer11n1 of in·
terest.," !tUesteln added, "there is •
chance I.hat the campua w111 survive."
A mem ber of 1he audlence aaked pane1
member Dean why only deroaatory news
geta into the prw,
Dean uid that just such criUcism has
caused many newsplpers to re-ev•luate
their role in the community and the m.tn·
ner in wbicb \bey hlvt been covering col-
leae cempu.ses in ttie patl
"We wUl have to try to be more con-
siructlve as well .u lnformaUve," De.an
said. "To aet more positive thin1s ln
print, we newsmen will have to do a bet-
tor job. .
"But the profe11ors will also have to be
more aa1reulve 1n telling news to the
press," he ldded.
Young Suspect
' Held ill Burglary
A 21-yelT~ld suspect in the Aug. 23
bur1l1ry of Tico BtJI in LagU11a Btach
haa been erretted in Santa Barbera and
retwmd to Laguna-fltach .
Thomas Arvld Nelson, a resident of Na·
tlonat Cit)', WU arnsted by 'Santi
Bar11ara County Sherif!'• d<puU11 on e
warr1nt f'rom Larun• Buch. Hf was
wanted In conntctlon With the Taco Bell
buf1lary in which $1,I» ln Cllh WIS
taken.
Nelton •aa to b& .arr•filled today on
CharfH Of bw'gJary and grand theft,
. police uld. •
I
Woman Diver Drowns
It took approxi mately an hour Sunda y for divers to
locAte the body of Mrs. Patricia Pa.rke Jones , 41 of.
Orange. She had be:en skindiving for abalone with
a male companiop at Scotchman's Cove near La·
guns Bea~h·ill·30-leet of water and failed to •urface,
Future for Cyclist Park
·In San Oemente 'Bleak'
Jury Selection
Starts in Trial
For Bad Checks
By JORN VALTERZA
01 lh• l:MllY l'llel Siii!
'the future of San Clemente's Seabreeze
motorcycle park -whoJe operators
fought through two bitte r public hearings
recently -ii In grave doubt this v.·eek
because of directives from Mormon
Church headquarters in Salt Lake City.
Blahcip Roy Trotter, head of the local
Mormon Cburch which led In the develop-
ment of Lhe 700.ecre cycle park on the
former Reeves Ranch, sald today It
would be known In a we!!k whether the
attraction will be closed for good.
COmpllints from sever1l locll residents
ta the church headquarters in Utah -
coupled wi th increased activity in at· .
Boulder Dropped
On Truck Kills ·
Driver; Boy Held
A truck driver wag killed Saturd1y
night when a boy dropped a 40-pound
boulder from an overpass as the big rig
r9•red through Ontario, crushing his
head.
The football-shaped rock shattered the
\\1ndthleld, hltUng Cllfford A. Owenby,
51l. of Downey, and causing the truck and
triller to rip throu1h the center divider
twice and run off the freewa y.
Hi• drivln1 p1r1tler, James B. Gas.io
Jr .. also 50 and a Downey resident too,·
suffered minor injurle1 in the tragedy,
the 91COnd such falal Incident in a month.
A teen11ed boy who said he saw the
rock dropped led police to lhe home
where the juvenile was arrested and later
relea1e<l to h11 parenta' custody.
No one w11 1rre1ted in the other in-
cident which occurred on the Pasadena
Freeway, while Saturd1y night's fatal
rock-dropp!Jl& WIS oit the San Bernardino
Freeway.
Criminal charges will be brought
a11inst the un identified 12-year-old ln San
Bernardino County Juvenile COurt, aC·
cordJn& to Police Lt. Lulh~r Franks.
. '
lempts to sell the hu11ie parcel -coUld toll
the death knell ?or the 'flve•mot1th-old
facility.
The park opened l11t July 1mld tome
furor Crom re1identa who complalned
about excessive nohie. dust and "rowdy
elements" being attracted by the hillside
park .
Few· o[ those predlcUons came ln!e,
howtver .
Since the same residents rcsurhed their
uproar at a city council hearina: acUon
resulted in a tWO-yl!Sr eirtol'lslon df the
park's pt>rmlt with a tagged condltlon that
"noise problems" be reviewed in three
months.
This \\'eek. ho\.\·ever. ,_fDrmon Church
officials ha ve Y.Titten a letter to the local
church ordering the closing of !he park.
"The main thrust of the directive." Dr,
'fr'olter said. today, ''I.a, that the .Church
does not want to be caught In the mlt1dl1
of a 16c:al controverty. Unfortunately they
arc viewing the situation from a con·
siderable distance.''
Dr. TrDttcr. a San Cleme1tte ciroprac-
tor, already has ar,pe•le.d the ru.llng and
the park will rema n In oparat.ion ut1tll hls
appeal is acted upon in Salt Lake City.
Rumors h;:i.ve accompan ied the news ot
the park's doom-one involvtng the poasi·
b!e sale of the entire ranch parcel to a
branch of the Kaiser organlr.ation.
Checks with repre!entatlves ot that
massive complex In Font1111. Oakland
and Lo8 Angeles thi1 morning yielded no
confirmation of the report& of 11le.
Dr. Trott.er could not confirm the.
rumor. either, other than to say it a~
pears the church l! "actively" pursuing
the s11le of the huge raneh.
A~lde from the normal amount of
ml1h1~ In 1Ueh an activity the motorey·
cle park has operated 1moothly all IWTl·
mer. No offlcl•l noise complalntl htve
been ve rifltd by San Clemente police,
·who have pra\ud the Idea of such a park.
because It takes noisy cycle• off 1m1ll
pieces of private property in the city.
Last sprini -before Seabreeze opened
-poUce logged constant coinpl1int£ of
noisy cycles on empty lot!.
Since the park opened, however, the
complaints have dwindled considerably.
Jury selei;tion began today in I h e
Orinti c.ounty Superior Court trial cl an
inveatment counselor accu~d of writ ing
$37 ,000 worth of bad checks (ln the San
Clemente branch of the Bank of Amer ica.
It ia expected that the first prosecution
wltnetsel!I will take the gtand later tod11y
in the courtroom or Judg e Charles 811uer
and o~fer testimony aga inst defendant
Darrell Graf Hafen, 42.
Halen, who was re ccnlly rultd to be
sane and able lo stand trl fll , i1
represented by att.ornty A!1n Stnkke.
Deputy Diltrlct Attorney Joe Dickerson
has the prosecution chore.
Halen's trial wa!'! delayed toda y when
Judge Samue! Drelz.en to wh(lm th!!
Hafen case was assigned excused himsell
frDm the proceedings.
lt was eirplained that Hafen had e11rlier
filed an affida vit of prejudice against.
J,udge Dreizen at a tim ewhen he was
defending himself against the bad check
ch1rges.
Hafen wa.s arre!ted last July 13 In Los
AngeJes by FBJ agents and San Clemente
police as he returned from one of his in·
veatme.nt trlpa from San Jose, Colit.a
Rica.
Jnve1tigatots iaid Hafen has conducte d
a thriving bu1lneu in this nation, South
American and Europe but many of the
transactions in which he has been in·
volved are now being inves tigated in all
three conttntnta.
COUNT SHOWS
HARTKE W!NS
INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. {AP\.-The of-
ficial certirte1llon of complete return!
from the Nov. 3 general election showed /
today that Democratic Sen . V11.nce Hartke .
finished ahead of Republican Richard
Roudebush by 4.338 votes.
But a recount '!ttmed almost a ctr·
tainty.
IUY WHERE IT'S MADE-SAYE!
lti.rffell '• manufacturh the flneat furniture you will
fincl enywhere. You ... it and N lect it ri1ht In oyr
1howroom. P1y up to 50°.4 , ••• than ratell. C1'1ooM
from 1n unllmittd •lectlon of fa b r I c s. Custom
change• are allO po11lblt.
UNLIMITED STYLES OF Pre-Christmas
Furniture
Idea
I
UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE
HUNDREDS OF BEAUTl~UL FA8RJCS
TO CHOOSE ~ROM
J
. I~ Vhlf our
·-1
'how room -
you'll enjoy
••l•cting
from our ~ar9• 1wateht1
• of colorful • f .tbrics.'
• ALSO CUSTOM REU PH OLSTiRING
• The re a ton wt' re Ng·
9tsti,ng Chri$tfnts 10 soon
is th•t it's a greet IDEA to
hive your . own furniture
solectod and m1nufactu r1d
I et 1 cost much ltss thin
you would pay in • retail
furniture store and in t ime
for Christm11.
'
e ALL WOii( GUAIANT!IO
'°It THI
lll"ITIMI 0, P:Ala.1c
.1-922 HARIOR ILYD. •
Or Call For Appointment
COSTA MUA
• 541·0259
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DAILY '1LOT J.7. •
TV DAILY LOG
·':). . •eopeorn M¥llftM!,' 'Deatbt' .,,,, y~u ,ee -~:.1' .. _.
othing else this year,
· you must see
Two Carts ,of Garbage at Nifty nt~ter
•• m -'"" -!CJ 190) llu By TOM TITU! Belch MlntlH Is tP(lclll tolO llllll Of 111t Otll't 'lltl S11ff • , '" MONDAf m
-
~ !Im lo a c1 .. 1c ewnple ol ~ 1•• llO) The avant gorde tMaler 1lu llla-daptho to-wbtcb Ihl-
NOVtMlllt 11 e-. lw IM'l llO) come a lo., way -lllpptd.la _Alntl'iun lheater can oink
D Ml11•lllt •--190) probably the better w~ --,.leued from au liill ltt
145 D 11').I" ID"" 1 , -from the ploneerillg o I final ru1ralnt. In oat o..nonc
: (Cl c&o"f •?,I 1111 ::'~ ~ Pirandello and Ionesco .. TOday J11yltt and 1notber merclfWly
Hltllt." tbe obscure mutterlng1 of ~let' oqe, the unlntellltlble
1:00 8 Ill ..... {C) (IO) Jel'TJ D11np1!7, t:OO . 8 CIJ .. .,..,.., U.D. (C) Pinter and the dreary drivel of rilt:btmara ol two Lona Buch
D Mtc •••••lw (C) (iO) Tom (30) 1111111, il'lllM thtt IMlttllll'lf Beckett c o m p r I 1 e the callere pro f e • a or 1 are
$ijder. ttrrlbll wiH ht,ptn t. s.111 •!Id vaniuard of abaurdlst drama, aleefull:y unleuhed to 1trib 1. e ni. an...., (C) (90) Ci11..U: Howard on thtlf lbhlns trip, 1114 and their acctptance hu in-rather mtllY Mow far ti•
Dtll Amu St., Ude V1l1ntl, Jtriy btp them Mt tt ao. aplrtd others of lesser creden-perimental. theater. Col~in1, Vlr1in1~· O'lrl•n •114 7·rt•r· D Chrva ltr PreHnll The tlals to stake out new claims "'rite Popcorn Mac~" It
••· 11•11• s , '""" Col 1 • / further from the fr-onUer1 ol ~ tonier iM more ouUan· " mit 1 to. * BOB HO"E SPECIAL Mra. Johnny car1rtn Is 1nl'I011noer. r rea10n. sh of the ·two, divided Into .
8 t1ll Cf) am ,....,, fllatrt With An In today's theater ch1n1e, four loosely related segment..
hetblll (t) (21,4 hi) St. Loub C.t· ALL·STAR CAST often lamentably for ita own of which only the final eplJOde sake, is the order of the day. ~ars 1ny resemblance to llln1!s at D1U1s Cowboy1. D -IT'l -I IHtW:l IN.... t'·· Th t f ••· h -~ -· ----· The &loves ire off and sa u~. e res o ul'IJ 1 ow e Ill l•ft (C) (lO) '1M 61rli l .. w (C) (IO) Bob 11111 Ills patb, ariyLhing goes. There are no ~mes off as an lncredlbly bad
from KAOS.'' L11clllt Btll, Tom .Jonts, 011111 forms or sWdellnes, only 1 lampooning o r melodrama 91 TIM 111....._ '(C) (301 ~· ~1'111 G1«1• BurM, fWll· · lemmtnc-like ru.lh toward the with a litUe sex and rad!t •It TM•• nllf (C) (IO) "for· ''' l1mous vtudtv1t11 ttU ti ttle apocalyptic vuJgarlty. The humor thrown ln.
. tiiilt Cit)'." P•t anta art inher!Ung the earth. Bridging all the purple prose e """'"" ltd&1 (C) (!O) •th fqftlwt (C) (IO) "flit lvr WMn such apparently out• and graphic: goings on Is the
"Poisonous sniua.~ MiU." l moded ideals 1s reason,· title character -a walking CD LIZA MtNEL I s1Nos purpose and discipline are jet-popcorn machine who strolls
• n..., '••ltt (30I * Htta from 'New A• M tllOned, the stage ls 1eft lt'llh around tossing handfuls or the e NtUWt J4 (C) (60) Album, NEW FEELIN' such unmltlg1ted g1rbtge as stuff out over the 1udlence. e Wlql" Uvtlltufe (Cl (30) on DAVID FROST SHOW "The Popcorn M1chioe" ind Thi!, ii you1ll forgive the bad
Ill Le "'" ftMlll•r ct11 P•ticfl m ft""7 .., (C) (30) "A Moat "The Dentist." a pair ol pun. ii the only part ot the tlb> l/opu 1urn111:· -dismal orlgl~ one-acta cur. program that shows 1ny lasle.
, renUy being perpetrated 1t the W}1at author.director George
·t :J0 8C.MW CtMtra (30) .... ,!ti" (C) (2: hr) 'Tll• 11111141 Nifty Theater ln Hunt'.tnaton Bet.ar·had in mind in the first e n. flrlll Ihm (C) (JO) "Thi J'Mln., -iiiiiiiiiiiiiii
CrMt C.lillO Robbery." fltrt I. Thi • JI ,. .... (C) (30)
nunt 1r1 ullil 11 p1wn1 lit 1 81 llltrlp (30)
. .C"me lo rob tllt t11lno. tm) Nlladi1 (60)
·-"" "°" ilO) "l't~OI l:IO •llllm""' Dt! ICJ (IO) llollo Duct #2." (Siii• concl111lon) JLtll• iil'j,ttin a t1Un 11110 wttody .,
.Ct,lld ii lloalus. ltilertl 1pnbl wM M11M "1 It
ID Sedll SIC'lrilJ (C) bt • fort11n lllJ,
i£' TIM htllt •llflllf (C) (30) Jtck Cl 111111 IC} (:Ml) Bldtr Witt
l •• Kl M · Ill hnJ lillttll (IO)· "Thi CIN l9f tu11m, m 1111111r. !lit llihfut l um.'' ,
'1> ·-"'._(IO) GM ....
1'45 e ·-fl) l-CCJ 190)
7:00.CIS E"11ra1 NtwS (C) (3'0) 1:4S-~Bl -TMUtlltf .. (C)
8 a Nit Jtlafttlr Hnt (C) (30) (!OJ 'A & li Conctttt."
• WMl't .., U11? (C) (JO) ID ...... Diet: (C)
GI I LM LMJ (JO) ''nit ltlca 10:00 • ft Cl} Catt! hl'llltt 11119 (C) ~I Cube." (II) Marthe lllYt tlld Roa Ntr1i11
1111111 _ t'4I et.a (C) (30) J1dl au•st. . , N.rz hllts. Ct 9 Ci1 E i IHt111o.1 JMl I•
• ........... (C) (60) (It) 111'• ~bilffru!J .... (C) (ID) J•cll ollebrtt• with -ruttt ltlr1 ID Clrtlt .. UYl111 WM (t) (30) Frink Sln1lrt, leb Holl' 1rld DIM•
•... rit (30) Sllort 1nd t number ~I hit fonntf radio t nd 1V lldtkli:b-fllt wift ti Siii~• Ntiit (55) Miry l1¥inplon1, Otn11 it Dly, De4'
Wll11Cn, Eddlt "Roch11t11" Alldlf·
aon, Mtl Blanc. frtnk Nelton i nd 7:J099())111n11111k1 (C) (60)
-rtit Sc.1vtn11n... Y1ph1t Kotto
,itys fllMJ l tus. 1 hun1ry tr1vtl11
W l11l1 1111 tll• lo M11~hll DU·
11111 tbeut ~ft l\lfVMI from 1n Ill·
~II ll'IMUClt. (1!11thtd11l1d)
B'nny Rubin.
8 111 5 Wtws (t) (IO) Kn
31nd1rs, Hal f\Uinun. e T'M lllld (C) (IO) m ,..,,. l"lt111M 11 ... (C) (60)
11) l.J Ftllltll (lO)
GD> Tti.ciM•• k 1llltillt (2 M
D l)o'n•t Min This Groat * R[D SKELTON SHOWI
.·Set Godfrey Cambrld1•
8 tiJ l1) le M ~ Shew 10:15 ~rt M1.w:::m:ru~) ·~ !i:=;
('C') {Jb)-Godfrey C:,-mblidlt IUH~ Moll, D1n1 Wynter, Ctr! Mohn1r,
" loott:llll h'!o Jot l~ldwty. lALttlllCI N1bmllh, Qtollrey ~II. I~ th• ~.• 111tnt 'PC!t. Dltmond IP.wt ti will 1uum1 11 · 11:~ T)• Cr1fY, flM toilowi111 tll1 111WS) -
!.~ ... (C) (30) "Wilk Ill• Lona Q) ..... (C)
11 lllilltll S Mtwi1: {t) "lu JO:JO 11 1111 ~· N• (Cl (30)
.., .. (com•llY) '56---M•rityn MOii· CM'*' ' .... fTI. (30)
tOt, Ar!Jlu1 D'_Con1'14111, Hopt L1n11. ll:OO B IB (J) GI ..... (C} • '""' " c.--• ICJ (30) 8 U ~Ill -IC) IOb B1rii1r ii boll. I.El
• Ot•ltl IWll (C) {ID) "R"ult!n
for Cr1w Green."
CD ''""'""'' n1111 1c1 (30)
• Nt Cree tn ltt "°'*" (30)
·-~-IC) D ,.... (Cl an1 Bonds.
D nt1tr1 9: "Mlf'IM" (~ •K-v1nese1 Rt41r1vt, DtvW Wtt·
"'· ' l :SI. c.tiM .. s.11111• ID MMI: "Cry, till ........ c.u.
.... 8 ID()) m u.p.111 (C) (60) try" (d11m1) '52~1n1da LM, si..
G• tt•i lOb Newh•tl pllJI 1 n11 floltltr, Clients Clr1011.
"l.Juati·l11" prop m111, ttlt U.S. II MIN: "1\t Ill T.,.otr" (11111·
"1tldtnt 1nd Adtm fn th• G1rden t1ry) ·~Rlch11d Conl1, Colllttnce
of Eden 11 ht joins u ri11 stirs Din Smith.
Rowtn, b~ ,"',", 1" 1n1 d the merry ID flfilll LI• (C) (llO) ·1111 Ml•·
1t11mbtn .., • 1m, l'IC. dl1 E.111.''
• Ylqlflil lr1ll1• Show (C) (60) --. Ill I · c TI Gulltl 111 The Ltl'ICI link Ch!m· ll:JQ -~ Min rltf111 ( ) m
peru:111, com1di1n l oula Mye, 1ctor Conw•r. Burt R1Y11Qld1, GIOfll
Geor11 S1nd1rs, Sten Bu1n1 ind • Pl!mp!Dn.
D11)'1 Kl1n1t •nd Monty H1l1. hod 1J QI (i) ID JIHllJ Ca,_ (t)
of '1.tfl _Mtk• •. O.tl." Monb' ~UI Miliure, 0.111 RIUI, ludH•
)olM V11stnl1 ln t 11n1in1 dull. Bill, llobtft N111tr.
81 Tt Ttll !111 Trwltl ('Cl (30)
• W01W Prt11 (C) (61l) W11kl,
roundup of lnt1t111t1o n1I press com·
mtpttry on m1)or U.S. 1ml world
mnla. lto .. r 8Gt1 rnod•t•llL
• Mii If Ybilll (3D)
• MIYle lltMt (C) T11m #1:
J1mes hh11n, St1!1ni1 flowtn, .IOI
fl1nn. T11m # 2: Miry Ttlu Moo11,
Geo111 C•rlln, Tiny 1i40011.
n lrltril: .,!ni lh1 l lNUl'd:.
eindu&ion. S.1 Uslinl tl 10:15 rM •
EL MORO
PIOUDL'f ANNOUMCU
lat ANNIVERSARY DINNIR
CELEBRATION
MelHI.., ttini n.,.;.y, N1..-m.r 1,, 17, 11, 19
Any 2 Mexican Dinners
For The Price of . One
CHAMPAGNE e HORS D'OEWRES
ENTIRTAINMENT
"• T• Att.M TW• ,_tt.11 Occ.w ..
16655 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY
SUNS&T BEACH 146-9177 '
PORT TH .EATRE
PHONI '73°U60 coaONA DIL MAI
HARBOR al ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546·31 0l
ON· HAll Ol I LVD ... "ONI MILi SOUTH OP SAN DllOO fWY.
·.
Paul Newman
.1-nne Wootlward
''WUSA' '
rldlculoua u lho malerlal,
there emer1e two or thret
c:ompottnt porformm.Jllelr.
beat llOpl 11 lo chaole their
Dlmtl 4nd. llfrt OVlf apin,
Let It be recor\1ed that this
r11her birlh auearnent dores
not conatltute an Indictment ot
lho Nllty Theater ti.el!, which
hu produced IOIM lmpreulve:
"WOl'b fn tbe-1v1nt 1arde field.
That I• flt from the CIM -in
f1ct, thll reviewer 11 achedul·
eel to dlr<ct the Nllty'1 next
production. ~ut _1 dunghe1p,
wbertve.r It 1wf1ces1 lhould
be identified as such.
three episode• Is 1n)'body'1 Fot those pl1y1oer1 whose
guess, but the tut scene ap-c:urioalty his been 1ufflcienlly
pears to be a coloual put.. aroused, "The Popcorn
down of the Chicago Seven and Machine'' and "The Dentist"
Manson Family trials. In thl!J Will be performed, If this Is
segment, two attorneys take the word, Frld1ys a n d
turns srllling the wltn,esses Saturdays for the ne'll· four
and Mch other while the Wet.kinds at the N I f t y
gorgeous defendant engage1 in .Theiler, 3ff1 Main St., Hun.
simulated copulation wit h._c_ln.:gc.ton_B_•_•_c_h. ______ 1 anyone not invcilved at the
time.
The ~ play, Gerry Locklln's 'The Dentist," very
nearly kes the 1r1de as
absurd.lit satire. But, like its
predecHIOr, its potenUal ef-
fect ls drowned il'l a !ltre1m of
fotlr-letter flounderin&.
Jn its brief course, this play
does elicit . some chuckles
purely from tile 'ludicrousness·
of Its prtn11se -a super slob
with the voc1b,ul1ry of 1 drill
sergeant decides to become 1
dentist, ind does, oper1ting 1-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
his profession in th ell
aforementioned m 1 n n e r .
That's about It, ind the only
~uori U Isn't u bad as "The
Popcorn Machine" Is beciuse
lt isn't nearly as Joni. ~
Taken together 1s "new
theater," t h e p~oductlons
represeot 1 bull-ln·the-chi_na-
1hop e1cur1lon Into t h e
reJttively recent concept. of
frttdorD or expression on
stage-. It ls much !lie the
young man observing his 21st
blrtbday who drinka hlmlelf
into • stupor jwt bec:au.e now
It's legal for him to do eo.
Regarding the acting, which
overall is not quite a s
(/Jdo
NIWP'()l f •l.lCM •• IOI "'-••to•-
h le""'-< ll•• lok •• 0 1. l ·l lM ·---..._,, IN ZIG ·Z-AG"-·--·-
ALSo '
Stec, KHc•
·M•l-Hlll
''THE TRAVliLING
.!XECUTIONIR" •
RI CHARD
BURTON'
GENEVIEVE BUJOLD
it.rt!:!~·
ALSO .,
''THJ_ FORBIN
PROJECT"
COUGAR
-CGUNTR¥
IN COLOR
All 911-""9 .••• ,., ... , . , ........ .
fHW wttll .... .,,.,
••11•••1 .U on.INMHt.
WU•OAYJ: •1•,11M1•
IAT. 11t .. 11IH1 ... , ... ,.
IVM. t1lt-411M1 ... :•
-flVE-EllSUas. · It will not, I think,
•;-f ever fade from
~-;: .. ':· ~:-; memory!''
t·,:.: ,;.! _,,_ .. Ult
COl.W'"" '°ICl\11\Cl ,,_,.. o 1115 ,.,,,.., •• ...,
JACK NICHOLSON~ FIVE EASY PJEC~S .,,.,...,.,. a1_.11
'"' S'J•l n AnlOIUI · ... _;.,°' .. ,_ ,.,,. · '""'.,. ... ,,, ... ,. - --._, ....... '"1·-.......... -., .. , ,_ -.. , .. _ -..msjl; _ .. .,.-·«<"" .-.~.us
EXCLUSIVE
ENGAGEMENT!
•o.(Jfl'kYW' llfOwl'
"Ill lllflllClll llUlllt• NCUf.t.aAlllOIWAf,TIC ICS I &•tllCA16 '1lll I Hlvf tl(llf llllYUll!-
'<• .......... •pHI,-P.••_lr_,...._ _ .. "'"-"""......,.. ....................... _ ...,001 .. uo_,......_. ....... 11.---=:.. "':5 •;. .... ...:::
-•lfniratll-'f OHi l'ICTUll( \'OU C.11 SU.
1"11 ll~·· ll•l (A1t N ttt ~!_':'-!fl" 0 -~-.-
* Robtrt Rtdford •• _;jj "DOWNHILL RACER"
--AUO IN COLO._ ... ONI OP THI YIAl'S FUN NllST c0MIDllS.•.R1ch11r4 H1r1t11h-(.A. f111 l'r1n .-..., .. , .........
"LOYl 'S A f UNMY THIM•"
• l t.m ....... .., •
lnl..... Arff SMwlitt
"**** IT'S ALL SO FUNNYI'' , ..... ,.TM I -H .. ,. .. °'"' NfiW
lovmu-OllallllftGmi 1-4 .....
ALSO-ll11 Minnelli i11 .,.ILL Ml THAT YOU LOYI Ml. J UNl l MOOM"-el'
• -·~ •
' •
. '
·•
-.. -
l
• .!
·-.
e" """" 1CJ '"' 11:00 8 .frlttllt: (C) "A lll11t ftr Mlle Qltlll" (dr1m1) '67 -1:05 CID Aqlll Tm l'ttlnts (25) ,
•·•• 9 00 ...,..1 L•CJ te> (lo> 11:•s a ,.... tc>
with Anthony Pertcln1
and Lawrence Harvey . ., ...... , .. --............. ------------···· EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT ·-LAST WEEK
' iflllftcii pleys 61Jstn V1nd1rme11, 1:00 • """: "Ollct Upo11 1 lllrlt"' 1 dl1mend tllller hired by Und• (comedy') '51 -Din rtewsn,
t11rrr to cirt tt11 f1mou1 "'C1Sb1h~ D 11 ... (C) atm ID rid II of I tul'll It II rt·
pertld ~ c•rrr. m Chol ~
TUE SDAY
m .. l'l*·UJ Alllr' fdr1m1) 'S7-
\lrctor Mtture, Mii• Eldltra. lfMI'
tlew1rd.
ll:OO e '1 .. TrHlllt Witll ..._,.
(ir1m1) '63-RI)' Mlll1nd, Ttl'tll
Wt11ht.
DAYTIME MOVIES 1:to ID "Allhl•R Ltft." (diimt) '51
'
-~ __ ..,_ ""' """'" -.loin Cr1'11'101d, Clllf 11.0.l'boll, ;w -, r•• Vtrl Milt&. LOl'lll CtHM. ' w1t1r11) '40-John Howud, Elltn
Dtfw, 2:00 D)"!""'I u,,"•,, "', P•S: .... t!!:
!S,,.., "lllll ltr YM" (mu11cll) '52 ml ~ -P • 04111, ........... , ,., w "'" ... ~n .. Buri IYll. 1n1 Crosby, Mnt 1m1n,
ltnymort, N1t1M1 Wood. 4:JO 9 (C) "1\t MltM JwP" <•rt·
l:Jl llJ -nm trM M"" (~r1m1) '57 mt) '54-Clttrtton Htsbln, EltlllOI
' .:=}111 Mlll•lltl, (l'llltt BorflllM. f11rker.
e JOB PRINTI NG
e PU BLICATIONS
• NEWSPAPERS
Queilty Printing encl D•p•nde,bl•
for Mot• thin 1 quarter of 1 century
Pll l)T PRI N iltJG
• 1211 wr~T IALIOA I LVD .. HIWflOlf l lACH -, .. , ... ,,,
,
11WUSA 11 crammM wlrll Otcar •omh1el\" •• ,
Li~ Smith, Cosmopolitan
"P•I Newman ond JMMe Woo._d are botlt su· ............. . ........... Froneis Horriclgo, N.Y. Post
~~~~
First Time In Huntington Be.aoh
PJZZAHUT
SMORGASBORD
Eve r y Mond1ty Night, Sa30 • 9:00
ALL THE PIZZA . YOU CAN EAT I
Adults $1.25 Children &Sc
--CAll'f OllT
Ol Dhl
AYAILAILI AT
U•UU.I n 1cn
IUM lll 111
I POPULl l
• YAl llTll$
AVAIL.AIU
SE RVING MORI THAN 70,000 PIZZAS COAST·TO.COAST DAILY
. 19071-SROOKFIUR-ST -•
' 962-1333
• ..
'
CALL 546-3102
z.a·xAa,IX
.~ IW.&Llli" Allo-_,._..,..,... ,,.. , .. _.
.... "House of Dark Shadows" ·
•
••• .,.
•
1'11\S·ll
'
. .
-
' ,.
'-
\
•
• _DAILY tfl_or SC
LEGAL NartCE
NOTICI 01" TJtllSTl•'S IAl• Nt.. t.I ... On WICIMldt¥ DK.Hl'llllH 1, IUt, .t fl :OO •'cladl. A.M., Al n,. hutll front.,..
t•1ncit' i. tho _, C-1¥ C:-tlloltw. 1,.
tN ell¥ <II lt(lho All.I WESTE•H
MUTIJAL COlll'Ofl:ATION, I C1ll1'9r11l1
C-111on, •• tf\llt.f, llllfff' ""* """" ...
l•\lfll "*'9 1w 0 & ,, COltl"OIAttOff A
C1!1fllr11i. Cot-•ltoft end ,_.,_ F~rt lt, lff,f,, Ill ao.k 7'M, ~· ffO,
el Off~t fll:Kllnlt If Or111t1 ·CW11tv, C1Ulonll4i •IWn fll MCW1 •11 l~NU
In 11 ..... ol DANIEL J, l"IS(HElt and
D•WH S. l'ISCHEll:, Hlllbtlld 11111' Wff• •t
JolM f.,.llllt flCIW' IWfltd lfld ... Id ltY J, ~ KAll:l WILLIAMS llld L E 0 NA 1 WILLIAMS. Hutblnll Ind wllt 11 Join! T-lltt b<I> Ill"*! fll Tiie 11,..lcll If Ci r>
... Ill lbl\HllMs HC\lt .. ~. Mllct ol Wllldl WK l"ICOl'dlti JulY t•. 1170, In IOOlr;
ft.It, '••• Ml, ol' Hlcl Ol'fld1I flt-di, •111 .... II IO\ol>llt .uctlotl hi Ille 11111*1 ~ for <1111. ....... In l•wtvl ........,, °'i tll9 Ul'll""' St1t.t 11 IM tim1 ol' tilt, "'ltlout """'rent¥ u te lltll, -uuio.. ., ~llr111Cft, tM lto"'~ll tOllv•~eCll hi
. fftlll -,,.... b<I> uld t""''" ..,,..,. u lO' bM ol' t11111, In •nfl' 111 tllt-tolkrwl,..
, 'lllltallll!'d ••-ti', -It:
t.OI t II Tri('! Ho. Jttf, 1" fll1 tljy o#
c.,. Mat. c-t)I °' o..,.. •. '''"' tA C1flf9nll1, ill H• ,,,.. rK«dtll' In 11111 tf... NHS Jt II .U lflCMM If
Mltef'lll-~ )II IM llflke If the C.....t¥ ._,,.,.If Mki (Olllljy. a-fie .. ,., .,.... , ... , ,,,_...,. It
k,_n 11 *5 11\IMDll Ctlwe, Cttll
"""'-C1llfo<111t,
fltr Int ,,.,,,., .. ol N~in. 1blltl1t1 ... 1
.._.., i.v llld DHd lllClutllfll '"'·
clle""' lnlll MNnNf <II 1111 T<11111 .. •lld ., .. 1.:
c11eci: Octoblt t7, 1tll
Wl!STEIN MUTUAL "fOltll'Olt~TION
Tf,11911!f
MO!ldJ:f, Mo11tmber. 16, 1970
• twn lpf
Siphons,
Savings
NEW YORK (APJ -II ban
honortd American tradition to
.save one's ptflnits until they
aCcumulale to one dollar and
then put the dollar into 1 11v.
in1s account.
Everybody has \ieen taught
the story:-·the dollars grow iD-
to hundreds and t h e n
• thousinds. lt may take many
years, but through this magic
of compoun<i interest, those
pennies eventually become a
tortune.
The savings tradition •Lill
exi!ta in frugal Amtric~
which In recent months has
been putting about 7.5 percent
ol take-home pay into savings
of one ICl't or another, 111 e1·
traordinarily high rate.
Savingi banks vigoromly
promote the co11cept of •mall
savin8s being the road to
.ecurity. Who in the past few
months hisn't seen a chart
abowing how money invested
in certificates of deposit can
double in less than 15 years!
But there is a perceptible
change now in the old b'adi·
fion. Inroads have been made,
perhaps pennanently. Savers
have become more
sophisticated, a bit more
cyntcal and much more Im·
patient.
Rlsillg i~ation and' t.ues
have been major factors
behind lbe chang•. Social
Security has leseened feara of
insolvency in old age. And
ttiere hu been 1 quite ~
tible broadening of the al-
titude dlat money lhould be
used now rather than at IOIDe
later date. ·~ fllll~ Vin Vllklnllu,...,, = 1>r11io.111 Analyzing the old tradition,
""ll{l"*f or..,.. c ... ,, 0111v ,r191, a good many savers have con·
,_.,,,INlr t , '·'"· t'10 202f.111 eluded thal the procea of
· LEGAL NOTICE turning pennfes into dollars
. . _.m!Y. have made some en-~ -NOY,ice-~,_~J,R•'S-111.c;r-during fortunes , but for the
• CM w111...woy, 0«-11er '· too, •' heirs rather than ' for the ll;OI 1'tloelc A.No., 1t tlle J.outll '°111!111~ •
t•anu 111 tt11•0111 c-IY Cturlllouw. In savers.
tl'lt clt¥ ol' . S•nl1 Arwt Wl!STEIN MUTUAL cott'°"'A.,.loH. 1 c1111or1111 And most A m e r I c I n S..
. Cetlior111 ..... lrutlH. l.lnclet ~ ftld ,, .. ~ 'f the ~-·· k I • ""' lftodl ..... O_& F COll:POll:ATlON, I Sll~ ..... l y UUl"I now or • ce+Hun.1o ·c ..... -.11ctt 11111 ._"°"' sure, that while the bank may . 'llM:\l.f"""· '"'" lll ·looll '""· "-tf,2.. • tA ot11ci.1 •-crs ot 0•111ft c111....,, tell them their money will • c111fomi....,..,, i. HC!W11 .., ,..,..."_ .1~·bl · ·r·ed miler ... ,,_. " OANlfL J. l'ISCHE• -uvu e In a spec! J nu .
0,4.'NN s. l'IKHE•. '"''°""' lnfl' "'"' I• ol years, the truth is it may
• JllM Tetllnhl · -_,. -lleld b¥ ti MlltE l'AUt.KNEflt ..... NOA'MA LfE not grow •t a or may e;ven ~AULl(.Nl.11:. Hl.llilllld .... Wiie •• '°'"' decrease if inflation llD't con-
ftfllllk b¥ ,.. .... ol 1111 '"MCtl" cemln oll!INti-MCU!'M ttwr_., 111"00 If tained.
• Wllldl .... , --Jurw 11. lfl'D. 111 'IOQllr tW, ...... Pn, II Mid Ofll<;ltl •tanh, Onfi thou.sand dolJart pi&eed
w111 un 11 !Mlbllc •ucTlen 111 1111 "'91'1m In a a:immercial bank in 1959 .bidder fw ulft, H~Rllt 111 llWhll ~
• 11, n.. un1t111 s1111t 11 1111 tin.."' .. ,,, was worth, ln real dollani, on-;=:;:=.~.:· =~':{, 1y $1,124 In 1969, which ·is 7 1M.-lleld iw u111 trv1fft ...,,, wkl hardly the road to wealth. An ' Otlll' fll Trutl, 111 .,,.r lo 1111 loUowlnw
: 9bcrlbeol IH'-rtor. i.-11: equivalen.t in U.S. Savings
l.&I 1 ot Traci Ho. Jnt, In lllt Cljy lflf DA....l ined I Ill C111t1 Mnl. C-1'1' II 0r1.,.1, Slit• o1 uuuuS ga Oil Y •
C•lllor .... , 4't -"'" rKOrdtd 111 tOD1c A ~ l fr I f 1r.. "191t ,. 111 .,, '"''u•l~• "' mong 1.ui::: mos uga o
MltWl111-.• M•"· In fl<t• oflla o1 fh• the .....,ny savers ha ve been .C.Unjy •-w ol 1111d Ceunt¥ • . ,.¥ ..
11-11c11rv ''"" '"" ,,_,,~ r. those with whole life insurance ;, c!t1t!':, ~ Ort¥t, Calli policies which they expected
' tor tti• '"",,_ ar "'y11111 a11111111on. to provide cash value in tbelr toc»rMI "" Mid Ctld lni;ludllltl IHI. • I'
• clllr.M• 11\Cf u.1tet1sn ef ""* t ru1te• aM retirement years. But mil Jons ~ :~. Octobflr ,,, 1,,. have foond tbe payoff shrivel·
WEStE•N MUTUAL ed by inflation, '*O•itoflATION
Truti .. · At tht same time, none: but ~~.":::'n::r, Vilklllburi~. llie unsophisticated could fail
'"" to understand the fOC'CU at "'1tll!llled Or11111 CN1t C.ll'I' 1111111, ,.,..,...,IN!, '· '· "· 1m 'WJ.ia work in equity markets.
.' LEG.I.I. NartCE In the same JO-year period
tn which $1.000 in U.S . Savings
Bonds earned only $.Jt. the
saJM amount in industrial
gtock grew to more than
$1 ,700. And even larger jn-
creases were common in real
estate investments.
'
NEW DODGE COLT IMPORT •• , ••.•. Available as hanllop coupe (shown),
sedan or station wagon. It's e<1Uipped with 97.5 c.i. overhead cam 4 cylinder en-
p:ine and front disc brakes. The new Colt will be in West Coast Dodge dealer
showrooms in January.
Division Import
SAN FRANCISCO -Dodg•
Division's late challenge to
stem the tide of import 11Jes
was introduced here and along
with It are high hope! of 1ell·
Ing nearly 40iGOO wtlt.s during
1971.
Ji'onically, the new entry,
called the C6lt, is itRlf 1
Japaneu import. Considered a
small car or as defined by the
industry as a 'mini-car" it
goes on sale January 1 in
California. Current plan.! are
for the Colt to be introduced
only on lhe West Coast due to
distribution. Al a Jatu date
nles will be naUonwide.
Addressing • press preview,
Chrysler Corp. vice-president
and Dodge general manager
Robert McCurry said auto
marketing approaches have
changed radically with the
times, "and what we have
1een Jn recent years and
months is only the beginning
of whole new concept! f o r
automotive marketing.••
"If the interest is In small
cars then we 'll offer small
canr.~' M rry said. Explain·
ing ili<>n of the sub-
compact the Dodge line,
McCu said. "The Colt w\11
'1be Colt is available as a
coupe, 2 door hardtop, 4 door
sedan and 4 door slati()n
wagon. The 95.3 I n c h
wheelbase car comes with an
overhead.cam, 97.5 l'\Jbic inch
( 1600 cc), 4 cylinder engine
d.eve l oplng 100 gross
horsepotter. ·
* ORANGE COUNTY AtrrO
SHOW BEGINS Tll!JRSDAV
The latest and fipest iro-
ducts of the 1utmotive world
will be spotlighted Thursday.
Nov. JI, when the Curtain
raises on the Sevenlh AMuaJ
Your Mone11's Wortla
Income Averaging~idened
By SvtVIA PORTEil
111 aollllltr•ll111 wlnt ttll, •llMrd
11111111111 If A111.,k1.
A/l!i.you among the millions
ol American! who this year
reetived a rat pay hike? Or
earned a hefty bonus? Or
earned an unusually large fet!
Or hit the wildly fluctuating
&tock market for a big capital
gain? Or won a .whopping lot-
tery pi"ize? If so. I have good
news tor you: the l!Hi9 Tax
Reform Act liberalized and
widened the use of "income
averaging," through which
you can hold down yoUr lax
bill when you suddenly pile a
Jot of income Into one year.
The new income averaging
long-term capital gains and
rules ror the first time cover
gambling winnings {which in·
eludes lotteries) in addition t&
other Income. Under these
1,IOl'1 o• OIL PAINT1ffS
WHOLaAU WAllHOUSI
Ol'tN TO THI PUIL/C
1•1t •. t~lfO::'! :rlfTA AN& '""'""' ...... IAL••s WANT•o
liberallied rules, Jr your 1970
taxable income is more than
120 percent of the average o(
your taxable income for the
four years 11J66.19&t, you ire
eligible to use income averag·
lng to get a lower ta:r. Before
1970, your taxable income had
to bt more than 133 1/3 per~
cent of the average.
To sec whether you qualify
for this tax bruk, check your
returns fOT the foUr year~
1116M9, add up your taxable
incomes for those four years.
Divide by fou r to_ get your
average taxable income.
Now match your average
1galnst tAe following table
prepared by the Research
1nstJ1ute ef America. This will
tell you wbethtr your 1970 tax-
able income 1s high enough
above the eligibility figure to
give you any tax savings from
the use of income averagin~ .
• ,.
• •• -· ~· • J! .. i: ~ • • •• 'J f)
•f •• • .. • .. ·-•• ~·&'
14,000 u ... J11.2Jt .... .... lt,652 .... ..... ,,,m
10.000 .... 11,?St
1J,ogo 11,a lt.Ut
U,000 N,000 "·"' , ... "'"' n,.,. ...... ,.,600 . ... ,. .. """' J),JJ1
2S,000 "·"" l5,2!J
~ ... ~ ... ~·"' ~ ... ~.,,, U.111
~ ... n,,. JJ.lSJ ..... ••.coa &t,171 ..... .... ,.,til .... 110,000 ,,.,.,.
ioe.ooq, 1"3,000 1u.11• ,,.. .. Ml ••vi"'' 111 H vln•• .-JIDll _,1111a
Here is an example of how
tbi! works: Suppose your
average taxable income for
the four years 1966-69 wa."I
$8.000. And suppose th at with
your pay hike and a bonus,
your 1970 tax~ble income will
come to about $16,000.
Look down the first column
to $8,000 -your average tax·
•ble inci>me for 1966-69. Now
move acrou to column two.
This shows that yoo can save
some taxes by lncame 1verq-
in1 because your 1970 hX!omt
is over $12,600. Now move
11cress to column three. This
shows that yw will 1111ve mort
than $180 ln tues through in~
come 1ver1ging becau!ie your
1970 income Js more th.an
ll~.2Sl.
But ntt\f dn you . actually
make the computation which
-747 Sets
Load Mark
I
-I
Market
. , Symbol.s
-.
-
I
·I
SC
'
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D.ULY, I'll.rt .J.
.:.:·" _,
·~ "''"
.... .... c..J Hlllt LtW a. C-.
•
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.. --~ ----------------·--------------------------------....,-------------* •• •• • '• ' ' -''' ·~ • ._' ' • I '• ' • ..... ~ ff DAJLV PILOT Monday, Howmbtr 16, "'"1
" ' . British Sex Boo~ :U~~~~J.n~kind_.-Off ·Pre·ss · Now·;::;'W'!r e , . FALSE TEETH LONDON (AP) -A Brlu.11' subtllfe .wu "Tbe Ei-. lhat anythJJll gos..Nothlog !JI , and lo .~)t wilboul iulJ4 declared Hlll .id Lloyd.Jones, ~g were lfl< to .enjoy aer.. On youtb <JPPOrlunlcy: ."W• , WI .. Lltti. Worry
. ·in' ei:lacatlon booklet b.u Zme,'' a takeoff oo.ero&efiOU! be barred to eltlld'nm. , fear or dqer." ••ire failing lit their parental ual e:r:perienees w:lth people must provide young people .-. ... _... ..-
• .. 1~ ' t ,._ •·~·~off ''-with tbe opport.unity ind the __ no.JO'¥r ~~~~u:imbll1• -l'Olftl-.moldnc-oU the pre!! in zone. , ~ wo·aul.QUlll IMU-.i , 'n.J1y parents who know that and;~ duty. they Jcho'.W, they wquld'be'les11 environment for their lov~ ;;~,~ar~~'l\1'! ~eEng)IM,incl~four· The general ,Jdea pul forth with the preirilse t ha t ' their 'aif~cl,a:Ul'b!er 'is-.-.,'I'M fta! moliYaUon ol llkely'to tum to the Dnd of making in .. comfort an d c::cn~ ... onrv\a~=
Jettw N!,lo-Suon ttnns. by Maurice , HIU, '41-year-old chlldref1 ahou~ be given aex usocliting 1wfth 1b0y1~ytt faU ·parenlal~antlsa attitudes may behav!or , which 1 leads • to .privacy." . f;mU: ~~~=:
Two. ltlboolteachtrs scorned high scboa1 ~~ between educailqn so they can "see ' to advise her.~ .attend ~ ct~c be not ~ de.sire to .protect. vener~al· lll'ection, namely, Ip-Th
0
ILY PILOT ;r:,~::;i~:Pti:C:,~•t.=; ~-e'm'Y prevtous la jobs, and Mtcl\lel·Llo):d>Jones, &enal e1paience for what lt · where.' she .wW. be. provided their children but the de.sire to tercOurse with proSti tutes and · e A -'~ ~t~t~1~1uiart1. 0 11i
educliUon work in 27 pa.ges ~ye&Mld adult ·edacltlon is -a .nOrmal and dellghlful with \he lltest,andlrnOn. ef· po11e11 them." oijler , partners one hardly. Tops in local Sports 11~MS:i .ud1\li:cowai-. called ' "Sex Educ1tion." The teacher In ·•~Brl&lah .jaU, wu aspect d human .behav~or 1 f l cl en t · c-'o ntt1ceptlvet,l• On veiettal diJeaet: "U the knows."
,,
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(
Sear~
Tire and Auto Center
FROM VOLKSWAGENS TO CADILLACS
' . • Sean bas the tireo that IJ'e juot .W.t for
you, at a price you can afford
• Sean bas Whitewalls -Sean bao Blek-
wallo
•Sears bas tireo with Steel Radial Bello
ror long mileage and ouperior . lnK:tion
•Sean also has tirel wilh -~ly Rayon -or
Nylon Cord, •• well as the. new tires with
Fiber Glass Belts
. ·-·-
•Sean nationally .advenioed'~I Radial
tir e• were put on s -bivelj , Kent11Ck7
police can
e Even after 40,074 beat-pound,ing mileO,
' they were still oaf er than · regular tires
that come on moat new cai-s ! ·
•·Stop In at Sean today!
Quantities Lim ited ••• Hurry!
10 Big Reasons Why You. Should
Buy Yo!Jr Tires from Sears
I. FREE Tire Mounting
2. FREE Tire Rotation
3. Convenient Credit Plam
6. Wheel Balancing Available
7. Wheel Alignment Available
8. Sean Low Prices
Aak ,AbOut
Sean
Convenient
Credit' Plitm
4. Wide Selection 9. Courteous Salesmen
5. FREE Tire Safety Check IO. Cout to Coast Locatiolll'
. .
Pri~ EffeetiYe Bfllinning Today thru Tue1., Nov. 17th .
1\oJ.oJo. T•bel-,....,_ ,.. ......
Bl.ckwall n.n.u Bl1ck"'1lll Blm:l.--..11 Ga1nb111an Tire Sizes N-'fr-t.•• F.E.T. Cl'\la•der• F.E.T. 1r~ ... ·~i1)• F.E.T. R11yon• ............. And Old TiN A~ Tin And.Ofd.T"~
6.50xl3 10.95 ·32• 9.95 1.78 17.95 1.78 20.95 • 7.35 or 7.00xl4 11.95 41• 15.95 2.04 19.95 2.04 24.95 . 7.75xl4 ll~95 44' 15.95 2.17 21.95 . 2.17 26.95
8.25xl4 11.95 45' 15.95 2.3'.\ 24.95 2.33 29.95
' R55x14 11.95 49• 27.95 2.!l3 32.95
7.75or6.70xl5 '12.95 47' 15.95 2.19 21.95 2.19 27.95
8.15 or 7.10xl5 12.95 51• 311 .95
8.45 or 7.60xl5 12.95 54• ~-95
Tubeles•
Whilcwall
F.E.T. ~~•il•u
"-"ide G111rd
A!ld Old Titt
1.78 31.95
2.04 33.95
2.17 35.95
2.'.\3 38.95
2.!l3 41.95
2.19 '37.95
' 2.35
2.53
-
T•bd-~II
Steel Redial F.E.T. F.E.T. Arid Old 1irw
2.00 '36 1.96
2.35 '40 2.29
2.55 •44 2.51 '
2.67 .
2.93. •54 3.01
2.61 •47 2.66
'52 2~97
'55.50 3.11 · '
.... -""Retreads on Sowtd Tire Bodies "Whi;•!•• aloo available in moot oi zeo -'2, '3 or '4 additional per ~re
...... ,,.. '" ~. 111....-" MONrl • ~11 ~Cl\ (a W121 "'CO WI 1-42•2 THOUIAND OAU 4'7...SM
CANOaA P.AU: MO-Nfl ..,_W CM ,.,...., a '"4611 otT9K' & IOTO AM WJ11 SANTA ANA Kl 7~171 TOIUNCI H t·fSt t
COM! W.. .... 2111, NI 2J 761 MOUTWOOll MO ... JMI OIAHOI 417·1100 I ANTA '1 SN INGI M4..ao1t UftAND tll•1t1:1 ~
,
PAIANJ4A .. 14211. llf-4211
POMOHA MA Miii
I ANfA MONICA II 44711
IOUfH COAIT PLAZA JM l&IJ
VAWT ~ .J•l411, tl+2J ~O
VllMOHT Pl ... lft l
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Monday, November 16, 1970 s DAILY '1LOTJ
Training Toro's Tois
Junior First Graders Find Aceent on Positive
UNDERSTANDING, PRAISE, WARMTH MOTIVATE JUNIOR FIRST GRADERS
, Mrs. Pratley Works With Sixth Graders at Gates Sdtool In Ef Toro
J_ttport Foes
'
Seeking Help
For Campaig11
A gfoup of students opposing the Bell
Canyon jetport plans appealed today for
adult aid in a campaign to gather petition
1ignatures for presentation in public
D.earings Tuesday.
Spokesman cf the 35-member Conr
miltee to Save Rural Orange County is
Jay Wentz, student-body president of San
:1emenle High School.
Wentz-asked for help bY adul ts and
vouths willing to make phone calls or
1ecure signatures.
''Many time11' people don't know what
!hey can do when something like this
'.!Omes up, but now there is an organized
tffort to : be.Ip save some of our en·
vironment around us. We need the be1p of
all people to prove that together we can
preserve the natural beauty and oat let
;)ur area be another victim of so-called
tnodernization," said Wentz.
'!be petitions will be presented Tuesday
II Boanl.of Supervisors hearing, 515 N.
Gyeamore, 2 p.m. '
Capistrano Bay
Gets Blood V a1t
Battin Revises Stance
On Supervisors' Salary
JIY JACK BROBACK
Of ""' Oallr Pll•I Steff
Orange County Supervisor Robert W.
Battin revised bis proposed move on the
bclrd members' pay situation Friday.
Battin sii.id he would now propose that
the board rescind · its action moving tbe
an'nual salary up $4,200 to '19,200 and ask
the Grand Jwy to recommend a salary
level. ,
Supervisor David L. Baker, who
criginally proposed that the salary ques-
tion be sent to the jury for recom~
mendation, said Friday that he would go
along with Battin's idea Inasmuch as he
always thought it was the best course of
action. '
Bake!' added, however, that "J am still
persuaded that the vast majority of the
people of the county do not disagree with
the fi'gure set by the board last Tuesday
($19,!00 )."
Baker had said beforo that he thooght
the people were upset because cf
widespread publicity ever a secret
meeting at which the salary was mq>o
posed1y set at $29,268 a year.
Meanwhile, the Orange County League
of Cities meeting Thursday night refused
to join in the controversy of the
&upervisors pay. -
The members turned down two ap-
posing proposals. One suggested that the
action of the supervisors in voting
themselves a reasonable pay increase be
approved.
'
Yule Light Regulations
For Laguna B~ach Listed ·
Special regulatioru: for the installation Jan. 15, he said, but it must not be
or decorative Christmas lights were .energized outside the 60-day period.
outlined this week by Laguna 's depart· No permits or inspections are required,
ment of building and safety.
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of "" Dlllrr r11e1 11ett
Ralph Gates Elementary School In El,
Toro is headquarters for 17 junk>r first
graders engaged in a mini-revolution.
Their call.!e is strictly their own and
their leader ls all over-30 learning Joan of
Arc who liberally lavishes them with
understanding, praise, and warmlh.
Mrs. Margaret Pratley is a ttacher
who employs new techniques· cf teaching
and moUvatlng six-year olds to help them
meet the challenges of first grade they
ctherwise would nnd fr u s .tr a t l n c ,
defeating "' just plain fr1ghtening in the
absence of,.... physical and emoUonal
maturity typical cf their classmates. ,
Gates school started the San Joaquin
District's first pre-first grade .program ·
• 21everal years ago. It petered out
however, when parents feared a stigma
atlached to their youngsters.
"There is nothing wrong with these
kids," principal ~nold Berman .,ys,
"many have av~rage or belier IQs."
"Just as there is a time when a child
can coordinate all the skills necessary to
ride a bike, aome children need a little
time to make all the connections
necessary to· learn."
Thua, Gates ICbool and Mrs. Pratley
th1s year sot together following UJe pre-
first grade teacher's return from Hawaii
where abe developed a .sim.llar 'approach
to boosting reading, math, social science
and getirng-a!oog·will><>!hers skills in
cht!dr<n. Commandeering a large, airy kin-
dergarten room., the junior firSct forces
Vets of WWII
Can Still Get
GI' Home Loans
World War II veterans who never used
their eligibility for GI home Joan! 21till
may be able to do so, according to 0. W.
Price, service officer af Laguna Beach
American Leglcn P05t 222.
"Eligibility cf the World War II vets,
which expired In July, has been restored
jn a bill recently signed by · the Presi·
dent," says Price. "Tile new law
eliminates all ending dates for this pro-
gram."
The home loan program. which has
been used to finance 71h million homes,
also includes veterans of Korea and Viet-
nam.
Loans are made by regular lending
agencies and guar.,nteed by tbe Veterans
Admlnl.tration, .which ~lso is authorized
to make dlttct loans in areas where loans
are DOI olhenllle available.
Laguna Thieve s--
Get Di~i~g Gear
.. "' LARRY .. THOMAS, 6, INCREASES READING SKILLS
' Students Work to The Drummer Eich. Hi1r1
march along .. each to the drummer he
hears," Berman said.
In an atmosphere · where each student
ts encouraged to develop at hit own pace,
one might ex.pect chaos, . but somehow .
that just doeSn't seem possible when Mrs.
Pratley is around.
She uSH no drill 11ergeant harsh words
with her errant charges, but brings them
in line with soft sounds of praise for the
proper ,behavior of another.
"I like the way Ricky uses walking
feet." she counsels a running trooper.
'.''J'.hank you for following directions.
Stan.'' she cues two or three who missed
an earlier point of proper behavior.
The accent ls always on the positive
and rarely on the negative and the result
is a remarkably quiet, but productive
learning environment.
In preparation for the more traditional
structured methods or learning bow to
read this group will encounter later on in
first or second grade, junior first graders
learn words as units. They "frame"
whole words with their hands on a wall
chart and repeat the sounds. Later, they
may learn to divide words phonically,
although some already practice rhyming
words on a picture panel.
They see a tree, and a "3" and learn to
match the sounds that end the same.
At the "listening post" seven at a time
may listen -to recorded stories. With
crayon and paper Oley draw the l!Ubject
of the story as they hear it and picture it
In their minds. Later~ 'the class ''reads ..
their own pictun: words which are more
Interesting tl\BD cthefs word!!, because
they are their own, Mrs. Pratley oxf.
tends.
The "listening pool" Is one of do..,,. ol
activities centers around the room.
C)µ.l dren select the activities they enjoy
-and more Often than not th@ ones that
help them with areas most needing ai.
tentioo. ·
·To the casual observer the alcthitles toOt a hot like play. ''Through_ J!lay 1fri
learn,,.,-i.s the motto of Mra. Pratley~
group. .:
· "Each act!Ylty Is fun, but educational,~
she says, noting she 'fttquenUy lits by 4
youngster asking questions about what bf
1s· doing to strengther. the learning ...
perience. . :
"Mrs. PraUey mabl learning· Ian. bat
stresses academic accomplishment. 1DI."
Berman says. ,
While socialization deYetopment Is fm.
portant, basic math, reading, music and
social science skills 8re just u tmr.
portant, Bennan and Mrs. Pratley :said •.
But key to the auccess of the program
Is the fact that whatever ls learned comes
when the child is ready to learn.
• A wea1lh of materials, and one·
teacher's patience are available ln th!
classroom for that magic moment whel..
the child Is ready In learn.
Among successes alnady oboerved l!Q
year, Mrs. Pratley priJes one above
ol\lers. "'!be titlle girl who bu. otowel
crying . and now feels comfort.Die· li.
school is our biggest SUCCH',• Mrs.
PraUey said.
. 5JJ_o~t,Students . Given ·-. -. ' ------.
Academic Honors at UCI ::
Standards for temporary w I r i n g Springe added, but he warned that wiring Laguna Beach police are investigating
A Red Cross bloodmobile will collect methods as set forth in an information shpuld be an approved 1 type for exterior a weekend burglary in whi ch diving Fi ve south c o a s t Orange Co u n t y The 109 students wtre honored bJ!:
donations from Cap istrano Bay area bulletin pertaining to the electrical code use and in 8 safe state of repair. equipment and $75 in cash were taken students are among 109 freshmen ac-Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr, in a
donors Friday afternoon and evening in will be in effect in Laguna, says building 'The sign ordlnaiice ban on flashing or tram Laguna Sea Sports at 925 N. Coast corded academic honors at UC Irvine last reception ceremony in wh!cb be :com-
lhe parking lot of the San Clemente and safety director Clyde Z. Springe. animated lighting installatiOns also ap. Highway. week. mended them for maintaining. superloc·
Presbyterian Church. These permit the use of temparary pUea: to flashing ligh ts on ... Christmas Police said the owner anived to open Dean cf Students Rebert S. Lawrence scholastic records in high !Cbool subjecif~
. The unit , .staffed by 15 volunteer electric power and lighting for Christmas decorations in commercial areas, he said. the store at 6:15 a.m. Sunday and found announced Thursday the awarding of required for admissicn to the unl\lft'!rty.~
women from San Clemente, will accept decorations for a period of 60 days, but lights that turn on and of[ that several diving watches and a diver's Certificates of Honors at Enfrance to Honors at Entrance are accorded te
donations from 3 to 7:30 p.m. beginning Nov. 15 and ending Jan. 15 for automatically are pernUUed in reslden-knife w·ere missing fr0m a display case. J ames Joseph Orlowski of South Laguna, students who present all A'• or all ·A.'•~
Appointments for donatioos have been the new year. tial areas during the Christmas season. The stolen merchandise was valued at :rdert Berniece Hicks of San Clemente, and one B in the courses submitted for ·
urged and are available by calling *'· Equipment for temporary lighting may Senior building impeder James Winter $334 and police speculated that the Virginia Anne Cooks of Laguna NigueL academic qualification to the untvermty.~ ·
William Morrison at 492-2889. Drop-in be installed. within 30 days prior to Nov. may be consulted for further inlormatiOD burglar entered the store through a rear and Patricia Jane Gregan and Wendy Lee The honors lilt atudenta are eight per.
donors also are welcome. 15 and must be removed w1thin 30 days of regarding Christmas lighting systems. windtw. Wainwright, both of Laguna Beach. cent of the I3S6 member fresbmm:l cl.u&.. ::=:.:...:::::...::.:....::.:::.=~~~~~.::::::.~~~~~~_;_~-=---=:__~__::..__:..:o.:.:.::~~~~~~~~~~~~~--=:....:..~~=-~~~~~~~~~~--'-~·.
' l
El Rancho has th\e hottest price in town!
Mince Meat .......................... · 59' Pie Crust Mix ....................... 25'
Borden's None Such ••• 28 ounce size! Betty Crocker ••• perfect result.! ••• 11 oz. pkg.
Dow Handi-Wrap .................. 49'
B ig 200 ft. roll ••• ~se so many \vays'!
Lipton Tea Bags .................... 59'
Serve it hot and hearty! 48 ct. pkg.
Early -in -the week -Menu-Makers!
Pork Chops ...... ~~===~~~ ...... 89~
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Cheese _ Eclairs •••••••••••••••••• 89'
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ARCADIA:
S.nsct tnd HanHo:ton Dr •. (ll lllodlo·tnJtr)
PASAOEllA:
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NEWPOU B~H:
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.. DA!lY"PllOT '
Pakistan Death
Toll 300,000?
DACCA, EU! l'aklltan (AP) -Of.
ficla!J aay !00,000 peraona may have died
In the cyclone and Ilda! wawo in East
Paldstan !aat Friday, making 11 ooe o1
hislor)"s greatest disasters.
Four Islands t!O mlles 10Uth ol Dacca In
tbt Ganges River delta wre laibed
'He'll make a great
political leader. He'•.
young, goo.d looking,
tUld taku orden!' • hardest by the 150-mlle-an-bour winds
and 20-foot waves from t.be Bay of
Bengal.
'The Bard~ -
'
Officiall said ,ao many were dead or
missing that i;escue teams were counting
survivors, not the diad. Some sources
said there appeared to be almost no
survivors .on !t least one of the islands.
The 1981 ce111111 u.ted u mllllon On Voting penqns on the four Islands -Hatia,
By DICK WEST " Ramagati, Cbarjabbar and Bhola -but
other' sources estimated the population
was less than half that when the storm
hit. However, there bad been a recent Jn.
flui of workers for rice harvesl
w ASIIlNGTON (UPI) -By th\s lime
nearly everybody bas had a shot at lhe
elecUon returns except W i 111 a m • Sbak-e. And SO, for the final
,analysis, ""cal! In the Immortal bard:
Q. Mr. Shakespeare, have you rea<.fany
of the analyses o! the recent American
electioo?
A. "I have bought golden oplnlons from .n aorts o! people."
Q. And did you noUce a rather wide
variance?
A. 111 DO PERCEIVE here_ a divided
duty."
Q. Well, bow do you ac:_count for_ the
fact that Republicans vie• the election as
a victory for President Nixon while
Democrats see it u a Nixon defeat?
A. "There is nothing eithtr good or
bad, but thinking makes it so."
Q. Have·:you formed any opiniOM of ·
your ownf-
A. "l have, perhaps, some shallow
•Plrlt ol judgmelJL"
Q. What is your judgd'lent of this year'•
campaign?"
A, "MaChinationl, ho 11 own e 5 s ,
treachery Ud all iu!nous dilorden. Too
lilce the llghlnlng. which doth ctaJe to be
ere one can say it lightens. I am notbtng
U not critical."
Q. HOW DO YOU FEEL about the win-
11lng candidates?
A. "! bavt seen bet~ fac:tS In my
time."
Q. What about the losers?:
A. "The lowest and mOit dejected thing
of fortune. Poor naked wretches that bide
the pelting of this pitiless 'storm. So
weary with disasters, tugg'd with fortune.
-When the hurlyburly's done, when the'
batUe's lost and :won. they have kjss'd
away kingdoms and provinces."
Q. There ...... to be llOllle dispute
over what IOrt of impact Vice President
Agnew had on the election. Would you
give Us your appraisal?
A. "He hath a mlnt of phrases in his
brain. Deflver1 in such apt and gracious
words that aged ears play truant at his
tales, and younger hearings are quite
ravished, so sweet and voluble In his
discoUrse. But, for my own part, It w~s
Greek to me."
Q. Inflation was one of the big issues in
the campaign. Would you comment on
that?
A. "f CAN GET NO JlE!llEDY ·againsl
this consumpUon of the purse." .
Q. How about the. charge that over-
J)ermissiveness contributes t o a
brelldown of law and order?
A. "Wbat makes robbers bold but too
much lenity?"
Q. What would be your 111111U1laUon of
the election? 1
A. "Sbivlng to better, oft we mar
'fhal's well."
Q. Thank you, Mr. Shakespeare.
Pope Attacks
Money Spent
On Arms Race
ROME (AP) -Pope Paul VI appealed
today for an end to the arms race so that
vast sums can be used to feed, clothe and
educate the world's poor.
Quoting his 1987 encyclical Popul<rWn
Progressio, the Roman catholic pontiff
told a conference of the U.N. Food and
Agriculture Organization that when so
many people are hungry, destitute and
·~steeped in ignorance . _. all ex·
J)enditures prompted by motives of na-
tiOnal or personal ostentation, every
debilitating armaments race, becomes an
lnt.olerable sCandal."
"Exaggerated naClonalism; r a cl s m
engendering hate, the lust for unlimited
power, the unbrl!lJed thirst for domlna·
tion: who will convince men to emerj:e
from such aberrations?" he continued.
"Who will be the first to break the cir·
cle of the armaments race, ever more
ruinous and vain? •.• Will man, who has
learned how to harness the at.om and con-
qt.ier space, finally succeed in c:ooquering
his eeUishness?"
He cited Dr. Normal Borlaug, the
American ilcientist who won ibis year'1
Nobel Pl"'ce !'rice for his ll&!lcuitural wOtk, and said: "If all men of good will"
would work together tor peace. "the
b-'agic temptation to resort to violerice
could then be overcome."
e .
Sihanouk's Kin
Under Arrest
In Phnom Penh
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) -
Maj. Chan Landy, head of the military
police intelligence bureau, said today that
two children of deposed Prince Norodom
Sihanouk have been arrested and will be
tried soon in military courts.
Princess Bothum Bopha and Prince
Naradipo will be the first members of the
royal family to go on trial in person.
Sihanouk, his wife Monique, and other
members of his inner government circle
have been sentenced to death or to long
prison terms in absentia and are in Pek4
ing, where Sihanouk has set up a govern-
ment in exile.
A source in the Military JUJtice depart..
ment said Naradipo and Princess Bothtnn
Bopha will be charged with cooperation
with the enemy, tantamount t.o treason,
• and that the trial will be public.
The ofllclal death count rooe to 11.143
Sunday nlgbt, but fatallly ..umai.. .,....
hourly from scores o! reporta. A former
a~mb!yman· said · local officla!J Jn.
dicated '5,000 bad perished in
Patuakhapl district to tho west of the
lour islands. A uW!ty official &aid
thousands of farmers were swept into tbd
sea when a tidal wave roared over the 15-
doot dam which bad roc:!almod the land
on which they were living. -
The .area is a cyclone alley, with storms
bitting almosl every spring and fall and
wltb huge tolls because of the. lack ol a
warning system or of speedy tranoport
for tbe masses of farmers and flBhermen.
In June 198$, 30,000 perialled In a
cyclone there, and hjstorlans say 300,0CKI
died in a storm and tidal waves In 1731.
The greatest. disaster recorded In history
occurred In China'• Honan Province Ill
1887, when a flood took 900,000 Uva.
The head of the Paklllan Red er.as .,.
pealed for help to meet · "the comp!ela
devutation in the offshore island.I."
President Agba Mohammed Yahya
Khan ordered army units into tbe ana to
restore communications and COftduct
evacuatJon and relief work. The Unit.eel
Nations, the International Red Cross, tl)I
Unitef;I S~tes and India off~red relief aid.
Many islands and coastal dlstrlct1 were
still cut off by high water.
A rescue official who flew to the delta
area reported seeing at least 3,000 bodies
in graves, 100 to 150 in each grave."
One ship that may have gone dOwn in
the storm was the 5,500-ton Maba4
jagmitra, an Indian freighter that was-en
route from Calcutta to Kuwait with 4i
men aboard. A shipping official said her
Jast radio transmission said she was in
the B.x of Bengal "in the proxilnity of a
cyclorie."
. Syrian Junta
Ruler Tightens
Grip .on, Nation
• BEffiUT, Lebanon (AP) -Syrf1'e new
ruler, Gen. Harez Assad, tightened tbe
anny's grip on his nation's politlcs today
and tried t.o form a new government as
some or bis supporters cltshed wilh sup-
porters of the oU.ted regime. ,
Weekend demonstraUons were reported
in Damascus, the Syrian capital, after
Assad. the defense minister, Ol;'trthrew
President Noureddin Atassi and a
government dominated by Gen. Salah
Hadid on Friday. All are members of. the
Baath Socialist party, but Assad is con-
aidered more or a moderate.
tlniversity student. claahed-In the
streets of Damascus. Ap unconfirmed
report said one man was ldlled and as
were injured when Assad's security
guards charged into the crowds, bitting
with batons.
The newspaper Al Moharrer said the
governor of Suweida, in southern Syria,
resigned in protest of th& coup, and
-demonstrators in the town supported tile
ousted government.
111 Egypt, Premier Mahmoud Fawil
re'Jtgned, and President Anwar Sadat
asked htm to form a new Cabinet.
Minister or Information Mohamed Ftyelc
said Fawzi, 70, and the other ministers
will remain i; office until the new cabinet
is formed.
The cabinet had been appointed after
the death of President Gan1al Abdel
Nasser Sept. 28. Sadat, Nasser's sue·
cessor, appointed Fawzi premier Oct. 20.
The semiofficial Cairo newspaper Al
Ahram said Fawzi wanted to shake up
the makeshift cabinet immediately, but
be has agreed io wait for a transitional
period.
Official sources said the new govern·
ment will be formed by next Thursday,
when the National Aaaernbly nconve.nes.
Freeze Grips Some States
South, Midwest Shiver A_! Mercury Dips Into Teens
..
l'emperatures
T~1turts el'CI pr~lplt1llon fir
lhe Uhovr ~ ..-11"9 11 ~ 1.m. ., ........
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°'"'" ~ •• """* -·. ........
lt•kl Ctty-
ltM Blvfl' ... --s.n . LR• c"" .......
San Fr111C!KO
*"'' --..........
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" " .... ... .... .. .. . ~ " .. .......
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"
TROOPS OF CAMBODIAN, S. VIETNAMESE TASK FORCE BUILD BRIDGE DURING DRIVE
Pontoons Replace Sp11n Destroyed by Entmy Forces; S~plies_ From Saigon
GI Toll Hits . 44,000 .
9 Anierican.s Killed by Red Mines on Weekend
SAIGON (AP) -Enemy mines and
booby traps pushed the total of American
battlelield deaths in Vietnam past 44,000
during the weekend, while ii), Cambodia.
North Vietnamese forces battered two
Cambodian units on the northern front.
down to 344,000.
The U.S. Conunand alinounced the cut-
back of 1,5.15 more troops with .the
withdr~ from combat of the 3rd
Squad 4th Cavalry. 25th Infantry
Divis , and lhe 7Mth Maintenance Bat·
talion of the 4th Infantry Division. Both
the 25th and 4th Di\:'iSions are being mov·
ed out or Vietnam by Christmas,.
Ca,m~an troops continued-to hold a
handful of key strong points along the
northern rront but ,niade no major ·effort ~
Tile Viet COng's crude explosive
devices took n~e American lives over the
weekend. Delplte the absence of any
pitched battles involving A rn er i c a n
forces. 44 U.S. troops were reported kill·
ed last week, the highest toll in five
weeks. This raised the total number or
American• reported killed in action in
Indochina to 44,033 slr!ct Jan. 1, 1961, but
the total will undoubtedly be increased by
casualty reports which have not yet
reached the tr.S. Command. .
Meariwhlle, U.S. troop strength in Viet·
nam dropped to 363,800 last week, a
decrease of 4,200 during the past week ·
and the lowd:t in almost four years.
Anolber 19,800 troops are to be cut by
Dec. 31, bringing the authorlted total
North Vietnamese forces in Cambodia
attacked tWo sweeping. ·detachments of
the big Cambodian task force bOgged
down 50 miles north of Phnom Penh Sun-
day, killing 13 Cambodian -soldiers and
wounding 49. It was the worst casualties
the Cambodian command has'" admitted in
two months .• and only seven North Viet·
namese bodies were found on the bat·
tlefield. .
Jt was the first serious ground fighting
in the area north of Skoun since the
20,000..man government task force recap-
tured Taing Kauk two months ago and
dug in.
' to re-establish government control along
the 32-mile stretch of Highway 7 between
Kompong Cham, 47 miles northeast of
Plmom Penh, and Skoun.
Southeast of Phnoni Penh, South Vitt~
namese Marines and Rangers aboard
river assault boats moved along the east
bank of the Mekong river to within 20
miles of the capital, shoring up that sec·
tor of the city's outer defenses. 1be
Marines clashed with · North Vietnamese
and Viet Cong forces ove.r the weekend,
claiming 44 killed and 34 captured. Seven
South Vietnamese were killed and 11
wounded, a SPQkesman said.
North Vietnamese and VlerCong forces
attac;ked Cambodian troops 11 miles
northeast of Phnom Penh along the
'Mekong. Air strikes and heavy artillery
broke up tlie attack. and there was no
report of casualties;
..
Credit card fraud -
-can be stopped
if you use your head.
•
Credit card fraud cost Americans over 200 miillon
dollarslutyear. ·-
CbiDing thought,. isn't it?
Well, here's a cheerful thought: It doesn't have
· to Tt J~We your head. di; more precisdy, '10ll1' face.
You*• unlike siF,~ your face can't be forged.
Which is why Umtcd States National.Bank came up
with the FaccCard.
As its name implies, this MuterCharge card has your
picture on it. (Scaled in plastic.) .
So nobody can use it. Except you.
In short, it's safe •
And handy. For instant identification.
OK, how do you get one?
Fint off, fill out a short application blank at any one
of our 59 ollices.
Sec:olld olf', wear a smile for our camera.
Tbat'a it.
,,
Rdily to get a Fa~?
That's using your head.
CC11ta MIMll Office 1845 NrA'()Ort Blvd.
South Cout Plaza 3333 Bristol Stree t
l
' • ' ' •
,
1·
" )
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Family Wiped Out ·
5 Killings Baffle Police
SUNBURG, Minn. (AP) -
Autho rities said today they
were baffled by the shotgun
slayings of a farm couple and
three children "who got alone
wilh everyone.11
"We can't even e!tablish a
motive at this time," said
Sheriff Harvey M. Spaulding
of Kandiyohi County, "It's a
complete mystery."
The body of James
Fremberg., 40, was found in
the barn abOut 10 a.m. Sunday
by Delbert Peler!On of Sun-
burg, who had stopped at the
farm to -pick up mllk for a
crea mery.
The mllkJng machine was
running, indicating Fremberg
had begun his morning chores
when he was &hot at close
range.
'
About llO ·y~ away, ill the
dining room of the two-atory
farmhouse, authorities found
the body of Fremberg's wilt,
Gloria, 29.
A close.range ~tgun blast
had decapitated her.
A quart of .milk and ctreal
bowls were on the table for a
meal the family never ate.
Toy1 were strewn about the
downstairs rooms.
In one of two upstairs bed·
rooms, authorities found the
pajama~lad bodies of the
three children. David, 7, and
Douglas, 4. were in one bed
and their slstu Patricia, 8, in
lllOther.
There we re no signs of a
_struggle and authorities had
no clues, the sheriff said.
No murder weapon 'fl'U
LAST 9 DAYS!
found and the 1l1yer or
1l1iyers bad taken away the
ezpende<r. ahe:U ca1if111, a~
parently from a 12-puge
shotgun.
"I've known this boy for 20
yesr1t I suppose," said SJ>4uld~
Ing, "A real good kid. No prol>-
Il!:ms -"o family problems."
Because of the distance
between house and barn, shots
could have been fired Jn one
building without being heard
in tht other, Spaulding said.
The family had lived for
about nine years on the ctn·
tral Minnesota farm , l!bout 115
mile! northwest o f Min·
neapoli s. The nearest town,
Sunbur1. ls a commwUty of
180 persons five miles away.
The tree-surtOunded
farmhouse, ib aqua paint
peeling and weathered in
many places, is typical of this
gtnUy rolling, occasionally
wooded rural re1ion.
$1 0 Billion
Total Seen
For Welfare .
WASlllNGTON CAP )
With U.6 millioc esUmale_d_
welfare recipient.s around the
country, and more expected,
Welfare Sccrelary Elliot L.
Rlcha.rdson t aay1 fiscal year
welfare expenditures may be
aver $10 billion.
The current welfare budget
f.1 $8.7 billion.
Some states have recorded
Increased welfare cases of 20
t.t 30 percent over last yur
and the resullant added f:x·
penditures for both welfare
and medicald will mean "the
total deficit at the end of the
•
Gonorrhea
Blood Test
'Imminent'
NEW YORK (AP l -The
United State~ soon will ha\'c a
blood serum test that can
detect gonorrh!a In mOlll
~·omen carriers ot the disuse,
Surgeon General Jesse L.
Steinfeld said Sunday.
Steinfeld said the Public
Health Service felt there
would ,.soon" be a serologic
test that will detect 80 percent
of ftmale gonorrhea carriers.
He said that of · 164,000
women screened routinely in a
wide variety of clinics over
the past year; 1 in 10 was
found to have the disease.
The-American Social Health
Association recently estimated
that there w!re nearly two
mill ion cases of gonorrhea in
the 1969 fiscal year.
Steinfeld reported t h a t
gonorrhea ranks first amoog
the reportable communicable
diseases In the United States.
Syphilis is now ranked
fourth, ~ added, saying that
paresis -syphilitic insanity
-hu been CQ!tly to the U.S.
taxpayer.
Lt. Calle'' .;
Jury J11st
One Short
FT. BENNING, Go . (AP) -
A jury to lry Lt. William L.
Calley Jr., charged in the
alleged My Lal massacre;was
expected to be completed to-
day, clearln& the way for the
trial to begin Tuesday.
The court-martial or the
Miami, Fla., lieutenant.
charged with the premeditated
murder of 102 Vietnamese
civilians, wu to have begun
today, bul was delayed when
onl y fi;ur or 16 officers ques·
tloned lasl wttk were ac·
cepted by attorneys.
Undu military law, a
minimum of five officers, none
belo\v Calley's rank, must
serve on the court-martial
board. A two-thirds vott is
neceuary to convlcl
The military judae. Cot
Reid W. Kennedy, called a
rare Saturday court session in
an effort to complete the jury.
But the dlsqualllic1tlon of 12
officers during 2~ days of
questioning brought on the
delay In the beginning of the
trial.
The four jurors thus far
selected are:
-Col. Lamar A. Welch. 56.
of West Palm Beach, Fla .. a
combat veteran of World War
11 and a military adviser Jn
Vietnam.
--Col. Clifford H. Ford. 53,
of Kno1v\lle, Tenn.. World
War II and Korean veteran.
-Lt. Col. Robe rt A. Duvall,
38. a native of Lockwood, Mo.,
a Vietnam veteran.
-Capt. Ronald J. Salem of
Sioux Falls, S.D., a Vietnam
combat veteran and adviser.
If convicted, Calley, 27,
could face death by hanging or
I
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Mond1y, November 16, 1970
CLIP THIS VALUABLE OFFER
OFFER
YOUR CHOICE
8x10 or 11x14
77c
ADD 50t WIAPPIN6
AND HANDLIN6
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•No-age llmlt, family
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• No appointment necessary, come early
• Minors must b• with p1rtnt1 -one offtr per family
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NOVEMBER 17-18
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life Imprisonment if the jury!--,=~===~--=-~--~====-------_,.-_. so decrees.
Listed as possible wilnesses Something Spec;,iel
~ --1istaly.ear...will be hi&her than
we thought It wall going to
be." Richardson said.
are 79 persons. Atheist-Scout~ The Army prosecutor. capt.
Aubrey M. Daniel III , has said
Almon Locklbey on boating, Tom Titus on tht1ttr, ri;Qmas Fortune en eduutlon, •
DAILY PILOT on tltt Or1n;t CO.SL It's the age of speelallutfon. And our speclalti' ll
belno;i really something spui1I.
He spoke on the CBS radi~
television program "Face the
Nat.ion."
Case Reopened ,..'hiii'iii"iii''.,1 m .. •.,r,.1,. .. ,,1 ,,. iiimiiioniiithiii . ..iii...&
PROVIDENCE (AP) -Boyl
Scout officials have indicated
that a youth apparenUy will be
reconsidered for the Eagle
Scout rank which has been
withheld on grounds that he is
~-...=..=-======-"-----~ - -
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9
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HUNTINGTON CENTER
HUNTING TON BEA'cH
892-3331, Ext. 283
'hologrtph 5tu4io, lit Floor
The HEW secretary said ht
thinks the lame duck session
of Congress may pass Pre.si·
dent Nixon's planned overhaul
of the welfare system.
"The members of the Senate
Fl.naince Committee and the
Senate as a whole will be able
to approach the pr9posal on it.s
merits without looking over
their shoulder as to what
might be the reaction back
home," he said.
an atheist. .
Robert F . Parkinson, scout
executive for t h e Nar·
rangansett Council, s a i d
Saturday night he had ar-
ranged a meeting tonight with
the scout. 16-year-Old Jamea
Clark, at the family '• home.
Suspense Over
Sea Creature Was Shark
SCITUATE, Mass. CAP) -a.shore was 23 feet 1001,
the rttr1ains of 1 giant sea although observers said lb: tail
auture which washed uhore appeared to have been cut off
near here and for a time and that its actual length
defied clual!ication we r e could have been as much a.a to
tdenUfied tentatively today by feet.
an oceanographic expert as One o{ the first expert.I to
thase of a basking shark. examine the carcass was
Thousands of spectators lin· Donald M. DeHart. executive
ed rocky Mann Hill beach Sun-director of' the New England
day after the creature rolled Aquar ium at Boston. He said
to the ahcre on a hilh tide and ·he did not know what it was ,
touched off reports that the but that it was not a whale.
remaJns of a sea serpent had He called it a "very wierd
been found . ' animal."
Andrtw Konn er th , a "It looks like It has a fi ve-
research' usociate at Woods foot head or neck,'' DeHart
Hole Oceanoiraphic Institute, said, "but the lower jaw !1J
said after an inspection today missing so you can't tell what
that the creature was a bask· the structure of the animal
in& shark, largest of the' Atlan· is."
Uc .1harks. Without the jaw, he said, it
A spokesman for the In-· looks "like 90me 50rt of
atitute said the basking shark prehistoric anlmal or sea 11er·
feeds on small plankton and pent."
small fish and has not been A crowd estimated by police
known to attack man unless at 10,000 nocked to the beach endan~red. They attain a ee.rly' today as news o! lhe '
length of 40 feet. grisly d i s c o v e r y was
The creature which washed circulated.
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GLASS-BELTED J~~:o
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The S•IM GI••• Bell lite Ol'lal Comea On N .. 1171 c.N
BLACKWALL TWIN·STAIPE fEO. EX.
SIZE Reg. Price Sale Price R~. Price Sale Price TAX
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F78-15
G78-15
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$29.40 121.41 $33.80 U0.42 12.15
$30.55 S27.41 $34.75 1.21 12.35
$32.30 S,29.07 $37.15 tp.43 $2.55
SJS.45 S31.90 S.0.45 SH.40 $2.87
$32.30 S2t.07 $37.15 tn.41 .11
s3s.•s 1:11.to s•0.45 131.40 12.n
$38.90 $35.01 $<t4.70 S40.2S $2.
$43.70 131,33 150.60 145.54 $3.0I
557.45 $11.70 13.22
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11).1• s2125 • "·'' t't4oa 1~w~51s 7.75-15 1.1$-15 ., •1.
'Tubeless wtiitew•tl priees plus St.71 to
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COmpou nding St u pidit y
I '\. ..... ":. • ~' ~ .. ' ~ '\-:: ~ ,' " ! ,.
.... ' ~ 1+ \ ~ ' -•• Ovtmacllon:~llllt 9ra!'ge CO\!litt 1!98r4 of Sqper-.. ~· . ob1trvor •'comes of! looking as serious as -a sos. panty
visors' ill-considered, ijl-timed action in voting first in raid or a 201 ~o1dfish·swallowing.
t th -u ,, a· th -Sal · a Adding football to the Cal ·State scene this yea.r only secre • en m open mee ng, i.v r ise etr aries--P" heightens tbe tongue.in-cheek aura of this latest educ&·
peared to b• 5ettljng _d,o.wn _.9_'<H',th~.,wJ~l\~n<J... 'l:h~ _,tiopal ,venture,-.. , 1 •
points were emerg:~a.~:, ·: , : "· . .__ · : \ . >.. , 1 , ·j " ' ' U!ing student funds; but granting no legitimat-
-The county's legal counsel had advised ~re was c04rse credit, Experimental College "classes0 may or~
a possibility passage of Proposition 12 Nov. 3 -ellmin~led may not be !0U11d on the Fullerton.campus.
board salaries as of Nov. 4; quick action was advised. For' example: Organic Gardening meets Tuesday
-Dog-in-manger atptudes on the· part or Orange nights ''at the plot in the Orange Grove" while No\hing
CoUlllY. assemblymen because · the board had not en· Happens If You Sit Tb~re meets in "5657" on campus. A writing course Atop the offerings provided In the dorsed tll•ir ~.I P.roiec\s bad_re•ul_!!'!l _ir!,d.~'l1"cl o!_•al~.... tradition'1 curriculum -optimistically-;, -labeled : Be inc.~se} by the' Legislature over a .s1x·y~r·pe~1od. ~l Your Own Henry Miller. ,
·a result, lnany,-many county officials, mcluding the-Other offering! that bfo8den the horizons if not the
supervisors' own administrativ~ assistants, yter~ draw ... ..., minds of Cal•'State s.tutlentS '.iritlu'd.e Beginning Travel~
ing substantially higher salarie• than the supernsors. · ing, Beginning Guitar. P09ket Bllliards, Candle Making,
. -'Pbe1supervisOri ·ustd pOOf jt(din\~nt in the way , .Camping Where You Wqq't se·.Found, Old Wines and
the)'. tiandled the incie"ase. · " ·.: · ' • • · .~· 1 ·:· • •• N~w Spirits and Skin .Divin~.: ' .
i. .Recall cQµ.ld leave ,the couDty...ln 'turm,oµ. it ~w~·' . ,, ~-Q~ t~e mor~ SeJ"tOUs, side Of ·avante academia ~re
compi>und 'one stupid action with another... • ,< • ·~· 't(jut!5'~·.m religion ·ranging from The Good News of
·'-The Orange· county Grand· Jury shoµ,ld proma· ti ·. ';" Jes\.(.s·Christ meeting on campus to Contacting the Dead,
review. fAe supefViiSOrs', ·action· and the pay issu " • ",• 1 w~icli 111iterialiies Wednesday nights "Near the play· apecial Grand Juty'~port wo,\lld,be a;.1reat•1\eal'tiig ,. · ·&round in Hillcrest Park."-_
useful -to -the .citizeiµ;y than the ·current !pate-of hire-"' -1 : The "Other Scenes" dlvisfon of the college tenders
&p0nsible. inflariitti4tdf-y rhet6ric 1and cheap poll~ J cour:sewofk in Sex ~nd ·~ye, Gay .Life and Lib, NastY~
posturing. '"" ., ._ ·H~b1ts and the Environmental Crisis '"d the Christian.
' ~ _ ·The future of the experiment.RI type college on
• . , t • .., cailiomia c'ampuses may be more.real than this early -'lfvfu>~;,;.,,-enta· l' Fun, G_ames :-. ,ru11atitinFilllerton. . ........... t""'.1. . .u.u. While the ExperimentaJ ... cpllege, in part, hopes tO
· ; leach students to "educate therhselves" the level of
The ·I•test thing on the Orange County college .scene courses offered this .Year'·lacks.fulL dedication to sobrie·
alonc .. tb~ ]~e,s_ qf .~elephon.e booth stuffing: and racoon ty, dignity and' pomp Uiat western man has come to
'This certai11l;y wo11't be the easiesf one J'ue euer writte11.:
,.,coats appears· to be'happe~ing at Cal State Fullerto~.. associate with the teaTning,pi'oces·s~
Though the ·intent of its organizers is set forth m On ·the o~er hand, the studen~s may be prbviding
1traigbtlaced tones' or: utter seriousness, Cat State's the~selves with a h~orous, b~l~-Js to be hoped viable,
"Experimental College" ~.hen · ex~~. by an over-30 renaissance of classic 11Qst~ctur~ learning models.
'
. ..
•• , A . ,·..,. ' mericans ... _,~:;
Don't Get -.. t
Enough Slee p· _ .,, . ·lf•I • •ingle trick-or-Ire•"'' '°'
. -~ ;-., • UNICEF came to my door this
. '
Cloomr
Gus:
year. J. p_
; As repllrly as the autumnal equinoZ corner, sipping .coffee ma kind of bleary
1 comes arOand, Harri• returns every year eyed d,esperatim.
\with hia pt.more-sleep C8DIP8i&n :Miybe ~ IF YOU ARGUE that people should I someday. the natiQn will take my ' . . d to 1 • aermonettea.On slum~ to be&rt. : simelY..go to bed.earlier 111 or er ge enoicb sie~R ·this JI \'irtually imposgible
! The dUef ream tUt the aspirin 1riH . within the pa"tlerq of:~ life, exc~
has become the .tildP of our ·civilizf:tion for a few rusuc outposts, OUr whole social
, is that Arnericaiia doa't iei enough sleep. life is ao~ geared that nobody wants to
· Most adulU don't re-~,~.,_ retire much~ midnight.
tire unW Pout·mid-The trouble 11:t!lat our society baa been
; njght, and are:forced .... chaniin&' from a rural to an tl'ban pat--
to get up by 7.ot,so· ,teni~ but,1we ·Jre lli1I observing the rural
; This is a barbarous hours of ari$lg, which an; 'JYitable for
hour lo begfn'.facinl fetdil!s.the chickens, but riot f9r coping
. a stem wOrld. with 1.b'e masses of humaitlty on the
1 Nothinl b'u t 'the freeway or the morning ·train. Most cit)'
(oroe of 'l1i.storic81 folks are fagged out before they even bit
. inertia keeps us ar· the office or the shop. riving at work at I . .\. a;m. Th.is iJ the tracUtlonal hour,·and ".e sOVTn AMERICA has a ·much more
are 5b.lck with it. ftctually •. because .. Of civilized pattern. There the stilrta and.Of-
lack o1. sleep altd accompanying mal· fices don't oeen until 10 or IQ, ~~ close
aise riot modt reil work ii dooe before an hour tater. Nobody has di~r until ·t
11 ;,m. aii)>way. p.m. or later, and it occupies' the who~e
' ' evening. In the :U.S., people rush homt to
l !14-VE BEEN ~vocaUng for years eat dinner abysmally early, and. then 1it
that Uie ~iting-)1.lme for ~t jobs-be 10 arowid watchini the boob-tube . far later
or 10:~ in' the--~. 11iat· extra hour than they should.
makesjall the (liff~.~een-$Darilng ''No civili!ed .person.'' said Wilson fiti~·imd at 1+.t ~i°" enthusiasm. Miz.ener, "ever;gets up and gOt! to bed
Employer• WOUid find that a 10 ·a.m. the same day." But if we are f.orced to
1tartlng time would inc:tease theii staff's -t.rydge 10'. Woik ai a primitive hour~ :who
efficiency to ~ ,mazing degr6e. The can-afford lhe )Wl:ury of bein_g civilized
averate office around 10 a.m. is va~nt and s\eep-stanfed at the same -ilme'?
anyway -the women are in the Aspirin-takers Of the world, unite! v_ou
washroom holding 'thtir head!. and the have J'.l(>thing to lose but your .mornin&
men are in the snaclt abop 11'.0Wld the headache. •
Know Your Boundaries
Ullder the old common law rule, anyo~ who puts a building. a feaci,-or
any other improvea.ient on someone
else's land by.Jlll!\11« cannot claim ,lo
get paid for it. And i£ he extends bis own
baildinc ooto.hJ1 neighbor's land heinw:t
remove i~
As a rule whel!I )'00 etcroach on your
neighbor's land, the court will J!lake you
remove your encroachment.
This rule still stands but with
believes this will atlaln ''substantial
juslki.1' },.
· ercepUons made in '1988 by our
Legislature. The perlOll who makes
tmprovementl ;on another'• I and
innocently and ·in 1ood faith caa ~OYe
them if he does·-.ot harm the Jana .. M
are bis:. He may lllo ·claim a ''iet o11:•
for the. value of hill1 improvement against
~Y of bi• odahbar'a claimed damages i..
J>IYD*ia or removall -if the ~St
~COURT CAN ;ive "apJW:Opriate relief
. to tht iood faith improver .... But if you
know of your mlatake ·.and keep on
makini ')mprovemeata, yon do not act in
"rood faith," Ud. the court will not help
you. .. .. ·· · •
lf your roof cwerhangs )'.OUT neighbor's
land, you must "remove' the overhang
even at areat e~penae, especially if your
neighbor plans to build·along the common
boundary.
I
I
.---•• ~e --·
Dear Geor1e:
1 don'L tbink l'm overly prissy,
but l don't think a girl should
lit In the lip cl a boy she has
11 never even met btfore. My friends
tauped at me because I wouldn 't
sit in tbi& · str1n1e boy's lap on
the way home from a party. What
ate the ruko! . NO PRUDE
Dear No Prude:
U It la a very tall car, aUnd
up. ·Never sit on the. lap of the ·
driver, IntrodUctd or not. Lyin&
on the lloonoor4 la frowned upon.
Trotting •Jone behind the car II
o.t. Pouibly tbe bell -er ta
lhll: II 1"' fetl Ytrf ftronilY
aplmt littloC la the lap cl a
.,,.,. boy, hal't bfm Iii In JOU'
lip. .
-1
Of course, the court can. give special
relief if the encroachment Is only
"!light." For. example, a paved driveway
Which tftC(Olchn on a neighbor's dlnd
may bave"' .existed for years before
anyone .notJctCI IL
IF THE. corr OF if.I removal and
relocation W(IUld be disproportionate to
lbe landowner's inconvenience, the cou rt
may order &he encroacher to pay
Mequate d~ages, 'but-may· allOW his
encri>achment to stlnd. He doun't 1et
UtJe to the land, but ooly the right to use
it. "Substantial" encroachment.I must go.
A &Uggtslion: When or before you buy
sroperty aet 1 civil tn&inter to aurvey
tbt place, ., that you will know e1aclly
n wl)ere the boundaries of your property
are.
Note: California l4wuers of/tr this
eohmm '° J10U-mou know aboui our
l41DI.
A Message About the Mesiage _
Understanding Our Metamessages
Two genuemen meet and converse. M
they leave each other one says, ''It was a
pleasure meeting you." The other repliei,
"We must get together for ·Jwich."
As a resuJt or an exchange of courtesies
like this, sometimes men do get together
for lunch. It ii clearly.underatood by both
Jl a r t i·e-1 that "We ~
must get together
for lunch" means ex~
actly ·1hat. But aome--
times (it is clearly
understood . by both r•"lii~ part;., that these .
w o r d s -re ·DM!rely a itylized ·way of ..
!aying, "Good -bye.
1 don't care if we
ever meet ._m,"
How do we know ,
when to believe what la said? we make
such interpretations intuitively, without
analyzing how we go about it.
ONE WAY OF ex plaining the process is
to say that for every message ~"l.et's
have lunch") there is also a message
about the message, technically called a
"'metamessage." The metamessage in
this case may be the eagerness of the
tone of vo\ce, the cordiality of the
handshake, the warmth of the smile, all
of which say, "I mean it" -or the in-
different tone, the limp handshake and
the feeble Smile,' all of which s_ay,
"Forget it." ·
Many problems of communication
.
revolve around the r.eJations between .
message and metamesaage. It is not
enough to say what y~u mean. You have
to sound and act as if you meant it.
There has to be agreement or congruen~e
betw.een message and meta.message. If
there is such congruence -if you l6ok
amused wheri you say amusing things, if
yott loo• apgry when you say angry
things. -people may disagree with y()u,
but. they wil1 not doubt your openness or sincerity.,, ·
THIS CONGRUENCE is not. however,
conclusive evidence of sincerity. Actors.
for example, can read lines expressing
love or jealousy with convincing ex·
pression without being in love or In a
state of jealousy. Salesmen can express
enthusiasm for a product without feeliug
any enthusiasm, except perhaps for mak·
ing a sale. People who sound or act
sincere are not necessarily sincere. Most
of us can put on an act when we have to.
Nevertheless, we all tend to trust people
in whom we find fairly regular ccin·
gruence between m e s s a g e arid
metamessage.
The absence of congruence is readily,
noticed. There is the man who says, "J.'m
qui.te comfortable, thank you," as be
shifts uneasily i~ his chair. There is the
husband who sa}'s, "You know I love
>you," without liftihg his eyes from the
sports page. 'There is the schoolleacher
who says, "I want you children to be hap-
py in this classrooin." while her cold,
watchfuJ eyes contradict the smile on her
Ups.
.WHEN CQMMUNICATIVE
incongruence is even more pronounced,
psychopathology is indicated . There Is the
man who screams a't his associates, "You
know DAMN we!( I Nf::VER lost'mY tem·
per!" There is the woman say ing, as she
consults her psychiatrist about her prob·
lemS with her little daughter, "I tel~ her
a dozen times a ~ay that \ 10v'e''.1ler. but
still the brat hates me. WhY, doctoi'?1!
Sometimes c o m m u'n i c a t i v-e ifl..
congruence takes the form of complete
lack o( crOollon in utterances that
normally are impossible to say without
feeling; such as. •·1 was never so happy µi ·
my life," or "I hale him, 1 hate him."
All such profound incongruencts are, to
a greater or less degree, signs of emo-
tionak ill ness -of something discon·
nected inside. RecenUy I read a case-
history of a woman in a group therapy
situation who was especiatly withdrawn
and out of touch with reality. Suddenly
something' wa~ satd in that session that
touched her:She sat upright, looked ri ght
. and left with' an expression of · great
alarm and said, ''Where am I? Where am
I? Is thi11 some kind or nut house nr
something?" And that's exa ctly wher•
Jhe was -in a mental hospital.
FROM HER TONE OF voice and her
expression of alarm, the psychiatrist
knew at ona; that she had been reached
and that from that moment on she would
start getting better. ·
Children are better than adults at
understanding metamessages. As infants
we do not understand words -'What we
un derstand are tones of voice, gentleness
or harshness of touch, w·hether of love or
ir'ritation or anger. Most of us, 'xcept the
over-verbalized and intellectualized, re-
tain this understanding.
Generally Women are better than mtn
at interpreting and responding to
metamessages. When a man says at the
end of a long, ~ard day. "I've had it. I'm
going to quit this lousy job," a loving wife
will say. something like. "Why don't you
take off your shoes and sit down, and ru
mix you a· nice, cold martini?" Only an
extraordinarily stupid or hostile wife
would say, "Have you got another job Jin.
(Id up ?'.' What ii called "female intuition''
is simply the greater sensitivity of
women to metamessages, which are the
indicators of the emotional climate.
So it's, hard for parents to lie to
children. It's hard for men to lie to
women. But we aU keep trying, don'! we ?
By S. I. Hayakawa
· President
San Francisco State College
Thr.ee Who Lo.sfWin Nixon's Eye
WASHINGTON -President Nixon
threw out several highly si&nificant hin~
in the course of his strategy conference
at the B"iscayne Bay White House last
weekend :
(I) Two, and possibly thfee , cabinet
members will be replaced ,before the
1972 re-election campaign.
(2) Slated for high 1ppointnients are
three able and attractive -Rej:lublicans
who failed to win in t.h-e' recent election,
but who greatly impressed the President.
It's possible one Or mori Of 'them may
get a Cabinet place.
The three Republicam who caught the
President's eye as promising comers are:
Missouri Stale Attorney General John C.
Danforth 34, who was rela'tively narrowly
beaten by Democratic Senator Stuart
Symington, 69, running fof a fourth term.
A member of the Ralston.'J>urina cereal
family, Danforth was the only R*p.ublican
to win state offict two .Years" ago. He
waged a vigorous campaign ag~lnst Sym.
ington on his age and aUe1ed me·ager
legjslative record . Symington's margin of
vict«y was the smallest of his Se n a t e
career .
REP. GEORGE BUSH, 44, who early in
the campaign appeared to have a good
chance to win a Senate. seat. Both the
President and Vite ~nt. ·Agnew
campaigned for Bw:h in Texas. Re-
elected without opposition in 1968 and a
member of the poweriul Ways and Meana
Commi ttee, Bush i$ highly rec1trd~ in
the House, and the President referred to
him warmly dur~g the strategy meeting.
Rep. Thomas Kleppe, St, whom the
President persuaded j.o o p p o s e
Democratic Sen. Quentin Burdick for re·
elect~ Kleppe aJ1o wu ~sldered a
likely winner, but wu defeatea larply on
the fRrm issue~ BUMIQ blamed ){leppe
for the admlnJSlrcUon's farm policies,
which are unpopular tn North DakolJ.
No·1ftrect mentio;n was made of any of
the three in connection with the Cabinet.
But the President was es:plicil ·about
wanting to bring them into his ad·
ministration.
"WE NEED MEN of their caliber and
public appeal," he remarked. "They have
oustai'lding ability, experience and keen
awareness of the problems facing the
country and the urgent need for forceful
measures to cope with them."
For some time, it has been· no secret
that Interior Secretary Walter Hickel and
HUD Secretary George Romney are not
in the best graces of the White House._
They are known not to have direct ac-
cess to the President. Both cabinet
members have privately complained
about that, and that they personally
haven 't talked to the President about
UNICEF ls No Handout
To the Editor:
M a member of the local UNICEF
committee, I wish to thank the DAILY
PILOT for the excellent editorial in sup-
port of the annual Trick or Treat for
UNICEF drive.
The rcspons~ of the community has
been very gratifying, promising to make
this year's effort the most successful
ever, It is sad that a few people remain
misinformed about UNICEF, since such
misinformation works to the detrimen t of
!ick and hungry children.
THE FAOJ'S ·are that the work. of
UNICEF bas.; ~ived the enthusia~tic
adptx>rt of every President from HlwTy S
, Tt.u~an to Richard M. Nixon. President
NilOn stated on March 20, 1969, "Ever
since its founding UNICEF. has enJoy'eO
the full support of the people antt the
government or the United States. I want
to talce the opl!_(lrtunity to reaffirm this
commitment, an~d pledge you our con-
tinued cooperation in the advancement of
your high human Coals."
In 1965, UNICEF was awarded the:
Nobel Peace Prize as the . organization
"which has worked most or best for
brotherhood amongst the nations,"
FAR FROM BEING a -handool,
'
Lette.,s from readers cire welcornt .
Normally witers .should convsy tMir
mes$ages i tt · 300 'words or less. The
right to condense letters to fit !p(!ce
or elimina te libel i& reserved. AU let•
te rs mu.si includt signature and mail·
ilig address. but namet 111a11 be with·
held · on request If sufficient reason
i.t apparent. Poetry -wil l •not be pub·
li&hed.. ·
f
UNlCEF Is •· ttue •elf-help project.
Governments requesting aid must make
substa:ntlal eit>endlturcs for locally
available supplies,.bulldings and tabor. In
recent years. cou'ntries being assisted
ha ve provided 2~ times as much aa they
have received fronl UNICEF.
If we are ·lo have a stable, pcacerut
world tomorrow, the children of today
will build It. We owe them the beM lhaL
we have to glye.
MRS. A. K. PHELPS
UNICEF Committee
United Nations AMOC:laUon
Coastline Chapter
their departmental affairs for months.
Th is is particularly true of fJickel.
LAST SPRING, at the height of sludenl
unrest and disturbances, he made public
a letter to the President impliedly sharp-
ly criticizing Administration attitude
toward youth. Hickel's b'luntness won him
no kudos in White House circles.
The recent defeat of Alaska's Governor
Miller, Hickel 's successor, also has not
improved his standing. Hickel is charged
with not ·tµtduly exerting himself to elec·
tioneer for, Miller.
Being ·largely attributed to Romney is
the bwnbl~g senatorial candidacy of h.is
ambitious wife Lenore -who was
oviribelmingly defeated by I i b e r a t
Democrat Senator Phillip Hart. Neither
the Aitministration nor leading Michigan
Republicans wanted Mrs . Romney to'run.
But Romney insisted on her stlection and
after a stormy inner party wrangle got
his way.
Significantly. neither the President nor
Agnew campaigned irrMichigan.
By Rober& S. Alie•
and John A. Goldamltlt
----
Monday, November 161 1970
Th• editorial page of tlu Doil¥
Pilot seek$ to inform and stim-
tdate readtrs by pre.tenting thb
MW1paper'1 opinion" and com-
mtntar~ on.. iopics of intere1t
and significa-net, bu protndtng •
forum for the ezpres&io-n of
our rcadt r1' opfnfont, and &r
presenting tJur diucrse view.
Poin t! of informed observtr1
and spokt.tmtft on topics of tht
day.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
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llAllY,PllGT 7 ..
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We'·11 hide the.ff presents .,for you at our piacO~.
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Put them on our lay-a-way, plan so you'll have th~m for Christm8$· ... ,
Girls' hand
embroidered tine
guage acrylic
sweaters In assorted
.1::5;:-.., colO<S and pattemo.
Slze17·11, of6·
Sizes 3-6X, $5 ,
Boys' acrylic crew
neck knit IPO<t-
shirts in.llripea
( and oolid&. ·
~ -. sizes s-M-1.. 299
Boys' 1 O way ault In
assorted ooiida and
stripes. Jacket, 2 pr.
slacks, v:est may·be
worn 10ways. Navy,
brown, olive.
3-7 reg, 4-7 lllm. 1298
S.12, 11111.·allm
1598
Boys' acryl"ie linkl
stitch cirdigin·
sweater in ivy,
ocean blue or brasa.
'&-18. I 79s
Boys' Penn Prest •
polyester/cotton
fashion teg pants
In assorted stripes
ancholids. Sizes
6' 18 11111 .... ,m.
49s
Misaes' long sleeve
polyester acreen
print blauaM, 8-M-!.;
-..rprtnll.
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Beautifu lly at-home satin acetate cu lottes
in prints and. colors ... or border: print
Honan robe;s in full or dress lengths .. ·.
all' quilted 1o polyester fiberfill. Robes,
misses sizes 10-18, culottes, misses. 8-18 .
Sho~ robe or culottes, $14
Full length.robe, $16· •
Acrylic electric
blanket with
'Supernap' for
minimum pilling,
snap-flt comers in
decorator colors.
Twin, single oont;or. ' 17
Full, single control, '19
Full,du1l00nllot, · ·125·
Queen, duo! contrOr, • 31
King, dull ~trOl, I 41
• Twin, 120
Full, '24
'Cerouse~enn Prest• never-iron
polye$ter/rayon bedspre~d. Festive
stripes In light and brl!lht colors, quilted
top with polyester fill on cotton backing .
Men's acrylic
pile lined
slippers with
browp vinyl
uppers, rubber 4 99
heel.
Women's
shearling lamb
slippers In
blue, pink, 3 99
fashion colO<S.
Scramble llf!ch • -
poly9ster knit shirt·
In stripes c;>r solltts:
blue. brown, green.
maize, gold'. Gift
boxed, S-M-L·XL ·$5
Matching .i>lrt and tie
sets, gift boxed. Long
point collar shirt Is ·
·polyester/cotton fall
fash ion shades. Sizes
14-1/2.17 neck. 32-34
s_lee.vel Franch cutta.
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. Short sleeve
sport shirt.
Poly,,st,. /cotton
long ·point coll•r ·
shTrf in-blue,
green, gold '
or 9rape.
S·M·L·XL. $5
..
$4 ~-
lofantia~-~ knit oiltma fer .ti!ya
and gifla, wllfi "Dllney,on ~· ap. '
pliqlML ~~ 1/2-2.
,.
I ' : ' ,' ,. .. (1,"I
Girl&' ~r lllflllr
ffl'ledr11111 ln)'O(lr · ...
choice oflllialtcolOr
combol. · '·'
$13
Man's Fortrel• polyaetertaxturlzedlPOrt
alacks In true, clear eolora. D~ loOk In
an extremely durable fabric !flat reslala
wrinkles. Gred or Continental. 30.42 waist.
-
ltafi11n antlc:rue·
1101<1 li~klhed
· . m.uoicel Jewel
boxes for gifting.
$10
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""" llil«lllled ful llllotlllled
•°"!lo 2 for 2.39
2.91,
~119,
'
'Bloltbrn SoutiQue' Perin •FPit~ Print
rnualln and eolkl decor8lor colored 111ualin --and plliow C.-·fo ~
N-iron. ; .,
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-. . .. " . . .. • --CHARGE -THESE VALUES AT YOUR LO.CAL PENNEY STORE I ••
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• DAllK PILOT Mond1r, Novtmbtr 1,, 1470
Cl imbers
Face Last
Barrier
QUEENIE lly Phil lnrerfandl
Y 0 S EMJTE NA~AL
PARK lAPl -Rock climber<
Warren Harding and Dean
caldwell, who refused rescue
two da}'s earlier, moved rapid·
ly up the 3,000-foot face of El
Capitan Sunday and reported,
''The climbing is I o i n g
superbly. It is actually
pleasant and fun now."
Short of food and drenched
by rain, the climbers had ap-
peared defeated Friday morn-
ing, 1,000 feet short of their
goal.
But the climbers advanced
100 feet Saturday night and
Sunday rooming . and, with
progress Friday, were aboul
'100 feet from the top.
•
"They're making great pro· //-16 ~
gress now, but It depends on _ /) /'J
whether they can paas the l~-.:.h;.:;;w\i:;.:..:~,;.;;~;...~,..:!·,,,~~::•:.::'•:-:·~"': .. :~·•::.•.::'-::;·.:."~";o· ~··;;";.':;:"';;·~;;;:a 'Great Roof' overhang about 300 feet from the top. After 0Do you want to·11e.e a blimp? No, 110, 11Wy, out
thaj they abould be h o m e your window ••• " ·
free," said a National Park------------~----~--
Service ranger, Harry Rawl-
ings.
Hundreds of weekend
tourists &tared from below
through te l escopes· and
binoculars as the climbers
tried for the 24th day to scale
the forbidding rock by a new
route . ·
They droppe(l a message in
a bag Sunday morning to
coordinator Dave Hanna which
'Totally Vulnerable'
•
Couple at'the Mercy
Of .Thie~es With Ke ys
said. "A pretty accurate LA MIRADA (UPI) , another apar tm ent , to
estimate for arrival is late Newlyweds J a m es and Money's office, to t h c Tuesday afternoon or Wed-nesday morning." Pollyana Money are changing classroom where Mrs. Money
------------." ·-· ~··-----~ ' . . .. .. . . --·---------""" ' '-. . . . . ----..;-----.-•
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Zodiac Linked to Coed's I See by Todays
Want Ads
• I .. , . ' '
1966 Death in J!iverside ·--..,. --~----e TENNIS ANYONE! Just
think You can plKy AU,.
YEAR AROUND? WOW.
IE! \.\'hat a. Groove! Stt
Class 8600. Before it's to
late .. ,
SA!'/ FRANCISCO (]JP!) -
The San Francisco· Chronicle
said in its Monday edition the '
knife slaying of a Riverside
City College coed in 1966 may
have been the work of the
elusive 7.ocliac killer.
Newsman Paul Avery said
notes sent to the Riverside
Press·Enlerprise and to police
after the Oct. 30, 1966 slaying
bore a strikin¥ resemblance to
reecnt notes sent to the
Chronicle by Zodiac who
boasts of killing 14 persons.
Victim of the Riverside
slaying was . Cheri Jo Bates,·
18. She was knifed to death
after being lured from her
stalled car to a deserted park·
ing lot by the killer.
Homicide inspectors in San
Franci!co have credited
Zodiac wilh killing r i v e
persons in attacks at San
Francisco. Lake Berryessa
and around Vallejo.
Riverside pollce said the
slaying of Miss Bates remains
unsolved. Main clues are a
wristwatch believed torn from
the killer, ·copies of 11 lYJ>Cwrit-
ten "confession" and three
othe r notes reading: ''Bates
had to die there will be more."
Avery ~aid t'wo of three or
the latter not.es had been si&_n-
ed with a "Z".
Also entering the case, said
the Chronicle, was a study
Couple Found
Dead in Auto
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desk in the Riverside Cit.y
College library on which
meone had scratched a poem
about spurting blood.. a new
red dress and ' "life draiiiing
into an uncertain death."
The desk poem appeared to
be signed with the letters "R''
and "H." Investigators figure
the initials could be the actual
ones of the killer.
The new s paper said
speciali sts at the State Bureau
of Criminal Investigation and
Identification concluded that
the Zodiac killer _ may have
authored the notes and the
poem.
Gasp s of Horror
T a te Murder Color
Pictures Debated
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Arguments begin today on
whether photographs of bloody
slaying victims will be ex·
hibiled. to the jury in the
Sharon Tate murder trial.
The photos -8-by-10 and in
color -show the blonde, preg·
nant actress and six others in
Stie was ordered to do this
previously and refused . Her at·f
torney. Paul Fitzgerald, said
she would refuse a g a i n .
Witnesses have linked Miss
Krenwinke\ to the slayings but
not lo the scrawlings.
de;~~e picturl!s brought WaVe Sweeps
gasps of horror from the
•
e NO\V YOU CAN "Tlf·
TOE ON THE OCEA~
fRONT'". This v er y
CHEAP for !he price of
happiness. these days. So
here is 8 sale • "Grab it
before it's too-too late!
~ Class 3200.
e A Mother has some T.L.C.
TO GIVE to your child
too. SO' if looking ft>r •
good babysitter. _ .Then
don't let lhi1 T.L.C, GQ.
BY. S.. 6550.
state's key witne ss, · Linda ·· W 0111an l o Sea
Kasabian, who collapsed in YOGA CENTER tears when she saw them. SAN l''RANCISCO (i.;P I) -
The pictures are among 297 A Sunnyvale \voman drowned 445 E I 7 h STRE "T. COSTA M"SA.
h Saturday W"he" a large wa"e · t '" • '" pieces of evid~nce which t e " •
state seeks to admit before it swept her and her husband in-Invites You To Say He llo And Take Our
_,ests '"-ea" agaiost Ch3'1CS tHoou'sehe_ Pacific "'" the Cliff F·REE CLASS, TOMORROW Manson and three women
codefendanls. Mrs. Karen Ann Thomson , TUES. AFTERNOON, NOV. 17, 3 p.m.
But before evidence 21, and her husband of six Enroll Now For New 6 Weeks Seriei Bqinninsi
Hanna quoted the clim·bers the locks Jn their hOuse in a teaches and a copy of Money 's
as writing, "N.igbt.s are-"1-hurry and Pollyana isJearning --1 busfue.sa itilierary for the next
credible. the full moon is on us how to use a gun. month, including the times. he
'lliirly aU night. ObviousJYJ __ w,,_e _ _,Jt-.all-began..Saturday_.nj&ht_wilLbe...ouLoUo.w 1----~re-nol stWlifti oursevles -when their car, in which Mrs.
just nibbling -but are feeling Money had left her purse , was
no effects from the cutback in stolen. While they w e r e
food . No o v e r w h e I m i n g reporting the theft to police,
hunger, weakneas, etc. lf the thieves drbve the car to
anything, we're feeling quite the Moneys' ·home and the
arguments begin, delendant months, Neil, 23, were sit11.·~,~gll-_J!IOV-.--24,-T-UE-SDA V--AF-TERNOON, 2:00 p.m. a r1c1a Krenwin kel, 22, i;nust on a rock at me end or-·a1 -
After the Moneys h • d FERNLEY, Nlv. {AP) - A indicate whether she will com· foot breakwater when a 646-8281
1ood physically.strong and couple's problems grew.
reported the theft, they man and his son \ihile hunting ply with a court order to hand breaker knocked them into the
returned home in a borrowed found a Glendale couple dead print all the letters of the water. Thomson tried to hold KAUDAS & BHARA Tl
car after attending· a party in their car near he're, the alphabet words which were onto his. wife as they were
Nevada Highway Patrol says. found scrawled in blood on the dashed against the rocks. but
and went .straigh~ to bed. The car containing the ' walls of one murder site. The he finally lost his grip. He was
••. Have come to the Harbor. A,..a after directi ng
the Yoga Fellowshi p of Sacramento,· conductint
high ly acclaimed classes at the Fellow1hip Ashram,
Y.W.C.A., Y.M.C.A.-Main and Northeast Branches
-and Sacramento City Collqe.
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alert." Jn the purse, Mrs. Money
Convict Set
----To Tes tify
FRESNO (UPI) -Defense
attorneys at Mn. ' Louise
Thoresen's murder trisl say
they will put on the witness
stand a convict her eccentric
husband bad hired tb kill ber.
Mrs. Thoresen, 34, hU ad-
mitted in court that she shot
to death be.r gun-collecting
husband, William E. Thoresen
III, 32. but said she did so
because she. believed he even-
tually would succeed in killing
ber.
•·1 realized he was insane,"
. she declared. "I realized he
might kill all of us, including
Michael ." Her son, Michael, is
8.
The convict, who is expected
to testify today ()f Tuesday, is
Harold Bell, an inmate o! lhe
Arizona State Prison a t
Phoenix. Defense attorneys
say be was hired to kill Mrs.
Thoresen and a family friend
the steel heir believed was her
lover.
had left the keys to their
house, to another car, to
Life Plan
On Planets
Lambasted
LOS AJllGl<:°LES IAUPI)
A proposal to "seed" other
planets with life forms created
on earth is a "mad scientist"
type of experiment. the direc-
tor of the Griffith Park
Observatory said Sunday.
Dr. William Kautman n
warned .hat the plan by the
National Aeronautics and
Space Administration posed a
possible thN?at to the ecology
of the planets.
NASA officials at Moffet
Naval Air Station announced
Saturday that it was con·
sldering the '' p I an et a r y
engineering" or as other
'scientists call It "cellular
engineering" to transform
lifeless and hostile worlds iato
places useful to man.
Beauty Bulletin
from Penneys:
~
Think holiday
hairdo.
Start with a
Sue Cory'Select'
perm at12.50,
including shampoo,
cut, and styling.
Or our color
retouch special, 6"
•
Sunday morning, MrS._bodies of Ervin-H. Fackrell, words are "Rise ," "Death to washed toward shore and
Money got up aad was about 52. and his wife.~ Marian, 51, Pigs," and • •He a Ith er rescued, but his wife was car·
to turn On the stereo and her was. discovered Saturda y after SkelteJ;"," _ "Healter'' an ap-ried out to deeper water Where
husband was about to reach it had apparent ly gone out of parent misspelling of "He!-the Coast Guard found her
for his golf clubs. The stereo, control on Highway 95A -and ter." body. ''===================== 'the clubs, and a radio were careened into a canal fourl-----------------------
. gone. days earlier, officers said.
•
LAST .14 DAYS!
Great gift idea for the fam ily :
OurTrim-a-Home Shop
is now ready for action.
Let~s-think-Christmas. ,,,,,.. '
lighted jewel
lamp 5.98
17" metel tree
stand. 99c
50 light indoor miniature
light set in clear or assorted
color lights. Your choice 3.99
· fO'li'Ql'it'·inao·or novetty·light "
set 2.99
25 light outdoor set 4.44
25 light indoor set 3.81
~ ··~
Christma~
center piece. 11
Beautiful 1ngel
chimes. 1.49
2V2" Satin balls in 4
colors 1.49 box of 12
' 1" shiny round ornaments
49c ·box of 12
40' Tinsel garland in
gold or silver color. 1.88
21,4" Solid color ahlny
ornaments lie
--!----
CHARMING CHRISTMAS
PORTRAITS OF
YOUR CHILDREN
777
all for only ..
o ONE LARG E BxlO FOR YOU TO KEEP
o lWO LOVELY !x7 FOR GRANDPARENTS
•SIX WA LLET·SIZE FOR 'TH E FA'MJLYI
Bring your children In now. Our talented
photographer will capture that special
sparkle in a Christmas Portrait that says
.. we love you." And remember ... you can
charge it at Penneys.
HUNfOllOTON II.I.CH
"""'""""' c .. ~ 1"11 1ie.., mnn
tollWl'OIT l l ACM
Ft1ll!ot'> 11!1'1(1 ,,,. fklo<' ..... ,,lJ
1599 Orlg. 19.98
7 ft. Scotch Pine artltlclal tree
High branch and tip counts for
a fuller look, flame resistant
.polyvinyl chloride needles.
4 ft . Scotch Pine artificial
'"!Ible tree IS.91
FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTE R e NEWPORT BEACH
I . . • 0 I •
24 99 Orig. 21.W
81/2 ft. grH n l11ta111 artlllolal tro1
Lifelike artificial trees.
that last for ye{ri. Frame
resistant polyvlnyl chloride
need let.
• • 2 ft.'Qreen artlliciat
Christmas tree. 2.•
HUNTINGTON BEACH
HUNTINGTON CENTER
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• Mondq, N"'-16, 1970 _______ DA_IL.,.Y_P_l_LD_T_,,,8
-Devices Dangeroas
I Cardiac T1~eatment Hit
Nagging Helps
Wives 'Make Difference'
Denture Invention
For People wlth•"Uppers '"and "Lowers"
Tbe tarfJll thifts. to havinJ ~ helps Protect rui::n• rrom bnailiar.
09o1) tetth. pombk DOW ••lb I You may bite harder, chew b9 Dlletk aam diacoway that 1e>-tet, eat men aahnlly. l-bGWlbotb"~'"" Fl...,.,..inarbelp,.._ .. kJowa'I" •ftWel' bebt OQlllble. mort dearly, be more at eue.
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J, (APl
-'I11e American H e a r t
AssoclaUon has been told that
a study of electronic devices
used in the cardiac care units
ol 12 leading hospitals Jn the
Unlted States r e v e a I e d
{'signiCICant det'iciencies" in
lll 12.
· "11\e problems varied from
time-wasting nuisance to life-
threatening · hazards.'' t h e
study said. "Some types of
defects could also result in in·
correct diagnosis and treat-
ment."
~ repolj from the Wayne
State University School of
Medicine in Detroit did not'
name the hospitals or give
equipment brand names. It
was presented for the annual
meeting of the Heart Associa-
tion.
uBoth equlpmtnt m11'1ufac-
turers and hosplt•ls seem to
be at fault," the report said,
"although both were an~ous
to correct the situation once it
was discovered.,..,
01 51 electrocardiographs
studied, more than half ex·
hibJted unsafe leakage of elec-
trical current, among other
problems, the report said.
These device& r e c o r d
heartbeats .ti8nd are used to
diagnose heart illness.
Another device studied is
called a defibrillator. It is us*
ed to direct an· electric shock
to the heart through a paddle
placed against the chest in an
attempt to correct an ir-
regularly beating heart, a
critical condition'' requiring
fast action.
The Wayne St ate in·
'•
Holiday Cooking Tips
featuring updated Heritage
recipies and t¥ easy electric
way to prepare them.
presented by
Southern California Edi•on Co.
FASHION ISLAND HOUSE
on the moll
Tonight (Monddy) Nov. 16-7:30. P.M.
....... 'f uesdoy Nov. ·17 -"TOJO ·;ec M :· .......... .
~
FASHIU ISLAND
NEWPORT CIJNTER
Ii vesJJcaton, a Mloloelst and . ALCONBURY, Eng I and "Mln<ls yqu, I'm not 1111·
an engineer, said they studied (UPI) -A nagging wite, far gesting they thould make their
4.1 direct-current defibrillators. from being a men annoyanct, husband's Uves a mltery.'' the
"In one brand," the study can be the key to her said, ''the main power switch husband's success, a U.S. 48-yeaMJd olfJcer from Foi'tsl
was difficult to find. Looaely' military command said. City, N.C., Wd.
fitting connectors were found With this in mind U.S. Air 1'But they need to coax them
in two brands, alioJlng the Force Col. Dwight w . and occasionally chide them
cable to be pulled out when Blanchard sent a letter to the into study," he 1 a Id~
' '
lt'1 a m'Ohaticmry cfllcoorery Th• tpec::i•I pc:ndl·Point di .. caDed ,~ ior dail1 home peneer Illa '/Oil apot FlxODtNt uee.. <U.S. PIL l:f.003,988) With With Ptecidbii. . , • w~ needed I FlXODINt man1 dmhn waren One apf!llcttion may latt ror
now •t. .-k. laush. trith little houri . Dtnturet th1t rit are ~ ol cleatutel commc looee. e11ential to he1llh. See your ~ F1XODKNT form• an tltatic dtntlst r~ty. Get e.7-to-
mitmbnne ~t hel~ abeorb the Ult FlxoPINT Denture Adbtli'lf: lbDck. of bib.Df Ud cbewinl-Cream at all dru,: couaten. the operator stretched the wives of 2,000 n o n -c o m-
cables to reach tht paUent." missioned officers at Alcon-"Sometlm~ adulb can_ be llkel-----------------·-----
The · p a d d J e s themselves frury Air Force Base. children. They need to be nag~·1.----------------------,
were not always manufactured · \,.llll message : a little nagging ged now and again-to get them Fastest in West
'I be I •'--6" Buy IL Stll IL Try tM fuwt nsponst In lht tst aga nst )'Olll' well, the study said. SOme I In the rl...,t places often lights to do th&r homework." 1 w 1
were eas1 v n · so un:iV no · ·, a fire, under the male. It could How did ~Mrs. Blanton feel · I nl ed to th sh ""•'• 1• OWft c:• ... t. Ttst Olmt·a·llnt Ads, wh11tt tht action b, In Saturda(1 onger co onn e ape !~'1\i\\!!~I ~i!.~:1.i~lx~.::tii11:•. push him to study harder, for about this alter 27 years of ....
of patient's chest, the study liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii example, to· earn military pro-marriage to such a Willinely· DAILY PILOT. said_.~ ·• motion. nagged spouse? IJ.. _________ .:.._ __________ _,
"Whel\_ applied," the reportl\----------__:=.:::: _______ __:::::::=~~__:------------------------
sa'ld, "thhe is ·then poor con-
tact, resulting in arcing,
wasting enerlY and burnlna:
the patient."
The team reported studying
57 pacemilers, .d e v l c e s
designed to speed up a heart
that Is beating too slowly by
applying a small, regular elec-
tric charge.
All 57, the Way'ne ·State
team said, contained a defect
at the end or the lines leading
to the heart thrit could allow
minute amounts ·of currtnt to
go astray and prodilce an lr*
regular rhythm in the
heartbeat.
In addition. a component
controlling the rate of the
electrical shock w a s in-
accurate in about 40 oercent of
· the pacemakers, the study
said, and electrical ouUets
were found to be faulty.
The study concluded that
many of the problerr11 resulted ·· rrom ·a:·1act ·ot·comm1DllcaUOfr ·
between manufacturers and
users of cardiac-care equip.
ment.
The investigators u r g e d
regular inspection of the
equipment, uoltorm standards
for manufacturing quality and
the inclusion cf medical elec-
tronics in medical and nursing
stud.Jes. •
The report was written ·by
Dr. Henry L. Green, Dr. Irwin
J. Schatz and Gregory E.
Hieb, an ent;ineer. all of
'-tayne State.
Short .on
space · and money?·
Take a long look
at--tbis ~-sleeper ·sale!
)
Call Collect
(714) '523-6511
for our shop-at-home service, free.
-ca~1·1 now.
·Save up to 1/3
on custom
drap-eries.
Decorate now for the holidays al these tremendous savings.
Save up to V3 on beauliful cuslom draperies. Choose from ell·
sual open weaves, sheers, and others. Regular low Penney
prices for fabrication. ·
r
DtCGrote Hw! U't Penntys ti•• ,., .... t pl••·
•
Sa1es219
..... '241. Contemport'Y Style dual , .. ePtr has the clea"
lintt of modem. Kiln dried hardwood frame. Tight back
construction, with loose pillow seat cushions of hi-density
polyurethtne fqain. Includes casters. TV headrest.
Mattress of potyure1hano
foam is 73" long by 52" wide.
Penneys furniture prices include delivery.within local delivery area •
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Sa1es249
..... U7t. laffJ Amerk;an 1ty .. dual lleeper
ls skirted, hu arm c1ps. Kiln dried h1rdwood
fr1rne. Coll spring back construction. Seat
cu1hioftl of US Koylon• Latex foam rub~r.
Choice of green, brown t>r
gofdVectra• otelin~
Sa1es259
..... tat. Ml>Dm •tJle queen Ill• ••I•...,.,
hu 1imple, sleek lines. Coil spring tight
back, kiln dr ied harowood frame. Zippered IMt
cu1hions of 9" latex foam rubbt'r. Coil spring
maltretS. ~cludtt .,.m CIP•· ChOtce of QrMn
or gold ptaidVectra•ottfi,,, ·
'
UM Penntys Ti.,. Pa)'ftlent Pl•n '•1 tlleae •lores:
I '
FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER • NEWPORT BEACH
HUNTINGTON CENTER • 'HUNTINGTON BEACH
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------... ~ ...... -...... _____ . -:.-!Oh=:::;;;;::~:.:: ..... ~·-··. --· ........ . ·-;:;;===:;;:::-; ___ ...,,.,,.._.,.------------------~-------•• ......... ,., ..... -... • .... "'lo-' • .......,....,
10 DAJLV PILOf Monday, Novembtr 16, 1970
For the Record
Marriage
Licenses
Dissolutions
Of Marriage
I!•*'" ... ...._.... ' lloron. Hlleti 0. lflcl Llllll
Flor«. L-111 end ClwtrlH A. McC11l1tlon, 81rb1r1 -RODl'rl 8-y, S1ncrr1 Ann l l'ICI Rklwtf'(I K. M.cv, J1mes R. •nd Mlrv J1ne c.,mm1no1. N•tflle •nd R-•• Andr"" Andtr'°" 80/ln , Ind Tho.!T\11 C11e ... 1. Ann M1ri. •net Ed'#lrd Coootr. Rfl«Fl'r< C11r1 Incl C1lvln RYUtU c~,,.~lev Et•ne •IMI Frtd ... lc
GilU<llllh, Aun.a M. •nd JoMPll A. Sutlor\, Br.tty J-.Ind IUno W, ""'-L 1 Ml•lne end S11n1.., G. H!'9K i., tme1 H. Incl Mlr<Jlrll Ann w1c:r.1t 1<1-!ne e. 1nd tovl1 J1mn Arwitl<lttl, Dtlorn Evelyn lfld JOl91l~ "" 011111.. J. L. Ruth tnd O. O.avld V1rlloorn, N1crl111 C. end Wlllllm
ml'/lltll, Avl1 O. lflcl Doll!"! '· I ....... Doris. Je1n Ind ' IY n How••ll ltr, Cll1rle1 M. end SN•Oll O.
W!llll(I Slllri.t Gill• lfld Hl•old (. Witt, SllSll<I C. tnd 0.Ykl A. L1'11t. 1(111\P!l"' Ind GeorH G. l"trouNr, Vkltl IC. Ind Jalln C. Kltltt". Phvllb J,1n ':::I' Wl!U1m J . ICurl...,, Miry L""n 1 Vtrn.r Y. ~'Conneu. Fr1mcl1 J, end Gill Y. orence. Fr~nci!S M. and Jalln P. tc~lhn. Rot>t•t L""ls and R.utl\ Ctclll•
AWARD RECIPIENT
Howard S.ar
Scout Leader
Awarded
Upper Bay Swap Hearing Set
Hy TOM BARLEY
OI *t 0.1,._ Plitt SllH
• ' The six-week trial of the trust that bars any tampering
.. J,.uue ended last Aug. 19 and with tidelands.
AU five ractlonl in the bit-the three subsequent months Berry's demand that the
terly c<iotested Upper Bay have added oonsiderably more issue be returned to the Stale
land swap trial will get their paperwork to the mountafn or Lands Comm!ssion for a new
last chance Thurtday to con-material p u m p e d into hearing into tbe controversy was denied by Judge OY.·eru.
vince Superior Court Judge volwnlnous Superior Court The jW'ist al~ refused to con-
Claude M.. Owens that his files during the trial before sider the Sierra C I u b
eagerly awaited ruling on the Judge Owens. president's claim that the
validity or !he Back Bay deal J udge Owens will not an-lrvlne .Co. was guilty ol fraud
between Orange County and nounce his d e c i s i o n im· when it succe.Ssfully argued its
med. •-1 f !lo · lh f" I case before the commission the Irvine Co. should be in 18~ 'I o wmg e ma arguments. But it w a s three years ago.
their ravqr., predicted Thll)'Sday by a What Berry described as the
The veteran jurist will hear issue that he will have his "certain e'llinction" of the Up.
final oral argumerits from at· source close to the Upper Bay per Bay environment became
Bay wild life are groMfy ¢l·
agll'.erated .
'J'hc plan will p r o v I d e
enhanced boating facilities, a
chain of parks and recreation
areas for public use and
carefully controlled deve.lop-
ment of coastal area that
hai;, at present, appeal for a
very limited public, Warren
has argued. . Helsing launched the lawsuit •
for Heim when the county o!·
(icial -acting on the in-
structions ()f the county and
the Irvine Co. -refused to
pay the first dredging bill sutr
milted to the county by Irvine. torneys represenUng f i ve verdict available before Nov. a heated issue i:l.uring the long
vitwpoints in the Jong court 30. trial. 'Ille young lawyer put •
battle: San Fra~lsco lawyer Earlier &Sseument.s "-'ei'e last pleas Of the five lawyers several conservatlonisJs and I M..M E D I AT E
Philip Berry for a group '()f that it was unlikely that Judge involved. ecology C<lnsultants into the HIGH mu S'S
Newport Beach homeowners, Owens would rule on the Up. wiU.SS box in a bid ~ COO· Los Angeles trial lawyer per Bay exchange before the He will be asked by Berry to vince Judge Owens that im· ou.-.11AMTEE0 & sEcu1t1:0
Robert WarrPn !or the Irvine end of the year. declare the land S'olo·ap invalid " ;ilementation of Irvine plans =•11~~ -;'PCIO~~ ':':,.w1:"1t1t~ Co S ~ . and restore to the county the would spell death to several •dr•, wtt111-, t•MI. ,1111 or ,-ri FMll1no. llev~rlv J . •1111 Andrew M. we11er11,1a, Fr•ru:et P . •!Id R.IY Ml<h•el Wlnll!rs, Dt:l1M •nd kow11d 11. Jr.
ll••ntle~. Mllthtll Ch1rlts Jr. Ind
" anta Ana attorney Duf· It appeared Thursday that 157 acres of Udelands,i! traded species ()f birds and fi sh who !1!:' d::;:i.W.:11,:; ,:.~:":~~-=
I L
'
T fern Helsing for Co u nty all sides involved in the eon~ for 450 acres of Irv:lne Co. inhatiit Uppe r Bay waters. "'"'' .. 'IJlr 1.i·11P. ccirn,-11r·ttl•bll1~· ll 8~ egas Auditor Vic Helm, Deputy troversy tiad submitted all uplands., ··Berry a~gued Warren 'isexpected loargue ~rdi:c.!1'0:,~iu~t,,:e1~:11:.'" wrtl'I ~ County Counsel ft-Obert Nut· relevant paper work requested ' through0u1 the trial that lh A -11-111oc1e11 us11 111.,..1l'Mflt. cif'J:.loJ: f::e'M.. 1nd Garv J1mt1
,_ N..,.,,.Nr J S1>1<k1. Fred Gtora• 11111 H.-1v Jotnll Jone1. LOttct and John W11ltY Clla-1, Jane and Do1111l11 M. HllrorO"t, Ger1ld M1rslllll Incl OorolhY
1man for the t d De · . he h at the Upper Bay contract 1K11r .. •IMI t11•r•111ttd c111 "'' you LAS VEGAS _ Santa Ana coun Y an pu-pr10r to t earing of Irvine development of those was a perfectly ... valid ex· 1111• 1m1M11i.11 bu•l11M.1 <•Hectiltl
rancher, businessman and Boy ty Attorney General Jay arguments. It will O!lly remain lands is unlawful since they ·change plan )>et ween the coun-~~i::!. ~~'M•':" n~r
Scou I der H d Be Scha1~elson for the State of for Judge Owens to announce were deeded to Orange County ty and the Irvine Co. and that 111"'" er wn, ... MltJI -Tiii
t ea owar ar re-a i!omia. his verdict after hearing the d S te EN11r ,.net. cn11 ~
ceived the Silver Antelope1------------.::....:....:.:::.:....:::.::.:....:::.:::::::"....::::.....::un::::•:_r_:a_:ta':'.:'.· :_:'o'._f_:Cal::'.'.'.i~forma'.".'.'~-'_'.'.fe~a'.::rs~f~o:_r_"lh~e:_s~uzv~iv~a'.'._l_?:of~·.U~pl'.!pe~r~~~~~~~~~~~
De ntl1 Nt•tices
CA5K£V
J1ck P. C1sl<ev. !9Sl "'nold Av1., Cost1 M1w, .Survived by wlle, Helen; d.uo~
ler. C1rul•" c. T1y1or, of Burtwinlc; tu., '''""'°"· se...,lces, Tu.-,, 11 1.rn .• p,. c<l!c VI-C"-l>t'I. !Mermen!, P.,:!lic
vie ... M_ .. , .P111i:. PKlfk View Mor·
tu1ry, Direct°"'.
<OX
Mele.. J . Ci:w. ~ Gt.nftn"' St., ll'Wfl9
8Nl;tl, Aoe S21 INl9 ol dte!ll. Ncw-tiw
1?. SIJNlV..:I' b¥' fll~, T~ Wwt,
"I L111unii leach; brot,...., ~.
West Jr,, S..t1 Cl1r1. S..Vleft wlll !Mt
~eld Tues<11y, Nov...,bitr 17, 11 1.m ..
$heffe-r ~11111111 ewcti c""""', with Or,
011111 A, T\ll'!WT of C-nlty Presbv· ~!Ml Cllurd1. i....,,,, l!Mch. etriclet-
1,.,.. lnluml!'llt, Pacific V1'1:.t' M9ft'!Or!~I
P1rff. Slleller Lnv"9 SNCll Mor1u1rr,
Dlreclll'"S.
MAlllC!JI
Mer11: G. Mtrlcuo. 311~1 O•lnd C1nr""
O•Jvp, l.-ivn• Nltutl. D.llP of clf!1tll. No-
vember 11. Survlve11 bv wilt, RPb«c1: lwo •onS, Robert. ol Lltu,.. Nl11Utl; E,,. W•rd. of Gltnde lt: brother. H~rrv M•r·
l u1. Frt1t10; !<!vet! ;r.endcll!ldren. Sl!f• .. 1c11. IOCll"t, Mond•v. 1 0 m., S~H~r Ltfu,.. !le1cll MDMu1,.... Ct...e>el. Prlv.rt
IMP!'"'"""! ti El TO<"o Ol•lrlct Cemelt...,, Sr..lll!f Lqu... BNrl/o~U.fl•V. Ol•t<· ....
MILLER Nlcllolt• Altn Mllltr. For!un1 Ave., N....,l>Of'\' , OaTe of dl!"1th, Nov-tier ll. Survived bv 01rerih,
Mr. Ind Mes. Ruuell E. Miiter; lwo tillers, Mrl. JOlll OofTI, Sacrarne<'IJO; Mrt. J.,.11 B~t...n, S1\ldl Arabl1; 11r1nd· ltlMr, Mr, E. F. Mllltr, l<etitudtv. St•·
"kn . Tueso.v. 11 a.m~ 81lt1 C-1 ~r M1 r C"9otl. Priv11t \nlffmtnl, !11l!l Coron1 del Mir Mortu1rv, OlrM:lon ..
L""lu c't"~c. Chrlitlne F<•ftt<!'S end RoOerl
Mutde, M1nfrtd IC1rl and Linda JoJ<ll Rose, Jo<t M1rlt 1"<1 Robtrl Lewh. Award al cerenionies here
Satorday.
Bear who has been a cub-
master, scou~r and unit
()rganizer, Was sefected from
leaders in California. Arizona.
Nevada, Utah and Hawaii, ror
the award.
Active in scouting
1947, Bear serves on the
Region 12 camping committef,
is a life member of the
Parent-Teacher Association, a
member of the H () a g
Memorial Hospital b o a r~d , ~
served five years on the
Orange County Committee for
School District Organization
and was president of the
Bowers Museum, Santa Ana,
for three years.
He and his wife ·Betty have
three sons who h a v e
parlicipated in scout orgahiza.
lions.
George lloag II of Newpo rt
Beach, vice president of the
Orange Empire Area Council
and member ()f 1he Reglon 12
committee p r e s e n t e d the
award.
Students To
Renovate
Govern,mettt •
FULLERTON -Cal Stale
Fullerton students are taking
Flied' November 4 h d I k the" l ktller, c1111ord w. 1..., Ma•I• A, a ar 00 at Jr own s U· ,,..11., ~o,piov Lee •nd S"•ron sor dent government -its struc-~!~!ri. 8i,:'~;· H":·1~d ~:;r:.r: :: ture, functions and spending
F!otrl•;e, Connie M1t 1nc1 Jav Lo91n practices., ' H1 llld1,, M1rt Curr!t Ind M1rt•ret R . Jones. Rlcto••d o. 1nd J .... n tt. A 10-man "student opinion Corcoran. o;.,!'le Merit -J1me3 commission" has been named ,..,,,....,y
11111vtr1, Norm• Jt1n 1nd ttobe•I. to investigate and m a k e WIU11m d " f h 1<11c1ow. J1n111e Rae 1nd E"'rett Eir• recommen at1ons or c anges
v111.,11. Juc11111 c1ro1 •nd Robert 1>1ut in lhe student organization Ge;:;;;. l't11tv Je•n 1»<1 Rlchlrd Alt)<· which administers $357,000 of
Adami, Sll1ron •nd lt&Ymclnd I'. Student fees. GuPllU, Ronlld Lu 'Ind IC1ren Miclltlll
FIM , Nell Fr1n<P1 and Mervin L""I' "We want the public to Slmmerm•n M,i,ro1r11 F. 1rw1 Tlwlm11 realize that studenls are L, It.II • ~~'.tc:·11, ~e:'t>t~· :rife ~1~'T.~"'.;~... capable of changing their own
T~i~1 M11dr1croe F. end Aq,,., form of s1udent government if
sT1vE111s =~~r,.~°F.!i ~~1~~A~i!1 c. it does need revamping,'' Herley IC. Slevt!'ll. '3t Avenlds Stv11 11, Wolfe, C"lleen amt R.~! Ch J R h · · L1tun1 H;o1. o.re o1 dellll, November CoTJon, Ro•allr J. end C1>c1r1'' R.. ares oug , commi.ssion
1•. survived 1tv w!le, Julia L. si .... eno "~:,non. s.ncrre Ylln incl Dl\llll W•r· director said. d1u;.,t1•, Mlrlor1' Ruhn two ;rtnd· G1llow1v, Janet Sut 1nd Wlllll GPOTot c:t1y9Me,.., Mro. Nll<Oc' MuttlPI'"/ Mis• l"'er1n1, Palrlci& G. Ind Wllll1.., G. A three·Week Series
SUll" R~~r. Strtlce--• htkl todiv,' Cllarter, Co<>nle M11 lnd'C"lq Eu"""t bl" b · Jr d h Mcflcliv. 1 <>.m .. Pttll Fimltv eoioniai M~~~--.. ,:~~~:rd ...... ,,.,. • n d pu 1c ear1ngs a ea y as Fune••• Komt. • a111r11rom. Flov .-.....,,1. i nd 1<eron1:lh begun, and the student senate
VAN ll:EIC e!:~~a c . .Ind E<lw1rd ... h; high on the priority list of
Jol\Mon, Thoma• E. Ind Jeflne l'tr11 lo be . !" led "''"" G. H. Vin ett1<. 2120 0orin1, ROid. Nodwtll, 1'1t•1c11 A. •ntl !l•l•n L. areas rnves 1ga , NtwPort Btacll. D.llt of dtllh, NOVM!· er.l\00. Gl&d\'\ M. Ind R~vmond E. R h 'd
ti.r U, Sur<lved by 1111r1nll. Mr. encl Mrs. Tlllohon. Alecl~ J, end Cllvt H oug Sal . Fen~ V•n Beek. S••Ytces were held '"" ~~T~· ~Yn Eli5e •nd Stth '"°"''' Associated StudentJ presi-111v, Moncl.>y, 1 P.m .. Pecll lc Vlotw CN· i\~11f~er R•.:e~j ~:ic'.~/l'1~J~ ot1, with Ribb! G1rwn Gol!dm.,. officl11-Wctowlctl, R.ubv E1r11rw •nd Edwe•d dent Chuck Loveless has
1no. '"'"'""""'· P1cr1k vi.w Memor111 ":tir. EHiitieth L. •nd Free1tr•ck A authorized the analysis or slu· Ptrll", P1ciFit View Morl111,..... 01rec1ors. c;,, ... G••• 11r1~n 1nd Hu!t!li! M•rce1ie dent government. ;--=============,fr-'•""•"···'•"•"•'•'•-•~iio·•"'iiii'•"'•"~·.·~wim ...... ;ii; .................. 1
ARBUCKLE & SON
\Vestcliff l\1orluary
427 E. 171h St., Costa l\tesa ........ • BALTZ MORTUARIES I .
Corona dcl l\1ar .... OR 3-9451
Cotta Ptlesa ........ mi &-%4!4 • BELL BROADWAY
l\IORTUARY ~·
110 Broadway, Costa Pt1esa
LI WUl • l\lcCOR~llCK LAGUNA
BEACH IHORTUARY
li9S Laguna Canyon Rod.
49.f·94l5 • P AClFIC VJE\V
l\fEi\10RIAL PARK
Cemetery l\1ortuary
Chapel
3HO Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach, 'California
lf4-%70t' • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL_ !jUNERAL
HOM>;
EVERY TUESDAY
AND THURSDAY
FROM 4 PM. TO
CLOSING IS
'BUCK'
NIGHT
AT GRANTS
FAMILY SPECIALS
YOUR CHOICE' * Roast Turkey Dinner * Golden Fried Chicken * Roast Bnf Au Jus * Ham Steak Hawaiian
Whtl ,., ...... cNIM ef 1111• ..... ., c,...., cea. ... ,.. ... ~.
$
1ttl Bolsa Ave. Moi:tday and Weclnescby Evenings Only w .. tmlllster e .... _ =W:'W=IZ=l-1t--t-BRADFORD HOUSE STEAK DINNER
SUEFFE&.. MORTUARY :::::!.~':!:=-' .!,~~' 2 ,_ $3M
J..a(UJll Beac~ ..... 4ff.IPS 1
Sa• a.-...... ltWIM • SMl'THS' llORnJARY
•
C7lllaloSL -"'" -Qltl•
{
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• Many famous brands in the selection. Nylon, polyeste·rs, acrylics
• Sculptured e,ffects, smooth piles, shags. Decorator fashion colors and, tweeds.
!'
IT'S A COLOSSAL CLOSEOUT!
•Mirage', a llandsome tip shear fevel pile or ·~ Vdef, our~ rwldom shear •
both, in beautiful blends of acrytic/modacrylic in 12 8"d 15" widths.
Olis· I.ii oq. :rd. NOW
4.99aq.yd.
'PT••r', our lush. 100% nyton plush carpet in five
exciting decorator colors ••• 12 foot widths.
•·1ncl1•n Sannne,., a magnificent shag pile carpe:ing in
aciylic/modacrylic. Desert paint only ••• 12 foot widths.
Orig. 5.50 oq. :rd., NOW 4 °2i. yd. Orig. 7.11 oq. yd., NOW .$5 sq. yd.
OTHER EXAMPLES OF ONCE·IN·A·LIFETlllE SAYINGS:
Polyester shag in gold onlyr--------------------0!1g. 9.50 sq. yd, NOW 5.19 sq. yd.
Acryticlmod'-crylic tip shear pile in sand gold OfllY ... Orig. 8.50 sq. yd., NOW 5..0I sq. yd.
Hetculon• potypropytene olefin ~vel loop pile in bfue moss. b!ue green tweeds_. -Orig. 6.50 sq. yd., NOW 4.14 sq. yd.
•
e Over -4000 sq. yds. reduced to clear. Come ear1y for best selection. All sales start Sunday, Nov. 15th, 12 noon.
• EJiipert installation and padding·nailable at regular low Penney prices.
•Bring tn your noor measurements fOf a rwrobligation estimate.
Save now on c:'rpetlngl Use PeMep time pey~ent plen.
-ennelfJ
Come In or phone: CANOGA PARK·(883·3660) CARLSBAD (729-7991) DOWNEY (869·4~1) FULLERTON (871 ... 343)
HUNTINGTON BEACli (892-7nl) LAKEWOOD (634·7000) MONTCLAIR (821·3811) NEWPORT BEACH (644 ·2313)
ORANGE "'.THE CITY" (639·5091) TORRANCE (n2-5893) ' vamJRA (642·7592) Uso Pennoys lime payment plan. ./
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CHECKING •UP•
Writer Showers
In His Underwear
Mond1y, Novtmbtr 16, 1970 DAILY PILOT J j
Vote fro·m Slump Ar-:as Blow to Nixon
KEY BISCAYNE, FI a . slump bu hit hfrde1t ar. P'l.llnc thin tM okl fuhioned Ronald Reagan, who had been above the nalional average. to stlmulate economic ac-
(UPI) -B.ackslalrs at the causing d.lat~u l.JTIOOC WbJt1 economJe iyuta. • 1 prohibitive favorite for re. Nixon 's economic "game tivity, he will run the rlsK of
Florida White House : Presi-Hou.st poUtk:al •lrategilts. Calilornla la a e111 In point. electlon. won by a smaller plan'' calls for a gradual reheating inflation which ll
dent Nixon wants last week's Nixon'• efforts to woo blue Nowhere elte WU the law.and-major l t y that Democratic pickup In tile economy. begin-just beginning to sh<M oorne
Congressional election to be collar work en into a new order issue drawn m o r e Rep. John V. Tunney, who rung early next year. The key
considered a major victory for Republican co1l1Uc.t foundered d r a mat i ca 11 y. Nb:911's unte1ted Setl. GeorgJ Murphy. political question is whether signs of cooling.
hls policies and the Republican . as unemployment rose to 5.S motorcade was attacked In 'llle Tunney-Murphy race had the upturn will be strong This is the dilemma which
Party. He has gone to-" great percent, the hlghttt mark In San Jose, Calif. by rock ahd betn rated 1 Iola-up. enough to produce'. rull employ· faces the Administr1Uon's
pa.J:{ls to say how happy he Is almost seven years. bottle throwing militants Ieu ni,te seenu little doubt ment befor,e lhe ~tm election. political and economic policy
with the outcome of the '?be 11w·tndi1rder theme than a week before the eJec-that the economic ls.sue was The President' has available makers: If the economy Is
midterm votina.. .. which Nlxon political advisers lion. • a'ucial in Ca!Uornla where the economic tools to assure a ·stimulated too much nt>w, the
But election returns from thoulht would 1ppeal to hard But when the votes were unemployment Is run n Ing rapid comeback in the Adminlalration could lose lhe
THAT STATE wherein you'll
find the most domino players
is Texas .•• AS P'AR AS fancy
.uames for summer cabins go,
can you think of any dandier
than ''f\.tlst·B·Ha ven''? .•. IN
POLAND, I'm told , you nets! a
$fi Jicense to hitchhike up · to
2,500 miles ... FOUR Otrr OF
IO Army recruits immediately...
catch cold when they get ta
basic training ... WHAT 00
areas where the economic bats apparently wu less com· counted, Republican Gov. mote tblb a percentage point eeonomy. But if he uses them battle against lnflatl~.
gentleman named John T. -::~::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::;.:::::::::::~===============;;;;;;;;;~ ~~U:·m~ ~r~~~o':.8C: r COSTA MESA ONLY ~~~.:.~:*::::-.;:i-~:w:~:::~:::»'~* ~
educators. But th!re is oo ~ ~ M T W d 0 I ~~~y.School in Oregon, ~ .•• ~ on., ues.,, e • n y
IN ms EFFORTS lo reeruit i Dally 10 • 10, Sunday 10 • 7 . members (or the Proper Job ..... ~
. Club, our Name Game man is ;.:;~~~~-tm:~:t'-.~-:.:"$.X::S:.::>X«~*-m:~a»'K«-"m>S.%~'v--.
' you do when you get depress·
ed, young lady? Petula Clarie
, washes her hair.
SENSITIVITY -Which are
• more sensitive to vibralions,
• your fingertips or your lips?
That's what I asked a medical
man. Your fingertips, he said.
As you age, he explained, your
lips tend to lose some of their
sensitivity, but your flngertJps
don't. Fasclnating, 1£ factual.
Do not have a neurological
specialist on lhe staff to
analyze OU ,matter, ao am
turning i* over to our Leve and
,War man.
'.-SURPRISl'!Q TO LEARN
: from a scienflst that the sun
:doesn't produce as much
·energy pound for pound I! the
human body, yet said sun
'tums. out ,more energy in 9ne
second than men haw: uted tn
r~ history. . .WERE
YOU A WAU the barracuda
herds fish the way a cowboy
herds steera? No, not on
horseback, you savage.. I just
mean the barracuda rounds up
a batch of littler fl.6h and
: keeps them corralled until he's
ready to eat iazne. "'
CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q.
"What proportion of the na-
tion's doctors own pieces of
drug stores?·" A. Little better
than one l:n every. 20. Or so
contends one authority . ;Doubt
anybody really k n ow s ,
howe't'tr .•. Q. "Does the
female canary sine?" A. Not
Unless she getJ a lltlot of male
honnones. 'J'hat will make her
as willing to burst into song as
:Jim Nabors.
checking out a report that a
fellow called Al Fresco owns a
St. Louis billboard company .. ,
A FEMININE READER
awears. positively swears she
has repeatedly removed warts
by rubbing ~m with the milk
or a well-matured fig tree .• -
HOW MANY CALENDARS
are hanging around your ~ ,..,.,._,._.~~\..
house? Averqe Ame rlc an
home, a survey shows; has
four. ·
AM ACQUAINTED wilh a
wealthy political columnist '
1yndicated nationally w h o
always aiteps Into · th e
ahowerbath in his underwear
so both he and the underwear
can get scrubbed at lhe same
time. Whli do you lhink ol
that for efficiei:icy! ~
Your que.stions aruf com-
ments art welcomed .and
will bt taed in CHECKING
UP whtrtver possibl.t.
Plta&t addrss your letters
to L. M. BoJld, P.O. Ba<
1875, Newport Beaclt.
Andy Berg
Given Post
Andy M. Berg, of Hun-
tington Beach, has b e e n
elected division membership
chairman of the National
Council for Exceptional
Children.
Bera. a teacher of the
trainable mentally retarded at
Wintersburc HJcb School. suc-
ceed:& Dr, Milton Wlsland of
Northern Illinois University
for the tJiree.yii..r term.
The studen'8 ~ lltfOU!d In
Berg's trainabl9 iri e D t'a·l l Y
retarded uili~ range in age
from lf.21. Many of them are
afflicted with ~ultiple han-
dicaps r es u It 1·1111 _from
Mongolism, minor cerebral
palsy, neurological and
prenatal dai:naae. anl:I physical
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A&,OUTS aftwo-sto·ry
ouaiouses, am now reliably in-
formed such exist also in
Calgary, Alberta, In Edmore,
Mich., and Nevada City, Mont.
And speaking or outhoUJes, the
first public school teacher in
the state of Oregon wu a injury at birth.
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Our R•CJ· 34¢ 4 ~ 96¢
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J DAILY PILOT Monday, Ncvember lti, 1':170
FAMILY CIRCVS 1>11 Bii K ea11e
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"Guess who won!"
+
2 Oil Firms Move
To Protect Tundra
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPIJ
-Two oil companies say they
are taking a "major step
· forward" to protect the fragile
tundra ground cover o f
AJaska's north slope where oil
was discovered in 1968.
The two firms say they are_
maklng a large scale ex-
perimental effort to find hardy
varieties of grasses f o r
reseedir)g the tundra.
So , far they have suc-
cessfully established on the
tundra four seeds w b i c h
survived the bitter arctic
weather and gennin3ted. The
seeds are now available com-
mercially, according to the an-
nouncement Tuesday b y
Atlantic Richfield and Humble
Oil and Rerinlng C.Ompanies.
"After more than 15 months
of intensive investigation and
observation we believe we
ha ve the seeds, in combination
with fertilizers which will
revegctate disturbed tundra
areas in the arctic plain of the
north slope," said Dr. Paul A.
McKim, a vice. president of
Atlantic Richfield and its Arco
Chemical Co. division.
'.'.In some cases, the induced
grasses grew more prolifically
than surrounding natural tun-
dn," McKlm said. · ·-.
Arco scientists, in coopera-
tion with the University of
Alaska and the Naval Arctic
Research Laboratory, con·
ducted the research project
which began in the spring of
1969 near Prudhoe Bay in the
region where oil wells have
been brought in.
Thirteen other oil companies
joined the p1"9ject. most of
them are involved in develop-
ing the Prudhoe Bay oil field.
McKim, of Philadelphia, and
Ralph .F~ .Cox, the Alaskan
manager for Atl a ntic
Richfield, told an Ancorage
news conference that the fin-
. dings could have a "far~
reaching effect" on the
development of A I a s k a ' :s
natural resources.
"They establish a sound
method for prompt re$toration
and growth of basic .ground
cover. now and in the future,"
said McKim. "It is a major
step forward·in environmental
protection in th e A r c t i c
regions."
The tundra acts as an in·
sulating medium wh ich keeps
an Wlderlying layer of water-
saturated soil known a s
permafrost frozen during the
normaJ summer t h a w .
·Disturbance of the tundra,
wbich ha.s poor f~rtillty and a
very short growth cycle, could
cause this substrata to melt
and start erosion.
MAY CO
l
custom drapery sa le:
labor for any wi ndow $1
Save on twenty-silC custom f.ibrics , all in
s1ock ... in 50 n1anY colors. And save on Roe
lon®i nsul ated lin ing, !h at insulates your
home winter, summer. Plus !he cost of labor
for any !'ize window is $1 .00 180" minin1um
finished length.) F•ncy lleatments elCtra .
fabric rfK. 2.75 to 5.00 yd .
1.99 •• 3.59
l abor reg. 3.00 per width, now
any size window 1.00
Roe tonill lining reg. 2.29 yd. 1.19
(l abor not sale priced.)
Call May Co. toll frtt. We'll vio;rt
}OU \\ itli Ympl~ and si\'e a free estima te.
custom falirlcs, 11. \ ,
m•y co, south co11t pl111
u.t1 Me11 546-9321
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soft to
the 'touch
go-togethers go sporty in lush'~e lour,
pants team ed with tops from Catalina -
The pl ushest of put-togethers.
Jaunt ily tai lored in pure cotton v(!lour.
Choose a shirt that doubles
as a jacket. Or a bri ght; stripy top.
Bolh take a pair of easy-lilting
·pants . And it's nice to know
they wash with ease. From a richly
shaded collection. For a nice
surprise come Christmas.
a. shirt style jac ket, buiton fro nt,
navy,_ aqua, orange, S-M-L 20.00
b. straight leg pu ll -on pants, navy,
aqua, orange, blac k, 10-l6 15.00
c. stripe top, in navy, S-M-L 20.00
nlay co aclive sporls\vear 76
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m1y co south co1st pl111, wn diego iwy 1t bristol , costa mesa, 54~9321
• shop monday thru 10tvrday 10 11f!1 hi 9:30 pm, 1unday noon 'Iii 5 pm
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MAVCO
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Treasures to suit the taste of. everyone is the key~
note for South Coast Community Hospital Auxiliary's
upcoming art auction.
And for those who don't have wall space for larger
pictures, the sale will feature a boutique corner with
small works of art. Both art sales will boast a display •
ol work from all media,
The annual art auction sponsored by the Silver and
Gold Qbapter will open wiUt a preview at 10 a.m. on
Sunday, Nov. 22, in Ben Brown's restaurant at the La-
~una Beach Country Club.
With donations of art already received from more
than 60 Southern California artists and more arriving
daily, this year's event promises to be one of the best .
. <\rt work on di splay will include oil, acrylic. collage,
serigraph, ceramics, metal sculpture, pastel. pencil
sketches and watercolor -virtually every medium in
which artists are working today.
Among coastal artists whose contributions will be
available for bid or outright purchase are Mrs. Marjorie
Adams Darling, Paul Blaine Henrie, Hal Akins, Dixi
Hall. Nick Pasko, Frederick Rash Sr .. Mrs. Joan Short,
Jack Taylor, Roger Kuntz and Ralph Tarzian.
The boutique corner will offer small works of art,
some for auction and others for outrighJ sale. Boutique
cash registers will open for business-at 11 a.rn .: silent
bidding will continue throughout the day, and the auc-
tion. itself Will be conducted at 4 p.m. ·
Co-chairmen of the auction are Mr~. James c.
Thomas and M~s. Hovey Cox.
Artists wishing to ·contribute may contact the Chat ..
tis Gallery, Laguna Beach Art Gallery or either chair-
man.
FOR ART'S SAKE -Artist Nick Pasko donates a marine painting
for Soath Coast Community IJospital's annual art auction next
Sunday as Mrs. James C. Thomas readies the gavel. Both large
and small works will be up for auction with a limited number of
outright s~les during the day-long auction in Ben Brown's restaur-
ant. The event will raise funds for the hospital. BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466
JM.....,, Mt•tlflW 16. l'J• I I'-1a
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The Laguna Line ·"~·!\ 4-
European Wanderers
'Wee Bit' Homesick
N
PARTLY BUSINESS, partly vacation and entirely sentimental,
a month's vacation in Europe took Doug and Sally Reeve back to their
native land and then some.
Major attractions for the Art Colony couple were London where
Doug's father was a 25-year partner of Charles B. Cochran, Britain's
lop showman, and Lucerne, his second hof!"letown.
For Sally, the Festival of Arts' publicity gal, perhaps the most
significant iournev was a visit to Bou'rnemouth where she was born.
arid \vhere She and her mother were involved in that city's famous Mu·
sic Festival -the largest such event in the world.
Gone just over a month. the Reeves \vere homesick for La guna
in Europe, but, as Europeans, are a "wee bit" homesick for their native
continent now.
Warm sunshine every day in London made the trip a treat, and
a leisurely pace made the overall vacation in England, France, Ger·
many, Austri.a and Italy a joy.
Their favorite city? Lucerne, th ey both agree. with the clean-
liness, ~fficiency and horiesty of the Swiss making the overall country
also the favorite on their map.
A BE LATED press bouquet to Mrs. Thomas J. Fletcher, South
Coast Community Hospital's hard·working press chairman. Virginia
garnered the top award as outstanding publicity chairman at the sixth
annual Public Relations Workshop at the Disneyland Hotel.
IC efforts in , publicizing her auxiliary's many money-making
events are any indication, her beautiful marble trophy should be at
least three times its siae.
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Fa-milies Benefit from Coffee Garden
ARTFUL DINING -Las Buenas Amigas has open-
ed its charming San Jaan Capistrano Coffee Garden.
·Brushing up the menu are (left to right) the Mmes.
Claude John, Ronald Birtcher and Luther Myhro.
Information on service or wall space for artists may
be obtained from Mrs. Birtcher.
San J u a n Capistrano's
newest addition, the El Paseo
R!al Coffee. Garden, has ex·
tended its menu and hopes to
extend its clientele.
Located in the complex
across from El Adobe, the cof·
fee garden is a mixture of
delightful outdoor and indoor
dining imd ·art gallery space
designed to boost the work of
area artists.
Us~ brick patios, bright
floral landscaping in borders,
hanging baskets, f o u n l a i n
areas and colorfully set tables
make the garden a favorite '
respite for coffee breaks,
luncheon or early afternoon
snacks.
The coffee garden. operated
by members oC Las Buenas
Amigas AuxiJiary to Family
Service, is open from 10 a.m.
until 3 p.m., Tuesday through
Friday.
Volunteers work twice a
month serving plain and.
flavored hot coffee, hot Danllih
pastries, soup and sandwichet
in order to raise fWKis fo'i-~anUly Service,_ a nauon!J:
organization dedicated t o
building a strong, healil>y
'IOCi~ty.
Las Buenas Amigas is one Of
five auxiliaries supportlig the
Tustin center which providell
family COU{lseling service with
cases handled by trained
social workers.
Sales Pitch Rings a Discordant · Note for Saddened MotQer
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am glad you
printed the ~1etter f~om the "."'oman who
had had a miscarriage at five months.
She urged you to educate the ignorant
fools who ask embarrassing questions
(such as, "Was it a boy or a girl?"). Now
~pe you will print my letter.
I had a prematW'e baby (seven
nths) and she lived only·24 hour's. Five
d s after I retllrned from the hospital, a
c ul voice on the telephone con·
g tulated me on the new baby. The
r wing day a photographer came to tlf front door with a camera -he
Wf:lted to take pictures. .
~Us from insurance companies, diaper
services. baby furnfture stores and toy
companita drove me crazy. 1 wa1 born·
barded by offers for gifts in the mail. T
became to depressed 1 could barely do
my housework.
I know these companies are trying to
get business, but why can't they at least
check to learn If the baby lived before
they begin to hound people? Or better
yet, why aren't the hospital records: kept
private? This leaking or informal.ion
should be stopped. Get ~Y. Ann, ttiere's
work to be done. -BEEN THERE, TOO
DEAR TOO: I acree. bat don't blamt
fte hospitals. They do not leak the In-
formation to eommertlal <t•mpanies.
Blrllis are • matter o( public record.
Anyone can gel them.
A check ibould be madt to le1ra If
there 11 a baby Ill lbe house before the
• promoters descend. It can be clone
taelfully 1nd llstefally -ud I strongly
recommend It.
DE.\R READERS: Hert. ls a Confldtn·
tial to the hunitreds who wrote to express
surprise or disappointment thal I am not
a Christian : Jn a recent response I said.
'·As a nonChristlan who rt c e Ives
(Mrs. A.) whom I've known for many ·
years. has been stealing things out or
the homes of her.friends -mine included.
At first I thought I must be imagining
th ings but now I'm certain my suspicions
are correct. Another woman In our club
has spoken to me about this friend also.
thousandg of Christmas cards every year
l do not resent the religious messages -
etc." J'w8S disturbed by the number of '
readers who don't !mow there are other The items Mrs. A has lifted were noL
religions beside · Christianity and equate-very valuable -the most costly was a
0 nonChri§tlan'' with COm'°unist, Atheist pair or S20 earrings .. But l'm terribly
and AntiGod . My religious faith Is .upset because J beJieve. she is sick and
Judaism, the basic concept of wblcb ii might get intO serious trouble.
. One God.' ,.. My husband says, "Keep · quiet. Just
· ,. lock up thing1 when she comes . over.''
DEAR ANN LANOERS : My problem I! This approach might not be the act of
too hot to handle because of the size of kindness he intend! it to be. By k"ping
this town and the prominence of the sllent. I could be uowltUngly enCOW'ilging
person involved. A very fine woman her to conVnue stealing.' Will you advise
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me? -CONCERNED FRIEND
DEAR CONCERNED: Tell the womu
at once that you are aware o( ber com.
pulslou. Be gentle ud aonactuaiory. Let
her know you believe 1be ii Ill and ta
uetd o'r-Ptotesslonal help. Jn tbe meu-
Ume. ke~p Items lhat mill>! tempi lier
locked up wben 1be ts a tue!lt bl your
bome.
ts alcoholism a cfjsease? How can the
1'lcoboUc be treated! ls there a cure?
Read the booltlet "Al~llsm -Hope
and Help," by Anri Landers. Enclose 3$
cents In coln wllb yow-request and •
Jong, stamped, oelf-lldcfreaaod envelope ill
care of !he DAILY PlWI'.
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8.AlLY PILOT Monday, Ho¥tmbtt 16, 1970
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Star Trek Reveals E.arthly Influence
By JODEAN HASTINGS
Of IM Dt1tr ...... Steff
U ihe preparta a aounnet
dinner with style and flair,
chances are she's a Cancer.
Llbra.s art the peacemakers,
trying to br!ni harmony to the
universe.
These and other insights into
personality a n d character
trails were disclosed by ca,..
roll Right;er when ht spoke to
members of the Lido lsle'
Woman's Cit.lb and their
guests.
The syndiCtted columnist
and astrologian for many
celebrities be1an his career 1s
a lawyer from a family of
lawyers. For 14 years he
researched astrology trying to
disprove that tbe planets did
exert influe~ over people .
"When people art: ignOrant
or ..... thlng they condemn It
because they .(IOO•t under-
stand," he . n!a&oned.
Before offering b r i e f
personality sketches for each
sign he explained that people
bom .on tbe cusp (when ooe
sign is coming In and the other
leaving) will pick up qualities
or both.
"It coud be dynamite -like '
miling nitroglycerin." ·
More 1>tJOple are born under
the aigri of Aries than any
other but there. are fewer in
the Hall of Fame because,
although Arians like to jump
in and do things, they don't
like to finish what they start.
Taurus attracts money, and
people in .this sign handle lt u
well as they handle all sllua·
Uoru. Practical aod
deliberate, they a1ao are
lovers or beauty and will fill
their homes with art objects
as the. late William R. Hearst.
did at San Simieon.
·•A Taurean will mull over a
subject but once he has made
up his mind -that'1 it,"
claims Right.er.
People born under the sign
of Gemini can do anyth.tng
which combines mental and
manual dexterity. They make
the best saJesmen and are
quick at repartee. They like
short cuts, so they never do
the same thing twice in the
same way.
Moon cbildrm (Cancertw)
are R1111Uve, W&Pm and
magnetic, and 1ood. about the ,
home. Righter es:plained that
lnvarllbly. lf he enjQyed a good
meal and checked out Ute
cook, the person waa born
under this sip.
Cancer men make excellent
merehand!S<n like Marshall
Field, Rocffleller and Wan·
namaker.
Leol rtsPond more to P!'alse
than any other sign, arid the
utrologer adviJed " o me n
with Leo husbands to be lavlah
with complimfntl." Never pet~
ty, Leos are very romantic
and have to have aHection.
They love heme and flmlly
more than any of the other
algns exctpt Canciier.
· Antileptic and analiealc was
the way Rl&hter deaaibed
Virgo. Pillow-nutfen,
·ltralgbtenen and ta b I t ·
dusters, they want everything
perfect and can't stand to tee
111\)'thlng wrong.
Llbru Uke to ,.. both oldea io aoythln(, and u· a Libra'•
husband waa hit by a car ahe
probably • would rationalize
that the driver's wife had 81·
ed him a bad pot of coffee that
morning.
They like to balan<e and
Migh and then do what they
want to do but with ch.um,
magnetism and harmony.
If yoo get into IQ argument
with a Scorpio, 1ive in,
arbitrate or get a lawyer,
Righter advises. Forceful and
. positive, they make ucellent
generals because they know
what they wan! to do and do
it.
Sqltlartanl are dependent
on being indopendent. Dln<t.
blunt and outapoken, they
don't mla a Point. And people
a!Way1 know where they llland
with thooe bmn under thJa
si&n.
Sqltlari1m usually have 1
difficult time 1f they continue
to live near where they were
born and he suuest..s they
would get along best n they move far from their pllce of
birth.
Scrappy Capricorns • r e
almost always conaervatlve.
They like the atatus quo and
don't like chqe. 'Ibey have a
flair for politics and a great
i.
Wldentancllng or W11t!d al·
fairs. President Nixon is 1
Cap.rlcorn. Also more
Academy Award winners wwe
born under thls than any other
slgn, Rll)lter clain1'.
Al'tlon is the key phraae ol
Aquariam wbo are autioinl
and frienc!iy.
''This age is the time to do
what you want to do; get bwly
and do it,11 he admonished .
Pisceans ...are the acrapbook
of the zodiac because they
contain elements U all tht
other signs. 'Ibey are · in tune
with what's going en and have
·a facility for reducing facts to
an exact formula. Many
artists and business leaden
are born under thit lign in.
eluding Einitein aDd Nijinsky~
No Stays "Barred • Gift Ideas
Suggested
Delegates
Gathering Corset Loosens Wa I let Delegates from 811 SOUtbern
87 ERMA BOMBECK
I have miatrusted Annie
Huck ever since tbe day lbe
invited me over for coffee and
advised, "Wear clean UD·
de.rwear."
. AT
-WIT'S-
' END
When I arrived, the.re were
ei&bt cars ln her driveway, an
overweight aaleapenon in her
Uving room who whipped out
an order book and sold me an
orthopedic airset.
That wq Annie's first in a
series of "borne parties."
Encouraged by her success
{she ttceived a nannl!!) Jam·
mie pillow for her bed) she
Ukiah Rites
went on to bolt a line of
parties that i e I I the
neighborhood up to their
checkbooks in jewek'y,
dresaes, toys, sUver, closet ac-
cesaorlet, greeting cards, par·
ty chocolates and cosmetlcS.
One afternoon she called and
said, "I want you and your
husband to come to d!Mer
Saturday night." .
•
111 cin't afford it," 1 said.
"What kind 'of a crack ii
that?"
"Really, Annie," I said,
"since I've betn cominc to
yoor houle, I've bad to clip
coupon1, get a part-time job,
breed my dog and cancel my
operaUoo. I .c·annot buy
another sfnJle item."
"Did I ask you to buy
anything?" she said, sniffing.
"I am sorry," I said.
"Forgive me for being ao
suspicious."
Annie had spared no ex·
Harborite to Marry
t.lmtng to Chrlllmu shop Calilornlan chapters -w l 11
pense:. Tbere were t 11 h t 1n their own garages will be gathe• tomorrow in t b 1
couples of · us seated a.round members of the Wednesday Mission Inn, Riverside ftlf' a
four card tables with plnk Momin.-Club of Costa Mesa conference of the southern
tablecloths and silver can-during a brwich and meeting councils of the Daughters o[
delabra. Two men in navy on Wednesday, Nov. ll, in the the American Revolution. Balboa Bay Club. blazers with dragon emblems Host chapter members will According to Mrs. Louis greet the Olll'c:•· at IO a.m.1nd served roast beef, baked K-·l -•·• th .--~ u .... , ui .... nnan, e program following will be worksbops, a
potatoes, fresh vegetables and will Illustrate "how an im· ge,neral meeting, lunch and a
bot rolls. aginative touch can turn talk by Wllliam Pena Mott Jr.
Just as J started to relu, ~~ug~~ly anything -into some-of the State ,Department of
one of" tbem appeared al my Parks and Recreatio•.
elbow and llid, "How were Plans far a Christmas Hon.1i~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; _,. vegetables?'' day diruter dance , taking place 1 ~ .. -Dec. 5 in the clubhouse, are llAUTIFUL Ci.OTHD • • ,
Only Jllgtitty UMll "Wonderful," I said. being finalized. A luncheon
"1ben you did notice bow ud gift exchange are planned IY "" Who cen'I betr • M -t.olce Jn Ille u'"' draa. the juices were preserved?" for the Globetrotters Section
"Ob, Y"·" on Dec. 11 in the Saddleback
Their tMt -Y-G.ala
I M Herbert L d THI SICOND TIMI AIOGND •-at '-because or the M. rs. ynes an 4'I I ."-JI CNI ~
'0 IA Mrs. Clive Schultz are the o.eio lipte i'-~
specill. v~lsh u...imil Ind thelrlr~chal~nne~n~ . .i··;_ ........ ~~~~~~~~~ preparaUon, e 1 e .
"Oh?" · t said putting my\
rork down slowly.
He whipped a small booklet
out of his pocket that read,
"Pots Are People" and con·
tinued, "Later on when we
show slides of the cookware,
you can follow along paint by
point.· Or you are free to U·
amine the display in the
kitchen while we are serving
dessert. Naturally, we don't
want to tum a fun evening into
HAVING HEMUNE PROBLEMS?
The •ntwt r i1 timpl, -l•t u1 1how you how lo
•nit your own p1nh 111it 011 • "Brott.e1" •nittin~
1"tchint. Com• in, you'll be d1li9ht1d lo 111111
, how quic.ly you ten de it.
THE KNIT WIT
Seuth CM1t Plua
LOWEil MAU ~,... '""" ~!It's COSTA Ml!!SA Pr!. s.&2'lt
Tapestries Enhance 'Noche'
Air Force Lt. Milton Arthur Berkeley. She Is an air line a market place, do we? So, if
Reimers Jr. o< Newpart Beach stewardess. you will just give me your
will claim Beverly Ann Bishop Her fiance, son of Mr. an'd phone number, I will call you
as his bride durinJ ceremonies Mrs. Milton Reimers 0 f and make an appointment to
to be conducted in January in Newport Beach, is an alumnus show the cookware at your 1 Artist ?\\rs. Jo (Esther) Dendel, a member of Torana Art League displays
one of th~ league's tapestries which wi 11 decorate the waUs o! Villa de! Sol in
·1. Fullerton for Santa Ana :Ebell's Noche de las Estrellas party on \Vednesday,
Nov. 18~ Sponsored by the Adrians Sec tion and the league the event will bene-
j fit the Hemophilia F0undation of Orange County.
Ukiah. of San Marino High School, convenience.'' ,
News or the forthcoming Pasadena City College and the All eyes were upon Annie
event was announced during a University of Puget Sound. He who whispered, "Look, gang,
family party in the Redwood played vars.ity tennia In high the door prize is a fiuted
Valley home of Mr. and Mrs. schooJ and college, is affiliated gelatin mold shaped like a
HSI Bishop, parent!· of the with Sigma Chi, aad now is vilentine." • ' bride-to-be. stationed at Castle Air Force It looked ridiculous on An·
~ l Iron Curtain Rises
l President
Honored
Miss Bishop is a graduate of.-;;;B=..,.='=M=er=ced=. =====:";;:l•;'•::;;:h•;;:ad;;:·====== Sant.a Rosa Junior College and 1r
the Univ'ersify of California,
•
[ · Speaker Tours Russia Series Begins .
A farewell luncheon will be An eight to ten week lieries
• : A tour of cath~ala, palaces
.. and aalleras in Russia as weli
: u 1 vis:it to the Kremlin is on
• • • . • . • • ' • • ' I i
I ' i ~ ~ .. • .. ~ ·1 ·1
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h
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EYES SOVIETS
0. W. Price
the agenda for members of staged by the Newport Harbor for expectant parents will begin at 7:30 p.m . Wednesday, tbe Laguna Beach Woman's Exchangettes at 11 a.m. Nov. IS, in the Huntington
Club at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, Wednesday, Nov. 18, in honor Beach home of Mrs. Thomas
Nov. 19. of outgoing president Mrs. Harris.
O. W. Price, a former or· Jack Dalbey. • Preparing Expect 1 nt
flcial of the U.S. Veteran's M H I K ·u Parents, a member group of rs. e en eever w1 open the Int~r atlonal Childbirth Administration, will present a her B lboa ho r the af a me or • Educati Association, i s slide lecture of his tour last fair. Mrs. Dalbey is moving SPonsoring the series in the
summer which covers with her family to Oahu, Lamaze method.
Hawaii. She planned to charter·i;:========~ll Germany, Hungary and a1 E1changettes Club there asl
Russia, enUUed Life Behind an 1uxili1ry to a newly Conned, 1 ~ll'lailiimaillili
the Iron Curtain. E1chaqe Club. I
Included in tbe talk will be aqjiO;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;o------
dMCription of the people,
economy and life under Com·
munl.!t rule as well as
numerous incidents he and his
wife Eliz.abeth ezperitnced
durint their vi.ail.
Also on display will be I by
10 pbo1o1Taph1 ln black and
wlllte which Price has tinted
in oil.
Proceeds from the lecture.,
'Nhidi li open to the public at
a 'COil ol It, will ht used for
new kHchen ettuipmenl.
MA.L ·AnncMn
HEARIN~ AIDS
C~ .-.n1 Alftlllllk'""' MO SALISMl ll
3409 E. COAST HWY.
CO~ONA OEL . MAR
,... ... ,,e1 ......
675-3133
Holiday Cooking Tips
leeturing updeted Her itage
recipies and the easy electric
way to prepare them.
presented by
Southern Colifornia Edison Co .
FASHION ISLAND HOUSE
on the mall
Tonight (Monday) Nov. 16 -7:30 P.M.
Tuesday Nov. 17-10:30 A M.
----FASHJU ISLAND
>fllW:tOllT OllllTllJl
• music
FREE CONDITIONING
TREATMENT
WITH TOUI Nm SHAM'°O & SIT
l'1mtu1 llUtll c•lll•n« -n• ,._lthlll', 19vttlltl' 1111r.
l'M..,.11• /!air ti Rd ,,..'91111 H•w trw Wllfl ttlr 111111· ...... -~ IOll1 1111 c•llflff'tl,
MOlf.·TUIS.·W•O.
SHAMPOO, SET & CONDITIONER s211
'"'"' """ ..... ""'"' HAIRCUT St &o
A,,oln1mtntl
Wl4c.m1
I UI N*I
Alwtyl l'l••tarr
FALL PERM SPECIAL
S 15.00 loitelJ11 WO'e NlilKel411J $845
l•y-Cef•, '•11t·l9'tl"f, lntthfttl .. , '
Crowning Glory,
(fonnPrly caprice Coltfurrs)
SOUTH COAST PLAZA J,7 L 17tti ST., COSTA MIU
low•r l1v1l-N1xl lo S11r1 ..... 141-fflt
rtrte .. 146-71 16 Op111 Evenl11t1 A Sulld1y
Opert E~1ni"9'
• ' I
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I I ;
• ' .
' ' ..
' I
j
I
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,,
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Riles, Rafferty Foe
To Address Branches
Dr. Sylvia Tucker, one of
eigbt candidates for the (lffice
oC ~uperintendent of Public
Jn.st.ruction in the primary
e.lectlon, will be guest speaker
for the Newport-Costa Mesa
and HunUngton B e a c h
branches o! the American
Associatjoo of U n i v e ri1 t y
Women.
'Ibe joint meeting will take
place Wednesday, Nov. 18, Jn
the Newport Riviera Pavilion,
beginning with a coffee hour
at 7:30 p.m.
Dr. Tucker, whose topic will
be Mind Has N(l Se1, is a l)f"()o
Prize-winning Pianist
Gives Laguna Recital
American pianist Thomas Concert Association recital at
Schumacher will "appear in a 8 s Fr.d N 20 :I p.m. on 1 ay, ov. .
in Laguna Beach High School
auditorium.
The gifted artist, whose
achievements include Wiruiing
first prize in the Busoni
C001petition in Bolzano, Italy:
the Frank D am ro sch
Scholarship; the Harold Bauer
Award and the Morris Loeb
Memorial Prize, was reared in
Butte, Moat.
fes.M>r of educallon at United
States International Untversi·
ty, Cal Western caippu.s.
She earned her bachelors
degree in business educaUon
and physical education at the
University of Northern Iowa
and her PhD at UCLA.
An expttieneed w or I d
traveler, she directs her cf·
!orts toward understanding
ilnd helping others to un·
derstand problems which she
feels are "shaping our
destiny."
Dr. Tucker has serwd as an
advisor to the California Com·
mission on the Status of
\Vomen and has appeared on
several televi5ion shows.
She lectures widely on the
subject oC women in the cur·
rent age and the nature of
women, and has done research
on masculine-feminine role9
and cultural expectations.
Th e Huntington B e a c h
Branch has announced study
group meetings for tomorrow
arid Monday, Nov. 23.
•
Show-stealing Dress
I
Shannon
Rodee"
for
Jerry
Silverman
NA-2032-2
\
MondlJ', November 16, 1970 DAILY PILOT Ji)
Horoscope " .,
Leo: Get 1Overa11 View ;;
TUESDAY
NOVEMBER 17
By SYDNEY OMARR
Altrolol)' helps •• to be
wb.t we are-it does not tr)' lo
make as aomethln1 we are
not. A1treloCY II a ~alaable
key to sreater s elf·••
dentladfng. If, lndeed, t.hl1
w11 all It ever did, It would be
doing • great deal. But
tbroagh astrology we also are
able to perceive future trends
aad cycles. Asb'ology helps 111
to .be at the r)&bt place at tbe
rilht tlm~od t o com·
prebend wbere we are 1olng
and ··by.
ARIES (March 2l·April 19):
Be ipdependent without Ir·
ritaUng one close to you.
There are ways to get what
you want-wltboot appearing
overly aggressive. Don't at,..
tempt to be your own lawyer.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Avoid trying to do too mucb at
once. RelaUve may throw
IOf'lle sharp restorts in your
direction\ Maintain 1ense of
humor, Don'( coinpound error.
Realize · some now a r e
BUpersensltive.
ping. Those who really care do
not require elaborate settlng.
Realize lbis and act ac-
cordingly.
CANCER (June ii.July 22):
, Sudden changes may up&et
schedule. Move with the tide.
Be aware (lf subUe nuances.
Check details. You gain only 1[
observant, 1bof'(lt.lgb approach
lo people, snuauons t s
necessary.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22): Ap-
ply light t()tJCb. Obtain hint
from Taun11 message. Social
activity favored. L e a v e
serious and detail work to
others. Gain overall view.
VIRGO (Aug. 2J.Sepl 22):
Protect possessions, assets.
Tendency is to misplace or
Jose valuables while in transit.
Accent harmony within family
circle. Express yourself in
diplomatic but dramatic man·
ner.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22):
Unorthodox approach is fac·
voted. Routine changes: plans
are revised. Keep (ln t.Op of
special situation. Not wise now
to delegate duties. Others may
not share your (9rtv:lctiob5-0r
d~ication .
SCORPIO IOct. 23-Nov. 21):
.
..... L Get ID touch wlO>
auoclate who ts at a dlstance.
SAGITfABIUS (Nov, ii.
Dec. 21): u yoo permit .,,...
tJona to above logic aside, the
cost could be steep. Don't
hang on to Intolerable sltua~
tion-<1r relationship. Permit
·no person to use you as door
mat.
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jlll.
19): If you are depending on
word from the top, change
your plam. Neeessary for yoa.
to tie loose ends. Put lolelber
puzzJe pieces. No one else Is
going to do it for yoo.
AQUAIUUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Not easy now to-Ae
motives, actions. Best to be
receptive. Permit mate «
partner to have uy l CCJDo L
ceming financial m a t t~
Don't provoke argument. s~
clear of legal entanglement.
PISCES (Feb. 19-M>rc~
20): Get expert advice befoN
signing over ~sessions •qt
valuables to any person et
group. S o m e hanky~
C<>Uld be taking pla!"'· Pro~
yourself in clinches: Ask q~
tions anti obtain answers . ..
' . AD alumnus of both Manhat.
ta• and Juilliard sch&ols of
music, Schumache·r h a s
performed as guest S-Oloist
with major orchestras at
home and abroad and has
complQted extensive tours of
Poland and Japan.
The (irsl will be a meeting
(lf the Beleaguered Earth -
Can Man Survive group,
chaired by Mrs. Edward
Kerins. Mrs. Paul Silvus,
distict director of Orange
County California Garden
Club, and Bob Young, an
organic fertilizer represen-
tative, will be guest speakers.
For the slimmest dress going choose this Jerry
Silverman design with detachable bias collar and
cuffs and the stage will be set for show-stealing
days and nights.
,.. GEMINI (May 21..June 20):
Temptation is to be ex·
travagaot. You would be wise
to dO sdme comparison shop.
Unusual bappeiting o c e u r s
backstage. One who I s
generally conservative acts in
eccenlrie manner. You will
need friends behind t b e
Admission is by membership
only with limited reciprocal
5eating for members ol other PIANIST Community Con<:<rt associa-
Thom11 Schum1ch1r tions.
Everyone!-<eessertec/'
Party's a Mouthful
~1rs. Henry Krueder wii1
host the 9:30 a .m. meeting in
her Huntington Beach home.
' The second ~ting, plan-
ned by the Academic Com·
munity group under the direc.
tion of Mrs. James McComb,
will gather In the chairman's
Huntington Beach home at 8
p.m. lo hear a talk by a
representative of the Women'a
Opportunity Center at UCI.
Lutheran Rites
The original was sh·~wn in a brown silk and wool
with white collar and cliffs decorated. with a jewel ..
ed. button. NA-2032--2 cut Misses sizes 10-18.
Size 12 requires approximately 2 1/4 yards of
54" fabric and 5/8 yard of 54" fabric for contrast.
Fabric suggestions: r aw silk, silk and wool, linen,
cotton. pique.
This precut, preperforated Spadea Designer
Pattern produces a better fit. Order Ni\-2032-2 give
size, name, address and zip. '2 postpaid. Address
.SPADEA, Box N Dept. CX-15, Milford, N.J. 08848.
Pattern Books py classification: Hali Sizes & Ma ..
ture Sizes -$1 postpaid.
You really shouldn't -but in this case
you should.
The case in point Is having another des-
sert, as members of the Albert Sitton Chil-
dren's Guild and their guests enjoy a d essert
tasting session at 12:30 p.m. on Wednesday,
Nov. 18, in Peek's Colonial Terrace Room.
Diane Eppele Marries . \
Under the title of Dessert Bridge Bene-
fit, members will bring a favorite dessert and
its recipe with the recipes to be sold for 25
cents eaC:b . Bridge and other games will.be
played.
The guild was organized to meet needs
of temporarily homeless children in' the Al·
bert Sitton Home, a county institution:
In a ddition to fund-raising projects, mem ..
bers give ;FridaY. night partie~ in the home,
present each child with a Christmas present,
offer classes in crafts and homema·kJng. as~
sist with school work and read to preschool
children.
Hospital
Toured
A tour of Orange County
Heritage
Cooking
Reviewed
.MRS. JOHANSEN
Texas Home
Starbrights
Take Office
Ot.ildren'• Hospital Will follow Miss Carol Heinz. home
the 10 a.m. meeting of the New officer11 of Starl>righl
Southern Orange County economist f<r the Edison Co., Club will be installed during
Alumnae of Alpha Phi on Wed· will present a program for lhe luncheon meeting In t h e
nesday, Nov. 18, in the home lluntington Beach Alumnae Newport Beach MR sonic
or Mrs. James Florance of Association of De.Ha Gamma Temple at noon on Wed·
Orange. sorority on Wednesda y, Nov. ncsday. iVov. 18. Cardi~c equipment hrl~r J!. Taking the gavel from relir·
O IOC is the major P i an· 1 H ·ta ing president Mrs. William ·~ropy of the alumnae group. Amer ca n er I ge: u• d Johnson will be Mrs. James The Orange County organiza# Thanksgiving an Christmas, Graham. Members of her
tion received a second place a slide presentation, will be board are the !'¥Imes. Elkan
trophy during the national delivered by Miss Heinz dur· Ragan, vice president :
'*1.vention in Dallas for Its ef· ing the 7:30 ~ting in the Edward Hobel, secretary, and
forts with the '6range County We.sbninster home of Mrs. Albert Kuhn. treasurer.
Heart Association. Following installation, mem·
Following the CHOC tour, Larry J. Hudack. bes will discuss the annual
members will return to the All..Dell.a Gamma alumnae Clrristmas party and projects
Faith Lutheran C h u r c h ,
Huntington Beach was the set·
ting for the double ring nup-
tials linking Diane Sue Eppele
and John Lyndon Johansen.
The Rev. James De.Lange
directed the vow ~xchange for
the daughter of Mr. and fof.rs.
Fred E. Eppele of Fountain
Valley and the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Joh1t J. Jobanse• of Hun·
tington Beach.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride asked her
sister, Mrs. William Stading to
be her matron of honor.
Bridesmaids were M r s .
Michael Husted, Miss AMe
Gsborn and Miss Chris Mer·
rill ; flower girl was JenFJiier
Gill, and ill charge of the
guest book was Miss Jack.le
Andrews.
Altending his brother as
best man was Jame s
Johansen. while usbers were
Jtobert Mitchel, ~aul Keohane
and Larry Clugston. Kenneth
Black, lhe bride's nephew ~s
the ring bearer.
Both the bride a R d
bridegroom are Founta i n
Valley High School graduates.
She attends a modelJng
6Chool and he studied at
Orange Coast College.
The bridegrcxm now is serv·
Ing in the Air Force, stationed
in San AJ'ltonio, Tex., where
the riewlyweds will make their
home.
Christmas Is Love
w ~oL•-l.
Party Sets -Candles
MEMORY LANE
HARIOR CENTER e COSTA MESA
··have you discovf'red us yi!l" Florance home for lunch serv. are welcome to attend. scheduled for the new year.
ed by the Mmes. Edwin Rose,• ~::;~;~~~~==~~~~~~~~~;;;;~;::;;:;::==;:;::;:;::;:;::;:;::;:;::;:;::;:;::;:;::;:;::;:;::;:;::;:;::;:;::=~ Calvin Crum and Fran kl
4
Edwards.
Attorney
To Speak
Meeting for dinner at 7 p.m.
Wednesday. Nov. 18, In the
Colony Kilchen restaurant will
be members (lf the Harbor
Area Legal Secret1 les
Association.
Arthur N. Hews. attorney.
will discuss aspects o f
personal Injury cases.
Mrs. Gilbert N. Mueller Is
accepting reservations.
.WEIGHT•.
WATCHERS. •
Somt 11lklng, aomt ll1t1nlng 1n(f-
1 progr1m th11 workL t•
\
HOLIDA y· PERM, STYLE,
CUT AND TREATMENT
2 0 .. 00 compl~ie
Imagine, you11 haVe a Helene Curtis permanen t
wove, Jtyle, cut, .hampoo sot and halC..:,,-ment
oll for one very special price. While you re In our
Beauty Studio • , • a sk. obout our Christmas gift
leltet'. You can give a Chri>lmos gift of booutyl '
Visit Ol1t Elimbedi ,A.rden ltd Door foclol Room ••• fioY9 a
foc.e treolment. •.go away wlh a beautiful .few inaQ.up~
10.00
Beauty Studio, tiR ~ nce;Pt Mal'lno
PIUNTFJI
OUTING FIJINNEL
Cuddly soft and worm for sleepwoor, ·designs
for tots 'n teens, for moms too!
greet for crHpers; crib blenkets
VALUES TO 59c YARD
•II cotton
36'' wide
:).. 1uer:_. washebl•
MINI PRINTS· TEEN TIME COLORS
The ab sol ute most in neat designs, specially for
poosont dresses, frilly bJs>usos.
PERMA-PRESS MACHINE WASH
evrll rayon/cotton
44" / 45'' widths
JACQUARD WEAVE
Beautiful colors on • lull bolt,· first quality
double knit.
Ealy to s_ew 1 never n e e d s to be ironed,
machine washable.
Never bag -never sag.
for now sewing[
r1yon, cotton, nylon,
•crylic
IT AUAN TWEEDS
72 Inch wool & ra y0n
HOl:IDAY RL-T
loo-/. wool
FLANNELS
$6.91 YD. VALUE acrylic wool
' : •
• . • • '• ··-. . -. -; -. • ..
• • ·-,• • •
' •
' KNIT JERSEYS
IA@@ ;;:: ~@@· L1t yd. width•
yd.
5611/SI"
wld•
UPHOLSTERY FABRICS
wldo ra11110 e huvy quality
Values from
3.98 to 5.98 yd.
54" wide
:HOUS'EoF F8BR1CS
'""c:.. Pt--.lrlll.t •• s." 01.,. fwy, " ... ,.__,,,h •• iristol
C.... M.....-141-1116 SW. Ml 14.l·ll'l ' . 01•••• ... r M.tt-Ot•"t•tfrt orpo '"' H,,.,.,, ..... ,.,_ C.ttr=lo '•'"'•at Sto11te11 hht1111 IJ6-JJJ4 .._ Pft mt.JU
1 llll l!OCHURl-CALl lll·llO! "''"l .. te« ... ......_.,, ••• ,)
H11•tl"'"9 C...r-E411tfo,. 1t lo•c.h ll'ltl. \
Ne'1P°rt •I Fashio" l1land Ne wport Canter e 6-44-2200 e Mon., Thur~., F,ri, I 0:00 til 9:)0; Other Dey• 10:00 till l :lO IL.-------------=--------+---------' l
-
••
'
Jf' WLY PILOT
DICK TRACY
TUMILIWEEDS
MUn AND JEFF
JIJl!T WM&N t ""6
dUTJ!'IG c90QO lr:r $ll.F
"T'Mli WINTIR 6£TIS IN
ANO l'M STUCK UP IN MY ru:JOMI .
\,
ACROSS ~I Sy1ttms of
ft ll glous
1 Ship b11rer
1truct11'1 SO Collrgt S F• subject:
E11-rntt Abbr. 10 Produced 51 Hiving
14 Slctntss • n1sty 15 l11t tptl dispos ition : or sibH Sl Attacks front ·1• loN of • a dlstanct
: •••IMlll SS Ptltlng :17 c.,,lldlan with ston1s .. Indian 59 Tht 1r11t :11 Old•• with btyond :
• 1cytht and 2 words • hourgl111: 6111111111 2 words 62 River er 10 Trans· '2D Up untll Europe portatlon
ru1w 6) Heath genus mtel lum: U Fort· 64 Wilhtrtd 2 words
,
Wll.l.1.l:!JGEJ .• "1lWE V\Q"4 OUR
Hl6"EST HO~!
11!ATro;fl".A CHEER
'IOU UPI
ll/16fl0
34 Author
of noted rtftrtnc.t ·~k
,
0,1*1'$
JUST
FJNf! ••
PERKINS
ly Tom K. 'Ryan
NaN I 60T NOTH IN' Af AJ.1.
"m LOOK FORWARPTO !!
.:w=.. . .
By Al Smith
----ln---1
MISS PEACH
· ord1ln1d 65 Audition 11 Actor
23 Crttlc god 66 Fort11lc1tlla. Tamlroff
37 Insolent
39 As ian
¥1gtllb1t :
2 wotds 42 Ship
• • P.T.A. ME£T11-.)G ·---24 Fruit 67 DomtS• 12 Fem inine
•15 Marlntr's t1c1t1d tllle dlrtctlon 1) l.oolced %1 Anthr1c ll1: DOWN O\ter 2 wotds 19 Thorough· )2: Contlntfll: 1 fltlatlon , fires
Abbr. to S[>!td of 21Goes1str1y
SJ lartltr's sound 24 Concerning
• accessory 2: Fl1ld1: • 1 certain
35 \lo lltY Latin ehUrCh ''Appear 3 Pudding 25 Super ior JI Klnd of lngrtdlent race of
t tllp1a 4 SOund of gods: Myth. 40 [bro, laug~tt 2& K Ind of
T11us, ate. 5 Insults l11lh1r 41 Ptiftct 6 Exe.Hnot 27 Corntrtd 43 Icy 1111111btrihlps 28 Apertures ~5 COnttnd. -7 Prtpmltlon 29 Martini
46 S~o ... ltr I ctrr1111n lngrtdltl'll wunl19 ertla1111tlon 30 Shun
"'•vlttsi 9 lfttflgtnt ll Sufftrs
'2 wotds person deprivation
• '
44 Colorless
47 G1m1I Abdtl-
49 Stcur1 lor
1 tau'I 51 Ar1 blan city :5f Product ol partial
combusllon 53 Sare 3~ Plural noun suffix 55 Settlad up
56 ConctpUon
37 lllan's nlclr:n1111e
58 Exultallon
60 BtfOft: Prefix ..
•
_..._,...._ .. ---~~l~HT't To Pie:
T14tf
f>OPULATION
EXPLOSJOH
MD~ TO
OIA\. Wini IT !
UJt.Gt'.~T !
Sl!lllOUS' !!
' .
STEVE ROPER
T~ Ollt.16/IJG
DANCCRS HAVE
TAKEIJ IA/KE
AWO Tl6ER ON
A SH(JRT·CVT,
PAST Ii.IV
I ARCHEOlC61CAl ·01G·-
-·
•
•
. ' --
.•
•
• '
By Charles Barsotti
GORDO
MOON MUWNS By Ferd Johnson ----
-·· · .. ---·
JI 1•
By MeU ,
11·~· I
DENNIS THE MENACE
By Saunders and Overgard
r-
. . ·'
' •
• . •
l
•
TV DAILY LOG
MONDAY
NOVIMIEll 16
m ...W f"" how (C) (90) !.>I
MIMlll b iptd1I telo rum.
m -ol(C)~O) -I
Ill • ..... "' u.i., (30)
ai.> Mrcueuto v1rc1u Sllow (30>
1:45 O @ Cl) a> Th1 Y1nin1 ltWJffl
((:) {60) "At the Ed&• of llle
Ni1ht."
1:00 1J II& News (C) ( Jerry Dunphy, t :OO II 5) (jJ MiJMrry •.F.D" (C)
0 ICMBC NIWM ct .(CJ (~) Tom (30) Milli• dreams that somethint
Snyder. terrible will happen to Sim ' ind
8 Tht Allen Show (C) (90) G111sb: How11d Gil the ir fishlnt trip, end
Dt.al Arnaz Sr., J1cll V1l1ntl, Jen)' b1p them not to ro.
Celllns. Vir1lnl1 D'Btltn 11\d 7·re•r· D Chrysler Presents The
·Old lt1H1ri Slnl'f Chlttl Col1lto. * BOB HOPE SPECIAL :Mn. Johnny C1non 111nnounoer.
• O a!> (I) Ill NFL ""°"' N/lll · With An :Fjetball CC> (Z% hr) st. Loubi Ctr· ALL-STAR CAST
--~•I• •t D1H1s Cowbor•. D ~ (}) m I lflCL\L l lob HO!M
~II kt s .. rt (C) (30) '1h1 Glrll Show (C) (60) Bob ind his aunts,
from KAOS." Lucille Bill, Tom Jones, Denny
QI Tiii Aillbtollll (C) (30) Thomas ind Georre Burns, r1-tre-
1t1 lunous v1ud1viU1 acts or th• ~IB tt l011 1 Dltf (C) (60) ''For· put.
!IU. n1 City." --.. -8 Tiit Fuaitfvt. (C) (60) ''Thi Ivy .:i (C) (30) Mui:'
.. Pol10110u1 SntbL"
e "..., , .. HJ <3o>
........... (C)(!O)
...... " -(C) (30) l )lA ""' ftllllim' -htrkll
1:30. ClaN Ci•t1 (30)
ID no """ "" <Cl ~~ ""' Grt1l CUlno Robb~." P11t I. Tllt 11~111 1r1 ustd . Js pawns In t
ehtm• to rati.£. c11lno.
fll JoJa: Chtll Cooks (30) "Pekin1
Dutk # t" (Strits cone!u1io11) Julia
(j.hild is hostess.
..... ,_.,(C)
m LIZA MINELLI SINGS * Hits from New A & M Album, NEW FEELIN'
,• on DAVID FROST SHOW
m """' ""'J:<30> .. , ""' Priip1r KiUlna."
II ._lltlu (C) r) ''file Mind 0TM1n.~
IE) 30 Mlnota (C) ~~
EEi lntri11 (30)
Bi) H1tach1 {60)
9:30 U 9 (j) Doris Day (CJ (30) Doris
Mutin is taken into custody br
federtl 11enls who believe her to
be 1 fonlfn spy,
D N1111 (C) (30) Baxter Wint . • 'ho --(C) (30) J1<l .• l1th1m, Kim M1rrin1r. IB ,..,, Mi• (&O) "'Thi C.11 " t1iii Bashful Burro."
Ii) Fulfthol: dtl Anlor (30) t1.') Minlclle
1:15 IE) Mmia• Ill.._.. (C) (30)
l:<!Of)Cll '""'" -(C) ~0) t-.15D<HICil C!IT>oarto.i f..,(C) CJ m JflC NiJlltly Ntw1 (C) (30) • (lfi) "A Cly Ill CGncrlte." -
CJ W!lat'1 My Unt? (C) (30) II!) P1stor'1 Desk (C)
~ . . g) 1 LM lllCJ' (30) "The R!ca 10:00 B Qt m C.1111 lurittd lllow (t)
Visit Cub1... (6{)) M1rtfi1 1111)'1 Ind Roa M1rtil'I
Q) h lJt th• Cloct (C) (30) Jatll 1uist.
Nuz hosts. O @ @ m I '''""~ I Itek I m·
-
'Popcorn MaeJalne,' 'Dentist' . ... . .
Two Cans. of Gm·hag~ at Nifty Theater
By TOM TltUS
Of llM O•llY l"lltt Sllll
The avant' garde theater has
come a long way -slipped is
probably the better word -
from the pioneering o r
Pirandello and Ionesco. Today
the obscure mutterings -of
Pinter and the dreary drivel or
Beckett comprise the
vanguard of absurdist drama,
and their acceptance has in·
spired others of lesser creden-
tials to stake out new claims
further from the fronUers of
reason.
In today's theater· change,
often lamentably for its own
sake, is the order ,of the day.
The gloves are off and
an ything goes. There are no
forms or guidelines, only a
lemming-like rush toward the
apocalyptic vulgarity. The
ants are inheriting the earth.
When such apparently out·
moded ideals as r e a s o n ,
purpose and discipline are jet·
tisoned, the stage is left wlth
such unmitigated garbage as
''The Popcorn Machiile'' and
"The Dentist."' a pair ()f
dismal original one-acts cur·
rently ~ing perpetrated at the
Nifty Theater in }funtington
Beoc~.
Here ls 1 da.Nlc ex4mple of
the depth> to whlch the
American theater can sink
when rtJeased from all but Its
fina l .restraint, In one.c·:erlong
playlet and another mercifully
brief one, the unintelligible
nlghtmares .of'two !Ang Beach
college proressors are
gleefully unleashed to strike a
rather mes.!)' blow for tt·
perimilntat theater.
"The Popcorn Machir..:" Is
the longer and more outla,n-
disb of the twa, divided into
four loosely related segments
of which only the final episode
bears any resemblance to
satire. The rest or the show
comes oft as an incredibly bad
lampooning of melodrama
with a little sex and racist
humor thrown in.
Bridging all the putple prose
and graphic goings on Is the
title character -a walking
popcorn machine who strolls
arourid tossing handfuls of the
stuff out over the audience.
This, if you'll rorgive the bad
pun, is the only part of . the
program that shows any taste.
Wha( author.director George
Detar had in mind in the first
EL MORO
PI OUDLY ANNOUNCIS
ht ANNIVERSARY DINNER
CELEBRATION
M••11I.., tlir• Th1!14ey, N•ftftlMr 16, 17, 11, It
Any 2 Mexican Dinners
For The Price of ·One
CHAMPAGNE e HORS D'OEUVRE$
ENTERTAINMENT
Pl•• T• A"M4 This Fntl•• Occnl••
16655 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY
SUNSET BEACH 846-9177
ridiculous u the malerlaL
there emerge twO or three
competent performers. Their
best hope Is to change their
names and start over again.
Let It be Rcorded that this
rather harsh assessment does
not constitute an indictment of.
the Nifty Th'tater itself, which
has produced some impressive
works in the avant garde field.
That is far from the case -in
fact, this reviewer is schedul·
ed to direct the Nl!ty 's next
production. But a dungheap.
wherever It surfaces, should
be identitled as such.
three episodes IS anybody's For those playgoers whose
guess, but the last scene ap-curiosity has been sufficiently
J:!Cars to be a colossal put-aroused, "The Popcorn
dOWQ of the Chicago Seven and Machine'' and "The Dentist"
Manson Family trials. Jn this Wnl be performed. if this is
segment, two attorneys take the word , Jo'ridays and
turns grilling the witnes.ses Saturdays for the next four
and each other while the weekeiids at the N i ( t y
gorgeous defendant engages in Theater. 307 Main St., Hun.
simulated copulation w i t'h._t_in-'-gt_on_B_e_ac_h_. _____ 1 anyone not involved at the
time.
The second play. Gerry
Locklin's "The Dentist," very
nearly makes the grade as
absurdist satire. But, like its
predecesSor , Its potential ef-
fect is drowned in a stream of
four-letter floundering ..
In its brief course, this play
does elicit some chuckles
purely from the ludicrousness
of its premise -a super slob
with the vocabulary of a drill .
sergeant decides to become a li~~~5~~~~~~~1 dentist, and does, operating
h'is profession In t h e
aforementioned m a n n e r .
-·That's -about-it,-1nd the-only
reason it isn't as bad as ''The
Popcorn Machine" is ·because
lt isn't nearly as long.
Taken together as unew
theater," the productions
represent a bull-in-the-china.
shop excursion into t h e
relatively recent ooncept of
freedom o( expression on
stage: It is much like the
RI CHARD o
BVRl'ON
GENEVI EVE BUJOLD
''If you~ee .... b'.-~.. . .
othing else this year, 1
you must see ':.1
RYE IRSTPl6'1. 1 ·-1
It will not, I think, ~
. "::9 ever fade from ·i ,. · ··-memory!'' .J
COllll'~I· PltlU~i:S ,._.. • ets "'odu<' •~
JACK NICHOLSON .. FIVE EASY PIECES -Klf9fl Sl•~k
•" SVN11 Ani~1ell • ...,,.., • .,., .... ,;. -· • ,..., " .. , ........ -,,.. ... -._, ........... -.......... _ ... ·-·~ .... _. ...... , .. __ ""'""""'
• .......... -·(<)100 ~-~.!•.::. ,_•M-·
EXCLUSIVE
ENGAGEMENT!
EXCLUSIVE
OR.ANGE COU,\'IT
l1"JDOOR THEATRE
ENGAGE1\.IENT.'
"GREAT
MOVIE
MA KI NG"
"&IO 4 .. UllCAN MAITUt• ~!ell fA~APtOAWU, TIC
J I ~I AlolUllCAN Ill.II: I ~&V!SUIO tff!STP.ll?Jacll ~~-""°'"'"·-· P'"' ....t U•llit ,.,,,,._
o ... "'"''"'°'t••,,_....., ................ -..... .....
............ -, ..... QI. ............ '-'_""'~ '"' '"" ,_, ..... ·-..... , ........... -
••-... IJ n•t •l IS OM;. f ON( l'IC'IU•t YOU Ca• 5(C
'"'' YIA•. flYl l&$f I'll Ct! 5~0UlD It m" --·--. -t--
"The Benjamin
perform8nce
is brilliant!0
' • • • • • l I " • ' • • •
1_;,
" '
eE Specul1tion (Cl (60) (RI
Ee Christ th• I.Irina Word (C) (30)
@Ii) Rt11rio {30)
ny's 20th Annivetllry Show (C) (60),
J1cll celebrates wi!h guest st1r1 I~~~!'!!!!!!!!!'!!!'!!!!!!'!! Frank Sinatra, 811b Hopa and OinahF
young man obsef:1.'ing his 21st
birthday who drinks himself
into a Stupor just because now
il's legal for him.to do so.
'CAiitt<<l di<~~Def'•
-11tw •o•'tt 1r..-t1 -•A'C.., ... .., .. ,,.
.'•fW ~OM "0&7 I
:, I all Sl111plr11Mntt M1rll (55)
7:3111J Qt (I) Ci11n11nok1 (C) (60)
--n1 Sc1wn11rs." Y1pb1t Kotta
p!m Piney Bips, 1 huna:ry tr1veler
•he tells tall tales to M•rthal D~·
Ion 1bout his 111rviv1I lrom 111 In·
dlan m1ssac11. (Rescheduled)
D Don't Mils Th is Great *RE~ SKELTON SHOW!
Shor• 1nd • number ol his former
11dio and 1V sideklds-his wif1
Mary Uvin1ston1. Dennis D1y, Dan
Wilson, Eddi• "Rochut1r" Ander-
'°n, Mel Blanc, Frank N1!son ind
Benny R11bi11, .
0 l it 5 News (C) (60) Ktvh•
Sanders, Htl fi&l\man.
0 Tiit Saini (C) (60)
m ,".',.. hhll• ...... 1C> <60J
GI LI Ftllilil (30) cm 1.1 .. ai.111 Arpntino (2 hr) · See Godfrey Cambridge
· · 10:15 O Movfa: '1'nl tllt l ism1rd:" El ID (i) m .. d Sl~lton Sholo P.rt I (1dvtntur1) '60 -Kenneth
(f) {lO)Godfttf ~l!lbrid1• fl/Ill!• More. D1n1 Wynter, Carl Mohntr,
as footba ll , he:o Joe B;?a.dwiy. Laurence Naismith. Geoflny Ke1n. ·t~-th .. shc-;,s ·stlfflt·apot.--DitlllOnd .... (Part IL will..LUUme at 11:30
Ttm G1ady, 1 PM lot!owina: the neWSf -~··· · -····
g IO'P'D (C) (30) "Wall! the Lona:I m News (C) .
Pier."
Q MllliOft S' Ma'llt: (C) -.11110:30 ID 1111 Jthns Jim (C) (30)
Slop" (comedy) '5~M1rilyn Mon· Im C111~ J lott•rm (30)
roe, Arthur O'Connell, Ho pt Lln~e. ll:OD IJ' 9Cl)111 Nlwt (C)
mrruth or.to1111q111M11 <C> (30) D 9@m Ntwt (CJ B<lb Bulter 1s hOJt. 0 11111111 In Actl1111 (C) (!J D1nltl loon• (C) (60) "Requiem
for Cr1w Green." 0 Ntn (C) Bill B<lnds.
€E) Sovtnnn111! rrr .. (C) (30) 0 Thtltrt 9: "Morpn" (comedy) '66-V1nm1 Redfrave, D1vld W1r-Uil No Crw tn lls Ko111bru (30) ner.
1:55 ail CllUtion '8 S.p NI m Mowle: "Cq, tlll ltlmd Co1111·
·-D ~ ~ '£ llu..._111 (C) (&0) try" (drema) '52-Canada Let, Sid· ......, ._ ~ ,,... 1111 Poitier, Charles Carson. Quest 1t1r b Ntwh1rt pl1ys 1 "Laulf!·ln" prop man, the U.S. OJ MIVll: "Tiie I i( Tip-Off" (mys.
Piesident and Adtm in the G1rden tef¥) '55-Rlcherd Conte. Constance
of (den as he joins u ri1s stari Oan Sm1tt1.
Rowen. Dick Martin 1nd the mtrry @a Firin1 UIM (C) (60) "Thi Mid·
memblfl of Bedl1m, Int. die [1st."
1J Vir&iflil Cil'lll1m Show (CJ (!iCJl 11 ·30 fJ -ITI Mll"I l riffin (C) Tim Guests art Th• lance Link Chim· · IOI ~ pinzees. comedl1n Louis N)'t!, 1et~1 Cti.nw1y. Burt Rt)'llll!ds. G1or11
Geora:e Sandert, Sltn Burns i nd Plimpton.
D•~! Ki,enu 1nd Monty ~.111. hOst 0 ~ (i) m hl11111r C.no11 (C)
of Ltl s Maki a Deal. Monty Doug MCCiure Della Reese Lucillt
toins V1rlini1 in 1 sinzinf duel Ball, Robert M111er. '
m To Ttll tll1 Truth (C) (30l O Movlt 611111 (Q Term #1:
Gl World Prut (C) (60) Weekly James M1son, Stelanle Powers, Jot
roundup of intarn11ion1I press com· Flynn. Tum #2: Mery Tyler Moo11,
mentary on m1 jor U.S. i nd world Geora:t Cat!Jn, Terry Moore.
_1venlL Roftr Boas m«ltrttes.
II!) MM If YbkM1 (30)
• fl) LI ~111tlt (t) (60)
1J Mevie: "Sink th• l ismard"
.C:Onc1111lo11, St1 listin11110:15 PM.
12:00 8 Morie: (C) "A Lot111 !Gr Mias
Quoll" (d11m1) '67 -l:OS 1I1J Aqlli Tm hUn• (25)
t:JD •a ([I H.,•'• L•cr ccr <3o) ia:u fJ ,.,.. tt>
'Wt!ly Cox plays Gustrw Vandeimeu, l:llD 8 Mowi1: "'Ona Upo41 1 Ho!'ll"
a di1mond cutter hired by Uncle (comed1) '58 -Din Row•~
Hi n)' to cut the famous .. C.ab1h" 0 Nen (t)
19mtotld ltof1C1111tltbrl· m •" pMed to ctrry. Cllll ...
TU ES D AY
m "P'kl•U' AiltJ'" (dramt) '57-
'7ider Meture, Anlll Ekll1r1. Tmo1
ttowarll.
DAYTIME MOVIES
11:00 IJ "TM Tr11blt W'tltl W1•111"
(drem1) '63-lliy Ml!ltnd, Tere11
Wri1hl.
1:111'.1 m "Autumn luffs" (dr1m1) '56
-Join Ct1wlorll, Cliff Robertson,
Vera Mh11, Lornl G11tne. t•aoi1'1t1• R•ll'f• ll4I "Apfn•
' fWtsltf'") '.tO--John Howa rd, Et!tn D 2:00 0 "D1sire Undll the E•u" (dta· ~~Ci "Just .ftf Y11i1" (music.fl) 'S2 m•). '58 -Soph11 L1r1n, Anthony
.:::eint Crosbr. Jin• Wym•n. (the1 M ins. Burl l'ttl.
t11iyll'IOre, N1Ull1 Wood. 4:il IJ (C) '1111 N••M J11nit1" (drl·
t::Sl)IJ "TtlrH lrM Men" (drtm•) '57 m1) '54--Cll11ltun Mtstan, El11nor
=tl;ay MIUlftd, f.Nl•ll BotJnlnt. Pitter.
. . ~ -.
e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS
e NEWSPAPERS
Qu1ilty Printin9 end D•p•ndeblt S•rvit•
for mor• thin • qu•rt•r of • c•ntury
'
Pll OT PR INTINt;
PORT THEATRE
PHONE 673·6Z60 CORONA DEL MAR
Regarding the acting, which
oVerall. is not quite 1 a s
~do
JOW,Oll llA(lf •• •I th• ••"•-
!• l•~~t•~• U4• 1110 •• 01. l·l llCI
G"rl• kn•Mr IN
.. ~'ZIG.~ZAG~'·······-
At.>O
St.c:y KHCh
M•rl•l'I• Hiii
"THE TRAVELING
EXECUTIONER"
llALaOA 673-4041
H·ARBOR at ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546·3102
ON HARBOR I LVD ... ONl Mill SOUJH Of SAN DllGO fWY.
\
Paul Newman
Joanne Wooclwarcl
''Wu· SA''
'with Anthony hrkins
ond Lawrence Harvey
Rotecl "GP"
-ALSO IN COLOI-·
J • ..,., •• , hl1t1e•d•
0'LO¥l'S A FUNNY THIN•'"
• Sterts WHMl4ey •
l •cl•"-" ArH 1 ... Wfllf
"Gcttit1g !;
Straigl1t"
"WUSA Is crammed wlttl Oscor nomfnen" •••
~LirSmlth, Co1m opolit•n
"Paul Newman and Joanne Wooward are both 1&1•
perb" • • • Francis H•rridg•, N.Y. Post
[LLJOT'T '""··
GOULD __ [!IJ COL OR
& ~od T1'tlor
"DARKER THAN AMllR"'
.. First Time In Huntington Beach
PIZZA HUT
SMORGi\SBORD
Every Monday Night, 5:30 • 9z00 -ALL THE PIZZA YOU· CAN EAT
Adults Sl.25 Children 65c
CARRY OUT
0·•0111
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S&RVING MORE THAN 70,000 PIZZAS COAST-TO.COAST DAILY
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962-1333
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·•-""ot, l!!ll. Ttclllcllor
ALSO OP
diary ot a mad housewlt•
------atrankperry l1\m ------"THE FORBIN
PROJECT"
COUGAR I
C-OUN-T-R·Y: I
IN COLOR
M edv...t11'9 •to'rj
M1t • Y••"I n•t•r fllfff wlftll ....... r
• ..,..... 9-4 •Kl'"*lt.
A fllM fer t9tl ... t1,. ...... ,,.
WllKOAYI: 4:JM:JM1•
SAT. 111 ... l11M1-..t»•1M
SUH. l1IM:.IH1M 1M
...
"LOVERS & • "JENNY"
THEl'SWAIJG"IRS"' . ·--~·~ ..... _ , • Ala~o lhOM&I •
' . "ONI OP THI YEAR'S FUNNI EST COMIO llS.""·Rlcll•rd H11m e!i--L.A. Free Pr111 "**-** ITS ALL SO FUNNYI" I NtlHllT RA11NO I • -Ntw y.,a O.llJ-.
DalMDon&llRMGmJ ........ R ..
ALSO-LI•• Mh111elli in ''TILL Ml TH~T YOU LOVI Ml, JUNll MOON"-6.P
J;XCIJ!SIYE ENGAGEMENT -LAST WEEK
It' •DWAND• ~ lillfXA•,z• ~ Clf.\Jif iii ~JIGllTI WAJ.18"
-.. ~OOIT4""41'M014 ... ·J•OI ., .. -.llOl'IM M., ...
•-·•--••--J.U:·P•lnc• CALL 546°3102
A t.>a "House of Dark Shadows"
!.
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• ' ................................................. ,,:
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Gould !:t~
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Suth1rl1nd
• • •••c" . •T •i..i..1• • •ALSO JAC"'UILINI .. -.. en. c•••""'""" .. ..,.,. ••••o r'W't. l issn .&•.-S-~ M 7•• ... >• ~\INTINOTON ••M:H 5nV
RATIO "G"· -IT'S FOR EVERYONE -Exclusive Wal k·ft! Run
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2nd Feature: "THE WALK ING STICK" HELEN HAYES "
-R!f~-"0 _trferhoryliiclyt-e.rbro ~trol .. nd end Wallor Matthau. -~1
~1 -:-N!JW FOR THE FllST mu AT l'OPllLAI l'llCESI -• ca;. ~H . . . , .. _. ~~mM~.~~=-~-~~ ELLO~DOLLY .1 .
CALL .'z ••93 -· 2G\llalltl!!llll ,, ;;;;:,;. "'••11t•• Ill ,'
..,., POSITIV ELY EljDS0 TUESDAY1 NOV, 17 l .. ,,
r.
r··
,
s
LEGAL NOTICE
~" tfOTIC• O'° al.ILi( TllAMl,..lt
NOTICE II MEll;EIY GIV!N TO THE
(lllfDllOlllS OF N11 Glwoff Md lltmvrld
W~f'f\, Tt.,.11-, !M1 • ""111c
"•ntlitt If abtl.ot to IN -bv ,.,.,.lf_, wf\o'lt but],.. .. 1ddrtn It noo
... .-e1..-.. 111 the Clf'I' er Cotlt MfM, c:-tv '' O•-•, l••i. of Ctlltor1111, .->d
alt ol WfloM 1>111IMH 111me1 afld -tf-llHd wlflllOI lfrlf"--tt .. II -1,
W .. , II ·-Ill Tttl'll'-°'"' f tf klnt't Stolt lo• Me11, UOll M.llrbor 11...i .. Coo•• MtM, Ctlllor11l1, lt JOMI>~ Gl-M,
Tr111111t,._, ~ bo.IJI.-.• .id•"" 11
liU Pt14111 l"lace. ln the City ot Cmlt
Mua. Caunl't ot 0•-· !tilt ol C..111-11, ol l!le lollOWlnl deSCrlbH
... _I ,.._rtv ol T•1n1t .. o-r. IO wit:
"!! 111K• In ltede, II•!"""' "ul11m1111
t flCll tood wit! of 1 ctr!lln '""''' doltllllt
i!Ort buli!'leH kl>OWll l l K1"9's $1-for
M~n 11111 loc1!fd 11 1JOO Mtrbor 1 1¥1:1 .. 111
!ht (ltv of Co1t1 Mtu. County ol Ort nte.
$tttt ol Ct llto111l1, Ind lhtl !ht fOrf90!"f
bul~ !r1111!t• will be conwMmt ltd f)!'I or
eNtr Wtd,...~dt~ lllfc 1J>ll dlP ol NC'lltmbl-. lUO, "''-" EKrow ...... 154 .i?O. ti I~ f-~1ow ft1>1rlment Cl! !ht 11111 '"" Vtrmcint 811ric11 o! Se<url!p Fir~! N1tlo1111 81n-11 f.jlS S Verme111 AVMVt In r~ Cllv of Loo A"9tlU, CDUn,.,. ol Lm
.-,~~•!•1. Stfle cf (1llfotni1. DATED "lov...,,btr 2, lf70
Monday, Novtmber 16, 1970 .. . ''""·
Inflation
Siphons
Saving_s
NEW YOJ!K (API -It ban
honored American tradition to
zave One's pennies until they
accumulate to one dollar and
then put the dollar into a sav·
ings account.
(
••
'
Finance
Briefs
CHICAGO (UPI) -Finl
National Bank or Chicago ha&
opened a neW me~t bank·
1ng subsidiary in ndon call-
ed Fi.isl Chicago, td, with
' Wllliam G. Curran as manag-
: }trC directors. , , .
· Cl!ICAGO (UPI) -Com·
pt/dyoO Corp. and S c a m '1nS~t Corp. announced • 'theY ~aVe settled a patent in·
frJni•meiit lawsuit in the
federal>'-court in Philadelphia JOIKlll Gfwo!I lr1111fe-r'"f 1fCUl!lfY l'lltST NATIONAL ••NIC .. ,s s. v • .._, •-
Everybody has been taught
the story : the dollars grow in.
to hundreds and th e n
~thousands. It may take many
years, but through Otis magic
of compounO interest. those
pennies eventually become a
fortune.
. on >. mutually satisfactory
Us A1ttt .. 1. C1ti.....11 NEW DODGE COLT IMPORT ..••. , •. Available as hardtop coupe (shown)', ~~sis. The ~omp.anies both a.re
sedan or station wagon. It's equipped with 97.5 c.L overhead cam 4 cylind'er ~· ~ 11\. • o Pb.1st t cat e d Jn-.tin1r1r!M' I!. L. M-• Pu~llllled Or111w Co.~t Dtl!v Pl»t,
Nove<nbtr 1,, 197G l!,1'·70 The savings tradition still
exists,. in frugal America,
which in recent months ha'
been putting about 7 .5 percent
of take-home pay into savings
gine and front disc brakes. The new Colt will be in West Coast Dodge deal sttumentaUon and co nt r o 1
.showrooms in January. . • systems.
LEGAL NOTICE
HOTICI 01' Tlt\J1Tll't SAll NI. f·211N
011 Wedntsdl¥ O«tmtier 1. 1tl'!I, 11
11 :00 o'CIO<k A.M., Al'"• Soutll lront ...... lttl\Ct lo Ille old CovnlY Cour<~u...,, !n tt.<I cilY or S1n!1 All• WESTERN MUlU,t,L CORPOR,t,T IO"'. I C1tllornl1
CMPOttt!Dll, •• '''"'"· under tilt dffd of t•u11 mt01 IN 0 I. F CORPORATION, A
C1llf01n!t Con>Mtllolt 1n<t r..:or6ed
Ftbl't.ll r'I' 10, 1''5, fl\ 8ooll: J«lf, P11t ffO.
of Ofllcl11 Record• ol Ori,.,. Counlv, C1tltornl1 91¥91'1 to tte:Utt II\ lndtble-drlffl In ff¥Clr ot DANIEL J. FISCHER Ind D•WN $, FISCHER, HU'$bilnd fnd Wfft 11 Jo!nl T.,..1111 ft/Toll owried 1nd fltld bY J. KARL WILL IAMS Ind LE 0 NA WILLIAMS, Husblnd 11\d wit.-ts Join! Te<Ynh IN •tflOl'I fllf IM b!'ffcll ol cer-
t•ln ollllt1llon1 uc:ur..i 11'1~¥. notice or
whldl Wis IKMOef J1,1lp 1,, 1'10, I" 8DOll. t :M7, Pf1'e 911, of uld Oftl<:l•I ll:ecordJ, will wll •I 1>1.1bllc 1uc1lot1 ta ~ l!lgllfft
biOder for c111>, NP•ble in l1wlul ...._.,
el Ille llnltM s111eo •I tr.. t!tife ol .. 1,,
"''itl'lo\lt w1rr1n!y •• te 1111.t, _i.t .. lon or
1Pl\Cumbr1ncn, t~e ln~•t1I (onvevecl to
f l!CI now held by 1110 Tr111lte 1111de-r Mid
DH!! of Tn.o1I, In 1°'11 to 1111 foll11Wl"9 d~r!bed Pnll't'r1'Y". bwll'
of one sort or another, an ei:·
traordinarily high rate.
Savings banks vigorously
promote tlie concept of small
Sffings being tbe road to
sei"l:tity ... Who in the past few
months hasn't seen a chart
Division Import
Dodge's Colt to Get West Coast Debut
showing bow money invested By CARL CARSTENSEN
in certibca~ of depooit can SAN FRANCISCO -Dodge
double in less than 15 years? Division's late challenge t()
But there is a perceptible stem the tide of import sales
change now in the old tradi· was introduced bere-and along
lion. Inroads have been made, with it are high hopes of sell·
pertiaps pennanently. Savers . ing nearly 40,000 unit.s during
have become more 1971 .
Liii l of TrJcl No. lttt. In llllP clip of
Co:n!1 M~. COllnlY 01 Drfnft, Stilt of
C•!lforn11, 11 Hr"''" rK0tded '" 800I< 114, Olt•• J9 111 '1 i11Clutlv1 ol Mlsc~t!·-MIPI, In '"• l>ltlc• of ~ CovnlY R..:order of U !lf COllntv, e-uc11rv 1l1tff 11>11 pr-rtv 15 ~-n 11 291$ Mffldci1 Drl¥f, (Olll Miu, C11llornl1,
for II>« Dl.l'POH ol PtYl"9 obllHllOftl socur..i ti'/' 11ld DefCI lllCIUGI"' ,_,
cll• ... <!ll 11111 UHl'IHI of "'' Trull" •1111 ... ...•.
Oiled~ ~r 27, 1'1G WESTERN MUTUAL CORPORATION
'Tr1111'M
8 y Flew \11" V11t111bur1ll, \lice PrttlOenl -l"ublllflfd o.,,.., Co.ti 0111r Pltot,
NO¥ernbu 2. t. 11, 1t7t 20211-'9
LEGAL NOTICE
sophisticated, a bit more
cynical and much more im·
patient.
Rising inflation and taxes
have been major factors
beh ind the change. ' Social
Security has lessened fears of.
insolvency in old age. And
there bas been a quite percep-
tible broadening of the al·
titude that money should be
used now rather than at some
Jater date.
AnaJyzing the old tradition,
a good many savers have con-
cluded that the proces,, of
turning pennies · into dollars
may have made some en· Not1c• o~,:~~::1•r•s sALr during fortunes. but for the
On Wedl'lind•v. December ,, 1'111. •• heirs rather than for the 11:00 o'clock A.M ... , lft• Sot.1tn Front .... lrtn(t lo lllt Old C111,111ty Co..,rttiov11. Jn '8Vers.
thfl cllv Ill Stn" An1 WESTERN -MUTUAL CORPOlllATION, • C1tllotnl1 And most A mer I cans
co._1111c11. •• tru1te•, ""'°'' tn• Gffll"' su....._t, if the" don 't know for tru$1 m.Ot bv 0 & F CORPORAT ION, I ~'-• :T c1n1orn11 co•POr•llort •"" •~roeci sure, that while the bank may Ftbru•fV 10, nu, In 8ock '""'· P1111 w , •All ~-m ·•~, mo-y will of Oflld 11 R:ecore11 ~ Or•~ CounlY, K: l•~ 1.11e1 ·~ C1Ulornl1 elven to M!tUre In lt10eblt0nn1 double in a ~jfied number '" l•Yor of DAN IEL J. FISCHER '"" OAWM s. FISCHE R, nu11>111d 1nd w11., •1 ol years, the truth is it may
J olftl TMlftls t\OW owned •llcf l'lttd lw nol t JI MllCE FAULKNER 11111 NORMA LEE grow a a or may e-ven FAULICNEA. Hulbllld Ind w1i. •• loll'll decrease i( irilalion isn't con·
1en1l'lb ""' •••""' ot "'' b•e•dl of cert1!n
Ironically, the new entry,
called the Colt, is itself a
Japanese import. Considered a
small car or as defined by the
industry as a ·'mini-car" it
goes on sale January 1 in
California. Current plans are
for the Colt to be introduced
only on the West C.Oast due to
distribution. At a later date
sale.s will be nationwide.
Addressing a press preview,
Chrysler Corp. vice.president
and Dodge general manager
Robert MCCurry said auto
marketing approaches have
changed radically with tbe
times, "and what we have
seen in recent ye8rs and
months is only the beginning
of whole new concepts f o r
automotive marketing."
"If the interest is in small
cars then we'll offer small
cars," McCurry said. Ei:plain·
ing the addition of the sub-
compact lo the Dodge line.
McCurry said. "The Colt will
provide extra strength a n d
appeal to I.he line. Colt ls a
perma0011t addition, and we
expect to market Uie car for
many years l.O come."
other reasons for the new
addition are obvious. Chrysler
Corp. is behind in the mini or
sub-compact lines as cOm·
pared to the other dpmestic
manufacturers such as F.ord's
Pinto, Chevrolet's Vega, and
AMC's Gremlin. It's the only
segment ot the market where
they find it tough to compete
today. Jt will be a·helpful ad~
dition for Dodge dealers. Their
own sub-compact is scheduled
ror 1972 .
The Colt ls available as. a
coupe, 2 door hardtop, 4 door
sedan and 4 door station
wagon. The 9S.3 inc h
wheelbase car comes with an
overbead cam. 97 .5 cubic inch
(1800 cc), 4 cylinder engine
developing 100 gross
horsepower. __,,,,,;'
' * ORANGE COUNTY AUTO
SHOW BEGINS THURSDAY
The latest and finest pro-
ducts of the autmotive world
will be spotlighted 11wt"S;day,
Nov. 19, when the curtain
raises On the Seventh Annual
obll1•llon1 Hf;Urfd thetflw, llO!la .i lained. ~1c11 w•• ren>rt1ec1 Jul r u. 1t10, 1n 80Dll. ....__ "---•-d doll•-p1a-d IU1, P-"1. ol 1111d Oftk:lfl lt-d•. Vin:: \.llll'ol.-.• ... "' ""' , w1u 1111 '' r>ublk 111c11on "' -nlDftell In a commercial bank. in 1959 illldelet' for tt,..,, 1>1nbi. In l1H•1'ul -v Your Jfl~'• Worth
Orange County lntern3tional
Auto Show in . the Anaheim
Convention Center.
The show, again sj>onsored
by the Motor Car Dealers
Ass n. of Orange County, will
run through Sunday, Nov. 22
and will be open from 5 to 11
p.m. weekdays and noon to 11
p.m. on the weekend.
More ,than 300 cars will be
displayed including 13
domestic Lines and 15 different
makes from seven foreign
countries.
Jn addition, manufacturers:
will show cutaway models and
some outstanding specialty
cars will be displayed in·
eluding J:he M·antls ,
Sidewinder III and D a n
Gurney's Leda.
Also to be shown will be tbe
Mercury Cyclone which set a
new national record for H
Stock Automatic quartermile
at the Orange County
Raceway earlier this year.
For motorists who like to
take their home along when
they travel, lines of campers,
motor homes and o th e r
recreation vehicles will be
displayed in a J0,000 square·
foot lent to be set up adjoining
the 100,000 square-foot eI·
hibition ball at the center.
"' ni. UnltH 111111 •• 11i1 ttme "' .. ,,, was worth, in real dollars, on·
•lllwwt wtrrt"tr •• to ottt, _,n1lon or ly $1,12' 1·n 1969, whic_b is f!!ltuoflb!'ll'l(H, ""' lnfe1HI COf!Vft'fd 10 '9 .
· -· ••--· ftt+tl ·11<1'· ..i.t·'FrVttft-enHr-... 111 ···hardty'1he ·road ·to·weelth. ·An ··-Died of Trust, In tl'ld to thl foll-Int !Jts(rlllotd ..,._,,.,, i-11: equivaJent in U.S. Savings Loi 1 of Tritt Mo, Jf2t, In 11\t CllV"' Boods -ined only $19.
Income A veragit1g ~idened
Co.I• M111, Countv ot Or1nvo. S'-f1 o1 a-
C1llloml1, •1 l>tf' "'" ~ded In BOOll Amo ••~ t f gal ( 114, "••e• J9 to 41 il'l(lu1I~• Of ng UJIC mo& ru O Ml1<1Uu1tot11 M1111. In '"' oniu o1 ti.. the penny savers have been CovnlY Recorcltr or .. 111 Coun!v.,, .... ~1c11rv 1111e1 '~" P•ot>trtv 11 those with whole life insurance
•now" 11 Mt Mendou Dr!Y1, Coll• polico·es which they expected Mt11. C'1llfernl1
~ ''" PU•PCnt o1 1>1yin1 obn1111-tc> provide cash:.value in their Mturtd b'r Jl ld Oted l"ChHll"• IPC!I, c~••ff• 1nd e~1>en1u 01 11>« Tn111e• .. 1w1 retirement years. But milllons Df~;!d , Cklobotr 11• ,,,0 llave found the payoff shrivel-
wesrErtM MUTu•L ed by inflation. CORPORATION ,...,,.,,H At the same time, none but
&v Flew v ... v1tken1>ur11h , • ~-.~~,,·cated could (ail Vier Pr11idenl Ul'C '"""l"' '"st · to , understand the forces at Pubtlst\ed o...... CPlll D•HY P!lot.
Movitrnbu J. f , U. \t10 JOl).'9 'WO'rlt in equil)' markets,
LEGAL NOTICE
. l
•
In the same IQ-year period
in·which $1 .000 Jn U.S. Savings
Bonds earned only $19, the
same amount in industrial
stock grew to more then ·
$1 ,700. And even larger ·in-
creases were common in real
estate in vestments.
By SYLVIA PORTER
111 c1t111•111H wll~ 1119 • ....,.di l1111tllW11 •I Am1rlr.1 •
Are Y.ou among the millions
of Americans who this year
received a fat pay hike '? Or
earned a hefty bonus'? Or
earned an unusually large fee'?
Or hit the wildly flu ctuating
stock JP.irket for a big capital
gain? OF won a .whopping lot-
tery prize~ 1( so. J have good
news for you: the 1969 Tax
Reform Act liberalized and
widened the use of "income
averaging," through which
you can hold down yoUr tax
bill when you suddenly pile a
lot or income into one year.
The new income averaging
long-term capital gains and
rules for the first time cover
gambling winnings (which in·
clude's lotteries) in addition to
other income. Under these
liberalized rules, tr your 1971)
taxable income is more than
120 percent of the average of
your taxable income for the
four years 1966-1969, you are
eligible to use int:ome averag·
ing to get a lower tax. Before
1970, your taxable inCfJme had
to be more lhan 133 1/3 per·
cent of the average.
To see whether you qualify
for thii tax break, check your
returns for the four yearl
1966-69, add up your taxable
incomes for those four years.
Divide by four to get your
average taxable income.
Now match Your average
again.st the following table
prepared by the Research
lnstitute of America. This will
tell you whether your 1970 tax-
able income is high enough
above the eligibility figure to
give you any tax savings from
the use of income averaging.
u ... .... ....
10.000
1),0!)0
1-.000
16.000
11.000
:i0,000
1J,OOO , .... » ...
~ ... , ....
60,000
"·"" , .... ,.. ..
• ~· -l ,.
H,c.JO
10.100
1J.60CI
16,000
11.a , ....
'""" 2•,600 .... )3.000
~ ...
""" .s2.ooo ..,ooo
l&,l)l)O
110.000
h (l,000
l\O 11¥!1\f!,
PCUlb!•
• ,.
~I ., •• •• ·~
•' .e ,•
~::
Jll,'157
11,lm
1~.J!i
!t,?U
19,2!2
7?.4.l9 n.o•
16,olJf
Jl.l.11 .U,?U
•J,1U
!J,119
lS.J!? ... .,.
7',2!2 ,,....,.
U~17t
t\O W~lllGI
POIS lb It
...
reveals whether you can use
income averag~ng} Say your
taxable inCfJmes for 1966, 1967,
1968 and 1969 were : $7.000,
$&,500, $7,000 and $7.500. Now
say your 1970 taxable income
ballooned to $l3.000 because
you won one of the big lottery
prizes in New York State.
Add up your 1966-69 incomes
Of $7,000, $6,500, $7,000 .and
$7 ,500. You get $28,000. Divide
this by four which gives )'Oii
$7,000. Multiply this by 12 per·
cent. Thi s cumes to $8,400.
Now all yOu need do is look
at that table. You can use in -
come av eraging because your
1970 taxable income is $13,000
-larger by more than 121}
percent of the average or your
1966-69 years.
This table eliminates the ex·
ceedingly complicated com.
putations you otherwise would
have lo go through to find out
whether you can use income
averaging. And i n c o m e
averaging CAN save you tax
money.
Next: Year.end gifts.
747 Sets
Load Mark
EDWARDS AIR FORCE
BASE. Calif. (AP) -An ad·
vanccd version of Boeing's
huge 747 jumbo jet claimed
the world's record toda j in lif-
ting a load IO tons heavier
than set by the C$A transport
the world's largest ai rcraft.
The 7478 packed a weigh t or
820,700 ,pountls on a one hour
test fl ight over the California
desert. Most of its 5 pounds of
load was in sand and water.
The other 32.000 poond.s was
the jet's b1"ic weigh~.
The previous record by the
C5A was 798,000 pounds.
The 147B. the same size as
the 747 now ln commercial
SMVice, is also design.ed for pa~nger scrVtce. -The weight
lifting. test was designed to
measure the capacity of its
engines which wtll give lt
ftreater nylng distance than
Ule current 747.
The 7478 piloted by Jack
Waddel of Seattle. kept Its en·
tire load of water and sand lhe
entire Otght but Jettlgone<f
some fuel before landing •
•
NEW YORK (UPI) -The
Textile Workers Union bas
asked the Federal Tariff Com-
mission for special help for
1,000 workers recently laid off
at three ri1illes because of in·
creased imports of Rayon
Staple Fiber. The mills are
located at Nitro a n d
Parkersburg, W. Va., an d
Front Royal, Va. The union
wants the workers retrained
and relocated at government
expense.
HOUSTON (UPI) -Brown
& Root, Inc., has formed a
venture with Nus Corp. of
Rockville, Md., to design and
build nuclear power plants. As
part ot the deal, Brown & Root
will buy 100,000 shares of Nus
common at $8 a share.
BEJHPAGE, N.Y. (UPI) -
Grumman Corp. has obtained
a $41.5 million Navy contract
to provide EA-6B electronic
wa rfare aircraft,
WORCESTER, Mass. <UPI)
-Jamesbury Corp. a ball
valve maker, has s ued
Kitamura V a I v e Manufac·
luring Co. of Tokyo and its
American subsidiary K i m
Industries, Jnc.. in federal
court at Houston on charges of
infringement of Jamesbury
valve patents.
MIAMJ (UPI) Keller
Ind ustries. Inc.. sai d the
Internal Revenue Service is
examining the company's tax
returns for 1965 and 1968 and
has reported disputed items
which, if resolved in favo r of
the government, c o u I d
substantially affect the COD)·
pany's financial results. The
disclosure was made by Keller
in its report for the year end-
ed July 31. But the company
said it expects to win the
disputes with the tax men.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The Securities and Exchange
Commission has revoked.-the
broker-dealer registration of
Nadel & Co. and barred
Nathan H. Cohen r r om
association with any broker
dealer on charges o( rigging
the market for shares of Com.
puter Counseling, Inc., in 1968
and 1969.
CLEVELAND IUPJ)
Arthur G. McKee & Co. said
its Avstralian .subsidiary as
obtained a cuntract from
Mount Isa Mine, Ltd., to
design a new $20 mffiion lead
• and z!nc concentrator with a
capacity of 7,000 tons a day.
WASHINGTON (UP()
RCA Corp_ bas obtained an
Sll.3 million Air Force con-
tract to operate radar track-
ing facili ties.
WILMINGTON. Del. <UPI )
-DuPont Co. has obtained a
$4.5 million contract for ad·
ditional work at an A:my ex-
plosives plant.
LEXINGTON. Mass. (UPl )
-Raytheon Corp. ha!I 015-
lained a $.1 million addition to
an Army contr.act for research
and development on the Hawk
Anli·Aircraft itissile.
ERIE, Pa. (U PI ) -Zurn
Industries. Inc.. said its
engineering di vision has ob-
tained contracts totaling $25.3
million from the Californi a
Depar tment of Water
Resourees for designing and
building aqueducts, a dam and
a reserve>ir to transport water
from Northern to Southern
California.
RED BA.~K. N.J. !UPI) -
Elect ronic Assistance Corp.
has arranged to borrow $6.4
mi llion from Pruden I i a I
Insura nce Co. of An1erica.
Procecd_5_!!itl be used to retire
short term--ioans.
\YALT~Mf, l\l;ss. (UPI ) -
Hewlett-Packard Corp. an-
noonced it now ls marketing A
comp u ter I z•e d cardiac
cat h eterization laboratory
whicb 1'1!duces time-consuming
procedure.~ A small catheter.
lniicrted in the J"'Ucnt's blood
system, mtasures v a r i o u s
flow rates and o t h e r
physiological variable!ii and the
rompultr rtduccs these to
dlgitaJ numbers and rctords
them and prints lht in·
fonnallon out immMiately on
~ cathode display acreen !or
the dOCIOr. I
THE NEEDLE
IS MIGHTIER THAN THE PEN
And the man who
knows just how to tum
the phrase to pet the
most out oJ the barb is
DAILY PILOT column-
i st Sydney Harris. He
has been called the
modern • da11 H e n r y
Mencken . Jf you're
ready f01' his use of the
acid adjeetivt and
t h ought· provoking
prose to give you tM
needle .•• if you want
to find something to
think about in what you
read ••. if you have a
.sense of humor, you
b e l G n g with readers
who delight in telling
others what *'S11d aaidH
in one of the nation's
most • quoted columns.
Some Sample Barbs
Recently Thrown
By Sydney Harris:
''Ont of tht highest paid fobs In Amertc1
con1i1tt of standing up in front of 1 mic-
rophone, separating the good records
from the bad ones -and plrying th•
bad ones."
•it'• s;d but true th•t while alcoholics
are the best argument for abstinence, so
many abstainers are equally effective ar· ···
cument for a litue drink now and then."
"Most of the so-called 'incompatibllity' In
marriage 1prin91 from the fact that to ;i,
most men, sex 11 an 1ct; while to all
women, it is an emotion. And this differ-
ence in attitude can be bridged.only by
fove.11
·~The sole difference between a 1dedfea.
ted crusader' and a 'nosy reformer' C(IQ.o
sists in our agreement or disagreement
with his objectives.''
"The ~01t explosive combination In the
world con sists of sincerity •dded to
Ignorance."
•
"\Vhenever I am the recipient ot an ex·
cessiv.ely hearty handshake, I suspect
itr. Muscles is trying to sell something,
hide something, or· prove something."
Check The Editorial Page
For This Signature ·
It'll Help You Find
Latest Quotables Created By
'The Needler' For His Col-
A Regular Feature of umn,
the
DAILY PILOT
Your Homtlown Dally Newspaper
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--~.-.-. .... --.,-.-r-.-·-·-·-·----....----·-~~ ---~--~-----.. ---..-··-----=-----~----------------.....
-'
-
s
with your
neWspaperboy
today .
I
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• . . ..
-· , .. .
. . .
' '
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I • •
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It will be good for both of you. lt'H remind you that not an of today's
youth has gone to "pot" or something won•: And It'll prove to him that
you appreciate the fact that he buys, sells, dellven, kHps records, ~
lects and tries to make a profit on his small busines-f t • n worklllCJ . .
When his pnn are playing. He's quite a fellow, that young busln.un.ii
wha dellven your newspoper. Get acquainted with him and yw'R kMw
why we',. so proud of him. We have 820 more like hilJl dellverlllCJ tlle
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%0 DAILY PILOT ·r:tiondiy, NOVtmbtr 16, tmJ
British Sex Book Hot··S111oking·-Off Press AO\llllTISIMIMT
Now Mii•y VIHr
FALSE TEETH LONDON (AP) -A British
su educaUon booklet has
come smoltilll off the press in
simple English, including four·
letter AnJlo-Saxon terms.
Two schoolteachers scorned
practically every previous sex
education work in 27 pages
called "Sex Education.'' 1be
subiltle was "The Erroneous that anything goes. Nothing In.
Zone," a takeoff on erogenou1 be barred to children. .....
The general Idea put forth
by Maurice Hill, 4'-year-old
high school teacher between
jobs, and Michael Lloyd.Jones,
23-year-old adult education
teacher in a British jail, was
'lbe two authors started oft
with the premise t b a t
children 5hould be given se'I
educatiqn so they can Hsee
sexual experience for what Jt
ia - a I normal and de1ight.!ul
aspect ol human behavior -
'.
and to enjoy it without guilt, declared Hill and Lloyd.Jone!,
fear or dqer." "are failing ln their parental
"Any parenta who know that and social duty.
their adolescent daughter is "The real molivaUon o(
assOctating with boys yet fail parental anUsex attitudu may
tG advise her to attend a clintc ~ not···the . desire lo protect
wflere she will be provided 'their chlldm:i but the de&re to
with the latest and mo.st ef· · Pol!PtJI tbem."
f JC i en t co ntracepdves,'' chii~eal diseMe: "U I.be
young were Irle lo enjoy .sc:r· On youth opportunity : "We W
ual experiences with people must provide young P""....Ople Wlth Llttle orry
with the ""portunity and the Do 1our t•IM ~b NUlOJ'_ ... they know, they would be lc&s "'" emt1anus Jou .,~ l!OID1DI environment for their love-wnu 1ou -~~°' \alllJ Tb&D
likely to turn to the kind or making in comfort and c::;::::.OtlJ'OlU=.:..~~
behavior which leads to privacy." io-u.. PA&TUTK boldll dll.atunl ="=""'=======i iu.uer lonf:er. Mak• •ilnl ~. venereal infection, namely, in-r m019a.iun1.•.urrszTHYaotiMML
tercourse with nrAstitutes and The DAILY PILOT-f~,'a~::'..::J.i.~~: t""u I!•• )'our den,IP re1ularl)'. O•• other partners one hardly Tops in Local Sports •1i1TUTB •• &1.1 dl'lll DOU.Dt.a"I.
knows."
•
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IANTA ANA Ill 14l71
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locmt COA.IJ PU.IA 140 lJJJ
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VllMONt" .. ,,,,
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Monday, N-16, 1970 DAILY PILOT ZJ
--hijmy Saved ·
" '~ Player From -
Is L.k( G ..
·
1
1 .~ .. .1v1ng Blood--Allen
.,
:; . Fiery Death
·•
MEDFIELD, Mass. (AP) -
Gregory Finn, a defensive tack.le on
the Marshall University football
_,, ·team ·· not on·'1he ill-fated flight
Saturday night that crashed near
Huntington, W. Va., did not make
the trip because of an injury to his
~ft knee.
In a call to his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Robe;t M .. Finn, Saturday
night the 20-year-old junior said the
team physician ru1ed against his
making the trip.
Finn said it was his son's third
near-brush with death. He said the
youth was injured when his car
Oipped over in an accident several
years ago and was tidiDg in a car
while aitending McCook Junioi-
eoyege_ ln Nebraska last Jwie when
the driver was k.ll1ed in an ac-
cident.
He .'\fas captain of the McC.ook
team and Was named to the All-
Amerlca junior college tam before
lranstei-Ting ·to Marshall. ·
Finn · Satd· an operation for
dariia(td ligaments in the youth's
left tnee' and a recent injury
, prevented him from making the
trip for Saturday's game. • ~ Finn said Gregory was terribly
upset and emotional when he beard
that "all his buddies were gone . . . ft
. burned to death" and had to cut ;,,
short the phone can.
Also missing the fllgbt WI! Red
Dawson, Marshall's d ef e n a i v e
coordinator for three seasons.
Dalrson skipped the plane ride
because of a fear of Dying and
made the trip by automobile in-
stead.
He 'was a reserve tight end with
th e Boston Patriots in 1965.
Wes Hickman, a 21-year..old
center on the squad, also just miss-~ 1
, ed being aboard.
LOS ·ANGELES (AP) -'!be Los
Angeles Rams aod their head coach,
George Allen, must look . wilh some
trepidation to their game at AUanta with
the F;ilcon.s Sunday.
Eight days ago the Rams had to
scramble in a desperate final two-minute
drive to get a tie with Norm Van
Brocklin's Falcons, IG-10.
On Sunday·ttle Rams fe ll in em·
barrassing fashion before 76,378 fans
before the New York Jets,·31-20.
The Jets were 17-point underdogs and
had lost their &11: previous games in the
National Football League.
They had also lost such valuable
regulars as quarterback Joe N a ma t h
Unstoppable
49ers Rally
To Win, 30-20
HOUSTON (AP) -Coach Dick Nolaa
0£ the San Francisco 49ers said his team
"just decided to go out and play "foot-
ball" in the second J!alf Sunday against
the Houston Oilers.
Nolan was talking about the ~9ers' 31).20
Victory the Oilers in the Astrodom1
in Ch his team trailed lG-7 at the half.
"Yes, we made some adjustments at
the ha o counter first half problems,
that really wasn't lhe difference,''
Nolan said. "The difference was that they
just decided to go out and play football."
Oiler coach Wally Lemm said "pwlt
coverage killed us."
.. They were cutting doWn out man who
was supposed to protect the· outside at
the line of scrimmage," Lemm said.
Lemm said a roughing the klckef
penalty in the fourth-period that kept a
San Francisco drive for its Jhird
touchdown alive "was the turning point of
the game."
Steve Spurrier waa back to kick on
fourth-and-two Crom the Houston 46 With
San Francisco leading 16--1~.
and running backs Matt Snell and
Emerson Boozer.
B)lt 1he R am 1 , lnjuryuperod
themselves, were never In it
Allen 'was asked if it might be difficult.
to get the Rams steamed for the ·invasion
into Dixie.
"I suppose it will," he replied.
"Everyilme you lose a game it takes
something out Of yOu.,......lt's like glvl.Dg
blood." ....
Namath's replacement, Al Woodall, and
two running back fugitives from t.'le taxi
squad, plus a tremendous defensive ef-
fort, kiUed the Ra.ms.
The backs1 George Nock 81'..d1 Llte
White, made the yards when 'needed,
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'.,iably on lhlrd don, and·tbe delenalve
-wuAIAttflllon.
All 'tbt iillddle llnebacktt did .... 111-
tttcept two Gabriel puaeo. One sel up a
u:;an100d·1oa1'.by Jim Turner.
1be aecond Wu even more important
'Ibo~ trJl!ed the Jeta, 17-7, in the~
cond eerlod.
Rom"ll Glibrfel plloted the R' m • doWD:ritld · 82 yirds. The b8Il was about
four inches from the goal line. Four
seconds remained.
Gabriel \hrew towa,rd tight end Bill
Ttuu. Atkinson intercepted. T b e
ball-17-7 stood.up. "Th!> delwe forced the p!ay. Gabriel
moy0bave been hurried. I happened to·be
theft mid Tnax wun't, "1 AW.... said
w.r. ' "For aome reuon· we· hl-ve hid u epidemic of }~ .... aai,t George.
Allen. "W_e keep mal!lng them and keep
making them •• ~re 11 no way we c~
win if we plQ lite Ulls." ·
'!be first "lnlltllk<:" Ram hilllback
WllU. ElltsoO !Umbled 1he ~:away on
the ·J·e~ two. -· •·· · -
There was controversy. The Jets trail·
ed, 7--0, In the secood quarter. Woodi'tt
threw long to Don Maynard. He caught it,
collided violently. with Kermit Alexander
and the ball popped loose. .
'Ibo Rams ""°"'""· •IIUt ol!idals rul-ed the flm>l>le """"1ed after the ball WU
dead. '!be pin WU 45 yards. On the Ml<
play Woodall threw for It to Rlcbao
~· andthe tying toudMiown.
..... ·-,Jrst ·-,. 12 lihtlllirll .,.,.,.... l:M .SI
P111lng. Ylrdtff 2D 27• Aetvr11 .,.,,..._ :W .Q
P11-»U• l'°4·J Pun~ 141 WI
FunlbltJ loll 2 I
Y1ra. 111Mll1td 7t "' Ntw YOl'k • t 17 7 f-31
LOI ""991• 7 0 t 1 -'II LA -Snow ft Piii ff-G1bri.I (llty klcllJ
NY -Cult!' 2' ,. .. ,,_ WDOCl,lll (Turiw·
'"" HY -Hock i run !Tu.-tldl)
NY -FG TUt"Mf" :t11
LA -f'G lll:•'t' It •
NY -Wlllte II P9» fl'fll'ft Wlladlll ITlltl*' ltldl:' lA-FG lll:1ylJ
NY -S.-II 11tM '""" WOONn CTl!nW' kick) LA -MllOll 2t plb Ir-Glbl'!l4 (ll:1y kick) A"""""• -H.an.
Australians
Whip World
For Goll CuP,
BUENOS AIRES (AP) -AuJtralim
Bruce Devlin and David Grahim took ~
)Vortd Cup goll cbamplonsblp -e II
AW1tratla today, but lei! behind !he II>
dlvldaal ocoring title In Argentina, mud>
lo the dellght of the Argentlnel.
'lbat title WU toat.cbed •W•Y at the
Wt mln\11' by bome favorite Roberto d<
Vlt:enzo, who ttaged • late charge befon:
thousands of cheering fam to overcome •
~~stroke dbadvantage in the final U
boles.
It waa a contest between the oki
master and the young upstart from
Australia. De Vicenzo, 47, has played irl
all II World Cups and this tournament
waa dedicated to him.
He bad helped win the team trophy for
Mgentina.in 1953, and won the individual
title in 1962.
Graham, on the other hand, failed onb·
two weeks ago to qualify for the lucrative
Professional Golfers Association tour in
the United States. He is 24, a relative
newcomer to pro golf, and was playing in
his first World Cup.
Hickman, son of Mr. and Mrs. ~
Roy D. Hickman of Overland Park, ~
Kan., a Kansas City suburb, li
telephoned them from his campus
apartment in Huntington, W. Va.,
after the tragedy.
The Oilers were guilty c:if roughilJg
Spurrier and the 49ers went' OD to soore
and make it 23-13.
. . ' .. PACKER BOB JETER USES HIS HEAD FOR LANDING AFTER STOPPING BEAR PASS PLAY.
Actually, Graham was the s e con d
choice behind Bruce Crampton who had a
previous commitment. In the recent PGA
school at Tucson, Arb:., Graham failed to
qualify for the tour by one stroke.
He told them he had been taken
off the traveling aquad Thursday.
His wife, Mickey, told bis parents it
was the first game away from
borne Wes had missed.
"I have shed many a tear for the
other boys," his. mo~ said. "God
was ·!.i*~blm.''-l -.-...::" --:aa--....,.. ~
All-league Picks
"It (the roughing penalty) really put UI
in the soup,'' Lemm said. "It looted like
a good acting job by Spurrier.
"We did a lot of tbinga well but we're .
still making those damned mistakes II ·
crucial ~ints,'' Lernm ~ed. _
BrOdio'. Aid, III itioiiib1 Wi:U. the boll·•
1ood."
Allllheim Strikes Again;
Snubs Players, Coaches
Ts there no limit to the humiliation we
must !uffer from Anaheim High School
(ootball coaches?
It's bad enough the C.Olonists encourage
the wholesale transfer of football talent
and potential talent by permitting these
migrating kids to turn out for the tea!lJ: ...
Clearly the Anaheim tutors could
discourage the exodus of grid stars from
neighboring schools by simply saying,
"thanks. but no thanks," when these lads
report for pracUct.
However, they don't and it seem! like
e&.•111" WNIT•
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WHITE
WASH -------
every year there art class players mov·
Ing from Garden Grove, Westminster,
Orange Santa Ana or wherever to benefit
coach Oare VanHoorebeke's machine.
That's bad enough.
But now Van's assistant,, have-·t.aken a
more brazen step and in doing so have
humiliated all Sunset League coaches and
pl ayers. When asked to make nominations for
the All-League team announced today
lhey had crust enough to put an Anaheim
boy at every position, offensively and
defensively.
preferred treatment, drawtng 1 home
assignment against a piUful Centennial
side.
Meanwhile Newport Harbor, the true
Sunset League champion by vb;tue of ill
'1.0 spanking or Anaheim, draws the In-
equity of having to play away and qUnst
a substantially strong Redlands outfit.
There was thought In some comm ·
of deleting An'aheim from league stan-
dings, rankings and playoffs. 'I'here was
additionally thought of keeping Anaheim
players from All-League consideration
untll bona fide Anaheim area kids could
be distinguished from the transfers.
But some well-meaning fellow 1>9lnted
out that such chore could take too much
time.
So some Colonists were given recogni-
tion. .
But certainly the ' entire Colony of·
fensive and defensive lineup· Clidn't 1nake
it, as coaches up there would bave bad It.
True, Anaheim baa seemed mighty of-
fensive to this corner .and should be at
last put on the defensive... "
And perhaps someday justice wlll out.
But it is admittedly a dim prospect.
what with one having to rely on Sun5et
· principals, cessation of preferred treat·
ment by the CIF and the Anaheim
coaches themselve! to right that acow.
* * * Mesa Verde Country Club In Costa
Mesa is building three new tennis courts
and a tenni.s clubhouse. Bob Ogle, father
of a couple of pretty nifty prep players at
Newport a couple years ago, is Ule pro.
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Bold Adventure appears to be enjoying his association with queen
Denyse Losi at Los Alami$<>.S. Bold Adventure will be on band for ·tbe
opening·day two;;year.;"QJd-1eature race after winning the $27,000
Pomona Futurity recenUy. The special 12~ay meet is the first day-
time action in three yetrs at Los Alamitos.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
LA, Detr~t in 4-4 Deadlock
LOS ANGELES (AP) -For Gordon
Labossiere, it's like'a new life.
'Jbe 31J..year-oldc center of the Los
Angeles Kings, playing the best hockey or
his life, helped the Kings si.inday night as
they moved into a fourth-place tie }n, the
National Hockty League's West Division
with a M ·ue with Detroit. ..
Laboaslere, a 6-foot--1, 18$ pounder,
scored Los Angeles ' first goel and
spearheaded the Kings until a late }led
Wing rally caught Los Angeles with fi ve
seconds to play.
Traditionals . '
De Vincemo led during the first 3ti
boles: of the tournament, fell two strokes
behind Graham OD the third round Satur-
day, and then fired a lw<Hlnder-par 70 ID
Sunday'a final round , while Graham went
over. '10 for the tiJrt time in the tourna-
ment with a 73.
De Viceru.o finished with a 8, It
unaer par. wblle Graham lhot 270. Next
were Devlin, at 275, 14 under, and Dave
Stockton of the United States and Allan
Set ~a~~ay
In Pacific-8 _ Henning of South Africa, tied at 269, nine
--=·under.
"Big Game" time is approaching in the
Pacific-8 confeWlct, and aometimea
that'11 all that counta.
But this year there is the excitement of
Stanford sniffing ~s.
'l'his Saturday, ft will be· Stanford
against Ca!Uom!A .In Berkeley, UCLA
against Soulhem,,catifornla, which 41"elf
a bY' fast week, Ottgon v1. Oregon state
1n c.orVallis and Washi.n&ton at
Washington State.
Of course, Southern Callfomll'! Tro-
jans have been to the Roae Bowl four
time running. so that became kind of a
continlling story.
But Stanford?
lt's bee.o 19 years sinc.e th< lndiBRI
have appeared In the Pasadena classic,
and pulses are 'quickerilng in the San
Francisco Bay Are1t.
.First though, ~ls .the .annual "Big
Ganie" between iStanford 'and tradiUonal
arch-rival California, and thLs ls a contest
that alway! sets off compeUtlve teruiioa
that can .send the oUtcome either way.
Coach John Rllston thinks his Stanford
charges might have been looking ahead
to CaJllornia when they lo.st to Air Force
31·11 last Satllr&y.
An even worse defeat was suffered by
UCLA, one of Pac-S'a season-after-seuc>n
powerhouses, e1.20, at the bands of the
Washington Huakies, •parked by superb
sophomore Sonny Slxkiller, one of the na-
tion' a to~ p8Slers.
Oregon WU stunned In the midst Of ..
succeafiil season. by a %2-22.tie by Army.
The Cadets. had won only one previous
game all year. ~
California came from behfnd for 1 35-21
victory over Sart.Joae State, in a-surpris.
ing outcome, another indication that Pae.
B's big teams ~ere looking ahead to their
"big games." _
Oregon State downed Washington Slate
23-16.
De Vicenzo's score was a record low,
breaking !he ml\fk of m, held jointly by
Sam Snead of the. United Statea, George
Knudsen of Canada and Hldeyo Sugimo to
of Japan.
Graham did not seem too disappolnled
that be Jost the Individual title. "We won
the world cup," he Mid; "and that'1 what
we came for."
Chargers Nip
Boston, 16-14
CAMBRIDGE, Mau. (AP) -John
Had! passed ta Lance Alworth •and Gary
Garrison for teeond-balf toucbdownl &zn-1 day In rallying the Son Dlqo Cbargen to
a 18-14 vi~ over Boston, handmg the
baple11 Patriots an eighth ccmecuUva
National Football Le&IJUe loss.
The Chargera ext~ed their unbeaten
string to five games after spotting the
Patriots an early touchdown, only the
third tcored by Boston in its last seven
•tarts.
Jiow does that strike you?
Participating In this shameful act were
JOHN BALAAM, ROBERT CAMPBELL,
BRANT COWSER, GENE DONNELLY,
TOM MINER, VIC GRABAUCH,
WILLIAM FASSEL, JIM HOWARD AND
BOB SALERNO.
Apparently Van ~nothing ta do with
An Old Man Can Still Play-·-C~nnon
Helped by a critical third-down
peraonal loul penalty against Boston, Son
Diego marched 84 yards to tie the tcore
in !he third period. Had! capped the surge
with a flv~yard touchdown peu to
Alwortb.
Alter Mike Mercer bit the pl PoSt M
a 25-yard field goal attempt at the end ot
the third period, the fired up aw..,.
moved Jn !root to ltay wtth a ltoul
defenoe doing the job.
tt. Nor would I have xpected him \o. ,.
But whatever, this another example PITrSBURGH (AP) -Tight end BlllJ
of Anaheim High brashness. Cannon bas a degree in dentistry.
The Colonists apparently think they can Somebody al!o should give him a degree do. as lhey please. regardless of who or. . . .
what may get In thetr way. tn genatr1cs.
And with weak-kneed I ea g u e ad-ft\ At 31, ~n was fired by the Qakland
minislrators letting tbem off the hook Raiders for old age.
when scandal! come up I guess you But Sunday, Cannon now with Kamas
reaU1 can't blame Anaheim people fur City,'caught two touchdown passes~as the actlnr as though they think they can get . away with anything. Ouefs defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers
Too. lhe CIF doc• notlllng to put the 3t·l4. •
Colonists In their place. "I'm an old man," admitted Cannon,
Quite the eontrary. Jn current pairings one of the start of the early Amerlcn
Jor tho football playo'Us Anabelm got Football Lellgue yearc, "But I 1WJ think
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I can play this .1ame."
Cannon bad a cbal tltls l1ll with Al
Davis, one of. the ·owners of the Raiden
where he'had played since 1964.
) "He called me in and said he waJlolng
with the younger kids. I could61t fault
him wlth that and Raymond Chester h"
done a trtm"1dous--job. But I still left I
could play.
).'I was "fired, ''-he said. ,
· ,. The 11-year veteran was on the Kansu
City cab squad for three games anci then,
WhC? Fred Arbanu Wll JnJured. be W81
activated. "'
Against ·WuhJn&ton last week Cannon
caught two Important passe!, just short,
of touchaownS. -
•11 should hav<Md them both tn the
end r.ont/' be said. ~·m too old. I got to
the one and the 10. It Was all my fault"
Despite h.18---age, Cannon. a twC)otitne
All·Amerfcan at LSU and the 11!?9 Hd,.
man Trophy winner, doesn't ste any kind
of companson with George Blanda, 43,
his former teammate at Oakland and
btmsol! .
"Georre·b•dUferent. If you could chop
Up his beor\ Ind put ft Into ti n>okfts
you'd have an alJ..star team."
Cannon had a word more for ownera
and coaches ui u1'. National Football
Leagae.J
"They all want to look at rookle1. 'lbty
haVe a Jot o{ money invested Jn draft
choices and f.bey want to make cerLain
about them.
Cannon. caught two of Len Dawaoo'•
tllree touchdown paue1.
Bolton ql;lltte-back Joe Kapp w11
dropped lO< • tJ.yard ""' to !he Booton
eight by Joe °""" and I running play lost 1 yard. Kapp then wu tackled by °""" oDd Ron Blllln'iSley In the em! zone for a 11.fety.
Hadl added 1 decisive touchdown, com-
bining_ with Garrison on 1 to-yard
oyerbead maneuvtr midway throu1Jh the
fuiale. .
Rushed hard , Had! lllt GarrlS\)lt on -O>e
run at mJdfield and the receiver •. with a
neat cu\·ln on !he llUldcty fteld, autroood
Booton defenders.
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DAILY PILOT
OAIL't •1LOT ....... h LM fl-
TOU CHDOWN BOU ND -Edisoh High's Jim Mox· lege. Jn foreground is mate Mike Balch (33) with
Iey (24J leaps over a Fountain Valley defender to Jerry Hinojosa (3) in backJ{round. Moxley scored
the Barons' one.yard line in Saturday's 2a::6 lrv;ine on the following play to cap the evening for the i ~L_e_a~gu_e~ch_a_m~p~i_on_s_h~ip~cl_in_c_h_e_r _at~O_ra_n~g~e_c_o_a_st_C_o_l_·~_C_h_a_rg~e_r_•·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
!
!Eagles Gain CIF ·Berth,
' '
1Clash With Orange Friday
By PIDL ROSS
Of '"-0111'1' l'li.t St11f After sending srouts to at least 10 AAA
football games around the CIF Soulhern
Section Friday night, Estancia Eagles'
head football coach has gotten his
ultimate wish -lor the moment anyway.
' ffis Irvine League runnerup gridders
(6-1 behind unbeaten loop titlist Edison
: and &-l overall ! will be performing In the
• ClF playoffs for the first time Friday
night when they tackle host Orange High,
the Crest view League champion.
They clinched the Irvine's se cond spot
1 Saturday night with a stunning , come-
1 from-behind 27-21 decision over stubborn
archrival Corona de! Mar's Sea Kings ~ before a near-capacity gathering at
Newport Harbor High. I At the same time, Edison was thum-
; ping fountain Valley, 2.8-0. to assure the
• Eagles of sole possession of the ruMerup ~position and a solid crack at the playoff
~ berth \1-'hlch became a reality on. a
decision by the CIF Sunday.
Brown said that he couldn't believe it
"·hen Co rona had his team down, 21·7 in
the v•aning stages of the first half.
···Tue kids didn't expect it and neither
did our L'Qaching staff. So, we had to go
to the air at thnt lime," he noted after
the Eagles had completed the greatest
regular season gridiron campaign in U1e
school's six-year history.
Actually It was the heady field
generalship of the Orange Coast area's
most underrated quarterback, senior
Curt Thomas. which was most responsi-
ble for the victory.
The 176-pounder and his teammates on
the Eagle offense inherited possession o(
.f(he ball on their own 20 with the count
knotted at 21·21 and just 6:07 left in the
arfair.
Thomas mh:ed his plays well in spen·
ding more than five minutes on the game
dock and driving the amazing Eagles the
. Chargers Praised
Edi son Played Best Game
Agan1st Fountain Valley
It all ~med antic limactic Saturday
night for Edison High and its boosters al
Orange Coast College following the
Chargers' 28·6 \Vipcout of rival Fountain
\'alley.
The dcci~ion gave the Edison crew an
umblemished reg ular season slate -nine
"'ins, no losses -and the undisputed
Irvine League football champio nship.
But the game \\'as locked awa y e a r I y
"·ith a three tou chdown outburst in the
first .half and U1c balance of Lhr second
ha lf and the moments following the fi nal
gun seerned only a matter of going
th rough the motions.
The overflow crowd that had arrived
early -began leaving early from the
Fountain Valley side.
we thought they were.
"They played exactly like we thought
they would in term s of strategy -they
1o1·ere just better than we thought "
A Baron assistant, Wayne Mi::!kaelain,
commented on Ed ison's possibilities In
the upcoming CIF playoffs:
"I saw Orani;e Frida y night and I think
this Edison outfit is a superior team."
Orange s1o1·ept to the Crestview League
Lille with a 7-0 mark.
Vail, of L'Oursc, had no Jdea who his
teem would be pla ying in the playoffs.
but he said, "They 're all good· teams in
the playoffs.''
Riessen Upended
final 80 yards in an ti-play series .
Junior fullback John Dixon climaxed
the all·successful drive with only 59
seconds remaining when he dove over left
tackle from a yard away for the go-ahea·d
six pointer.
Despite Randy Carpenter's ensuing
unsuccessful PAT kick attempt (he
booted three o\ber good extra poihts), the
Eagles had Corona's back to the wall an~
the ·Sea Kings tried a vain, final drive
which ended in Eagle territory at the 2t-
yardlloe as time ran out.
It appeared that coach Dave Hal.land's
Sea Kings were going lo upset the high-
flying Eagles in a tsig way after they
broke a 7.7 tie on a pair of dazi.Hng 41·
yard scoring sprints by junior halfback:
John Miles (a 10.2 sprinter) ln the first
and se<ond periods.
Miies'' two scores plus an eat Iler one-
yard plunge by fullback Bob Ferraro and
Joe Ricca 's trio of PAT kicks had given
the Sea Kings their 14-point bulge.
Estancia's oilier · touchdowns were
tallied on 15 and two yard passes from
Thomas to Lee Freldersdorf and Lee
Joyce in the second and third stanzas and
an 86-yard klckoff return by Jim Schulll
Alter Ferraro 's TD in the first quarter.
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Coach Bill Vall of the winners w1s
unable to find a lunling po int -\l•hich
fi gures since the Chargers si mply moved
up and down the field each time they
gained possession.
Ashe Wins Net Chissic
He dld adm it his team had pl1yrd Its
best game of the year - and that ~e
offensive wrinkles he had his team work
on for the Foun(111 Jn Valley game were not
lJsed .
"J should know better, I guess. We
worked on a lot of variations for this
£&me but when il got down to playing the
game, v.·e still went to the power," said
Vall. r...., •
His fonner bo.u, Westminster lligh'a
Bill Bosweil, com1Til!:nted on EdJsaf.'s pro-
we$S, sayin8', "They Jooked awfully good
-\'try wt.JI bll1nced."
As for CC'lach Bn.aet Pickford of Foun·
lain VaJJey1 the genial Baron mentor
rep lied, "T'My beat the hell out of us,
that's all lhere Is to II .
''f hope they go all the way, they're •
good b311 club. They're 1 lot better than
PARIS (AP) -Arthur Ashe rodr a
\\'ave of superb volleys to a straight set
victory over Mart y Riessen In the all
American final of the Paris 0pen indoor
lennls tournament SU'nday and vaulted in·
lo a tic wlth'Cllfr Ri chey for leadership in
the rich tennis Grand Prix.
Ashe's 7-6, M . 6-3 vi ctory over Riessen
gavr hlm the se.ooo first place money of
a total o( '31 .000 In prize money.
Jn the final of the doubles, Rosewall
and Pancho G0pu.lez {)f Los Angeles
defeated Tom Okker of Holland and
Riessen , 6-4, 7-3, 7-6.
TI1e Grand Prix has a jackpot or
$1501000 to be di stributed among tht
le1ae.rs from 21 sele¢ed t.oumament.s
around the wo rld.
The winner "'ill gtt $25.000. Whh l)nly
l\VO tournaments left in the Grand Prix
program, Ashe of Rlcpmond, Va., and
Ri chey of San An£Clo, Tex., ha ve 49
Po ints, Ken Rosewall ot Australia 44 , Rod
\
Laver of Corona de! Mar 40, and Stan
Smith of the United States 3ll.
Ashe started slowly J05ing his sertlct
in the fourth game of the llrst act on two
netted volleys from close to .lhe net , but
everled1 it in lhe seventh game when
Riessen Or Evanston, Iii., gave up h I 1
service on errors.
Ashe took the tie.break game by
holding three service points and taking
one of Riessen'rty.'O"{lervice points with•
beckh•nd t~t laitded on the side.line out or ttoch. .
In the seco nd set , Ashe broke Riessen
In the nrst and firth game!I and carefully
Mid on lo his strvice all the way.
It \I as thr la~ set that Ashe hit the top
of his form with carefully placed volleys
and stinging ctoU-court and sideline
service ret urns. He gave up only two
points In four 5ervlce games, and one Wl'S'
a double f11;u!t.
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·Edison Face·s Lanc·ers
..
In Opening Playoff Tilt
By ROGER CARLSON
Of 1119 O•llY Pllill 51•1t
The winning lradilion, that intangible
source of power not usually found in
young prep rOOtball teams, was apparent
Saturday night at Orange Coast College
before an overflow crowd of 9,000.
Orange County prep clrc1et!I Is no fluke.
Coach Bruce Pickford's Barons gave a
good account of themselves, but it was a
ca&e of too much in every department for
Edison. The Barons finished the cam-
paign with a third place finish in the loo p,
maining.
So the Chargers are clwnpioOI today
with nine In a row in thrir pocket&, 12
straight over two seasons ,and the
playoffs on tap!
And the team that displayed it along
with a iuper-balanced, poised and tough
aggregation was Ille Irvi ne League cham·
pion, Edison High's Chargers.
Hinoj~sa completed 50 percent of 14 at-
tempts for 130 yards and Moxley rushed
for a 5.1 average on 22 carries after being
hospitalized last week with illness.
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Coach Bill Vail's talented crew swept
to an impressive 2MI rout of rival Foun·
tain Valley to claim the Jrvlne crown
with an undefeated season and a berth in
lhe CIF AAA playoifs. ~
The Chargers will host Sunny Hills, the
Freeway League rUJ\llerup, Friday night
in the first round.
And the defensive work. of Mark
Harmon accounted for a pair of· in·
terceptions and fumble recoveries were
recorded by Gary Balch, Tirry McNay
and Brian Bayless to stifle the Barons'
attack.
tee.. Illy ow""" 11181 -ZI 0 0 0 ,_'
lt UtHING
And If anyone had a notion that
perhaps the second-year Chargers would
have to share the title with anyone else,
Vail's well-<1iled machine made ahort
work of that folly.
Hinojosa's two TD passes were to John
Fisher and flarmon, on 25 and 39-yard
plays, the last one' coming with 40
seconds remaining in the Jialf to settle
the issue.
Earlier Hinojosa had capped an eight
play, 33-yard advance with a one-yard
keep behind the blocking of Steve
Roberts.
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The Green and Gold slashed to a 21 -
point lead at the half, scoring twice~
through the air behind Jerry Hinojosa's
deft passing game and showed true
balance with runner Jlm Morley cutting
lhe Fountain Valley line apart.
The final Charger tally was Moxley's
16-yarder, shaking off three tacklers in
the process. Gary Balch toed his fourth
PAT with 7: 14 to go in the game. .. pc ,.,, • .,.. "''· In short, there was little doubt that this
was no paper champion running amuck
-and the Charger•' No. 2 standftic in
Fountain Valley's only score was a 14-
yard strike from quarterback Ken
Shibata. to Gary Hernandez with 1:11 .re-
Powtr
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11 1 0 I• .lCO '-"111 vau.., _ l 0 ,, • .coo 1•1•·"' f I ! .!O ,"'4
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Monday, N~~embt, 16, 1q10 ( DAIL V PILOT f :I.
Johnson Coach of Year; 9.¥:Gcid .:~onf~.rence Title on Line
. Tars Dominate Loo Team :!:f,ed ;4ffiir.Garichos Tie Citrus P Cil?us Belt League 'cham· By CRAIG SHEFF A~gh lack or emotion Cilrus. Their w0<1 Joas record
pkln Redlands will furnish the Of """ 0 .. "~.'1* 11•H • rilay have pll!gued the l4-3·1} Is very dectiving.
Newport llilrbor H I g h ' s
Grant Gelker and coach Ernie
Johnson led a Sailor domina-
tion of the official All·Sunset
League football team for 1970
as \ selected by the DAILY
PILOT.
time In 28 years In his first try
at the Newport helm. ~
the selections wlt h four Sailors wbile'Huntington Beach Hlgh's opl*>Sttloh in the first round of .E~otlOltS plaf a big part In Gauchos. a fired-up Citrus •·But we made many, many
gaining first tean1 defeMlve one·man wre<:klng crew . the ClF AAAA to o·t b a 11 winning f~bel games. defensrve unit didn't help mat·
~1arina High's Steve
Monahan, who led the Vikings
to their first ever winning
~son. was the chOice for
Back of the Year laurels.
bertbs. 1 Garth Wise. wa·s named as a plajoffs tor Sunset . Leagµe And th,at's one reason why fers. • tnistakes. Penalltes (12 for 95
Besides Gelker, mates Terry first team back. champion Newpoi:t Harbor Sa&Jleback .COUege. wu only "They (Citrus) were a very, yards) just killed us and we
Albritton, Jim Swick and Bill Westminster's Doug Milne , Frida{ night. -r af ~ Unlvq-able to tie Citrus ,College (7•7J very tough defensive ball club. had impossible field position
Whllfold nabbed honors. Of· ·also picked up a first team slty o Redlands. Saturday night at Citrus. I said all ·along that Citrus was most of the time .
lensively It was guard Ron defensive spot. Irvine League titlist EdisCn "We just weren't emo-one of the finest ball clubs ln "Our offense dkln't do the
Gelker, a 220-pound tackl e
playing both ways, was a
near·unaminous choice for
Lineman of the Year honors in
tbe rugged Sunset circuit
while bis coach took the Tars
to the loop title for the first
Monahan passed for 1,040
yards, ran for 475 and played
sterling defense.
Tripp and halfback Mike Second team honors went to will play host · to FI'1'.way Uonally and mentally ready,'' the cooference, ·• s aid the
Easterling in first team Newport's Alvin White ~n·d League i:unnerup Sunny Hills sald Sadd.leback coacli George Gaucho coach. job we thought they should. It
clreles. Scott Schaefer, Marina's Bob and Estancia Higb's runnersup Hartman. •:sut I don't think. The Owls held Gaucho wa s a total or fens l v e
Newport Harbor's forte in
gaining a tie for the league
championship with Anaheim
was defense and it shows in
Another st a n do u t for Witt and Dave Jackson, and in .the lryine ·loop will ttek to that will be the case Saturday 1 ob Whi 1 1 breakdown as far as the block-
Marina, Bryan Kerns , We s t m j n·s t er '.s Steve Qrsnrre fu MA action. night." tai back T Y ·pp e we 1 in ing went. And our passing at· • -~ H £ · he check. He netted on1y 49 yards r· · I ff garnered firs~ team accolades GrassbaUgb and Jim Ho!Land. Edl0>n's game-will ·be at e was re en1ng to I tack was very de 1n1te Y o . · •• · 1 h with the Saddleback running · 't -~ · II Westminster Hfgb . wtiile El commg encouni.cr w 1 We. Just weren e ....... 1ona Y 'tr F*l-t Toamd!:Jffo-tfnst -<(::{ 'Modeni. High,' borne of the Riverside Co11ege at Miss.ion gaim getting only 89 for the 'and mental.ly ready.
,., Orange District Stadium, \\ill Viejo Higb.' game. ''But I'm hopeful and con ·
r\ame Wt. Class be . the ~le-. of the: Estlncia-Ttie Gauchos need a tie or But SacMleback·s -defense fident the kids have learned a Pos.
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NoPm Anr;iersen, Anaheim 161 Orange eta.sh. . \\'in against Riverside to claim was not outplaYed. lesson. I'm confident we'll be
Rick Emde, \Vestern 180 Sr. Ticket. for the Newport tiff the ·Mission Conference cham: '·You have lo give our ready for Riverside . We'd bet-
Bob Eukovich, Loara 215 ~: are on sale at Harbor lllgh. ~io~ip a11nd a 1berth jnh the
1
dkele~ tre'!lendthoubs cllredit fo.~ ler be."
Rolf Brown, Anaheim 201 Jr. with adult ducats $2. children Jumor co ege arge sc oo s eepmg us in e a game, Saddleback waited until 12
Ron Tripp, Newport Beach "' 175 Sr. 12 and under 50 centa. and playoffs. said Hartman. minutes left in the game.
Glenn Martinez, Anaheim 191 Jr. students with cards 75 cents. '1::f t? -{';{ "OIJerall it was pretty evi-before scoring. A one-yard
Terry Terrell, Anaheim • 201 Sr. AAAA GAME ST•T1sr1cs dent we didn't play the type of plunge by quarterback Chris
Greg LaMendo\a, Weslem 190 Sr. St. Francis at El Rancho. fl"5t dcwn• ...,..,,lno s: 10c ball game we are capable of Hector capped a 61-yard drive
Garth Wise, Huntington Beach. 170 Sr. f\.11.ra Costa at Santa Barbara F1r11 oOWM N»llll ' J playing. B,ut .J don't want to in 12 plays. Rothrock's kick.
Mike Easterling, Newport Harbor 142 Sr. 'Centennial at Anaheim ~~~~·fi~t".=:111a 1~ !1 take anything. awey from then knotted the score at 7·7,
Jim Beyers, Loara 185 Sr. Bishop Amat at Arcadia Y•ro• ru.,,1.,. '°' "' ·p; .. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"i
First Team Defense LaKewood at St. Paul ~=~ i!~1n11 '::: !: 11 ~ rtm ~~~z·:::~:Harbor ~= Sr. WalT~ at Pioneer ::M::~:r:~~lltln(t 10/l~~ !~~IA Why It Pays· to Know T Te N Soph. , Bu~a a,t Pasadena ,._111 .. 1Y1rd1 -11110 111t5 i135 -rry Albritton, ewport Harbor 215 Jr. Newport at Redlands F11mbltJJ F11mb111 11111 211 ,11
T-Grant Gelker, Newport Harbor Z!5 Sr. AM 5<.,. '' 0111"••1 BOB PALEY MG-A l F Lo S~ltblid o o I 7-7 r ry, ara 205 Sr. Ranctio Atarn.it,ps at Boni~ Ci1n11 o • ' 0-1 ' LB-Mike Davis, Anaheim 186 Jr. 1tusH•NO LB-Dave Dalton, Loara 190 S Estanda at Orange s11Mi.ucJt ~ 11 hb Poley? A fMttMll 1ter,
LB-Bryan Kems, Marina l&s J~: Newbury Park ~t Lompoc w~1"'' ':,' ~: "! ·;~ perh•ps1 C• lie , ... Ilk• ••rlf! .... STEVE MONAHAN
B•ck of Year·
GRANT GELKER
Lineman of Year
B-Bill Whitford. Newport Harbor 165 s Glendora at Kennedy u1<1ar 11 :u l• 1.t r•• 11111 S•pt1f 11 .._ • 11.....,_kl .. r. Sunny Hills at Edison Oivel XI • 5·0 W.Ckb•ltef Ill• httl•f O..'t tdi B-Steve Monahan, Marina 170 Sr. ...,.,., o • o.o ., .. _., ,... •II _. k .. w. hb ,...,
B-Doug Milne, Westminsler l'?J Sr. Excel lsior at RoColling Hills 1111'11 c11;!, 1°' ,. 1·11 ca't t•ll • "'"' "'4 "-• lln1111k ..
Set.'O!ld Team Up and at West Vina 1 • .., ,, vt .,,. .-1 .. ,, ht ....,_., ... till .. f9r •• ,.
Bob Witt, Marina 190 s Bishop Monlgomery al Minier ' n 10 1•11 ••• 119 en coll"'-..1-... ...._ wbe9 Zaltosky Gets 6 E-
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r. Pac·rric· a Hu.wnd n 1n :n •. ,1 ·~· r~• Steve Grassbaugh, Westminster 161 Sr. s1m. 1• 13 1 s.1 h c•-t. world .. '"' J••r I_,...
Bob Reyes, Santa Ana 240 Sr. AA ~!.,. ~ ! ~ 1! ....,.,
11 Interceptions
~ace OCC, 24-10
Dave Jackson, Marina 208 Sr. Murphy at Temple .City Nn,_1,, ' '' o 6.0 t.ri•••ly, ttffdS. wltl! lob P•l91 -4
Jim Holland, Westirnenter 2114 Jr. Saddleb'ack at Norihview to1111 ~ASS~NG 2_.. u 2·' ~). ::;:.-... .,..':;":,.::~. •:.::= Mike Mueller, Western 220 Sr. Hemet at·Central sH111aHa loM. Fi,., tlleft, _, •••• ..,...,.,.,
Scott &haefer, Newport Harbor 185 Sr. Victor Valley at Colton HKtor · ";. ~ ';'1
1;!' .':! yow M-4 ••• W. will~'"
Alvin White, Newport Harbor 210 Sr. Cantwell at El Segundo c1tm t'-Mlt c•_.... et • ....., price.
Monte Floyd, Santa Ana 165 Sr. Wilson ,at.Glenn a1b1ch ':. ~ ":'1 !: ,!;~ SAFECO 1--"''* tlie ...... hb P•ley. 474
Mark Hanna, Loara 170 Jr. Sonora a t Ontlll'io Hu&111n0 ~ : : : .ooo INSURANCE I. 17tti StrMt, Cottti M..._ Plo•:
Jim McCulley, SA Valley ------~198".:_ _ _'.s:r:. _ _.:B~a~rs~w:w:_:•~I ~M~o:•:•no::_~V~•:ll~ey'.,__ __ '~T'~,;;-~~;'°~, --~"'._~'-''...._~"-C:::~~~~~~~~~~~"~'~ .. ~·~0~0~· ~~~~~~
By GLENN WHITE
Of Ille Dill, '''°' Still points, making It 17..0 at
halft ime.
SAN DIEGO -C r a I g But the Olympians came
Zaltosky, a young man who right back. scoring with 13:01
was never asked to pl.:iy in an to go in the third quarter, sllc-
all·slar game and who never' ing the gap to 17-7. And they
was acco rded A 11-O r a n g e were driving again moments
County honors despite being Later when Zaltosky picked off a throw in the end zone. called one o{ the best athletes
Top ~ports
Fisherman
Succumbs
MIAMI, Fla. (AP)
Within 90 seconds the losers in Huntington Beach High were again on the attack.
history, finally had glory catch resting at the Pirate ~. But
up with him. Walters grabbed a throw and ~mas M. Gifford. noted
It happened Saturday night ran it 56 yards to set.up the ' sports flstiemum aud operator
clinching toucfu:lown. oC I charter bOat Service ln at San Diego 1.1esa College
with some 850 c h i I I e d Ken Eppelbeimer went over the Virgin Islands, died of
onlookers viewing his football rrom l~e t~ to ~p the I~-cancer in a Miami hospital yard. f1ve-pJay drive and it prowess. was 24-7 with 22 seconds left in Sunday. He was 74.
The 5-9, 151-pound Orange the third period. Gifford was credited with ln-
Coast College freshman in-Mesa ~tlled for a field goal venting the fishJng b o a t
tercepted six passes -four in the la.st quarter as six in-outrigger and s w i v e l l e d
the fourth quarter. He return-terceptions kept the Olym-fighting chair, now sland.ard plans throttled. ed one theft 47 yards and ran equipment on fishing vessels,
a kickof! back a like distance First down• ru~ll'lt occ 5 3 so although his inventions were
'-lend a vital assist in OCC's Fir•1 oawni paulno ' 12 never patented. w f irs! CIOWl'I> -'•Illa , 3
24-10 South Coast Conference Tatar 11rit dawn• u 11 Gifford had made 24. world Y1nh rusllino 1•1 Sol win. Y•nh 11eurno us "' record fish catches. A pro-Yaros 191.r n ., While coach Dick Tucker's Nd .,.n:1. 1111'1td 111 ,.1 fesslonal fisherman for some
Punt1 tAver1oe dilltnce 101.10.l ""·' ·orrense sputtered. the defense P~nlflfY•nb ~,,.11zec1 "" u1103 50 years, he had fished with
saved the bacon with Bob Fumblei/Fumbl" JGll ''1 110 such personalities as Ernest Scere "' 0V•rt•r'1 Blanchard (2), Lee \Vallers. 0 ••nve CCNoit 0 11 1 .._,. •lemingway and Max Lerner. so M.1>11 0 0 1 J-10 Ha1Ty Cannack and Jessi 111usH1NG Gifford y,·as born In Red
H d I I k• f£ Dr1"11 (NII ernan ez a so p uc 1ng o t<:b ,, .,.1 ... , Bank. N.J., but had Jived in Olympian pa sses. Er>oe!l>l!lmrr 1• 67 • '·• Mool"e 16 31 11 1.s Miami, Puerto Rico and the Throttled on the ground by v.,,t1Yma 1 J1 .10 0.1 occ·s classy defensive crew. Mvero • 10 o ?.J Virgin Islands for a number of
Corwin 1 • O •O the hosts went to passing. ro1111 53 ,., " 1:1 years. He operated a charter
They threw 59 times. com-5'" 01.,., M111 boat service out of Lagoon Ban~ll • u 11 e.s pleling 22 -that's II for each cu•rv 1 1 , .1.s Marina. Redhook, In S t.
side. 0ev11 s • ' 1.1 Thomas, V.l., until stricken
Ottombrlno 1 1 3 1.5 Ith I hs They outgalned the intruders wa11t1n~ ' is 11 .t .5 w cancer severe mon t
by 85 yards for the night but v~~%11~ ,; ,s! ~ ~:! ago, family members said.
Lhe interceptions, 13 pcnallies ~•ss1wG He underwent surgery at -" Or1n11 CH I! G I and a two-ya, u punt proved to 11 "' l'hl ,, •(' eo rgetown U n I v e r s t y
be their undoing as the Bucs v11Mn• ?S 10 o 125 • .cooo Hospital in Washington, D.C., Siii DieN Mtu nabbed their fifth straight vie-•• "' ""' ,, •(t before entering MI am i
tory and nailed down second 0•,·,~~"'-" ' ' 1J1 .c1 V e t e r a n s Administration
h . .....~ ... -11 11 7 '" .ttf place in t e circuit. 1111111 5• 20 11 ,... .lll Hospital Nov. 8.
Tucker lauded his defensive1;=====================:::;I
outfit's showing and had
particular praise for Zaltosky.
"He's one of t~ bes t
defensive backs I've ever
coached -'he· ra nks right up
there with Bill Jenkins apd
Joe Scott," Tucker told the
DAILY PILOT.
"He does everything
returns kickoffs. Intercepts
and blitzes once in a while to
throw backs for losses. He's so
good that after a while you
start expecting all lhese great
things of him .
"And is he lough! l'd hate to
fight him. He consistently
comes up with. the big plays -
he's a helluva kid."
It was Zallosky wflo set up
the first OCC touchdown after
Bob Ryder's 27-ynrd field goal
had given the winners a 3-0
lead with 11:23 !~ft jn the hall.
Zalto!ky ran a stolen. aerial
47 yards to the Mesa two then
Bob Moore went lnto the end
zont from the one to make it
10.0 with 7: IS remaining In the
1econd quarter.
Your visiting in·laws
are using the family car?
Rent a new Ford from Ford.
Just call your local Ford Aent·A...Car Dealer. He's
close to h'ome. And In • Jiffy he'll rent you a new
Ford, Mustang, Torino or Pinto for a day, week or
month. Low rates ••• Insurance Included.
FORD RENT-A-CAR SYSTEM Then Cnrm ac k 's ln·
terception al the Pirate 13
broke up a menacing drive by 1 •..::::a.....
the Olympian.s and was one or ~
the game's turning points. .._ _
Gary V•lbuena direcled the THEODORE ROBINS FORD WILSON FORD
visitors 87 yerdii In seven · • 2o6o H•rMr llv4. llUS l••ch 11¥4.
plays, concluding the ~ti:ttti Cost• fMM, C•llf. H11"tln1ten Inch, C•llf.
y,•lth a picture pass to Tam '4Z..OOTO MJ-6611 Malone fer 47 yards" and 1lx ,.._,,_ __________________ ~_t
;. ~ •
I· I
l
•
, ,
' .,
•
%4 DAILY PILOT
J~, Prep
Football
Standings
MISSIOlit COtlll'IRllllCI
WLTP',.l'.l
S•Odl~ s t I 1!. • ltlY.nl* ~ I f ,., U
c 11rw 32 1 1.io "
Gl'Ol-.1 3 ) O 11• 11• ~l!IWMltr" 2 ' t ,,, 1"
CMftey 2 ' • 1~ 1'1
P11orNr l ' 0 1'6 1J1
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SadCl!ebWI 1, Cllrv• 1
Rlver1.i* 3l, S.ft l •Mnllno 21
l"•lo!Nr 4. $GUiii-'-'" 21 O..~ JI, CllaffwY n · ,......,.., ......
1'11omtir II Siii l!ltfMl'OIM
s11....,.1 o..... Rl~kle v1, StddltbKk 11 MISJlOll
Vl1IO Hl!lfl
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G-1 ti S..011'1.,..,,lttft
SOUTHEIN CAL COMl'lltlHCll W L l'I' rA-
Rlo Ho!ldo I I ID 11
LACC ) 1 116 11
EutLA t 7 10:5 1$
Ct Pren t 1 11 " Golden wesl 1 l XI ti
LA l11rb0r O • .U 111
ltlllrilll'Y'1 k -
C11>rns n. GGldtn WM! •
Rio Hon<la •I, E1~1 LA 21
LACC )I, LA H1rbor ll ,,.,.,....... ··-E••• LA vs.. Goio.n W.I 11 °''"" (O&JI
Rio HMdo 11 LA H1rbor
(y~ 11 I.A((
50UTH COAST COHl'llllN(I
W L l'I' '" Fulltrton s a 110 "3
Or1ntot Cou l • 1 1°' $7
/$1nll ...... l t .. 17
c ... ritos l J ltf llJ
Se" Di.SIG Mew t 1 11 II
Ml. $fn A"'°"'9 I I 71 115
S.n D!tM t $ 11 131 ,,....,. •• kWft
O!'lnll'! (DUI 14 Sell Ditto Mt'9 10
Fuller'"" ti , Ctrrllft 17
Ml, Sin Anlonlo JO. Sin DleOo Jl
l'rl91"s G1me
Sin Dlffo 11 Ori n" Co1~t
llllll'UJ"I 0.11191
Fullf<'10l'I at Senti ......
Mt. S•n A11lon10 •I Solll DlellO Men
Pleru 11 CC!'rllot !noro ~1r1ncel
F•l•WAY L•AGUll
t 'IHALI
w ' ICtnMdY 1 I s"""" 141111 ' 1
" , . "
•
Monday, N0vtmbtr 1•. 1970
ADJUST0SHOULDERSTOCORlll'.CTOff.LtNtSHOTS •
A sJ iaht adjustment in th• alignment of your.
shoulders aa you address the bill can dram1tically
affect th• direction of Your shots.
Let's say you art slicinc your shots from left to
right or pullinc them on a straight lint to the left.
Then you need rportof an inside·to·outsidt clubheed
path through the ball. You'll obtain this by aligninc
your shoulders IS shown in the illUstration at the·
left.
lf")'our shots 'bend fiom right to left, fly straiaht
b.ut to the rlaht . of target, you need · more of. an
open sh oulder position (see illustration on the riaht).
Actually, the best shoulder 1li&nm1nt is one that
parallels the tar11t lil)e. Onc1 you correct your
otf·lint shots, work back to thls 1ll1nment. . . ... mtw.n. ...... ..,. _
Rustlers' Slide
Continues 13-0
Anteater
Poloists ·
Win Title
Sea King Poloists (19-0)
Trip Newport Harbor, 7-3
Orange Coast area prep Cee Ults by 11-3 and 14·2 Holloway was the top scottr
UC lrville couted wnh ap-water polo aggregations closed scores. ln the game for the winners
parent ease in ~•lnntnc the out their regular 1 9 7/0 Gary Robertson paced the with ,thrff tallies while Eric schedules over the weekend Welt Coast water polo chem· with some predictable ha~ winners in the Bees with four Files was a step behind with
plonship at UC Santa Barbara penings resulting. goals while Newport's Jim two scom.
Saturday with victories ovtr UndeJeated (19-0 ), defending l..()r~ managecl a like ' amowit Marina captured the jayvee
UC Riverside (2.W) and the CJF champian Corona del for the Cees. ga.Jlle by a forfeit and was also
host scbool (1-S). Mar's Sea Klnp· wrapped up Estancia goalie Doug Weller victorious in the frosh-soph
In tbe temJllnal match with their regular slate Friday with had to Junge to block .tbe battle, 7-t, as Pat Hovick
• 7 • •~-,·on over 8""-t ~·1·b1e ty1·ng shot -Ith 10 pumped in three goal!. Rivtnide, tbe A n t e ate r s "" """'~ ... ._. ,..~ "" League UUlsts and 1969 C1F »econds left Friday in the Viking vanity goalie Chll!'lle
wasted Uttle U.qae moving in numerup Newport Harbor's Eagles ' tr I um p b over · Shio.saka who had blocked two Iron~ 4-1, jn tho lint period Tars In a contest In the Fullerton. ohot.s ag~t Foothill, tlll'll<d
and 11.J at balftime. Nine Corona pool. Earlier Weiler, an a 11 -back another Saturday as his
I~ wtre added to tbe ~I Area squads were victorious leaguer last seuon, h a d squad stonned p a s t Wl·
in the flnaJ: It.Ima u coach In the two other Friday squelched a _ pair or Indian dermanned Westminster.
Ed Newland erQPtied his matchup! as the Estancia penalty shots. Robbie Robinson finished at
bench in peeling his lOOtb vie-Eagles nipped the visiting Q)ach Barry Fry•s Estancia the top of the Marina scoring
Fullerton Indians, 6-5, and outfit, which bad to play ledger Saturday with four Wry as the Irvine water polo Marina's Vikings edoed the oaJ bile mate Holloway i:o catchup quite a bit of the way, g s w s coach. Foothill Knights, 6-4, in an was led by Ward SaWlders (four) and Flies (two) also
-Dale Hahn 1od Jim Jltad-overtime batUe at Foothill. (thrie goals) and Dan Kent scored in twin tlgures.
bum paced the scortna: with C.OSta Mesa's host Mustangs (two). Art Lillis and Steve Murray
five goals etch white Jim ripped Ga rden Grove by a 13·7 Tom Smallwood led the had one each for the Llons.
McDolSald hlld four and Ferdy count and a clash at Golden Eagles to a junior varsity win Hal Benington. p u s b e d
Massimino ICOCed t b re e. West College saw Marina with four scores \\1ille Eagle through seven scores in pacing
Ma 10 n Philpot and Wade upend Westminster's Lion!, Chuck Prince got the only goal the Vlklng jayvees . to a J2:3
Arens bad two apiece while 10-2, in Saturday games. in a S.l frosb-soph win for the romp.
J1ck. Dickmann and Bob Coach Cliff Hooper's Sea Indians. A 13-4 Marina win in the
McClellan bit one eacb. Kings dropped Newport for Although the Eagle varsity fro!h-sopb ma!c hup was ac-
AgaiMt Santa B•btra In the second lime this season didn't qualify for the CIF companied by the four-goal ef·
the flnah, the Anteaters and nrulded coach Bill Bar· playoffs, a Ont rowd playoff forts of Doug Fabian and Jim
jumped into a U first quarter nett's Tars only their third set· contes t between Garden Grove Rock.
edge and beld the advantage back of the campaign. and Anaheim will get under Costa . Mesa (17-2), the
throughout the IClion. Each Corona, which along w Ith way in the Estancia pool at Irvine League runner up
team scored a pair of goals in Newport and Costa Mesa, 3:15 p.m. Tuesday. behind Corona, had little.. trou·
the second and th!rd quarten draws a bye in Tuesday's first After the teams had fought ble In subduing Garden Grove,
with the Anteater& bitting round CJF playoff action, v•as to a 4-4. deadlock: after regWa-the Garden Grove League
three in the final period to pull paced again by Ga r t h tion play had ended, coach champion.
away, Bergeson with thrtt goats and Chuck Morrl!' Marina Vikings Mike Beal led the ~1esa
Mike Martin and Bruce Kurt Krumpbolz's two. receiv,ed scoring efforts from scoring parade with five
Anteater
.Cage. A~
Sid~lined
Steve Parker, retu"1ing to
the basketball wan .at UC
Irvine for the first Um !n two
years, was sidelined with a
severely wrenched knee In
practice last week and will be
out of action for at least three
to four weeks.
A doctor's report Friday fn..
dicated the knee was severely
wrenched with hemorrhaging
but no apparent cartilece
damag~ was done.
Parker is the f our t b
member of the JS.man squad
to be sidelined with an early
injury. (
Richard Clark (ankler and
Bill George (cut lip) are both
back in uniform but Phil
Rhyne (hamstring m u a c le
Jlllll) Is still Oil the sidelines.
"He sUU has aome pain and
tenderness and I don't want to
rush him back into action,"
coach Tim Tift says.
Meanwhile, the Anteater
mentor is dJsappointed in the
showing ol hJs squad to date.
"There is very Uttle team
effort apparent and they have
shown little pride. We're going
to start all over today (Mon-
day ) in practice,
S1v1nn1 S 2
Fuller?On l
LI Htb•I l 4
Lowel l 5
"' '" '" •m " •
..
" " " "' "' '" >»
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Of Ille 0.1" Plllt Smft
When you put five little let..
ten together backwards like
this, e-d·i·r-p, they mean
nothing.
Black joined Ma.ssimloo in Matt Greer (two) an d Jay Doug Dw:ln and Chuck tallies.
started but we cert a In 1 Y scoring a palr' o( goals while Farrer (one) tallied the only Holloway in the overtime He was supported by Ron
haven't played the brand of single tallies were posted by goals for the Tars. periQd to overcwne_Foothill, Misiolek (3) aod Mike O'Brien
football we are capable of Hahn, Bradburn IDd Pbllpot. Newport wept the Bee and another playoff entrant. (2) .
"\Ve 're going back to fun-
damentals and begin.crawling,
then walking .and I hope run-
ning by the time we pla7
Sonoma State in the opener
Dec. I," Tift added. T..w I ' at!tN ,.,.. 0 1
S1IWU1"'1 SClft
Slv_. 2D. Fulltrllon l "
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(FINAL)
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Ett1ncl1 21, Coron.1 Gi i Mir 21
When you twn them around
in the proper aequence, they
spell PRIDE.
Golden We9't College has ap-
parently lost all of its prlde on
the football Held 1n recent
games and the latest example
came Saturday night when the
Cypress Chargers de.teated the
Rustlers, 13--0, in Southern
California Conference play on
the Western High field.
"Cypress has lmprovd u
the season bu 1one along and
we have gone downhlll," .coacb
Ray Shackleford said I n
disgust after the defeat.
"Unlesa aome drastic
changes are made we will
have our first loalng aeuon"at
Golden West.
"We are playing a fine foot·
ball team next week in East
Los Ang'elea and we wlll have
to play super to win. I don't
know If we are capable of it,
either." The RusUers are now
4-4 for the year and 1-3 in
league play,
He was asked when the
downhill skid bad started -
perhaps with the 37-0 shellack·
ing at the bands of Rio Hondo.
"I don't really know when it
Pro Cage, Hockey ...
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VW BRAKI
SPECIAL
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~ " " " .. ..
" " " " D ,.
u • " " • • " ..
RtllM 4 Whitis
MMMM 4 D"""9
o-haul4W!Mo1Cyll-
.,...M111~1M11 ... 1w•
CNO'T P•O.UTl•J
539.95
YW SHOCKS ................ $7.tl ....... .
tOO.ooO mile 1uarantffd Cnot pro.ratedJ.
WE DO AIL FOREIGN CARS.
e 111C IUD SNCIAUIT e
COSTA llDA STOU ONU ''" ........ . .. , ..... 14Nllt
p1aylng." !-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
What about the injuries that
h:ave beset ~ team thiJ
season?
"We have had quite a few
but I'll tell you one thing,
there wasn't a soul missing
tonight that would have helped
us to win. We got beat and we
played very poorly. And that
isn't meant to take anything
away from Cypress. A1 I said
before, they have-improved
and we have gone downhill."
A dog'maUc Cypress team
moved 'the ball to the Rustler
three yard line on a sustained
drive after the oprning tickoU
before Rw!Uer linebacker Tom
Allanson averted a score wltb
a third down pus lntercepUon
at the two.
Wg break of the game came
in the third period when the
Oiargers w e r e apparently
held on a third down play.
Quarterback Vic Pertboom
was 11acked for a 12-yard loq
but a defensive boldtna
penalty was called and the
Chargers had a fint and 10 at
the: Rustler 39 in.stead of
fourth and 16 at their ewn 24.
A distance of 'SI yards,
From this point they movtd
to the end zone in eight plays
with workhorse Ray Spagnuolo
going over from the four and
Aruck Teachanaronc kicked
the convenlon point.
The final score came after a
fresk pus interception that
bounced off the chest of
Rustler Kurt Dedrick with
Junior Punsalan~ grabbing it
off his shoetops. Pereboom hit
St.eve Koziatek from 11 yards
out for the score.
OAMI ITATllTICS •we c
Flrrt dllW"I rutl\!nt' ' I
l"lrtl ~ l'IHl~I 6 t
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Sean BetltTJ' Caannte.
Frtt ~ •idiiD 90 .,.
of pwdlne: i( b.ttel"J' PfO''' de.
fec•i•e. Af1er 90 d1yi, ~ reph1ce
die batltry, if dcfecrire end cber110
you ooly b' fhc period ol owACr·
sbip, based M tlic rqulu price
1"5 tnde-im • die tiioe of n:nirn,
pronttd a.er --ol mooth1 "'-·
Fire Extinguisher
SAYE '3!
Re .. lar 7 9 9
$10.99
Fights greas e ,
gasoline, paint
and electrical
fires. UL, ICC
and Coast Guard
approved.
3-Height Jack Stand
}99
SAVE *6!
42-Month Guarantee
High-Voltage Battery
Regular
Trade-In Price
$23.99
99
Fits 90% of All American-Made
Cars with 12~Volt System
.FREE Battery Installation
Standard Tnne-Up Kit Heavy Duty Oil Filter
}99
lnclader. Point:!', Rotor.
Condenrer,
C•m Lobe.
I' ii ten oul 1fudce
and dirt.
Carburetor Air Filter Allstate Spark Plugs
Lifetime
Guarantee
each
Heavy Duty Muffler
99
INSTALLED
Heary Du1y Mame..
5-Wa)' Lifetime
Cuarantee
tf muffle r ftilt dDt' .,
~dcfccrt in .matetil1& cc
worbnao1bip or blow--
out, ru1r-out OC1il'nt'CJQt_
,while otiainal purchater
owns the car, it will N
ttpllCCd upon tt,fW1t.
free of c.harae 11 dtt dc--f«ri~ mu8ltt WM i.
11alled hy Sean, ... will
install the ne1t muBlu
cluarglng onfy for tine.
kers and bolti. i( needed. ,
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•
AMERl .C-AN NEWSPAPERS
•
• -
YEARS OF
"--""
FREEDOM
. .
Nowhere is there a greater .news
gathering organization than the American
Press·. Reaching to the four corners of the
world in search of the truth and without
restrictions, it is the major link between
peoples of the community, the
community and the world at large.
• Th is freedom has been defended in ' the
past and will be again whenever it is
threatened, so that there · wi.11 always be
an open line of communication between
the peoples of this country and the world.
We are proud to be a part of this Freedom.
•
200 YEARS Of 'FREEDOM
J
DAILY PILOT
• ~
•
Moadar, NOMbff' 16; 1970 $!LY l'ILOf
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR ,SALE
Gen•r•f 1000 General 1000 Oonor•I 1000 o.,..r.1 , , IOOOGonor•I ' 1000 Goftw•I !-"--~~-'-~~-'--~~~~ 1000 General 1000 0. .... 1
2629 HARBOR
BOULEVARD •
546-8640
Open Evenings
till g,30
ME$A VERDE
ELEGANCE
5 Bedroom & POOL
$54,950,
FAR OUT BEACH HOUSE
Luxury & comfort by the sea. 4. bedrooms-
5 bath.s. Entertain tn paneled family room
atmosphere or formal livipg roo m, both have
massive fireplaces. Watch ·the ~inakers sail
by from the glassed patio on the roof. There's
a special income feature, too! A rare value
al $69,500.
POOL HOME-$27,500
It sparkles from the new roof and paint job
to the pool. Can't afford a pool -Try this
on for size . . . 3 Bedrooms, covered f;atio,
Solar heated pool. New carpets in iving
room, dining & ball.
EASTBLUFF-5 BEDROOM
with sparkling pool completely fenced· fro m
huge back yard. 3 luxury baths, formal din·
ing room, elem. & high school in w(llking dis·
lance -$52,000. ,.
P~ONE 646-7171
* * .:* * * TAYLOR CO. *
DOVER SHORES •. $145,000
Terraced tree-studded patio extends to pier
& float. Spac. 4 bdrm & den home in top re--
furbished conditi~n. For a yachting (,am.
DIGNIFlcD & ELEGANT .
You'U love the professional d~ct>r in this finer
2-Story tiome w/4 bdrms, fam rm, formal
DR & 31> baths: PLUS \liew. $124.500.
''Our 1Sth v .. r"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realton
• 2111 S.n·.J00<1uln Hiiis Ro•d
NEWPORT CENTER 644-1910
* * * * * * 1000 General 1000
· HOME plus-INCOME Terrific
•
COATS
• &
WALLACE
-REALTORS
546 4141--'-
Triplex
r rivacy for all thrtt 2 bed-
room. units. Owner y.•IU sell
to Veterans, NO DOWN.
Have 2 tenants help pay
YOUR way.
$39,500 •
Newport
••
f1irview
646-1111
(1nytime)
;enJa !Jd/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
26 Lind• Isle Drive
Corp. owned. 5 Br. 5 bath home facing Har.
bor Island', Jacuzzi & sauna. Comp. furn .
for imi;>ed. occup. W /dock $200,000
For CompleteJ nform1tion on all homff &
Iott, pl11ta cell: SAVE $5000 . . BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR
133 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642'4620 Owner just reduced this Mesa Verde t bed-
room, family room, dinfua: room, tri·level
home tO" $41 ,950. It's in excellent couditlon
and. sh.ow s beautifully· but o'w n tr says Gener1I 1000 Gener1I 1000 ----....,..--
BUILDERS
CLOSEOUT
Unbelievable but true. Bright
11.nd sparkling new, 4 & 5
bedrm. 2 story homes, many
fantaslic options • almo.st
Immediate possession may
be arranged.. AU to be 110\d
in 30 daYS • $35,S<k) • FHA/
VA • NO DOWN. Terms
available. Call ~24
$39,500
4 BR+ FR
;I-POOL
Newport Beach !oven look
11.t this • 4 big bdrms • fam-
ily room .' sparkling pool •
Custom_ ·2 Bedroom
& Ovott HouH
Excellent ·E:sldt location,
compl redecorated, tieayy
shake rocif, many bltn ft•·
tures, refrlg/waaher Incl.,
ideal home for the adult .
fantily .l In-laws. Vacant &
ready for immediate OCCU·
pane)'.
PERRON 642-1771
"SELL". '
C•ll tod•r .for • thowin1 •• ·.·546-ii11
~-,~ !_ THE RE.AL
ESTA1'ERS ,. . .
~~~~
N•wport Bueh 1200 Coron• del Mar 1250
3 BR + den, 2 BA, hrdwd
fin, apts, drps, dbl a:ar-
&it, aceff5 to rear yard for
boats, trlrw, etc, &side CM.
$25,750.
Wellt·McCardlt, Rltrt.
1B10 NeWpOrt Blvd .• C.M.
iiii~iiiiiiiiiii!iiiii!i!i!!ii!iii I SCAR c I! ITEM t
71/4 °/o•4 BR·POOI. A real Crown of the "'•'
Owner's divorce gacrifice in ~; beaut. home,
Baycrest near schools & 17~ A . {t, ot living space.
atores. Fee title. New car-Access to beach. For de.
pets & drapes, family rm, taill, Call:
xlot ''""'· game nn. Save CORBIN· 54'-772t about $10,000! ·
EXCEPTIONAL 1~2BilUN·1 "!1!!!!!!·!!!5l!!!48!!'82!'!11!!!!!!~ MARTIN ITS. Studio type. Only 7 yn: I :
old. l'i BA each. E-slde CM. WATERF.RONT &
TRIPLEX, Clllfhaven area, Vll!W
N.B. {3) 2 BR units, fee Charming 3 Br, 2 ba, condo
land. Call Ken Harris, South Pier & slip avail.
Coast Real Estate 545-8424. $75,000
REALTORS 644-7662
INVEST IN YOUR
FAMILY'S FUTURE (0pon Evening•! "'l:=:=::mz=:;=:::=:;=:;=:;: I pl us Harbor Hla:h Schoot•. iii WestcliU Shopping • All thl1
Ted Hubert & Assoc.
1100 Costa Mes• 3471 Via Lido 615-8j(l(I
""'-'""-..o-'----MUST SELL BY OWNR
*1st Sh-Ing*
Lovely 2'BR. tlome on 60'·1ol.
So. of Hwy. Formal din. rm .•
trpl. Lge. worbhop off pr-
•it!· Extra p1rklni So r
JU'IUI. -Te.Jce·a )OOk!
MORGAN R·EAlTY CORONA DEL MAR
N.EW LISTING
. Realtors
''OUr 25th Y e1r
In Th~tiir Jd-ea''
673-4400 •
Thi5 beautiful dclux du-
plex is PHICEO TO
SELL at just $33,000
... It will do the fol-
lowing thin~!'i for you
•.. put 2 children thru
college ... save you
S800 to $1.000 in actual
cash on yoU r income
tax . , , pay for dinner
[or tY.'O Ill a fine rC's-
taurant several times a
week , .. cloth your
school agcN> fnr y('ar.;
... etc., rte. GET THE
PlCTUr.E??? call us
now and GET THE DE·
T A.U..S ! Let us sho1v
you ho'w you can pro-
vide tor yor family's fu-
ture NOW ... anyone
can . . . EVEnYONE
SHOULD. 546-8640
Spac-ious, professionally dec-
orated 2 story home, 3 large
bedrooms, -f01·mal dining,
bug'e family room \\ith fire-
pl'il.C<', 21,J baths, garden kit.
chcn. Beautifully landscaped
yard. All of. this and only
1~~ milts to he ocean. Take
O\'er this terrific l?fn with
just $5200 down. $292 per' mo.
pays all. $37,50Cl.
jj;;!j!t!jj J H~~!~! .. ~~ooy~o~x. wow
All this for
$22,500???
/CiJa,,. COATS
~WALtACE
REALTORS
\O 'THE REAL
\'"'\. ESTATERS ' ,. . .'
You'd better bel ieve lt. Open Evenings F .H.A. 6112% LOAN
THREE Bedroom." . . e 962-44S4 e $20,500 PRICE
TWO baths •.. double If!!!!!!!!!!!!!,...!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!! TOTAL ~ent for this
garage •.. F'orced air HOM£ sharp 3 bedrOom home is
heat • , . built-in kltch-$1 16 Subject to FHA Loan
en ••. rxcetlent arl'a · · & INCOME with 51,1 annual percentage only FIVE years old ! .. Ready to be lived in nd Profitable to own .•. A rate. All appliances such as
O\\'n<'r is READY TO p\easul"'t to live in! The' washer, dryer, refrii&ator
~)11~sa\;~~l ·J;c.11t}1
546 -5990 SELL.. Let's go look at home is a custom.. luxurious • all also Included. ,WJ-{Y
it. 546-8640. charmer with 3 king size RENT if you are? Submitl--===~=i--
bedrooms: Country kitchen your down payment· SELL-UPPER BAY
NO MONEY DOWN
4 Bedrooms-2 Baths
\Vith huge family room. for· ER ANXIOUS. ANYONE TWO STORY
ma! dining. secluded living QUALIFIES. Vacant with imrriedlate pog, :;m~r:;u~o~e~=~ Walker & Lee =c~~s;'~
that really reduces those Realtors lour t>e,droom. dirt. Rm.
VETERANS .• , even If monthly payments! $45,950 279'J H,rbor Blvd. at Adams Fam .. Rm., thtte bath home.
your C!ligibllity rspired for both! $4600 down. See 54!>-9491 Open 'HI 9:00 PM Completely carpeted and
\\'ilhout being us<'d. all 1oday. Call now. Thanks • ..,,..,.. ... ..,,..,..,..,...! draped for your comfort. Lo.
you neC'd is closing costs 546-2313 or 646-nn. cated on quiet cUl-de-sac
to move into thi!I br.au· street near NEWPOR"
li fu lly maintair.ed home. YMCA and open sp.cf-s. Full
FHA t('rm!I also a vail-Really Company price· only $43,000 with a.a-
able. o .... •nrr has pur-WARM
chast>d another home 11_""""'""'""'==' . sumable financing. Owner
and MUST SELL TJ--n S TWO SEPARATE E1rly Calif. Home will lease a't'$315. per~nth.
CLUSJ.VE BA YSHORES. 2
bedroom I.' ,dining room.
Home stressed for addition.
Needs T.L.C. Ideal lamily
Uvtnr. b!ache1 • tun tor all
ages: Arnillni low price or
only '$36,5CO. ·
Colesworthy
& Co.
'REALTOR
Newport Bf.ach Office
1()28. Bayakle Drive
'. 615-4930
ADDED FAMILY
ROOM
MESA VERDE
A 3 bedrocm, 2 beth, T-plan
with an added 13xl9 family
room: Urn~ ln"e'IUl&.r back
yard wilh btlilt-in Bar-84.
Quiet cUJodc.cac street. Fab-
ulous hOtne (or the family.
Call n0w. Only $29,$0.
546-1.Jl"J .•
',O THi:REAL
''"'\. ~STA 'I'ERS ... ONE N•O•\V. He'll even GARAGES In best Dover Shores view M. M. LA BORDE, Rltr.
c:arpet it lo ,your 1.8.ste. area. 4 Bedrooms, family 64~ -644-.7003 f "'""!lil"l"•'""'""""''"";o 2 Qur.enslzed baths, THREE BEDROO?t1S, Large room with many book-· 5 BHroOm F lxer~U-r
built-in kltcht'.'n, etc. Sit-living room, dining area, til. sl:elve!I, outstanding island $15,800 ,F t_H,A. ... ....-
uation.'> make BAR· ed built-in kil al'ld service kitchen, spacious terrace on Anyone quallfiea subjeo'"~ to Need.a a lot of work, such as GAINS . . . and this porc:h EXTRA LARGE FHA , •• ~ ,1, paint, yMd work a little oy.•ner n,. e d s action. • bay side. Ovefl!ized Hvini ....,..n with "' annual repair. Back Bay area. Al80
HURRY, HURRY. HUR· STEP DOWN DEN with room & format dln1n n room. perctnlage rate. Total pay.
F ·•·•· and BIN Bar "15 available ··on lea1t option, ttY . . . C&U ~6-8640 ra1""1n stove • $92,500. ment $148 per month. Sharp
right nov.·. 8-Que. New cpts. ihcludlna: 642..a235 675--3210 3 ~m borne cllatening S325 or ma1$4! oUer.
PRICE SLASHED
$2,000.00
3 Bedroom POOL
den, Large fenced yard • 1 ~"'l!'!!'!~~~'!!'!~!!!!f HARDWOOD FLOORS: 2 LNte-Met• Verda ·
Priced at $26.500 -ASSUME 2 . BEDROOM/POOL luxurious baO., modern Sharp,..t1 + tam rm., on qujet
S21 .800 GI LOAN. Excellent corner Jot with 18 x built-in kitchen, RHdy for street, near schools. Vacant
M. M . LA BORDE, Rltr. 32 heated & filtered pool, 10' immediate ocC?upanc)'. GI now. $260 lnc:ludlna: pr.
646-0555 Eves: 64&4j79 deep. Assume existing 1st buyen welcome, CALL.! dener,
OPEN DAILY 1·5
301 BROADWAY
EASTSIDE, C.M.
3 Bedrm, 2 Baths * plus *
2 Bedrm,I Bath
near 17th St. Shopping, frp\Cl'l
in each, bllns In apt, rt{'(!nt.
ly redeoorated,
lochenmyer Rlty
Call 646-3928 Eves: 548-6769
'°'"&I 7\l% '"""'!.ea~ Walker & Le" ~ SU·WO . pets, drapes, all elec bltn Ci fllllrclnln~ ,
appliances, pal.lo, garage, ftealtors . OUEGE11REALTY
walk to shOpplng:. Prtce 2791) Harbor Blvd. al Adami •lSDi .....,.
'22,000, Open 'tll 9 PM
I' 962-4471 ( _ 1 54...,101 You ca n . move In and pay
...... only ns:; per month for a
WITH $1000
JUST LISTED .
REDUCED to .lu11t ~31,·
500 is thi.~ itrrat POOL
home. Excellent fan1Hy
neighborhood movr·in
rondition. Pool a rcA has
an added bath and dr!"5.'i·
ing ronm and rnclosed
J)fttio. \\"e have the key
so you can sClf. It right
away and help l h15 AN-
XIOUS O\VNER move. II~-=~:..~=======
call '°' dotaH•. 546-8040 II SPACIOUS $36.'7SO nlA terms, 4 bedrm,
family rm, dining rm, DX!
ft on ot* level. Larie rov.
en!d patio, drapes, shag
crpts, excellent location
near all tehool.a Now vs.
cozy 2 bedroom and family
room • borne. Priced at
s~.ooo. Eutaide Costa
Mesa. For details call
546-2313.
LIDO WATER~RONT
APTS.-320 LIDO NORD
$150,(l()J Price with 7% 1st
T.D, 6 Beaut. turn. units;
6 car prqta i uw, room.
80 li'L on A'immU:v bea,ch.
W\11 oonsider trade for boat
or mQimwn $85,000 l;e, 4
BR. house.
OJgtom lrvint' Terrace, 3
Bedroom, palme locale .
$S'l,9'JO. cant • make oJrtt. C • 11 · 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;,_
540-llSl Heritage Realtors. 1• ~
U~ Grundy, Rlt r.
8l3 OoVtt 0:·· N.B. 64~
COL~GE PARK
and only minules to the
beach • Priced under mar-
ke1 for qu{ck sale. Better
hun-y,
DIAL 645-0303
FOREST E. OLSON
REALTOR
2'299 HARBOR, C.M.
LIDO ISLE
Realtors
''Our 25th Veer
In the Harbor Are•''
673·4400
HERE'S YOUR
CHANCE!!!
Assume a $24,500 low ln·
terest loan on this delightful
3 bedroom, 2 bath home.
Beautiful comer lot with
access for boat or ttailer.
Fresh, clean, neat. $30,800.
5-lS-2313.
\i:>THE REAL
'('. ESTATERS
f. •, ••
675-3000
The riumber to call whether
Buying, Selling or Leasing
View • Pool • luxury
In Came-a Shorei;, 4 BR. 3
Ba., F.R. & D.R. 3,im sq.
ft 3 car gar, $9:-i,tql.
mn;\l ,\ i11;.l.:11
lll:.Ul'\' l \f.
f~;,,1q !]'.'~'
2401 E. Coalt Hwy.;CdM
• Eastsiile Triplex •
$57,500
347 E. Woodl1nd Pl.
Co1t1 Mesi
'42-4905
REPOSSESSIONS-
Sparkling clean homes, eome
newly painted & carpeted. 2,
• ' & 5 bdrms, Some with
pools. FHA-VA conv. tenns,
from $17,000 to $40,000.
Collins &: Watts Inc.
8843 Adams Ave. 962-5523
COLLEGE PARK Braod 0<w, lee •imple, I blk
beach, 3 br, 2 ha, 2 frplc, 673-6642 . 675-6459
3 BR PLUS b!am ceil'g w/w c:rpt, huge
• dbl 1ar. sri.1523. Lido ltlo 1351
FAMH.Y RM. COUNTRY.CHARM • Unrn.aoRsE.PaU.~y nn.e
JUsr l.lSTED. Shaded tree
lined st. to spotless College
Park home. Island • bar
style kitchen. Roomy vault-
el! celling Utvng rm. l1uge
· BR'1. N,c:w carpeb & dlsh-
·washcr. 20' flln. r:m. alldlna:
8lau to pf'tVate CiOVttt<l-p&·
Uo, Fish pond & ~rf&ll.
Prime area, Blkl. to school•
I 11hoppinr. Better huny •
Take over 5% % FHA Joan.
Call (714) 962.SSSS.
FOREST E. OLSON
Inc. Realtors
19131 Brookhurst Ave.
Huntingtor. Beach
FIXER UPPER
4 Br., xln't residential •
Cozy frplc, bltns, tam. rm
access for boat or trailer.
Quiet tree lined cul-dt--&ac •
walk to park"& schoolJI. On
a l5t come but& • $26,950,
FHA or VA terms available.
Call 5t5-842.f South ())a.st
Realtors.
*TRIPLEX*
$5,950 Down. Owner wili help
finance. 3 2·BR., l* ba. ea.
mtns, w/w cpt. &: drapes. 3
Car gar. w/.Uey ent. Walk
to shop~, churche1, schools
& o.c.C, Price $34,950!
Call: Patrick Wood 545-2300 e Biii Haven, Rltr.
2111 E. CDast, CdM 673-321.l
E-SIDE Trl-Plex ; 2
hr's/gar'1, fenced /yd'1.
Inc $405 per mo.
Prine/Only. $38,500 or may
trade up. ·By Owner:
642-5531
5% ~ LOAN, Take a look at
3 BR. & fam. rm_ in Early
Am erican cbann. Natural
wood paneling, beam cell·
ings, used brick frpJc., new
cpts/drps. htodem bit • in
kitchen. Large yard, gar. on
alley. Fine Heights area.
$31,900
OCEANFRONT
Beach & Ocean view at your
door. 2 BR. hOme over triple
iB.r. R.3 Jot with space to ex-
pand or add rental units.
A!kirlg $59.500.
CALL cg •46·1414 ,. ...
:IALTY
Nttr N••P•tl P••t or~
ewPort Shorn 1220
NEWPORT Shores 2 Br. It
conv. den, 2 ba, frplc, all
bltns. Oub !aci1. 642-9463
Coron• del Mar 1250
CORONA
DEL MAR DUPLEX
Spacious and modem. Ideal
for the owner occupant. A
spectaoular 3 Bedroom 2%
bath owners unit and 2 Bed-
room 2 bath secondary unit.
Top quality construction
and finishing throughout.
Presently under construe·
tion, to be finished in mi~
Dec:ember.
CAU:"673-8550
J . lot sll'ett to street, By
app't. only. '
-$93,150
LIDO REAL TY INC.
3377 VI• Lide 673-7300
~tlngton h•oh 1400
CRANKY?
Swim and relax In your own
her.led pool, combine fabuJ.
OUJ entertainment ahd hap.
PY Jamlly living, 3 h•
btdrm1, 2 bathi, man-alzt
d~n, Ct:1ZY fittplace, drt&m
kitchen with custom "BBQ"
ceqter. Separate laundey
room Includes washer &: dry.
er., wall to wall carpets,
drps, inter-com, covered pa.
tlo + much more, Luxur-
loua Jindacapinc on a cor.
ner lot, underpriced (very}
at $27,000 for immediate
sale ti '
REAL ESTATE
HUNTINGTON BEACH OFC.
194-5311
Open 'T days. 8:30 to 1::0
$19,SOO
FULL PRICE
for• thb sharp 3 bedroom, 2 ,
bath cottage with spacious
cement patio, front and rear
fenced yard, space ap
kitchen and aquuky clean.
Hurry before lt'1 iold!
Walker & Lee
th\& Expanded T -PI a n ! I -==-==~===--Realtors 0v .. u 101, Pymu $131/mo. FOR THE ARTIST 7682 Edl,,..r
Owner: 546-2176. }lard to find-hdwd. Ooor SU-4455 or 54Q..5140
2216 MEYER PLACE home, fully carpt'd. for
3 br. l'Ai ba. lte fenct'd yard. easy walking. Elec, bit-ii"! EXT-ENDED
Newly decoraltd. Vacant. ldtch., new walipa,pen, frelh ~
Sll.900. 549-2367 owner, -paint, 1 Blk. to ocean. 2 Bd-ELIGlllLITY
$.!JOO Down $185 mo, 3 BR, Jge rms., 2 baths &: den pl111 ~RAN~ ~ !'Orid War n
lot, attract nelihlborhood, lgc. studio rm. w/windoWI and all wteranaJ Now elil·
no credit needed, Move Jn on all 4 sides for the artist Ible td ~ homes er
today. Ont, 644--0962. In your familf! l'erfec:t Joe. units • call Jor turther ln!()-
COLLEGE PRk: _ $25,900 within walking distance to homes 1vall in an areu!
FHA ?'Ai-% _ Lo Dwn.e ocean or shops. Owner will 847~ MZ-OC27 431-3789 * B)' Owner: 645«t2T * help finance with SS.CW -
Mo•• Vm• 1110 ~~ir~~~1~.·~:: GJi1;§'Jf..W
64+1270
s llodrm/F•m Rm i ~~:ii~~~~~I $1508 TOTAL Spacious contemporary, Mesa I ~ DOWN
Verde home on large corner HARBOR VIEW HILLS to take aver spacious 3 bed-
Jot • divorce Mle! Submit lutk Home room rancher subject to tow
oHers. VA •PPraiM!d at By owner, Belvedere model, 19v•t. loan and total pa)'·
H V-2. t&J. 1 yr old custm home. Maa:· zDentt le. than rtnt. lluce Orne + lneome PllltRON '42-1771 n!OC<ot 180 degrff .,..,.,, bacl< y&M witlt doltble pi.,
Big 3 bednn home + 2 bed· !!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!'I ~ bay view, ~BR, ram nn, deep avocado carpet, and a
room rental on BIG Jot 72x Newport Baach 1290 fonnaJ dln'a: tm, self-elf':~ STEAL at $)4,~1
175, in elt'cellent c:ondlllon, ~ uperad@d deep pile w lk I L
Owner '""'' .. u. "'"'°'"' Oceanfront Duplt1 cpt'r. d....,, sh&k• ""1• .... I er ee $.l3.SOO. Glen Queen, Herl-ly fncd , profeuional Jndsc::pd
tage Real Estate. 541).lliJ. FOR SA'LE BY + other extras. You own the Jte.ltars
-OWNER 1anc1. ·~~Edi~, •• TBEACH BARGAIN .tt..-:-ONLY $74,500 -,.. ~ w
3 BR,!% ... "'"' cond. Wal 3 + 2 Bd-llttpl. SHOWN 'BY APl'f ONLY OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 2629 HARBQR
BOULEVARD
546-8640
PETE BARREl'.I'
Realty + 642-5200 _ == WEST~UrF
. IMPRESSIVE 1915 Marlnou l'ool, Patlo, v~w + • ...,. oj>en f'rl-Sat.Sun 1·5
rooms, 3 baths. KP po11.'d Jut ntat.ed. ~ bednn, 2
rm., "Nt:t bar. l& dln rm, IC bath, tah1ily rm home, ne•r
ktt w/aep brkfat nook, panel· Mariners Sci'fool. NI~ Jo.
ltd !t;m rm .• In 1ht. excta. caJo, wtll plantl4d !im.lly
alve Dover Shorea home. home
to best beach in Newport! • 6504 OCeanfront: • 7lt/64+S476 * 100S2 llrchWOlell Aw. Best buy, l~•t 3 ,bednn, I".~. • !J6US52 I
fam11y rm "-2 bJithl over ......, I ~!."l!~Pri~·~..,~\pAU~;i;o~n~y~~ "~IEIW>ml GARDENS""
Open Evenings
till 9,30
NEWPORT SHORES
2 BA., den, ' ba. Dbl, garage
Close to beach. pooJ.a A tel\-
nls courts. $25.(XXI.
Goorgo Wllll•mHn
Rt1ltor
673-4350 64S. I 564
Oaaified's action power.
~
Roy J. wa"' ru1r., 1033 Mor. PETE BARRm lner1 Dr. 646-1550 o~n dally. 1. OIM)!;...A~. ICM67I REALTY MZ-5200
' ••
1600 sq. n. Obie fittplice, CAYWOOD REAL TY B•ycrest 1f'1cle~ p elep.nt tai·levet • btdrm,
crpts, drpl, corner lot, boat 6:Kl6 W. Coa.~l90Hwy•" NB From th). Spanish art.hes, OCEAN ltbrBAf&mY VIE~t abai.tb ~~· dJ
0
n, ~;
storage, tantattlc value at e 541-12 beame< celllfll', red velvet Nev• Lusk 4 , rm. a ... _ nh '"""-
$30,500. Now va-:ant. cau I 'n=r.E=o'"o"1"'t1t'"a"t"'•"ld"rurn='"11Unt=~'I' tle·b&ck dnpt1 1n the aunk. bl. Bf.autifully 111.ndlcaped. dlnl,. rm.. prof landscaprd
54().ll51 Herilate ~'1tors. tt'a rtally not ~t hal'd en llvliw rm to the lovtly By o~r. &l4.(J94 6: decorated. Atklrls,$45.500'
to replace. Just watch tbe adobe brick walled pa.Ho • LIKE To ttaae? p u r but aubmSl! I Amdoul, fall
121-:500. Cheerful 2 br E-tlde furniture &' mtscellaneous thl1 beauty ti.the ultimate! tr.der's 'Paradili! column la po1Hmlonll ~
c.M. homo. lldwd noon, 11 columns In tlto OutUled JEAN SMITH, RLTR, tor""'' s Utti!o, 5 Days tor L1rwhi Rtolty~
!'"c:ed )'d. Aa~ £1&.14[>6. . S.Otlon. 646-32!5 jO)) E. 17111 St., CM 15. Call tDtlay ••• m.6611. Muta Anyt ~_,~~--~-··---~~~~
!
I I
..
DAILY m oT MOAdlJ, Nowmbet 16, 1970 ALS '111-~$::;1;.;S;_,F,..;O'=R-SA=L-"E-""HO=u ... s "'ES""FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi! RENTALS 'RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS 1-·-· RE.~T._ Furnllhod
Hou,.. Furnllhod Hou ... Unfumlahod Hou ... Unfumllholl Apta. Fumllhod Apta..Fum~~!!'!~--.:""::.:~~::.:;.~-;:;I ~ llooch t• :.H:.:"":.::':.::l":::"':.:.°':";_.::•.:•:.•"':..__14..:_00 J ·H-""-;tl;-ng;;'°";;;-;lo;;;;;o:;;a;h ;-'-•-1·0--.:..:.:,::::•:.:I ;;...;.:;;.==2000-· I -G'-ono=r"11-'--'-.-...--::I0-<00 I ·c-".....,=:.::.~do;:.l.:.:Mo=,=.:.:32511:=...1-c .. =1,=Moo~•==;;;..4_1_00_ 1-H.-.oun.:::t;;.lng"""ton loo di -Huntlnglon load! -
$17,750 GI RESALE 4 BIG BORIS. NEWLY °""""''""' 1 BR. l BR.·1% Batlll. VHy FULL PRICE You'll be ROME to. awe RENT• A • 0HOME * $103 Incl Utll .. ""''"""'· So. ol n..,. SpacloU1. Luxurious
mu ln tbh large 4 btdrm ONLY $19 ODO $95.00 & UP HARD TO FIND! l BR. Se~ Adult. -m &>@ta. SlSO/mo. fumlture. Carpeted. Walled ofa· Quin/a fiermot.a Jiu,. bedroom• with mod. 2 bath nnr-thf..beacb cu.tie'. I ALL SlZD • ALL AREAS a.rate Bu.naalow. Near evtry. **6'73-l953k• pat lo. At tr a c 11 ve. I Y
m IOf'l*"a bath. Jt needs Hich Gt lo&n to tab over, SO FURN. OR UNFt1RN thina:! Available now. decanted. l.Aqe clontl.
cleanlna: but you rqp try SlQI down &: a &mall LID AS A PYRAMID! ASK FOR JOOI 1 * BLUE BEACON * HuntlM!eft Beach MOO BttutifUI kitchttH.nUqued hal'wst WUl lltll wfth 2nd TD with euy low In· Quiet ~ lined •t. • Near ~ cabinet&.. Very rt'ut1nable aM No Down TermJ beach, .C full alzed BR'a, • 122-7'00 * 645-0111 * 2 Bedroom, 2 bath, near the rent. No lease required .
Casual estate living. Enter La Quinta Her-
mosa's lush green atmosphere & stroll tree-
lincd walk wavs to your aot. J te"1'\I. WllY RENT? :!.,~ments, 1l$t pas. I 2 baths. Ste~saver kitchen $150/UtU pd. 3 Br. triplex. RENT e A e. HOME beach, brand new, w/w First months rent t;1Ny. lk r & Lee' L I R II I wilh all boilt-lna. Spacioua Childrl!n A pet ak. $!5• • UP crpts, drape•, bltns. 3 Children & gmall peta I e arw n t a y, nc. I Jlv. rm, Hua:e yard wilb Pl· Brokftl'. ~ .. Available lrom Sl!O to $195 welooo1e. 3.17 Victoria, Apt
ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED
1 BR. Uni. $ISO -Fu,n. $180
961-6918 Anytime 1 tlo &: boat cate. Brina your ALL SIZES • A.LL AREAS month. Lease re q u ired , 1.
: Realtor1 TREES-TREES I.,.;,, bru•h aod .... $$$. Rontola to Shor• 1005 FURN. OR UNFURN. '"'"' 962-4<54, ••• .,i-Co--,A~S~A~v=1c=T~O~R~l~A,.-I 2 BR. Uni. $175 -Furn: $i10 .
3 Spac. Or. plans, decor. furn1 sh1ngs: live
within romantic setting w/fun or pr~vacy.
Terraced pool, pri. sunke n gas BBQ s w/
seculded seaUng comp!. w/Ramada & Foun-
tain.
17!\'I Harbor Blvd. at Ad11ms CUat tarp: 2 BR home. like , Short on cash? Try low dn. A.SK ~R JODI 962-8197. ~ Open 'Il l 9:00 PM new shae crpl", drrn. patio, 1 Jiuny & Call (TI41 ~-5585. Newport Sho~1: Congenial 132-7800 ~IM=M°'E~D7IA~TE=~0-,-,-u-p_a_o_c_y
lCUSTOM BEAUTY lg fool Y'!JI· SUbmlt tern" I FOREST [. OLSON m>fe °' femal• 2().30 to share UPPER Bay. 2 Story, ' Now 3 BR. r.m •m. 2 Bath NEW LUXURY APTS. iKJ• Frontage laclnr Park, or assume 6%1' FHA Joan 4 br turn channel borne. Pool bedroom + family room + home. Park Huntington. 1, 2 & 3 8R'1-from $145 ~bl, H.B. 2 BR. 2 BA, hu.a:• at $138 total\monthly, clubhouse. $87.50. dining room. 3 bath, $350 Crpts, all elec kitchen. 213: FW'n It Unf, AdUlts, no peta. m~ tarnUy rm . ~rteet BRASHEAR REAL TY Inc, Realtors LIKE C.Ollqe irad for room-month. Rltr. 646--0555. 4~571. .515 Vlctorle, CM
Iona!
"
19131 Brookhurst Ave. · Ph ••• "SI the profeu ! Ap. 847-8507 * &U-04 mate 1n beautiful house $175 BRAND NEW d1x 2 br HUNTINGTON H .a r b o u r \ ona ~ ~iltd at S52,300, ~ _..:.:.;.,B=U::,lc,L_D_E~RC,S--_ __;H;.;";:,"c.11°",::,.'°-"~"'~"-"--1 overlookin& oce&n. 2936 CiU triplex .ap~. PriV paUoa, waterfront l Br, 2 Ba, frpl Acapulco Apts attraclive,
* Color c.o-ord. lcit w/ indirect lig htlng. * Oelu:ice r•nge & oveni * Plush 1he9 c.rptr * Bonus storage sp•c• Cov. c:erport * Sculptured marble pultmen & tila b•ths * El•g•nt racreetion room. Will consider reaaonable CLOSEOUT $24,300 Dr. shai:: crpta, pr. 356 E. I< deck It dock. Lie or lse Pool, Utll paid, Garden
h&r. ~ltrejec:tlons plaee7hom. VA LOAN YOUNG Catholic lady "''Ould 20th St., C.M. &U-4905 option. $550. 6of4-4221, livifl&'. Adulta, no pell. FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY
Blk from Huntington Cc:nter, San Diego
Frwy .. Goldenwest College.
~By appt Harbour Realty es on choiC'e Jots on the mar· • • Uke to share apt w/same in SlSS..REDEC. 3 Br, nu w/w 846-5041 1 BR -S136 It up. i Dorn Drake IWS-4l5l ket again!! 3-7 Bednns, 3 &: subject to 7'1,1:% annual per. north Htg, Bch. Ask fur & drps. Avail 11/l5. f'OR Rent or assume M4 % 1800 Wallace Ave, C.M. ~ME 5% FHA mortpge i baths, bltns, Cf'Pli, i;hake cenlage rate with Iota! pay. Mias Bi.uh, 894-1307. Chldttn I.: pet ok, Bkr. loan. 4 br, J ba.. crpll, dtps, e ASSUME 7% LOAN e
of S24.000. Cash out for roof etc. from $33.940. mt'nt o( $211 per month. ROOMMATE Neetled, 2 fem 534-691Kl. 21141 Binrhampton Circle, Costa Mesa• 2 BR House
San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. on
Beach 3 blks. to Holt; W. on Holt lo .. -
La Quinl• Hermosa 714: 847-5-441 al5.9IXI. Heated pool, two RANCHO LA' CUESTA Huae 3 bedroom, 2 batb teachers seek'g &tm~ to 968-5230. + (4) 1 eR. apts. Room 2
lltoey, 3 ~tl}S. 2n, baths, Brookhurst It Atlanta, H.B. homt-close to schools and 1hatt 3 BR hR in CdM. Cost1 Mesi 3100 3 BR. 1%: Bath. Crpta, drpl, nlore. $56,000, Gros5 $6,500.
}orm.al din.In& room, !amily 968-ll38 Open 10 am.O pm shopping, C.Orgeous FIR& 675-4918 • 3 bltn1, refrlg. 548-4059 Rf.NTALS /fi 1 ,.,..,.._,_ &: PI.ACE "Gt' t n·n< Hard NEW Duplex, BR. 2 BA., l1'5/ * • ., ,0 _ r---------r.oo'11 w rep ace ........ .,....... ' is e 1
• BACHELOR will stwe 3 br bltlns, dishwasher, shag mo. .,..~ SERIOUS Single person for Balboa 4300 Aptt. Unfurnished F8~1· VicinJty Brookhurst NOW'S THE wood Floort.'' Submit a ~a.. 2 ba boule. ' cpts, drps. trplc, dble rar. 2 3 BR, crpts, bltns, 2 car gar, smaU bachelor apt. Part!)' ---------_:.~~.:::.::.:.:.:::::.:::=..-1
a Indianapolis. By oY.·ner sof.able down payment, sell· 646-0245 patW>s, corner Jot. Very fenced in rear, patio, $210. furnished. $65. 540-1943. • S25 WK-OCEANFRONT General 50001
hfter 6:00 Pttl 962-7S35. TIME FOR er will co-operate. PR01'~ Man 4G-50 Share lwc private, 1 blk to bank & • * 962-8047. NOW Renting-2 Br furn, gd Lovely Bachelors, 1-Bdrm. I i ONLY $2.5,95011 Wa Iker & Lee 18$"' NwBk r:.~~1...:,.1.au: wo/;ian shopping, rear gp.te to put 4 BR, 2 BA, new crpU;, drps, Joe, N!C rm. hid pool. No Maid ser, Pool, ulil. i
.: , GI/NO DOWN '""UICK CASH "" JW--..u trailer or boat in yd. $250 bltns, $235 per rn o. children. $140/mo. 64&-5824. · • 675-8740 • f.1 ~or FHA Low Down ,,. Realton1 WOULD like matu~ lady to mo.·1541 Wintergreen Pl, 1 Tradewinds Realty 847-8511. BEAUTIFULLY FURN. 2 BR. 315 E. Bay. Winter RENTAL FINDERS .... I 1 t t blk west of Harbor&: Baker. :::::=;;:;:;,,;:;:=:1 ·i R uma owr ow n eres THROUGH A 2790 Harbor Blvd. al Adams share lovely H.B. home. 2 BR, Htd pool, adults, no $200 monthly. Yearly ava1 · Fret To Lindlords AN! -3 Bedroom, 2 bath, 545-9491 o-n 'ti! 9:00 PP.l 968-4686 Call 642-5039 be fott 9 AM or La9una Nl9u1I 3707 ..... ts. $155/mo. 642-9520 Ing. No. c. 673-1521, 548-7771 ~ le·-• 1 .;;i;;;;;;;;ii;~:;;;~;;;;;;;i;;!;'=~~::'==~~ alter 9 Pt.1 . --,,... 645.0111 ....... ~. ·~· DAILY 0 PILOT " -~~~::..-,=~=~ LEASE $250 .• 3 BR, 2 BA. BONUS ARRANGEMENT HAFF~~~ALTY BUY OR RENT Costa Mes• 2100 MOVIN~ON~~? HONG view, bell/pool privileges. FURN Bachelor& 1 Br .... L ... ld;.:•_1•_1• _____ 435_1 4JJW.ttrti,c .... w ..
BR. crpts, blln1, 2 car aar.
enced in rt:ar, patio, FHA I ~ale. * 962-8047.
WANT AD iTUDIO-Ga1 & water paid, Lei the Property f.lanage-Cpts, drps/frplc, 83Q.4l7l Exceptionally nlcel DELUXE Beach Apts. Furn. ~~==;:.,;M~E~N=T~-1
Thi: Immaculate 3 bednn CaJlafter6:30pm,646-420;>,_ment Division ol South RENTALS 2ll0NewportBlvd,CM Stove, refr i g, gar. APART
642-5678 ---No M..!ltter What It Is
SELL IT
WITH A
DAILY
PILOT
WANT
AD!
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678
condominium 2 ,bath, dble 1975 Parsons, CM. Coast Realtors solv_e your Apt1. Furnished * WINTER RATES * $200-$250/mo. 320 Nord . RENTAL
garage fireplace all elec problems. For appo1ntn1ent t BR. furn $125. Bachelor'• ~642-409;;;;:::~7 ;"'~535-E696~-::::;:;;,· == $70.00 & UP
with a' dl&hwashe~ .and en. Newport Beach 2200 call 54s-fl424. General 4000 $115. Adults, no pets. See ;;;; ALL SIZE.S. ALL AREAS
joy aU the carefree fun ol WTRfRNT Balboa C.oves CLEAN, sharp, spacious, 3 RENT f~URNITURE l\fgr. Zlli'"'l:tden, No. 6 O f. Balboa Island 4355 FURN. OR UNF1JRN,
Condo living. Rent or as-home furn 3 B• 2 Ba ...,~ bedrm. 2 bath, family rm, ·~" Wk. 1 ""r. wlklt S3S. ASK FOR BONNIE
-•LN. loan ' ' . -FA h t ( I I d NU .,.. YEARLY Cule l BR furn. sume this lm\• :)n11"' • to-mo. Ask for l\I,. Brie ...... , ea• rp c, crp s, rps, Maid ser. linens. TV, & tele. a--7800 nl ., dbl On! s~ * o~~~ TO TENANT apt New kitchen. $170 incl. -====·=·=====! tal monthly p&Yf!lents o Y 673-0210. C e garage. Y 'W ™ 1 Seal.ark Motel 2301 Npt ;;;
$169, full price, $25,000. ~ Ca 11 Heritage Realtors 24-Hr. Delivery Blvd CM 646-7445 ;":;"'~"o.=N:::o:_P'o:::":;:.·.;:"::"'c:m~5::.. -c7.' Costa Mes a 5100
Come see this now?!! Bayshores 2225 540.1151 100'/\ Purchue Option FURN 2 B t Clo t 11 2 BR. compl fW'n. Bltn kit, .;:.;=o...;..;;:.."'-----
COLLEGE Park 3 bedroom Complete l BR Apt u · r. ap · se 0 a new cpts &: drps. No chldrn, * $170 *
BAYSHORE Col'"" dults Low as 122/rno. shopping. Adulta only-lio no pets. $225 yrly. 673-6945 lio bit •--._e, a . + din. room. 2 Bath, pets Inq !791,i Rochester 3 BR. 1% BA, pa , ·Ulll,
2 BR, furn rmmaculate. $350 kitchen, dishwai;her. Quiet *30-WDl•DYEMiV'rumA·RIETYum CM.' · ' crpts, drps, Ask about our
mo. 26ll Ba~hore Dr. Open neighborhood. $260 month. Huntington B•adt 4400 discount plan. 880 Center St.
REAL ESTATE weekends. (213) 821·l5t5 tor Rltr. 64fH!5.55. CUSTOM FURNITURE e BEAUT. Bach &: I Br. NEW 1 BR-View of Ocean. 642-8340
HUNTINGTON BEACH OFC. appt. 2 BR. Gar. Patio. C ...... ts, RENTAL apt. i 29.so wkly &: up. Qu. I d I d k/ VILLA MESA APTS 89~.5311 !='======== ... 517 W. 19th St., CM-. r:.Ao 3481 Fum., incl util. 546-0451. iet soun proo ec pa. • drps stove I refrlg, Quiel ....,.. tio. 2tl2-A 14th • 536-1319, 2 Bij., Prlv patio. Htd pool.
Open 7 days -8:30 to 8:30 Corona dtl Mar 2250 tropi'cal setting for adults APARTMENT Newport Beach 4200 673-1784. 2 car encl'd gar. Chlldrt:n
only. 1 blk lo 1hop1. I t plea·•! EASY PAY PLAN 416 Larkspur. CdM. 2 $lSg/mo, 64&-4430, RENTAL DLX Apts. I-fresh paint. ""'e come. no pc s ~
, '-Bedroom. &. rumpus . Open "-=~-"=-o--,-~~-c OCEANFRONT APTS. Pool, Lg z Br studio. Al Sl65 mo. TI9 \V. Willon, Rent now-buy in 71, quall-Sat & Sun. 54&-2086. 3 Bdrm, 2 Balh, heated poo~ $70.00 & UP 2 BR. I ba., yearly .... $245 ocean. $1~$175. 219 15tb St. 646-1251
fied GI can move In nowJ=:;;:;:;::=;:;== x!ra lrg playroom, w/w ALL SIZES • ALL AREAS 2 BR. J ba, frplc .••••• $250 846-3927. L. ·
.. \\'hile esc.~w ~s p1·~ssed. Balboa 2300 crpts & drp1. College Park. FURN. OR UNF1JRN, 2BR, 1 ba.: wintf'r .... $225 1..:::::.::::,c:,,,, __ =~~ Quiet Adult 1v1ng lOO~~Glhnancingava1lable,1---------$295/mo. Lse. 54:'>-5438. ASK FOR BONNIE Call: 673-366.1 642-2253 Eve1. BAGIELOR Apt, Util pd. 1 & 2 BR. Shag cp!s, bltn~.
seller 'Aili pay a)f cos1s. 3 2 BRrModem. Winter season. 1-7800 NEAR OCEAN! beaut lndscpd, $1 50 & $170
Bednn, 2 bath, 2 story with C. Beardslee ·1600 PaN:ay, $l9j, UNUSUAL, attrac 2 br .ii.&• LINDBORG CO. 536-2579 incl all util, Adults only ao &: den + util rm. Yard. J I fo s· I Ad It huge rumpus room, many Glendale. (2131 243-5316 1 ts Eas us r 1n9 • u J • 1 & 2 BR. Crpts. drps, pets,
'·u-·. "-s""'rat• Dad stuck Also 4 BR, 2 BA 'House. Patio. Adu ts, 00 pe • t SOUTH BAY CLUB . bltns. 733 Lake. 536-3700, 241 Avocado St 646-097! ... "" vc •-side. Avail 12/1. 644-4212
wtth 2 homes, make ofler, APARTMENTS 536--0Z75. QUIET DUP LEX 2
we're wheelln' and dea\ln' Lido Isle 2351 2 BR, House. Crpts, drpi, New~rt Beach 1 BR. apl partly furn. Wtr & b r / s hg-cpts/bltns/drps/-•~A ,,_ $145/mo. No pets. 1 amall 00n • A N w T LI 918 on th i~ one . Don't let ..,,,VIN 5 BR., 4~ii ba. waterfront -... rvine Ave. ew ay o Ye gas pd. Adults only. SS5. pnld-waUs/s.ldg-glass d r• apprai~l stop you. home w/dock, on Lido 0ba'=b,_y.~Call",--646--,-m~9·_~-{Irvine and 161hl in Newport Beach Palm St, HB. 5.16-4678 to fncd-yd -cov-patio. 1
Larw1n Realty; Inc. Nord nsoo Month 2 BR, trplc, cpts, drpa, stove: 1714) 64S.0550 OAKWOOD GARDEN SllS. MOD. 1 & 2 BR cpts, baby $170, 1016 American
962..6911 Anytime 3 BR.' 3 ea. off.wa:i.eroome _!\-Jature cpl. no pets. Sl50. HOLIDAY PLAZA APARTMENTS drps, nr beach. 409 Calit .P'..:I::.· ::548-6609:::..::::::..· N:.:o:._:dor~•c,· ~-I Pref. leue. 642-4996 r..t -furnlshffl ... $4.50 month ----=~~~-DELUXE Spacious 1 BR On 16th Street btwn 536-4261 OT 847-51!):1' • * NEW 2 & 3 BR. Shq
Fountain Valley 1410 Bill Grundy, Rltr. 642-4621) 2 BR. 1987-B Charle. tum apt S135. Heated pool. Irvint' and Dover Dr. e AT OCEAN_ Adult living. crpts, dwhhr, car. Only I
51,r. 1 b Sl3S/mo. 1 cb\ld ok. Ampl~arklng. No children. (714) 642-117~ I BR $150. 2 BR. $175. Pool, neighbors in ~r Bldg. ASSU~tE 10 oan, y Balboa Island. 2355 "="'N=o=pe="=· =*=64=2-'°"'9== no pe:t1"965 Pomona, CM. OCEANFRONT De "'e. Rec rm. 2'2(1 12th St, 11.B. Child ok. Nr. S. Coast ownr, Immac 3 BR, 2 ba. nu :.:;.:__....;;= Pl
2nd -rnmpletely furn, clean, 2 br. aza. cpts & drp!I, will take , 1010 SO. Baylront: 4 Br. 3¥,. Newport Beach 3200 Costa Mesa 4100 Dishwasher. !lundeck. $275 ,S:::•::n::!l.:•_;A:::;n:,• ____ 4;c6:::20 __ .::;lt).;.;:l;cS7.::!~•:,:,'~"='~"~"~"'"
$2S,500. 968-8004 alt 6 & ba. waterfront home & 2 Br. -~~-------incl util. Winter. 350 i 1· 8 NOW RENTING e wknds. 1 Ba. aaraa:e apt. Dock. 3 BR CW:FF HAVEN, qo!et REMARKABLY STANDARD MANOR
1\1 BA Bill G -• RI '-64" A""" ne ighborhood, <:lose to all Seashore D .. NB. 673-9367. Mesa Verde Area. NEW Du. MODERN 4 BR. , nl•OQY u . ~ · I UNBELIEVABLY Lg lovety I 9R, nu rurn, drps bl I
Condo. $21,500. 5* 'iQ FHA, 3 BR furn. hse avail for s:~·mo.G~r~l~;se ~d. ~r EXTRAORDINARI Ly I Br. den, 2 ba. delu~e &. pnt. Util pd. Adults, no plexes, 2 & 3 BRhr ~sd enc
trans.Ierable loan. 962-5040 family only until June 15. "A" •us1 BEAUTIFUL duplex near bch. Ref s ..... ,,, 1130. Con1, sec the __;ar, patios, w1 ryer appt call Days """"..., or ....,.,.d Adults $205 642-3082 ,~ bopkup, Also Jrg 2 &: 3 BU.
alt 5. S250, Incl util. m · Opal, 673-1234 eves/wknds Val D'iser• Garden Apt1 ·~.. ' · · · best, 1009 Slandard, 541·9494 . in 4.pJexea. 546-1034
1612 ,_c=al=I :";;""':="';:·===== ---------~ Adults DO peta '!':OCEANFRONT -Winter W•:.:•:::•::;lm'.!.'.!:ln::;•::l::••:,_ __ :.::;c:I;.; BEAIJTWUL 3 bedrm & Putting gree~ waterfall & rentals. 2, 3 & 4 BR's. Laguna &.ich 4705 GOLD MEDALLION
-L•gun• Beach 2705 lamily rm, 3 baths, full .din. stream, now~ tverywhere, Adults only. * Call 673-8088 Modern 2 BR, cpls, drps, GE BY Owner: 3 br. 2, ba,1 :....:.:...;:_.o..:_c..;____ ;,g rm, sweeping view $395 . _ _,_ p 1 'd LAGUNA BEACH k't h E 1-• Colo• ·•Jen-.. i~ 45' pooJ, rec. room, bilh11.1~, 1 BR. Deluxe oo -11 e Apt. 1 c . nc ...... • ... cul-desac, drps, new crpt. Leasa/Salt Furnished a month. Brk. S40-l720. BBQ's, Sauna, furn .• unfurn, Newly decorated. Westclilf. DELUXE RENTALS nas. Nr. bus. $148. Adults.
Terms. S:l.5.000. 839-1445· Lovely Beach Condo N'PT, Shores: 1 Br. k conv. Singles, 1 BR, 1 BR + den, $185. 642-6274 AT VICTORIA BEACH 12-0 E. 2()th.
L B h 1705 Avsil Now for lease thnJ den. 2 Ba .. bltns. Walk to 2 RR. f'rom $l35, See lt!l,2"-'B=R-'.C,FO-u",.".~u~til~it7;,-,-.. ~;d~.1 1.2 Bdrm. &: den, 2 bath, DELUXE 2 Br, l 'rl Ba. epta,
eguna ••c June or longer. 2 BR, 2 BA, beach. SXO mo. (l 1 2000 Parsons Rd., 642-8670. Garage. Yearly. furn. unit. Lge . balcony drps, studio apt . Adults. Htd
SUPER LOCATION
On quiet greenbelt, only a
short walk to school1, shops
&. pools. 2 F'rJ)lcs.. added
family rm ., a sewing rm.
for ?tlom, an office for Dad
&: a playroom for he chil.
dren . All these features
avail. In this 4 BR. 2~ ba.
townhou.se, ror only s~.000.
•red hill
upper with Jiving, dining _82S-__ 11_63 _______ Between Harbor & Newport Call ~1793 w/ocean vie1.;·. 120 yrs. to pool. S180, 5 48 -9341 ,
kitchen areas main lloor ov-4 BR • 3 Baths family room. . 2 Blk N. 19th. the sand. &J&.aa.48. ..
erlooking beautifuJ p oo I . Penn. Point. Large homt> ~-=-=-=-=-=-~~~1YRLY 2 br over aarage C'ln YEARLY LEASE $275 l\fO. llt,·. SMALL l b•. -•-. • • • • • • • • • I 29th Street $145/mo Mar. '"""~ Large 2 car port plus slor· .a v s i I ab I e untU 6113 SS nite up $27.SO wk up ried couple. 675-4958 · 2. 2 Bdrm., furn. un it. Ocean Yard, Gas paid, 1 woman.
age & completely laundry fa. 675-8992. STUDIO &: t BR Apts t------· ~~-~~ view. Live on the beach no pets. 319 Univeni.ty.
cilltles. All beautiruUy &5 --B~R-.-,-B-A'rE~.,~tb7Ju~ff~ho-m-e • Color TV, pbone serv, pool * OCEANFRONT 1 BR. In Old Laguna for only, 644-4212,
completely furnished, linens. Be au t. v I e w . N.e w • Linens, maid serv avail Y'arly $175fmo. $225 MONTI!
china, ttc. if desired. Only cpt.s/drps. Lease $395/mo. e Children &: pc : section 673-2259 9 to 6 pm !\fISSION REALTY 494.0731 SPACIOUS 1 br, w/w crpt1,
100 11.e,,. to private beach. 644-5862 * SUNNY ACRES * $20().0CEANFRONT y new drp5, fre shly painted, I _;--_;c,c.·====--• S30 WK UP LUXUR elec. bltns. nr. !rw y s . Tennis court It 2nd pool al-e BAYCREsr 237£ Newport Blvd. 54!-9755 LO?ELY 2 BR. * 642-1265 Bachelors, Singles, 1 &lrm. Adults, 00 pets, 54:>-4893.
so on property with rorg· Beaul 2 story pool home CUP TIJJS AD. , . LRG 1 BR. Garden apta on Steps to btach. I ..:=:=.:::_,:::=..:.c....:o:::.._1
eous landscaping thru-out. avail. Dec. 1st. 4 BR., 3 (OOd for $2 on night's Bay. Furn Sl9j. Unfurn • Maid Ser-linens 2 B1 r. Apts,. bltr_is, cf'P:.~~ .. drf>aA,
Easy access to supe:r mkt, BA $650/ .. , "28! $S k. -·t 11 67, ~41 • All util-Heai·d pool c ean . nqu1re ...,,,. .. prr mo . .,......, rent or on wee s •c" . $185. Incl Ut . ,,....,, . " C · d ''"268 shopping, eac. $325 month, • • • • • • • • • I • Rec room-Billlards onan er . ..,_..,, · ,.,;nl•r bssls. Will consider THE BLUFFS! 3 Br. 2\~ b11.. Oceanfront • 2 & 3 BR's 3 LG 8 2 Ba ta ~. Pool. Frpl. Spli t-le vel, C d f 1 VILLAGE INN-Restaurant r, , new cp ,
REALTY lease -purchase or outright View. Lease-$400 Month QUIET·EASTSIDE 67?~3 2.'s9s:zi'Mci Dancing-cocktails 494-9436 drps, no pet.s, chldrn ok. Avl
Univ. Park Center, Irvine sale. Adults prt:fem!d, Refs. Bond Realty 4gs..2238 Lg Purn 1 BR $160 1 BR N. end, ~ blk shop/ Nov. l $165. 545-7245 art 5.
Call Anytime 83J.(ll20 499-2152 Af.f or 837.Q791 &n)'· f 1 Private patio f rplc, Locked C d M 4150 bch, Jdry facll. Adults. $175 2 br apt, ranie, relrig, drps, •"'.::~'t':i~~~'i'i':"'"l~t~lm~e';,. =~-----1 3 BR. 2 Ba., cpts, drps, rp' ru.,e, Adults only. ""pets. orona ti ar II ·r Ad It •--1 3 c up. 494-4488, 830-4237, crp!s, a u1 . u 1, nope .... ~COMMERCIAL RENTALS pat». poo • "' ganae. 2035 Fulluton 2-BR. fully~td, pool, So. I ,;;~:=:==:;;=:=: $150. 64&'464
h $265. Realtor 548--6966. Sc Manag rat· 1 ---'~-------t BUILDING Hou111 Unfurnls eel 1 Blk lrom beach, 3 BR, 2 ' e · of Hwy. Close to 11hops. D•n• Point 4740 LG 2 BR. Unfurn. Crpt3,
• 3000 b bl '-I ti fncd 1'16 Melody Ln !around cor) Adults $185, Isl'. 673-8213. drps, bltn~ no ptts, Sl50
Located in the ttnter of IA· General a, Ins, u., c, pa o, ' 2 b SINGLE, TV, pool , pets ok. 1048-A Mission. 54a-18S2
guna Bea.ch, with SO fl, $275. torappt646-6055. e $30 WEEK & UP FURN. 3 BR apL t · r DANA ilfarina Inn, 34lll l -':.:::C.::...==""~~"--I
lrontqe. ~.ooo. Call • LANOLOROSI,! 'Tl{E BLUFFS 1 Br or Studios tum w/ upsta.ir1, 1 br downstairs). Coast Hwy. Dana Pt. ANY Day is the BEST day to
AO/an 3 BR. 1~ b11., pool11, nr 1ehols comPt. kitchen. f'rte linens, Ava ilable now. 673-lt<t8. run an ad! Don't
• h 1~' 644-"'32 d J ·-•-·• 1V .._ 2 BR & Bs th -~ f,.,..l c It IT'S A brtttt .. sell Your delay .. call today, &t2-56'1S
REAL ESTATE
a: 11 p'r . ...... ..., · ht poo &II"l.vuu ""' ' ,.... • ,, Ith D•"•• t'l•m• wi'lh e•••· "" ~-"y · ' fri $2001 T'f 7/1/n items w ease. use ........, VIW maid ··-avall. re g. mo. 1 •
Vacancy Problenu Ended ---;-"""'" N•:;.;,rt Bl·~ .• at 2 •• ,.1,;:C;;;al;,I ;;64;,;'-:,,:2523~::,· ====oi:P;:il:,9t"O=au=ili=o!=."64=2-<'6="78=,,.:_=P=il"oi=O="'=il=;o1=.=64=2-=56=1S==i FREE supply ot qualilied l ~n1ver1lty Park ~3237 _, .. ,.... Yu ...,.
• • 642-2611 •
tena.nts at no cost to you, B/Amerlcard • M/Charge General 20000entr•I 20000.neral 2000 Ask for LEE or OLA. 3 BR.&: D.R., 2 ba ...... $325 ~~~~~!._~~~v:::::::..::.:_ ____ ::;::::.;::::::.;::_ ___ __c::;.:..:c::;::.;::.. ____ .;:.:.;;.:;.._j 1190 Glenneyre SI .
494.9473 ~9-0316
832•6600 3 BR .• F.R .. 2'1 ba ••.• $300 1135/mo. Dix mob hom•
3 BR + huge bonus room: w/cabana, compl furn. hld
Just listed! Attr. tradltlonaJ * $185 * moiith to month .•.•••. $350 pool. Adlts, no pets. f\:lur ~l:Rfm~ :af~~Pm!'.v, rm., SHARP 3 BR. 2 Bath Home. WE HAVE OTIIERS! ~~: 2359 Newpo r t .
U6 Emerald Bay S75.000 Larae fenced for children * * Sll5 * *
Shown by app'l, &I.ASTpets, Garage, WON'T I .
1 l Br. turn. apt. Stove. tt rig.
Biii Grundy; Realtor * BLUE BEACON * crpt1, drps. carport. lndry
833 Dover Dr., NB 6'12-4620 rm. No pets. Ask ou.r clis-
CAREFREE Hillside house * 64$.01 l I * ~unt plan. 741-W. 18th St.
w/irpeclscula.r ocean view. l BR tot/pet OK ........ S80 lgt \Ve1tern Bank Bldj:. 642-115.§
EMERALD BAY
$55.000. Bethke Realty 2 BR tna: kids/pets •. ,, SlOO Unlvenity Park srUDIO Apt turn. for middle
1504 s . Cst. J~""'Y· 49t-2$M 2 SR TRLR C.J\1 ....... $120 Daya 133-0101 Nights aae person. I ml s. of
3 BR k1ds/petl OK •••• $140 Falrvie1v tmpitlll. $110/mo.
Ap•rtment1 for 3 BR kldl/pe11 OK •••. SBO 3 BR. 2!ii BA. townhat, cpl It :W.a-.5300 aft 6 pm.
Sale 19t0 4 B!t a:~up/atudents OK $ZXI drpg, Avail Dec 1. opllon to ~'-"'"""'---'7'=-.,.,..,,-1
'
__;;::.:::.. ____ ...;.;.:.; 4 BR H -I ·~ h If •-1 d B 1 Br. $125-pool, 1pac, Adulta, one ........ oorn. i........, pure UC ..x;s re · Y Ide al for Bachelor, 1993 \9ATERFRONT·Three 1 br STAR*LET n6-7330 ownr 833-29SS aft 6 pm. unit• w/dock. $&3,000, Prin. .:-.~=~:C..,-'--~ Olurch. 548-9633.
dJ>al• only_ Owoe• 673-"62 * $140 * EHi Bluff 3242 E.X. U. Bach. Rode<. FOi' aft 6 pm. NEAT 2 BR, Homf'. Excel--"'~..;;;.c;.;.c.. ___ .;._;; adultli owr 35. Utll pd. $105.
RENTALS lt!nt location. Children & 3 BR. ,2in Ill' 1p!it level. Avail by 15th. 548-2407.
HoUHI Furnished pe:b tint. VACAl\'Tt Bayvitw, ~ mo leau.o ,.,.U,:P:,;L:EX:;,..:_,=~b,="'rum""'-~~ •. 1 * BLUE BEACON *I ='lJ.=222:1=. ===== Quiet, ""dor•. ~
Genera l 2000 * 645-01 11 * Coron• d•I Ma r 3250 * MS-2'720
* $100 * VERY CLEAN 3 bednn t BR $(2; loci utll. No pr.
bome w/11.l'fe fenced yArd 2 BR, Elec/rana: ... Gardner. Adult.. no pets. S32 Center
NEWLY DECORATED 1 BR. & grtllt p111io. hllr·b<cl. Jllln.!1 ADULTS. S~fmo. SIS St. S40--062l.
Cottaa:r-. NtC~tlo ~yard. k trple belp make thia the Jasmine, Cdll-f. BAOtELOR Apt-tum, crii1s·.
•
S@~~lA-"'B!fS9
The Puule with the Built-In Chuckle
O l!earran;e leuer1 of th•G; lour .c:to mbltd wt11ds be-
low to form four Simple words, ~
I ~YNRJT I ,·
-I I I I I I ·( '
I F EDJT I' f _ I \' I I . I' ~T_UTIRriF-'!~1 l I I 1 I I . Sign In a per shop window: I ~:::;~:;;:~:·:::'..._, 'We're Chock Full O' -. • I s u E s I H I Jt-1• • I I I I' I 0 Coinpl•te th• chuc:Ue quofM by IHI! 111 the mlUing WOtd
• • • YO\I dtv1lep "from ttep No. 3 below,
9 PRINT NIJMllREO lfllfRS IN
1
• r
1
s
1
•
1
•
1 IH!SE S£Y61!! . _ . . . . Canel!. CALL )10\V! beal ft.nlAi lor the monty at •644-3603 aft 5:30 * drp~. utll. SJ20-per mo. * BLUE BEACON * S~ J>(!t mo. Call A&:ent 2 BR. + fant. rm. :z Blka. 1,, 5'1S.I40S or 646-1762. UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE ltT !RS
64'0111 * .. ., 1 1---TO::...::G::,!l:..:;;AN.:;S:.;W;:!.:,l _ _.=,...J.....J......IL-.L......L.....I * , .rw-t.14 ocean. on LarkRpUr. $235 DELUXE l A 2 BR. rum • TRA=°"oER~'S.=-;P;;:,A:,:RA.,;D.,ISE,.,--,5faTH"'Ei;-';;;SUN"°"'N"'EVE=R.-.;SET;:;;S0oo:: I Mo., utll. l11eludo! I U"fum. Pool . l1'S-$16.l. 1T7 SCRAM·LETS ANSWER 1•• ~SSIFICATION 7000
Jfnea-5 dmet-5 bucltl Pllot OaultJed Scenic Properties 6~5726 _:E::;·..:22ad:::..::S:;.t. .::"::).,l615;::::::_ __ 1 _.;:.::.:;:_;;;..:...=:;;..:.:;..:.:..;.;.:..:..:..:..:..:.._..:c"_;_.::.:::;:j.;~----------
f' -,
.• :
,....,..v..r .. ....,=-i,..,,.·~---------------------------~~---------·--··-~~--
•
RINTALS RENTALS Ae'!: Unful'nl-Apt.. Unfurnllhod f
RENTALS RENTAL$
1 _..;.Afl=•:c· ..;U..;.it.;.;lu;;.••;.;;l;;•;h;;;ed.;;.__.;.Ap=t•;_· ;:;U;.;.nlu=rn;.;.l";;.'iod;:;;:,__ I. , * *
RP.AL I STATli * 0-r•I
Mond.,, N-btf 16, 1970
I BUSINESS •nd
• • flll!IANCIAL
OAILV PILOT ..
• ANNOUlitlMINTS • '
Ind NOTICfS ' '
.. 1 L .. t '!!!!port -h 5200~port a..,.clt 5200 HuntlngNol Buch -5400Huntlngton Buch 5400
PRESTIGE LOCATION .JJunlinglon Vi.ita
Office R1nt•I 6010 a ......... "°° l;;;;;===-1 -;;;;;;;;;;;ojijjii;;;;;;:;;;;;; LOST: '11nkei'belle Pellam • ii abe IJvtl &I lli Via Lmq, 300-600-tJXt •P. ft.
OFFJCES, l(;0.$90.$181),
Colt.a Mesa. 646-2130
Oppo"'.onltlet
Custom Garden Apartments
I, 2 & 3 BEDl\OOM
FAMILY UNIT NOW OPEN
CUSTOM FEATURES: .
Commercl•I
LAGUNA BEACH Sl'ORE
2S ft x .fl ft on Forut Avt. nr
Coast Hwy. Idtal for
~ specia.lty. Submit lease of.
fer. Phone Mra. Gable
. ,. . on Lido • lhe'• & sirt at
tlriped like & rac:oon. w:rY
IOfl I. trlendly, blue i
w/plnk 1tcnt1. PLEASE le/ 1
UI know U )'OU !
ANYTl:nNG about be:r~ ,
PleilM ·caU Dr. Pel1ans •
&33-69'10 between 9 am " 5
pm wk-day'l!J.
* * * * *
MARINER SQUARE APARTMENTS
immediotely od jocent Westdiff sho p-
ping center -hos a Townhouse ovoil-
able featuring privote residentiol at.
mosphere. 2 Bed room. W oter. gos &
coble TV included in rent. Kitchen
built-ins include dishwasher & dis posal,
well to well corpets, full length linen
drapes. Coll Bob Buckley ot MS-0252
or come by MARINER SQUARE
Apartments. 1244 Irvine Ave ., N.B.
Ctl'ftral Rec.reetion Area-Swimming Pools
Weding Pools & Seunes-Pvt ~•rden Patios
Color Coordin•ted Drapes & Cerpetinv-
Soundproof V.0all1 & Floorinq-Blt.in R1nge
& 0v.,.._o;~wa1h•..-Ctramlc Tile Baths
Open le•rn (Vaulted Cetlin91-Yz Mil•
Wllffclya Want? Wh•dd~• Got? 71'"'125-7225.
SPICIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR COMMERCIAL-INDUSTRIAL
WOULD YOU
INVE S T s~oo TO
START A
BUSINESS
THAT COULD
grow Grow
GROW?? Would the WHtcllff pe.rl;Y
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS n. ._1 I n.o:-ntala 500 sq. ft to 2800 aq.
...-• R•h ft. 13c ID !Oc. 496-1840 SC.
who ar11wertd above ad
pleue call back.
5 LI ... -5 times -S bucks Then you .,.. fnterestod In l'IL•J -AD MUST tNa.UDI I '°90 the Uil Snack Shop Vend· Male Siamese cat w/fiea. coi-t=.~:!t:..;, ... ~,_ ...... -,--•• = . .,' .: .. L:.-,, ... ~~-=-_nd..,0.u:;s;;.t:.;rl;:•:..l ,,R:;.,.=l::•I:_.;:.:.;. I ~:opsM:.e~· ~~n S= ~U ~esa V~ atta. \
To The Beach.
21S51 Brookhuraf. SINO!
(S. of Hemllton) Huntl"flon Be•ch
PHONE: 962-4451
H -. INDUSTRIAL BLDNG: 2550 neu opportunity in a grow· 1 :.========:ol
To Place Your Trader's Paradise Ad gq. ft. 643 w. 17th St. CM. Ing ·ss billion market, a PertoMI• 6.s I PHONE '42.sfll Owntr ph: 6~1927 market In which 3)% of , 1 ~*-.~s-MA~L-L_U_N_l_T_S_*_ • the bu1lnes1 Is done by FULLY LICF.NSED * I
Renowned Hindu Spirl~t, ·1
Advice on all matters. ;1 '.
Corona del Mar 5250 Huntington Beach. 5400 Trade $3,000 equity 3 hr 2 :w Ft. Cabin O\liser:, tlp top Ill• •. ~ c M ... •,mall lndepende.nt opera--ba • • "" ..,,, nio, • ., , rea..., ors.
5100 Newport Beech 52001----------11 & 2 BR New apts Frplc't Lake Havasu home fol' cond.; twin screw: loaded for oocypa.ncy. 642-14.85 Your $600 to $1500 invest·
1----------'----------HUGE, View 3 Br, 2 Ba, Near Ocean! Pa~.· ... ults. · property or T \vlth extru. FOR house, ment covers machines and 1-f-lc bltna cpts &: d......, . uu '"' CALL I•· T 0 • NEW Bldg, 1368 lo 2300 tt. inventory, with no ohldden
BEAUTIFUL l.e:rge 3 Br, l '~ PARK NEWPORT -<!are .. be,,•t ' .. -~ 6.,.. .,.,,,. .,...., LINDBORG CO. 53&-2579 E -• .,.,. un .,.OWN.,. ER. 's. Nr. Baker&: Fairview, 1 yr cost or fees. No e>cperience
Baths c--'-··-LR ·th •-· II · n... ... .. a . ...,..,.,. ·~,,.,... ves, vi.:111.u 615-6259 f SUllJ ••• "-'" d k · .,......iv= · · w1 u""' vg over""6 the water. AT Beach-4 beaut dlx .apts.1,,--,.~-''--"""'---"'"';~'--;;;;~;--;~l ~'~ase~.~~""'~·~~~~;·= ~ n!a!U&ry, an you ma e brick&: paneling. P ass-thru 7 poob;, 7 tennis els UNIQUE tree level apt l Br Sl~Sl7S. Pool. 219 lSth.St, Trade like-new ~7' Coldspot HAV~: Sm. acreo.ge in no personal sales calls. We
Mack bar. Shag carpi?!. S7'50,<m Spa. From '175 to nr bch w/ Jklol. $225/prt. 2'lO lltti St. 846-392'1. tc_ip-tlftr.er refrigerator for Hemet, Am.a + xlnt TD'a. Acre•ge 6200 will train you, counsel you,
Balcony, At Ir a ~tl ve J y $450. Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Also 2 furn. 431 Dahlia, M9--0010 1:=:=:,:;:=:=====l'"mllar model wtth ltft \Vant 2 BR "Blutts" condo, and 1ecure your locations.
dea>(afed l\f~ter bedroom. sty Townhouses. Elec. kt. V 5410 hand door. · l le"el 1cyle. 833-0242 or CHOICE You service the buslnf!61 in '·-e closets. Beau ti ful . ba1 B•lbol lsl•nd 5355 Fount•ln •ll•Y WHIMll\.t your spare time, In your ..-., pr1. pat or Subtrn prkg, ;:;:;o;:;::..;c::;::;,:;::__..;::::: ..._....'1\n write Box 33, Balboa 15.le. LOCATION own car, at your own pace. kilche~ntiqued cabinets. opt n1a.id ser cpts, drps YEARLY: a .... View, roomy ALL NEW HAVE :II' Aljo Travel Trlr, The growth of your bu.!11· Very ' reuonablP.-rent. No Just N. of Fashion Isl at --Y VALLEY PARK Have vacam & Unproved Ml LAND nes.!I will depend on vour
I ·-• F . 2 BR 2 BA. lo"-r 6 ~ oew, also xint TD's. Want: Ml ln-m• WANT· Rl Jot ' ease n!Q\lh'C<.J. nt month.!I Jamboree &: San Joaquin • """' · .,.~ ..... • · willlngnep;s to work and rent only. Otildren & small Hills Rd. S44-l900 for leas· old. Bltn.s &: re.frig. New For FAMitJES with pre-Income prop. to $100,000, or home, coastaJ area, New. 7.2(1 Acret on Crand aJ'ld your desire to succeed.
pet. welcome. 351 Victoria, Ing info. -'=""'==""'"'=t.=6=75-520==''"'·==~ school children only_ Orange or Riverside Cty. port Beach thru Dana Point, Chestnut, near 1st St, in It you are a man who be·
Apt 3. !-"""~~=~~---... 2 & 3 BR and 2 BR Studio 833-0M2 or Box 33 Bal tsleo. 67U809. downtown Sii.nta Ana. lleves in success and wants
Westcliff River• Huntington &e•ch 5400 $160 to $215 CORONADO 2 small hsea on $627,000 to see a small Investment e MARTINIQUE e 2 BR. Unfurn. Bltns, crpt.s, 17256 SouC· Euclid, FV R·3, ·•·· o.se~ Hot Spr!.os 19' sloop, Marconi rig, l suit For further information grotwthJnto blJ: dlvibcldends, fill drps. Hid Pool. .......... ~· .... of aa.lla, FOR P.U. or Van ou e couoon ow.
P•rk·Like Surroundings 1800 Westclilf Dr, NB ON BEACH.' (JWit South of Wam!r) Nie <motel zoned). Total or Stn wagon or Dune Call 673-8550 .. -... - -DELUXE 1-2 ' 3 BR APTS. (714) 540-4785 $48,0IXI equjly, Trade for bugy of equal value at NATIONALLY
AJgo FURN. BACHELOR , * 642-5.388 * $ 2 BR unf. From ft'll: Trust Deed.!!. &44-1060 $1000. 540-llll aft 6. ADVERTISED BRANDS
Prv patios * Hid Pools 2 Br. Unfurn. Crpts, drps, ,,_.., S•nt• An• 5620 40 prod . d.ivi.!lion of Uil
ti pool ~ 2 BR Furn. From $285 1;;::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 Ac. ucmg Orange e Spectacular Laguna Bch 1275 Profit Ori Nr shop'g e Adults on1., pa o, , bltns. Sllil). . ve, ~ o. cl'U ,, A " 1"25 C. rpets-drapes-dishwasher grove 8 mi. So, of Rtvtrsidr, duplex $00,<nl value. Take Dallas, Texas 75247
1777 Santa Ana Ave, CM P~I• ' u· i·i~r .. ...,~ ... • a k;) heated pool-sauna-tennis VILLA MARSEILLES Fully managed. Trade lot. • Roy J. Arntson e 10 Ac. So. Calif. SlO dn, $10 I em Interested in more fn. Mgr. Apt ill • 646-5542 acen a. .... ~ a I a· AND EW mo 1995 F/P. L. Shewfelt, formatlon about making about our discount plan rec room«ean vie~·s R' N $60.000 eq, @ S35CCI per ae. 100) No, Coast Highway h ndi . ' "-SPACIOUS 1 TD · 1•-.... ~. 4.,.. .....,,. 32l W. Srd St., L.A. money In t e ve ·ng busi· * TiiE SEVILLE * BAY-ONT * p.··"' ample parking. or · · 11 or un ""·.............., * ...,...,_, * 213: 623-SlOl. ne.!ls. I have 11. car and 6-8
New 2 Br, llh Ba w/ gar. ' rft. Security Jt\Ull'ds. I & 2 Bdrm. Apt1. Laguna Niguel GoU Courae R2 lot, Laguna, takes 9 un-houni per week spare time.
Adlts, cpts. drps, fncd yd Furnished & unfurnls~ HUNTINGTON Adult Living li>t. Seclucied canyon w of Its $54,000 clear For res. ;; ACRES nr lake, town D I can invest $600 in a
w /..pat. Wtr I Grdnr pd. ed1 starting $295. Furn. & Unfurn. 6 fairways, I~ & clbh9e, units or comm'l ,bldgs. So. $30 down, $15 per mo route. "' "~ 642-2202 · PACIFIC TD *~'* D 1 <an tnvOll $!500 In a VJ<>"'lu.v Dl11hwasher _ color eoordinat-Trd for camm, 's, mltplx cout area. Linon R.E. Jn. t B 3
2619-1 Santa Ana Ave. $135 -... -rou e. •
3 Br 2 Ba. unlum BJtns 711 OCEAN AVE., H.B. ed appliances • pluab aha& ln Hbr area. Owner 645.1021 ve1trnent1. 499-1397 Mou 1 I & De 6210 667-K Victoria St. ll55 erpU;, drp.!I. $225/rOO. eall (TI4) 536-1487 carpet -cbolce of 2 color CAPISTRANO C ZONED Approx % acre :P.f-1 proper-n .. n 11rt Name ·····-----·-HA1101 GREENS 54{)-7573 or 968-8658 aft 5. O!c. open 10 am.ti ,pm Daily schemes • 2 . ballis • stall 4+ acres, Free & Clear'. ty lflX>' bldg w/income, GOOD horn@ + 3 ·rental Add1'611 -·····-·········-·····-· GARD~ " STUDIO ... ..-... Managed by sho'l\·en • trUlTO':'ed ward· $130 000 TRADE for income •<K,000 -"ty. Trade for units. Cd location In Desert Ci
...... ~ .Ar J..3 Irvine 5238 WilLIAM WALTERS CO. robe doora • tndired: light· or ? ' _. ~... Hot Sprgs. For Wo write E. ty ·~·=-· State ··-·· Zip -
Bach. 1. 2, 3 BR'•. from SPO. 1 ing in kitchen • breakfruit REALTOR 548-7711 ;~~rthem Calif. or C. Thomas, 66-563 Acoma Phone ( )
1100 Potuson w.,, '9M. Huntinnt•n Granada bar • huge prlvata fence<11~°"""'-~-~-"'-Avo. °'"" n ot s.,.... . .............. " ......... ..
5t6.ll370 NOW LEASINGt rrgw . patio • plush landlcaping _ 12 Units, prime loe. Santa 2111 aeres Northern Calli, Dept. #SlS9C
WILSON GARDENS APTS New, family and adults unit! I BR, From 1135 brick Bar-8-Q's. large heat. TrAnasd. "', G~sOOO. $50,D00$60Eq000. forest land or beautiful Sa.l-IR= • ..:E::;·c.W=•::•c.t.d=--.:62:.40:.: ACCENT Furn/GI"· Fl-·t 2 BR Unturn. Newly de<;. ed pools & lanai. e Ol ,,.,..., to , ton Sea lot $3,500 val each. ,..,, ·~
New crpts ·& drps Spac with total recreation club ~BR. 2 BA. From $155 ' 3101 So B . tol St home Trade for car. boat, plane PVT PTY : WANTS CdM loc. Att1utnt cllentele.
grounds. Adults. ~ pets. &nd pre-school. 1, 2, ·& 3 Sep FAMILY SECTION for (" Ml N. oi So.'c'! ..... P~) O~er/Broker 673-3430 or ??? 492-8508 API'/HOUSE. CALL MR 2Al,OOOI o"'t · ftC. Fantastic Opp. ~40 2283 F ta\ w bdnna from $150 . .Nr. shop. children under 5. ~ -WOOfEN · rs on s Ider ed .
•• mHo.bor oun n ay ping, golf, schools. Just JustSouthofW.......... S•nt• An• H.aveoceanfr o otacre, 170 ac·hwy 79 nr Scout ** 67· ~"ll ** 67~7530or524-5832
E.il 1 )ar • tum W. on 50Uth of San Diego Fwy. on ........... PHONE: 557.S200 clear. heart of Salmon f1sh-Camp-Warner HOt Springs, ~Y" CARD • Gift Sto-. W son . oo Goldtn West H.B. "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•I'"' ........ Want A-frame cab--& •· at!/part ~ Private buyer wants apt units "" "' C\i.lver Dr., Irvine. 333-3733. (714) l47al055 = '"'"J tree cu, . ...,,a ac Hallmark; near new In bllsy
BRAND New 2 BR duplex. PARK WEST ~~~~~'""==~ ALL NE\V in, Lake Arrowhead. Pyra. vaL For a.EAR prop, boat ~!oc:1 ation, any condition. shopping center. Priced for
$165 mo, large room.1,r at-APARTMENTS *HERITAGE APTS PARK PLAZA mid Exchangorg 61!Mi000. or??. 557-9700 ot' ~~-.,,......,. quick sale. Terms. BKR
tach. gar, patio, fully ept'd Ovmed and A'i""ft......t ho,, AVAIL.ABLE NOW 34 FT Cabin Crui ti Have: lit TD'a (4) $6,COO. BUSINESS and .J.0.54',i-<lil\'f-""-=------&: drp'd, garden at-... -.=--"' 17-401 Apt c Keelson Ln, H.B. Separate Family Section · ser; P mosphere. No pets or The Irvine Company Lrg Attra.c 2 Br From $135 1 BR $137 • 2 BR S167 top cone!.: twin screw; load. {61 $20.COO. {6) $125,000, all FINANCIAL • Sm. Restaurant on
children. 548-6920. Kids ok, All extras. Pool Pvt 3824' South Flower St SA ed with extras. FOR bowie, or pert for Newport, O. 8utln111 &yfront. Ready to O{>en 2 bllci! ·E Bristol & •Mac-WlltS or T.D.'s. Cnt:y prop, boat ($3G-$50M) W/Sm Down. 673-02ll * e THIS WON'T LAST! East Bluff 5242 patio area. Rec bJd1t Ar'c ... , nr. S. Coast Plaza OWNER~ or 14?. $7·9700 or 49H206. Opportunities 6300
Spac. 2 Br, 2 Ba Studio. New 1----------__ .:,84:_7,.:"335~,.:°':;..:968-=.75:.:::;lO'--"""
·epns, • .,... bltns."No pets, 1 CASA del SOL (714) 54Hl14 s-3 •-2 bath untu, 1m Motor Hem• 27'. Load· AAA
child ot<-Wal!< to .,,.pg & NEWPORT llEACH · SUNNY BROOK 7 yn old, °'"1a M•ss • od! L\ko ""'' T .... for CANDY AND SNACK
sehls. 549-3524 or Sf0.6338. Villa Granad• Apts. Lovely, very lg 1 BR, new $125,to:I valUe. W~ land, Real Eltate, etc. cau SUPPLY
NEW 2 BDRM. Beam ctil· Furnished. Five bedroom, & Olarmlng, ca.sual new apts dee. in&: ou., SllS. Wo pets. home or up tot um.ta local· 645-2CQ; oz Write Box 4196, WE ESTABLISH
inp, wood !l'lfll?ling. All rec den, with balconies above ·'' at the beach. • Nicest in area. 1227 Brook ly. Quintard RM1~299L Palm Sprinp, Cal. 9228'2. ALL ROUTES
teaturel!. $165. Adull~. no patio below. GradOUs Jiving 1 BR. From $135 St., 1135-7013 * * * * * * fNo Sellin-: lnvnlvedl
Money to Loan
2nd TD Loan
1"-% INTEREST
6320
R!:d~pM~e. Teua: ft
week, 1D am -10 pm, '
312 N, El Camino Real,
San Cemente l
-· '9>.()076 MASSAGE SPECIAL,
* * 6 Dollar's * * He &: She Health Qub
Separate walk in Sauna'• tor
Ladies & Gentlemen 847·78'19
17434 Beach mvd. (cornet'
o! Slater) H.B.
*MASSAGE* I SAUNA * WHIRLPOOt:;i
Lovely Glrla, Plush facllldes. \
Open G days, noon.midnight!. · 1
2930 W. Co&st Hwy, Ne l
Beach 548-3608 1
RESUMES That work bY I
former Pertoonel Director:
In your home or office. Sen.
alble prices, By • pp t
557-7625.
SWINGERS! New Orange
Co. Gulde. Free info OCSG,
P.O. Box nu. AMbetm
821.-4193.
YOGA CLAS.SES ·Tue& attns
3 p.m. Free claa thla Tues.
Nov. 17th. Yoga Center, 445
E. 17th, C.M. 646-82S1
ALCOHOLlcs Anonymowi.
Phone SU.7717 or write to
P.O.~ 1223 Coate Meaa.
Announcements
FREE
BOATING
COURSES
6'10
Small Boat Handling
by
U.S. Power Squadron
Tue&day, November 17th
7:15 PM
(bring pencil It paper)
United Savings Aa'n
Ma.nchester & Carden Grow ..........
Community Room °"""'· Calli. pet5. Call now 646-0073 & quiet 11WTOundings tor 2 BR. From $220 CASH REQUIRED
381 w. Bay Street family with children. Near 21661· Brookhun;t St, HB Laguna Beach 570J Ple.n one •••••••••••• $975.00 GRAND OPENINGI
NEW TOWNHOUSE CoronadelMarHigb SehOol. {714} 962"'653 -RENTALS RrAL BSrA Pl11;n two •••••••••• $1625.00 Term"' b!Ued on equity. Oriental. Swedish&: Frepcb.
1st TD Loan
F1"'pla-, wet bar • buiJt. l----R--s-----1DELUXE 2 BR. 2 BA, vle\v, • TE Pl th "'~00 642°2171 r .. r0611 2 BD l'J Ba. & 2 BR. Crptg, " « * F E H AIR A U fu I h d G an ree ••••·•••·• ...,...... ~.,.. MASSAGE d,.;:;, &elf cleaning grui ov-Ir. kitchen appliances. Will (!\cc eye garage, ldry. pit. n rn • • lntr•I Exc:cllent Income for a few Serving Jfar bor area 21 )'I'll,
••• p tl "'"" ~,.,,= cc-ruilder unfumlsbed or turn. Walk J blks to Bee.c h! 497-1056 or .f94-sg}O R _::.:;:::.:;:::.:_____ hours weekly work. (Days & S•ttler Mortgag• Co, AU nc1v yottng &: attractive en, encl gar, a os. ~:;yw,J !lure purchase. Beaut. big 2 & 3 BR apts. ent•I• W•rtted 5990 Office Rentel 6070 Evenings). Refilling and col. 336 E. 17th Street female tecmiclam tD terW
377 W. Wilson. 835 AMIGOS WAY 644-299! w/w crpl.!I drps bltns ex. San Clemente 5710 EXECUTIVE lectlng money from coin op. _ _::::.~~"-':::.:::.._.I & satisfy OW' customers.
1 BR A t SI & R fri ""Pt ~mg' I'"" 0& ~-No wanltl to rent sUP~DELUXE Q $9000 Pti t • Sa . P, ove e g. 'Coldwell , Banker & Co. P<t& 536-liu ~ .,_,. . * 2 Br-Palisades. 1 child ok. hou.!le In Newport Beach ~ UALITY erated dispensers in Costa For short term lat or 2nd va e rooms una
Garage. Water pekl. Adults Managing agent 833-0700 • No pets. Pool. Avail. now area. Needs approx. 1800 ..:J:. 1·2-3 room, up to 3,000 sq. MeH. and surrounding area. TO. Vacant OK. Cali Mr. Hni. 12 .til U.
only. No pets, $105/mo. 571 MORA KAI _ 2 BR. Palk>. $16.5. 496-3802, 55'1-8400. fl, Will consider 1..quna ft otflce suites. lmmed oc-Cffandi@s name brand candy AdllJ1lll, Bkr. 7141499-21.30. 1813 Newport Blvd.
Hamnton, Apt D 548--6954. e NEW DELUXE e Pool Washer & dryt!r Beach to Huntington Beach. cupancy. Orange C ri t y. and snacks). For pe;sonal Cost• Mes•
LUXURY-Spacious 3 Br, 2 3 BR, 2 BA Apt tor k3.Se. hOok-up. 8181 Cartleld. ~i Dan• Point 5740 Call 54Q..M53, 8-5 wkd)'I. AJrpor.t ll'vlne Commerc. in~rvlew in Cb.!lta Mesa Money Wanted 6350 642.0450
Ba, Adults/teenagen; ok. Incl spae muter suite din blk E. of Beach Blvd CoU Complex. adj. Airporter area, send name, address
. $165/mo. Refs. 540-0154, MI rm &: dbl garage, auto 'door Garfield). 962-8994. DELUXE Duplex, new in Rooms for Resrt 5995 Hot.el -' Restaurant, ban4a, and phfne number to Multi-PRIV. pe.rty wantl 2nd T.D.
Outcalla By Appt .
Liconsetl 6-6922, or 54~9457. opener avail. Pool 6 Rea, 1 SR, crpts, drps, bltns, April, nr Doheny State Park San Dlero &: N'pt F'wyB. State Distributing, Inc., 1681 on Me1111. Verde home. Have
SPACIOUS 2 BR. Cpts, drps, area rctrig., $135 mo incl util, &: new harbOr. 2 br, 11/. ba. *SIS per week-up W/kit· UNCROWDED PARKING West Broadway, Anaheim, lge. equity. Pay lDo/'o. lnL TALENT conteat at Fell-
CILJ1'3rt. Child ok. $1,,35 + .. FR.OM $265 • adults, no pets. Tradewinds Fenc ed yard, newly chens. $27.50 per wtoek·UP LOWEST°RATES Ca.lif., 92802 (714) 778-5060. 546-1385 642-7000 clanos! Mu1lci1.J11. slngin,
dep 2214 College Ave. No. 865 Amigos Way, NB Realty 847-85U. landscaped, Garage w/ex· Apt.I. MOTEL. 548--9755. Owner/mgr. 2172 DuPont Dr., Active all
2. 646--0627. Mn .... --' by 2 BR "'l)O tki':" hentra8<><:eilt d1"'ctl1_!, di~ FURNISHED room for rent, Rh. 8, Newport Beach. NATIONAL CO. ANNOUNCEMENTS ~="'··~~CJ~ =: .... _...... -... tc en. u -ms •""'1U .. .., Costa 1<1esa. $18 week. Call 833-3223 Courtesy to Broken: •nd NOTICES NEW-EASTSIDE wn..LIAM WALTERS CO. IN 4 PLEX, W/W CRPTS, dishwasher & garbage S4&-l807 Nceds
0
reliablepersonwhore.1 ----------Tues It Thurs nltes. Apply
Open for inspection 10 to 4
1
SPAC 1 BR. Lrg patio, entry ORPS. NEAR SCHOOL. d\spo&a.I . Carpetin1 thru-out . PRESTIGE OFFICE quires $15,000 10 $40,000 per Found (Free Ads) 6400 In per.m Mon A Wed, from
l l 2 Br, all tacilities, 324 E. hall, crpts, drps, dh\\"&he.r, •-"'-·"'-'-------I 2 storie.!I. $200 mo. Ave.ii to NI.CE Room, pnv. horn~, ··or· TiiE BAY" year income to take advant-1.;._;;;c.;c..;:..;,.:;;;_:.:;:;_:.:.:o 10:30 pm on, FelldanM.
20th st. 646-9490 pool, nr. Fashion Isl &: DUPLEX _ 2 br, din'g rm, show, renting Dee. lio;t. No kitcb. prlvU .+ Near &bop r At LlcSo yacht ancharage age of the most unusual off-FOUND • injured gr ey 161? Westcl!H Dr., NB.
mrk"' '!7'>. rn•~ ts d ti peu. Drive by 33!111 Copper &: tr&n.!lp. C.M. 54~1061 l room . Ground floor er made in the distribution female wire haire d SERVICE DIRECTORY LRG 2 BR. Crpl, drps, 1 or 2 • ...,............., crp , rps, stove, pa o, .
kkls ok. Sl3S &.$140 + dep. 2 BR. Frplc. Pool acce~ll. No gar. $165. Avail l :;i / l. .~nf!1!• dDana4,,~t~79o1r call KITCH1 $GOEN Pri~'M"1ne' M8snt ~Z rondk:• crputs, drps. of food product&. No .!leUing ~=na~U:~_:!thFwyttd &~U: A ti 6lOO 1998 Maple Ave. No. 1. children or pets. $200fmo. '="'=.,·.;71;.37'--.~=----· 1 .,..-~ a.vs, ,,..-. eves on y. ITlO. r , &..-par mg, tll. pa.id required. Company will es-r e-.,.,.. ' c-"c-"cou;,.:;;n=•.;:@._ __ ._;;.=.1
.,0 .,77 or'" ~25 or 499--1397 Lingo Real 646-5289 or 893-5370. Sl:il5 per month tabliah accounts. May start Co.!lla Mesa. Call Vet. ·•·
.,.. .!I au:: nves en.... -·---·-'' o ar Drive part or fUll lime. .NIN ..,...,,... 64~'1. 1=~=~====~======' I fl $130 • 2 BR, crp~. ,drns, E 1 -I tm •· -7 Lid p k 637-'>=l\ Sm bu-'----n ... d•P<ndablo,
* DELUXE. 1 & 2 BR. bltns, dshwshr, garqe. Aft R & •·· d 5-N Be h ·~· 2 accurate &: reas bookeeplnt1
Co-· d•I Mar 5•R• * * SPARKLING NEW oom -r .,..,.., ewpor. ac 673-.wuv CASH REQUIRED BLACK and white puppies Carden Apa . Blt-irui, priv. ,.,,. ...u 4 pm, 847-3771 done? Will pick up 968-;ml
patio, heated pool. f'rptc. '"1-'B-R.~.,.-.,-... -c-h.-crpts--, 1 1• 2• BlUBIRLDaEpboR '!';!;",905 Sl41l WANT Room 6 bom1 for 1741 WESTCLIFF DR. $3000 to $0000 maJe &: female 3 or 4
Adu!•· ~•s mo .,. •163 CORONA DEL MAR d 1 dull! •· ~ cul\"~ gentleman In •arty Pti loc •·-ol"-Inftstment .ecured by lnven.. months old from eme Ut· •·L-IHI-WO 1,.:.=c:~cc•=''-"':;·.,;~""-==-,-1NEW 3 Br. 3 Ba. lower du. rps, poo, a ·nope~. "'on. m ·• ,..,..,. or u..-.::s tol')'. Cuarant~ sale of ter. Vic Mesa Ver de :-:;:;•:.:.:••:.::.:o:·~:._. __ _:=::1
1 Br. unf. $150/mo. Pool. pl.ex. Frplc., wa.sbe:r/dr)'e'r, Tradewindt Rlty st7-8.ill. Condominium 5950 60's. Beach area. 642-4620. 3000 111 ft @ Xie, gmd 1Joor product or refund. For In-546--0140 aft. 3:30 '../ NEWLY LICENSED
Elec &: wtr pd, Adlts, no I bit · ..,.__,_ ..... 2 BR. Avail Now! Children & . Lota of Pk&. Wal/pan'J., Cpts, t -• ti FG compete ·tns, """"'~ 2 BR. 11t BA, ~~-. bl..,, Misc. Rent•ls 59" drps, alM:ond. Owner 548-95S6 e1v1cw, ma you: name, UND Frlerx:lly Beagle COSTA MESA PR&SCHOOL pets, MESA MANOR. 2·11 paHo & garage. Beautlfully small pet ok. $140. n .....,,....., addre!I It phone no. to Deal-Puppy near St. George's 18th & Monrovia. ~ day +
W\190n Ave., CM. 548-7403. landscaped. Year lease al 842-8365 new crptg, end pR.tio, extra sroRAGE Glrqes DESK SPACE enihiti Div. 3002, P.O. Box Episcopal Church, Laguna Full day MUions. PJ.an. •~ per mo. Contact e LGE 2 b t·"'"' .l-clean. $l70. ~2919 $'15/ -.. mo, ,... 24851, L.A. Calif. 90024. Hills. 837-9670. · ~ .. p~m, hot •·-·•-.,..,...... r ap -.....l'ts, .... l'a, Pho .. A2-6391 tll 6 lOS No. El Camino Re•I ''"""' ·---~ iou...,._ Newport Be•ch 5200
3 BR, 2 BA, delx 4 plex apt,
trplc, bltns, cpl!, drps, nr
Hoa&" Hosp. $220 mO, Jnq;
4150 Patrice Rd. 64l-4387,
•
: 175-1050 0 bltns. Ava~~731. Rent•lt W•nted 5990 ne .,., un pm, Son Clemente OWN A PROFITABLE YOUNC Male cat fourx:I In Age1 U, hn 6:30 am.fl pm,
-U' I&.& 3 Br. & den, bllns, crpts & 0 LANDLORDS e alley access. $45.00 mo. 492-WO w/fiea collar. 644--5752. ·ar 8J8.5237.
_;:; • ""vo..o Ovenilzed dC)tlble gar.p, IA" • the Bluffs. Beige &. white SU wk. Compare! 64M050
drp~. 2 atory. $250 mo. FREE RENTAL SERVICE * 6'6-9'JJ9 * • * DELUXE 1-room office. FOUND: Brown female pup--BA;.:B~Y:.:Sl'lTlN:.::;,,~G-.-w-a-n-te-d-.·I
84M6:ill. Broker. 534-6982 RIAL ESTATi ~~~nt ~~fer Inn I: py vie Magnolia It CarllelJI. Exp'd. Re.fl. ·De.y or ntte, bY
NEW! Never Llved-tn: 21: 3 MA11JRE Rella~ couple Oener•I ...... ,.... n..,., rport · FAMILY 1'aken to Humane Society, the week. Nr Wamtr A
BORMS. Nr. Beach need untum. house w/dble ~·· drapes, mu.sic, air-CAMPGROUND 21632 Newland, HB, Nov. U. Brlltol. ~231. 642--tm. -
DELUXE Gold Medallion 2 "'9 c;.., ~
Br. 2 Ba., C/O, bltns, encl ~
pr, new paint. $1 7 5. ON TEN AatES
548-3708. 1 A 2 BR. Furn 6 Unfl.ft
2 BR, gar, patio, drapes, Fireplace. / prt•. pat!Gs I
1tove, private SI., adults Pool&. TeDD),. Owitnn Bkfst,. only, no pe ts. $145. Back Biey llOO Sea Lane, ClcDI lf4..JIJ'll
area. 642-2267. (MacArthur nr. Cbf#t Hwyl
2 BR Triplex, frplc, gar.
Adult.II, no pel.'!. $1&.'i/ per 4 Br, 2%. bA Studio apt.
mo. 1500 Coral Pl. NeWpOrt Cleam. TI4 Goldenrod,
Helghll. 548-~ $.1151 mo. yr lse. ~757l.
1'2"°"B°'R.:-,2'°""'B"A'°,-'°""bltn-s.-crp-.,ts-.1 aft 5 ~.
drpl, $170 mo. Nr Hoag NEW 2 Br, 2 Ba A 3 BR. 3
Hosp. lnq. 4130 Patrice Rd. Ba.. So or hwy. 3 2 2 642-4387. 642-lTIL Marguerite, QL'\f or call 1'2,;.=Bc.r::°"'=..:n;,;frlrt;.:,:;.;l:.wr-d~u-p~l•-x 1 6ff.l3'2 I
$2SO y.ty. crpts, •'I'•· bl'"' * COROLIDO APTS * 5009'Ai' Seuhcft. Patio, gar. 2 BR Studk>, Unfum. All
Av1.\I now. 213:243-1921 elec, d11hwlµ', dbl carport I:
EX1'RA nice Ig;; dplx • 2 br, Ira pool, $190 A UP. 673-3318
l blk' to ba.y Ii: 1tare1. CTR.. 2 ba. 2 yn old,
M11.l re couple,--ro-pell. $210 Swedish frplc, b 11 n 1 ,
yrly, + utll. 675-4172 alt 6 &: 11undeck. 6U Narc l11u1 ,
2 BR, 1 BA. trplc. unfum, 6~13). ·
crpts, drr-, blk to ocean. TREETOP View. Walldna
Yearly $195/mo. fl:J.-M88 distance to bet.ch. 2 br I
LWO ISLE-C'..rJt: ~ View 2 dell, 2 b3.. $265. 646--2523. j
Br. study, - 2 Ba. crpta, drps, LGE 1 br. ~ •ha& crpt,
(\'Plc. SlM. r.:12_-IJ!07-'----t!le, drpc, ttfri.a, slo)'e, pr.
2 BJ° :tOOMS l lM. 70011 Goldentod. I
4400 Sc111"-,. Dr, Apt A * 2. BR Un#Urnlahed j
637-02!!2 $175. NC. chffd..,n, "3-9)!:'
* Art. ~1070 * pr. Max $150 mo. 6U--O'J38. Bu1fnn1 lt9nt•I '°'° m.oiO't •tc..~ Mon~44 g*~11~nau~>: :::"~~ FOUND Fem. brown puppy .. TLC your chlld by hr/dily.
MIO STORE 23 x 40 tor )I@, omCE _ ~~ sq. ft., Join the nation's 'largett Part Shep~rd. Taken to Mesa Venie area. RQI.
"'F_ou=n.,t•,.i_n_V_a-'ll-"•Y,__54_1_0;.F-'ount=;,;•;;.ln;;...V;.;•;.1;.l!f;.t__c:.;.;,; 1 Pre 1 en t 1 Y Fa 1 h 1 0 n carpeted, funrlibed, sub-let system of full..gervice Humane Sociecy. 536-8480. rates. 56-7495.
Hide-A-Way drtu shop. monltl to month. Suite 545, camPll'Ounds. Immediate YOUNG G. Shepherd found CHILD CARE my i.:ime, 9JlY
':J.ounlaiM
1ai11et1n1om1-tllalbo
AA!all IJ"8I ......,_ • v""""'°"'
e l>Woa•A•
•3 ... C.-.,....., .. •a-.-·-~ ~81alor&•mae
•
'
r.o1ne flxtW'H. Avail Dec 1. 500 Newport Center, NB. cuh flow. Proven operat· ln Vic ot Ocean Blvd. & age. Near Fairview I: .,, E 7 C ..-. Ina-methods .. National pro. Dehlia H\11 77IM Ad CM. "9-11152 .w.'\ . 1 th St. .M. .,,.,..1440, motion. Inquire now while .,,.,. · =='"";;::;•c..:,·~-'-'"-'-C.:,--1
6-16-8661. * NEWPORT BEACH Civic choice Jocatiom still ava.11· FOUND • Crey a: white cat, CHILD or Infant eve, depm.
ARnsrs:crattamcn -Art Center. 300 ft to 1000 tt. able. W r I t e : KA.MP-vie Ford It MacArthur Blvd. dable .l ex per. CJnn home,
Ctnler now fonnln'f. Studio Answerln& a: Secretarial. GROUNDS OF AMERICA. &H-618$ lrg yd. 646--5537
•• -"•-•pa-a·-Uabl•. -1601 P. O. Box 1138-. BWlnp, will au •.1 .... ~.. •• ,;•,;:•~:;;:;--.,----1 Mt. !59103, for full infor· EXPER. mothtr babysit
New col'leept in art OFFICE space tor led an matlon a.t no ob!Jption. Lost MOI In home. Nr. Sonora A: St
""n:handblna. 793 Lal\tn1 San Diego rwy nr 1.quna DISTRIBUTORSHIPS LOSTo Doa. am&ll tan John'• sch!. !546-0lOO
Canyon Road. ~· Nill!el. Delta E 1 e c tr I c, tr $1C0>/$2SOO/xtra mo. Inc. female. P&rt dachshund A BABYS!Tl'ING, day or nite.
HA.R.BOR BLVD. front . &.n-1400 lJt/yr, dblt l11 :! yn, doesn't beagle, white on cheat. Vic. 11 fncd bk )'d, tnfant
19 x 37' w I 1wtroom. 2110 t o-NTOWN H B """ you ca111 .... tor a.n appt, Alpha Beta, C.M. Tueaday •'tlcome. 64J..Sa!I.
!!arbor Blvd, CM, . -mo. "~ ' • "• ....... mode.lea ore or abop. blk. ro Now! Then this lg not tor eve. Mlutd ffr.y much. NEWPORT· He.Jpts are..
)'ttl''• ieue. 548-0113. oettn. Llndbors O> M&-:1579 )'ou. Phone 548--3155, '42 E. 19th. Lrs )'d/sa.odbllX. Balanced
OFFICE, STORE, nt. N°PI. DELUXI: Ottloe ' C dM Unlimited Opportunll}' C.M. Allk for Betty hux:h. Ex; Care. GG-2"l5C.
Bch. Poat Otc. A Greyt\ound outside entr&Jtce' m . 0" Call tn4) 646.5241 LOST in vtclnlty of the Ter-AITER SChOOi care, m:r
depot. Ud2. m mo. l1e. 23U "'i'. Oout nw). SUit \· un; Agent hu captive nee, S.J.C. Ble.ek. female tiom~. Collete Park aru •
Graham Realty 6f6..2414 ..... • e · cPU&I ... cll.elltl WUU"• to cat wilh d<?ar collar. ChiJd'1 Nr achool buJ .......... M&-.1-
00RONA DEL MAR Y • ., ':~~~I ~·~~~--~1 ~~¥==~;:=;:-::-,•;:;:~: $200 Per mo., ID) 911. ft. 5 RMS llOO • ~ Qr 2 1.HOCltite w/cuualty~ aqnt. ,J-t.
oftiCI 111' rt tall store. lU · aq .:.. .. "' "" • Sha.re dtl1r1t tum. otneea. YOUMG bta k 1 1• 8 lck ~ --,., 66nd St., N.B. h Manqtr BA. CID, Pkt 673.ml ~TGJ, W-0925 coli;. $10 ~wa.:. v: %: ~' ""' 1 8'I
at the 'n'avtJodge e XLNT 6mce 9paoe Now GOING bullftell for salt st A On.np Avt, CM .
"71 ¢~'"Ls4o.U: ::1. ~ Small cofte• shop :~-"'=~~~----8e~~ 8*~~~·;:1':; :;.;:;::::.==,;_-_:.;c..; • Downtown Santa AN. foca. UlSI', Mothtr's <OJnpa!tloo]. small. 64&-7825. Re! tum.
DESK SPACE 37110 NEWPORT BLVD. N.B. lion. $4000. F.P. Ttm" !onc·ltalr. !em "'"" beig>, I==========,(
ON THE BAY anU. l:>QI 541-3?22. eve "Chou-chou''. S•l-1923, 222 Forest /\venue m-:1414, S41.-JG..'1641, 64>-1343. C•rponlerlnt "'°
Laguna Beach 16711 SANTA ANA AVE. CM DAILY PILOT DIM& " A SMALL Cook ....... I mo l5e 1q, lt ·LINES COit )'OU j\gl pen. dd, blk w/wh c h•1t.
494-9f66 67s.24&t or 541-5032 nles a~. temale. ~7.
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Additions * Remodeling
Gerwkk & Son. Llc. * 549-2170
ICIAN. Small jobs,
maintenance & r ep a I rs.
Lic'd &: Bonded. 548-5203
Floors 6665 1-------
* F.XTERIOll-lNTERIOR *
Won't bl! underbid! Custom
v:ork. fully guar. Finest
paint.I. Frff est./colar cor.-
su.lting. Local ref!:. Lie,
CARPET VINYL 11LE Baud, Ins. 492-5338, 549-0611 LlC CONTR. FREE EST. * 540-7262 * HOLJDAY Special lnll!r & I=========' I Exler Painting. Free est.
Furniture Restoring Local ref's. Lic'd & Ins.
& Refinfshfftft 6675 Fret window washing Inside
••• & out. eau Chuck, &15--0809
NEW Lawns. re-seed. Compl
lawn catt. Clean up by job
·or mo. Free est. For info
.897-.2417 or 846-0932 .
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MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE ANO TRADE
Mu1Jcal
Jp1trument1 1115
12 STRING GIBSON
Guitar: Great Soundl
$125 or Bnt Otter. PLUS
Fret; set of stri~. * 532-2977 *
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MIRCHANDISI ,OR PITS ind LIVESTOCK TRANSPORTATION Tlt.ANSl'ORTATION
SALi AND TRADE .
Dogs 1125 Truck• flOO Truck• HOO
M isc, Wanted N1D
Sf'ofALL paint oulflt PUPPYS G. M. c. spray Black and v.'hlte 11M>Herl pup. wanttd. Rca.o;.onnble? • 642-5776 •• pys, 6 v.•e<-ks o!d. % Sht'llle, TRUCK CENTER· . QUALITY F re n c h Dialn.g ~ Cockrr. il~. 200n Marlha
La ... , lluntln&:ton Brach.
room furniture, Please call iBettA'e!rn Buse hard and 633-9547; 64UJ239 ~lagnol ia, Ofl ol Adams.) CALL 546 -6750
WANTED . USED Slim e POOOl...ES! e 24 hr. Phone
Gym. ~1u.11t be In good con-Small toy champagne viale, SALES • SERVICE ditk>n .• Call 66-0561 black female toy. Both AKC
( Machinery, Etc. 8700 Rcgi1terr~. &16-0142. 333 E. UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE 17th SI. C.f'of. 2850 Hirbor Blvd., Cost• Me11 ' * \\IEIMARANER C0~1PLETE woodv.onrkillJ.:' Fem/Beauty: 8 Wk's, AKC
&hop; Wiii sell as package -Ext·/Pedigree. Reas, to
Boet Chert•r 9039 only. 3117 Cinnamon A\'r, Rd hon1r. Co-owner ron· Mini B ik11 9275
Apt B, C.~f . ~1 sldef'l'd. 5-15--0878. -T aco M ini Trell Bike
lRISl-l seller puppies, cham-32' Tu·ln-screw Chris Cn1t * """"' * FREE TO YOU pion blood lillf'' grand Slps 6 * Delux boat
champion sired, pet priced. * 5-18-2•34. 636-4034 * BONANZA 3 hp J.1ini Bike. 5
LOVABLE yng male poodle-~1542 mo old. Tttumseh f'ngine.
terrier mix, \\'ht apricot Flying Lessons 9150 1.1ake oUer. &12-9950
·~. hsbrkn, good v.·11.tch-HERE'S v.·hat """ l'l'ally -wan1, "' choice, mini. '* <log, lov"s children. ""' , . LEARN TO FLY Motorcycltl
gd home, fn<d yd. I· Schnauzer pups. Marhncrest Lo 1 · 1 tJ Kcnnrls 546-0Cl89 w l'3. rs, pnva e 1n1 com.
523-0325. ~·93 ll /16 ' 111ercial Call after 5:00 pin. n.n.r'U'&n
Beautiful purebred charcoal LITTLE Balls of f 1 u ff . Tues TI1ur and Fri and on THINK Ador?ble .poodle mixture, \\'l"ekends. ·830-t370 · miniature PQOclle, very ar. puppies 1$5, Ca.II Sunday HONDA lecliona1e, to qualifird hon1c 5-1!)..-0.113 Mobile Homes 9200 w/fenced yard. 548-0813 * BEAGLE PUPS • l wk!. SU
VERY friendly 3 ,.,. old AKC-!'EM-Shots. $60 & $30. Mobile Living ''FRIEDLANDER'' small Grrman Shephrr!'d, -548-3281
"""' lols of lo \'C. \VJHE 11711 •IACM fNWY, •I
5-18-1281 11/17 t'ox terrier pups, at Its Best "'""'' • """"" A KC, Ch mp. s I red, NEW-USED-SE RV. OBEDIENCE·lraill('d dog, pt show·11Ct shots 830-1680 aft 6 ft.l'VV'Ln small Ccnnan Shepherd, TOY 'Yox Trrrier Puppies. IN IRVINE AGRICULTURAL
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female, spayed, terrific Ul\C reg. RM• brown & PRESERVE-BEAUTIFUL! .
\\'a\chdog &: Jo.,.e_s childrt>n. \1·hi1e. 54:,...2153 "'8-""11) 11/17 NEW \VANTED: \Vesthigkland j FREE 6 w"'k old II White Terrier. Must "' German Shepherd pups. Ji:wbrken. 4!»-4734 aft 6.
2IXIO Anaheim St, 646-ia88 * SCHNAUZER PUPS . $300,000 a!t 4 11/16 Male at stud. Grooming, •
NICE ,'-. lovely grey & wht * 846-0R39 * male cat. 2 yn, too good ..
home. No •m. children. Horses 1130 RECR~TION " '
541).-4943 11/17
FREE: 2 puppies. brottwr & * 6 YR OLD Albino/Mu~!-• . '
1isttt, 3 mo old. ?.i Lab, ~I ani;:-?.1organ Gelding, \\'l'll CENTER ? Desire Ult"y go to snmr !rained, Exp rider. S2'"JO or
homf!. 615-5619 Jl/16 111akc olr.
TIGER kitten about 2 1nos 5464297
old. Male, \'Cry good \\'ilh 7 YR old AQllA !bcrel SPACE RENTALS ..
children. Please ca 11 gelding. )..lnt disposition, Cd FROM $11 .50 546-7563 aftl'r 3:00 ]J/16 lo' exp/rider. lncld: All IN ADULT PARK
WANTED _goorl Mme for 2 lark S350. C>tll Aft: 7 , -PETS ALLOWED-SALEI SALEI SALE!
female 4 month old kittens 1 846-9657 '70 'HTI 90cc Er.duro Yama-
calico , 1 b I k, .,.,. h I. Horse Corral for rent MODELS ON hi\~, $:189.
64&-1Zl4 11/16 Bar:k Bay ar1!a AWARD MOTORS
NEED good home \\•/lge * 545-2:'1.'6 * DISPLAY . 1680 Ne\\'pClrt Blvd, CJ\.f
yard for 9 mo old black lab. TRANSPORTATION
642-4343
V•'Y good v.•/children. •.TRADE WANTED •
6-46-9:,SS, 11/16. Boats & Yachts 9000 -EXAMPLE-'69 llarley Davidson';'• Chop-
FREE part SlamPM? kitten. BRAND NEW prr, Mu~t see 10 apprttiale.
Hsbrk. \Vith 1 "'eek·s supply FREE \\'ill 1rade for late mod ti
of cat food and kitty litler. DOUBLE WIDES srortscar. Call ~116 after ,.,..368 11/17 BOATING 6 p.m ..
ClITE adorable kittens !rec }'()Tl Sale or trade. liJ66 305
lo good home, 1 white m11.le C~URSES Total Elrctrh. Honda Scran1bter. l new tire,
and 3 fen1ales. 548--0117 art Small Boat J-laodling {Gas Available) ' sprockets. $300. firm.
4 11/17 by 2 hr., 1 hath, comp!. 1vilh :,1~JG!XI. .
FRP::E to qmtl home U.S. Power Squadron carpet, drapes & appliances. '69 Yan1aha 175 E nduro Lo
beauliful Jong hairM callco Lg. av.•nings, both sides & 111i's, Exira~. Clc>an
rema11', sweet and lovable. full skirliug-Tax & $475 * * 644-5084
548-<1813 11/17 Tuesday, Novf'mber 17th lice.nsc--Complc.tcly set-up ! IONDA mint trail 50, bored
rnEE lo qual home poodle 7:15 PM $9999 ""' t\1•ice, slraight pipe.
mix male dog wht \•tilh blk (bring pencil & paper) 4!&53Tl
eyes •"" -fn<d yd . Unitrd Saving1' As..ot'-n SEE THE FABULOUS • '68 HONDA 350 548--0813 11/17 ~fanchester & Garden Grove 30X55 CORNELL Scrambler. Very good cond. Fret"v.'ay FREE walch dog Au:1tl'lllinn Comn1unily Room AND MANY OTHER Lo mile& $475. 644--0057
Shepherd. 1 ~;, years old "''ilh Orange, CalH. MODELS INCLUDING 1967 BSA 650 cc dog house, will deliver. SINGLE-\VIDES
837-3479 -11/17 12' _FIBERGLASS-0/8. Xlnt .FINANCING AVAILABLE. All or iginal & Jo mileage. . Like nr1.,., $675. 846-~ cond. Priced to sell· Quick! WANT good Rome for kitten, 548--0316 14151 JEFFREY RO., MONDA 1970 CB 450, like black. 6 w"' old. Call
546-0233 11/16 IRVINE new. $G95
Sailboats 9010 ~ MI. SO. OF \ 831-2117 or 499-2366
2 BEAUTIFUL black male
kittens 7 weeks old free lo a RENEGADE ~ANTA ANA FR\\'Y. '67 Honda 305 $300
good home. 548-3316 11/16 of CALL COLLECT * &12-4826 * NEWPORT 714-132-3585 Sl\1 dog, mixed collie, 1 yr FamOU.!! r.1· Tops'! eullrr, \Vant To Live fn Auto S•rvlc•
old. l\J good home. ~71i67 dit'S<'l, A.P., 7 bag:o. ol sails, & Parts 94DO
alt 2 11/16 COSTA MESA l'\'t"l')' possible equipn1<'nl 111 Locnl .!!putts available no\v! 6 CYL ADORABLE kittC!ns n<'t'd f:d . go 811)'\\'heie in the \\'Ol'ld. If you are serlous about buy. ho1n<'s. S4 7-5306 or Askini.: $9:iOO. &16-1914 Eve. In." a molille home .• ,Now's FORD 84i-7G43 11/16 21' VENTURE: '\!/Tr!r. Slp:o. the tln1e to see Fac1ory rebuilt \\'ilh lhrer
GOO!) hon1e wanted for 4 1no 4, hrarl. Lrnuls ol x1ras! BAY HARBOR SJ)('Pd lrans. 2,000 mil rs,
old female Dobern1an. Gd :r-.1ust See to Apprec. MOBILE HOMES IX'st offer. 54&..'"80
\V /childtC!n. &ti-2413. 11/16 12'\0. ** ~'31-0S.11 1125 Bakrr St, (at Harbor) V\V Clutch job. 120. Lahor
\VHITE par! Siame~e 1 yr. & NF.\VPORT 20, sacrifice, ln1-Costa Mr.AA ~~10-!Hill p I us p 11. rt s . M.D.
also domestic kittens 7 \\k:<.. mac. s:,r:.0. orig ro!lt. Sell Tripi• Wide Corn1ll AulomolivP. 642-3625 " 534-570:i. 11/Hi for S.'1119'1. 213/249-1941 Conlinentn.l e Paramount ~8-8667 eve.
LAB Puppy, 51'i mo• olo!. * Nt-;\V SOLING -Nl'\'rr US· Barrington • Universal \VANTED: RochestPr furl in-
Free to good home. Call "I. Priced lo s P 11 ! Jo~lamingo e Cl'ncral j('ction for 327 c.i. Chevy
96S-2200 aft 3 pm. 11/14 Uy~/rt4R-!<7R1, F.ves/:i<lR-!"110:1. Lro:idmoor • Stnr rngine. Call 8~2-14.'il.
HUSKY-Shepherd 1nix, 3 rnn. Hobie Cat·14: W /Trlr IlillCTf'~t • Cambridge C.11EVY V-• mo I or \\'ilh
$!1!15, * Call &16-1'\2!15 CHAPMAN Munf"if' 4 !'iperd trans. $225. lemA!e, v.<ell be h av~d. MOBILE HOMES or !r;u]e. 64:~160!! aft 6 pm. 892..SSSI 11/ 111
Pow1r Cruisers 902D 1206 N, lfarbor, S.A. VW PARTS HAPPINESS is a \\'anll kl1-* 71./5.11-8105 • Chassl11, Tran!missions • ten. ' wk old 11\·ins. . ., F:SS & F.SS C3hln
~16--i308 11/lfl Crui.~!'r, $2700_ r.ood shitPf". CONTE)\ PO-Body par1~. 642-0«3 . LAG UNA HILl.S
FREE; lo "'"" honte ,. ,,, rndio, D.Y .. 320hr 2'.'~'\01 RIDGF. ROUTF. DR . VW Engine, Good Cond. • Sian1esc male aUcrcd car. Chrysh•r V-<lri\'l'. inhnl, bail 1.1\GUNA 1-fll.LS • 642-0113 •
Black. 8.19-14SI 11/17 lank. Nr,1·port 1111.rbor Pt'P!ligr adult comn1unity, -SLIP. Trrn1!'i . 67~i-..~1~ Trucks f5DO f.RF.E .. ' good horne 7 n1lja1:1•nt tn Lrisure \\'orld.
Wt'Pk old puppir! i'lfo!hrr Speed-Ski Boats 9D30 B1•Kllliful !'iUrroun<lini;:-s, all FALL CAMPER 002-6-101 11/17 luxury nppoi11!n1rr11s, put.
FREE !o good hon1", 4 mo 11' Ski boat, 4:1 horse i'l1crl'. ling gn•f'n, "'"hobhy shop, CLEARANCE old fen111le Sh<'phenl m ix. 0 .13., big \l'hE't'I trailrr, S600. n1u{'h 1norc.
Call 548-794.7 ]1/16 \Viii 111ke P.O. or van of CALL SJ0.3900 Q\'cr a dozen brand new 11
'BEAtfTJFUL long hairl'd 10 equal vnlue for trade. Tripi• Wide Cornell II. !O 11 ft. e&mpel"!I now
v.·ecks old male kiHtn to a su.S6n liillcrcst e F1amingo slashed to
good home. 54~13 11n1 18' CF.NTUP..Y 115 HP "'· Paramount • Unlverul s49 0'111
FREE terrirr nil:< puppies 7 marine low hrs. 1-lull good Bnrringlon • Rroadmoor ACTUAL
\\'t't'ks, 342 Flora St., '"'· cond. hst offer. S.1S.-ZS05 Contlncnla.I • Star FACTORY
' guna. 11 /17 General e Hill('f('SI INVOICE
Merine Equip. 9035 CHAPMAN Positively no added dralrr
4 KITTENS, rm, IM'e<l yo11r MOBILE HOMES rhnrgc1! Evrry unit ·rt'11dy
love. 96.~1&1 11 /17 FOR' Si\LF. P125A,R.5 Yamn. 12331 BellCh Blvd., i:;· for i1nn1cdlnlc installation on
PI.AT~'OR!\'l roC'k"r fra111f' ha Oulho:'lrd Motor, nrrd~ you r truck or a new 19n? * 71·11530-2930 ;.~[)..lf~·12 11 /lf; son1<' a1Jju~1ln!l', asking $100. '69 GENERAL THEODORE
JI~ Yrnr old "" J'IO(l(lll' 2:,1.1 S, Olive St . S/ A 51'." .. ti784 ROBINS FORD IO\'l'~ l'hlldrcn. ~;).6.102 Jl /1<1 24x43', Di~ll\\'&.,he.r, awning,
FREf; Bunnies. Boat SI ip Mooring 9036 l!lk lrtlng, St! up In llunlini;:. 2060 llARBOR BLVD.
OOS-Wl.l lt/16 tor. By The Sea, Rr nt $75. COSTA MESA &IUXlln
PETS 1nd LIVESfOCK
I'.'> TO :IO 11. 1d lps <l\"Bil. tor S9'l50. Call Tony, 5.11-8.171. '71 DATSUN PICKUP pl\\'l'r hont~. AIM dry
Pets, Gener•I uoo storn.gl' for boats & trn ile~ GREENLEAF PARK .J3n.y1\de Vil lage, 300 E . 3 NEW MODELS UM.'<! • Rndio, heatrr, lll"P
OHTNC!ilu.AS: Emergency Coe.o:t 1-li\)'. N'pt Beach. 12XOO 2"002 21X60 burnper, dlr, Pin 1trippina-.
ill~ss forces uerlflce of •PVT dock for op lo 28' In clear, clenn, cool \VIII lake c:11r in Jralle or will
?.M prime. animab le equlpt. motor boat on channel. COllla ~1esa fir111nct' p rivnl e """'· Cl!.11 536-2241 613-266:1 aft 6 pm 1750 \VhlHll'r A\'e, &12-1350 f>.1!)...4002 ·or <19'1-6811.
PET P<>rt'llpilk' $60. Br. Std. BOAT Slifl5 N.8. 14-32' New '71 Datsun
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1 poodles. fish &: nquatlUm•, pov.·l'r boat&. From l l.75 • '69 IGt ~r\'iew unfurn. 2
'5'47~:>.11. 9 am -9 pm. Sl.95 per fi_ 54~1 • BR, 14; It~ dt setup in !I lf,OC QllC, Pickup v.·ilh camp-
BOAT SLIPS 11a.r pK. Adl1~. •m pets uk. r<. SAie price lm9 dlr.
bogs 1115 llL'al buy. 842--5471. < • •594Ml \Viii ta~ car In
~ilNIATURE SchnauzeD for
Up Th li', NB. 5'1!t-i 183 Nl:W 1970 l.anctr, 51 x 12 In trade. \\'Ill f!nancr private
S a1Ar pnrk, s:l800. pnr1y. Call 546-4051 0' ChristmAS. AJ<C champion Bo•t Rental• 9031 ~9~-6811 , 'lork. £\'C'!I ~~13; .,. -"""'" M7-!l.i61, Bolton Rent A Sailboat DUSJEST . markt-lplace In
No m11tter what It 11, )'OU Cal 2J, 1lt'CPJ •. fully equip. NEED JiELP? Look l'lr 11 !OV.'r.. Th• DAILY PILOT
Cla111lfled ~cllon. Sa ve
1
.:11.n srll ·it with .g DAI LY f)l'.!d, J30 per day, wkriy:c: S4Cl In lht Smtict Dlntctol"}' money, Um• A •llort by 11).n,y PILOT WANT AD. J)l!r day wknd1; s:iofJ Ptt wk. cla.WcaHon1. 1 hoppln1 """' """' Call 8'2-5818 a: charre II. Lf:saon\ incl. ~MO. arm chair.
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CHUCK'S
Bowling la Biiiiard
SuppllH
2750 H1rbor Blvd.
Costa M111
540-?303
DO YOUR
CHRISTMAS
SHOPPING
EARLY
& SAVE
Fill Out Thi•
L ist R ight Now &
Bring It In To
CHUCK
He'll Savt You
$MONEY$
POOL
TABLES
Brunswiclc
7' Clelrmont
$269.95
SLATE
TABLES
$39S & UP
BOWLING
SUPPLIES
BALL, BAG & SHOES
Ladles ... , . , ..••. $27.95
Mena .••••••• -, •. $30.95
This Special
Is For A
Umlted
Time
Onlylll
HURRY
IN AND
$ S~VE S
•
CHUCK'S
Bowling & Bllll&rd
Suppli11
2750 H&rbor Blvd.
-~ Coste Mt••
540.7303
SALE! SALE! SALE!
l'extraonllnaire
QUITTING
BUSINESS
SALE!!
Everythl119
Must Go!
Fantastic Buys
Just In Time For * CHRISTMAS*
HOME ACCESSORIES
Ne•r Co1tl
.At Cost!
Below Costl
FOR TllOSE
WHO HAYE
EVERYTHING!
(Yau Ju1t think th•y
h•v• •v•rythln91)
Backdoo1•
Jmporfj
h•• th• lfllWU' lrt
Anti'Juej
Old & Novel·•·
Silver pieces
Orienta.I dishes
Porcelain dishes
Antique jewelry
Bra ss doll bed
FIXTURIS FOR SALE Antique doll fu rniture
This Is for REAL 111
Lt.l.IPS &
CHANDELIERS
The
Cryjfal
&
Accenfj
Slior
has that utterly
UNIQUE
&
UNUSUAL
gift for everyone
an your list!
For Dad···
J\1onoif'ammttl i la&W for
the boat or bf.er mup for
the den o r hls own person·
alli:ed uhtray for the of.
flee.
For M11m···
Tha t 40" Brus candleJtick
ahf!'5 a.lways v.·ant~ or
thft t "Just right" non.I &r·
~nRf'ment or maybt a R09. $100.$200-$300
NOW $5~$100.$15D 01.d & Shinlnl) •• , Fnmoh La.dybug uhtny,
EXQUISITE DECO RA TOR
ITEMS
BELOW COST!!
HANDCRAFTED
GLASS
TIFFANY'S
R09. $4S.$7S-SIDI
NOWI $2f..$14-$49.fl
PAIR $1 ,00D Ant ique
ll·Ptlr Only)
Crystel Hurrlc1ne1
1&5T OFF&RI
WROUGHT I ltON
RACKS
COltNER STANDS
ETEGERE5.
SO',O to 70°,0 OFF 111
SALE! SALE! SALE!
MASTE R CHARGE
BANKAM ERlCA RD
CASH OR CHECK
STOR E HOU RS
IL AM · 5 PM
l'extraordinaire
3555 E. Coast Hwy.
. ' Corona , de! Mar. Calif.
CHOICE
Coron• tlel Mer Store
... Lease.
Brass wall lights
Tiffany lamps
Cut glass di shes
Sterling tea service
Louis XVI gold
leaf mirror
Old & Charmin')
Country Kitchen with
Hoosier cabinet & other
unique accessories plus
handmade kitchen
knives.
Old & Empty···
English Goth ic chest
15th Century
Spaniah chest.
•
Old & S,.clal • • •
Card table with inlaid
woods, with onnolu.
\Valnut secretary
Vitrine
Buggy seat
Candlesticks
Old & TlAlnCJ • • •
Rerul1l<>r clocks
Other antique clocks
BACKDOOR IMPORTS ..
ANTIQUES
1H6 Herbor Bl,
Cotta Mesa
642-7576
For Grandma • • •
Her own monogrammed
candy dilh or one of those
jor1eow candles!
For Special OMS •
Monogrammed touting
a-lust'll for all occa.sions -
v.·P<ldinI:S, annlvPrsa.rie&,
Merry Christn/as, Happy
Nf"v.' Yl"IU', Bon Voyage etc!
Do they ha\'e a "You·• &.
"Me" 1el or gluies?
v
For The Family • • •
F r o 1 I e d monorrammed
ha.th 1eta &: e\'rn Dennl1
~
can have his name on one
-or how about a beauU·
fut monogrammed bent
•' Cry1tal Tray that . i.!I tern·
pered for hot or cold ,1erv·
ln1 -th• Br1ndy A: Wine
sell a re lovely 6: l!IO a re
tht ''Mom &: Dad" cockta.11
ACCENTS FOR EVliRY
ROOM lrom:
tlong Kong
Austria
Thailand
Tripoli
Hungary
Belglum
Gennany
\ fr Mee
Venice
CRYSTAL &
ACCENTS SHOP
11t2 HarNt II, C•t• MIN
~2-5053
i
~AIL V l'ILOT
STAR LIGHT
STAR BRIGHT
• Let a Shining
Diamond Present
'r-"Bring Your
Message Ever
Dear,
With a Gift
That Speaks,
"FOREVER"
For your Love
Alone to Hear.
'!
CHRISTMAS ·'
The time to say •
"I love you, Always'\
And Diamonds
Say it BEST •.
ANNUAL
PEARL
EVENT
CULTURED PEARLS ' .
Are always ln sea.son ·-.
, . , rlJhl for any·
occasion. Always
in good taste.
SOLIDLY
HANDSOME __.
Meo Understand
th e look of gold,
As well as appreciate
its basic value.
Wbat better way
to please him
On a special day,
Than with:
14 KARAT GOLD
CUFFLINKS·ELEGANT
Dress Studs·A
Di stinctive Tie Bar
OR EVEN AN
Amusing TIE TAC??
Men·'s Rings
traditional or
modern-in feeling
a selection can be
made ... To Please
BOTH OF YOU!!
d
HOW TO TELL
THE MEN
FROM THE BOYS
MEN
GIVE DIAMONDS!!
-"• I I I • • o I ' fl CRA!lLES II. •AU
~ :! • ....,....._
W.. ......,_°""'"II
i '
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•
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• ,
-. ....
~ f l'ORTATION TAAHSPOilTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSl'OltTATIOH TRANSl'OltTATION TRANSPORT#-TION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATI ON
; .Trucb MIO Im~ Autos • HOO 1...,.,,... --ln!fO!!!d C1n -lmf!!!'?' Autwe MOO' Imported A--AU... W...... '111 UMd C•rt 990G U&ed C1n "'° i i '61 IMJSlll PICllf DATSUN MG TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN WI PAY TOP CADILLAC FORD
: Radlo, ,,. ...... tll.r., • ...... '67 DATSUN WAGON ~ IT™ • & i '63 vw CASH '68 Cad El Dondo, Sil'" ... Country Squlto ""· Air, I • <WPP 162) W-dl take m.r 1n _ ....... .._. M!M T 11'1 Mist, com.pl equip, Stereo Pwr windov.'11 &eats, Disc
• trade or ftnance pt1vate W· Auttimatic t\b'. Rad.Jo, btaf.. ttUi!" • --b ._,, can 6 fnacb ;flllt tape deck, 4 nu tires, $4.375. brks, Nu wldt OYal tires.
1> . ...-or49f.<Sll. er, .,,ec/aJ wheels. CVO& l'IU '71's HERE -I c:allqolttr ... -to. IWPl!l9ll Call BayJbore 11m. """"'· f
"Ill roYorA m LUX PICK-951) WW trade or financt 3100 w. Coad-Hwy, -SEE • DRIVE THEM Sed . GROTH CllEYllOlET Motors, 642--401L . '68 FAIRLANE 500 2-dr HT.
·UP Under factory warranty, private party. ~ ot N EWPORT< BEACH A PEW REMAIN1NG 10'1 AT an '7G ·CAD Coupe de Ville • Auto, VS. Flair, P9· X1nt 1
Can't tell this one from a 49USU, '1iftDl,Aflr O..OSEOUT PruCESJ 1500 inL Llke new. $1495. 54g..(l3'11, ~ 1
-::'. o~~:~=-1 -·1"'0~2'=0TOO~R~O~A=os~T=E=R ' 642-9405 540-1764 ·i:i.~ ';,-'.;.!l we.iuc lPAoi.t Radio, (ASL 634) 15:: $6000. ,....-I~ :.OS:~.~ P.U. 3S2 Ii
·Inc., "5 E. °"''Hwy., NB. Authorlnd .MO OH ier NEW USEO.SERV !HPOR $725 8'1-6118'1 CAMARO * * Pb' 6'6-22!2 * * .SU-0000 ext. 53 or 54. Llkt· new. Must sell CWPr. Authorltecl • • i .• TS . \ .KI "111
.. i; ;.=,=~::.,::..:;=,,.+=:I 104) 41<. Will take ""' in ---..-..-...-:. 1006 H bor CM ..._9303 LATE MMEL flREllRD I' ' '&I OfEV % ton truck. New trade or finance private par. F errari ~ ar • · • "f.."f: e '69 camaro RS 350 V8. ~
lifts, r&.h, pJumben frame. ty 546-4052 49H8ll Dealer MG H b v w CADILLACS Orange. Air, new tires, --------1
. :p,rfect .roPd. ""· Ask for '68. 1600 .,ROADST.ER Sal••. Se-'-. p-~-TllUMPH ar our • • .w.':..NyT~ ·"~':;;P•::.· :::!2600::::;..· 613--58::.::..::;:11;;,.. -'70 FORMULA 400. FUiiy :PauJ,CostaM!!Ullotel Iuunedia;;~~~ r--------·11!71J. BEACH m;, ~ ...,, vanwn. 1;6SCamaroSS, , 3SOeng., ~mp'd~ui:::n t~d~l: !
'61 CHEVY P.U. 19·7 0 AU Modela HUNTINGTON BEACH G~ ~~,..ft 4 spd. priv party, $1495 496-2500 IBl'YLJ"8IbE. Lge. back: win. Ready to go! dlr. CWEZ TIO) 1964 TR-4, blue, blk top &: in-~ 548-S.i61 673-500> -=====::;:==I , 8' Bed. Rebll/Chrysler Will take trade or finance terior. Wire whls. A very 1960 YW IUG SEE CHUCK TRAPP OR. ' eves: -
. ".8 6-Plv tire< 549-0674 p<>'"ate ~·'·. "'" •~• -neat, good ntnnl.. car. Red BILL MAC CRACKEN CHEVRO'.,... MERCURY • • ' · • ~·, ~ -IN"' clotoh 3 mo. ago.I •with mag wheels. wide Nabers Cacllllac .y;•
. 969 FORD F-100 custom. 4!»-68ll. ~ Strlppil'lg out, need #60. ·oval tires, new e~ guar. 1970 M
/pb, aolo trans. UPder 1969 4-DR ''"""" wagon. M G B Pbono 54>-21i5o. ......... :;.:,-1IT17' """ ~ .. )r;_'!'.!'VD· . '70 Malibu SS . ercury ,ooo ml Uke new. $2599. Auto.. rtdi. Red w/black ~, .,., ~ Cyclone
-:SRO .,. T P.u. uke ~Ni::_.,;: kow~~; . =· eout Hwy.S:.f?&t ~.r~ .. =;:ruu~All=M~~~w-,6:'~., .. -, -~-.-':-.-~' CHICK~RSON M PAY CAstt Swiday V:; ~$~9~9m5®A~>~w-':;~~~re=.=
""• kl mi's wed ror rec --:·:==·;:·=·===== MG Midget '69, like new, Plus xtra/P.rt$. Must sell Z driven 7000 miles. •till in
• """'· S45-4462 ~ FERRARI $3635 ~~. "'.'!~Y a;;"'3 m~~ 1575. 54>-11'5 ~ ~1,l66B~~ FOR YOUR CAR BILL JONES' lactory wamonty, "'11 lac-
F ==---.;:'95:.o:=20 FERRARI LIST • . • • wkdys ~ -wlcnd.s. ·~ ... ~~:J ::!:' .,::; __ cosr_c.,A_;;>IE=SA=--· -1 BJ. Sportscar Center ~~~Lie~ •• '71 dl>lrl'RgA'\J • I Ne._ Imports Lid. Qr. '53 MG-TO $950 body ..n.. 1325: 833-1036. '62 vw CONNELL 2&'13 Had>Or, C.M. 540-4491 . $23"
\'alon Delon, 9 Jt. mono-ange Cottnly's only .. -. $ .835 ,....,.... '61 'ffi.3' Alr, Gd, """' • CHEVROID ~Cl!EVELLE SS 396. CHICK IVERSON
'"matlc, butane stove 0& oven, 11..ed dealer . MGI w/factory brdtp, 'tomieau 2128 Barbar Blvd. Turbo Hydro, vin. top, air YW
bou SALES-SERVICE-PARTS SAVE cover. $450. 546--0081 "'--·portatio B • ~--111Ha •• .,_ di b"" tilt hi :unper ext., nee-aways, H • •. __ ...;;.. __ J--,------=="===='=== ., ... .,, n uy. VJOJ1.a -U'JY corxl, sc ·~· str. w . 549-30n Ext 66 or 61
elec &: band water pump, 3l~eWwpo. ':~ wy. * '70 . MGB GT, e•. -llent V91JCSWAGEN Ra$dio. (SKU 891) WE PAY TOP OOLl.AR 25,000 left on warr. $2400. 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
.. outBlde connections. ·~""' 427 FOR WP USED CARS 548-4824. COsrA MESA ;** Make Offor ** 642-9405 54().1764 condition. 7400 low miles. ;;r II Is Ira cl
c 213, 645-Sll64 Aothor""1 Fem.rt Dealer NOW Calt 6'1S-134o. '66 VW Sunroof ,.::,;::., "' ""· ':. :;!;~~oo~~.~ MUSTANG
li__11 D •••• D.. s2eoo '67 MGB: Lo mi. Orig. ImmaculatecondlHon. Yellow BAUER BUICK AM-FM, tinted glass, air, -------'~-! ~NOUNE CAMPER Van. FIAT Owne<. """"' New' top, with pin •tripping new Ures Har'bour v w 234 E. 17th St. 22,000. T.0 .P·bal approx. '67 M st
iMust saaifice~. om p I baUeries & ~. 6T;i..2530 & engine guarant~'for 90 • • Costa Mesa ~Tl'65 $3200. MottF1·i eves, 67~170!! U GftCJ
~equipPed for le free -· - -..__ days. Uc .. YP'rJ05. 18111 .BEACH BL, 842-4435 ~ HELP? Look fot tt e '65 CHEVY IMPALA: 2 V8, au.t<>matie, rai!io, dlr. ~mping. Micheli X tires, ~ - -• PORSCffE ' $1099 HUNTINGTON BEACH 1n Pilot Qustfied. Or/Hrdlop, V8/283, po"·er new tires. (QT'[ 1.24) Must !;'; :'."" ..=· ~~Y .J:"; "THINK" '" IZH + TAX l LIC. CHICK IVERSON '68 VW Pbono 64J...l6'll •'"''·PIS. ssg;. reU by SoPday, Will ..,,,
o646-1100. ~DBfl '66 PORSCHE VW Sq•-.;.back Auto LH 1ing 9110 * * 540-5027 * * trade o< finanee pri""teJ•r· • Coupe 912, 5 speed, brown -· '67 CHEV. 1\talibu, 2 dr ty, 546-4052: or $-SSll.
Dune Buggies 9525 '69 PORSCHE 911 s \Vith black interior. BI'llild ~l Ext, 66 or 67 White with red interior, new LEASE rohr:t~P.·,.~~8...,;~to, r/h, xlnt. '.67 Mustang NEW 124 CPE. DEMO 11,110061 new Perrelli tires. XYJ474 l970 ::-e:;vn. tire9, 500 miles on new tac-A NEW 1m "" .,.. .... ......., '69 VW $2795 $3399 toey -· VUR8l9 PINTO 1956 CHEVY $75. Hardtop. Owned by little old ... $6499 CHICK IYERSON 1969 vw $Ifft $50.00 mo. 1955 Mereucy, """'' brakes sclto<>l '"'"''" 29,000 actual
Spedal paint 1782 AAA) M"8t ''FRIEDLANDER'' A"tomatie •tick!hill CHICK IVERSON ('6 mo.) $50. After 5 pm, >ll>-1947. miles. IUOF61.2) Moat ..U!
sell! Will take trade. dlr. or YW open end •1964 CHEVY Jl\1PALA, air· Call Sid dlr. 540-3100 or
finance pr~vate Par I y. 1J750 IEACH ILYD. ?M9-3031 Ext. 1i6 or 67 Excell;~~coodltlon. VW RENT cond, p/s, p/b. 494-T:;iOG aft 10 am.
5f64052 or f94..6811. 89i.~W: ~.gs:u FERRARI 1970 HARBOR st.VD. Phone SJ3.l157 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 6T A NEW 1971 Call 536-6214 eves or wknds. '65 MUSfANG <»-ivt. fi cyt,
Imported Autos 9600 NEW-USEO-SERV. COSTA MESA 19'10 HARBOR m..VD. PINTO e '62 Chev Nova station auto, 1 owner, good cqnd,
'67 FERRARI GTC '65 PORSCHE '65 VW, whlto. Good Ures, COSTA MESA . $4 DAY wagon. Good roPd. $600 o< best 'offer, '46-3653
• - - - -I XOXltl Clean. $195. ~ ... ~vw=-~~---.,~~.1 $375. 546-9956 ~"'~'.,',.,p_.m_.=7"'-,..,,..-,0':'1
- -------356 SC Qlupe, with sunroof. 962-7331 • 6"""' '·"""• ong AND ~ Earth green, with luggage· -~~=~~~-owner, $1300 firm. 4 MILE '65 CORVATR convertible ·55 Conv. R/H, p/s/b, V-1,
-·ALFA ROMEO
FIAT '62 Alfa Rt>mero Spider 2000,
' 5 speed, rebuilt engine, $600.
Call 646-9523 eves. t --------· t
llBBD umNAMERICA
69 AUSTIN AMERJCAN. Ex-
...... eont11-·$1250. -to •port ltd
~*'=""=="'=;:;:-='===;='I Authorized St\lea • Service
AUSTIN HEALEY 1970 ~{"g_ s~ c,..
Radio, heater, special ex.-AUSTIN AMERICA ba"", pin striping, ndial
•·'-..,_...._ ......... tiru, ;ow miles. ~~.·~ lmmodlate DelWGJ $2795 AD llocWI 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. -sn.rm Call. CQ!inct
JAGUAR · _1~r tup ~:'.·t
_1l 11Jl10l ['.· JAGUAR
~"· 0ttut u..,. .. ~'r,.. HEAD9UARTERS
TlK' only autbor!rlid JAGUAR BMW dealn ID lbe enUn Harbor
•------~--r Area. Authorized Dlr. CcmpJ~ ~Sales e Serviee e Parts SALES
AD Modefa . to Cboooe From SERVICE
Smnc. MoPday 'till 7,00 PM PARTS
Sat 'dn Noon BAUER
~OAST IMPORTS BUICK
-Of Onnge "°"""' lne_ 1N
W. Padfle CoHt Hwy COSTA MESA
• 642-0406 8 546-4529 2l4 E. 17th Street
169 BMW lSll, Good Cond. 548-77GS
.. White, New t1rcs $2300.• -,-, -,-A-GU-AR--,-,.,-.-,-, -3.8
675-6918 or ~2286 Sedan. $500. Runs OK. Bul
DATSUN
needs motor \\1lrk & at·
tE'nlion. Terms or trade.
675-8913
~ DATSUN WAGON MERCEDES BENZ -l apeed, dlr., radlo, heater,
excellent.condition, 1 owner.
\(WQP 143) Will take trade .or finance private party.
,__54C..4002 or 494-6811,
'500Trucks 9500
WHILE THEY .LAST!
BRAND NEW
1970 TRUCKS!!!
' 50,000 MILE GUARANTEE • 3/• TON FLEmlDE
I foot f»ox, ... "Y -'1ty r•1r 1'1fJ1191, 91 11911, 7.50rl6JI ,,, """ ""'"52640
•
EL CAMINO
A•-•ff• ~S27'59' ( """)
ALSO HUG! DISCOUNTS ON ALL
1971 MODELS
·CONNELL CHEVROLET
1111 MAllOI 11.¥1,. COSTA MIU.
'
$7899
'67 FERRARI 2+2
VJ621l
$8699
JAGUAR '67 XKE
VOF591
$2599
'67 MINI •
$1699
'64 GHIA
r 1411•
$799
'69 A·A
ZLKl 16
$1099
'59 PORSCHE
Red c.011pe, UAM067
$1699
'64 PORSCHE
Yellow, OVF569
$2399
'64 PORSCHE 1600
Yellow, PHHl'l
$2209
'65 PORSCHE' SC
Red, XHT291
$2699
'66 PORSCHE
E1rlh Green, SJD605
$2999
'66 PORSCH E
11110, SVIE652
$2599
'61 PORSCHE
T1n9erille, VVY652
$3699
'61 PORSCHE tll L
TARGA 1.
W-SJIJZ
$4799
• j~C\llpLl l I '
:1111p u11·:·
3100 w: c .... Hwy.
NEWPO RT BEACH
642·'405 540-1764
• Authorlnd MG Do1lor
,~
'
radt a: tape deck. YCC-525 1969 BUG $1495 1 =,-,,=-*-842-&l.,...._JO_*_-_~ ¢ turbocharged, Make offer. auto.. 29,000 ml., clean!
$3099 · ,Xln't cond. 833-0919 '66 vw chassis complete PUT A LITl'LE 5-15-6321. 646-8877 day, 548-5289 eve.
CHICK IVERSON '69 vw, Immaculate, under w/plnk siip. Less engine & KICK IN YOUR 1959 Che\.)' conve~·tible. En-*'69 l\fUSTANG Mach l 351.
warranty, $1395. 534-829-t trans. axle $75. 962-1782 or LIFE! glne tun!! well, $100. Call air, 4-spd, full pwr, stereo. VW. ext 201. 545-6519 THEODO~E eves 968-7880 Reas, 642-2986.
549-3031 Ext 66 or 67 '°''65,...,.VW""'°"co,..n-,.:-. -good-.,-ro-Pd~. • '57 SNRF, rblt eng, good ROBINS FORD 'Ga Mustang, gd cond.
1970 HARBOR BLVD. 35,000 orig mi's, A steal at mech cond, R/H, $1.95 cash. 2060 HARBOR BLVD., CORYEnE New tires, isoo.
COSTA MESA $695. 675-2409. 494-4925 COSTA MESA Call 642--2494
1-:,,,,61:-;;PO~A"'s"c"Hci'E:::,;:,,,0::-,..,, -1964 vw Bus w/bed, mags, '66 vw 6424110 '57 CORVE'ITE '66 Mustang, radio, heater,
bit tr Xlnt _, s•-= GOOD COND * $500 power steering, new tires.
C.Onv. near new everything. re m • ~""· '""""· * Aft 6: 54&2531 * Must ad!? Make otter. The 646-6024, 6 to 9 pm 1: wknds. 1:;.;:sed=.:C;;.•r:.:•;_ __ _;9900= =~~===~=J ,;:$11:;:00;;;·:;';:;91-;9805;:;~· ==='1
"'"""' og] In town! 646-lS!< 1965 vw Jluo:, -engine, Sedan BUICK COUGAR OLDSMOIU . Ewnings. ;850. Owner JtOYbis.
1956 PC>RSCHE Speedster; * 5M-8'48 * '69 BUICK Electra 225, 1967 COUGAR w/sk. 4 new 1960 OLDS Station Wagon.
Runl perfect! Needs paint. • 68 YW Desert Cold, 4 way seats, I.Ire~. tune up, 1ow mileage. Air, automatic1 ps/pb, $250.
$131S. -i'Z3o-7995..-l.l.l.-A-t5tb 100% Warranty. Radk>, full power, air, sharp con-112~1~00~. ~Call==~al=t•=r=6:':00~pm:r~-~~~~~~;:;~ St, NB. Green with black interior, (RUF 081) ~_!!'°!.,., $3250. Pri pt y 897-8174,
"'·n;,;:..:,, 1600~co=UP=E~: -No-m-,~.,. 31.ooo •""81 """'· Immae-"'-$997 -PONTIAC
on now J•blt/""' '10/ncl<, ulat• condltlon. Spodal 01 l '10 SPORT WAGON -Like DODGE 1-;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;(
radials, AM I FM. MUST the Wttk. Lie. VGO;Uf new. ps/pb, air, $3375 --------I•
Se 11 ! $160 0 . $1299 54$-9419 or 644-0631 1970 DODGE Challenger. 170 GTO ..._..,,_ CHICK IVERSON Harbour V W '".-l969~~B~u°'1CK='-m='"'c.."',.-,n-•. Folly ...,1pped. 3111 c•n-""cu. •n. nam Alr, • • All extras. Call days namon Ave, Apt B, C.i:lf. close ratio 4-speed, VW 18lli BEACH BL, 842-4435 894-5591; eves 645-1415 I ;::54().606;;;;;;'~-,,-,,--,,,.., hJod tach, Ride & Harid!'c
549-3031 Ext. 66 or .61 HUNTINGTON BEACH 1967 Riviera, full ""'"er. SACRIF1CE, Equity '66 pkg, PIS. P/D/B, Radio ~.. ~.. Pol r conv 54" ''"'"' &: heater, New Firestone
SAAB
Authorized Dealer
Sales • Servtee • Parts
Sonet Coupes in Stock
Oranp Oount)"s Newest Dir.
1970 l!ARBOR BLVD. WAN' ..,D v.'".Yl top,_ excellent con-UVU6e a a · II"~ • 11' d 1 12195. 64&-S959 e • days, 557-9359 eves. Wide ovals. "ALL BLACK"
MUST SELL 1910 VW BUG ru iDp doUa~ for 1 ion. .,.,,. :;:;s======== Make off@rtlr trade for
{Red), like new, low mnee VO~AGEN todq ~ '67 RJviera. Excellent con-FALCON late model Ford truck,
COAST IMPORTS Sl'F.AJ. 493-f15l and ask tor Roa Phicbot. dltion. Vinyl top &: extru __ ,;_;.._____ 64&4665
'69 VW . XLNT CONO. S4>J03l Ext. ll&Oi. 673-0000. l'4SO. >lt).<1316. e '66 FALCON, 1 owner. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'"'"I
Lo mileau. 544-'n4l '60 vw Bus clean, reblt 1964 BUICK LeSabre Convt. Good cond, lo mi's, ST;:iO. '64 PONTIAC ,1::, •-Mam. o( Orange County Inc. engine, good 'clutch, trans &: ~ corxlltion. Ca ti ,,-=.....,...======= While w/ turquo...., wterior, brakes, 4 new tires. ~. 545-6691 aft 6 pm. 1• bucket l!leats. auto., JIOM1' UXI W, Pacific Coa3t Hwy.
642-0406 • ,....,,. '67 VW BUG .....,.., strg, xln\ rnechanleal con-
Black beauty. Radial tires. 403 Newport Bvd No. 1. CADILLA FORD dltlon. Very elean inskle • TOYOTA Sacrlfic.! (VOE 310) 'l:ak• * '57 BUS. V.ry good roPd., ______ c __ --------ool! IT;). 16985 Edgowainr
•mal! down. Will • ......., ""'' S<'IL l""I ., ouer. CADILLACS JO'S TOP DOLLAR """· H""ttngton Harbour, 1968 TOYOTA P"'-Pty.Cal!Sid dlr.540J1oo ,_S4&"'6 __ 19 _____ , ....... 285
or 494-7506 aft 10 am. e '62 VW Bus, 1500 eng, tor '6.1 PONTIAC Hrdtp. Sl!rl.
Sedan. Raruo, heater, auto-~-------srJO. 5.57-9655, 546-1694 La rgest Stock of Quality CLEAN USED CARS Splerxlid Cond, Needs slight
matic transmission, 17,000 Lal'C)e Selection VW LEASING Cadilla cs In O range amount of work.
actual mil$1·~c. WAR052 Of VW Campers, e Tax & Lie. Down County 5fH~~bgR£ *53IHi646*
V K 'b• • $50.S7 per month ROBINS FORD CHICK IVERSON GM, om IS, • 36 month ....... , .... Cpo Devm ... Sed. DeVlllcs
VW Buses New &·Us-.. 1971 vw B"g and El Dorados -H""°' BJ,d.
T·llRD
• SU AT 1963 th'l'OUih 1970 Costa Mesa e ·55 T-BIRD: 61 ,000 Actual
549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 Immediate Delivery CHICK IVERSON Phi! Many Other Fine Cars. 642-0010 · mi's, 3~Spd 1 Xlnt 1970~~~~~VD. CHICK IVERSON ALL SALE PRICED Looking tor • car? Ong/Cond. 11550.
1-------· 1 YW 1970 H:OR BLVD. NABERS CADILLAC Call Aoto E::~e;,ol '"° ol I ''56~T'°'·B~~nl~962-~H=~~:!..-*_-.~blo-.1
BJIL MAXEY 549-"'31 Ext. Ill or <r cosrA MESA ebugc. W• h.,e selle". A"'°·· new palnt. Very aood
1970 HARBOR BLVD. VW Complete w/out body. 2600 HARBOR BLVD., waiting. All types & pricel:i. oond. Best ofr. 96&-3025.
ITIOIYIQITIAJ COSTA MESA Runs, + trans axle & 36 HP COSTA MESA Sellen also "·e\come,
• -eng, 40 HP header system, 540-9100 OPEN SUNDAY 6424431 TORINO Is you ad ln the classlfled •otM i::•n "118 b ' & 6 11111 IEACH ILVO. SECTION! Someone Ii _.,u, .,....... twn .. 19i>9 CADILLAC PARTS Auto Relerral Serviee
Hunt. Beech 147.a55S watching for It. D I a I pm. (SEDAN DE VILLE>
I mt K ~ Ctlut ._ n-... ,.~., =-+.vi~.. '61 Volkswagen, good Transmission
• ~ ... ,., • U<'"9 ............... o """'JI transportation car. $450. Air Conditioner
Call 646-5591 Radiator
Dot Sing Says ..
• "W• make better
deol on new car.
e '"We poy very high
price for Ira~•·
e '"How we stoy In
·busines1? "Boy
we lucky!"
1883~ Beat~ B8'1ewari
HUNTINGTON BEACH
84~7781 • 548-0H~
·'
9600 '56 vw. Dlri ""'· .,, na•1o VALIANT
shock3. ~ er best oHer. :::sps '65 FURD SOOXL 2-0r HT. 1--------1 ~naft5 pm. '·'· n..o-.. for .. ,.let. sale !I Air corxl. Full power. Xlnt '68 VALIANT Silntt. Xlnt ~••!,;nl su.3li> ~ cond. $965. 64Ull6. corxl, VB w/full power, air
VOLVO !-=~;;;~"""=-'00 Falcon Futura, good corxl. Will consider trade,
'63 CAD COUPE transportation car, ru ns $1495. Da.ys: 642-69fS. --------INu tires real dean. 644-5500 good, $95. M9-2483. Niles: 673-2831 \IVUVUl==:=~~~:;;~;=.:~==1 TlllNI I ir 'VOL.YO' STAR GAZER:~~ 1:::>=C!.!..!..;.. __ ,B7 CLAY Jl POLLA.N---..-.,.,,.,,.--1
M Yow Dally Adirity Gt.li<l• M
"FRIEDLANDER" ...,. '"'"''"• " """"· "Y" To develop messoge for Tuesdoy,
121M l lA(lt CMWV. •I
89.1-7566 • S37.&824
NEW-USEO.SERV. .
~
VOLVO
71'1 HERE NOW I
.,. SEE & ORJV'.E 111EM·
A FEW REMAINING 7D'J AT
C1DSE01lr PRICES
aJJeoit lPAoi.t
.IHPO[US
1966 Harbor, C.M. &t&-9303
Autos Wanted '700 -IMPORTS WANTED
Oran~ Counties
rop I BUYER
BlLL MAXEY TOYOTA
1B881 Beach Blvd.
ft. Beacb, Pb. 847-3555
I
n:od words c«mponding to runbers
of your Zodiac birth sign.
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